In tens, please (ten pound notes)
buy aricept Aside from the Penguins, the Met’s been a huge disappointment so far. In fact, apart from Pittsburgh, every other team in the Met sits in the bottom half of the league’s overall standings. Recently, the Capitals and Rangers have picked up and climbed back from their disastrous starts (the Rangers are now finally just above the .500 mark), so the division might not look like such a lemon by the end of the year, but there’s little chance anyone but the Pens will be visiting the offseason. That’s a real shame, as part of the idea behind the league restructuring was to revive rivalries or build new ones. Those kinds of things are solidified mostly in the playoffs, when teams come fighting out of their divisions only to have to fight each other again for perhaps seven games in a row. Even with so much opportunity (two NYC teams, two Pennsylvania teams), we might have to wait a year or two before that starts happening in the Metropolitan.