Jumat, 30 September 2022

Ravens coach Harbaugh calls Tagovailoa situation ‘astonishing to see’ - Sportsnet.ca

Baltimore Ravens head coach John Harbaugh didn't hold back Friday when he was asked about his approach when players sustain concussions following Tua Tagovailoa's frightening injury Thursday night.

The Miami Dolphins star quarterback was taken off the field on a stretcher and rushed to hospital with head and neck injuries after he was sacked midway through the second quarter against the Cincinnati Bengals.

Tagovailoa had also suffered what the team called a "back injury" just four days earlier against the Buffalo Bills. The 24-year-old was removed from that game with what the Dolphins said was a head injury originally until he returned to start the second half.

Harbaugh told reporters he "couldn't believe" what he saw during both games.

"It was just something that was just astonishing to see," Harbaugh said. "I've been coaching for 40 years now in college and the NFL, almost 40, and I've never seen anything like it before. It just was really something that ... I just couldn't believe what I was seeing."

Harbaugh expressed appreciation toward the Ravens' doctors and to general manager Eric DeCosta for how their team handles players returning from concussions.

"A lot of times players want to play. They want to go out there, they want to play and sometimes you just have to tell them, 'No,'" Harbaugh said. "You have to say no. No has got to be the answer."

Harbaugh referred to how the Ravens dealt with wide receiver Devin DuVernay, who sustained a concussion during Week 2 against the Dolphins.

"He really didn't have much in terms of symptoms or stuff like that, but he was out for the game and he was out most of the week and never had a symptom," Harbaugh explained. "... When he was finally cleared, I think that's the approach you take.

"Sometimes, guys might be there physically where they're sound, but they're not confident yet. They're not quite there yet. ... You don't put them out there until they're ready. Until they're ready in their minds."

Harbaugh said Ravens doctors would probably call themselves conservative but added, "that's what they should be."

The NFL and the players' association are investigating Miami's handling of Tagovailoa's injury Sunday.

Tagovailoa underwent an MRI Friday and remains in concussion protocol.

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2022-09-30 21:10:00Z
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Diving into the Blue Jays’ AL wild card scenarios - Sportsnet.ca

TORONTO — Thanks to the Boston Red Sox completing a sweep of the Baltimore Orioles on Thursday, we know this much: the Toronto Blue Jays will play a three-game wild card series beginning Friday, October 7.

Who will they be playing against? And where? That remains to be seen. But answers to those questions will come at some point over the next six days — sooner if the Blue Jays can string together some wins, later if they scuffle.

The good news for the Blue Jays is they’re in the driver’s seat.

They wake up Friday as sole occupants of first place in the American League wild card standings, 1.5 games ahead of the second-place Seattle Mariners, and two games up on the Tampa Bay Rays in third. Here’s how those standings look entering the weekend:

As a refresher — the first-place wild card finisher hosts all three games of one wild card series against the second-place finisher. The third-place club travels to Cleveland to be the visitor in all three games of the other set against the AL Central-champion Guardians.

The winner of the series between the top two wild card teams will go on to play the Houston Astros in the divisional round; the winner of the series in Cleveland will get the New York Yankees.

So, if the regular season ended Friday morning, the Blue Jays would host the Mariners, with the winner continuing to Houston, while the Guardians would welcome the Rays, competing to earn a spot in a divisional series beginning in the Bronx.

Of course, there are still games to be played — six each for the Blue Jays and Rays, seven for the Mariners. Toronto’s magic number to clinch the first wild card spot is six with the Mariners and five with the Rays. That means the earliest the Blue Jays could secure home field advantage is Sunday. Three Blue Jays wins combined with at least two losses by the Rays and three losses by the Mariners over that span would do it.

But it’s unlikely to be that easy. If the Blue Jays can’t take care of business against the Red Sox at Rogers Centre this weekend, and the Orioles at Camden Yards next week, the Rays, Mariners, or both could close their respective gaps. Which would be bad news for the Blue Jays, who don’t hold the edge in any tiebreaker scenarios.

At the end of the regular season, any two-team ties will be decided by head-to-head record, while a three-team tie would come down to which club has the best combined winning percentage against the other two teams. And with the Blue Jays, Mariners, and Rays all having finished their season series against one another, we know who holds the hammer in the various scenarios:

So, the Blue Jays need to finish at least one win ahead of both the Rays and Mariners if they’re going to ensure one of next weekend’s wild card series is hosted at Rogers Centre.

That will make for some intense scoreboard watching over the next six days.

The Rays open a three-game set in Houston on Friday before travelling to Boston for three more against the Boston Red Sox at Fenway Park starting Monday. The Mariners, meanwhile, host the Oakland Athletics this weekend and then welcome the Detroit Tigers for four next week, including a Tuesday doubleheader.

Ultimately, Toronto’s fate is in its hands. But it would take only a couple losses this weekend, and a couple wins by the Rays, Mariners, or both, to change that. All scenarios are still on the table for now. Here’s a look at each of Toronto’s potential outcomes at the end of these next six games.

Blue Jays finish first, host wild card series vs. Rays or Mariners

The Blue Jays can force this scenario without any help from elsewhere across the league by simply winning their final six games. Easier said than done, particularly considering the mental miscues and unforced errors that have sabotaged the club’s efforts of late. But with a playing-out-the-string Red Sox side coming to town this weekend, and a series with the likely-to-be-eliminated-by-then Orioles on tap next week, it’s not out of the realm of possibility.

But what if the Blue Jays go 3-3 over that stretch? Then they need three Mariners losses and two by the Rays to clinch home field advantage. What if Toronto goes 2-4? Then the Mariners need to lose at least four of their final seven, while the Rays lose three of their final six. The less the Blue Jays win, the more help they’ll need to ensure a wild card series is played at Rogers Centre.

That’s why, even after clinching a postseason berth Thursday, Toronto can’t take its foot off the gas. We’ve all seen it in postseasons past — 49,000-strong packed to the Rogers Centre rafters, creating the kind of sound that causes Johnny Cueto to drop return throws, Gerrit Cole to balk, and opposition players to meltdown under the pressure of MLB’s most hell-raising atmosphere. That’s what the Blue Jays are playing for over their final six games.

Blue Jays finish second, travel to Seattle for wild card series

Seattle has a game in hand on both the Blue Jays and Rays, a discrepancy that won’t be made up until Tuesday, when the Mariners host a doubleheader against the lowly Tigers.

And if Seattle is within 2.5 games of the Blue Jays Tuesday morning, the possibility of leapfrogging into the first wild card spot will remain. That could lead to some nervous scoreboard watching for Blue Jays fans, as their club plays play the middle game of a series in Baltimore.

Of course, the last couple weeks haven’t only been nervous for Mariners fans — they’ve been maddening. MLB’s schedule makers have presented Seattle with an abundant platter of cupcakes with which to finish their season as the club plays its final 20 games against below-.500 opposition. But the Mariners have refused to consume the pastries.

After a 3-7 road trip against the 70-86 Angels, 56-100 Athletics, and 63-93 Royals, the Mariners returned home this week and were promptly shut out in the opener of a series with the 66-89 Rangers. Seattle finally got back on track with a narrow victory the next night. But it took multiple extra-inning comebacks to edge Texas in an insane, 10-9 finale on Thursday, as the Mariners continued to fumble around with their season above an open flame.

Despite all that, it’s easy to foresee the Mariners putting things back on the rails over its final two series, as they welcome the 100-loss Athletics and 92-loss Tigers to Seattle. For all their blundering, the Mariners are still the best positioned club to overtake the Blue Jays for that first wild card spot by sheer ease of schedule. Which would create a tough scenario for Toronto, as it flew across the continent to contest a series before rowdy Mariners fans watching their team play postseason baseball for the first time in 21 years.

And recent struggles or not, Seattle remains a talent-rich club capable of running out a stacked rotation of Robbie Ray (3.58 ERA), Luis Castillo (3.06), and Logan Gilbert (3.29) in a wild card series. Sensational rookie Julio Rodriguez, who’s posted a five-win season in his first trip through the league, is expected to return from a back injury in time for the playoffs, and will reassume his place atop a lineup that, not unlike Toronto’s, runs deep with hitters performing at an above league average level.

If the Mariners can get out of their own way, they can be as dangerous a postseason team as any.

Blue Jays finish second, travel to Tampa Bay for wild card series

Thanks to a two-game cushion as of Friday morning, Toronto can afford to play one game worse than Tampa Bay over the next six days and still finish with a better record.

But what if the Blue Jays play two games worse than Tampa? What if Toronto goes 3-3 over the next six while the Rays get hot and go 5-1? In that case, Tampa could edge in front of Toronto in the standings thanks to the tiebreaker they hold and potentially force the Blue Jays to travel to Tropicana Field for three games next weekend.

Did you feel that churn in the pit of your stomach? The involuntary dread at the thought of a three-game, winner-take-all series at The Trop? The Blue Jays are 87-135 in franchise history at Tropicana Field — a .392 winning percentage. Over the years, Toronto’s players and coaches, its style of play, the very uniforms it wears, have all changed. But the results have stayed the same.

Now, to be fair, this year’s Rays vintage is the least threatening we’ve seen in some time. Thanks to an unbelievable run of injuries, the club has been forced to reach deep into its renowned depth and look outside the organization for playable veterans such as David Peralta, Christian Bethancourt, and Jose Siri to plug holes around the diamond. With a 102 wRC+, this isn’t an offence a team as good as Toronto ought to fear.

But it’s still a versatile, fundamentally-sound, balanced one that’s allowed manager Kevin Cash to start 152 different batting orders and 146 defensive alignments over 156 games, and match up advantageously against tough, late-inning relievers. That’s really the Rays' secret sauce — metamorphosing their lineup to best exploit the opposition’s weaknesses while putting its own players in the possible position to succeed.

The Rays also still feature the kind of deep, adaptable pitching staff the club’s known for, led by Shane McClanahan, Drew Rasmussen, and Jeffrey Springs. Meanwhile, Tyler Glasnow just returned from Tommy John surgery flashing the same dominant stuff that gave him ace-like potential prior to his injury and gives Cash another weapon to use in shorter stints either as a starter or out of an already-stacked, versatile bullpen.

All told, the Blue Jays are a better team than the Rays on paper and would be the odds-on favourite to win a three-game series. But when that series is being played at Tropicana Field, all bets are off.

Blue Jays finish third, travel to Cleveland for wild card series

To find themselves in the third wild card spot and hopping over Lake Erie for a series with the Cleveland Guardians, Toronto would need to play two games worse than the Rays over the next six days, and 1.5 worse than the Mariners.

One scenario would see the Blue Jays splitting their final stretch, 3-3, while the Mariners go 5-2 and the Rays go 5-1. Or, if the Blue Jays go cold and lose four of their final six, the Mariners would need only a 4-3 record, and the Rays only 4-2, to knock Toronto down to third.

Ultimately, the Blue Jays would need to scuffle at the worst time while the Mariners and Rays get hot at the best time. But that’s well within the realm of possibility when you’re looking at a two-series stretch of baseball. The Blue Jays have split or lost their last three series, going 4-5 in the process. And one of those wins was a 10th-inning walk-off. Anything can happen.

And yet, while the run of poor play necessary to make this scenario occur would be an unfortunate way for the Blue Jays to enter the postseason, there’s a case to be made it wouldn’t be the club’s worst outcome.

Cleveland’s averaging only 4.3 runs per game this season — fewer than the 89-loss Rangers and 91-loss Colorado Rockies. The Guardians offence has produced a 98 wRC+, the lowest of any postseason-bound club by a mile. Its 123 home runs are the second fewest in baseball to the 92-loss Tigers. Its 33 per cent hard-hit rate and 4.8 per cent barrel rate are dead last.

Meanwhile, Toronto’s second among AL teams in runs per games and first in wRC+, hard-hit rate, and barrel rate. The Blue Jays have five hitters with 20 or more homers — Cleveland has one. And while the Guardians and Blue Jays have near identical records, Cleveland’s gotten there while playing 110 games against teams below .500. Toronto’s played sub-.500 teams only 71 times while out-scoring Cleveland by a half-run per game.

A three-game playoff rotation of Shane Bieber, Triston McKenzie, and Cal Quantrill supported by a bullpen with a collective 3.04 ERA would certainly by a challenge. But with a lineup regularly featuring some combination of Owen Miller (85 wRC+), Gabriel Arias (61), Myles Straw (63), and one of Austin Hedges (43) or Luke Maile (75) as its bottom three hitters, the Guardians are essentially giving away outs a third of the time they’re at the plate.

if the Blue Jays can muster even four runs per game against Cleveland’s pitching, they can feel pretty good about their ability to contain its anemic offence. Dropping to third in the wild card standings wouldn’t be the best way for Toronto to back into the playoffs. But it might produce the best matchup.

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2022-09-30 14:52:00Z
1586664015

Explainer: Tua Tagovailoa, fencing response and NFL concussion protocol - Sportsnet.ca

Tua Tagovailoa stumbled to the ground, his legs wobbly and unable to walk to the huddle after banging his head Sunday. He was carried off the field by stretcher after another hit caused his head to violently slam against the turf and his hands to freeze up Thursday night.

The Dolphins said the third-year quarterback was conscious and had movement in all his extremities. He was taken to University of Cincinnati Medical Center but was released and expected to return to Miami with the team.

``It was a scary moment. He was evaluated for a concussion and he's in the concussion protocol,'' Dolphins coach Mike McDaniel said.

Some who watched the scary injury want to know why Tagovailoa was playing just four days after his quick return Sunday prompted a joint review by the NFL and NFL Players Association.

Many former players were critical of the decision to allow Tagovailoa to return against Buffalo and start against Cincinnati.

``Player health and safety is at the core of the union's mission,'' the NFLPA wrote on Twitter. ``Our concern tonight is for Tua and we hope for a full and speedy recovery. Our investigation into the potential protocol violation is ongoing.''

NFL executive vice president Jeff Miller said the review usually takes a week or two.

``Every indication from our perspective is that it was,'' Miller said about the team and its doctors following concussion protocol on Sunday. ``I know the player, the coach and others have spoken to this. And we are engaged in that review now. So we'll come back with a formal answer to that question, something that we want to engage in.''

Before the game, Chris Nowinski, a founder of the Concussion Legacy Foundation who played football at Harvard, wrote on Twitter: ``If Tua takes the field tonight, it's a massive step back for concussion care in the NFL. If he has a 2nd concussion that destroys his season or career, everyone involved will be sued and should lose their jobs, coaches included. We all saw it, even they must know this isn't right.''

HOW WAS TAGOVAILOA CLEARED TO RETURN SUNDAY?

Tagovailoa appeared to be disoriented by what the team originally said was a head injury after taking a hard hit from Bills linebacker Matt Milano late in the first half. He missed just three snaps and returned after halftime. Tagovailoa and the team said a back injury was the reason for his instability after the hit and he wasn't in concussion protocol. He was questionable to play on Thursday but started the game.

WHAT IS THE NFL'S CONCUSSION PROTOCOL?

A player who exhibits or reports symptoms or signs suggestive of a concussion or stinger enters protocol.

During each game, independent certified athletic trainers (ATC spotters) monitor the players on the field. If they see an impact to the head, they call a timeout and the player must be removed from the game, examined and evaluated. Team trainers, coaches or physicians, teammates, NFL game officials, sideline unaffiliated neurotrauma consultants (UNC) or booth ATCs also can initiate the protocol.

Any player in concussion protocol undergoes a six-step evaluation by a team physician and UNC to determine the severity of the injury and whether or not they're fit to return to the field. The final step is a neurological evaluation featuring a cervical spine exam, including range of motion/pain, evaluation of speech, observation of gait, eye movements and pupillary exam.

If any elements are positive, inconclusive or suspicious of concussion, the player is escorted to locker room.

In the locker room, a team physician and UNC conducts a full neurological exam and complete NFL Standardized Concussion Assessment Tool.

If abnormal, the player doesn't return to play, undergoes periodic evaluation by a medical team and has a follow-up neurological exam.

The league instituted the system in 2011 after Cleveland Browns quarterback Colt McCoy took a helmet-to-helmet hit in a game and returned without being tested for a concussion. The Browns said that the team's trainers didn't see the hit because they were tending to other players and that no one told them about it. After the game, McCoy was diagnosed with a concussion.

WHAT IS FENCING RESPONSE?

According to healthline.com, ``when a person experiences an impact that's strong enough to cause traumatic brain injury, such as a concussion, their arms often go into an unnatural position.''

Tagovailoa appeared to take that position, his fingers flexed awkwardly in front of his facemask for several seconds as he laid on the turf.

``The fencing response is often seen when a player is knocked down or knocked out during full-contact athletic competitions such as football, martial arts, boxing, rugby, and hockey,'' per healthline.com.

It happened to Los Angeles Chargers tight end Donald Parham during a Thursday night game against Kansas City last Dec. 17. Parham was removed on a stretcher and stayed overnight at a hospital for observation after being diagnosed with a concussion.

WHAT'S NEXT FOR TAGOVAILOA?

The severity of Tagovailoa's concussion is not known, but it's seemingly encouraging he was allowed to fly with the team. He must undergo a five-step process before being allowed to take the field again. The fifth phase is a full practice followed by clearance from the team physician. After that, he must be examined by an independent neurological consultant.

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2022-09-30 05:40:00Z
1581362981

Kamis, 29 September 2022

Rasmus Sandin wise to end stalemate and rush to Maple Leafs camp - Sportsnet.ca

TORONTO — This was never about money only.

Opportunity and ice time were always intertwined in Rasmus Sandin’s prolonged contractual stalemate with the Toronto Maple Leafs, which mercifully ended Thursday morning with a two-year, $2.8-million bridge deal, signed eight days after training camp’s opening.

“This morning, Rasmus Sandin and (agent) Lewis Gross reached out to us and informed us that after watching our game last night and seeing more injuries accrued by our defence, that they wanted to get this locked in today so Rasmus could get over to Toronto and help his teammates,” GM Kyle Dubas said in a statement. “We appreciate Rasmus and his camp taking that step today to get this contract done and allow him the time to ready for the final preseason games.

“As stated throughout this process, Rasmus is a key member of the present and future of (our) team, and we are excited today that he is en route to Toronto to ready for Opening Night in Montreal.”

The subtext here: Sandin blinked first.

And that’s OK.

The defenceman accepted a bridge contract similar to one tabled months ago, for the same term and total dollars as friend and fellow RFA Timothy Liljegren. He won’t miss a paycheque.

The deal is fair market value for both sides. No one “won” the dispute, and if there is any loss it may be Sandin’s fitness needing to play catchup — but let’s see how he looks on the ice before ruling.

If Dubas made any concession in the deal, it’s that the final season of Sandin’s agreement carries a salary of $1.6 million, meaning he’ll receive a richer qualifying offer as an RFA upon the conclusion of the 2023-24 season.

Ultimately, flying Sandin from Sweden to Toronto — he’ll make the journey Friday — is in the best interest of all involved.

From the club’s perspective, NHL-calibre defencemen were getting scarce fast. Veteran Jake Muzzin (back) has yet to participate in a full team practice. Liljegren (hernia) is still a minimum of five weeks away from seeing action.

And next-men-up Jordie Benn (groin) and Carl Dahlstrom (shoulder) both suffered significant injuries in Wednesday’s pre-season action, further clearing a path for Sandin to seize not only a regular role but make a case for the top four.

Continuing to sit at home and ask for money the cap-strapped organization doesn’t have to give (without making a trade) would have hardly served the 22-year-old well.

With only 88 NHL games on his resume, the 2018 first-round pick needs to see action for his own sake.

“It goes without saying,” coach Sheldon Keefe said this week, that there are prime shifts just waiting for Sandin as soon as he signs.

Once Sandin is up to speed, it will relieve pressure on the Leafs to rush Muzzin or Liljegren back from recovery.

More important, a strong showing by the confident left shot could set him up for the payday and security he really desires by 2024.

The lone Maple Leafs defenceman signed beyond that summer is Morgan Rielly.

That means a top-four role — and top-four salary — is dangling like a carrot in the distance. The onus falls on Sandin to go out and snatch it.

With Sandin’s business tidied up, the Maple Leafs currently stand $2.9 million over the salary ceiling, per CapFriendly.com.

To become cap compliant — and sign PTO Zach Aston-Reese as hoped — Dubas must shed salary via LTIR and/or the waiver wire prior to Opening Night.

Provided Muzzin’s recovery from back pain goes smoothly, the Maple Leafs’ blue line should look something like this when their season opens on Oct. 12 at Bell Centre:

Morgan Rielly – T.J. Brodie

Jake Muzzin – Justin Holl

Rasmus Sandin – Mark Giordano

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2022-09-29 15:19:00Z
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Aaron Judge home run ball: What happened to it? | CTV News - CTV News Toronto

New York Yankees outfielder Aaron Judge called one of the Toronto Blue Jays pitchers "a class act" for his instrumental role in returning Judge's historic home run ball to the Yankees on Wednesday night's game.

During the third game of a three-game series against the Toronto Blue Jays at Rogers Centre Wednesday, Judge tied the MLB American League (AL) record for most home runs in a single season.

Pitched to by reliever Tim Mayza, Judge hit his 61st home run of the season into the Blue Jays bullpen during the seventh inning of Wednesday’s game. With Aaron Hicks on first base, Judge hit the record-tying homer on a 3-2 count to give the Yankees a 5-3 lead.

Before falling into the bullpen, the lucrative ball grazed the glove of a Toronto Blue Jays fan sitting in the first row, a Toronto restaurateur named Frankie Lasagna.

Lasagna had brought the glove for exactly that reason – he’d hoped he’d have the chance to take home a piece of baseball history, or at least leverage it.

“I would have held on to it for as long as I could (to) negotiate,” he told the Canadian Press. “Maybe get Judge to try to come to the restaurant.”

But ultimately, Lasagna left empty-handed, as he couldn’t quite reach the ball, allowing it to fall into the Jays bullpen.

“The disbelief comes over you and just the shock and the amazement,” he said. “I was like, 'Oh my God, I almost had it.’”

From there, Blue Jays bullpen coach Matt Buschmann caught the ball after it bounced off a wall, a spokesperson for the team confirmed. He and closer Jordan Romano made sure it got back to the Yankees, they said.

“Romano was one of several people involved in our bullpen. He made sure our group hung onto it until Zack Britton of the Yankees came to get it,” the spokesperson said.

In an interview after the game, Judge called Romano a "class act" for handing the ball back to Britton.

"He's one of the best in the game. It definitely means a lot. I gotta try and find him and thank him," he added.

In a video shared to MLB.com, Judge can be seen taking photos with the historic ball alongside his mother, who watched all three games in Toronto in anticipation of the big moment. He says the ball has now been "locked up" by the Yankees equipment manager.

Overall, Judge called the moment “an incredible honour” in an interview following the game and said he felt relieved. 

With files from The Canadian Press.

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2022-09-29 17:17:00Z
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Blue Jays fan Frankie Lasagna just misses catching Judge’s historic home run ball - Sportsnet.ca

Blue Jays fan Frankie Lasagna grabbed a baseball glove from his garage before heading down to Rogers Centre for Wednesday's game against the New York Yankees

With Aaron Judge on the verge of baseball history, Lasagna wanted to be prepared just in case the Yankees slugger hit his 61st homer of the season. 

"I would never ever bring a glove other than this situation," Lasagna said. "I needed a bigger one."

The 37-year-old Toronto restaurant owner came agonizingly close to catching the historic ball after Judge went deep in the seventh inning. 

Lasagna stretched over the railing but the ball hit the wall just below and bounced into the Toronto bullpen. He put both hands on top of his head after the near-miss, a frustrated look etched on his face.  

"Two more feet and I would have had it," he said. "I needed a fishing net and I would have got it."

Blue Jays closer Jordan Romano said the ball remained in the bullpen for a couple minutes until it was given to Zack Britton, who walked over from the opposing bullpen. 

Security guards, police officers and stadium employees were hovering in the area at the time. Blue Jays bullpen coach Matt Buschmann handed it over once the Yankees reliever arrived.

"It's a very important ball," Romano said. "There was a lot of people there. We just didn't want to give it to the wrong people."

Judge said the ball was eventually given to the Yankees' equipment manager to be locked up for safe keeping.

The homer tied Judge with Roger Maris, who set the American League's single-season home run record in 1961.

Lasagna bought his ticket in the front row of the 100 level thinking it would improve his odds of catching the ball if Judge went deep. 

"In the front row I felt like you've got the best chance," he said. "Lo and behold, I was just a few feet away."

Lasagna, sporting a baby blue Vladimir Guerrero, Jr., jersey, said the anticipation built during every Judge at-bat.

"It's like you're in the game, you're fielding and getting ready for the pitch," he said of the fan experience. "When he hit the ball, it was like 'Oh my God! Oh my God!' 

"I think I hit my buddy in his neck (as I stretched out). I almost got it."

Lasagna could only look down into the bullpen as the ball — which could have been worth big bucks to a collector — bounced a couple of times before it was picked up. 

"The disbelief comes over you and just the shock and the amazement," he said. "I was like, 'Oh my God, I almost had it.'"

One fan seated near Lasagna, still clearly frustrated at just missing the ball, declined an interview request. 

Lasagna said he would have kept the ball if he had caught it.

"I would have held on to it for as long as I could (to) negotiate," he said. "Maybe get Judge to try to come to the restaurant."

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2022-09-29 03:05:00Z
1567157577

Deletions on D make Murray work in Maple Leafs' pre-season win - Toronto Sun

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Matt Murray wanted to be challenged in his first pre-season game, but not at the expense of Maple Leafs defencemen falling faster than autumn foliage.

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Toronto’s projected No. 1 goalie played a chunk of his first 40 minutes of Wednesday’s 3-0 win over visiting Montreal with two forwards moved to the blueline. This after Jordie Benn left following just three shifts with a groin injury and Carl Dahlstrom joined him late in the first period with a bad shoulder.

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Add that duo to Timothy Liljegren (hernia), Jake Muzzin (back) and the contract stalemate of Rasmus Sandin.

“We don’t know the full extent, but both guys will miss time,” said head coach Sheldon Keefe, who a day earlier was told that centre John Tavares will be out three weeks with an oblique muscle issue. “It sucks to see it happening as frequent as it has been, but it’s part of the game.

“In the meantime, there’s lots of opportunity and a great showing from all our guys today.”

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On that note, Keefe called it a “fun” evening, turning forwards Alex Kerfoot and Calle Jarnkrok into defencemen, while Murray debuted with 16 saves, Erik Kallgren completed the shutout aas Scotiabank Arena held an evening-long love-in for special guests from Team Canada ’72.

Maple Leafs goalie Matt Murray makes a save against the Montreal Canadiens in the first period at Scotiabank Arena on Wednesday, Sept. 28, 2022.
Maple Leafs goalie Matt Murray makes a save against the Montreal Canadiens in the first period at Scotiabank Arena on Wednesday, Sept. 28, 2022. Photo by DAN HAMILTON /USA TODAY SPORTS

“I had a blast,” Murray insisted. “Calle and Kerf stepping in, making breakout passes, it’s like they weren’t missing a beat. Pretty impressive. I can’t believe how seamless they were.

“Guys were blocking shots, we had a good penalty-kill. I wanted to make the most out of tonight, putting the jersey on the first time, getting my feet wet. It was a while since I played in a game.”

An added thrill was Team Canada goalie and Hall of Famer Ken Dryden coming down to talk to him for a couple of minutes. Murray was also credited with an assist on Nick Robertson’s opening goal.  

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Keefe didn’t want to tax his remaining four defencemen too much in a nothing game, so figuring that Kerfoot and Jarnkrok were defensively conscious centres, he thought they were ideal candidates.

“They made it look too easy,” chirped Morgan Rielly, who was partnered with the Swede, while Kerfoot joined TJ Brodie, leaving Mark Giordano and Victor Mete to skate together.

The forwards Keefe did keep together worked well, particularly newcomers and youngsters who needed a big night as Toronto improved its exhibition record to 2-1.

Robertson took a Giordano breakout pass and beat Samuel Montembeault short side, though he got so revved up later on that he made some defensive mistakes which  Keefe had to address.

Pontus Holmberg pulled a puck off the goal line behind Murray in the middle period while centring William Nylander and Denis Malgin, who scored on the power play from Kerfoot and Alex Steeves. Meanwhile, Nick Abruzzese tapped in another in the third with the extra man from Nylander and Malgin.

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Robertson needs a breakout camp with many more experienced players brought in for a look.

“It was a really good game for Nick, getting involved in the goal,” Keefe said. “Montreal) wasn’t reflective of an NHL roster (Wednesday), but there are NHL players over there and we’re still looking for guys to stand out, even AHL guys in an NHL building.

“Everything is amplified and you’re still looking for them to step up and separate themselves. There was Nick, Steeves and I thought Bobby McMann had his best game today. There was Joey Anderson, but it’s a big roster of guys and I don’t want to leave anyone out.”

McMann is barely two years removed from two of the ECHL’s most remote destinations, Newfoundland and Wichita. The second-highest goal scorer on the AHL Marlies last year, with 24 to Anderson’s 26, he was under the bright lights for a nationally televised game between the league’s two oldest rivals.

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Keefe has been talking up the 6-foot-1 winger through camp and started him on a prospects line with Abruzzese and Steeves.

“I like the journey I’ve come on, this organization likes you to earn your spot,” McMann, who signed a two-year NHL contract, said in the morning.

There will likely be cuts after Friday’s next game in Belleville against Ottawa. Though Kallgren has also played well, Murray and Ilya Samsonov, who also is 16-for-16 in saves, are expected to get the most work in the four remaining games before opening night in Montreal.

Neither team dressed an ‘A’ lineup, though Montreal used No. 1 overall draft pick, right winger Juraj Slafkovsky, who also played Monday in Montreal’s 2-1 loss to New Jersey.

  1. John Tavares of the Toronto Maple Leafs looks on in the first period during a game against the Tampa Bay Lightning at Amalie Arena on April 21, 2022 in Tampa, Florida.

    Leaf injuries mount, Tavares to miss three weeks

  2. Maple Leafs star Auston Mattews throws out the ceremonial first pitch before the game between the New York Yankees and the Blue Jays at the Rogers Centre on Sept. 27, 2022.

    Maple Leafs star Matthews chirped by teammates before and after throwing pitch at Jays game

  3. Maple Leafs prospect Fraser Minten (left) battles for the puck with Ottawa Senators defenceman Nikita Zaitsev at Scotiabank Arena on Saturday afternoon.

    Maple Leafs' Denis Malgin hustles to take advantage of second-line chance

Wednesday also kicked off an unplanned audition phase for opening night second-line centre in the wake of Tavares’ three-week absence with a strained oblique (pelvic) muscle.

Kerfoot, who’s started at left wing, and the scratched David Kampf, are the in-house favourites to see some time in the middle. Jarnkrok will also get a shot, either now or should injuries down the middle occur during the year while he’s playing either wing.

lhornby@postmedia.com

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2022-09-29 01:50:36Z
1576891285

Rabu, 28 September 2022

1972 Summit Series: New $2 coin commemorates Canada's victory | CTV News - CTV News Ottawa

Fifty years to the day after Canada defeated the Soviet Union in the 1972 Summit Series, the Royal Canadian Mint is issuing a special coin commemorating the occasion.

The $2 coin is entering circulation on Wednesday to commemorate Canada’s victory in the clash of hockey superpowers, which ended with a win in Game 8 on Sept. 28, 1972 thanks to Paul Henderson’s goal with 34 seconds left.

“Hockey is a defining aspect of our national Canadian identity, and in 1972 Team Canada helped inspire a generation of Canadians,” Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland said in a news release. “This new circulation coin may be a small token, but I hope—fifty years later—that it might help to inspire another.”

The reverse of the coin, designed by Canadian artist Joel Kimmel, features two Team Canada hockey players set against the team’s maple leaf jersey emblem. They are framed by the words “THE SERIES” and “50 YEARS” in English and French.

The coaches’ initials and the jersey numbers of every player surround the core. The obverse still features the effigy of Queen Elizabeth II.

Three million of the coins have been minted, of which two million feature a coloured inner core. The Mint says they will gradually reach Canadians as bank branches and businesses replenish their inventories of $2 coins.

“The Summit Series is a compelling reminder of what Canadians can accomplish when they unite, work hard and persevere,” said Royal Canadian Mint President and CEO Marie Lemay. “I hope that this coin will inspire Canadians of all ages, genders and backgrounds, on the ice or in everyday life.”

The Mint is also issuing several collector coins, proceeds from which will be donated to the Ukrainian Humanitarian Appeal.

Collectors can get a special wrap roll of the colourized coins for $79.95 each or a special wrap roll set of coloured and uncoloured coins for $159.90.

There is also a large-scale pure silver version of the coin for $189.95 and a pure gold version for $4,099.95.

The collectibles can be ordered on the Mint’s website and at their Ottawa and Winnipeg boutiques.

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2022-09-28 14:00:00Z
1572810449

'Inexcusable': Schneider calls out Blue Jays for sloppy play as Yankees clinch AL East - Sportsnet.ca

TORONTO – Amid the eclipsing of their own post-season pursuits by Aaron Judge’s omnipresent orbit, the Toronto Blue Jays are quietly working toward pivotal decisions while picking up valuable lessons big and small.

The extra-inning machinations of John Schneider that helped stall the pursuit of Roger Maris’ American League record of 61 homers certainly led to insights into the interim manager’s strategies and standing Tuesday, even as the star slugger walked four times and scored twice in a 5-2 win that clinched the AL East for the New York Yankees.

Last week’s stretch of four losses in five games by the Blue Jays made that divisional outcome an inevitability, one that led to the Yankees (95-59) spraying champagne in the visitors' clubhouse before charging out to the field for a triumphant photo on the Rogers Centre mound.

As bad as that was, the messy performance before a Rogers Centre crowd of 40,528, ending a three-game win streak and sealing the deal, prompted Schneider to rebuke two of his most important players for baserunning gaffes that truncated a promising rally in the sixth inning.

Bo Bichette, whose foot came off the bag after he slid safely into second with what should have been a double, must be “more attentive,” while Vladimir Guerrero Jr. “flat out needs to run harder” after getting thrown out at second after a slow start out of the box “that’s inexcusable.”

“We're at the point where every little thing matters, every 90 feet matters,” he added, “it should matter every day of the season, and that wasn't the best right there.”

Far from, yet the magic number for the Blue Jays (87-68) to clinch a wild-card berth still dropped to two when the Baltimore Orioles (80-74) fell 13-9 to Boston. The Tampa Bay Rays, 6-5 winners over AL Central-champion Cleveland, are now 1.5 games back of them for the top wild-card spot, while the Seattle Mariners (83-69) are three games back after losing 5-0 to the Texas Rangers.

“Congratulations to Aaron Boone and his staff and the Yankees. This is the hardest division in baseball. Good on them for doing what they did,” said Schneider, adding later: “They gave themselves quite a cushion in the first half. We're hoping to be in the post-season, we're hoping to see them, we're hoping to continue to play deep into October. I don't think there's anything to draw on it. You move on, you've got tomorrow and you try to win a series.”

The way he transitioned between messages post-game – from correcting and stern to measured and encouraging – were the latest examples of what GM Ross Atkins earlier in the day described as Schneider’s consistency, preparedness and positivity.

His derring-do in Monday night’s 3-2 win – intentionally walking Judge to load the bases in a matchup call to escape a 10th-inning jam – was telling not only about his decision-making in extreme leverage, but also how his standing with the front office provides the latitude to take well-reasoned risk.

The Blue Jays could have easily stayed right-on-right with Anthony Bass during that inning, but instead brought in lefty Tim Mayza to take on Anthony Rizzo, inducing a groundout to end the threat. Mayza was told the plan as he was warming up and “after the fact, you're like, ‘Wow! That was a pretty cool move.’ But in the moment, you accept the challenge and go attack that hitter as best you can.”

Whether it worked out or not, it’s not the type of easily second-guessable decision someone worried about his future makes. Atkins “wants him to feel the power to make decisions that may be perceived as potentially riskier,” and when probed about Schneider’s future, he didn’t commit to stripping the interim tag from his title, but didn’t sound like someone laying groundwork for a potential change, either.

“He's certainly a long-term fit and we continue to work through that and feel good about his leadership to date,” said Atkins. “Whether or not that ends up being a manager is not our focus. Not because we don't have the utmost respect for the job that he's done and is doing, but more all of our energy is being deployed towards winning tonight and the next day.”

For his part, Schneider said that in the 2½ months since taking over from the fired Charlie Montoyo, “I’ve come to realize that I absolutely love (the job) and couldn't think of a better place to be and couldn't think of a better group to be with. (The mind) wanders every now and then when you're sitting there at night or talking to your wife. But I'm focused on winning games and hopefully that continues to happen.”

As that plays out behind the scenes, the more imminent call involves Jose Berrios and how his outing Tuesday will impact the club’s wild-card round rotation deliberations.

Berrios pitched better than a messy pitching line – five earned runs on nine hits and two walks, both to Judge, in 5.1 innings – would suggest and Schneider felt the right-hander “probably had his best stuff of the year.” His velocity was up nearly two m.p.h. across the board and at 97.3, he threw his hardest pitch of the year en route to seven strikeouts.

A pair of Bichette misplays in the fifth, one on a Rizzo blooper to short right-centre and a throwing error on a Josh Donaldson grounder two batters later, extended an inning that should have ended without damage. And perhaps they contributed to a troublesome two-run sixth, when Aaron Hicks ripped an RBI double and later came around on Gleyber Torres’ second RBI single of the game.

“I felt pretty good out there, I thought I was throwing the ball the right way,” said Berrios, who’s been weighed down preparing his Florida home for Hurricane Ian’s arrival and caring for family both there and in Puerto Rico, which was recently struck by Hurricane Fiona. “But that's baseball. Sometimes it doesn't matter if you have your best stuff.”

Judge scored on two of his walks and perhaps if his chase of Maris wasn’t soaking up so much of the baseball’s world oxygen, the Blue Jays might be attacking him differently, although Schneider chalked the walks up to Judge not straying from his approach.

Either way, the jump in Berrios’ raw stuff is sure to get the Blue Jays thinking, because the extra power is bound to play if he can maintain it. At the same time, there will be debate over whether to ride with him or sacrifice some upside to lean on the reliability of Ross Stripling.

The front office was surely hoping for a more definitive answer on Berrios one way or another, but he showed enough to steer some of the conversation.

Definitive is that the Yankees are AL East champions and the Blue Jays will soon punch their ticket to the post-season, too, perhaps even as soon as Wednesday, beneath the ample shadow cast by Judge and his chase of 61 and beyond.

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2022-09-28 02:05:00Z
1581712062

Selasa, 27 September 2022

'We'll grow through this': Canada shut out by Uruguay in World Cup friendly - CBC Sports

Despite Canada's ability to control much of the game against a formidable opponent, it was the missed chances that stung most.

Canada suffered a 2-0 loss at the hands of No. 13 Uruguay in its second last friendly before heading to Qatar for the World Cup. The 43rd-ranked Canadians dominated possession and outshot their opponents but were unable to capitalize on several occasions.

"Disappointed. I just spoke with the lads. [I] let them know that when you have that type of opportunity in a game, you got to take the chances, you got to win football matches and there's not going to be any special award for losing games where you have a chance to win them," head coach John Herdman said post-match.

"You lose games like that, you're going to drop out of the World Cup pretty quickly and go home. I'm happy with elements of the performance, don't get us wrong. We're a real team and we've got to take those moments."

Canada was coming off a 2-0 win over the World Cup hosts last week.

Although Canada dominated possession (59-41 in the first half, 55-45 overall), it was Uruguay that set the tone early making the most of its opportunities.

WATCH | Canadian men fail to convert chances in World Cup tune-up:

Uruguay shut out Canada in penultimate friendly before World Cup

7 hours ago

Duration 0:55

Luis Suarez set up Darwin Nunez's header for the insurance goal, as Uruguay blanked Canada 2-0 in the Canadians' second-last friendly before the FIFA World Cup kicks off in November.

Nicolas De La Cruz scored on a free kick from the left side just outside of the box in the sixth minute, putting by the near-side post as goalkeeper Milan Borjan could not get enough on the ball to stop it.

Following a close miss on a volley shot from a Luis Suarez cross five minutes earlier, Liverpool star Darwin Nunez made up for it with a header goal in the 33rd minute off a cross from Suarez to double the score.

There's moments I thought we could have crossed the ball and we wanted the extra touch ... and there's moments where we could have pulled the trigger and it's an extra pass.— Canada head coach John Herdman

"The goal from Suarez to Nunes, I mean, it's just two top top, top, top level players where that's what they do. They got a few chances and they took them," Herdman said.

The Canadians on the other hand, had trouble scoring on legitimate chances. Canada outshot Uruguay 11-6 (3-2 on target) and took seven corner kicks to zero for Uruguay.

Larin denied early on

"I know I've got top level players as well. We've got to take our chances," Herdman said. "There's moments I thought we could have crossed the ball and we wanted that extra touch and there's people waiting and there's moments where we could have pulled the trigger and it's an extra pass. We'll grow through this."

Alistair Johnston missed on a header from a cross sent by Alphonso Davies in the 12th minute. A dozen minutes later, Cyle Larin found an opening, taking a pass from Davies, but his left-footed shot was saved.

In the 39th minute, Davies drew the attention of multiple defenders outside of the box before sliding a pass to an open Larin inside the box. With the ball bouncing in front of the Brampton, Ont., native, he had his shot blocked after attempting to get it set properly.

Larin missed again one minute later on a header following a cross from Samuel Adekugbe. In the 41st minute, Davies once again pulled the eyes of multiple Uruguay defenders and sliced a through ball to send a streaking Jonathan David into the box but his shot was stopped.

Getting into Uruguay's zone following a giveaway, Davies corralled the ball after a Canada cross was knocked away and found David driving towards the box. David turned around and shot from just inside the box but Sergio Rochet saved it leading to a corner.

After Davies' corner was cleared out of bounds, Uruguay handed the Canadians a free kick with a foul in the 64th. Stephen Eustaquio sent a pretty cross into the box, but Kamal Miller headed the ball just over the net.

Twenty-one minutes later, Davies took a pass from Tajon Buchanan but had his shot blocked from outside of the box. In the 91st minute, he was high and wide on a shot from outside of the box. Junior Hoilett had the final chance but also went above the net in stoppage time.

"Normally, we're used to our players just finishing these types of plays, right? Now it kind of was the opposite. On a normal day, I know [David], [Davies] can finish those balls. I just want to think they're going to save it for Qatar," said Eustaquio after the match. "We lost 2-0, but it's a test. Qatar (is) in two months and I think we'll be ready."

"It's another level. You can't switch off the whole game. I just felt like it was two moments that cost us the game but throughout the game, I thought we were brilliant," Miller added. "Second half, I felt like we dominated, kept them out of our box. It's just those critical moments that are going to win or lose you critical football matches.

"The back line room plus Milan are going to look at the performance and see what we have to fix so we don't feel like this again."

Canada entered the game having defeated No. 48 Qatar 2-0 last week. The national team plays its final World Cup tune-up match on Nov. 17 against 24th-ranked Japan before taking the pitch Nov. 23 against Belgium in World Cup action.

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2022-09-27 20:07:44Z
1571486156

Tavares out for start of season for Maple Leafs with oblique injury - NHL.com

TORONTO -- John Tavares will be out for the start of the season for the Toronto Maple Leafs because of an oblique injury.

The center is expected to be sidelined at least three weeks. The Maple Leafs open the season at the Montreal Canadiens on Oct. 12, and that timeline could keep him out at least four games.

Tavares sustained the injury in a 4-1 preseason win against the Ottawa Senators on Saturday. He had one shot on goal in 17:14 of ice time. He practiced Monday on a line between left wing Denis Malgin and right wing William Nylander but did not practice Tuesday.

"He has been dealing with something since the game the other night," Toronto coach Sheldon Keefe said Tuesday. "He thought it was pretty minor, but they had some further tests here later today after we started practice and it has come back with an oblique strain that is going to keep him out a minimum of three weeks.

"He's a huge part of our team and it really does alter the plan for sure. But we've played without guys before, so for the remainder of the camp it just is additional opportunities for guys to step up and fill in that space."

Tavares was fourth on the Maple Leafs in goals (27) and points (76) in 79 games last season. He has scored at least 24 goals in 12 of his 13 NHL seasons.

"You are not going to replace John, but it does create extra opportunity for us to look at others and others to step up and take advantage of that opportunity," Keefe said. "At the same time, John and our medical team will do all they can to get him back as soon as possible."

Pontus Holmberg replaced Tavares with Malgin and Nylander at practice Tuesday but Keefe said he is not sure how the Maple Leafs will line up without their captain. Keefe said Alexander Kerfoot, who was on a line with left wing Nicholas Robertson and right wing Nicolas Aube-Kubel in a 4-2 preseason loss to the Senators on Saturday, and Calle Jarnkrok also will be considered at center on the second line.

Auston Matthews, who led the NHL in goals last season with 60, is the first-line center. 

"This is fresh information and I have not had a whole lot of time to process it, but we've been putting Alex [at center] throughout camp, Jarnkrok has the ability to play up the middle, [and] I've been really happy with Holmberg's camp so far," Keefe said. "We've got a number of different options."

Tavares is the latest injury the Maple Leafs have dealt with during training camp. Defenseman Jake Muzzin did not practice Thursday and Friday because of back discomfort but skated Tuesday for the second straight day and is expected to join the main group as a limited participant Wednesday.

Defenseman Timothy Liljegren had surgery Sept. 16 for a hernia sustained during the offseason and is expected to be out six weeks.

Forward Pierre Engvall sustained a foot injury while training in Sweden during the offseason and will be reevaluated next week, general manager Kyle Dubas said Sept. 21. Engvall has been skating on his own since late last week.

Forward Adam Gaudette sustained a shoulder injury against the Senators on Saturday and is day to day, though he skated on his own Tuesday.

Defenseman Rasmus Sandin, a restricted free agent, is not at training camp.

"It's no secret you need to have depth," Keefe said. "It comes at various times, your needs, we hope that this is the time where we need it and we can be healthy the rest of the way. The good news is at this point, the potential for guys to miss time like John, like Liljegren, like Engvall, like Muzzin, nothing seems to be too serious to the point where we would expect to be close to full health if not opening day, not far after that."

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2022-09-27 20:25:33Z
1578516997

Devils @ Canadiens 9/26 | NHL Highlights - NHL

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2022-09-27 03:23:20Z
1580198387

Senin, 26 September 2022

Free of distractions, Raptors will go as far as young core will take them - Sportsnet.ca

All around the NBA, teams were gathering to reflect on the summer past and the season ahead.

It was media day on Monday, the annual rite where players get to talk about the big step they hope to take, coaches about how happy they are with the roster and executives about how happy they are with the coaches.

In most places, the sentiments don’t last long. The rapid-fire pace of the NBA picks up, and keeping things together becomes a challenge, and a lot of teams and organizations can’t meet it.

Of course, many of them are starting in a deficit as they are coming into the season trying to fix things, explain things or desperately hold things together.

In the past few weeks alone the Eastern Conference champion Boston Celtics have had to suspend their highly-regarded head coach, Ime Udoka for having a sexual relationship with a female staff member; Western Conference contenders Phoenix Suns are being sold because owner Robert Sarver’s long history as an abusive boss and the super-star laden Brooklyn Nets are trying to focus on basketball after one star – Kevin Durant – demanded to be traded and his coach and general manager fired and another – Kyrie Irving doubled-down on his anti-vaccination stance that sewered their season a year ago. Their other star, Ben Simmons, hasn’t played basketball in 18 months.

The Los Angeles Lakers and Milwaukee Bucks have stars coming off injuries and in Miami the team president blamed his starting point guard – former Raptor Kyle Lowry – for being out of shape

The Toronto Raptors – at the very least – could meet the media at Hotel X in downtown Toronto en route to opening their training camp in Victoria and convincingly put on a united, calming front.

The Masai Ujiri/Bobby Webster front office tandem is back for their ninth season; head coach Nick Nurse and his evolving staff are in year five and the core of the roster is back, albeit with some new pieces that should bolster them around the edges.

No one is coming off surgery. No one is dealing with an off-season scandal and there are no new faces set to upset the established order.

The Raptors are returning 13 players that ate up 96 per cent of the available minutes of a surprisingly good, 48-win team a year ago, giving them the highest degree of continuity in the league.

For the most part, all of this is intentional.

“I think we made a commitment to grow,” Raptors president and vice-chairman Masai Ujiri on Monday. “We’re a young team, a young growing team. That’s all we talked about last year, lots of players who can make a jump. Even our veterans are young veterans in the league, with Freddy [VanVleet], Pascal [Siakam], O.G. [Anunoby] I think in this organization we’ve always wanted to preach patience. We want to win. We’re expecting to win [but] honestly, we can’t react to what’s going on in the league. Yeah, we see other teams. We study all of that. But in terms of our plan, it’s to grow our young players and continue to develop and see [where] that takes us.”

The hope – obviously – is the destination ends up being a step or two farther than they managed last season when their 48-win, fifth-place regular season ended up in a good but not good enough first-round playoff loss to the Philadelphia 76ers.

No, the Raptors did not “get their asses kicked” is the six-game series, as VanVleet put it, but it’s not immediately clear how they closed the gap on the top few teams in an Eastern Conference that has become packed with quality teams with big plans.

Adding Otto Porter and Juancho Hernangomez in free agency along with a full season of Thaddeus Young should help improve both the team’s perimeter shooting and depth – areas that required shoring up given the Raptors concentrated their minutes among the top of their rotation more than any team in the NBA last year and they finished last season ranked 26th in effective field goal percentage.

But Toronto will go as far as their young core – a group that now includes second year, do-everything wing Scottie Barnes – will take them.

How far is that? We’ll see. The Raptors themselves had questions. The Raptors were in the thick of the talk about acquiring Durant after the Nets superstar demanded a trade and were at least willing to listen when opportunities arose around the likes of Rudy Gobert and Donovan Mitchell, though they were never too close to putting themselves in the thick of the trade talks for the two Western Conference all-starts jettisoned by Utah.

With no outside forces to divert the inevitable pre-season wave of hype and enthusiasm, the internal expectations are high.

“We always look at those things. I think working with Bobby and Nick, you have to open your minds to different things,” Ujiri said of the off-season player market. “But we also have a plan with this team. We’re focused on that and to grow this team.

“I think every team can make the playoffs in the NBA, can have a good year and make a jump. We have to make a jump now as this team and seeing how all these pieces fit together is a good challenge to have going into the future, going into the season,” said Ujiri. “We always look at things … and try to be as active as we can. We’re also focused on who we are as a team and where we want to go as a basketball team. Sports is about winning. We want to win here. Sometimes it’s good to be patient, too, and wait for the right moment.”

The continuity, the hope is, should lead to chemistry.

“I think that sitting up here a year ago today we didn’t have any idea who we were, identity-wise and how things were going to unfold,” said Nurse. “And that’s how things worked out in the first four to six weeks [the Raptors started 14-17] … so this year we know who we are a little more … I feel confident in knowing who we are quite a bit more than a year ago at this time.”

To a man, the Raptors are optimistic that they’ve moved ahead while mostly keeping still. Pascal Siakam feels like he unlocked something in his game as he surged to all-NBA honours in the second half of last year and will a full and healthy off-season to hone it, the 28-year-old feels he’s still scratching the surface.

“I’ve been All-NBA, I’ve been an All-Star,” said Siakam. “I wanna be a top-five player in the league. I wanna be one of the best, and I’ll do everything I can to make that happen.”

The sentiment was catching.

Rookie-of-the-year Scottie Barnes was talking about making all-defense teams and earning all-star status; Fred VanVleet was talking about using the long off-season to hone his training and preparation so he can maintain the torrid pace he played on for the first two-thirds of the season, before fading with injuries down the stretch, while Anunoby, everyone agrees is ready to make a big jump.

In some ways, it’s the best time of the year. Everything is possible and nothing can be ruled out. The Raptors are healthy, deeper and know exactly who they are and what they’re about, and don’t have to navigate through an off-season of distractions on their first day of work.

The job, however, remains the same. “Winning is why we play and winning is what we want to do in the NBA here,” said Ujiri. “We always want to win and we are going to win again.”

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https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMibWh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LnNwb3J0c25ldC5jYS9uYmEvYXJ0aWNsZS9mcmVlLW9mLWRpc3RyYWN0aW9uLXJhcHRvcnMtd2lsbC1nby1hcy1mYXItYXMteW91bmctY29yZS13aWxsLXRha2UtdGhlbS_SAQA?oc=5

2022-09-26 20:43:00Z
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