Senin, 28 Februari 2022

FIFA and UEFA suspend Russia from international football and clubs from European competition - The Athletic

FIFA has suspended Russia from competing in international games until further notice due to their invasion of Ukraine.

The suspension means Russia will not play its European World Cup play-off semi-final against Poland on March 24.

Russia’s clubs have also been suspended from European competition by UEFA — which means Spartak Moscow will not play in the Europa League against RB Leipzig and the German side automatically qualify for the quarter-finals.

A statement from FIFA and UEFA read: “Following the initial decisions adopted by the FIFA Council and the UEFA Executive Committee, which envisaged the adoption of additional measures, FIFA and UEFA have today decided together that all Russian teams, whether national representative teams or club teams, shall be suspended from participation in both FIFA and UEFA competitions until further notice.

“These decisions were adopted today by the Bureau of the FIFA Council and the Executive Committee of UEFA, respectively the highest decision-making bodies of both institutions on such urgent matters.

“Football is fully united here and in full solidarity with all the people affected in Ukraine. Both presidents hope that the situation in Ukraine will improve significantly and rapidly so that football can again be a vector for unity and peace amongst people.”

It has not yet been confirmed whether Poland will receive a bye to their play-off final against Sweden or Czech Republic, or whether they will face another opponent.

All three nations had said they would refuse to play against any Russian side.

UEFA will also decide at a later date whether Russia’s women’s team will be able to compete at the Women’s European Championship this summer.

FIFA had previously said it would allow a Russian side to compete under the name “Football Union of Russia” (RFU), but not play matches in the country or display flags.

The ban from FIFA follows international condemnation of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

Earlier on Monday, the Ukrainian ministry of sport called for all international sporting bodies to exclude Russian teams and athletes from competition.

The International Olympic Committee (IOC) had made a similar recommendation, including Belarussian athletes and teams too.

Last week, UEFA moved this year’s Champions League final from the Gazprom Arena in Saint Petersburg to Paris’ Stade de France.

(Photo: Wolfgang Rattay - Pool/Getty Images)

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2022-02-28 16:34:33Z
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With deadline looming, baseball risks missing bigger picture - Sportsnet.ca

TORONTO – When these negotiations started, they offered baseball’s owners and players a chance to think big.

For instance: Could all involved benefit from two new expansion teams? Beyond a pitch clock, what on-field changes could allow baseball to evolve at a time when the entertainment landscape is more competitive than ever? Might a shortened season of 144 games or so improve the overall product without excessively cutting into revenues?

In reality, talks have unfolded differently in Jupiter, Fla. this week and the focus has been on dividing revenues rather than growing them. A pitch clock may be coming, but expansion hasn’t been a priority in these talks, which have instead centered around core economics: competitive balance tax thresholds and penalties, arbitration, big-league minimums, revenue sharing, pre-arbitration bonus pools and service time manipulation.

Those areas are essential, no doubt about it. And if there were no agreement on those fronts, we’d soon be able to shift our attention from revenue sharing and anti-tanking measures to spring training, a trade market that’s expected to move quickly and the top remaining free agents – a group that still includes the likes of Carlos Correa, Freddie Freeman and Kris Bryant. You know, actual baseball. The kinds of stories that excite old fans and pull in new ones.

Unfortunately, it’s not happening that way, and on the final day before the league’s deadline to reach a deal with enough lead time to play a full season significant distance remains between the players and owners. Despite suggestions over the weekend that a real pathway to a deal existed, multiple sources close to the negotiations pushed back on that sentiment.

“Beyond absurd,” said one person connected to the players.

According to people familiar with the talks, MLB would have to move significantly off its current position for a deal to come together by Monday. So far, the league has moved slowly and incrementally, waiting six weeks after locking the players out to make an offer then finally moving on the competitive balance tax by just $1 million from $214 million to $215 million – an increase of just 0.47 per cent and far below the players’ target of $245 million.

Because the progress has been so slow, many players are angry. In fact, some believe the owners’ slow pace and apparent willingness to miss games actually brings the players together.

“Only strengthens their resolve,” one industry source said.

Regardless, with each passing hour, it becomes more likely that a labour dispute will cost the sport games for the first time since 1995. And as for the fans? Some existing fans may find the back and forth interesting, but it’s likely baseball will lose more fans than it gains from now until the moment a resolution is reached. Labour talks do not make for entertaining television. Juan Soto, Vladimir Guerrero Jr. and Shohei Ohtani do.

Editor’s Note: One of the 30 MLB teams, the Toronto Blue Jays, is owned by Rogers Communications Inc., which also owns Sportsnet.

It’s still possible that an unforeseen shift will accelerate talks on time to preserve the season. Yet owners have shown little inclination to meet the MLBPA’s asks and sources close to the players say they’re equally resolute – especially after the last CBA nudged the sport’s economics firmly in the owners’ favour.

A week or two of missed games would hardly stop the sport in its tracks, especially if the result is a deal that works for everyone, but the lasting damage done by the 1994-95 strike shows the danger in being cavalier over work stoppages. The risk now is that the game as a whole will suffer.

Already, spring training games are being cancelled every week. Depending on how Monday goes, regular-season games could soon be lost, too. Owners say that would mean missed salaries for the players. Players say that would mean no expanded 2022 playoffs for the owners.

If that’s where these talks are headed, there would be lower revenues, less cultural significance and missed opportunities to create new fans. In other words, the game would be shrinking rather than growing. And if this fight costs baseball revenue and cultural impact, a win on arbitration or the competitive balance tax won’t matter as much in the end.

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2022-02-28 15:06:00Z
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Minggu, 27 Februari 2022

IIHF could make decision at Monday meeting affecting Russian participation - TSN

Russian participation in international hockey events could be in question going forward.

According to TSN Hockey Insider Darren Dreger, the International Ice Hockey Federation will make significant decisions at its council meeting on Monday that will likely impact Russian participation in international events.

This could begin with the men's World Hockey Championship set to begin in mid-May in Finland.

TSN Hockey's Gord Miller tweets there is wide support for an immediate removal of Russian teams for the rest of 2022, including the men's Worlds and the World Junior Championships.

Miller adds there is also support for moving the 2023 World Junior Championship out of Russia.

The 2023 WJC is scheduled to be played in Novosibirsk and Omsk in December and January. There is also a possibility that the Men’s World Championship scheduled for St. Petersburg in the spring of 2023 could be moved, but that decision may not come on Monday, Miller adds.

This comes after Russian forces invaded Ukraine in the early hours Thursday morning local time.

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2022-02-27 18:21:38Z
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Wild @ Flames 2/26 | NHL Highlights 2022 - NHL

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2022-02-27 06:36:06Z
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The Maple Leafs Scored 10 And Have Problems - Defector

Look, I’m no happier to be here right now than you are. Asking What’s the deal with the Maple Leafs? is a fool’s errand at the best of times, let alone before the trade deadline and still two months out from the playoffs. They are confounding, is what they are—as much to their own front office as to observers. They are a danger, but to themselves as much as to others. They are a high-priced sports car doing 90 but ready at any minute to fly apart and smash headlong into a tree. They are, in short, basically what they have been for the last half-decade: fearsome up front, mediocre-to-questionable on the blue line, and a time bomb in net. What that has earned them is a series of first-round exits, but perhaps this year is different. Perhaps this offense is talented enough to overwhelm opponents and paper over the cracks, and perhaps this streaky goalie has what it takes to win in the postseason. Perhaps! But these suppositions too have been part of the annual tradition. You can’t achieve disappointment without them. Anyway, the Leafs nearly blew a 7-2 lead last night.

If it’s ludicrous to stock-take after or infer anything from a single game, it’s not nearly as ludicrous as that game itself. Toronto beat the Red Wings on Saturday evening in Detroit by a score of 10-7, and that is no typo. It was the highest scoring NHL game since 2011, and it was an absolutely carnival of bad goaltending. Per MoneyPuck, the game featured 12.2 goals above expected, given the quantity and quality of scoring chances. Both teams yanked their starting netminders, and one of them even brought theirs back in after having to pull his replacement. Jack Campbell, Toronto’s starter, actually had the best numbers of any goalie in this one, even though he allowed five goals on 25 shots. But Campbell gets the coverage because, of the four men who strapped on the pads and watched a bunch of pucks fly past them, he’s the only one who may be counted on by a good team come the playoffs.

The Leafs have to hope it was the third period of this game that was the fluke rather than the first two, though neither were extensively out of character. Because Toronto looked damn good for 40 minutes, utterly outskating and outworking their opponents. “We lost every puck race, every puck battle, every competition battle,” said Red Wings coach Jeff Blashill, “we lost every single one of them.”

Much of the damage was done by what has emerged as perhaps the best line in hockey, that of Michael Bunting, who is scoring his way to a strong Calder case, Auston Matthews, who leads the league in goals and has somehow found yet another gear this season, and Mitch Marner, who’s having the best shooting and goalscoring season of his career. On Saturday Toronto’s first line combined for six goals and nine assists. Marner, as part of his four-goal game, racked up a natural hat trick in a span of under 10 minutes in the second:

“That line was pretty much unstoppable tonight,” said Leafs coach Sheldon Keefe. It’s that line that Toronto will be counting on to overpower playoff opponents, and even ones capable of siccing talented checking lines on them will find it hard to keep them off the board for a full 60. The top line—give or take some sort of coming back to earth for Bunting, who was a career Coyotes AHLer until this magical rookie year—is not the problem. Depth scoring is, though maybe not a huge one. Unfortunately it’s one that may have to go unaddressed, as the Leafs’ desire to pick up a top-six forward at the deadline may fall by the wayside thanks to a greater need for another defenseman. And even that may not be their biggest hole.

Jack Campbell has gone from feel-good story to another in a long line of Leafs goalies with big blinking question marks. He started off this season with a Vezina-worthy run, but since the new year he’s sported a sub-.900 save percentage. His offense has picked him up more often as not—as they did in this one—but it’s hard to compare him to the other netminders the Leafs may face in the playoffs and feel confident about Toronto’s chances against the likes of a Vasilevskiy or a Bobrovsky, to say nothing of potential later-round match-ups in a strong Eastern Conference.

Speaking of great East goalies: That Freddie Andersen thrived the second he got out of Toronto may hint that the Leafs’ back-end woes are significantly a function of their inability to stop a rush or clear the front of their own net, but when Campbell has been bad, he’s been really bad. Campbell entered the third period on Saturday looking to protect a 7-2 lead, and promptly allowed three goals in under five minutes before getting the hook. The first and third goals of this sequence are among the softest you’ll ever see.

“He’s got to be better,” Keefe said of Campbell. “That goal to start the period is a nothing play, really. It’s a routine save that he can make and he doesn’t. And then it kind of still snowballs, obviously, from there.”

Petr Mrazek wasn’t much better, allowing two goals on eight shots in relief, but the Leafs offense yet again bailed the team out, tacking on a few more for the least comfortable 10-7 win you’ll ever see.

“I’m putting Petr Mrazek in a horrible spot,” Keefe said. “I mean, if there’s ever been a time where a goalie knew for sure he wouldn’t be going into a game, that would probably be it. I’m sure he was pretty much already on the plane in his mind. And then all of a sudden, he’s got to go into a crazy game. I thought it was important to make that change at that time.”

It was a crazy game, and a wildly entertaining one—the NHL is perhaps not thrilled that it overshadowed an outdoor game in Nashville. But these Leafs have a way of demanding attention, for reasons both good and … otherwise. No deficit is overwhelming to them, but also no lead is safe. That makes for fun, fascinating hockey to watch, but not an ideal roster with which to enter the postseason. With a later-than-usual trade deadline of March 21, the front office still has time to come to a decision on whether it can trust Campbell to try to reverse historic fortunes. There may be an unusual number of quality goalies available at the deadline, and if Campbell can’t reverse his slide, I’d expect the Leafs to go get one. With a looming first-round matchup against a more complete team, Toronto is still playing catch-up, no matter how many goals it can score.

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2022-02-27 14:25:00Z
1315490342

Marner, ‘dumbfounded’ Maple Leafs salvage highest-scoring win since ’80s - Sportsnet.ca

“Welcome to the 1980s!” Sportsnet play-by-play czar Chris Cuthbert said during a third period that should’ve forced TV viewers to adjust their antennae. Or duck outside and check their driveway for a DeLorean.

Because what in the name of Miroslav Frycer were they watching?

The final score was 10-7.

And, no, neither the Detroit Lions nor the Toronto Argonauts were playing.

Same goes for the four goalies involved, three of whom were pulled due to performance.

“Wild game, completely,” Mitch Marner said.

“I've never played in a game like that," Auston Matthews said. “I don’t really have words for that third.”

The Toronto Maple Leafs led the Detroit Red Wings 7-2 after 40 minutes on Saturday.

In a night terror disguised as reality, the Leafs saw that goose-down cushion flatten to 7-6, then 8-7, before they pulled Jack Campbell, burned their timeout, and beared down.

“Dumbfounded” is how coach Sheldon Keefe described his bench.

“Hockey’s a funny game,” Michael Bunting said. “It wasn’t that fun to be a part of because we were getting scored on, and then it was fun again. It was up and down emotions.”

Key rush goals from depth wingers Ilya Mikheyev and Ondrej Kase (shorthanded) righted the ship and stunted a crowd-charged comeback.

“Adversity comes in different forms,” Keefe said. “When push came to shove, our team rose up.”

So, the Leafs sigh relief and jet out of Motown on the happy side of the franchise’s highest-scoring game since the Leafs defeated the Edmonton Oilers 11-9 on Jan. 8, 1986.

Frycer — Petr Mrazek’s first agent — snapped four goals for Toronto that night. Wayne Gretzky ripped a hat trick and posted six points.

In Saturday’s throwback, it was Marner hitting the Wings with four goals and six points, while the hottest trio in hockey, Bunting–Matthews–Marner, combined for a ridiculous six goals and 15 points.

“That line was outstanding today,” Keefe praised.

Marner gets his trick

On 14 occasions in his six seasons, Marner has scored twice in a single game. But not until Saturday has he triggered the caps to rain.

Well, Marner did so in style Saturday, scoring a natural hat trick in a span of eight minutes and 46 seconds during a dominant second period.

“It was pretty cool. I won't lie,” Marner said.

Marner hit ’em with the four to cap off the night, thanks to a very Marner-esque setup by Bunting.

Can’t buy a save

All four goalies appeared in Saturday’s shootout, Detroit’s Alex Nedeljkovic twice.

Here are their save percentages: .800, .760, .750, .714.

Pretty, it was not.

Keefe started the suddenly shaky Campbell, in part, because he wanted to give him a game in his home state of Michigan.

But Campbell was so out of sorts to start the third period — allowing four goals in a five-minute span — that he was yanked with a lead.

Although the coach knew he was putting Mrazek in “a horrible spot,” throwing him in cold and late as the Wings stormed, he also couldn’t stand there and let Campbell’s confidence crumble. Or two points slip away.

The goaltending is a growing issue in Toronto.

One must believe Mrazek starts Monday in Washington, right?

Is Robertson being showcased?

“Time flies,” said Nick Robertson as he conducted his Detroit pre-game media availability inside the dressing room of the Little Caesars AAA club, his alma mater.

Robertson — also a former Toronto Red Wing in his minor hockey travels — found himself back in a familiar town facing some familiar colours.

“It’s kind of surreal. It kind of brings you back,” Robertson went on. “I was proud to wear these colours, and now I’m here playing for the Leafs.”

The 20-year-old was stuck in snowy traffic Friday, expecting a trip to Rochester with the AHL Marlies when he received a call from GM Kyle Dubas. The highly touted and often injured prospect was getting called up to the Show.

Pleased with his progression since returning from October’s broken leg but believing he needs more reps to reach his “absolute best,” Dubas’s call took the winger by surprise.

Unlike the 2020 playoff bubble and his six appearances in the Canadian Division, this time Robertson would be performing for fans.

"I'm just excited,” he said. “To be in a familiar area like Michigan, because I grew up here, it's nice to have some family friends come out for the game."

With Pierre Engvall sidelined due to illness, Robertson skated 9:19 on the fourth line, nearly scoring on a wraparound attempt, registering three shots with a minus-1 rating, and taking a boarding penalty.

An NHL-level left wing, Kyle Clifford, was already on the Leafs roster. So, was Robertson being rewarded for his determined play on the farm? Or is he being showcased a few weeks out from the trade deadline?

“Anything’s possible,” Robertson told The Athletic’s Joshua Kloke of the March 21 trade deadline. “I’ve got to prepare myself and showcase myself out there for any possibilities.”

“I’ve seen guys get traded out of nowhere, and they thought they were going to be somewhere forever. Like I said, I want to play as well as possible. And after the deadline, if I’m here, I’m here. I don’t know what’s going to happen.”

Keefe says the Leafs will take it a day at a time with Robertson: “We want to give him some more experience and an opportunity to grow.”

Bunting refuses to change his game

Bunting says he won’t alter his greasy, in-your-grill, crawl-under-your-skin style of play despite his recent $2,000 fine for embellishment.

He vows to continue to crash the crease, stare down opponents, and absorb their hacks and whacks.

“I’m willing to put the body on the line,” Bunting said. “If I get cross-checked and taken down, it's a power play for the team.

“That gritty style—I don’t shy away from that,” he went on. “It gets me into the game. It kinda wakes me up. So, I don’t mind it.”

Keefe shrugged off the ding for diving. Because the emotional Bunting is always in the thick of the action, officials are paying attention.

“The big thing with Bunts is that he’s an absolute competitor,” Keefe said. “Because he’s involved in everything, he’s usually the most hated guy on the ice.”

When Toronto visited Detroit last month, Bunting registered a hat trick. Matthews teased his winger, asking if he’d be eating the same pre-game meal. Bunting conceded he probably would. Chicken and pasta. Typical.

The food fueled Bunting’s five-point showing and a climb up the Calder Trophy power rankings.

He co-leads all rookies in goals (18) and now ranks second in points (40).

Hey! Detroit has a couple of Calder candidates, too

Some nice insight into the Red Wings’ stud freshmen by teammate Sam Gagner on Spittin’ Chiclets this week.

Gagner on Mortiz Seider: “He has great hockey IQ. He's one of those guys who isn't afraid of the moment — ever. If you saw a clip earlier in the year, after a whistle, he just takes the puck from [Victor] Hedman and is just toying with him. It's situations like that that he's just not scared of the moment, which is awesome. I imagine in playoff hockey he’s going to be an absolute beast.”

Gagner on Lucas Raymond, who enjoyed a three-point Saturday: “He controls the game like a Mitch Marner would. Everything kind of goes through him. The puck’s on his stick all the time. He makes a ton of great plays. He's got amazing hockey IQ. And he’s one of those guys who just keeps getting better as the year goes on. It's been awesome. Both those kids, they're great kids, too. They want to get better. So, it's been a lot of fun.”

One-Timers: Jake Muzzin (concussion) was spotted around the Maple Leafs practice facility Friday, which is a positive sign. If he’s healthy before season’s end, he’ll play…. John Tavares did not get a point Saturday, extending his goal drought to 12 games, his longest since 2011-12…. Justin Holl had himself a three-assist, plus-3 night, a fine response after consecutive healthy scratches…. Ilya Lyubushkin registered his first point as a Leaf.

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2022-02-27 05:25:00Z
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Lehkonen, Hammond lead Habs to fifth straight win - TSN

HKN-Canadiens-Senators (1st Writethru)

Habs extend win streak to five on Lehkonen pair

Lisa Wallace

OTTAWA, Feb 26 The Canadian Press -

Artturi Lehkonen had a pair of goals Saturday night in the Montreal Canadiens' 2-1 win over the Ottawa Senators to extend their win streak to five games, but everyone was talking about Andrew Hammond.

Hammond stopped 26 shots for the Canadiens in his return to the Canadian Tire Centre after playing 55 games for the Senators between 2014 and 2016. The 34-year-old is best known for his outstanding run to the playoffs in 2015 where he posted a 20-1-2 record.

Hammond was traded to Colorado in 2017 and has been playing in the American Hockey League for the most part until he was traded to Montreal (13-33-7) a couple of weeks ago. Last weekend he played his first game in the NHL in nearly four years.

Fans in Ottawa clearly haven’t forgotten about the “Hamburglar,” as he was known, and threw burgers on the ice following a video tribute.

“I have no animosity or anything like that towards them, but I think it’s natural any time you’re playing your former team, you’d like to win,” said Hammond. “Obviously, very happy that we were able to do that tonight. Just a really, I thought, grinding game by us. You’ve got to win lots of different ways. It was fun to be a part of.

“They came in waves at times, but for the most part I think we kept them to the outside and made my job very easy.”

There are only a couple of Senators left who played with Hammond and Colin White, who scored the lone goal for Ottawa (19-27-5), was one of them.

“It's great to see him back in the NHL,” said White. “He’s doing great and played a great game.”

It was a momentous evening for White as well, as he made his season debut after suffering a dislocated shoulder in pre-season against Toronto on Oct. 4.

“I felt good, it just felt like another hockey game,” he said. “I was a bit nervous and excited going into it, no nap today, but it felt pretty good to get out there and just playing hockey.

“I just went out there and had fun today and (Connor Brown) made an unreal play and made it a little bit easier for me and it was just super exciting for me to score that.”

White scored on the power play early in the second period after Brown made a great pass out front.

The Senators found themselves short-handed before the game even started as both Thomas Chabot and Nikita Zaitsev were deemed unable to play just prior to warm-up. It was not COVID-19 related. That left Ottawa playing with just five defencemen.

“When you’ve got five 'D' you’ve got to play with a certain set of rules and we had some guys do it and some didn't and we didn't give our 'D' enough of a breather,” said Senators coach D.J. Smith. “Give them credit because they played hard.”

The win allowed the Canadiens to extend their winning streak to five games. Players seem to be buying into new head coach Martin St. Louis and it’s paying off.

“When you have a new coach, I think you’ll see that early on guys want to show you that they’re a team-first guy,” said St. Louis. “I feel like we’ve gotten better and better and better and we’re doing it consistently now.

"We come to work, take care of the team, play the game the right way. You’re going to be in a lot of games. You don’t know if you’re going to score all the goals or get all the saves, but at the end of the day, you’ve given yourself a really good chance to win if you’ve played that way.”

Montreal opened the scoring late in the first at 16:47 as Lehkonen was able to get the better of Victor Mete in front of the net and grab Ben Chiarot’s rebound for his eighth of the season.

After White’s power-play goal Montreal regained the lead late in the second period as Lehkonen scored his second of the game with a slapshot from the high slot at 14:21.

“We’re trying to stay on top of guys, force other teams to make mistakes,” said Lehkonen. “As of now, we’re getting a bit of swagger. Confidence is a huge thing in this league.”

Ottawa had chances in the third, but just couldn’t find a way to beat Hammond who made some key saves.

“Just give them credit,” said Smith. “Defensively, and five guys back all night, they didn't give up odd-man rushes and the goalie made the saves when he had to.”

NOTES: Ottawa has played 12 games in February, the most in the NHL … Mathieu Perreault returned to the Montreal lineup for his first game since Dec. 14 when he suffered a lower-body injury.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Feb. 26, 2022.

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2022-02-27 03:40:13Z
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Sabtu, 26 Februari 2022

Koskinen gives Oilers the goaltending they need in big win - Sportsnet.ca

For a fan base that has spent the past few days howling over what bad goaltending can do to a team, Mikko Koskinen issued a reminder of what happens when the opposite is true.

The score sheet says Koskinen made 44 saves on 47 Florida shots Saturday, but Natural Stat Trick tallied the high danger scoring chances at 21-12 in favour of the Panthers. That puts a fine point on Koskinen’s afternoon, as the Edmonton Oilers snuck out of Florida with a 4-3 regulation win just days after they’d outplayed Tampa and lost on a few iffy goals.

“Today, it was my day,” said Koskinen, 6-0-1 in his last seven starts. He earned a day like this one, where a few shots from the NHL’s highest powered offence found his glove, pads or even mask, rather than finding their way into the net. “Wins are the only thing that I’m counting here, and it was a big win for us. And a big game tomorrow (in Raleigh).”

The subtext on Saturday came from Derek Ryan, who found more ice time when centreman Ryan Nugent-Hopkins left with what looked like a shoulder injury in the first period. All Ryan did with that extra responsibility is score a hat trick — the first of his career at age 35.

“Didn’t plan on getting my first hat trick in the NHL at the ripe old age of 35, but it feels pretty good,” said Ryan. “Yeah, just feels good.”

Ryan is that depth guy that an NHL locker room loves to see pop a few. He opened the scoring on a nice two-on-one saucer pass from Warren Foegele, blasted off a two-on-one over Sergei Bobrovsky’s glove, and then tapped home a perfect pass from Evander Kane to complete the hatty, affording Edmonton a 4-2 lead after 40 minutes.

His teammates were ecstatic.

“Oh yeah, they were they were super happy,” chuckled Koskinen. “Almost too happy after the second period. He should have saved the last goal for the third.”

New head coach Jay Woodcroft has found a way to engage certain players, like Ryan, rugged defenceman Markus Niemelainen and forward Ryan McLeod. The latter two have really come on in the last two weeks, with Niemelainen adding a completely new and physical layer to Edmonton’s defence, while McLeod has gained some assertiveness and confidence, two welcome additions to his big, fast frame.

Saturday, it was the old man’s turn however, to show that he can contribute at 13 and 14 minutes per night, as opposed to seven and sometimes six under the former staff.

“Yeah, confidence is moving for sure,” said Ryan, the first University of Alberta Golden Bear grad to score an NHL hat trick. “When you say a little bit more opportunity, I think it's a lot more opportunity — that’s definitely translated into some confidence in myself and the line I’ve been playing on.

“It’s hard to get your momentum, your rhythm going in the game (at seven minutes). Woody’s getting me out there in key situations and yeah, I’m enjoying it.”

Ryan Lomberg rode Nugent-Hopkins out along the boards in the first period, a clean but hard hit that injured the Oilers centre. The team called it an “upper body injury,” but it looked like a shoulder injury, and not good news for an important piece of this lineup.

It’s funny — Edmonton held Tampa to just 23 shots and lost 5-3 on Wednesday. Three days later, they get outshot 47-22 and win.

As for Koskinen, when kept in a role where he shares the net, the big Finn has shown he can win games. His save percentage crawled to .901 with this stellar performance, but his record is more than respectable at 18-8-2.

Like he said earlier, “Wins are the only thing that I’m counting here.”

“For him to turn in a performance like that today, against a pretty good hockey team that we took two points from in their building -- we needed it and he was excellent,” marvelled Woodcroft. “That’s a really good hockey team. They’re at where they’re at (third overall in the NHL) for a reason. They lead the NHL in goals for a reason.”

Mike Smith will likely start Sunday in Raleigh against the NHL’s No. 2 club, the Carolina Hurricanes, but you can pencil in Koskinen for one or both of the final two starts on this trip in Philadelphia and Chicago.

As for the rest of the team, it was survival mode at times, down to 10 forwards against a Panthers club that comes in waves. Edmonton’s young defence is still too soft down low, Evan Bouchard in particular. As a group they could use some snarl in front of their netminder.

With Duncan Keith, out the kids are getting their ice time, but between Philip Broberg (7:12 Saturday), William Lagesson (11:20), Bouchard (12:21) and Niemelainen (13:50), it’s the big Finn that has stepped in alongside Bouchard as two kids who will still be playing once everyone is healthy.

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2022-02-26 21:51:00Z
1315657824

Poland refuses to play World Cup qualifier with Russia - Al Jazeera English

Poland and Sweden will not play a Qatar 2022 playoff in March in Moscow after Russia launched a full-scale invasion of Ukraine.

Poland will not play its football World Cup qualifier against Russia next month following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

“In light of the escalation of the Russian Federation’s aggression against Ukraine, the Polish national team is not going to play a match against Russian Republic,” the president of the Polish Football Association, Cezary Kulesza, said on Saturday.

It is the “only correct decision,” he said.

Moscow is scheduled to host Poland in the semi-finals of its strand of the World Cup playoffs on March 24 and, if its team advances, is scheduled to host either Sweden or the Czech Republic on March 29 in the Path B final.

Kulesza added the association was in talks with Swedish and Czech associations to present a common position to FIFA.

Polish national team players also took to social media to express their support for the move.

National team captain Robert Lewandowski said he couldn’t “imagine playing a match with the Russian National Team in a situation when armed aggression in Ukraine continues”.

“Russian footballers and fans are not responsible for this, but we can’t pretend that nothing is happening,” he wrote on Twitter.

Kamil Glik, Mateusz Klich, Matty Cash and other players said it was not an easy decision but “there are more important things in life than football”.

They also expressed solidarity with Ukraine “and our friend from the national team, Tomasz Kedziora, who is still in Kyiv with his family”.

Sweden later on Saturday also announced it would not play the soccer World Cup qualifiers against Russia.

“The illegal and deeply unjust invasion of Ukraine currently makes all football exchanges with Russia impossible,” Swedish Football Association chairman Karl-Erik Nilsson said.

“We therefore urge FIFA to decide that the playoff matches in March in which Russia participates will be cancelled. But regardless of what FIFA chooses to do, we will not play against Russia in March.”

The conflict has entered a third day since Russian leader Vladimir Putin unleashed a full-scale invasion that has killed dozens of people, forced more than 100,000 to flee Ukraine in just 48 hours and sparked fears of a wider conflict in Europe.

FIFA president Gianni Infantino refused to take a decision regarding the playoffs when he held a press conference hours after the invasion began on Thursday.

He said “FIFA condemns the use of force” adding he was “shocked” by what he had seen but would not be rushed into a decision over moving the matches.

“The first match is in a month, we hope of course that this situation will be resolved well before then,” he said.

European football’s governing body UEFA punished Russia on Friday by stripping Saint Petersburg of hosting European club football’s showpiece event the Champions League final on May 28 and awarded it to Paris.

UEFA made no reference to its relationship with Gazprom, the Russian state energy giant that is one of their key sponsors, but is reportedly in talks to cut ties.

It also announced that Russian and Ukrainian clubs and national teams competing in international competitions must play home matches at neutral venues “until further notice”.

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2022-02-26 11:58:28Z
CAIiEKnsPlws2bN3N5N_BnFHQDkqFQgEKgwIACoFCAowhgIwkDgwufqTBw

Jets fail another litmus test to Avalanche as significant decisions loom - Sportsnet.ca

This is what an elite team looks like when it’s clicking on all cylinders.

For one period on Friday night, the Winnipeg Jets made it look like they not only had what it takes to hang with the team that’s currently residing in the NHLs penthouse, but they built a 3-0 advantage against the Colorado Avalanche.

To say they had dominated the flow of play wasn’t completely accurate, though it’s exactly what happened to them when the Avalanche found another gear during the final 40 minutes of play and the Jets provided absolutely no pushback whatsoever.

When the scoreboard read 6-3 for the Avalanche after the final buzzer sounded, the truth of the matter was that the final tally was a touch flattering for the Jets.

This game wasn’t even that close, even after starting with a three-goal headstart.

For all the talk about the Jets possibly pushing back into contender status this season, it was another litmus test this team failed miserably.

Right now, the Jets barely even resemble a bubble team, having dropped four consecutive games and collected just one of a possible eight points going into Sunday’s matinee against the Arizona Coyotes.

At a time where the Jets should be showing urgency and playing up to a certain standard, they simply aren’t meeting expectations - either of the internal or external variety.

That the Jets remain only six points out of the final playoff spot in the Western Conference with a record of 22-21-9 seems like nothing but a mirage, considering they would need to leapfrog four teams to accomplish that goal - only to likely earn a first-round date with the Avalanche.

For as much talk there has been about the Jets still having 30 games to get things sorted out, efforts like Friday night paint a picture that is not nearly as rosy.

It’s games like this that reinforce the belief there just might be something wrong with the mix of players assembled or the construction of the roster.

This group, though it doesn’t lack talent, is not greater than the sum of its parts - and that’s a problem Jets general manager Kevin Cheveldayoff is going to need to address.

The closer things get to the March 21 NHL trade deadline, the more apparent it’s become that the Jets are looking more and more like a team that’s in need of another major shake-up.

Yes, the pending unrestricted free agents like forwards Andrew Copp and Paul Stastny are going to be the primary focus for Cheveldayoff in terms of maximizing his return, but making a few other moves during the coming weeks could be a pre-emptive strike toward whatever plans the organization has for bolstering the squad for the 2022-23 campaign and beyond.

Despite several talented forwards - even with guys like Nikolaj Ehlers, Cole Perfetti and Copp sidelined due to injury - the Jets don’t find the back of the net often enough.

They’ve also had far too many games when the group is carried by one line - and maybe gets a contribution on special teams, as was the case Friday when Adam Lowry scored shorthanded to augment the two goals created by the trio of Kyle Connor (one goal), Evgeny Svechnikov (one goal) and Pierre-Luc Dubois (two assists).

“I wish I had the answer,” Jets interim head coach Dave Lowry told reporters in Denver. “Well, we’re going to have to continue to demand (consistency). Big thing is that our level of desperation has to continually increase.”

Even after bringing in Brenden Dillon and Nate Schmidt during the off-season to upgrade the blue line, the Jets still don’t defend well enough - and that’s not pointing the finger at either player by any stretch of the imagination.

To recap, the Jets don’t score enough, nor are they a defensive juggernaut.

They’re not overly physical and the goal of becoming a tougher team to play against remains very much a work in progress.

That’s not exactly a recipe for sustained success.

It’s also part of the reason the Jets seem to be suffering through a bit of an identity crisis.

“If you look at the best teams in the NHL, they don’t always play their ‘A’ game. There’s nights that they’re not the best with the puck, there’s nights they don’t have their best legs. But they can fall back on things that they do well, and they do it consistently,” said Dubois. “And that’s why they win games, even when they’re not feeling great. And when they’re feeling great, they blow teams out of the water. Consistency of the team and consistency of the players are two different things.

“But I think if we have an identity to fall back on every night, you know what kind of team is going to show up for us. That’s when you have consistency. You lose some, but if you play to your identity, if you have an identity and you play to it, you’ll lose some games but you’ll win some when you don’t even play well. And I think we’re still trying to find what our identity is here, and that’s what’s hurting us. We just have to find what our identity is and do it.”

Working through that frustration is essential for the Jets to break through this rough patch.

“It’s one of those things where, collectively and individually, it’s about accountability and looking in the mirror and trying to find what you bring to the table, what you can contribute collectively and go from there and build it out as the season wears on,” said Jets centre Adam Lowry. “We’re over halfway and you’d like to have that ironed out and clearly, that’s an area we still need to get sorted out really fast here.”

Connor Hellebuyck may have allowed a goal or two on Friday that he wouldn’t like, but he also faced a barrage of shots once again and has been subjected to more shots on goal than any other goalie in the NHL.

By making his 44th start in 52 games against the Avalanche, Hellebuyck has been shouldering an enormous load.

He remains the foundation of this Jets team and remains under contract for two more seasons after this one, that’s why the onus is on Cheveldayoff to retool this team on the fly.

In a situation where all of the Jets top-end players needed to be at their absolute best on Friday, they didn’t get enough from several of those big guns.

On the flip side, Avalanche captain Gabriel Landeskog notched his second hat trick in as many outings against the Jets and top centre Nathan MacKinnon scored twice and racked up a ridiculous 14 shots on goal and 16 shot attempts to pace the offensive attack.

The Avalanche will obviously need to exorcise a few playoff demons this spring, but they look like a team that is built for a long playoff run.

They’ve got a high-octane offence and added plenty of depth both up front and on defence, while goalie Darcy Kuemper has been in a groove after a bit of an uneven start.

Even after a rocky first period, Avalanche backup goalie Pavel Francouz slammed the door as his teammates began chipping away at the deficit and then eventually took complete control.

If the Avalanche are now the gold standard in terms of how teams are put together, the Jets are in need of an injection of talent - and possibly a bit more youth - if they want to compete with them in the Central Division.

It’s admirable when a GM like Cheveldayoff doubles down on his belief in the group he’s assembled like he did coming out of the NHL All-Star break, but when his team doesn’t respond or get the job done, the management team has no choice but to have difficult discussions and ultimately make hard decisions when it comes to the direction this organization plans to go.

As the days go by, there are more and more signs that something significant must be done.

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2022-02-26 13:46:00Z
1313987279

Jumat, 25 Februari 2022

'Please, no more war': Alex Ovechkin responds to Russia's invasion of Ukraine - The Athletic

Washington Capitals captain and Russian native Alex Ovechkin asked for "no more war" amid Russia's attack on Ukraine while speaking with reporters on Friday. The comments are the first Ovechkin has made publicly since Russia launched its attack on Ukraine on Thursday.

"It's a hard situation. I have family back in Russia and it is scary moments," Ovechkin said. "But we can't do anything. We just hope it going to be end soon and everything is going to be all right."

He added: "Please, no more war. It doesn't matter who is in the war — Russia, Ukraine, different countries — I think we live in a world, like, we have to live in peace and a great world."

Ovechkin is a native of Moscow, Russia's capital, and spends a significant amount of time of the NHL's offseason in his home country. The 36-year-old winger is a known backer of Russian President Vladimir Putin, sharing his support on social media over the years. In 2017, Ovechkin announced on Instagram that he was organizing a movement to support Putin. Ovechkin's Instagram profile picture is a photo of him with Putin, who gave the Capitals star an ornamental tea set as a wedding gift for his 2016 nuptials. Putin also sent a telegram that was read at the wedding reception.

When asked if he supports Putin as the president leads the invasion of Ukraine, Ovechkin reiterated how he hopes the attack ends soon.

"Well, he is my president. But how I said, I am not in politics. I am an athlete and you know, how I said, I hope everything is going to be done soon," Ovechkin said. "It's (a) hard situation right now for both sides and everything. Everything I hope is going to end. I'm not in control of this situation."

Russia launched its attack on Ukraine with air and missile strikes, targeting the country's capital, Kyiv. Thousands are fleeing the region, with 29,000 Ukrainians having crossed into eastern Poland, according to Poland's border service.

(Photo: Scott Taetsch / Getty Images)

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2022-02-25 19:04:51Z
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Canada's Shapovalov upset in Dubai semis; Russia's Rublev makes anti-war plea - CBC Sports

Canada's Denis Shapovalov fell to Czech qualifier Jiri Vesely in a wild semifinal that saw all three sets go to tiebreaks on Friday at the Dubai Tennis Championships.

Shapovalov was serving for the match up 5-4 in the third set before Vesely came back to complete a 6-7 (7), 7-6 (2), 7-6 (3) victory in three hours 12 minutes.

Vesely, who advanced to the semifinals with an upset of top seed Novak Djokovic, will face Russian star Andrey Rublev in Saturday's final.

Rublev defeated Poland's Hubert Hurkacz 3-6, 7-5, 7-6 (5) in the semifinals, then wrote "No War Please" on a TV camera moments after the match.

WATCH | Russian star makes plea for no war in Ukraine:

Russian tennis star writes 'No War Please' on camera, after match

7 hours ago

Duration 0:36

After winning to advance to the final of the Dubai Tennis Championships, world No. 7 Andrey Rublev, who is Russian, wrote "No War Please" on the lens of a broadcast camera. 0:36

In the first matchup between the two players, Vesely often had the sixth-seeded Shapovalov on his heels.

Vesely fired 19 aces and had nine break point chances and converted two, the most crucial being the break in Game 10 of the third set Shapovalov was serving for the victory.

Shapovalov had seven aces and four break point chances. He converted two of those, including a break to put him up 5-4 in the third that he subsequently gave right back.

Vesely forced Shapovalov into three errors in the final tiebreak.

WATCH | Shapovalov falls to Vesely in Dubai semifinal:

Shapovalov falls to qualifier Vesley in Dubai semifinals 3-set thriller

1 hour ago

Duration 4:47

Czech qualifier Jiri Vesely upsets Denis Shapovalov from Richmond Hill, Ont., 6-7 (7), 7-6 (2), 7-6 (3) and advances to his first career ATP 500 final. 4:47

Rublev wrote his message on the camera — a common practice after matches — as Russian troops bore down on Ukraine's capital Friday in an invasion of a democratic country that has fuelled fears of wider war in Europe and triggered worldwide efforts to make Russia stop.

Rublev wasn't asked about the message during his on-court interview immediately following the match.

Compatriot Daniil Medvedev spoke Thursday at the Mexico Open about waking up to news that his country had invaded Ukraine.

"Watching the news from home, waking up here in Mexico, was not easy," said Medvedev, who will become the No. 1 men's player when rankings are announced next week.

"By being a tennis player, I want to promote peace all over the world," Medvedev continued. "We play in so many different countries. It's just not easy to hear all this news. I'm all for peace."

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2022-02-25 19:47:43Z
1285242263

Russia Ukraine Live Blog - TSN

Athletes and teams around the world are reacting to Russia's invasion of Ukraine. Follow the latest from the sports world with TSN.ca's live blog.


Rublev Calls for Peace

Russian tennis player Andrey Rublev wrote "No war please" on the camera following his advancement to the final of the Dubai Tennis Championships.

Rublev is currently ranked seventh in the world. The Moscow-born 24-year-old defeated Hubert Hurkacz in three sets on Friday.

New world No. 1 Daniil Medvedev praised Rublev and his Ukrainian doubles partner Denys Molchanov on Thursday for their win last week at the Marseille Open.

“This was amazing, because people need to stay together,” Medvedev said of the pair.

Medvedev, who will officially become the world No. 1 on Monday, also called for peace after his win over Yoshihito Nishioka Thursday in Acapulco.

“Watching the news from home, waking up here in Mexico, was not easy,” Medvedev said. “By being a tennis player, I want to promote peace all over the world. We play in so many different countries; I’ve been in so many countries as a junior and as a pro. It’s just not easy to hear all this news. ... I’m all for peace.”

“In these moments, you understand that tennis sometimes is not that important," he added. "It was not easy to play and I'm happy that I managed to win the match, but it was bit of a roller-coaster day for me.”



IIHF to meet Monday on Moving events

The International Ice Hockey Federation released a statement on Friday in response to Russia's invasion of Ukraine, condemning the use of military force and announcing that its council will meet on Monday regarding the implications on its events.

Russia is scheduled to host the 2023 World Junior Hockey Championship in December and the 2023 Men's World Championship the following spring.

Read more on that story here.

 


WCF to move European Championships from Russia

(AP) - The World Curling Federation has removed the 2022 European Curling Championships from the Russian city of Perm in response to Russia's invasion of Ukraine.

The WCF said in a release Friday that the decision was made after an emergency meeting of the World Curling Federation board.

The organization said a new host city for the event scheduled for Nov. 19-26 will be named at a later date.

Read more on that story here.
 



IOC Calls for Cancellations in Russia, Belarus

(AP) - The International Olympic Committee urged sports bodies Friday to cancel or move all events they plan to hold in Russia and Belarus, and stop using the countries' flags and national anthems.

The request from the Olympic body came after UEFA moved the Champions League final from St. Petersburg to suburban Paris, and after the governing body of skiing and Formula One pulled upcoming races from Russia.

Read more on this story here.


Jokerit Withdraws from KHL Playoffs

Jokerit Helsinki confirmed Friday the team will not take part in the KHL playoffs following Russia's invasion of Ukraine.

Jokerit was scheduled to open their playoffs against Spartak Moscow on March 1 in Finland.

"My position on the end of the season was clear right on Thursday morning," team owner and general manager Jari Kurri said in a statement, per Google Translate. "However, in accordance with KHL policies, I had to have discussions with the league. That is why we are unfortunately only able to report this now."

"The world is going through really difficult times right now. All our thoughts are with the people suffering from the situation. We hope that a peaceful solution to the situation can be found soon."

Read more here.



Haas Drops Sponsor, Mazepin's Future Unclear

(AP) - American-owned F1 team Haas carried on racing without the sponsorship of Russian company Uralkali on its car Friday and said it hasn't yet decided whether Russian driver Nikita Mazepin will race this year.

Team principal Guenther Steiner said the 22-year-old driver, who did not attend media duties Thursday and Friday, has no guarantees.

“There are no guarantees anywhere. There are governments (involved) and I have no idea what is coming from that side,” Steiner said. “He puts a tough face on it. For sure it bothers him because it’s his own country.”

Read more on that story here.

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2022-02-25 15:59:24Z
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Russia loses Champions League final to Paris; Sochi F1 axed - Sportsnet.ca

LONDON — Russia was stripped of hosting the Champions League final by UEFA on Friday with St. Petersburg replaced by Paris, and Formula One dropped this season's Russian Grand Prix at Sochi, as the invasion of Ukraine drew punitive measures in the sporting world.

The showpiece final in the European men's football season will still be held on May 28 but now at the 80,000-seat Stade de France in the Saint-Denis suburb of the French capital after the decision by UEFA's executive committee.

It followed discussions led by UEFA President Aleksander Ceferin that involved the European Commission and French President Emmanuel Macron in recent days after concerns were raised about the status of Russia retaining such a prestigious event after its aggression toward another European country.

UEFA thanked Macron for his "personal support and commitment to have European club football's most prestigious game moved to France at a time of unparalleled crisis.''

Alexander Dyukov, a Russian member of the UEFA executive committee, complained the decision was taken for "political reasons.'' Dyukov also opposed UEFA ordering Russian clubs and national teams to play at neutral venues until further notice — a ruling also imposed on Ukrainian sides.

The move comes as Russian bombs and troops pounded Ukraine during the invasion's first full day, and world leaders on Friday began to fine-tune a response meant to punish the Russian economy and its leaders, including President Vladimir Putin's inner circle.

The F1 race wasn't due until September in the Black Sea resort of Sochi but the motorsport series leadership decided it would be "impossible'' to stage the Grand Prix after talks with teams and the FIA governing body. American team Haas also dropped the sponsorship of Russian company Uralkali during preseason testing in Barcelona. Nikita Mazepin of Haas is the only Russian driver on the F1 grid this season.

"We are watching the developments in Ukraine with sadness and shock and hope for a swift and peaceful resolution to the present situation,'' F1 said in a statement.

The French government will work with UEFA to help to rescue footballers and their families who "face dire human suffering, destruction and displacement,'' European football's governing body said in a statement.

There is the unresolved matter of Russia still being due to host Poland in World Cup qualifying playoff semifinals in Moscow. Poland wants the game taken out of Russia, but FIFA has yet to decide.

UEFA was more decisive on the Champions League final hosting, which was welcomed by the British government.

"Russia must not be allowed to exploit sporting and cultural events on the world stage to legitimize its unprovoked, premeditated and needless attack against a sovereign democratic state,'' said British Culture Secretary Nadine Dorries, who has the sports brief.

This is the third consecutive year that UEFA has had to change its Champions League final location after two switches due to coronavirus issues.

The Stade de France last hosted the Champions League final 16 years ago, when Barcelona beat Arsenal in the 2006 final.

The 68,000-capacity St. Petersburg stadium was originally picked in 2019 to host the final in 2021. That was postponed by one year in the fallout of disruption caused by the pandemic.

The stadium is named for Russian state-owned energy firm Gazprom, which is also a top-tier UEFA sponsor of the Champions League and European Championship.

UEFA has two weeks before the next set of Champions League games to resolve the issue of Gazprom adverts flashing around stadium pitches. Reinforcing the company's close links to UEFA, Dyukov is a CEO of a Gazprom subsidiary as well as sitting on European football's top decision-making body.

Gazprom's logo has already been removed this week from the jerseys of German club Schalke but it remains a sponsor.

Manchester United has yet to drop Russian state-owned airline Aeroflot as a sponsor despite the company being banned in Britain on Thursday as part of sanctions.

Away from soccer, the International Ski Federation announced that Russia will not host any more of its World Cup events this winter. The decision came after a farcical attempt to hold ski cross races on Friday in the Urals resort Sunny Valley one day after Russia started an invasion of Ukraine.

Only a handful of Russians started and dozens of racers from all other countries did not take part. FIS cited ''the safety of all participants and to maintain the integrity of the World Cup'' for calling off five scheduled events in the next month. Replacement venues are being sought.

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2022-02-25 13:23:00Z
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Flames @ Canucks 2/24 | NHL Highlights 2022 - NHL

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2022-02-25 06:25:27Z
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Kamis, 24 Februari 2022

F1's Vettel won't race in Russia after attack on Ukraine - TSN

Four-time Formula One champion Sebastian Vettel says he will not race in the Russian Grand Prix in September after Russia launched a wide-ranging attack on Ukraine earlier Thursday, hitting cities and bases with airstrikes or shelling.

After President Vladimir Putin defiantly announced he was launching a military operation, Ukraine’s government said Russian tanks and troops rolled across the border.

“I woke up to this morning’s news shocked. I think it’s horrible to see what is happening. Obviously if you look at the calendar we have a race scheduled in Russia (on Sept. 25),” Vettel said Thursday at preseason testing in Barcelona.

“My own opinion is I should not go, I will not go," he said. "I think it’s wrong to race in the country. I’m sorry for the innocent people that are losing their lives, that are getting killed (for) stupid reasons and a very strange and mad leadership.”

The 34-year-old German is head of the Grand Prix Drivers’ Association but says they have not yet discussed the matter.

“I’m sure it’s something we’ll talk about,” the Aston Martin driver said. “But personally I’m shocked and sad to see what’s going on, so we will see going forward but I think my decision is already made."

World champion Max Verstappen agreed with Vettel but stopped short of saying he'd pull out.

“I think when a country is at war it's not correct to race there, that's for sure,” Verstappen said. “But it's not only what I think, it's the whole paddock (that is) going to decide what we are going to do next.”

Two-time F1 champion Fernando Alonso said: “We can make our own decisions for sure but eventually I think Formula One will do the best (thing).”

F1 said in a statement that it is “closely watching the very fluid developments” but made no further comment on whether the race in Sochi would be canceled.

F1 team principals planned to meet Thursday night to discuss the situation.

“My wish is that somehow everything will stop very soon. We will have a meeting between us tonight, try to understand and how to cope and how to manage with it,” Ferrari team principal Mattia Binotto said. “A deep discussion (to) understand all the implications and the right choice for the future.”

Williams CEO Jost Capito urged F1 to choose wisely.

“It's a very sad situation and our thoughts are with the people who are involved,” he said. “We think about the performance of our cars where other people are scared to lose their lives. We have to have this in mind and we're all aligned on this ... (F1) will take a proper and a right decision for all of us.”

NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg said Russia shattered peace on the European continent and called for a summit of NATO alliance leaders.

Stoltenberg said that “this is a deliberate, cold-blooded and long-planned invasion.” And he charged that “Russia is using force to try to rewrite history.”

The Associated Press learned earlier Thursday that UEFA will no longer stage this season’s Champions League final in the Russian city of St. Petersburg.

An extraordinary meeting of the UEFA executive committee will be held Friday when officials are set to confirm taking the May 28 showpiece game out of Russia, a person with knowledge of the process said Thursday. The person spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss private talks.

Meanwhile, German soccer team Schalke is removing the logo of Russian state-owned energy giant Gazprom from its jerseys. The team said it will be replaced by lettering reading “Schalke 04” following what it called “recent developments.”

___

AP Global Soccer Writer Rob Harris contributed to this report.

___

More AP auto racing: https://apnews.com/hub/auto-racing and https://twitter.com/AP_Sports

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2022-02-24 13:02:21Z
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What Jake Muzzin’s slide to LTIR means for the Maple Leafs - Sportsnet.ca

TORONTO – “Sometimes the stars align for you.”

That is how general manager Julien BriseBois explained how his Hart Trophy–winning game-breaker Nikita Kucherov was too sore from hip surgery to play for the salary-cap-strapped Tampa Bay Lightning in the 2020-21 regular season. Yet Kucherov was healthy enough to skate nearly 20 minutes, score two goals and add an assist in Game 1 of the playoffs.

Milking but not breaking long-term injury guidelines of the collective bargaining agreement, BriseBois, Kucherov and the Bolts barged through four rounds and hoisted a second chalice carrying a collective “cap hit” of $98.84 million. We put “cap hit” in quotes because, come postseason, the NHL’s salary cap is irrelevant.

Thems the rules.

And so, when Kucherov is in one (a bender) and on one (a boat) last summer, and he’s photographed with a T-shirt emblazoned with an image of himself hugging a Bud Light alongside the phrase “$18M OVER THE CAP,” some got indignant and some got an idea.

The first time the stars aligned was in 2015.

Patrick Kane’s damaged collarbone took him out of the Chicago Blackhawks’ lineup and off their books ahead of the trade deadline. Then GM Stan Bowman added Antoine Vermette ($3.5 million), Kimmo Timonen ($2.75 million) and Andrew Desjardins ($800,000), spending the precise cost of Kane’s LTIR relief.

Kane rehabbed the remainder of the regular season, then played more than 23 minutes and set up a pair of goals when he jumped back into action in Game 1 of the playoffs. The spendy Blackhawks won the Stanley Cup.

In wake of the Kane incident, the league’s decision-makers discussed the cap loophole.

“It seems to be a counterbalance that you work 82 nights with one financial equation, then on Game 1, there are no financial concerns,” Blues GM Doug Armstrong said in 2016. “I’m not sure what the proper answer is.”

Because this bad-luck-turned-good-fortune formula has worked in the past, eyebrows now raise whenever a contender slides a star player on LTIR ahead of the deadline.

The Vegas Golden Knights were staring at a forced trade off their roster until Mark Stone (back) went on the shelf, clearing enough room for No. 1 centre to pop onto a Cup-hungry roster.

Though no one doubts Stone’s back is in a bad way — and the NHL will investigate potentially shady behaviour — how shocked would fans be if Stone’s injury healed well enough by May?

Today’s hockey fan is as smart as it is suspicious.

Conspiracies float.

So, it is against this backdrop that defenceman Jake Muzzin (concussion) and his $5.625 million was shifted to the Toronto Maple Leafs’ long-term injured reserve Wednesday evening.

As long as Muzzin is off the roster, the Maple Leafs are free to use roughly $5.624 on other players, be it call-ups, new signings or trade acquisitions.

If and when a healthy Muzzin returns to the roster in the regular season, Toronto must be cap compliant.

“I want to take as much time as we possibly have, to find out what exactly it is we need. I know I have my opinions, and they change all the time. I'm sure everyone here has them as well. And teams around the league probably have their opinions of us when they look at it,” Leafs GM Kyle Dubas said recently of his deadline strategy.

“We're in that mode now where we're trying to win.”

Regardless of Muzzin’s health, for the right deal, prospects (Nick Robertson? Nicholas Abruzzese? Roni Hirvonen?), draft picks (2022 first-rounder?), and players (Justin Holl? Travis Dermott? Alexander Kerfoot?) could all be in play.

A true top-four defenceman (no disrespect, Ilya Lyubushkin) and a top-six forward would be at the top of the wish list.

But what should not be lost in the math and forthcoming trade rumours — Forget Luke Schenn and Tyler Motte. Let’s go get J.T. Miller, Claude Giroux, Filip Forsberg, Ben Chiarot and Jakob Chychrun!—is a career and quality of life that could be in jeopardy here.

Muzzin is a Stanley Cup champion, yes.

More importantly, Muzzin is a son, to Ed and Judy; a husband, to Courtney; and father of a girl named Luna, who will celebrate her third birthday right before Game 1 this spring.

“The head’s no joke,” close friend Mitch Marner said. “We got to make sure that when he comes back, he’s fully ready to go.

“We don’t need anything hurting him in the future or even past hockey. He’s got a family and kids. There’s more important things than trying to battle through stuff like that.”

Felled in a frightening and accidental collision with Chris Wideman Monday in Montreal, Muzzin suffered his second concussion in a span of 37 days. He spent the night of his 33rd birthday undergoing tests at a Montreal hospital.

In the six games he played in between concussions, the Leafs’ top shutdown man went minus-6 and confessed to tentativeness — kryptonite to his hardnosed style of game.

"It was tough coming back a little bit," Muzzin said last week. "You're a little hesitant maybe, but I feel more comfortable now.

“I have to be physical or else I'm not as effective.”

Head injuries are unique and mysterious. There are plenty of unknowns here.

The deadline is still 25 days away. More injuries could occur. Muzzin could rebound. The trade landscape will shift.

What we can feel confident is saying, though, is two things:

1. If Dubas has money to spend, he’ll spend it.

2. And if Muzzin feels healthy and confident stepping back on the ice, he will.

“The one thing about Jake Muzzin is,” Dubas said recently, “especially when people start to count him out, or people think that he looks like he's starting to fade, he's very competitive, and he has a lot of pride, and he's able to find his way back.”

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2022-02-24 16:01:00Z
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The Day After: What are the Edmonton Oilers going to do with Mike Smith? - Oilers Nation

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  1. The Day After: What are the Edmonton Oilers going to do with Mike Smith?  Oilers Nation
  2. Goaltending has been the Oilers’ problem all season. Can Holland fix it in time?  Sportsnet.ca
  3. Perry scores 400th goal to spark Lightning past Oilers  TSN
  4. Mishkin's Extra Shift: Lightning 5, Oilers 3 - Tampa  Official site of the Tampa Bay Lightning
  5. Baggedmilk on #theLOCKERROOM: A tough week ahead for the Edmonton Oilers  Oilers Nation
  6. View Full coverage on Google News

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2022-02-24 14:00:18Z
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Rabu, 23 Februari 2022

Canadiens promote Sedgwick to assistant GM - TSN

The Montreal Canadiens announced Wednesday that the team has promoted John Sedgwick to assistant general manager.

Sedgwick was hired by the club in April 2013 as the Canadiens' Director of Legal Affairs. His main responsibilities include contract negotiations with players, salary cap management, arbitration cases, and managing situations regarding the collective agreement between the National Hockey League and the National Hockey League Players' Association.

He was promoted to VP, hockey operations and legal affairs in July 2017.

Sedgwick was also part of the NHL's Hockey Operations department from 2006 to 2013.

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2022-02-23 19:18:00Z
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