AF Nikkor 85mm f/1.8D?

I just need the heads up on these lenses, ie I now that the f1.4 is a stop faster than the f1.8 and the AF Nikkor 85mm f/1.8D and AF Nikkor 85mm f/1.4D is the older version of the new AF Nikkor 85mm f/1.4g.
They say in write ups you can use the f1, 4d for inside sports. But it is not mentioned in the write up on the f1.4g or the f1.8d or g can anyone tell if it is ok for ice hockey/figure skating.
The light in the rink is as bad as it can be, so please take this in to account when answering, ooh and I do now about Nikon 70-200 and its price! To dear for me. Thanks
Added (1). I have a Nikon D7000 so I'm trying to find best lenses I can without going to lenses like sigma, I now they are probably good lenes but it would be like putting a ford engine in a rolls royce

What camera do you own? If you own a D40, D40X, D60, D3000, D3100, D5000 or D5100, the 85 1.8 AF won't autofocus with your camera. Any 85 will be fine for sports, but you'll also want a lens with a little more reach (maybe a 55-200). Just for future reference, "D" does not indicate that the lens has an aperture ring, it means "distance" - the lens tells the camera the distance it is focused at and that helps with metering. All AF-S & G lenses are also D lenses, it's just not written on the lens.

For 1 thing, you can use a lens anywhere, anyway you want. There's no set placement on where you can or can't use a lens, regardless of it's alphabetical setting of D or G or whatever…
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Grow out of your head and think for your self. Use write-ups as only a guide, for most are slanted or biased based on who is doing the tests. Get independent test results, not some editor or magazine because the lens is often theirs to keep, so they are inclined to give a GOOD report…
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The difference between the 2 lenses is basically the D lens is "last years" model and the G is "this years".
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I have a D lens. It works most excellent in whatever capacity I want where the focal length and fast f/1.8 is needed. However, you MUST understand, a fast lens is really only useful when used - fast! The f/1.8 or even the 1.4 mean zero squat if stopped down to f/8… Understand? Nikon's fast 1.2 lenses are only good when used wide open AT their maximum aperture of 1.2, if not, they just become "another 50 or 55mm lens". The other side of the coin is fast lenses can generally see and focus faster because they are letting in more light, at that moment, and the view through the finder looks brighter too.
The price between the two is nominal so I wouldn't worry there much.
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The two lenses…
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http://www.nikonusa.com/...index.page.
I bought mine, used, but like NIB (new in box) for $300 - 85mm f/1.8 AI D
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