Sabtu, 30 April 2022

Quick Shifts: 4 big reasons Maple Leafs could lose to Lightning - Sportsnet.ca

A quick mix of the things we gleaned from the week of hockey, serious and less so, and rolling four lines deep. Is it Monday yet?

1. The Toronto Maple LeafsTampa Bay Lightning series — positioned as the showcase matchup of Round 1 — will be analyzed, scrutinized, and dissected to death over the next 48 hours.

Two speedy, superb offences unleashing wizards on the power play. Two underrated defence cores that should battle hard and smart but will have their hands full.

If you’re the Maple Leafs (or a fan), four major things should concern you here:

• Andrei Vasilevskiy: So rare is the true Number 1 netminder in today’s NHL that Vasilevskiy — winner of eight consecutive playoff series, impeccable in elimination games — is a blazing comet shooting through a sea of dimly lit stars.

That the Big Cat enters the postseason on a four-game win streak and that counterpart Jack Campbell has only seven games total of postseason experience.

“He’s been playing great since he came back from injury,” Wayne Simmonds says. “He’s made the big stop when he’s needed to, shut down teams, and allowed us to play our game.”

Campbell must match the best.

• Depth: “I'm a firm believer that a lot of series are won and lost on the depth guys,” Simmonds says.

He’s not wrong.

No one can question the Leafs’ top end these days. It’s the aging and/or unproven bottom of the lineup that will need to raise its game.

Sure, the Lightning lost its valuable Gourde-Coleman-Goodrow unit, but Nick Paul (16 goals), Brandon Hagel (25 goals) and Ross Colton (22 goals) aren’t too shabby.

• Coaching: Sheldon Keefe has done a fantastic job in regular seasons. Frankly, he should get more credit for his work (but such is the fate of all coaches blessed with talented athletes).

What Keefe has not done — yet — is outsmart the guy on the other bench when it really matters. Despite being in the higher seed in chess matches with John Tortorella and Dominique Ducharme, Keefe hasn’t adapted well enough to win in the playoffs.

Jon Cooper, the NHL’s longest-tenured bench boss, is a master motivator who knows how to rouse a dressing room and play the podium.

He’ll be a challenge, too.

• Intimidation: The Lightning rank fourth in hits; the Leafs rank 24th. Tampa ranks 22nd in blocked shots; Toronto ranks 29th.

The champs will be physical — very physical — out of the gate. Corey Perry and Pat Maroon will try to agitate and bully. They’ll be relentless. How the Maple Leafs respond to the grind will be critical.

“I think it's about initiating rather than retaliating, to be quite honest,” Simmonds says.

“We want to be the first team to jump in and go full bore, whether that be hits, grinding it out, smothering our opponent.”

2. If Gary Bettman’s parity dream lives anywhere, it’s in on the Hart Trophy.

Not since Alex Ovechkin went back-to-back in 2008 and 2009 has the NHL crowed a repeat MVP. In the 13 seasons since, 12 different players have captured the award.

Only Connor McDavid (2017 and 2021) has won it twice in that span. A unanimous champ last season, he’ll be in tough to win this year — despite crushing the scoring race with 123 points. That’s the highest total a player has racked up in 29 years (Mark Recchi hit that number in 1992-93 but needed 84 games to do it).

With all due respect to Johnny Gaudreau, Roman Josi, Jonathan Huberdeau, Igor Shesterkin, Kirill Kaprizov, Steven Stamkos, Cale Makar, Leon Draisaitl, and so on, I’m staring at my ballot and seeing a two-horse race between McDavid and Matthews.

I asked Huberdeau whom he’d pick.

“It's a good question,” the Panthers star replied. “Matthews is having a great year, so I would probably give it to him. He's special. I had a chance to play in the all-star game with him. You give him the puck, he’s going to score every time. Not a lot of guys can get close to 60 goals.”

Other than himself, who would Matthews select if he had a say?

“There's so many guys to choose from. It's tough. But obviously [Huberdeau] would be one of the guys. It just seems like he's been driving the bus for [Florida] along with a couple other guys. He really stands out,” Matthews considers.

“You look at a guy like Josi in Nashville who's just been unbelievable — kind of the same thing, just driving the bus for that team. So, I think there's a lot of guys that you can kind of look at and pick.

“You know, it seems like McDavid and Draisaitl, we've gotten so accustomed to them just doing this every single year that you kind of lose sight of how good of a season those two are having.”

This is the hardest choice and will be the narrowest vote since Taylor Hall edged out Nathan MacKinnon in 2018.

3. The Leafs-Lightning series will feature the NHL’s past two 60-goal scorers, each coming in hot of their first 100-point campaigns.

Here are Matthews’ 60 goals, by type:

Wrist shot - 28

Backhander - 9

Snap shot - 8

Tip - 7

Slap shot - 6

Wraparound - 2

He accomplished the feat with a 17.2 shooting percentage, 1.93 goals per 60 (1st), 44 even-strength goals (first), 348 shots (first), 16 power-play goals (third), 10 game-winning goals (fifth), four empty-netters, and pinging 13 posts/crossbars (third).

Here are Stamkos’ 60 goals in 2011-12, by type:

Wrist shot - 32

Slap shot - 8

Snap shot - 8

Tip - 6

Backhander - 5

Wraparound - 1

Stamkos had a higher shooting percentage (19..8), more game-winners (12), fewer power-play goals (12), and fewer empty-netters (two). He also appeared in all 82 games, nine more than Matthews.

When we spoke with Stamkos about that magical season, he said he was most proud of his 48 even-strength goals, particularly as a player once pegged as a bit of a power-play specialist.

That season, Evgeni Malkin was a distant second in even-strength goals, with 38.

Matthews’ 44 at evens this season is the closest anyone has come to Stamkos since, and you have to trace all the way back to Alexander Mogilny’s 49 ESG in 1992-93 to find the last sniper to hit that mark.

4. A sly news dump by the National Hockey League Players’ Association, revealing its search for a new union chief around 9 p.m. ET Friday amid a hectic final night of the regular season, with media preoccupied with playoff matchups.

The PA’s executive board voted in favour of forming a search committee to hire executive director Donald Fehr’s successor. Ian Cole, Zach Hyman, Justin Faulk, Sam Gagner, Kyle Okposo, Nate Schmidt and Kevin Shattenkirk will lead the job search.

Fehr guided the players through two intense rounds of collective bargaining, striking agreements with commissioner Gary Bettman in 2013 and 2020.

“Don's been tremendous. Great communicator. The PA has been very organized and has been through some tough times with negotiations. Those are hard,” says Jason Spezza.

The veteran has picked up on the challenge of getting new players to wrap their heads around the history and complexities of the owner-player relationship.

“I think it’s hard,” Spezza continues. “As the league is getting younger, there's less and less guys that have been through the labour disputes. So, I think Don and his team have done a great job. The executive committee decided on transition plan to figure something out, and I think that's good. I think the PA is in good order right now.

"We'll find the right person to run things and leave the game in good shape, but I think hockey is in great shape in general. We want to just keep building forward.”

5. Fun with numbers.

The NHL’s first-round matchups, but with the teams’ final ranking by points percentage in brackets:

Florida (1) vs. Washington (13)

Carolina (3) vs. Boston (10)

Toronto (4) vs. Tampa Bay (8)

New York (7) vs. Pittsburgh (12)

Colorado (2) vs. Nashville (16)

Calgary (6) vs. Dallas (15)

Minnesota (5) vs. St. Louis (9)

Edmonton (11) vs. Los Angeles (14)

My take: The 11th-place Oilers are the biggest winners here. Not only are they the only team outside the NHL’s top seven with home-ice advantage, they’ve drawn the third-weakest opponent in the tournament. A reward for playing in the thinnest division.

The eighth-place Lightning have the greatest grievance, drawing four-seed Toronto. A punishment for being located close to the Atlantic Ocean.

6. In these troubled times, it’s imperative we rely on our diligent researchers for important information.

Thankfully, the folks at Time2Play.com crunched the data to discover which NHL fan base consumes the most alcoholic beverages at the good ol’ hockey game.

According to the site’s survey, Maple Leafs fans guzzle an average of 3.9 beers on game nights — tops in the league. Chicago, Tampa, Colorado, and Arizona round out the top five, while New York Rangers fans (1.8) are the most responsible.

Full results:

7. Just because Ben Chiarot was rented from worst to first doesn’t mean the Florida Panthers defenceman severed all ties with the Montreal Canadiens.

When hearing Carey Price was finally ready to make his comeback a couple weeks ago, Chiarot made sure to compose a text message.

“I told him I wish I could be there for him, be out there with him,” Chiarot says. “The last couple of years we grew a nice bond there, the defence and him. We had a good unit going on.

“So happy to see him back. And he's such an important player to that city, that franchise. Important for the league, really. He’s such a big name, especially as a goaltender. So, it was great to see him back.”

Price finished second, to Tampa’s Andrei Vasilevskiy, in the goalie category for the 2022 NHLPA Player Poll:

8. Considering he is too hurt to take the ice, Alex Ovechkin managed to have himself a big night Friday.

First, the Great 8 got name-dropped in Drake’s hot 16 on Future’s brand-new “I’m On One”: I’m just all about my goals like Ovechkin, what / I’m just all about my goals like I’m Messi.

Then the injured captain had no issue trolling Rangers fans from the Madison Square Garden press box. Looks like a guy who will be in Washington’s Game 1 lineup:

9. Mitch Marner (97 points) finished painfully close to the century mark, and came this close to joining Darryl Sittler, Doug Gilmour and Matthews as the only Maple Leafs to record 100 points in a season.

Because Marner was healthy scratched for Friday’s season finale, and missed another nine games to injury, Sheldon Keefe softened the blow by rounding up. In the coach’s mind, Marner is already a 100-point man.

Over a full 82, Marner’s point-per-game rate translates to a 110-point campaign.

Record books don’t tend to include projections or estimates, though.

“It's definitely tough,” admitted Marner, who could’ve taken a run at three points against a thin Bruins team in Game 82.

“At the same time, I want to just make sure I'm ready to go [for playoffs]. Talking with our team here, we got a pretty good awareness of how this year's been and how it's, obviously, hard on everyone's body. We all discussed that, and we thought it was a good idea to rest and make sure we do the right stuff before the real thing starts.”

10. An eagle-eye pickup by Maple Leafs video coordinator Jordan Bean and coordinator Sam Kim Sunday in Washington.

The duo caught a John Carlson hand pass in Toronto zone that led to a goal much later in the shift. The illegal hand pass was missed by the officials, the broadcast, and the Leafs bench.

By correctly challenging the goal, Toronto had a chance to (a) tie a close game, then (b) win it in a shootout.

Essentially, it was a two-point catch that would help the Leafs secure home-ice advantage in the playoffs:

“We didn't see it at all. Nobody on our bench was talking about it. Credit to those guys. Beaner is on the ball with these things,” Keefe says.

“Honestly, it seems like there's a hundred things a game that they pick up on — it just doesn't always result in a goal. They may be cheering for us to get scored on in some of these instances, so they can shine. It was a great job. They communicated it well, they were on the ball and were very clear that we should challenge that.”

You just know a coach’s challenge or four is about to sway a playoff game.

11. Another lost season in Buffalo went out on a high note at least.

The team won five of its final six, watched the Golden Knights miss the dance, and got to hear goaltender Malcolm Subban belt out “The Star-Spangled Banner” before Friday’s home game.

“At first, I heard he was going to record it, so I was pretty impressed when he stepped up and did it live. And I don't have the balls to do that. That was extremely impressive,” teammate Casey Mittelstadt told reporters. "He's good! I did not expect that."

12. Eight playoff predictions in eight words or less.

Florida over Washington in six: Capitals need goaltending more than Cats need Ekblad.

Boston over Carolina in seven: William Jennings Trophy winners’ health is concerning.

Toronto over Tampa Bay in seven: They can, and they will.

New York over Pittsburgh in five: Taking the team with a No. 1 goalie.

Colorado over Nashville in five: Two home gates for Predators at least.

Calgary over Dallas in five: Stars have a negative goal differential.

St. Louis over Minnesota in six: Blues’ experience and centre depth prevails.

Edmonton over Los Angeles in five: No Drew Doughty spells trouble.

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2022-04-30 17:26:00Z
1407947684

2022 Stanley Cup Playoffs first-round predictions - NHL.com

The Avalanche, who are the top seed in the Western Conference, were picked by seven of 16 staffers to win it all. The Flames, the second seed in the West, were picked by four staffers.

The only other team to be picked by more than one staffer was the Florida Panthers, the top seed in the Eastern Conference, which got two picks.

The two-time defending Stanley Cup champion Tampa Bay Lightning, as did the Carolina Hurricanes and Toronto Maple Leafs each received one pick. 

As for the Conn Smythe Trophy, given to the Most Valuable Player of the Stanley Cup Playoffs, Avalanche center Nathan MacKinnon got four picks while Colorado defenseman Cale Makar got three picks.

Flames goalie Jacob Markstrom got two picks, while Calgary forward Johnny Gaudreau and Matthew Tkachuk got one pick.

The others to get votes for the Conn Smythe were forwards Jonathan Huberdeau of the Panthers (two), Sebastian Aho of the Hurricanes, and Mitchell Marner of the Maple Leafs, and defenseman Victor Hedman of the Lightning.

Here is how the 16 NHL.com staffers picked:

Amalie Benjamin, staff writer

Eastern Conference First Round
FLA vs. WSH: Florida Panthers
TOR vs. TBL: Toronto Maple Leafs
CAR vs. BOS: Boston Bruins
NYR vs. PIT: New York Rangers

Western Conference First Round
COL vs. NSH: Colorado Avalanche
MIN vs. STL: Minnesota Wild
CGY vs. DAL: Calgary Flames
EDM vs. LAK: Los Angeles Kings

Stanley Cup Final: Flames over Panthers
Conn Smythe Trophy: Johnny Gaudreau, Flames

Tim Campbell, staff writer

Eastern Conference First Round
FLA vs. WSH: Florida Panthers
TOR vs. TBL: Toronto Maple Leafs
CAR vs. BOS: Carolina Hurricanes
NYR vs. PIT: New York Rangers

Western Conference First Round
COL vs. NSH: Colorado Avalanche 
MIN vs. STL: St. Louis Blues
CGY vs. DAL: Calgary Flames 
EDM vs. LAK: Edmonton Oilers

Stanley Cup Final: Avalanche over Hurricanes
Conn Smythe Trophy: Cale Makar, Avalanche

Brian Compton, managing editor

Eastern Conference First Round
FLA vs. WSH: Florida Panthers
TOR vs. TBL: Tampa Bay Lightning
CAR vs. BOS: Boston Bruins
NYR vs. PIT: New York Rangers

Western Conference First Round
COL vs. NSH: Colorado Avalanche
MIN vs. STL: Minnesota Wild
CGY vs. DAL: Calgary Flames
EDM vs. LAK: Edmonton Oilers

Stanley Cup Final: Flames over Lightning
Conn Smythe Trophy: Matthew Tkachuk, Flames

Nicholas J. Cotsonika, columnist

Eastern Conference First Round
FLA vs. WSH: Florida Panthers
TOR vs. TBL: Tampa Bay Lightning
CAR vs. BOS: Boston Bruins
NYR vs. PIT: New York Rangers

Western Conference First Round
COL vs. NSH: Colorado Avalanche
MIN vs. STL: St. Louis Blues
CGY vs. DAL: Calgary Flames
EDM vs. LAK: Edmonton Oilers

Stanley Cup Final: Flames over Panthers
Conn Smythe Trophy: Jacob Markstrom, Flames

William Douglas, staff writer

Eastern Conference First Round
FLA vs. WSH: Florida Panthers
TBL vs. TOR: Tampa Bay Lightning
CAR vs. BOS: Carolina Hurricanes
NYR vs. PIT: New York Rangers

Western Conference First Round
COL vs. NSH: Colorado Avalanche
MIN vs. STL: Minnesota Wild
CGY vs. DAL: Calgary Flames
EDM vs. LAK: Los Angeles Kings

Stanley Cup Final: Panthers over Avalanche
Conn Smythe Trophy: Jonathan Huberdeau, Panthers

Tom Gulitti, staff writer

Eastern Conference First Round
FLA vs. WSH: Florida Panthers 
TOR vs. TBL: Tampa Bay Lightning
CAR vs. BOS: Carolina Hurricanes
NYR vs. PIT: Pittsburgh Penguins

Western Conference First Round
COL vs. NSH: Colorado Avalanche 
MIN vs. STL: St. Louis Blues
CGY vs. DAL: Calgary Flames 
EDM vs. LAK: Edmonton Oilers

Stanley Cup Final: Hurricanes over Flames 
Conn Smythe Trophy: Sebastian Aho, Hurricanes

Pete Jensen, director, senior fantasy editor

Eastern Conference First Round
FLA vs. WSH: Florida Panthers
TOR vs. TBL: Tampa Bay Lightning
CAR vs. BOS: Boston Bruins
NYR vs. PIT: New York Rangers

Western Conference First Round
COL vs. NSH: Colorado Avalanche
MIN vs. STL: Minnesota Wild
CGY vs. DAL: Calgary Flames
EDM vs. LAK: Edmonton Oilers

Stanley Cup Final: Avalanche over Lightning
Conn Smythe Trophy: Nathan MacKinnon, Avalanche

Adam Kimelman, deputy managing editor

Eastern Conference First Round
FLA vs. WSH: Florida Panthers
TOR vs. TBL: Tampa Bay Lightning
CAR vs. BOS: Boston Bruins
NYR vs. PIT: New York Rangers

Western Conference First Round
COL vs. NSH: Colorado Avalanche
MIN vs. STL: St. Louis Blues
CGY vs. DAL: Calgary Flames
EDM vs. LAK: Edmonton Oilers

Stanley Cup Final: Lightning over Avalanche
Conn Smythe Trophy: Victor Hedman, Lightning

Mike G. Morreale, staff writer

Eastern Conference First Round
FLA vs. WSH: Florida Panthers
TOR vs. TBL: Tampa Bay Lightning
CAR vs. BOS: Carolina Hurricanes
NYR vs. PIT: New York Rangers

Western Conference First Round
COL vs. NSH: Colorado Avalanche
MIN vs. STL: St. Louis Blues
CGY vs. DAL: Calgary Flames
EDM vs. LAK: Edmonton Oilers

Stanley Cup Final: Avalanche over Lightning
Conn Smythe Trophy: Cale Makar, Avalanche

Tracey Myers, staff writer

Eastern Conference First Round
FLA vs. WSH: Florida Panthers
TOR vs. TBL: Tampa Bay Lightning
CAR vs. BOS: Carolina Hurricanes
NYR vs. PIT: New York Rangers

Western Conference First Round
COL vs. NSH: Colorado Avalanche
MIN vs. STL: Minnesota Wild
CGY vs. DAL: Calgary Flames
EDM vs. LAK: Los Angeles Kings

Stanley Cup Final: Avalanche over Panthers
Conn Smythe Trophy: Nathan MacKinnon, Avalanche

Bill Price, VP, Editor-in-Chief

Eastern Conference First Round
FLA vs. WSH: Florida Panthers
TOR vs. TBL: Toronto Maple Leafs
CAR vs. BOS: Boston Bruins 
NYR vs. PIT: New York Rangers

Western Conference First Round
COL vs. NSH: Colorado Avalanche 
MIN vs. STL: Minnesota Wild 
CGY vs. DAL: Calgary Flames 
EDM vs. LAK: Edmonton Oilers

Stanley Cup Final: Maple Leafs over Flames
Conn Smythe Trophy: Mitchell Marner, Maple Leafs

Shawn P. Roarke, senior director of editorial

Eastern Conference First Round
FLA vs. WSH: Florida Panthers
TOR vs. TBL: Tampa Bay Lightning
CAR vs. BOS: Boston Bruins
NYR vs. PIT: New York Rangers

Western Conference First Round
COL vs. NSH: Colorado Avalanche
MIN vs. STL: Minnesota Wild
CGY vs. DAL: Calgary Flames
EDM vs. LAK: Los Angeles Kings

Stanley Cup Final: Avalanche over Lightning
Conn Smythe Trophy: Cale Makar, Avalanche

Dan Rosen, senior writer

Eastern Conference First Round
FLA vs. WSH: Washington Capitals
TOR vs. TBL: Tampa Bay Lightning
CAR vs. BOS: Carolina Hurricanes
NYR vs. PIT: New York Rangers

Western Conference First Round
COL vs. NSH: Colorado Avalanche
MIN vs. STL: Minnesota Wild
CGY vs. DAL: Calgary Flames
EDM vs. LAK: Edmonton Oilers

Stanley Cup Final: Flames over Hurricanes
Conn Smythe Trophy: Jacob Markstrom, Flames

David Satriano, staff writer

Eastern Conference First Round
FLA vs. WSH: Florida Panthers
TOR vs. TBL: Tampa Bay Lightning
CAR vs. BOS: Carolina Hurricanes
NYR vs. PIT: New York Rangers

Western Conference First Round
COL vs. NSH: Colorado Avalanche
MIN vs. STL: Minnesota Wild
CGY vs. DAL: Calgary Flames  
EDM vs. LAK: Los Angeles Kings

Stanley Cup Final: Panthers over Flames
Conn Smythe Trophy: Jonathan Huberdeau, Panthers

Dave Stubbs, columnist

Eastern Conference First Round
FLA vs. WSH: Florida Panthers
TOR vs. TBL: Tampa Bay Lightning
CAR vs. BOS: Carolina Hurricanes
NYR vs. PIT: New York Rangers  

Western Conference First Round
COL vs. NSH: Colorado Avalanche
MIN vs. STL: St. Louis Blues
CGY vs. DAL: Calgary Flames  
EDM vs. LAK: Edmonton Oilers

Stanley Cup Final: Avalanche over Panthers
Conn Smythe Trophy: Nathan MacKinnon, Avalanche

Mike Zeisberger, staff writer

Eastern Conference First Round
FLA vs. WSH: Florida Panthers
TOR vs. TBL: Tampa Bay Lightning
CAR vs. BOS: Carolina Hurricanes
NYR vs. PIT: Pittsburgh Penguins

Western Conference First Round
COL vs. NSH: Colorado Avalanche 
MIN vs. STL: St. Louis Blues 
CGY vs. DAL: Calgary Flames 
EDM vs. LAK: Edmonton Oilers

Stanley Cup Final: Avalanche over Hurricanes
Conn Smythe Trophy: Nathan MacKinnon, Avalanche

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2022-04-30 18:35:02Z
1399897817

Was Canadiens’ season-ending win the end of Carey Price era? - Sportsnet.ca

MONTREAL — With roughly 20 seconds to go in a 10-2 win for his Montreal Canadiens on Friday, Carey Price plopped his stick atop his net and began waving at his family. This happened while play was still ongoing — with the Canadiens in possession of the puck just 10 feet away from him — and there’s no way of knowing with any certainty what it symbolized.

Was he just so ecstatic about his first win of the season that he couldn’t wait until the end to celebrate it?

Was he just wrapped up in the moment, with the Canadiens winning by more than a touchdown after giving up at least five goals in 31 of their 82 games this season?

Or was Price just thinking about how these might have been his final seconds as a Canadien?

Before they expired, he made 37 saves against the Florida Panthers — 30 would’ve done the trick — and notched his 361st win in his 700th start.

But Price wasn’t around post-game to talk about it.

Pierre Gervais (the team’s equipment manager, who worked his final game on Friday after 35 years in his position) was, and he contemplated what the future holds for No. 31.

“I hope the best, and for whatever he hopes,” Gervais said. “This guy, I’ve said it before, he’s amazing, he’s been through a lot of stuff. He’s working so hard off the ice, and hopefully this summer is going to be a good summer for him; he’s going to get set up with all his doctors and (deal with) all his injuries and he’s going to have a couple more seasons, hopefully.”

Gervais, who is known for being all-knowing about all things near and dear to the Canadiens, didn’t deny this might have been Price’s last one in Montreal—or in the NHL.

“It’s a possibility,” Gervais said. “I’m not a doctor, but it’s a possibility.

“But that would be a great way to finish; tonight was amazing.”

It was something much better than what we saw on most nights this season — the Canadiens tumbled to the bottom of the standings early on and locked themselves into last place in the NHL before the puck even dropped. They thumped the Presidents’ Trophy-winning Panthers (or a version of them, with the Panthers resting virtually all of their best players ahead of what they hope will be a very long playoff run) and had all but two of their players register at least a point in the game.

Cole Caufield, who began the season with one goal over his first 30 games, managed to score three to bring his total to 23 in 67 games. He finished tied in second for goals among rookies with Trevor Zegras (74 games) Michael Bunting (79 games) and Lucas Raymond (82 games) and can leave for home or the World Championship — he hasn’t decided yet — feeling like he has achieved something.

The fans chanted 'Caufield! Caufield! Caufield!' both after he scored his third goal and after the game, and he addressed them and thanked them for their support.

“I’m not going to lie, it feels pretty good,” Caufield told the media. “I think it was a fun night for all of us playing for some pretty important people in our organization, and I think it was a good way to go out and end the season on a win.”

And then Caufield said this about Price:

“It means everything to us (to win for him),” he started. “He’s the backbone of our team, he’s a guy you want to play for, and just having in the room every day was just something special and you just feel the energy he brings no matter if he’s excited or not.

“You just feel him back there, and it helps a lot that he’s very good at his job.”

Whether or not Price believes he can be as good as he expects himself to be is a question only he can answer. And he might not be willing to come Saturday, when the Canadiens hold their end-of-season media availabilities.

The soon-to-be 35-year-old’s week started on the sidelines. He traveled to New York to meet with surgeon Robert Marx about the knee procedure last July that repaired his meniscus but took much longer than anticipated to heal. Several setbacks — following a one-month stint in the NHL/NHLPA’s player assistance program — turned what was supposed to be an eight-to-10-week recovery into a nearly season-long absence, and there was fear Price had suffered another setback after just four games of action.

Without any official word, Price was back on the ice Thursday despite the Canadiens having a day off. He led the team on the ice for morning skate Friday and was confirmed as the starter shortly after by coach Martin St. Louis.

After Price picked his stick back up off his net and got back into his crouch with time expiring on the game, the crowd gave him and the Canadiens a standing ovation.

It chanted 'Carey! Carey! Carey!' after his first save of the night, and again, late in the game, when he flashed to the top of his crease to make a windmill glove save on former teammate Ben Chiarot.

Price was all smiles as the Canadiens stood along the blue line and saluted the fans ahead of giving away their jerseys and signing autographs for them.

“I think it meant a lot,” said St. Louis. “I think he wanted to play towards the end, and first few games we didn’t give him any run support, so it could’ve been different. But I think him winning this game, I think it means a lot. If I put myself in his shoes, battling what he’s battled, the level that he’s played at in this league, and he’s got his own expectation — the top guys in this league are really hard on themselves — so for him to finish like this, I’m really happy for him.”

Gervais was more than just content for Price.

“I’m so, so, so happy for Carey Price,” he said. “He’s an extraordinary man. Never mind the goaltender, who was the best in the world, and all the things he did; I had the chance to be with him alone in the dressing room on many early mornings, and he’s just an extraordinary person.”

They won together with Team Canada — Olympic champions in Sochi, Russia, in 2014, which sticks with Gervais as his fondest memory of Price.

“This guy here,” he said, “I’ve never seen a hockey player — even my colleague from the New York Rangers, who was in Sochi, he said, ‘What the hell is that guy?’ — he was the first guy to arrive, full suit, cowboy hat, focus… He was incredible, and I had no doubt at all we were going to win the gold medal in Sochi. Carey was invincible.”

Less so now, hence all the uncertainty.

Price is under contract for four more seasons. He’s got an annual average salary of $10.5 million and is still owed $31.25 million — $24.25 million of which must be paid in signing bonuses — and it’s impossible to say at this moment if he’ll play again. Injuries have piled up over the years and validated this doubt, with him only appearing in five of 82 games this season.

Perhaps Price will announce on Saturday that he will continue, and that he intends to do it with the Canadiens for as long as he wishes to do it for.

But if that’s not the case, he spent his last seconds in the only uniform he’s ever worn in this league — the franchise leader in games started and won — sharing it with the people that matter most to him.

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2022-04-30 04:40:00Z
1406610051

NHL playoff schedule: Dates, times, television and results - USA TODAY

The Tampa Bay Lightning have to start on the road again as they try to win a third consecutive Stanley Cup.

Last year, they had to overcome the home-ice advantage of the Florida Panthers and Carolina Hurricanes on their way to a repeat.

This year, they finished third in the Atlantic Division and will open at the Toronto Maple Leafs.

Other first-round series in the Eastern Conference are Florida-Washington, Carolina-Boston and New York Rangers-Pittsburgh.

In the Western Conference, it will be Colorado-Nashville, Calgary-Dallas, Minnesota-St. Louis and Edmonton-Los Angeles.

Here is the full schedule for the first round of the NHL playoffs (all series best of seven, times ET, *-if necessary):

(All times Eastern)

EASTERN CONFERENCE

Florida Panthers vs. Washington Capitals

Tuesday, May 3: Capitals at Panthers, 7:30, ESPN2

Thursday, May 5: Capitals at Panthers, 7:30, TBS

Saturday, May 7: Panthers at Capitals, 1, ESPN

Monday, May 9: Panthers at Capitals, 7, TBS

*Wednesday, May 11: Capitals at Panthers, TBD

*Friday, May 13: Panthers at Capitals, Friday, TBD

*Sunday, May 15: Capitals at Panthers, TBD

Carolina Hurricanes vs. Boston Bruins

Monday, May 2: Bruins at Hurricanes, 7, ESPN

Wednesday, May 4: Bruins at Hurricanes, 7, ESPN

Friday, May 6: Hurricanes at Bruins, 7, TNT

Sunday, May 8: Hurricanes at Bruins, 12:30 p.m., ESPN

*Tuesday, May 10: Bruins at Hurricanes, TBD

*Thursday, May 12: Hurricanes at Bruins, TBD

*Saturday, May 14: Bruins at Hurricanes, TBD

New York Rangers vs. Pittsburgh Penguins

Tuesday, May 3: Penguins at Rangers, 7, ESPN

Thursday, May 5: Penguins at Rangers, 7, TNT

Saturday, May 7: Rangers at Penguins, 7, TNT

Monday, May 9: Rangers at Penguins, 7, ESPN

*Wednesday, May 11: Penguins at Rangers, TBD

*Friday, May 13: Rangers at Penguins, TBD

*Sunday, May 15: Penguins at Rangers, TBD

Toronto Maple Leafs vs. Tampa Bay Lightning

Monday, May 2: Lightning at Maple Leafs, 7:30, ESPN2

Wednesday, May 4: Lightning at Maple Leafs, 7:30, ESPN2

Friday, May 6: Maple Leafs at Lightning, 7:30, TBS

Sunday, May 8: Maple Leafs at Lightning, 7, TBS

*Tuesday, May 10: Lightning at Maple Leafs, TBD

*Thursday, May 12: Maple Leafs at Lightning, TBD

*Saturday, May 14: Lightning at Maple Leafs, TBD

Western Conference

Colorado Avalanche vs. Nashville Predators

Tuesday, May 3: Predators at Avalanche, 9:30 p.m., ESPN

Thursday, May 5: Predators at Avalanche, 9:30, TNT

Saturday, May 7: Avalanche at Predators, 4:30 p.m., TNT

Monday, May 9: Avalanche at Predators, 9:30 p.m., ESPN

*Wednesday, May 11: Predators at Avalanche, TBD

*Friday, May 13: Avalanche at Predators, TBD

*Sunday, May 15: Predators at Avalanche, TBD

Calgary Flames vs. Dallas Stars

Tuesday, May 3: Stars at Flames, 10, ESPN2

Thursday, May 5: Stars at Flames, 10, TBS

Saturday, May 7: Flames at Stars, 9:30 p.m., TNT

Monday, May 9: Flames at Stars, 9:30 p.m., TBS

*Wednesday, May 11: Stars at Flames, TBD

*Friday, May 13: Flames at Stars, TBD

*Sunday, May 15: Stars at Flames, TBD

Minnesota Wild vs. St. Louis Blues

Monday, May 2: Blues at Wild, 9:30 p.m., ESPN

Wednesday, May 4: Blues at Wild, 9:30 p.m., ESPN

Friday, May 6: Wild at Blues, 9:30 p.m., TNT

Sunday, May 8: Wild at Blues, 4:30 p.m. ET, TBS

*Tuesday, May 10: Blues at Wild, TBD

*Thursday, May 12: Wild at Blues, TBD

*Saturday, May 14: Blues at Wild, TBD

Edmonton Oilers vs. Los Angeles Kings

Monday, May 2: Kings at Oilers, 10, ESPN2

Wednesday, May 4: Kings at Oilers, 10, ESPN2

Friday, May 6: Oilers at Kings, 10, TBS

Sunday, May 8: Oilers at Kings, 10, TBS

*Tuesday, May 10: Kings at Oilers, TBD

*Thursday, May 12: Oilers at Kings, TBD

*Saturday, May 14: Kings at Oilers, TBD

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2022-04-30 06:01:21Z
1399897817

Canucks @ Oilers 4/29 | NHL Highlights 2022 - NHL

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2022-04-30 04:37:18Z
1399834133

Panthers @ Canadiens 4/29 | NHL Highlights 2022 - NHL

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2022-04-30 02:11:10Z
1406610051

Jumat, 29 April 2022

Tennis great Boris Becker sentenced to prison over bankruptcy charges - Sportsnet.ca

LONDON — Tennis great Boris Becker was sentenced to 2 1/2 years in prison on Friday for illicitly transferring large amounts of money and hiding assets after he was declared bankrupt.

The three-time Wimbledon champion was convicted earlier this month on four charges under the Insolvency Act and had faced a maximum sentence of seven years in prison.

Judge Deborah Taylor announced the sentence after hearing arguments from both the prosecutor and Becker's attorney. She told the former top-ranked player that he's shown no remorse.

"While I accept your humiliation as part of the proceedings, there has been no humility,'' Taylor said.

Becker will have to serve at least 15 months before being eligible for release.

The 54-year-old German was found to have transferred hundreds of thousands of pounds (dollars) after his June 2017 bankruptcy from his business account to other accounts, including those of his ex-wife Barbara and estranged wife Sharlely "Lilly'' Becker.

Becker was also convicted of failing to declare a property in Germany and hiding an 825,000 euro ($871,000) bank loan and shares in a tech firm.

The jury at Southwark Crown Court in London acquitted him on 20 other counts, including charges that he failed to hand over his many awards, including two Wimbledon trophies and an Olympic gold medal.

Becker, wearing a striped tie in Wimbledon's purple and green colors, walked into the courthouse hand in hand with girlfriend Lilian de Carvalho Monteiro.

The six-time Grand Slam champion has denied all the charges, saying he had cooperated with trustees tasked with securing his assets — even offering up his wedding ring — and had acted on expert advice.

At Friday's sentencing hearing, prosecutor Rebecca Chalkley said Becker had acted "deliberately and dishonestly'' and that he was "still seeking to blame others.''

Defence attorney Jonathan Laidlaw argued for leniency, saying his client hadn't spent money on a "lavish lifestyle'' but rather on child support, rent and legal and business expenses. Becker, he told the court, has experienced "public humiliation'' and has no future earnings potential.

The judge said Becker's two-year suspended sentence for tax evasion and attempted tax evasion in Germany in 2002 was "a significant aggravating factor'' in her decision Friday. She said he "did not heed the warning'' and opportunity of that suspended sentence.

Becker's bankruptcy stemmed from a 4.6 million euro ($5 million) loan from a private bank in 2013, as well as about $1.6 million borrowed from a British businessman the year after, according to testimony at the trial.

During the trial Becker, said his $50 million career earnings had been swallowed up by payments for an "expensive divorce'' and debts when he lost large chunks of his income after retirement.

Becker rose to stardom in 1985 at the age of 17 when he became the first unseeded player to win the Wimbledon singles title and later rose to the No. 1 ranking. He has lived in Britain since 2012.

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2022-04-29 15:05:00Z
1404251891

Boris Becker sentenced to prison - TSN

LONDON (AP) — Tennis great Boris Becker was sentenced to 2 1/2 years in prison on Friday for illicitly transferring large amounts of money and hiding assets after he was declared bankrupt.

The three-time Wimbledon champion was convicted earlier this month on four charges under the Insolvency Act and had faced a maximum sentence of seven years in prison.

Judge Deborah Taylor announced the sentence after hearing arguments from both the prosecutor and Becker's attorney.

The 54-year-old German was found to have transferred hundreds of thousands of pounds (dollars) after his June 2017 bankruptcy from his business account to other accounts, including those of his ex-wife Barbara and estranged wife Sharlely “Lilly” Becker.

Becker was also convicted of failing to declare a property in Germany and hiding an 825,000 euro ($871,000) bank loan and shares in a tech firm.

The jury at Southwark Crown Court in London acquitted him on 20 other counts, including charges that he failed to hand over his many awards, including two Wimbledon trophies and an Olympic gold medal.

Becker, wearing a striped tie in Wimbledon’s purple and green colors, walked into the courthouse hand in hand with girlfriend Lilian de Carvalho Monteiro.

The six-time Grand Slam champion has denied all the charges, saying he had cooperated with trustees tasked with securing his assets — even offering up his wedding ring — and had acted on expert advice.

At Friday's sentencing hearing, prosecutor Rebecca Chalkley said Becker had acted “deliberately and dishonestly” and that he was “still seeking to blame others."

Defense attorney Jonathan Laidlaw argued for leniency, saying his client hadn't spent money on a “lavish lifestyle” but rather on child support, rent and legal and business expenses. Becker, he told the court, has experienced “public humiliation” and has no future earnings potential.

Becker’s bankruptcy stemmed from a 4.6 million euro ($5 million) loan from a private bank in 2013, as well as about $1.6 million borrowed from a British businessman the year after, according to testimony at the trial.

During the trial Becker, said his $50 million career earnings had been swallowed up by payments for an “expensive divorce” and debts when he lost large chunks of his income after retirement.

Becker rose to stardom in 1985 at the age of 17 when he became the first unseeded player to win the Wimbledon singles title and later rose to the No. 1 ranking. He has lived in Britain since 2012.

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2022-04-29 15:01:53Z
1404251891

Winners and losers from Day 1 of the 2022 NFL Draft - theScore

theScore's football editors evaluate the biggest winners and losers after the first 32 picks of the 2022 NFL Draft.

Winner: Eagles

Wesley Hitt / Getty Images Sport / Getty

Philly fans are famous for booing their own team, but even they have to be pleased with what the club did Thursday.

The Eagles made their first splash at No. 13, trading up a couple spots to select Jordan Davis. The former Georgia star was the top defensive tackle in the draft, and his combination of production and athleticism screams "eventual superstar." The Bednarik Award winner will begin his career behind veterans Fletcher Cox and Javon Hargrave on the depth chart, but it shouldn't take long for him to take over as the Eagles' anchor up front.

Philadelphia pulled off a blockbuster trade for A.J. Brown later on, finally acquiring the No. 1 wide receiver it long coveted. The Eagles immediately signed the 24-year-old Brown to a long-term extension, and will pair him with DeVonta Smith going forward to create a dynamic duo out wide.

Moreover, Philadelphia didn't have to surrender an extra pick in the top three rounds to get Davis, while Brown cost a similar price to what the Arizona Cardinals paid moments earlier for a lesser receiver in Marquise Brown. The Eagles made both moves without touching either of their first-round picks in 2023, meaning they can keep loading up next year or get in position to draft a quarterback if Jalen Hurts stalls out.

Loser: Aaron Rodgers

New year, same issue in Green Bay.

Six wide receivers were taken in the first round, and two others were traded as part of stunning moves on the first day of the 2022 NFL Draft. The Packers had nothing to do with that, though.

Green Bay left Round 1 without adding a pass-catcher despite having two first-round picks and a major need at wide receiver after losing Davante Adams and Marquez Valdes-Scantling in the offseason. Granted, the two players the Packers did take in the first round - linebacker Quay Walker and defensive lineman Devonte Wyatt - instantly make the team's defense better. But the major hole in the club's receiving corps remains.

As good as Aaron Rodgers is, it's hard to envision the Packers making a Super Bowl run with their current wide receiver depth chart, which is headlined by Randall Cobb and Allen Lazard. Green Bay will likely add to the position in the later rounds, but there are no guarantees that Rodgers will get the pass-catcher he deserves. Green Bay still hasn't taken a wideout in the first round since 2002. The clock is ticking.

Winner: Jets

Icon Sportswire / Icon Sportswire / Getty

Jets general manager Joe Douglas hit Thursday's action-packed first round out of the park, arguably more than anybody else, by adding three potential cornerstone pieces in cornerback Ahmad "Sauce" Gardner (No. 4 overall), receiver Garrett Wilson (No. 10), and pass-rusher Jermaine Johnson (No. 26 via trade-up).

New York desperately needed to inject some blue-chip talent into its roster, and it came away with some wild value based on its own board. Douglas said after the draft that the Jets had Gardner, Wilson, and Johnson ranked in their top eight, according to Connor Hughes of The Athletic. They seemingly weren't alone in that view. Many experts believed Gardner and Wilson were the top players at their respective positions, and the Jets got them as CB2 and WR2. Meanwhile, some had projected that New York could even use its fourth overall pick to take Johnson, who ultimately fell 22 spots below that.

The AFC is set to be extremely competitive this season, and the Jets appeared to be in no man's land before this draft. It's too soon to call New York a wild-card contender, especially after 11 years without a playoff appearance, but it's far easier to see that becoming a reality with the addition of this ultra-talented trio. All eyes are on Zach Wilson now.

Loser: Patriots

Bill Belichick just doesn't care how the fans, the media, or anyone else in the NFL values draft prospects. He picks who he wants, even if that's a beefy FCS offensive lineman no one pegged as a Day 1 or even Day 2 selection.

The Rams' reaction to the pick says it all:

Strange indeed.

Winner: Kenny Pickett

Pickett's NFL draft experience had a Hollywood-like ending Thursday as the Pittsburgh Steelers drafted him in the first round.

Though the Steelers opted not to gamble on such quarterbacks as Malik Willis, the team's investment in a familiar face could pay dividends in Pickett's development. While many other prospects will be forced to adjust to their new homes after being drafted, Pickett, a former Pittsburgh Panther, will be afforded the luxury of staying put.

No stranger to the Heinz Field crowd, the former Pitt passer may very well find himself in the most comfortable position of any quarterback drafted when all is said and done. That could be a major factor in Pickett reaching his full potential. Whether he does or doesn't will be determined at a later date, but it's easy to see that the 23-year-old quarterback has been provided with all the tools necessary to succeed.

Losers: Every other rookie quarterback

For the first time since EJ Manuel was the 16th overall selection in 2013, only one quarterback heard his name called on Day 1 of the draft. The Lions, Giants, Panthers, Falcons, Seahawks - all teams in sore need of a quarterback upgrade - opted to use their top-10 picks on other positions. The Saints picked twice in the top 19 but passed on the position.

Malik Willis entered the draft with the most buzz. More than a few mocks had Willis coming off the board to the Lions at No. 2. But where there's smoke there's not always fire, and the Liberty product's buzz quickly dissipated when the Steelers, the team most often linked to him in the media, picked local star Kenny Pickett at 20th overall. The rest of the first round went down without a hint of a quarterback in play.

Willis joins fellow quarterback Matt Corral, linebacker Nakobe Dean, and cornerback Kyler Gordon as the only players invited to the draft who didn't make it out of the green room Thursday. One wonders if the quarterbacks' wait might extend well into Day 2.

Winner: Georgia defense

James Gilbert / Getty Images Sport / Getty

Georgia's defense lived up to its billing on the first day of the draft. Months after winning the national title on the heels of the nation's top-ranked defensive unit, the Bulldogs set the record for the most defenders taken in the same first round with five selections.

The party started with edge rusher Travon Walker, who the Jacksonville Jaguars took first overall. The Eagles traded up to select defensive tackle Jordan Davis at No. 13. Linebacker Quay Walker and defensive tackle Devonte Wyatt went to the Packers at No. 22 and No. 28, respectively, before the Minnesota Vikings closed out Round 1 by taking safety Lewis Cine 32nd overall.

The total topped the four Miami defenders taken in the opening round in 2004 and the four Florida State defensive players called in the first round of the 2006 NFL Draft.

Loser: Lamar Jackson

Lamar Jackson seemingly didn't try and hide his anger about the Baltimore Ravens' stunning decision to trade Marquise Brown to the Arizona Cardinals midway through the first round.

Baltimore used the compensation gained from the Brown trade (No. 25 following a two-spot drop in a deal with the Buffalo Bills) to take center Tyler Linderbaum, 11 picks after adding safety Kyle Hamilton. Both selections were very Baltimore: unsexy but likely to provide an instant impact. But Jackson is trying to earn a life-changing first extension in the NFL, and his receiver group now looks dangerously thin.

Rashod Bateman had a solid first season in the NFL, catching 46 passes for 515 yards and one touchdown in 12 games. But is he ready to be a primary option? Devin Duvernay, James Proche, Tylan Wallance, and Jaylon Moore fill out Baltimore's depth chart. Of course, Pro Bowl tight end Mark Andrew is a great player, but he can now be double-teamed on every play.

Jackson and Brown were close friends, and it's a curious decision by the Ravens to potentially strain their relationship with their franchise player while trying to lock him down to a long-term deal. Maybe Baltimore can ease the pain with a veteran addition like Jarvis Landry and/or a receiver at No. 45 overall. But as it stands, Jackson is one of the major losers after Day 1.

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2022-04-29 05:13:06Z
1346434367

Kings @ Canucks 4/28 | NHL Highlights 2022 - NHL

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2022-04-29 04:57:15Z
1404082614

Jaguars select Georgia DE Travon Walker first overall in NFL Draft - Sportsnet.ca

JACKSONVILLE, Fla. -- Placing more emphasis on pro potential than college production, the Jacksonville Jaguars chose Georgia pass rusher Travon Walker with the top pick in the NFL draft on Thursday night.

The Jaguars took the 6-foot-5, 272-pound ``athletic freak'' over Michigan star Aidan Hutchinson, who set a school record with 14 sacks in 2021 and finished second in Heisman Trophy voting.

General manager Trent Baalke had been leaning toward Walker for months and insisted new coach Doug Pederson was totally in agreement on selecting the former Bulldogs defender at No. 1. Critics argued that Hutchinson was the more polished product and pointed to Walker's limited college numbers. He had 9 1/2 sacks in three years in Athens, Georgia, including six during last season's national championship run.

But Baalke and Pederson see a more versatile player in Walker, who logged snaps at defensive end, defensive tackle and outside linebacker in Georgia's vaunted defense last fall. His highlights include more than sacks; he stops the run, tackles speedy receivers in the open field and tips passes that lead to interceptions.

``He's an athletic freak,'' Georgia defensive coordinator Will Muschamp told The Associated Press. ``I swear to God he could line up at middle linebacker and go be fine. I would take him at No. 1 and not even blink.''

The Jaguars did just that.

Once a two-sport star with NBA dreams at Upson-Lee High School in Thomaston, Georgia, Walker eventually settled on football and quickly became one of the most sought-after recruits in talent-rich Georgia. He signed with the Bulldogs and played college ball a little more than 100 miles from his hometown.

He bided his time as a backup during his first two years at Georgia _ he made the league's Freshman All-SEC Team _ and really started to blossom as a junior. He started all 15 games in 2021, finishing with 37 tackles, including 7 1/2 for a loss, and two pass breakups.

Muschamp first met Walker when he was 10 years old and now considers him one of the best kids he's ever coached.

``There's not a single red flag,'' Muschamp said. ``He's the real deal now.''

Jacksonville is the fourth NFL franchise with back-to-back No. 1 picks and is hoping to become the first to nail both selections. Tampa Bay (1976-77, 1986-87), Cincinnati (1994-95) and Cleveland (1999-2000, 2017-18) all failed to find success both times.

The Jaguars believe quarterback Trevor Lawrence, the slam-dunk top choice a year ago, is on the verge of becoming a star and just needs more help around him.

Jacksonville signed tight end Evan Engram and receivers Christian Kirk and Zay Jones in free agency to help Lawrence. They also brought in five-time Pro Bowl guard Brandon Scherff to help revamp an offensive line that allowed Lawrence to be sacked 32 times.

Offensive tackles Ikem ``Ickey'' Ekwonu and Evan Neal were under consideration at No. 1 but improving the team's pass rush proved to be a more pressing priority. The Jags still expect to use at least two of their 12 total selections to bolster Lawrence's protection and potentially his receiving corps.

But for now, they have a defensive building block to pair with fellow pass rusher Josh Allen in hopes of immediately improving a defense that ranked 20th in the league in yards allowed in 2021, tied for 27th with 32 sacks and gave up nearly 27 points a game.

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2022-04-29 00:20:00Z
1346434367

Kamis, 28 April 2022

4 things to watch in Sixers-Raptors Game 6 - NBA.com

Joel Embiid and Philadelphia have struggled against Toronto since going up 3-0 in the series.

The first-round series between the Philadelphia 76ers and Toronto Raptors has quickly gotten very interesting. The Sixers won the first three games, and now they’re heading back to Toronto, hoping to avoid a Game 7.

The Raptors are looking to make history. We know that no team has come back from an 0-3 deficit to win a best-of-seven series in NBA history. And only three of the previous 145 (including this year’s Brooklyn Nets and Denver Nuggets) who have faced that 0-3 deficit have even forced a Game 7. (The last was the 2003 Portland Trail Blazers in the first round.)

Here are some things to note from the first five games before Game 6 on Thursday (7 ET, NBA TV).


1. The vanishing Sixers offense

In Game 1 of this series, the Sixers had the third most efficient offensive playoff performance (131 points on just 89 possessions) in the 26 years for which we have play-by-play data. With each ensuing game, the Sixers have scored less efficiently. And Game 5 on Monday was their fifth least efficient game of the season (88 points on 94 possessions).

When you have that big of a drop-off, lots of numbers suffer. And in regard to their wins vs. their losses, there are huge differentials in the Sixers’ effective field goal percentage, free throw rate and offensive rebounding percentage. The biggest drop-offs in effective field goal percentage have belonged to Tyrese Maxey (69.0% vs. 36.5%) and Tobias Harris (69.1% vs. 51.8%), while Joel Embiid hasn’t been getting to the line as much as the series has gone on.

The Toronto defense certainly deserves some credit. And there were several possessions in Game 5 on Monday when the Raptors were able to double Embiid, rotate from there, and stifle the Sixers’ attempt to play four on three …

Raptors rotations

According to Second Spectrum tracking though, the Sixers’ shot quality was better on Monday than it was in the previous three games. There were times when the ball moved faster than the defense, but the Sixers just missed good looks …

Tyrese Maxey missed 3-pointer

If this trend of the Sixers’ offense getting worse with every game would somehow continue, Game 6 would be pretty ugly. And even if it weren’t that ugly, a low-efficiency contest would probably favor Toronto.


2. Embiid defending in space

It could be that the Raptors are defending better because they’re playing bigger. With Fred VanVleet having missed the last game and a half with a hip injury, the Raps have had just one guy shorter than 6-foot-7 (6-foot-5 Gary Trent Jr.) in their rotation. But though they’ve been big on the wings, the Raptors have also been able to play five out on offense.

With that, Embiid has had to defend outside the paint. And he’s struggled a bit in that regard. The Raptors scored just nine points on their first 11 possessions of the third quarter on Monday, but then got four straight scores by making Embiid defend on the perimeter.

First, Precious Achiuwa got him off balance with a pump fake and drew a foul on a drive. Then Embiid couldn’t get around a screen fast enough to prevent an OG Anunoby dunk …

OG Anunoby dunk

Then Achiuwa …

Precious Achiuwa drive

… and Siakam …

Pascal Siakam drive

… took turns blowing past him.

Playing five out isn’t just good because Embiid can be beat off the dribble. It’s also good because he’s not at the rim to protect it.

In the regular season, Embiid defended a league-high 8.8 shots at the rim per game, and opponents shot just 58.7% at the rim when he was there to protect it. In the playoffs, he’s defended just 6.8 shots at the rim (in more minutes) per game, and the Raptors have shot 73.5% at the rim when he’s been there to protect it.

Part of that is the Raptors being a team that doesn’t get to the rim a ton. But Embiid has also defended a much lower percentage of the opponents’ shots at the rim for which he’s been on the floor (37%) than he did in the regular season (49%). The Raps were outscored by 1.5 points per game in the restricted area in the regular season, but are a plus-5.6 per game in the restricted area in this series.


3. A dangerous differential

In that super-efficient Game 1, the Sixers committed just four turnovers, with three of the four coming after they were up 20 with less than four minutes to go. Over the four games since then, Philly has committed 30 more turnovers than Toronto, giving them a differential of 5.2 more turnovers per game for the series. That’s the second biggest differential for any series in the last five years (68 total series).

Credit the Raptors, who forced 3.4 more turnovers than they committed in the regular season. That was tied (with the 2014-15 Dallas Mavericks) for the best mark for any team in the last 14 years.

But as they fell into an early deficit in Game 5, a few of the Sixers’ mistakes were self-inflicted …

James Harden turnover

Turning the offense around begins with taking care of the ball.


4. Counter to the counter

Another one of the Sixers’ 16 turnovers on Monday came on a fun sequence in the third quarter, when they ran the same play three times on a stretch of five possessions.

On Philly’s second trip of the period, Danny Green set a “pistol” screen for James Harden that Scottie Barnes switched. Green then flared around Embiid and set a cross-screen for Tyrese Maxey, who continued into a dribble-handoff from Embiid …

Tyrese Maxey drive

The Raptors didn’t switch the Green cross-screen. With Trent trailing Maxey around it and with Khem Birch initially staying attached to Embiid, Maxey was able to turn the corner and get to the cup.

Two possessions later, the Sixers ran the same play. This time, OG Anunoby switched the cross-screen and denied the handoff. Green was open for a second, but he wasn’t ready …

Raptors switch

The Sixers proceeded into a Harden/Embiid pick-and-roll and gained another advantage, but the timing between the two stars was off and Embiid lost the ball out of bounds.

Two possessions later, the Sixers went back to the same play. This time, Green was ready for the Anunoby switch (while Trent wasn’t), and he quickly popped to a wide-open 3 …

Danny Green 3-point attempt

See the note above about the Sixers missing some good looks in Game 5. It can be a make-or-miss league and the Sixers were 10-for-37 (27%) from 3-point range on Monday after shooting 45% through the first four games. In the regular season, Philly had the league’s second-biggest differential between their record when they shot the league average (35.4%) or better from 3-point range (38-10, .792) and their record when they didn’t (13-21, .382).

The Raptors have shot much worse (32.1%) from beyond the arc in this series, but they were a worse 3-point shooting team (34.9%, 20th) in the regular season, relying on transition and second chances to prop up a bottom-five half-court offense.

Still, even with VanVleet doubtful to play on Thursday, the Raps could be due for a hot shooting night. And that could set up a very interesting Game 7 back in Philly.

* * *

John Schuhmann is a senior stats analyst for NBA.com. You can e-mail him here, find his archive here and follow him on Twitter.

The views on this page do not necessarily reflect the views of the NBA, its clubs or Turner Broadcasting.

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2022-04-28 14:59:05Z
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Blue Jays’ Guerrero Jr. not in lineup Thursday vs. Red Sox - Sportsnet.ca

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2022-04-28 15:51:00Z
1402890331

Canadiens secure top odds in draft lottery - TSN

The Montreal Canadiens secured the top odds in next month's NHL Draft lottery on Wednesday despite snapping a nine-game losing streak.

The Canadiens, who defeated the New York Rangers 4-3, clinched last place in the NHL as the Arizona Coyotes defeated the Dallas Stars in overtime later in the night. The Canadiens could still match the Coyotes at 55 points, but have two less regulation/overtime wins than Arizona. 

Montreal - the draft's host city this year - will have an 18.5 per cent chance of selecting first overall in July's draft and can fall no further than to the third overall selection. The Coyotes are locked in to 31st in the league standings and will have a 13.5 per cent chance of winning the draft lottery.

The Seattle Kraken currently sit third-last in the standings but could pass the Philadelphia Flyers over their final two games. One of those two clubs will have an 11.5 per cent chance in the lottery, while the team that finishes 29th in the standings will enter with a 9.5 per cent of winning the top pick.

Under the new rules for this season, no team can move up more than 10 selections and only the top two picks will be decided by the draft lottery.

Kingston Frontenac centre Shane Wright sat atop TSN Hockey Insider Bob McKenzie's mid-season draft ranking, with nine of 10 scouts surveyed ranking the Burlington, Ont., native first overall. Russian winger Ivan Miroshnichenko was the only other prospect to receive a first-place vote.

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2022-04-28 12:13:43Z
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BULLS at BUCKS | FULL GAME HIGHLIGHTS | April 27, 2022 - NBA

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2022-04-28 02:02:25Z
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Is Doc Rivers to blame for his teams blowing 3-1 leads? Richard Jefferson doesn't think so - ESPN

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2022-04-27 23:53:56Z
1391909684

Rabu, 27 April 2022

Mission accomplished: Auston Matthews hits 60, Soupy posts shutout, and Maple Leafs clinch home-ice advantage with win over Detroit - Maple Leafs Hot Stove

Auston Matthews stole the show by becoming the 21st player in NHL history to hit 60 goals in a season as the Toronto Maple Leafs downed the Detroit Red Wings 3-0 at Scotiabank Arena in an incredibly lopsided affair. 

Matthews scored two goals, a pair of tallies sandwiched around a goal from John Tavares created by a great pass from William Nylander. In net, Jack Campbell stopped 20 shots for his first shutout since New Year’s Day.

With two more points tonight, the Maple Leafs have clinched home ice in the first round of the 2022 Stanley Cup Playoffs. Their 30th home win of the season sets a new franchise record, and they continue to extend their franchise record for most points in a season with 113.

Your game in 10:

1.   Before we delve into the game, let’s talk about a few personnel factors at play. The Leafs re-inserted Jake Muzzin into the lineup after his most recent ailment, while Justin Holl was scratched to make room. With Michael Bunting missing his second consecutive game after tweaking something in his lower body, Nick Robertson was called up from the Marlies to play in his place. Kyle Clifford and Wayne Simmonds were out of the lineup as Colin Blackwell and Nick Abruzzese suited up on the fourth line. Keep track of all those changes?

As for the opposition, the Red Wings iced an extremely-depleted roster tonight. Star Dylan Larkin and young forward Filip Zadina are both out for the season with injuries. Moreover, Tyler Bertuzzi, one of the team’s leading scorers, is ineligible to play in Canada due to his COVID-19 vaccination status. Thus, the lopsided beatdown that unfolded is not necessarily unexpected. But boy, was it a beatdown.


2.    The first period didn’t bring about any goals for either side, but it was a period decisively dominated by the Leafs.

Ilya Mikheyev went on a mini-break very quickly, but Alex Nedeljkovic was up to the task in net for the Red Wings to snuff it out. Something I wrote in my game notes that was especially true of this period and continued to be later in the game: “The first period was played nearly entirely in the Detroit end.” We use shot attempts as a proxy for possession, but sometimes they can understate how lopsided a game is when a team is cycling in the offensive zone but not throwing pucks at the net all the time.

That’s pretty much what was happening in this game. The Red Wings did a pretty good job in the first two periods of clogging up the neutral zone and causing Toronto to play dump-and-chase. The problem for Detroit is that once the puck was dumped in, they had severe problems getting it out. If they did, it was seldom a clean zone exit with possession. Rather, the modal outcome was a flip to center ice for a frantic change before a Leafs defenseman pounded it back in, starting the cycle over again.

The forechecking pressure and puck possession cycling in the offensive zone was superb for the Leafs in the first and throughout the game. Detroit created one good look (in my opinion) on Jack Campbell, and Natural Stat Trick attributed them with two high-danger chances in the first period. That’s it.

The Leafs produced five at 5v5 in the first period and owned over 70% of the expected goals, scoring chances, high danger chances, and shot attempts in that frame. Dominant.


3.     While the Leafs didn’t score in that first period, it was another frame of Auston Matthews looking excellent without the puck going in. He fired a one-time blast off of cycle in the first:

When the Leafs got their first power play in the opening period, they were clearly trying to tee him up. The trend of AM34 looking superb without scoring a goal seeped into the second period, as my first note of the frame was this stop from Nedeljkovic on the Toronto superstar:

Sometimes you can tell by watching the tape when a player is completely locked in, and that was Matthews from the jump.  I thought Alex Kerfoot looked good on that line in the place of Bunting and Mitch Marner was fine, but Matthews was the one driving play.

In the words of Red Wings color announcer Mickey Redmond on the Detroit feed, “When Matthews is on the ice, it’s absolutely mayhem for the defense.” That was 100% true tonight; each time he had the puck, Matthews seemed like a threat to score.

AM34 was zooming around the ice, hounding the puck, firing shot after shot at the net (he finished with seven), and dominating the flow of the game. It took quite some time for Matthews to break the ice, but we could all feel it coming.


4.      The penalty kill has been a topic of discussion in Leaf-land recently after allowing far too many PPGs in the last few games to Tampa and Florida. While the Red Wings’ power play minus Larkin and Bertuzzi is a far cry from what those two teams can load up on a unit, it was still an opportunity for the Leafs to make a few adjustments shorthanded in one of their final tune-ups before the postseason.

Toronto had to kill three penalties tonight, the first of which came at 6:12 of the second period after Nick Robertson was called for high-sticking. I thought the PK was okay, and Natural Stat Trick shows them limiting high-danger chances pretty well throughout the night, although a handful of scoring chances did seep through.

The first kill saw Jack Campbell make one stop of consequence. The second one at the tail end of the period was notable for a diving shot block by Alex Kerfoot:

The final kill came in the third, and the only good look was nearly a goal as Jakub Vrana rang the post for Detroit from the right circle. The Leafs did a solid job taking away the change-of-sides pass that hurt them against Tampa on the PK, but puck movement was a tad too easy (the stop Campbell made on the first PK was an obstructed pass to the slot) and shooting lanes were a little too open for my liking.

Let’s call it a decent showing shorthanded, but there is still some room for improvement headed into the last game of the regular season.


5.    Alex Nedeljkovic was terrific for the Red Wings tonight. He helped keep the doors closed for a long time in this game and prevented the floodgates from ever fully opening.

Moritz Seider’s stellar defensive play took away a clean pass from John Tavares to Jason Spezza that Spezza still nearly batted out of the air and into the net, but with each close call, you knew a goal was coming soon. It finally did, and Spezza played a part.

The fourth line was in the midst of transitioning into the first line after a good offensive-zone shift by the bottom unit, leaving Spezza on the ice when Auston Matthews stepped on. The wily veteran used his long reach to guide the puck to the net front, where Matthews snagged it, deked Nedeljkovic, and slid it into the net:

What I like about this goal is the anticipation from Matthews. He read the play perfectly, identifying that Spezza had a shot to come away with the puck into the slot and knowing what was coming next. Matthews saw open ice in the slot and moved himself to it, while Detroit’s Michael Rasmussen was caught puck-watching. Great goalscorers know how to routinely put themselves in the right positions to score, and Matthews is the great-est goalscorer in the NHL right now.

That was point #995 for Spezza, who suddenly has a four-game point streak going. After a long slump, the old goat has turned it on again, and the Leafs have won the xG battle when he is on ice in four of his last six games.

Compared to fellow vets Kyle Clifford and Wayne Simmonds, Spezza is the one who I think has to be in the playoff lineup. He still has far more scoring touch, is getting hot at the right time, and offers considerable value in 6v5 and 5v4 situations.


6.     Another veteran I had my eye on tonight was Jake Muzzin. Muzzin returned from his second concussion, played four games (where I felt he looked improved compared to a dreadful performance for much of the year), and then has been out a week with a mysterious ailment.  Back in the lineup tonight, I thought it was another good game for him.

Sure, it was a good game for just about everyone, but Muzzin and TJ Brodie graded out as Toronto’s best defensive pairing tonight by the metrics, which lines up with the eye test. Mark Giordano and Timothy Liljegren were on ice for a bad giveaway by Giordano, while Morgan Rielly and Ilya Lyubushkin weren’t all that noticeable (not necessarily a bad thing, I will say).

Meanwhile, Muzzin and Brodie were engaged and quite noticeable. Muzzin drew a penalty, his good defensive stick shorthanded cut off a possible high-danger pass, and he was confidently moving up in the offensive zone to create offense. He put a couple of shots on net, and at 20:38 TOI, he was Toronto’s third-most used defenseman tonight. Brodie, at 21:41, finished with the most ice time.

I wrote this in a previous game review, but the nice thing about the Muzzin-Brodie pairing is that it doesn’t require Muzzin to be the defensive titan he was expected to be at the start of the season. It allows him to take a few more chances and tap into that offensive upside that’s often been underrated over his lengthy NHL career, which he’s looked comfortable doing in the five games since returning from injury.

The scoring chances were 8-3 at 5v5 with Muzzin on the ice, and the Leafs owned ~86% of the expected goals with Muzzin and Brodie on the ice in Evolving Hockey’s numbers. If the playoffs were starting today, I think the three pairs we saw tonight would be my three pairs.


7.    The Leafs were skating an experimental line of Ilya Mikheyev with John Tavares and Nick Robertson on the second line, but that started to change in the early third period. It was only a minute after I wrote in my notes that Robertson had shifted down and William Nylander had moved up that Nylander and the captain hooked up for a magnificent goal:

That might be one of the best two or three passes that Nylander has made all season. Out along the boards shielding the puck from the defender with his back to the intended target, in one spin-o-rama motion, he flung it right on Tavares’ tape for an easy tap-in.

Two more assists tonight for #88 bring him up to 78 points on the season as he continues to pad his career-high. I’m not sure if he’ll play in the final game (see point 10 for that), but it’s been a season to remember offensively for the Swede. Now, we’ll see if he can manufacture another playoff showing like last season.


8.     When Tavares scored that goal, the game felt close to over. The Red Wings were continuing to get sat on in their own zone and could do next to nothing at 5v5. At that point, the game became just an exercise to see whether Matthews could hit 60 goals in the final 16 or so minutes.

When the Leafs were set to go on the power play for the second time of the evening, all the attention turned to Matthews. Guess what happened next?

It’s pretty fitting that Matthews’ 60th comes on a vintage wrist shot as he’s got one of the best the game has ever seen — perhaps the best since Joe Sakic. That goal put Matthews into an elite club to score 60, made even more impressive when we remember he did it in just 73 games and in the 21st century.

Only Alex Ovechkin and Steven Stamkos have done it this century, and Matthews is the first member of the Toronto Maple Leafs to achieve the feat. A living legend playing before our eyes, and the possible 2021-22 Hart Trophy Winner.


9.      Once Matthews extended the lead to 3-0, it was pretty much cruise control. After the Leafs killed that third penalty off, Jack Campbell was able to coast to his first shutout since New Year’s Day.

He only needed to stop 20 shots to post the shutout, but he still looked calm and confident doing it. I would not describe this as a terribly difficult clean sheet, but there were six high-danger chances against by Natural Stat Trick’s numbers, and he stopped all of them.

Campbell’s positioning looked very sound, his rebound control was stellar, and he showed off a quick glove, too:

Campbell is now 7-0-1 in eight starts since returning from injury, posting a .922 SV% in that span. If we distill it down to just the last four starts, he’s stopped 116 of 123 shots (.943) and saved 1.82 goals above expected, allowing just seven total goals for a GAA below 2.00.

It’s the first stretch of four-straight appearances with a save percentage above .910 since November when Campbell was lighting the world on fire. Some are fretting about Tampa playing their best hockey in a couple of months right before the playoffs — which is true — but so is Campbell, who is arguably the most pivotal piece for Toronto’s side in the upcoming series.

It’s hard to have reasonably imagined Campbell could look any better when he returned from injury at the start of April having been in meltdown mode just three weeks prior.


10.    This win locked down home-ice advantage for the Leafs, which could be crucial. For the first time since 2004, they will have home ice for game one of a series that will be played in front of a capacity crowd. In a series that figures to be as tight as the one against Tampa will, it could mean a lot.

With home-ice wrapped up, the Friday night game against Boston doesn’t appear to have much meaning, and I’m curious to see what Sheldon Keefe does personnel-wise.

TJ Brodie has been an ironman who has appeared in every game this season, so it could be a chance to rest the veteran defenseman. Morgan Rielly is in the same boat as a candidate for rest. We learned today that Rasmus Sandin will be back, so he will sub in for one of those two. iI you wanted to take both out, Justin Holl is available, too.

Will John Tavares be given another load management day? Perhaps Mitch Marner? It should be interesting, and there’s a bit of a tactical decision to be made. On one hand, making sure key players enter the playoffs with a full tank is important. On the other hand, playing close to a full lineup to make sure there’s no rustiness or the intensity doesn’t drop off just before the postseason could be an attractive option. We shall see on Friday.


Game Flow: 5v5 Shot Attempts


Heat Map: 5v5 Shot Attempts


Game Highlights: Leafs 3 vs. Red Wings 0

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2022-04-27 06:12:49Z
1402371011