Lingo

Started by dss28, December 10, 2003, 08:32:26 PM

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dss28

I'm curious to hear your opinions on these -- some of them I've heard, and some of them... not so much.

http://www.chicagowolves.com/html/fan_terms.cfm

Example:  I've never heard of the Gordie Howe Hat Trick-- and I'm a Whalers gal.

But seriously, has anyone ever heard a commentator use the phrase "dipsy-doodle?"

Ack

Woooooohhh! "Dipsy doodle"  I don't think we've ever heard a commentator say "Bitz kibbles it into the corner" either....


dss28

After getting into a chippy dance with a cherry picker, he blew a tire.

...that sounds so wrong.

Rita 00

if i remember correctly, a gordie howe hat trick is a goal, an assist and a fighting (or maybe just elbowing) penalty.

atb9

I have heard of a dipsy-doodle...and I think I've seen it in an instruction manual for an old hockey game too...I agree that it's probably not a current part of the hockey vernacular.

24 is the devil

judy

and I think the Harvard announcers just used that term....

Ack

What is it exactly?


dss28

According to that link:

 "Dipsy-doodle"–Skating and stickhandling skillfully around the ice.

dss28

Judy -- the same announcers who went for kibbles and Bitz?

Ack

"Dipsy-doodle" - vocab yet to be learned by those Cambridge goons?


atb9

I would even take it a step further...I always thought it as being a slalom move through two players (sort of a half figure eight but instead of completing the figure eight, continuing in a straight direction).  Not sure if that makes sense...

24 is the devil

Keith K \'93

I've definitely heard the term dipsy-doodle.

judy

I'm assuming that it's the same guys. I tuned in to listen more for the entertainment value than for the game...
Makes me value the quality of announcers we keep.

Although, these guys are much better than whoever those guys doing that Colgate game broadcast last year.

jason

I'm familiar with "dipsy-do". I remember my grandfather and now my father (particularly my grandfather, an avid hockey player in his youth, fwiw) using it on occasion. See: http://www.bartleby.com/61/24/D0242450.html

Jeff Hopkins \'82

I've heard dipsy-doodle, too.  It's just a fancy move that gets around the defense.

There's a few things on that list that I've never heard, but most are pretty common terms.

JH