Guess those big deals never really happened....but HEY!! TRAINING CAMP IS HERE!! SOON! Join the 
Fantasy Hockey League! JPHiPHLLeague ID#:    25461
Password:   rika
http://hockey.fantasysports.yahoo.com/hockey/How's this for Live Draft date:
Draft Time:    Tue Oct 3 10:00am EDT 
Max Teams:    20
Let's get as many teams possible!! Last year it was 5 and I think I whooped everyone's ass! Masa and ctz! Kuno_Thunder and suki 

This is an interesting article:
Memories of Gretzky trade still bothers Jari KurriBy JOE WARMINGTON

HELSINKI -- It was an August phone call he just didn't see coming.
It's interesting how one ring of a phone can change the direction of your life.
"I was shocked," former NHL star Jari Kurri said this week, reflecting on the 18th anniversary of The Trade.
It was Aug. 9, 1988, and Kurri, now 45, was running a hockey school near here in the Finnish capital. All was right with his world. He'd just won his fourth Stanley Cup, come off a season in which he scored 57 regular season and playoff goals and could see immortality for his Edmonton Oilers.
Then suddenly Wayne Gretzky was on his way to Los Angeles. "I didn't believe it," he said with tears in his eyes. "I told my agent it couldn't be right."
It's still emotional for the Finnish Flash, who has always wondered what could have been? "Who knows how many cups we could have won?" he said. "We were all in our 20s and our best hockey was ahead of us."
In true Finnish style, Kurri, now GM of the Finnish national team, which won silver at this year's Olympics, dropped by to see me at my hotel. He wanted to make sure I was enjoying my visit -- which I will write about in future Sunday Sun travel sections. I also have a neat scoop about a little Finnish-Toronto history for you tomorrow.
How can you not have a good time here? I mean I have never seen such scenery. "The architecture was nice?" asked a friend. Sure. But I was talking about the blondes. Anu, Leena, Ava, Nora, Orna, Tiina, Miina, Aurelia, Johanna are just some of the beauties I met.
And let's not forget Elisa, an example of what a garbageman (garbage woman for the political correctness police) looks like here. Not many sanitation workers look like that in The Smoke, or anywhere for that matter.
I tease Jari that I now know why he came home after his NHL career. After hockey, babe-watching has got to be Finland's national sport.
"It has been a good summer," laughed Kurri of the warm weather, which allows Nordic women a chance to go without winter coats for a while.
He knows about beautiful Finnish women. The Finnish national treasure married a former Miss Finland.
But back to The Trade. "It changed things," said Kurri.
When Gretzky went to the Kings it was the end of an era and a start of a new one.
"Suddenly the players and owners starting thinking about money," he said. "The trade did open up things for players, which was good, but it also made it about money. As players, we never talked about money."
For a few years, at least, he lost out hanging out with Gretzky, one of his best friends and the godfather to his children. "It wasn't hard to play with him," laughed Kurri. "You just got to the open ice."
It seemed to work for both. Gretzky is the league's all-time leader in scoring and Kurri is 18th with 707 regular season and playoff goals and 1,631 points.
"I was lucky to be drafted by Edmonton," he said.
In other words, he's saying he was lucky to play with Gretzky. But Kurri was a heck of a player without No. 99's help. In fact, the legendary right-winger helped lead Edmonton to its fifth Stanley Cup in 1990, without Wayne.
"He was so far ahead of everybody on the ice," Kurri laughed, adding it was the Great One's off-ice conduct that impressed him the most.
"He'd always have 100 people around him and yet he always managed to have time for everybody," he said. "We would leave the dressing room, wave and say 'bye Wayne' and nobody would bother us. He put a lot of energy into that stuff and yet he came to play every game at a top level, which is difficult."
But all of that is in the past now. "It was a long time ago," Kurri said, adding he never forgets those good times and often thinks of Canada. Fondly.
"A lot of people were surprised I did come home," he told me. "But it was always the plan."
Yeah, I've seen the women here -- even though 
he always loved Edmonton, where he played for 10 of his 18 years. "Edmonton was perfect. It was the same size as Helsinki and I loved it there."
He often wonders what might have happed had he not received that call on Aug. 9, 1988. Maybe he'd still be there.
Yeah, sure! And miss out on being married to Miss Finland!
Source: 
http://torontosun.com/News/World/2006/08/28/1781023-sun.html