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germany00
Preds 2013?
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I DIDNT FUCKING DO IT. we get there, and i have to show my passport, andmy passport is out of date, then we go back home to get my birthcertificate, and its not there. So now we just found it, but the place is closed.
Ellett was getting ready to play in his 1,000th career NHL game. Thornton was getting ready to play in his 42nd career NHL game.
"They gave him the (next) day off," Thornton recalled Thursday. "I thought, 'Wow, I would love to have a day off, so I hope I get to 1,000 games.'
"Here I am, and it's weird."
Thornton will play in his 1,000th career NHL game Friday at Prudential Center when the Sharks start a six-game road trip against the New Jersey Devils. San Jose plays in Boston on Saturday, so if coach Todd McLellan is planning to give his captain a day off just like Pat Burns gave Ellett 13 and a half years ago, it'll have to wait until at least Sunday or Monday.
"If you asked me in my first year would I ever get to my 1,000th game -- I thought just getting to 100 would be amazing," said Thornton, who has 1,002 points in 999 games and was the Art Ross and Hart Trophy winner in 2006. "Sure, you look back and say how fast it goes. I remember the older guys saying cherish every day because it just goes by so fast, and really it has. It flies right by, and I've been lucky."
Thornton turned 32 over the summer, and he understands his place as one of the older guys on the Sharks' roster. Heck, only Dan Boyle, Michal Handzus and Colin White were born before Thornton.
That said, there isn't a bone in Thornton's body that feels old.
"You know he's one of the biggest kids on this team," Sharks forward Joe Pavelski told NHL.com.
There's no doubt about that. Thornton still exudes youthful energy, matching it with his veteran savvy.
When Thornton came off the ice Thursday, he bounded into the dressing room and started cracking jokes about when the bus was going to be leaving. He chirped White for feeling old because his three kids were in the Sharks' dressing room, and joked with Brent Burns about his impending milestone.
"I still have young legs and a young mind," Thornton said, sporting his infectious smile that he had on the moment he got into the dressing room. "Really, I don't know how (1,000 games) got here so quickly. I woke up one day and here it is. I still feel young, though."
And because of that, Thornton is a joy to be around.
"It's a quality that I think is an excellent one for Jumbo to have," McLellan said of Thornton's youthful exuberance. "The outside world -- the fans, the reporters -- they use that against Jumbo a lot of times, but I think that's what drives him. It's his passion and excitement for being at the rink.
"I really believe you're either giving energy off or you're sucking it out of people, and he's giving it off all the time."
Ironically, Thornton also now finds himself as the guy giving advice to the younger players about cherishing every day in the NHL like it was their last.