Jumat, 30 April 2021

The Blue Jays and MLB cut ties with Roberto Alomar after sexual misconduct investigation - Toronto Star

Roberto Alomar is no longer affiliated with the Blue Jays, after Major League Baseball found the Hall of Famer violated league policies following an investigation into an allegation of sexual misconduct.

Alomar, 53, was terminated as a consultant to MLB and placed on the ineligible list after a “baseball industry employee” came forward earlier this year with an allegation of sexual misconduct from 2014 involving the former Blue Jay, according to a statement from the league Friday. The decision was made after an independent investigation by an external legal firm.

“Having reviewed all of the available evidence from the now completed investigation, I have concluded that Mr. Alomar violated MLB’s policies, and that termination of his consultant contract and placement on MLB’s ineligible list are warranted,” said commissioner Rob Manfred.

Alomar, elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame in 2011, said in a statement that he is “disappointed, surprised and upset with today’s news.”

The Jays subsequently released a statement of their own supporting MLB’s decision and announcing they would be severing all ties with Alomar, effective immediately. The club also announced it would be removing Alomar from the Level of Excellence and taking down his banner at the Rogers Centre.

“The Toronto Blue Jays believe in creating a safe, inclusive, and empathetic environment, where everyone involved in our game is respected,” Jays president Mark Shapiro, who joined the organization in 2015, said in a statement. “I am reaffirming our organization’s commitment to our employees, fans, media and partners to uphold a culture of respect that treats all individuals with dignity.”

Later, the person who filed the complaint issued a statement through lawyer Lisa Baird.

“Today, Major League Baseball announced that it placed Roberto Alomar on its Ineligible List for sexual misconduct after my client, a baseball industry employee, took the brave step of coming forward to MLB with her serious allegations. We applaud MLB for having this matter thoroughly investigated and for taking meaningful action against Mr. Alomar. My client commends other baseball industry survivors who have come forward, and who helped her feel safer in sharing her own terrible and life-altering experience. My client has no plans to file a lawsuit or take further action. She has not exposed Mr. Alomar’s behaviour for notoriety or for money and looks forward to moving on with her life. She simply wants to ensure that Mr. Alomar is held accountable for his wrongdoing and hopes her actions can help Major League Baseball create a safer workplace for its employees.”

While the Jays will remove reminders of Alomar’s honours, the National Baseball Hall of Fame said it was “shocked and saddened” by Friday’s news but his plaque won’t be taken down.

“When he was elected to the Hall of Fame by the Baseball Writers’ Association of America in the Class of 2011, Alomar was an eligible candidate in good standing,” they said in a statement. “His plaque will remain on display in the Hall of Fame in recognition of his accomplishments in the game, and his enshrinement reflects his eligibility and the perspective of the BBWAA voters at that time.”

Both the Jays and MLB commended the courage of the person who came forward, but said they would not be providing further details or comment to protect privacy and confidentiality.

“MLB will continue to strive to create environments in which people feel comfortable speaking up without fear of recrimination, retaliation or exclusion,” the league said.

This is not the first allegation of sexual harassment to come to light in baseball this year.

In January, the New York Mets fired general manager Jared Porter after ESPN’s Mina Kimes and Jeff Passan reported on a string of explicit, uninvited messages he sent to a female reporter in 2016.

Los Angeles Angels pitching coach Mickey Callaway remains under suspension amid an investigation into reports by the Athletic’s Britt Ghiroli and Katie Strang of sexual harassment of women while he worked for the Mets and the Cleveland Indians.

Jays general manager Ross Atkins, who was part of the front office that hired Callaway in Cleveland in 2010, told reporters in March that it was a “failure” on his part that he was unaware of any incidents of sexual harassment by Callaway during their time together with the organization — from 2010 to when Atkins joined the Jays in 2015. Callaway remained in Cleveland until 2017 before he was hired as the manager of the Mets.

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Atkins said it was “heartbreaking” that the proper channels were not in place in Cleveland for those facing harassment to seek support.

“As a leader it’s our responsibility to ensure that our staff feels safe, supported, and I deeply apologize to anyone who every faced harassment or didn’t feel comfortable to come forward,” Atkins said at the time. “This is the type of behaviour that should not be tolerated and something that we need to work harder on in the game and the industry and the world to ensure that it doesn’t happen.”

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2021-04-30 21:56:15Z
CAIiEJ7j72q29op7uvc3j7j58QAqFggEKg4IACoGCAow6bV4MPfJDDCtvTk

Should Maple Leafs be concerned about special teams for the playoffs? - Sportsnet.ca

There’s a stat I’m familiar with hearing about from my time playing and coaching that oddly isn’t a part of the public conversation, which is simply “combined special teams.” No need to overthink this one, it’s just a snapshot of “how are our special teams?”

If you combine your power player percentage with your penalty kill percentage, there’s a clear baseline in that a total above 100 is good, and below it is bad. So if your PP scores 20 per cent of the time and your PK keeps the puck out of the net 80 per cent of the time you’re … fine. Nothing to see there, that’s a combined 100.

Of course, the top teams have more talented players, so their PP will exceed that 20 per cent number. Certain teams have great personnel for keeping pucks out while down a man and so they exceed 80 per cent. The best teams can do both.

This is an area where the Toronto Maple Leafs have been outplayed in the post-season in the past. Not last year, where the Blue Jackets had the fifth-worst PP in the NHL and showed it in the post-season, but in the previous three playoff series that went the distance, special teams may have made the difference. Here are playoff power play goals by year:

2017: Washington: 5, Toronto: 3, total -2.
2018: Boston: 7, Toronto: 4, total -3
2019: Boston: 7, Toronto 3, total -4.

As you can see, it was the PK burning them, not the PP.

Against Columbus the Leafs managed to finish with two power play goals for and none against, which was aided by that aforementioned fortuitous draw. During that regular season the Leafs were 21st in the NHL on the PK (77.7 per cent), but Columbus was weak enough (they had a 16.4 per cent success rate) they couldn’t take advantage there.

To get back to the whole “combined special teams” thing, in 2019-20 the Leafs sat at 100.8, thanks to a PP that clicked along at a 23.1 per cent rate. This year after a hot start to the power play they’ve struggled a great deal, at least in terms of actual goals (more on that later). Their combined special teams total currently sits at 98.3, with a 21.7 per cent power play and 76.6 per cent penalty kill.

If you sort the NHL table by points percentage, here are the combined special teams of the top-10 teams in the NHL right now.

Vegas: 104.2
Carolina: 111.6
Colorado: 104.2
Tampa Bay: 105.9
Washington: 103.8
Toronto: 98.3
Florida: 100.9
Pittsburgh: 99.7
Minnesota: 100.8
Boston: 107.3

Only Pittsburgh joins the Leafs below 100 in the top-10, and the next four teams exceed 100 as well. Expanding it to the top 15 in points percentage, the next five look like this:

Islanders: 102.1
Edmonton: 105.9
Winnipeg: 105.6
Rangers: 104.3
Nashville: 92.9

North Division playoff teams, then:

Toronto: 98.3
Edmonton: 105.9
Winnipeg: 105.6
Montreal: 96.1

The quick and dirty on all this is the Leafs' special teams have been kinda bad compared to the good teams, which is all that’s left standing in the post-season. I could’ve saved us a lot of time here and just started with that.

This year’s first round draw may yet be good to the Leafs as well, in that Montreal sits 21st in the NHL on the PP with a 19.1 per cent rate (Calgary is 17th). That would take some pressure off their flailing PK. But if they hope to move on from the North, they’re going to have to face one of Edmonton or Winnipeg, who sit third and fourth on the PP in the entire NHL, scoring 26.3 and 25.4 per cent of the time, respectively. That should give Leafs fans some vivid flashbacks to the pain incurred by the Bruins in previous years.

So, how much of a problem is this, and what should we expect in the post-season? Could this be a weak spot that derails the Leafs?

Here’s the good news: the Leafs' special teams are likely as bad as they could statistically be, and I expect them to get better. Their underlying numbers are better than their actual outcomes right now on both sides of the coin.

I’ll be quick on the power play, because I don’t think fans look at this group and see a team that’s not going to be able to convert on the power play. What they see is a group that seems like it should score every time they get out there based on the name bars involved, so expectations get crazy-high, and when they struggle at all it's baffling.

We’ll look at “per 60” numbers to keep the field level. On the power play the Leafs generate the seventh-most shot attempts in the NHL, the fourth most actual shots, the most scoring chances and the most high-danger scoring chances in the NHL. Great, talented units like the Oilers and Avalanche don’t generate as many opportunities.

Despite all their talent, on the PP Toronto's scoring chance shooting percentage is in the bottom-10, and only a dozen teams have a worse overall shooting percentage on the power play. Toronto has too much shooting skill for that to continue, let alone get worse.

It’s not worth much more breath – the Leafs' PP has been flawed, they had a long run of baffling ineptitude, but they create a ton, they’ve scored in three of their past five games (where they’ve got PP attempts), they’re just outside the top-10 in actual PP percentage, and I wouldn’t be overly worried about this side of things come playoffs.

The penalty kill is obviously more cause for concern because it’s been a persistent issue (they’ve been in the league’s bottom half since 2018-19), but also because Winnipeg and Edmonton loom in Round 2, and because just about any team that gets into Round 3 will certainly have an elite PP1.

However, there’s reason to believe Toronto will be better in this category, too. Their underlying numbers here are a little more chipper than you’d expect, and that hasn’t always been the case with their weaker PKs in the past.

In terms of shot attempts against (per 60), the Leafs are fourth-best in the NHL, just a hair behind the Boston Bruins in third. They’re inside the league’s best-10 teams in actual shots against, expected goals against, and high danger attempts against. They sit 12th in overall scoring chances against.

Not bad for a PK just outside the league’s bottom-five.

Where things go off the rails here has been simple: they’ve got truly terrible goaltending on the PK, particularly from Freddy Andersen. There’s good news for Leafs fan there, too.

One is that Freddy hasn’t typically been an awful PK goaltender, and him getting healthy and back to form should improve things. They’ve been getting better PK goaltending of late from Jack Campbell (no goals against in his past four starts), so things have trended better on the PK.

Some general regression should be expected based on their ability to limit dangerous attempts against. Combine that with the addition of Nick Foligno to the forward group, and potentially Riley Nash, and you could see a team that gets stronger on the PK heading towards the post-season. It may not become a strength, but all the arrows point in the right direction, at least.

Nothing about what the Leafs do on either the PP or PK is systematically remarkable, and it by and large comes down to execution. On the PK that means work ethic, commitment to stops and starts, and the willingness to get in lanes, block shots, and win battles. On the PP that means being crisp, deceptive and, let’s face it, talented. You’re asking guys to take what’s there and create. You can’t coach every aspect of it.

While they haven’t scored or kept pucks out at a rate in line with the best teams in the league, Toronto's underlying special teams numbers imply they can hang with the better half of the league in those categories. If the results fall closer in line with their processes to date, what looks like a team weakness may not be such a problem after all.

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2021-04-30 17:12:00Z
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2021 NFL Draft Day 2: The best players still available - Sportsnet.ca

One of the best linebackers in college football, the top defensive tackles in the class and the consensus best safety are all still on the board heading into the second day of the NFL draft.

The first round was dominated Thursday night by quarterbacks (five in the first 15 picks), the Southeastern Conference (12 first-rounders) and Alabama (a record-tying six players selected).

"It just makes me feel like a proud papa,'' Alabama coach Nick Saban said in an interview with the ESPN "College GameDay'' crew.

The Tide matched a record set by Miami in 2004.

The Big 12 was shut out of the first 32 picks, as was Notre Dame, but that is likely to change quickly when Round 2 begins Friday.

The best and most notable players still available in the NFL draft:

IRISH BACKER

Notre Dame's Jeremiah Owusu-Koramoah was the Butkus Award winner as the nation's top linebacker last year and maybe the most surprising player to slip out of the first round.

He's a vicious tackler and explosive athlete, but built more like a safety than a run-stuffing linebacker at 221 pounds. His lack of polish in coverage might have scared some teams away, making him a high upside second-rounder.

Irish tackle Liam Eichenberg, who was popping up late in the first round of several mock drafts, also figures to come off the board on Day 2.

D-TACKLES

Not one interior defensive lineman was selected in the first round. That wasn't a surprise. Alabama's Christian Barmore is considered the best of the bunch and up-and-down play made him a borderline first-rounder.

There could be a run on the big fellas on Day 2, though, starting with the 310-pound Barmore or maybe Washington's Levi Onwuzurike, who opted out of last season.

Other intriguing defensive lineman include All-American Daviyon Nixon of Iowa; Alim McNeill of North Carolina; Tommy Togiai of Ohio State; Jay Tufele of Southern California; and Marvin Wilson of Florida State.

BIG 12

The only Power Five conference to produce no first-round picks Thursday night has a handful of players likely to get the call soon after the second round starts.

TCU's Trevon Moehrig was considered the most likely safety to go in the first round, but instead that position got left out altogether. Moehrig was better in 2019 than 2020 and is light at 202 pounds but still the best bet to be the first safety selected.

Rival pass rushers Ronnie Perkins of Oklahoma and Joseph Ossai of Texas couldn't crack a first round that had five edge players taken between 18-32, but they could keep that run going into Day 2.

Texas tackle Samuel Cosmi and Oklahoma State tackle Tevin Jenkins shouldn't last long with teams such as Jacksonville, Atlanta, Miami, Philadelphia and Cincinnati holding early second-round picks and holes in their offensive lines.

If they'd prefer a centre over a tackle, Oklahoma's Creed Humphrey would be a good fit.

MORE 'BAMA?

Pencil in either Barmore or offensive lineman Landon Dickerson, who is still recovering from a knee injury, as the next Crimson Tide player off the board.

Guard Deonte Brown and linebacker Dylan Moses are also safe bets to be drafted, though they might have to wait until Saturday and the fourth through seventh rounds.

QUARTERBACKS

The five quarterbacks everybody thought would be selected in Round 1 were gone by pick 15.

Who's next?

Texas A&M's Kellen Mond was a four-year starter whose college career was marked by inconsistency and notable improvement as a senior when he threw only three interceptions.

A big, mobile quarterback, Mond also raised his completion percentage every season in college.

Stanford's Davis Mills is a former five-star recruit who only played 13 college games because of injuries and a Pac-12 season shortened by the pandemic. Cardinal coach David Shaw calls him the most talented quarterback he has had other than Andrew Luck.

Florida's Kyle Trask was a Heisman Trophy finalist last season throwing to tight end Kyle Pitts, who went No. 4 to Atlanta, and Kadarius Toney, taken No. 20 by the Giants. Trask has so-so traits, but his accuracy and decision-making were impressive — at least when he had his top weapons.

The Falcons, Broncos and Lions all have top-10 picks in the second round and long-term questions at quarterback.

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2021-04-30 13:46:00Z
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Toronto Maple Leafs take it easy, beat the Vancouver Canucks 4-1 - Pension Plan Puppets

The Toronto Maple Leafs are playoff bound, the Vancouver Canucks are not. Both teams decided to use this game to test out some spare parts before the year ends.

IN:

  1. Pierre Engvall (C/LW)
  2. Timothy Liljegren (RD)
  3. Ben Hutton (LD)
  4. Michael Hutchinson (G)

OUT:

  1. Nick Foligno (LW)
  2. Morgan Rielly (LD)
  3. Jake Muzzin (LD)
  4. Jack Campbell (G)

For the Canucks Kole Lind made his NHL debut.

The game started as most games do, with a faceoff. Shortly after said faceoff Wayne Simmonds decided to punish Alex Edler for his knee on knee hit on Zach Hyman in his last game against the Leafs. Edler was suspended for the hit, but Simmonds wanted to make sure Edler knew not to try that again.

Coming back to play, TJ Brodie snaps a shot off from the slot but it hits the crossbar, and the Leafs can’t recover in time to score in the midst of the chaos.

The Maple Leafs are not just being offensive tonight - not like that, this isn’t the Burke Leafs - they’re also working on a defensive game, with everyone chipping in.

The Canucks are...you know they’re here.

For a low event game like this one - shots after 15 minutes are 3-2 for Toronto - it’s been very fast, and entertaining. No trapping defense to bore you to death. Solid play from the Leafs with flashes of awareness by the Canucks. However, this play there was no awareness by the Canucks.

William Nylander is allowed to waltz into the Canucks zone and he easily scores the first goal of the game.

The rest of the period is all Leafs, but ends with less than ten shots total - 7 for Toronto, 2 for Vancouver. And Canucks coach Travis Green is not happy.

The Canucks come out hard to start with a scramble in front of the Leafs net thirty seconds in. David Rittich keeps the puck out and the Leafs head down the ice and Marner passes to Matthews, and they show the Canucks how to score. 2-0 Leafs.

The Canucks try some offense again and ths only makes the Leafs mad. Two minutes later Pierre Engvall scores the third goal of the game. 3- Leafs.

This assist from Jason Spezza moves him into 99th on the NHL’s all time scoring list, just above Maurice ‘Rocket’ Richard, officially making Spezza a superior player.

Alex Galchenyuk feels bad for the Canucks, and gives them a power play by intentionally taking a tripping penalty. It’s very nice of him to let the Canucks have a man advantage for two minutes.

The Canucks blow the opportunity, and the game remains 3-0 Leafs when Galch emerges from the box.

The Leafs keep pushing for a fourth goal, Matthews tries to set Marner up, but it doesn’t get into the net.

Timothy Liljegren is kind enough to give the Canucks another chance to score when he’s called for hooking. Such a kind team the Leafs are tonight.

This time the Canucks score near the end of the power play. JT Miller shoots and the puck gets lost in Rittich’s feet and crease and it deflects off the goalie and into the net. A pass turned into a goal.

Maple Leafs still lead 3-1.

The period ends after Jason Spezza tries hard to end on a Leafs goal, and things get a little chippy between the two following this play. Nothing comes of it as the horn goes to end the second.

The Maple Leafs come into the third period extra confidant, with some extray snazzy moves when trying to score goals.

The Leafs are really taking it easy on the Canucks in this game, like they’ve been told to ease up on the gas. The game doesn’t mean anything, don’t get hurt, don’t embarrass your opponents.

Bayden Holtby doesn’t believe in this and keeps John Tavares off the scoreboard.

Lots of practice with the puck in this game.

Timothy Liljegren is playing for a roster spot in the playoffs, and puts his body on the line.

At times the Leafs were taking it too easy on the Canucks...

The Leafs keep working, and they keep trying to score but Holtby won’t let another one in.

The Leafs young defense are really doing everything they can to show off to management tonight.

The Canucks pull Holtby with 2:30 left, and keep the Leafs from getting an empty netter until 1:03 left in the period where they call a time out.

Holtby is back in net after the time out and Mitch Marner scores to make it 4-1 off the face off.

The Maple Leafs will win this game 4-1. It was an easy game, not an ounce of stress while watching, and it got some underused players some time on ice.

Not a lot to say about this one, aside from it’s great to see some goals.

The Maple Leafs next play Saturday night at 7PM against these same Canucks.

See you then, and Go Leafs Go!

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2021-04-30 02:03:53Z
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Jaguars pick Clemson QB Lawrence No. 1 overall in NFL Draft - TSN

JACKSONVILLE, Fla. — The Jacksonville Jaguars waited more than four months to make the easiest and maybe most significant pick in franchise history.

As obvious as it was, fireworks and frivolity followed.

A sold-out draft party that included 8,000 fans celebrated wildly as NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell stepped to the podium and announced Lawrence’s name as the first pick in the draft Thursday night.

The Clemson star had a more subdued reaction in Seneca, South Carolina — probably because he knew, like everyone else, that he would be the first pick in the NFL draft.

“It was just a kind of a weight lifted off my shoulders,” Lawrence said. “I’m going to do everything in my power to get us back to where we need to be. I’m going to put in the work. No one’s going to work harder than me.”

Lawrence is the fourth quarterback drafted by the franchise in the first round in its 27 years of existence, joining Byron Leftwich (2003), Blaine Gabbert (2011) and Blake Bortles (2014).

The chance to draft Lawrence was one of the factors that lured coach Urban Meyer out of the broadcast booth and got him back on the sideline. Jacksonville has five of the top 65 picks, including the 25th pick later in the opening round.

No matter who else the Jaguars bring in, none of them will compare to Lawrence. He’s now the face of the franchise for the foreseeable future. And Jacksonville is counting on him solving the team’s decades-old problem at the all-important position.

“My mindset always going in is I’m going to earn everything that I get,” Lawrence said. “I don’t have any expectations for anything other myself. I’m not expecting anyone to hand me anything. I want to come in there and earn the respect and trust of my teammates and the right to lead the team.”

Meyer spoke to Clemson coach Dabo Swinney, who initially had four words for his former college coaching colleague.

“Don’t screw it up,” Swinney said.

″“This will be a very easy transition” for Lawrence, Swinney added. “What he’s stepping into, the expectations, all those things, that his normal. And it has been for a long time. He’s built the right way. ... He’s the epitome of consistency. And if you know anything about Urban Meyer, he values consistency and toughness. I didn’t have to sell him on his toughness.”

Lawrence enjoyed a stellar college career, going 34-2 as Clemson’s starter and leading the Tigers to three Atlantic Coast Conference titles and the 2018 national championship.

He completed 66% of his passes for 10,098 yards, with 90 touchdowns and 17 interceptions. He also ran for 18 scores.

He finished second in Heisman Trophy balloting to Alabama receiver DeVonta Smith last season. Lawrence threw for 3,153 yards, 24 touchdowns and five interceptions while missing two games after testing positive for COVID-19 in October.

The Jaguars locked up the No. 1 pick in the next-to-last week of the 2020 NFL regular season, and Lawrence was the target long before Meyer was hired to replace Doug Marrone.

Meyer, general manager Trent Baalke and owner Shad Khan never tipped the obvious pick, but they didn’t try to disguise it, either.

“No negatives,” Baalke said recently. “All the research we’ve done, you’re always looking for the stars to align when you’re looking at prospects, whether that be from a physical, mental, character aspect, whatever the case may be. With his situation, like many others in this draft, the stars all align and that’s what you’re looking for.”

The Jaguars already gave Lawrence a playbook and held several Zoom sessions with him. Even Khan sat in on at least one, getting to know a player he’s prepared to guarantee nearly $40 million in a five-year deal.

Lawrence was the fourth quarterback Jacksonville drafted in the last four years, following Tanner Lee (2018), Gardner Minshew (2019) and Jake Luton (2020). Minshew and Luton remain on the roster, but Lawrence is expected to start from Day 1.

He should be a significant upgrade for a franchise that has endured Gabbert, Chad Henne, Blake Bortles, Cody Kessler, Nick Foles, Minshew, Luton and Mike Glennon as starters over the past decade.

“I’m just pumped. The best is yet to come,” Lawrence said.

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2021-04-30 00:26:09Z
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Patriots remain patient, draft QB Mac Jones at No. 15 - Sportsnet.ca

BOSTON — The New England Patriots have selected former Alabama quarterback Mac Jones with the No. 15 pick of the NFL draft, their biggest move to date to bring in a player to possibly be a long-term replacement for Tom Brady.

It was believed the Patriots would have to trade up to get one of the consensus top five quarterbacks in this year's draft class. It turned out Jones fell right into their lap.

After Trevor Lawrence, Zach Wilson and Trey Lance came off the board in the first three picks, top-rated prospects Justin Fields and Jones were still up for grabs.

The Bears moved up from No. 20 to No. 11 in a trade with the Giants to select Fields, leaving only Jones available. He becomes the first quarterback selected in the first round during Bill Belichick's 21-year tenure in New England.

Jones has been high on the Patriots' list for some time, as evidenced by the pre-draft scouting they did on him. They sent scouts to the Senior Bowl and both Belichick and offensive co-ordinator Josh McDaniels attended Alabama's pro day.

Jones, who played under Belichick's longtime friend and former coaching colleague Nick Saban, earned the Davey O'Brien Award in 2020 as the top quarterback in college football.

Lauded for his accuracy and ability to command Saban's system in his lone year as the Crimson Tide's full-time starter, Jones arrives in New England coming off a season that saw him lead Alabama to a national title while completing an NCAA-record 77.4% of his passes for 4,500 yards, 41 touchdowns and only four interceptions.

He joins a Patriots team that is in transition after finishing 7-9 in 2020 and missing the playoffs for the first time since 2008. One of the biggest reasons was Cam Newton's struggles to get his footing in the offence after taking over for Brady following his departure in free agency to Tampa Bay.

Newton was re-signed this off-season but returns on only a one-year deal. His backup last season, Jarrett Stidham, was beaten out for the starting job and has underwhelmed in limited action during his first two years in the league.

Jones becomes the 10th consecutive player to win the O'Brien award and be selected in the first round of NFL draft. He is also the third former Crimson Tide quarterback to be chosen in the first round since 1967, following Tua Tagovailoa (taken fifth in 2020) and Richard Todd (sixth in in 1976).

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2021-04-30 02:36:00Z
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Kamis, 29 April 2021

Report: Rodgers doesn't want to return to Packers - theScore

Reigning NFL MVP Aaron Rodgers has told some within the Green Bay Packers organization that he doesn't want to return to the team, according to ESPN's Adam Schefter.

Packers president Mark Murphy, general manager Brian Gutekunst, and head coach Matt LaFleur met with Rodgers at various points this offseason to discuss his concerns. The team also offered to extend the 37-year-old's contract, Schefter adds.

Rodgers' agent held several meetings with the Packers over the last month, but Rodgers refused to restructure his contract and instead wants an extension, according to NFL Network's Ian Rapoport.

The quarterback's issues go beyond his contract, as he doesn't like anyone in the team's front office, according to Mike Florio of ProFootballTalk.

"Aaron's our guy. He's going to be our quarterback for the foreseeable future," Gutekunst said Monday.

Gutekunst made another statement Thursday, reiterating the franchise's commitment to Rodgers.

Multiple teams have already reached out to the Packers about trading for Rodgers, Jay Glazer of Fox Sports reports.

Among them is the San Francisco 49ers, Rodgers' hometown team. However, there's a "0% chance" of such a deal, reports NFL Network's Tom Pelissero.

Rodgers has three years remaining on his contract with the Packers.

Some of Rodgers' unhappiness likely stems from last season's draft, when the Packers - who went 13-3 and reached the NFC Championship Game in 2019-20 - used their first-round pick on a quarterback. Green Bay again went 13-3 and lost in the NFC Championship Game this past season.

Following the 2020 draft, Rodgers said he believed his future with the Packers was out of his hands.

The three-time league MVP spent part of this offseason as a guest host of "Jeopardy!" and said he'd like to keep playing football and host the show full-time.

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2021-04-29 18:53:09Z
52781552427199

TSN EDGE: 2021 NFL Mock Draft: Predicting the First Round - TSN

We are just hours away from the start of the 2021 NFL Draft.

Trevor Lawrence will be the first-overall pick. Zach Wilson is expected to go second.

After that, it’s wide open.

A lot can change over the final few hours before commissioner Roger Goodell steps to the podium, and trades make accurately predicting the final order that much more difficult.

Based on all of the information available right now, here is how I think the 2021 NFL Draft will play out.

1. Jacksonville Jaguars: QB Trevor Lawrence, Clemson

Lawrence is -20000 to go first overall. Congratulations to the Jaguars’ new franchise quarterback.

2. New York Jets: QB Zach Wilson, BYU

Once they decided the second quarterback on the board has a higher ceiling than what they had on their roster, the Jets traded Sam Darnold to the Carolina Panthers. Wilson is -5000 to go second overall.

3. San Francisco 49ers: QB Mac Jones, Alabama

This is easily the most interesting pick in the draft. The 49ers gave up a ton to move up to No. 3 and get their franchise quarterback. There has been plenty of discussion about who the third-best quarterback on the board is.  Tonight, we’ll finally learn Kyle Shanahan’s opinion on the matter. I’ll bet on Jones to be selected over Trey Lance and Justin Fields.

4. Atlanta Falcons: TE Kyle Pitts, Florida

Matt Ryan will turn 36 in May. Still, the Falcons have the fourth pick and not the first pick, which means new head coach Arthur Smith is better off choosing Ryan and a generational talent at tight end than he would be rolling the dice on Lance or Fields. Pitts will be the first non-quarterback off the board.

5. Cincinnati Bengals: WR Ja’Marr Chase, LSU

I flip-flopped on this pick a couple of times before landing on Chase. The Bengals need to upgrade their protection for Joe Burrow. However, they can’t afford to pass on Chase when they can take him here and then bolster their offensive line in the second and third round. Cincinnati will select the top wide receiver in the draft here.

6. Miami Dolphins: WR DeVonta Smith, Alabama

I’m not sold on Tua Tagovailoa. He did nothing as a rookie to convince me he can be a franchise quarterback. Still, the Dolphins invested a high first-round pick on Tua and brought in some insurance in Jacoby Brissett. So, while I can’t shake the idea that Miami should draft a quarterback, they still need to find some help for whoever their starter will be and they can get one of the best available options with this pick. With Pitts and Chase gone, the Dolphins will take Smith.

7. Detroit Lions: QB Trey Lance, NDSU

The Lions received two first-round picks, a third-round pick and Jared Goff from the Los Angeles Rams in exchange for Matt Stafford. That means the Rams thought Stafford was so much better than Goff and his current contract that they were willing to give up all of that to make the swap. If that’s the case, how could the Lions possibly feel comfortable with Goff as their franchise quarterback? Detroit has several needs to fill, which could lead a trade. If they stay put, I think the Lions address their most important position with a quarterback.

8. Carolina Panthers: OT Penei Sewell, Oregon

I’ll be the first to admit I’m higher on Sam Darnold than most at this point. The Panthers still have several holes to fill to become a contender. After trading for Darnold, I think they’ll shore up their protection in an effort to help give their new franchise quarterback a chance to succeed. They should be thrilled if Sewell falls to them at eight.

9. Denver Broncos: QB Justin Fields, Ohio State

This was another tough one. Teddy Bridgewater could become Denver’s league-leading 10th different starting quarterback since they won Super Bowl 50. Bridgewater and Drew Lock are very different passers, and I’m not sure either one is good enough to lead the Broncos to a Super Bowl. With Fields still on the board, I think John Elway takes his best shot at a potential franchise quarterback and drafts him with the ninth-overall pick.

10. Dallas Cowboys: CB Patrick Surtain II, Alabama

I’m quietly hoping the Cowboys take another receiver, but the most realistic outcome is that they take the top cornerback on the board. The need is too big to pass on Surtain here.

11. New York Giants: OT Rashawn Slater, Northwestern

No team was worse than the Giants in ESPN’s Pass Block Win Rate last season. Daniel Jones was sacked on a higher percentage of his dropbacks than any quarterback other than Carson Wentz. The Giants invest in some protection for Jones heading into a make-or-break season. 

12. Philadelphia Eagles: CB Jaycee Horn, South Carolina

While Jaylen Waddle is still available, it makes more sense for Philadelphia to go cornerback here. If the Cowboys take Surtain, the Eagles will take Horn with this pick.

13. Los Angeles Chargers: OT Christian Darrisaw, Virginia Tech

The Chargers have a legitimate franchise quarterback and the playmakers he needs to thrive. Now they get the chance to upgrade the protection for Justin Herbert with the third lineman off the board.

14. Minnesota Vikings: OT Alijah Vera-Tucker, USC

The Vikings will be disappointed that Slater and Darrisaw are off the board here. Minnesota addresses a major need and takes the best available lineman with this pick.

15. New England Patriots: WR Jaylen Waddle, Alabama

With the top quarterbacks off the board, New England can add a weapon at wide receiver and target a passer in the later rounds. The Patriots had the fifth-fewest catches of 20-plus yards in the NFL last season. Waddle gives them the deep threat they have lacked for years.

16. Arizona Cardinals: CB Caleb Farley, Virginia Tech

The Cardinals fill a massive need after losing Patrick Peterson and Dre Kirkpatrick this off-season.

17. Las Vegas Raiders: LB Micah Parsons, Penn State

The Raiders have a number of needs to fill. I’ll bet on them to take the top linebacker on the board.

18. Miami Dolphins: EDGE Jaelan Phillips, Miami

After getting Tua some help with their first pick, Miami could trade back here and pick up some more draft capital. I have them adding one of the top pass rushers in the draft at 18th overall. 

19. Washington Football Team: WR Rashod Bateman, Minnesota

Washington needs a quarterback. However, with the top passers off the board, they’ll have to settle for one of the top remaining pass catchers to complete an off-season overhaul of their wide receiver core.

20. Chicago Bears: OT Teven Jenkins, Oklahoma State

The markets agree the Bears need to make their line a priority – Chicago is +190 to draft an offensive lineman. Jenkins is the best available here.

21. Indianapolis Colts: EDGE Azeez Ojulari, Georgia

The Colts are desperate for pass rushers. Ojulari might be the best edge rusher in this class.

22. Tennessee Titans: CB Greg Newsome II, Northwestern

The Titans lost Adoree’ Jackson, Malcolm Butler, Desmond King and Kenny Vaccaro. Newsome should help fill a void.

23. New York Jets: RB Travis Etienne, Clemson

Najee Harris is the favourite to be the first running back off the board, but there has been plenty of talk linking the Jets to Etienne, who has a draft day over/under is 31.5. I’ll take the under and roll the dice on the Jets pairing Etienne with Wilson. 

24. Pittsburgh Steelers: OT Walker Little, Stanford

The Steelers lost three of their five starting offensive linemen from last season. They will address a clear need with this pick.

25. Jacksonville Jaguars: DT Christian Barmore, Alabama

Most mocks I’ve seen have Barmore going higher, but I think he could slip a little bit. The betting prop for Barmore’s over/under is 23.5, so I don’t feel like this is a major slide.

26. Cleveland Browns: S Trevon Moehrig-Woodard, TCU

The Browns could add a pass rusher with this pick, but after losing several key veterans in their secondary I have them filling a different need here.

27. Baltimore Ravens: WR Terrace Marshall Jr., LSU

The best thing the Ravens could do is add as many weapons as possible for Lamar Jackson. Can Marshall follow in fellow LSU alumni Justin Jefferson’s footsteps?

28. New Orleans Saints: WR Elijah Moore, Ole Miss

The Saints have needs on both sides of the football. However, with Emmanuel Sanders leaving and Michael Thomas coming off an injury-plagued season, I think Sean Payton gets his new starting quarterback a weapon to help the transition to the post-Drew Brees era.

29. Green Bay Packers: WR Rondale Moore, Purdue

One year after passing on a pass-catching weapon in the first round, the Packers finally get Aaron Rodgers another playmaker at wide receiver.

30. Buffalo Bills: RB Najee Harris, Alabama

Buffalo could go in a couple of different directions with this pick, including addressing its offensive line. However, the Bills are +210 to draft a running back with their top pick. They get the top-ranked running back on the board at the back end of the first round.

31. Baltimore Ravens: OT Dillon Radunz, NDSU

The Ravens turned a lot of heads when they traded Orlando Brown to the rival Kansas City Chiefs. They will use this pick they got in that deal to draft his replacement.

32. Tampa Bay Buccaneers: OT Samuel Cosmi, Texas

The Buccaneers could go in a few different directions if they hold on to this pick. If they stay put at No. 32, I think they will bolster the protection in front of Tom Brady. 

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2021-04-29 16:37:36Z
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The Canadiens could beat the Leafs in the playoffs - Habs Eyes on the Prize

I’d be remiss if I neglected to address the ambitious nature of my headline right out of the gate. The Montreal Canadiens lost 4-1 to the Toronto Maple Leafs, so how could I possibly take from that game that they could win a playoff series against that same team?

Well, firstly, last night’s loss was more a product of costly errors than being dominated. If Tyler Toffoli doesn’t take an early penalty, Jon Merrill doesn’t have a puck deflect in off his stick, and Jake Allen doesn’t fumble a puck behind his own net, it’s a 1-1 game after 60 minutes. Alas, all of these things did happen.

But the Leafs won’t get a muffed puck by a goaltender or an own goal off a Montreal Defenseman every night. They might get more mind-bending displays of hand-eye coordination from Auston Matthews, but they won’t get regular season levels of power plays, and if the game goes to overtime, they’ll have to play it at five-on-five.

And that is the second reason the Habs have a chance — the five-on-five numbers put these teams closer to each other than their respective records, and last night’s score. The Canadiens controlled 55.26% of even-strength shot attempts, and had a significant edge in scoring chances at 27-16. At five-on-five, it was not as bad a game for them as the score alone would suggest.

Where the Leafs took a significant edge of their own was in high-danger chances, leading at 7-3. This gave them the edge in expected goals as well, and it earned them a win. This brings us back to costly errors causing those chances — it’s the one area at five-on-five the Habs need to look to improve if they have hopes to complete an upset. Either that, or hope for some stellar goaltending, which they’ve only gotten in spurts this year.

I believe they could win this series, but of course there is the question of whether it does the club any good long-term. It could serve as a crutch for management to claim their plans are working, and stave off change that this team clearly needs. I don’t think anyone has these Habs as a legitimate threat to go far in the playoffs, and there’s plenty of work needed before anyone will.

But the goal is always to win, so I’d not expect the players to do anything less than their best to make it happen. I’m not going to go so far as predicting they’ll do it, but if these Habs can get in the playoffs healthier than they are now, they could beat this Leafs team.

I’m honestly not even completely convinced that I want it, but it would be quite the sight to behold.

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2021-04-29 12:00:00Z
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Report Cards: Toronto Maple Leafs jump on Habs early, clinch playoff spot in Montreal - Maple Leafs Hot Stove

X marks the spot.

We can officially put an “X” next to the Toronto Maple Leafs now that they’ve clinched a playoff spot with their 4-1 victory over the Montreal Canadiens. They got some help from the Ottawa Senators, who defeated Vancouver 6-3 earlier in the day, but we’ll focus our analysis on the Leafs tonight — since they’re the only team who matters.

After getting out to a 2-0 lead in the first period, things got a bit wonky in the shots and scoring chances department. The Galchenyuk-Tavares-Nylander line got absolutely caved in at even strength, yet Toronto still managed to hold their lead thanks to some strong goaltending and defensive play.

I’m sure you know the format by now. I don’t love getting wishy-washy in these introductory paragraphs; I’d rather just get to the actual analysis. So, without further ado, let’s dive into the individual player evaluations for tonight’s game.

It’s time for some Leafs Report Cards.

5 Stars

Game Puck: Auston Matthews (C, #34) — Sometimes you just have to laugh at the things this guy can do with a hockey puck.

What’s crazy is this wasn’t the only time Matthews batted the puck out of the air — to himself — and got a shot off before the defense had a chance to blink. This takes me back to the time Elliotte Friedman got caught shouting “WOW!” live on the broadcast when watching Matthews in warmup for Team North America back in 2016.

We’ve come to expect special plays from #34 by now, but it’s still fun to watch him do things we haven’t seen a player his size do before. Pucks just seem to find his stick in the offensive zone. It’s silly.

The Thornton-Brooks-Spezza Line — This isn’t a line any of us expected to see coming into the season, but it might be my favourite fourth-line combination the Leafs have tried in 2021. Joe Thornton is out there winning seemingly every puck battle along the boards to keep the cycle going in the offensive zone. Adam Brooks is making a case for himself to stick with the big club come playoff time, while Jason Spezza is casually tying Rocket Richard on the all-time points list.

It helps when Jake Allen misplays a puck behind the net, or when Jake Muzzin scores on a point shot off of Jon Merrill’s stick in front, but I tend to care more about the process than the result. This fourth line was making plays in the offensive zone. I’m talking east-west passes; quick little give-and-goes to get around defenders; using the full width of the ice on the cycle and covering as F3 for their pinching defensemen.

What’s impressed me the most is Brooks’ skating, which has come a long way over the last few years. He’s been able to catch opposing forwards on the backcheck, breaking up plays in the neutral zone and starting rush sequences the other way. I know he’s not the biggest 4C out there, but with his ability to make quick passes and kill plays with his surprisingly good stick defensively, I think there’s a case forming that he should stick with Thornton and Spezza even when things tighten up in the playoffs.

4 Stars

Jack Campbell (G, #36) — He stopped 32 of 33 shots tonight, with the only goal coming off a Nick Suzuki wrister where Campbell was screened by Justin Holl. It goes without saying he played well, making a few key stops on a Joel Armia breakaway, Corey Perry in tight, and Shea Weber on the power play with his booming slap shot.

That last one didn’t look like fun, but Campbell seemed to shake it off pretty well. It was nice to see him regain some of his confidence tonight, especially when playing the puck, where he looked much more comfortable starting the breakout for Toronto on dump-ins.

Wayne Simmonds (RW, #24) — He was the best player on his line tonight, completing a few high-leverage passes to move play up the ice. That’s usually not an area in which we expect Simmonds to thrive, making it that much more meaningful when he is completing those plays in transition.

He was doing all of his other usual stuff, getting in on the forecheck and bulldozing his way to the front of the net, but it was the passing tonight that really stood out.

Jake Muzzin (LD, #8) — His partner had a few rough moments, forcing Muzzin to be the stable defensive presence we all expect him to be. I’m not going to give him too much credit on his goal from distance, which was more of a fluke than anything, bouncing off a defender’s stick in front.

What I will give him credit for is his stellar defending, both against the rush and the cycle. Muzzin does a great job using his strength to dislodge opposing forwards from the puck, whether it’s at the blue line when they bounce off of him at full speed, or in front of the net, where he simply pushes them out of the way.

This probably isn’t news to anyone: Jake Muzzin is good at defense.

3 Stars

Nick Foligno (LW, #71) — Speaking of good defense, that’s exactly what we saw from Toronto’s newest addition tonight. When the Habs were trying to mount a comeback in the third period, Foligno took away the middle of the ice, getting his stick on pucks multiple times to break up those high-value passes. On the forecheck, he was great at forcing board battles when Montreal’s defensemen were trying to start the breakout, similar to what we’ve seen Zach Hyman do for years.

Foligno also picked up a primary assist on a play where he didn’t complete the pass, but gets nothing for this breakaway feed to Matthews.

Sometimes this sport doesn’t make any sense.

Travis Dermott (RD, #23) — Maybe Travis Dermott was a RD this whole time and none of us realized it.

I really enjoyed his game tonight, particularly because he was forced out of his comfort zone and still found a way to succeed. For example, he’s usually the puck-mover while Zach Bogosian plays the “heavy” role in the corners and in front of the net. That isn’t the case anymore now that Rasmus Sandin has taken over as the pairing’s primary puck-mover.

It’s put Dermott in a situation where he has to win more battles in front, get physical along the boards, and most importantly for his long-term value, kill penalties. I thought he did well in all those areas tonight. If he can continue to play well without the puck in his own end, it could put Keefe in a tough spot when Bogosian comes back from injury.

Rasmus Sandin (LD, #38) — Like we just mentioned, Sandin is the puck-mover on his pairing. When you watch him start the breakout, it’s easy to see how confident he is with the puck on his stick. He’s great at waiting that extra half-second to suck in the forechecker, right before passing it to a teammate in open ice.

That trait has made him an excellent power-play quarterback, making a lot of us wonder if he’ll eventually take over for Morgan Rielly in that department sooner rather than later. The biggest concern with Sandin is how well he can handle himself in his own end. Tonight, I saw him lose quite a few puck battles below the goal line.

Now, he did deliver a big hit on Jake Evans, which probably should’ve been two minutes for boarding. Between that and the Blake Wheeler reverse hit, it’s clear that Sandin can pack some punch at 183 pounds, but we’d be lying if we said his strength wasn’t a concern in the tough areas of the ice, especially when the penalty standard is loosened in the playoffs.

If he can start to win a few more of those battles, I wouldn’t be shocked if he’s a regular moving forward.

Mitch Marner (RW, #16) — This wasn’t his most dynamic game, but in typical Marner fashion, he pulled off a structure-breaking pass that gifted one of his teammates an empty net.

There’s a reason Marner ranks second only to Connor McDavid in 5v4 Assists per 60 since entering the league; he can make passes that other mortals can’t. It’s a valuable trait in that you can impact the outcome of the game even if you have a bit of an off-night at 5v5.

Coaching Staff — I’d like to use this section to address Toronto’s special teams since it’s an area of the game where coaches can make a major impact.

On the power play, the Leafs‘ puck movement looks much quicker lately. They’re zipping the puck around the OZ, finding John Tavares in the bumper spot more often, who’s been making quick plays either down low to William Nylander or firing a quick shot on net. The entries still aren’t as clean as you’d like them to be, but the in-zone play is finally starting to look as dangerous as it should with Toronto’s five best offensive players on the ice.

On the penalty kill, I have to be honest, I’m not loving it. Too often this season, we’ve seen the Leafs’ PK give the opposing PP the shot they’re looking for, which was Cole Caufield on the left dot tonight. They also need to do a better job of standing up at the blueline. I understand that you don’t want to get beat behind for an odd-man rush, but you’re doing the opposing PP a favour by backing off the blue line and giving them the free zone entry.

Another thing to consider: Foligno is winning only 45.8 percent of his faceoffs this season. In his 14-year NHL career, he only has one season above 50 percent. The Leafs have been using him on draws in PK situations lately, which I’m not sure is the ideal situation considering how often it leads to the opposing PP starting off with the puck, set up in formation.

2 Stars

Alex Galchenyuk (LW, #12) — It’s not a good sign when Alex Galchenyuk is the most defensively responsible forward on his line. This came at a cost; he generated zero shot attempts, but at least he was putting in effort on the backcheck, intercepting passes in the DZ, and for the most part, “standing in the right spots” as Mike Babcock would say.

This make me think of the infamous Chris Rock bit about doing what you’re supposed to do. I find myself rooting for Galchenyuk when he doesn’t blow his assignment defensively, when realistically, we shouldn’t be giving him that much credit. “What do you want, a cookie?”

The fact that his defensive commitment cost him essentially all of his value on offense and transition tonight is very concerning. It’s making me wonder if the Galchenyuk we saw in the first few games was a mirage. He has seven more games to convince us otherwise, so let’s see what he does with that opportunity.

TJ Brodie (RD, #78) — His pairing got lit up at even strength tonight. As one half of that pairing, some of the blame obviously falls on Brodie. His puck-moving under pressure wasn’t the greatest tonight. While he was good defensively, he also tended to back up a bit too much, to the point where he was conceding clean entries when he had an opportunity to kill the play earlier.

We’ll break down the other half of the pair, but I think we need to acknowledge the fact that bad games like these can’t be entirely Morgan Rielly’s fault at 5v5.

Should one of these guys be benched? — This is the section where I make the argument to take Alex Kerfoot or Ilya Mikheyev out of the lineup. Let’s start with Kerfoot.

Here’s a list of Leafs with a 5v5 scoring chance share below 50%.

  • Travis Boyd (waived)
  • Mikko Lehtonen (traded)
  • Jimmy Vesey (waived)
  • Nic Petan (waived)
  • Alex Kerfoot

We could bring up his frustrating 14 minutes tonight, but I’m more concerned with the 581 minutes he’s spent under water at even strength in 2021. Unless he’s stapled to Tavares-Nylander’s hip, Kerfoot hasn’t been able to accomplish much of anything at 5v5. He isn’t strong enough to win battles in the dirty areas (i.e. getting man-handled by Tyler Toffoli in the corner), and he isn’t producing enough offense to make up for his poor play-driving numbers (i.e. putting the puck over the net on his only real scoring chance of the game).

With Mikheyev, there’s obvious value in his puck pursuit, especially on the PK. On the other hand, his inability to make plays with the puck on his stick has reached the point where I’m not sure what the differences are between him and Pierre Engvall.

  • Annoying forechecker with a long stick? Check.
  • Zero ability to complete passes in the OZ? Check.
  • Terrible shot selection from distance? Check.
  • Lots of odd-man rushes that never convert? Check.

Since Keefe is so intent on keeping Engvall out of the lineup, frankly, I have to ask: why not Mikheyev too?

1 Star

There’s more to life than Points — I always find it funny when old-school types will tell you not to use numbers to evaluate hockey players, then they proceed to make all of their evaluations based on points (and plus-minus). See: awards voting over the last decade.

Tonight was a great example of why you shouldn’t do that. Morgan Rielly finished the game with two assists but got out-chanced 17-5 at even strength. William Nylander picked up a goal on the power play but got out-chanced 9-1 at evens. At some point, we have to hold players accountable for their impact on the game at 5v5.

What’s weird is that Nylander is usually one of the league’s better play drivers, but as we all know by now, he has a tendency to not fully “engage” himself some nights. This was one of those nights.

He did start moving his feet in the third period after having a talk with Keefe, but that’s too little, too late.

With Rielly, we should mention that he made a great pass to Marner from the point on the PP when it looked like he wanted to shoot it. That’s a great decision from someone I tend to criticize for poor shot selection.

On the other side of the puck, I’d argue the referee defended the rush better than Rielly tonight.

If you’re wondering why Rielly gives up so many shots and chances against, it’s because he fails to take away space in the neutral zone, unlike stripes on Cole Caufield here.

Justin Holl (RD, #3) — When he’s defending well, it looks like this.

Awkwardly getting his stick on the puck at just the right moment. The opposite of that happened on the Suzuki goal, with Holl giving him too much of a gap to get the shot off.

Holl also got burned by Armia on this weird play.

Sometimes it’s just not your night.

John Tavares (C, #91) — This was a “burn the tape” game for Tavares. There were multiple blown coverages defensively, lots of turnovers in bad areas of the ice, and limited offensive chances until later in the third period when the game was out of hand. We can blame Nylander and Galchenyuk all we want, but at the end of the day, your center is expected to provide more 200-foot value than Tavares did tonight.

He’s been on fire of late, so we know he’s better than this.


Heat Map

Here’s a quick look at where each team’s shots were coming from at even strength, courtesy of Natural Stat Trick.

This is the type of game that makes my head hurt as a stats nerd.

The shots were a 51-49 split in favour of Toronto, although Montreal controlled 57 percent of the scoring chances but somehow lost the xG battle to Toronto, who had 60 percent of those.

All of this is to say, I have no clue what to do with that information, especially since score effects kicked in pretty early.


Game Score

Game score is a metric developed by The Athletic’s Dom Luszczyszyn to measure single-game performance. You can read more about it here.


Tweets of the Night

Wait, Adam Fox has more points and a better plus-minus than Victor Hedman? Maybe awards voting comes down to having a big name more than anything.

Internet, do your thing with this one.

It’s too bad we don’t get a full 82-game schedule to see what a healthy Matthews could’ve accomplished this year. It’s right up there with some of the all-time great scoring seasons.

This is one of the better articles I’ve read in a while. Highly recommend checking it out when you have the time.

Sometimes you have to look around and count your blessings, especially considering how messed up things have been for the last 13.5 months.


Final Grade: B-

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2021-04-29 05:29:54Z
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Connor McDavid has another three-point night as Oilers edge Jets - Sportsnet.ca

WINNIPEG -- A pair of power-play goals powered the Edmonton Oilers to a 3-1 win over the Winnipeg Jets on Wednesday.

Tyson Barrie and Ryan Nugent-Hopkins each had a goal and an assist for Edmonton (29-26-2), and Leon Draisaitl burried an empty-net strike with nine seconds on the clock. Connor McDavid helped out on all three goals.

Blake Wheeler scored the lone goal for Winnipeg (27-18-3), temporarily drawing the Jets even early in the second period with his first goal since March 26.

Oilers netminder Mikko Koskinen posted 29 saves to collect his 11th win of the season. Connor Hellebuyck stopped 24-of-26 for the Jets.

The result extended Winnipeg's longest losing skid of the season to five games. Edmonton has won four of its last five outings.

It was the final matchup of the regular season between the two teams, with the Oilers winning seven of nine games, including a decisive 6-1 victory on Monday.

Edmonton sits second in the all-Canadian North Division, seven points back of the Toronto Maple Leafs. Winnipeg is in third, three points behind the Oilers.

McDavid helped set up Draisaitl's empty-net goal, slipping the puck up the boards through the neutral zone as time ticked down. The German sniper slid a shot into the yawning net for his 24th goal of the season.

The Jets pushed hard for the equalizer in the third, outshooting the Oilers 8-1 across the first half of the period, but couldn't get a puck past Koskinen.

Winnipeg got a chance with the man advantage when Kailer Yamamoto was sent to the penalty box for slashing 15:33 into the the third.

Paul Stastny had an excellent chance in tight midway through the power play but Koskinen punched the wrist shot away with his blocker.

Yamamoto picked up the puck as he returned to the ice and streaked away on a breakaway. Hellebuyck's diving, spread-eagle save kept the score at 2-1.

The Oilers got their second power-play goal of the night 6:20 into the second after Wheeler was handed a double-minor for a high stick that left Ethan Bear with a cut over his lip.

Nugent-Hopkins wasted no time, riffling a shot in past the far post just 12 seconds into the man advantage to make it 2-1.

The Oilers forward has 14 goals on the season, including five against the Jets.

Wheeler drew Winnipeg even earlier in the middle frame after Andrew Copp forced Dmitry Kulikov to turn over the puck along the end boards.

Copp shipped the puck out to Wheeler in the right face-off circle and the Jets captain blasted a shot past Koskinen for his 11th of the season.

The Oilers opened the scoring with a power-play strike 11:52 into the game Wednesday after Wheeler was called for tripping.

McDavid sliced a pass to Barrie at the top of the slot and the defenceman ripped it past Hellebuyck into the top of the net.

The goal was Barrie's seventh of the season.

Edmonton was 2 for 3 with the man advantage Wednesday. Winnipeg was 0 for 1 on the power play.

It's a quick turnaround for the Oilers, who'll be in Calgary Thursday to face the Flames. The Jets will visit the Canadiens in Montreal on Friday.

NOTES: McDavid has 22 points (seven goals, 15 assists) against the Jets this season. He also put up 21 points (four goals, 17 assists) against the Ottawa Senators this year. ... McDavid is on a five-game point streak with five goals and 10 assists since April 10.

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2021-04-29 03:48:00Z
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Blue Jays fall to Nationals in Springer's debut - TSN

Erick Fedde went six strong innings, Josh Harrison hit a three-run homer and the Washington Nationals beat Toronto 8-2 in George Springer’s Blue Jays debut Wednesday night.

Fedde (2-2) allowed one run and two hits, including a fifth-inning solo homer by Lourdes Gurriel Jr. The right-hander struck out seven and walked three.

“With cutter, sinker, the combination is really good because he works both sides of the plate,” Washington manager Dave Martinez said. “Today he threw a lot of curveballs, and it was effective for him as well. When you get can all those pitches in the strike zone as you can see he's real tough to hit.”

Harrison got his third homer in 16 at-bats against Steven Matz (4-1), a three-run shot in the fourth that made it 6-0.

Springer, who signed a team-record $150 million, six-year deal this off-season, went 0 for 4. The World Series MVP when Houston won its first title in 2017 missed time in spring training and the start of the season because of a strained oblique and later due to a right quadriceps strain.

“He ran fine, saw a lot of pitches, which is good,” Blue Jays manager Charlie Montoyo said.

Trea Turner had four hits and Josh Bell also homered for the Nationals.

Toronto got an eighth-inning solo homer from Bo Bichette.

Matz, acquired from the New York Mets in January after going 0-5 with a 9.68 ERA last season, had won his first four starts for Toronto. He gave up six runs and eight hits over 3 2/3 innings.

The lefty is 1-8 against Washington. Since the start of last season, Matz has allowed 22 earned runs and eight homers over 14 innings in four games against the Nationals.

“He just wasn't as sharp today," Montoyo said. “He still has the stuff but didn't locate as well.”

Ryan Zimmerman drove in two with a single during a three-run third. Bell hit a two-run homer in the fifth.

Toronto loaded the bases with two outs in the third but failed to score when Turner, at short, fielded Randal Grichuk’s slow grounder barehanded and threw him out at first.

“I remember that ball just trickled by me ... you've got to be kidding me,” Fedde said. “I think my initial reaction was ‘Oh no, it's bare hand.' Then an unbelievable play.”

Blue Jays catcher Danny Jansen went 0 for 3 with a walk. He is hitless in a career-long 34 at-bats.

MORE TO COME

Springer feels that teammate Vladimir Guerrero Jr. hasn’t even scratched the surface of what he can become. Guerrero hit three homers and drove in seven runs at the age of 22 years, 42 days in Tuesday’s 9-5 win over Washington to become the youngest player ever with that stat line.

“I think the most impressive part is a lot of people forget how young he actually is,” Springer said. “I think he’s starting to understand the things that he can do offensively."

Guerrero went 0 for 3 and was intentionally walked Wednesday.

SUN INFIELD

Blue Jays 3B Joe Panik appeared to lose Zimmerman’s high-hop single during the first inning in the sun, which was brightly shining just over the low single deck roof at TD Ballpark.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Nationals: RHP Stephen Strasburg (right shoulder) could throw off a bullpen mound this weekend. ... Washington is evaluating if LHP Jon Lester (COVID-19) will pitch next in a big league game or again at the alternate site. He had a bullpen session Wednesday.

Blue Jays: Hyun Jin Ryu (right glute strain) went on the 10-day IL but Montoyo is hopeful the left-hander will miss only one start.

UP NEXT

Nationals: Will face Miami RHP Pablo López (0-2) on Friday night.

Blue Jays: LHP Robbie Ray (0-1) will start Friday night against Atlanta.

___

More AP MLB: https://apnews.com/hub/MLB and https://twitter.com/AP_Sports

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2021-04-29 02:11:14Z
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