Senin, 31 Juli 2023

Blue Jays star Bo Bichette suffers knee injury, leaves game versus Orioles - Toronto Sun

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As the Blue Jays look to add a significant piece or two prior to Tuesday’s MLB trade deadline, the team is hopeful it won’t have to deal with the subtraction of its best hitter.

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That was certainly the early concern on Monday night at the Rogers Centre when star shortstop Bo Bichette exited the game in the third inning with what the team later described as right-knee discomfort.

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“(We’re) still gathering information to see what we are going to do next,” manager John Schneider said following his team’s 4-2 loss to the Baltimore Orioles. “In terms of what’s going forward, we’re still figuring that out right now.”

  1. Jordan Hicks delivers a pitch while with the St. Louis Cardinals. He is excited to be joining the Blue Jays.

    New reliever Jordan Hicks ready to bring heat to Blue Jays playoff push

  2. Relief pitcher Jordan Hicks throws for the St. Louis Cardinals. Hicks will provide a big boost to the Blue Jays bullpen.

    SIMMONS: Are Romano and Hicks the new Henke and Ward for Blue Jays?

While you can’t read anything into the fact that the Jays aren’t ruling out a serious injury, it was clear there was some concern.

With two out and looking to make something happen by stretching a single into a double, Bichette appeared to take a bad step, then stopped in obvious pain.

Bichette immediately grabbed at his right knee as training staff and Schneider hustled out to the infield to tend to their star player. It was also clear by Bichette’s reaction there was some fear in the moment as to the extent of the injury.

“He’s our best player,” Monday’s starter Chris Bassitt said. “Obviously we’re waiting (to find out his status) a lot more than you guys are.”

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2023-08-01 03:00:00Z
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Christine Sinclair on Team Canada elimination: 'Wake-up call for our federation' - CTV News

MELBOURNE, Australia -

Captain Christine Sinclair refused to point the finger at Canada Soccer in the immediate aftermath of the Canadians' early exit from the FIFA Women's World Cup.

But the world's all-time leading scorer sounded a warning after the Olympic champion's tournament-ending 4-0 loss to Australia on Monday.

"Look we've been battling our federation for support but I can't put this on (Canada Soccer). There's 23 players out there and staff and we didn't get it done tonight." she said. "I think more of it is like a wake-up call for our federation -- the lack of a professional league, the lack of support for our youth national teams.

"I think you're just going to continue to see teams reach our level, surpass us, whatever you want to call it if things don't change."

Both the Canadian women and men have been battling with Canada Soccer over a new labour agreement with the women calling for equal pay and support as the men. The women announced during the tournament that an interim deal had been struck covering compensation for the World Cup and 2023 but said there are "many more important items" that still have to be settled.

The men say they have yet to receive compensation from last year's World Cup in Qatar.

Sinclair made a point of collecting a few blades of grass from Melbourne Rectangular Stadium before heading to the dressing room, a souvenir from her sixth World Cup.

Asked what her next move is, the 40-year-old from Burnaby, B.C., replied: "I have no idea."

Sinclair was calm in defeat but emotion showed when asked about her teammate and close friend Sophie Schmidt, who had previously announced she was retiring from international football after the tournament. Sinclair said she hoped Schmidt, 35, could be convinced to take part "at least" in the September Olympic qualifying series against Jamaica.

Seventh-ranked Canada is scheduled to play Sept. 22 in Jamaica before hosting the 43rd-ranked Reggae Girlz in Toronto four days later with the last CONCACAF berth in the Paris Olympics on the line.

At 40 years 38 days at the start of the World Cup, Sinclair was the second-oldest player at the tournament (behind Nigeria's Onome Ebi's 40 years 73 days).

Sinclair earned caps No. 324, 325 and 326, starting the tournament-opening scoreless draw with Nigeria, helping Canada rally to beat Ireland 2-1 coming off the bench to open the second half, and being one of four tactical substitutions exiting at halftime of the Australia game.

Sinclair had a penalty kick saved in the Nigeria game, which prevented her from becoming the first player -- male or female -- to score in six World Cups.

Asked about Sinclair's future with the team, Canada coach Bev Priestman replied: "I don't know."

"I think the reality is with Sinc is you only talk one game at a time," she added. "I'd love for those players (Sinclair and Schmidt) to be part of our Olympic qualifying … I think Canada deserves, they deserve to get this team to the Olympics on home soil, That's what I'll be pushing them. The whole conversation I had with every veteran was how crucial September was.

"I'm obviously still processing (the game) even here. (That) you say 'Could this be Christine Sinclair's last game' breaks my heart."

As for the performance against Australia, Sinclair said the one thing Canada didn't want was to concede an early goal.

"With the home fans, we knew they'd get momentum, energy from that. They scored in the (ninth) minute and we weren't able to recover from that."

Sinclair said the tournament has already shown that "teams came ready," pointing to No. 25 Colombia's 2-1 upset win over No. 2 Germany on Sunday.

"It happens. It's exciting for the sport. The catchers are catching up."

---

This report by The Canadian Press was first published July 31, 2023

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2023-07-31 17:46:00Z
2290032762

Blue Jays GM Ross Atkins discusses Jordan Hicks trade - MLB.com

TORONTO -- The trade represents a new type of aggression for the Blue Jays.

This front office has been aggressive before, dealing top prospects and several first-round picks, but those all have been deals to acquire players with team control remaining. Some trades have been made with more of a “win-now” lean than others, but few moves from this front office, if any, have looked like this.

The Hicks acquisition is a classic rental. He’s here for two months -- though, hopefully a little longer -- to throw baseballs just about as fast as a human being is capable of.

“This really is just about as good a fit for our bullpen as we could find,” said general manager Ross Atkins. “I think he’s going to complement our bullpen exceptionally well. The power is obvious, the ground balls and an elite, elite ability to get very weak contact.”

Going from a seller to a buyer has energized the 26-year-old Hicks, too, after the Cardinals fell short this season of their always-lofty expectations.

“[Toronto] is the team with the highest [batting average] against me, so it’s good to be here,” Hicks said with a smile. “They’re a great group of young talent, a good team and good individual players. Inside the clubhouse, it just seems like a really connected team. I’m glad to be here.”

For Atkins: A bold (first) step
This is the exact type of move that points to further aggression.

That could be tough in a market that’s shallow on hitters, which is where Toronto would likely prefer to turn next, but the Blue Jays recognize how big an opportunity this season is for them, and Hicks only adds to that.

Prior to the deal, Hicks and the Cardinals had some level of dialogue around a potential contract extension. That clearly never advanced, but Hicks will be one of the top names on the free-agent market this offseason at just 27 years old. If the Blue Jays want to lean into this caliber of a bullpen as an identity, not just a late-season peak, then they’ll be shopping in that market, and they now have two months to make an impression on the young flamethrower.

“I absolutely would love to have that dialogue with him,” Atkins said. “First things first, we want to welcome him into the organization. We are always glad to hear when a team is aggressively wanting their player back. That certainly is encouraging.”

For Schneider: A garage full of Lamborghinis
The Blue Jays’ bullpen was already stacked, ranking top-five in MLB in ERA, strikeout rate and walk rate. There’s no such thing as too many options, though. Good teams have one closer. Great teams have three or four.

“You can shorten up some games,” said manager John Schneider. “I don’t want to look too far ahead, but when you’re talking about a three-, five- or seven-game series, you can really shorten some games and grab some really, really good matchups with really, really good pitchers if you want to.”

When Jordan Romano (lower back inflammation) returns from the injured list, the Blue Jays will find themselves in situations where Hicks or Erik Swanson are being used in the sixth or seventh inning against the heart of an opponent’s lineup. This is exactly where Toronto wants to be in the postseason, and while Schneider will still need to pull all the right levers when it comes to the matchups, most managers in MLB will be jealous of his options.

For Hicks: A shot to chase a championship
With Romano on the 15-day IL, Hicks could be used in the closer’s role over the next two weeks. The Blue Jays will spread that love around based on the situation, but a fastball that averages 101 mph would look awfully nice in the ninth inning.

“I didn’t even know Romano was out until I got the trade call. Then some of my ex-teammates were telling me, ‘Oh, you might close for a little bit,’” Hicks said. “I’m just expecting to be in the back end of the bullpen when he gets back, helping out in whatever way I can. If he’s been used a couple of days in a row, maybe I can step in.”

Hicks will become the hardest-throwing reliever in Blue Jays history the moment he takes the mound, and with the direction this club is headed, some of the season’s biggest moments are waiting for him.

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2023-07-31 23:39:28Z
2298333055

Sergio Perez risked Christian Horner silent treatment with Belgian Grand Prix joke - Planet F1

It is a good job Sergio Perez qualified in the top three in Belgium, otherwise he would have been getting blanked by Red Bull team boss Christian Horner.

With Red Bull’s runaway Championship leader Max Verstappen facing a best-case scenario of P6 on the Belgian GP grid due to a five-place grid penalty for a new gearbox, Red Bull needed Perez to deliver with qualifying pace having proven to be a shaky topic for the Mexican racer in recent months.

Additional reporting by Sam Cooper and Thomas Maher

Perez did though ensure his place on the front row, qualifying P3 to improve to P2 on the grid, while Verstappen lined-up P6 having dominated qualifying, going on to do the same in the race.

Sergio Perez avoided Christian Horner silent treatment

After securing his P2 grid slot, Perez was heard over team radio saying: “You’ll talk to me now,” in response to Horner’s congratulatory words.

Perez then, when speaking to media including PlanetF1.com following Sunday’s Grand Prix, which he finished P2, would explain what exactly his response meant.

“It was a joke,” Perez confirmed.

“He came before qualifying and said ‘if you’re not in the top three I will not talk to you the rest of the weekend’. So he was talking to me the rest of the weekend.”

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Horner also commented on that joke he shared with Perez, his version being that the requirement for Perez was that he made the top five on the grid.

And thankfully he did, as if he had not have done so, then Horner’s conditions of the joke were a little more severe than simply not talking to him.

“I told him that I wasn’t going to talk to him if he wasn’t in the top five and I’d squeeze part of his anatomy if he wasn’t,” said Horner.

“It seemed to do the job. So we’ll have to try it again in Zandvoort!”

Verstappen goes into the Dutch Grand Prix at Zandvoort, his home race, 125 points clear of Perez at the top of the Drivers’ Championship as he goes in search of his ninth win on the bounce and Red Bull’s 14th in a row following the summer break.

Read next – Belgian GP driver ratings: Ferrari surprise and Red Bull redemption for Sergio Perez?

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2023-07-31 17:00:55Z
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Blue Jays break new ground by acquiring premium rental Jordan Hicks - Yahoo Canada Sports

The Blue Jays bullpen will be bolstered significantly by the addition of Jordan Hicks. (Rick Ulreich/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)
The Blue Jays bullpen will be bolstered significantly by the addition of Jordan Hicks. (Rick Ulreich/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

The Toronto Blue Jays have often needed a player like Jordan Hicks at recent trade deadlines, but before Sunday, they hadn't acquired one.

A team in playoff position bringing in a high-leverage reliever on an expiring contract around the trade deadline isn't a revolutionary strategy, but it represents a philosophical departure for this Blue Jays front office.

That's not because the team is unwilling to make meaningful trades. Just two years ago, Toronto's deal for José Berríos cost them far more than the Hicks trade, and the current regime has made blockbuster moves for Matt Chapman and Daulton Varsho in the past 24 months.

While the Blue Jays have done their fair share of wheeling and dealing, they have consistently passed on either top-of-the-market players on expiring contracts or brand-name relievers at this time of year.

Since the current front office took over, they've presided over four trade deadlines in which they've been buyers looking to supplement a team with playoff aspirations (2016, 2020, 2021, 2022). Below is a list of every player they acquired who was on an expiring contract:

None of the position players was producing at a league-average level when he was acquired, and most of the pitchers were having middling seasons at best.

Ray (7.84 ERA) and Benoit (5.18 ERA) stand out as prominent examples of buy-low rentals Toronto acquired hoping for swift reversals of fortune. To their credit, the team was right in both cases, though Ray didn't hit his stride until he re-signed with the team for the next season.

Feldman was having a good year when he was acquired, but he was a long reliever whom no one expected to take the ball in big spots. The closest comparable to Hicks is probably Hand, who served as a closer with the Washington Nationals prior to Toronto scooping him up.

Hand was pitching at the end of Washington's bullpen due to the team's lack of relief talent, though. The Blue Jays got him for a 25-year-old catcher who'd just cracked the big leagues and looked like he might be a Quadruple-A type in Riley Adams. Adams has performed relatively well as Washington's backup catcher, but back in 2021, he wasn't a big-time trade chip.

Toronto's most notable midseason acquisitions in recent years (Berríos, Ross Stripling, Francisco Liriano, Trevor Richards, Anthony Bass, Zach Pop, Adam Cimber, Whit Merrifield and Mitch White) have been players with multiple seasons of team control. It's hard to dispute the logic in that.

Results in the MLB playoffs can be highly luck-driven, especially in a three-game series. Trading some of your best prospect capital for players who will give you two of months of production and as few as a couple of appearances in the postseason can be tough to swallow.

In the case of Hicks, for instance, if he continues to appear at approximately the rate he did as a St. Louis Cardinal, the Blue Jays can expect about 20 innings from him in the regular season and as few as one or two in the playoffs.

Even making the postseason isn't a certainty for a Toronto team that enters Monday just 2.5 games ahead of the Boston Red Sox for the final AL wild-card spot.

Meanwhile, the Blue Jays have relinquished two prospects — Sem Robberse and Adam Kloffenstein — pitching well in Double-A, who could be bottom-of-the-rotation MLB starters in short order. That might not sound sexy, but when the market rate for such players is an eight-figure salary, developing guys such as that internally is extremely valuable.

Sem Robberse could have a promising MLB future. (Steph Chambers/Getty Images)

Sem Robberse could have a promising MLB future. (Steph Chambers/Getty Images)

Robberse and Kloffenstein aren't sure things by any means, but there is a world in which the Blue Jays gave up 12 years of useful MLB production for less than 24 appearances from Hicks.

Sometimes criticism of the Blue Jays front office being risk-averse is unfair, but they've steered clear of the kind of risk Hicks presents in recent years. That has meant bargain rentals and bigger deals for guys with term.

By adding Hicks, this front office is sending the message that this team — not just the Blue Jays but the 2023 Blue Jays — is worth investing in and taking a gamble on. Whether they're right remains to be seen, but with Matt Chapman's contract expiring after 2023, George Springer not getting any younger and the foundational duo of Vladimir Guerrero Jr. and Bo Bichette locked in for only two more seasons, there's no time like the present.

You could interpret Toronto's change of course as an enlightened reevaluation of priorities or a sign of desperation. Whatever the case might be, a Blue Jays team that has been underwhelming relative to expectations just got a little more dynamic.

Hicks might wind up as the team's most significant add at this year's trade deadline, but Toronto has opened a door that has always been shut before. It will be fascinating to see who else — if anyone — walks through.

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2023-07-31 16:09:07Z
2298333055

Defence leads Alouettes to win over Stampeders, snap of three-game skid - TSN

MONTREAL — Just a few months into his CFL career, Kabion Ento is quickly finding out why the league is known for games coming down to the wire.

The 27-year-old cornerback scored the only touchdown off an interception on Sunday as the Montreal Alouettes held off two late Calgary Stampeders red-zone possessions to win 25-18 at Molson Stadium.

“It’s a crazy league in the CFL,” said Ento. “I’ve been here a short amount of time, but the last three minutes is wild. We knew it was going to be on us (the defence).

“That’s when the game gets fun, when the game is on you and you’re with your brothers.”

The Alouettes emphasized the need to improve their pass rush coming out of a bye week — signing veteran defensive lineman and former Stampeder Shawn Lemon to help the cause — and backed it up.

Montreal’s defence limited Calgary quarterback Jake Maier to 256 yards on 24-of-44 passing and secured two interceptions. Maier, who was also sacked three times, was fortunate it wasn’t more as Montreal’s defence got its hands on a number of passes.

In the end, he couldn’t get the Stampeders in the end zone either.

“Very disappointed that we couldn’t score,” said Calgary coach Dave Dickinson, adding he wasn’t sure his receivers ran the right routes. “We are playing extremely hard, you wish the guys would get rewarded.

“I believe in Jake, I know he believes in himself and the guys believe in him.”

Under constant pressure early, Maier threw for just nine yards in the first quarter before throwing an interception early in the second to Ento, who ran the ball 53 yards to the end zone in front of 18,093 fans.

It’s a type of play Ento knew he was under pressure to make after he was beaten by his man in the final minute last time out against the Toronto Argonauts.

"He had a lot of pressure on him going into this game,” said Alouettes head coach Jason Maas. “And we talked to him and said 'hey, you've been put in a lot of positions to make plays and you haven't made one yet, so let's make a play — when it's there you gotta have confidence you can make it."

Montreal (3-3) snapped a three-game losing skid to move into second place in the East Division with the win, leapfrogging the Hamilton Tiger-Cats and Ottawa Redblacks.

Calgary slipped to 2-5 ahead of a difficult stretch in the CFL season. The Stampeders haven't had a losing season since 2007.

On offence, it was a battle of the kickers. David Cote went 6-for-7 on field goals and kicked a rouge. Calgary kicker Rene Paredes, who was playing in his 200th career game, was perfect at 6-for-6 to score all 18 Calgary points.

The 12 combined field goals were one short of tying a CFL record.

Alouettes quarterback Cody Fajardo appeared to hurt his hand in the second quarter and also had trouble producing with 158 passing yards on 16-of-29 completions as Montreal failed to add to a league-low eight offensive touchdowns.

The Alouettes did, however, do a better job protecting Fajardo, who was only sacked once, bringing the total from 26 to 27 this season.

And although the Alouettes didn’t get in the end zone, Maas was encouraged by the number of times his team got in position to score.

"To be disappointed on six or seven scoring opportunities in this league, I don't know if that's the correct way of looking at it,” he said. “We do need to get better, absolutely. … It just comes down to execution at times and better play calling on my part at times.”

Montreal running back William Stanback had his best showing of the season, producing 86 yards on 15 carries. Calgary’s Reggie Begelton led all players with 102 receiving yards.

After Ento’s interception, Calgary had an opportunity to score a touchdown on its ensuing possession, but Montreal’s defence continued giving Maier trouble, sacking him on second and five to force a 32-yard field goal from Paredes to make it 13-6 Montreal.

Montreal and Calgary traded field goals to end the half. The break went an extra 40 minutes due to lightning strikes near the stadium, forcing a Cirque du Soleil halftime show inside a field house nearby.

Touchdowns proved hard to come by in the second half as both Calgary and Montreal continued to settle for field goals despite getting in the red zone.

With Montreal leading 22-15 with five minutes left, Maier led Calgary to the Alouettes 30-yard line but the Stampeders once again settled for a field goal after two incomplete passes.

Montreal’s defence stood tall again on Calgary’s next offensive possession as defensive back Kordell Rodgers picked off Maier with 1:33 remaining.

"We see it every day in practice, we saw it a lot in camp," said Maas of Rodgers. "He's a guy that has a lot of confidence in his abilities, has great technique, doesn't hesitate out there, and will make plays."

Despite the time left on the clock, the Stampeders stormed back once more but Montreal’s defence turned away multiple end zone passes to secure the win.

Calgary now embarks on a tough schedule with two games against the unbeaten Toronto Argonauts (6-0) in their next four.

"This group will win a lot of football games, but the longer you wait on that it gets tougher,” said Dickenson. “Next one is Toronto, undefeated. Just show up and play well and see what happens.”

UP NEXT

The Alouettes visit the Tiger-Cats (3-4) on Saturday. Montreal’s next three games come against teams that have lost their starting quarterbacks to injury — Hamilton, Saskatchewan and Ottawa.

The Stampeders play Friday at home against Toronto. Calgary then plays the B.C. Lions, the Winnipeg Blue Bombers and the Argonauts again.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published July 30, 2023.

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2023-07-31 04:16:59Z
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Minggu, 30 Juli 2023

Cardinals Trade Jordan Hicks To Blue Jays - MLB Trade Rumors

The Blue Jays landed one of the most sought-after bullpen arms on the trade market Sunday, announcing the acquisition of righty Jordan Hicks from the Cardinals in exchange for Double-A right-handers Sem Robberse and Adam Kloffenstein. In a corresponding roster move, Toronto designated righty Mitch White for assignment. Hicks had previously been reported to be discussing an extension with the Cardinals ahead of the trade deadline on August 1, though those discussions seemingly stalled out earlier in the week.

Hicks, 26, was a third-round pick in the 2015 draft by the Cardinals. He made his big league debut back in 2018 and threw 77 2/3 innings in his first big league season, with a 3.59 ERA and 3.74 FIP. While he generated an impressive 60.7% groundball rate in his rookie campaign, he posted a lackluster 20.6% strikeout rate and struggled badly with his control to the point of walking 13.3% of batters faced. Early on in his sophomore 2019 season, Hicks required Tommy John surgery. That surgery began a series of injuries and setbacks that would limit him to just 38 2/3 innings of work from 2019-21.

Finally fully healthy in 2022, the Cardinals decided to try using Hicks as a member of the rotation. That experiment did not go well, as Hicks posted a 5.84 ERA and 5.54 FIP in 24 2/3 innings of work across seven starts while walking a whopping 16% of batters faced over that stretch. While he pitched a bit better upon returning to the bullpen, he nonetheless finished the 2022 campaign with 4.84 ERA and 13.3% walk rate in 61 1/3 innings of work.

The 2023 campaign started off difficultly for Hicks once again, as he yielded a whopping nine runs (eight earned) in just 5 2/3 innings of work in his first seven appearances of the year. Since then, however, he’s settled in as one of the most dominant relievers in baseball over the past few months. Since April 18, Hicks sports a 2.25 ERA and a sterling 1.92 FIP in 36 innings of work. He’s cut his walk rate to 10.4% in that time, a figure that, while somewhat elevated, is more than made up for by a phenomenal 34.4% strikeout rate. Hicks also sports a characteristically excellent 58.3% groundball rate this season, a figure that has led him to allow just two home runs all season, and none since he got his season back on track in mid-April.

Hicks’s dominant arm makes him a perfect candidate for Toronto’s bullpen, as the Blue Jays lost closer Jordan Romano to the 15-day injured list earlier this weekend thanks to lower back inflammation. While it’s possible Romano will return fairly quickly after the minimum 15-day stint, he’s been plagued by the issue since it caused him to depart the All Star game earlier this month. Still, it would hardly be a surprise to see the Blue Jays take additional time to ensure their closer is fully healthy upon his return given both the nagging nature of the issue and the importance of Romano, who leads the AL with 28 saves this season and sports a 2.79 ERA in 42 innings this season, to the club’s success.

In return for Hicks’s services, the Blue Jays are paying a hefty prospect toll. Robberse appears to be the headliner in the deal as the club’s seventh-best prospect according to MLB Pipeline and their sixth-best prospect according to Fangraphs. Originally signed out of the Netherlands back in 2019, the 21-year-old hurler sports a 92-94 mph fastball, quality secondary offerings in both a changeup and a slider, and plus command. In 113 1/3 innings of work at the Double-A level, Robberse owns a 3.97 ERA and a strikeout rate of 22%.

Kloffenstein, meanwhile, goes unranked on both Pipeline’s and Fangraphs’s lists. Fangraphs describes Kloffenstein as a pitcher with a four-pitch mix highlighted by a sinker and a slider, though it ultimately pegs him as more of an innings-eating, depth starter type. That evaluation, however, is from prior to the 2023 campaign, where Kloffenstein has impressed to this point. Toronto’s third-round pick in the 2018 draft has shoved across 89 innings of work at Double-A this season to the tune of a 3.24 ERA with a strikeout rate of 27.6%, a figure well above his career rate of 23.5% entering the 2023 campaign.

Both Kloffenstein and Robberse clearly fit the mold of return the Cardinals have reportedly been looking for in dangling their rental arms this summer: controllable, upper-level starting pitching prospects. Both Robberse and Kloffenstein project as starters going forward and have over 100 innings of experience at Double-A, with Jeff Jones of the Belleville News-Democrat noting that both hurlers are set to be promoted to Triple-A by the Cardinals organization. Given that promotion, it seems reasonable to assume both pitchers will be on the big league radar for sometime in 2024, barring injury or ineffectiveness changing the timeline.

The deal also spells the end of White’s time in Toronto. A second-round selection by the Dodgers in the 2016 draft, White impressed with a 3.44 ERA and 3.78 FIp in 49 2/3 innings of work across his first two seasons in the majors. He continued his success in a Dodgers uniform in 2022 with a 3.70 ERA and 3.95 FIP in 56 innings of work, but the club dealt White to Toronto at the trade deadline last season. Since joining the Blue Jays, White has struggled mightily, with a 7.60 ERA in 55 2/3 innings of work. While he posted a 4.03 FIP that far outstrips his results as a member of the Jays, his walk rate has ticked up to 11.7% this season, a level unlikely to be sustainable given his mediocre 21.7% strikeout rate. Going forward, Toronto will have one week to either waive or release White, assuming he himself isn’t traded before the deadline on August 1.

Craig Mish of the Miami Herald first reported that Hicks had been traded to Toronto. FanSided’s Robert Murray reported that Kloffenstein was part of the return. Shi Davidi of Sportsnet first reported Robberse’s inclusion in the deal.

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2023-07-31 00:17:59Z
2298333055

Blue Jays To Acquire Jordan Hicks From Cardinals - MLB Trade Rumors

3:21pm: Toronto officially announced the trade. To clear a roster spot for Hicks, right-hander Mitch White has been designated for assignment.

3:05pm: Shi Davidi of Sportsnet reports that the full trade will send Hicks to Toronto in exchange for Kloffenstein and fellow Double-A right-hander Sem Robberse.

2:58pm: Per Robert Murray of Fansided, Double-A right-hander Adam Kloffenstein is headed to St. Louis in exchange for Hicks, though Murray notes it’s unclear if other players are involved.

2:36pm: The Cardinals have begun their selloff by trading right-hander Jordan Hicks to the Blue Jays, per Craig Mish of the Miami Herald. The return headed back to St. Louis is not currently known. Hicks had previously been reported to be discussing an extension with the Cardinals ahead of the trade deadline on August 1, though those discussions seemingly stalled out earlier in the week.

Hicks, 26, was a third-round pick in the 2015 draft by the Cardinals. He made his big league debut back in 2018 and threw 77 2/3 innings in his first big league season, with a 3.59 ERA and 3.74 FIP. While he generated an impressive 60.7% groundball rate in his rookie campaign, he posted a lackluster 20.6% strikeout rate and struggled badly with his control to the point of walking 13.3% of batters faced. Early on in his sophomore 2019 season, Hicks required Tommy John surgery. That surgery began a series of injuries and setbacks that would limit him to just 38 2/3 innings of work from 2019-21.

Finally fully healthy in 2022, the Cardinals decided to try using Hicks as a member of the rotation. That experiment did not go well, as Hicks posted a 5.84 ERA and 5.54 FIP in 24 2/3 innings of work across seven starts while walking a whopping 16% of batters faced over that stretch. While he pitched a bit better upon returning to the bullpen, he nonetheless finished the 2022 campaign with 4.84 ERA and 13.3% walk rate in 61 1/3 innings of work.

The 2023 campaign started off difficultly for Hicks once again, as he yielded a whopping nine runs (eight earned) in just 5 2/3 innings of work in his first seven appearances of the year. Since then, however, he’s settled in as one of the most dominant relievers in baseball over the past few months. Since April 18, Hicks sports a 2.25 ERA and a sterling 1.92 FIP in 36 innings of work. He’s cut his walk rate to 10.4% in that time, a figure that, while somewhat elevated, is more than made up for by a phenomenal 34.4% strikeout rate. Hicks also sports a characteristically excellent 58.3% groundball rate this season, a figure that has led him to allow just two home runs all season, and none since he got his season back on track in mid-April.

Hicks’s dominant arm makes him a perfect candidate for Toronto’s bullpen, as the Blue Jays lost closer Jordan Romano to the 15-day injured list earlier this weekend thanks to lower back inflammation. While it’s possible Romano will return fairly quickly after the minimum 15-day stint, he’s been plagued by the issue since it caused him to depart the All Star game earlier this month. Still, it would hardly be a surprise to see the Blue Jays take additional time to ensure their closer is fully healthy upon his return given both the nagging nature of the issue and the importance of Romano, who leads the AL with 28 saves this season and sports a 2.79 ERA in 42 innings this season, to the club’s success.

In return for Hicks’s services, the Blue Jays are paying a hefty prospect toll. Robberse appears to be the headliner in the deal as the club’s seventh-best prospect according to MLB Pipeline and their sixth-best prospect according to Fangraphs. Originally signed out of the Netherlands back in 2019, the 21-year-old hurler sports a 92-94 mph fastball, quality secondary offerings in both a changeup and a slider, and plus command. In 113 1/3 innings of work at the Double-A level, Robberse owns a 3.97 ERA and a strikeout rate of 22%.

Kloffenstein, meanwhile, goes unranked on both Pipeline’s and Fangraphs’s lists. Fangraphs describes Kloffenstein as a pitcher with a four-pitch mix highlighted by a sinker and a slider, though it ultimately pegs him as more of an innings-eating, depth starter type. That evaluation, however, is from prior to the 2023 campaign, where Kloffenstein has impressed to this point. Toronto’s third-round pick in the 2018 draft has shoved across 89 innings of work at Double-A this season to the tune of a 3.24 ERA with a strikeout rate of 27.6%, a figure well above his career rate of 23.5% entering the 2023 campaign.

Both Kloffenstein and Robberse clearly fit the mold of return the Cardinals have reportedly been looking for in dangling their rental arms this summer: controllable, upper-level starting pitching prospects. Both Robberse and Kloffenstein project as starters going forward and have over 100 innings of experience at Double-A, with Jeff Jones of the Belleville News-Democrat noting that both hurlers are set to be promoted to Triple-A by the Cardinals organization. Given that promotion, it seems reasonable to assume both pitchers will be on the big league radar for sometime in 2024, barring injury or ineffectiveness changing the timeline.

The deal also spells the end of White’s time in Toronto. A second-round selection by the Dodgers in the 2016 draft, White impressed with a 3.44 ERA and 3.78 FIp in 49 2/3 innings of work across his first two seasons in the majors. He continued his success in a Dodgers uniform in 2022 with a 3.70 ERA and 3.95 FIP in 56 innings of work, but the club dealt White to Toronto at the trade deadline last season. Since joining the Blue Jays, White has struggled mightily, with a 7.60 ERA in 55 2/3 innings of work. While he posted a 4.03 FIP that far outstrips his results as a member of the Jays, his walk rate has ticked up to 11.7% this season, a level unlikely to be sustainable given his mediocre 21.7% strikeout rate. Going forward, Toronto will have one week to either waive or release White, assuming he himself isn’t traded before the deadline on August 1.

More to come…

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2023-07-30 21:22:30Z
2298333055

Canada and Australia face off at FIFA Women's World Cup with elimination on the line - CTV News

MELBOURNE, Australia -

The exit door at the FIFA Women's World Cup could swing open for Canada on Monday. Or the Canadians could use it to usher out co-host Australia.

The stakes couldn't be higher on the final day of Group B play.

"We know it's going to a fight (Monday). They're fighting for their life," veteran Canadian midfielder Sophie Schmidt said of the 10th-ranked Matildas. "But we're prepared as best we can be for what they have to offer. We know what we have to do to get the result."

"I think that we have a long World Cup run ahead of us," she added. "(Monday) is a massive big step for us. But we're up for the challenge."

Australia coach Tony Gustafsson also described the game as massive, calling it "a crossroads moment, for sure."

Nigeria (1-0-1, four points) leads Group B ahead of Canada (1-0-1) by virtue of having scored one more goal. Australia (1-1-0) is one point behind with Ireland (0-2-0) already eliminated from advancing. Only the top two in the group move on.

The permutations favour seventh-ranked Canada, which will advance with a win or draw while the Matildas need to win to be certain of advancing.

"We know the fate's in our hand," said Canada coach Bev Priestman.

The Canadians can still keep going with a loss, providing Nigeria loses to Ireland in Brisbane and ends up on the wrong end of a tiebreaker. And Australia could advance with a draw if Nigeria is beaten and the tiebreakers favour the Matildas.

What may decide the outcome is which versions of Canada and Australia show up Monday.

Both had their issues getting past No. 22 Ireland and stumbled against upstart Nigeria, with Canada drawing the 40th-ranked Super Falcons 0-0 and Australia losing 3-2.

"Ultimately if we turn up -- and we turned up in the second half for sure in the last game (against Ireland), then we can go and get three points," said Priestman. "And it's got to be about us bringing what we bring and getting the best out of the group in front of us. That is the focus, is to be brave and be what we bring and bring it well."

Priestman said Canada will go for the win despite the fact a draw will suffice, saying if you play for a single point "you're not playing on your strengths."

Gustafsson, meanwhile, said his team will have to be careful not to allow the Canadians counterattacking opportunities as the Matildas press for a result.

Both teams came to the tournament with high expectations.

The Canadians looked to translate their gold-medal performance at the 12-country Tokyo Olympics into success at the 32-country World Cup, having exited in the round of 16 four years ago in France.

Australia had the weight of a nation on its shoulders, knowing no host team has ever failed to make the knockout rounds at the eight previous editions of the tournament (co-host New Zealand became the first Sunday when it tied Switzerland to finish third in Group A on goal difference behind Norway).

Canada is no stranger to high-pressure games.

Priestman's team also had to recover from a tournament-opening draw (1-1 with Japan) in Tokyo's Olympics before dispatching Brazil in a quarterfinal penalty shootout, the world champion U.S. in the semifinal and Sweden on spot kicks in the final.

There are injury question marks over both teams.

Star striker Sam Kerr missed Australia's first two games with a calf injury, but told reporters Saturday that she is available for the Canada game. Just how much of a role the Matildas captain will play remains to be seen.

Gustafsson said a meeting was planned for later Sunday to discuss Kerr's status, with the team's medical staff and the player involved, with fitness tests scheduled for Monday. One concern is the risk of aggravating the injury and losing her for a longer time.

"So there's a lot on the table to discuss," Gustafsson said. "We probably won't know how exactly we're going to use that (information) until we come here to the stadium (Monday)."

Canadian midfielder Jessie Fleming said her team is ready for whatever lineup Australia fields.

"I think she's just one player," said Fleming, who plays alongside Kerr at England's Chelsea. "We're preparing for the game the same regardless of whether or not she plays, how much she plays. I think they have a very good team with or without her.

"Myself and the whole team are familiar with the quality she brings. She's a threat in the (penalty) box but our backline has dealt with her before. I think we feel confident that we can deal with her again if she comes on the pitch."

Kerr's status has gripped Australia.

Australian rugby coach Eddie Jones even weighed in on the issue Saturday night after the Wallabies' 38-7 loss to the All Blacks before an announced crowd of 83,944 at the Melbourne Cricket Ground, when asked if he would risk one of his players if they were 50-50 health-wise.

Jones referenced Gustafsson in his answer.

"If I was him, I would be playing her, mate," Jones told his post-game news conference. "Because they've got to win. They've got to roll her out, strap her up. Whatever they need to do. Because she can play. She can play."

Kerr is the Matildas' all-time leading scorer with 63 goals in 120 appearances.

Canada captain Christine Sinclair, playing in her sixth World Cup, limped off the field after making an impactful appearance off the bench against Ireland, while centre back Kadeisha Buchanan, battling illness, exited in the dying minutes of the first half.

But the two took part in the portion of practice open to the media with Sinclair wearing SpiderTech tape on her right knee. Priestman said both will be available Monday.

Both attacks have yet to hit top gear.

While Canada completed 790 of 969 passes over its first two outings, only nine of 30 shots were on target -- seven of which were in the Ireland game. The Canadian setup has also been lacking with just 13 of 45 crosses completed.

The Matildas have been equally wasteful, putting just nine of 40 shots on target and completing 13 of 41 crosses. Gustafsson, however, disagreed saying the attacking football against Nigeria was the top game out of his team's last 15.

But having said that, he conceded his team's conversion rate was not efficient enough. Still Australia has failed to score in just one of its last 22 Women's World Cup group matches.

Three of Canada's backline -- Vanessa Gilles, Ashley Lawrence and Buchanan -- and forward Evelyne Viens are on yellow cards, meaning they face a one-game ban if they collect another Monday.

Canada is 8-7-3 all-time against Australia and has won the last three meetings, including last year's 1-0 and 2-1 victories in Brisbane and Sydney, respectively. So playing before a hostile crowd in Australia is nothing new to this Canadian team.

Adriana Leon scored all three goals in the two most recent victories, which upped Canada's record against the Matildas to 6-2-2 this century.

The Group B winner will face the Group D runner-up and vice versa in the round of 16. No. 4 England currently tops Group D with No. 13 Denmark in second, ahead of No. 14 China on a tiebreaker.

"At this point anything can happen," said Priestman, asked whether avoiding her native England was motivation. "Right now it's just abut getting three points. If we want to be the best, we've got to beat the best. Ultimately we'll just be aiming for three points (Monday) and get that job done and (then) face the team in front of us."

The showdown at Melbourne Rectangular Stadium, better know to locals at AAMI Park, kicks off at 8 p.m. local time (6 a.m. ET in Canada).

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2023-07-30 17:21:13Z
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Summer McIntosh wins gold in 400m IM, becomes only Canadian swimmer with 4 world titles - CBC Sports

Summer McIntosh won her second gold medal and made Canadian history on Sunday at the World Aquatics Championships in Fukuoka, Japan.

The 16-year-old from Toronto captured the world title in the women's 400-metre individual medley final for her fourth-career gold medal at worlds, the most by any Canadian swimmer.

McIntosh finished in four minutes 27.11 seconds, the third-fastest time in history. The Canadian came into the event holding the world record in the event (4:25.87) which she set in Toronto in April at national trials.

"Going into tonight I just wanted to see how hard I could push myself," McIntosh said.

American Katie Grimes, the silver medallist, finished more than four seconds behind McIntosh in 4:31.41. Australia's Jenna Forrester took bronze in 4:32.30.

WATCH | McIntosh cruises to 400m IM gold:

Canada's Summer McIntosh defends her world title in the women's 400 individual medley

5 hours ago

Duration 9:40

Toronto teenager Summer McIntosh easily wins gold in the women's 400 individual medley with a championship record of 4:27.11.

McIntosh seized the lead in the opening leg and won going away.

The win also means McIntosh repeated her historic double from last year's worlds in Budapest. She won the women's 200m butterfly and 400m individual medley to become the first Canadian swimmer to capture multiple gold medals at the same world championships.

McIntosh successfully defended her world title in the 200m butterfly on Thursday.

WATCH | CBC Sports' Devin Heroux profiles McIntosh:

What it takes to be the best

19 hours ago

Duration 2:54

CBC Sports' Devin Heroux profiles world champion swimmer Summer McIntosh on her move from Toronto to Sarasota, Florida in order to join an elite training swim program.

Not long after the gruelling 400m IM race, McIntosh anchored Canada's women's 4x100m medley relay team to a bronze-medal win.

Kylie Masse, Sophie Angus, Maggie Mac Neil, and McIntosh finished the race in 3:54.12.

"Doing it together as a team, it means the world," McIntosh told CBC Sports' Devin Heroux.

The reason I'm still swimming are [my teammates]. They're the ones that keep pushing me.— Canadian swimmer Sophie Angus, who nearly left competitive swimming in March 2022

Angus swam 1:06.2 in the breaststroke, second fastest since Annamay Pierse's Canadian record performance of 1:05.74 in July 2009.

"It's pretty cool. I got to meet Annamay a month or two ago, so she's inspiring," said Angus, who has her first world medal after nearly quitting competitive swimming in March 2022. She pointed out the dream of earning a world medal and qualify for the Summer Games kept her motivated.

"The reason I'm still swimming are [my relay teammates]," Angus added. "They're the ones that keep pushing me. I'm very glad I made that choice to still be here and looking forward to next year."

WATCH | Canada's women's 100m relay team picks up bronze in Fukuoka:

Canada wins their 6th world aquatics championship medal with a bronze in the women's 4x100m medley relay

4 hours ago

Duration 9:26

Kylie Masse, Sophie Angus, Maggie McNeil and Summer McIntosh finish third in the final event of the world aquatics championships, in the women's 4x100m medley relay.

Masse has tied Penny Oleksiak for the most long-course (50-metre) world medals by a Canadian with nine.

"It hasn't been easy," she said, "but being able to stand up here on the last night [of competition] with these girls is something I'll remember forever."

The Americans took gold in 3:52.08 while Australia took silver in 3:53.37.

Canada's Javier Acevedo, James Dergousoff, Josh Liendo, and Ruslan Gaziev finished seventh in the final of the 4x100m medley relay with a time of 3:32.61.

The U.S. took gold in 3:27.20, while China (3:29.00) and Australia (3:29.62) took silver and bronze, respectively.

The top three finishers in both relays qualified for the Paris Olympics.

WATCH | Full coverage of Sunday's events, the final day of competition:

World Aquatics Championships: Swimming preliminaries day 8

16 hours ago

Duration 1:29:54

Watch day eight of the swimming preliminaries at the World Aquatics Championships in Fukuoka, Japan.

Sjöström sets another record

Sarah Sjöström of Sweden made history with her victory in the women's 50 freestyle. The gold gave Sjostrom 21 medals in individual races in the world championships, surpassing Michael Phelps who had 20.

Sjostrom, who set the world record in the semifinals on Saturday, powered home in the final 25 metres for the win, clocking 23.62. Shayna Jack of Australia picked up the silver in 24.10, while Zhang Yufei of China earned the bronze in 24.15.

Ruta Meilutyte of Lithuania set a new world record on the way to winning gold in the women's 50 breaststroke in 29.16. Meilutyte grabbed the early lead and was never challenged.

American Lilly King claimed the silver in 29.94, while Benedetta Pilato of Italy picked up the bronze in 30.04.

Ahmed Hafnaoui of Tunisia added the men's 1,500 free gold to the 800 free he won earlier in the worlds, prevailing in an epic battle with Bobby Finke of the United States that went down to the wire.

The 20-year-old Hafnaoui captured the gold in 14:31.54, with Finke clocking 14:31.59 for silver. Sam Short of Australia rounded out the podium with the bronze in 14:37.28.

Short led from early in the race until the 950-metre mark when Finke moved briefly in front. Shortly thereafter, Hafnaoui went ahead and retained the lead the rest of the way, narrowly touching before Finke at the finish.

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2023-07-30 14:44:19Z
2274602452

Canada and Australia face off at FIFA Women's World Cup with elimination on the line - TSN

MELBOURNE, Australia — The exit door at the FIFA Women's World Cup could swing open for Canada on Monday. Or the Canadians could use it to usher out co-host Australia.

The stakes couldn't be higher on the final day of Group B play.

Coverage of Canada vs. Australia begins Monday morning at 5am ET/2am PT on TSN 1/4/5 and streaming on TSN.ca or the TSN App.

"We know it's going to a fight (Monday). They're fighting for their life," veteran Canadian midfielder Sophie Schmidt said of the 10th-ranked Matildas. "But we're prepared as best we can be for what they have to offer. We know what we have to do to get the result."

ContentId(1.1990293): Revisiting recent history between Canada, Australia on the pitch

"I think that we have a long World Cup run ahead of us," she added. "(Monday) is a massive big step for us. But we're up for the challenge."

Australia coach Tony Gustafsson also described the game as massive, calling it "a crossroads moment, for sure."

Nigeria (1-0-1, four points) leads Group B ahead of Canada (1-0-1) by virtue of having scored one more goal. Australia (1-1-0) is one point behind with Ireland (0-2-0) already eliminated from advancing. Only the top two in the group move on.

The permutations favour seventh-ranked Canada, which will advance with a win or draw while the Matildas need to win to be certain of advancing.

"We know the fate's in our hand," said Canada coach Bev Priestman.

The Canadians can still keep going with a loss, providing Nigeria loses to Ireland in Brisbane and ends up on the wrong end of a tiebreaker. And Australia could advance with a draw if Nigeria is beaten and the tiebreakers favour the Matildas.

What may decide the outcome is which versions of Canada and Australia show up Monday.

Both had their issues getting past No. 22 Ireland and stumbled against upstart Nigeria, with Canada drawing the 40th-ranked Super Falcons 0-0 and Australia losing 3-2.

ContentId(1.1989942): Canada expecting 'crazy' atmosphere as they look to play spoiler to host nation Australia

"Ultimately if we turn up — and we turned up in the second half for sure in the last game (against Ireland), then we can go and get three points," said Priestman. "And it's got to be about us bringing what we bring and getting the best out of the group in front of us. That is the focus, is to be brave and be what we bring and bring it well."

Priestman said Canada will go for the win despite the fact a draw will suffice, saying if you play for a single point "you're not playing on your strengths."

Gustafsson, meanwhile, said his team will have to be careful not to allow the Canadians counterattacking opportunities as the Matildas press for a result.

Both teams came to the tournament with high expectations.

The Canadians looked to translate their gold-medal performance at the 12-country Tokyo Olympics into success at the 32-country World Cup, having exited in the round of 16 four years ago in France.

Australia had the weight of a nation on its shoulders, knowing no host team has ever failed to make the knockout rounds at the eight previous editions of the tournament (co-host New Zealand became the first Sunday when it tied Switzerland to finish third in Group A on goal difference behind Norway).

Canada is no stranger to high-pressure games.

Priestman's team also had to recover from a tournament-opening draw (1-1 with Japan) in Tokyo's Olympics before dispatching Brazil in a quarterfinal penalty shootout, the world champion U.S. in the semifinal and Sweden on spot kicks in the final.

There are injury question marks over both teams.

Star striker Sam Kerr missed Australia's first two games with a calf injury, but told reporters Saturday that she is available for the Canada game. Just how much of a role the Matildas captain will play remains to be seen.

Gustafsson said a meeting was planned for later Sunday to discuss Kerr's status, with the team's medical staff and the player involved, with fitness tests scheduled for Monday. One concern is the risk of aggravating the injury and losing her for a longer time.

"So there's a lot on the table to discuss," Gustafsson said. "We probably won't know how exactly we're going to use that (information) until we come here to the stadium (Monday)."

Canadian midfielder Jessie Fleming said her team is ready for whatever lineup Australia fields.

"I think she's just one player," said Fleming, who plays alongside Kerr at England's Chelsea. "We're preparing for the game the same regardless of whether or not she plays, how much she plays. I think they have a very good team with or without her.

"Myself and the whole team are familiar with the quality she brings. She's a threat in the (penalty) box but our backline has dealt with her before. I think we feel confident that we can deal with her again if she comes on the pitch."

Kerr's status has gripped Australia.

Australian rugby coach Eddie Jones even weighed in on the issue Saturday night after the Wallabies' 38-7 loss to the All Blacks before an announced crowd of 83,944 at the Melbourne Cricket Ground, when asked if he would risk one of his players if they were 50-50 health-wise.

ContentId(1.1990280): What did Canada learn after Australia's loss to Nigeria?

Jones referenced Gustafsson in his answer.

"If I was him, I would be playing her, mate," Jones told his post-game news conference. "Because they've got to win. They've got to roll her out, strap her up. Whatever they need to do. Because she can play. She can play."

Kerr is the Matildas' all-time leading scorer with 63 goals in 120 appearances.

Canada captain Christine Sinclair, playing in her sixth World Cup, limped off the field after making an impactful appearance off the bench against Ireland, while centre back Kadeisha Buchanan, battling illness, exited in the dying minutes of the first half.

But the two took part in the portion of practice open to the media with Sinclair wearing SpiderTech tape on her right knee. Priestman said both will be available Monday.

Both attacks have yet to hit top gear.

While Canada completed 790 of 969 passes over its first two outings, only nine of 30 shots were on target — seven of which were in the Ireland game. The Canadian setup has also been lacking with just 13 of 45 crosses completed.

ContentId(1.1990262): 'I can't say enough about this player, she's wonderful': McLeod on young phenom Caicedo

The Matildas have been equally wasteful, putting just nine of 40 shots on target and completing 13 of 41 crosses. Gustafsson, however, disagreed saying the attacking football against Nigeria was the top game out of his team's last 15.

But having said that, he conceded his team's conversion rate was not efficient enough. Still Australia has failed to score in just one of its last 22 Women’s World Cup group matches.

Three of Canada's backline — Vanessa Gilles, Ashley Lawrence and Buchanan — and forward Evelyne Viens are on yellow cards, meaning they face a one-game ban if they collect another Monday.

Canada is 8-7-3 all-time against Australia and has won the last three meetings, including last year's 1-0 and 2-1 victories in Brisbane and Sydney, respectively. So playing before a hostile crowd in Australia is nothing new to this Canadian team.

Adriana Leon scored all three goals in the two most recent victories, which upped Canada's record against the Matildas to 6-2-2 this century.

The Group B winner will face the Group D runner-up and vice versa in the round of 16. No. 4 England currently tops Group D with No. 13 Denmark in second, ahead of No. 14 China on a tiebreaker.

"At this point anything can happen," said Priestman, asked whether avoiding her native England was motivation. "Right now it's just abut getting three points. If we want to be the best, we've got to beat the best. Ultimately we'll just be aiming for three points (Monday) and get that job done and (then) face the team in front of us."

The showdown at Melbourne Rectangular Stadium, better know to locals at AAMI Park, kicks off at 8 p.m. local time (8 a.m. ET in Canada).

---

Follow @NeilMDavidson on Twitter

This report by The Canadian Press was first published July 30, 2023

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2023-07-30 15:39:34Z
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B.C. Lions add to Elks' misery with 27-0 victory in Edmonton - CTV News Edmonton

Edmonton -

Just when you thought things couldn’t get any worse for the Edmonton Elks.

Dane Evans completed a pair of touchdown passes as the B.C. Lions defeated Edmonton 27-0 on Saturday, helping the Elks take sole possession of the worst run of home losses in North American professional sports history.

Unbelievably, it was the second time this year that the Lions have blanked the Elks, also doing so in the second week of the season, when they won 22-0 in Vancouver. Before that Edmonton had not been shutout in a game since 1976.

“It is unreal,” Evans said of keeping the Elks off the scoreboard completely. “That is hard to do in the NFL, but here, all you have to do is kick it into the end zone to get one point. To do it twice is pretty special.”

“It is pretty unique,” echoed Lions head coach and co-general manager Rick Campbell. “Getting a shutout, that is not even part of our mindset going into a game. You are just trying to win the game, but it worked out to be two shutouts. I’ve never been a part of something like that before.”

The Lions improved to 6-1 and took over lone ownership of first place in the West Division.

“I was proud that they played for a full 60 minutes on all three phases,” Campbell said. “Obviously the defence stands out because it was a shutout, but that is a function of not just our defence, but also our offence and special teams.”

Edmonton dropped to 0-8, the worst start in franchise history.

The home hex continues for the Elks, who have lost a CFL-record 21 consecutive home games, a string of futility stretching back to Oct. 12, 2019.

The loss surpassed the longest run of consecutive home losses held by Major League Baseball’s St. Louis Browns, who lost 20 straight in 1953 before becoming the Baltimore Orioles the following season.

“It's an oddity to me to not be able to play good football and, secondly, not to be able to play good football at home," Elks head coach Chris Jones said. "That's strange to me."

Edmonton has also lost 12 straight games overall.

“(Frustration) is at an all-time high right now,” said Elks quarterback Taylor Cornelius. “The first half, we get behind the sticks with penalties, it seemed like every drive it was something. And then to come out in the second half and still not put up any points for a second game in a row against these guys is just crazy, man."

Edmonton took 13 penalties for 177 yards.

The Lions had strong drives on their first two possessions, but were forced to settle for field goals on both, with Shaun Whyte striking from 26 and 16 yards.

Veteran quarterback Evans, starting in place of Vernon Adams Jr. who served as the third string as he rests an aching knee, finally found the end zone with five minutes to play in the second quarter as he hit Justin McInnis with a 23-yard pass for a touchdown.

Evans completed 25 of 32 passes for 330 yards on the night.

“When we had the opportunity to trade for him, I remember that day, it was a no-brainer for us to get a guy like that,” Campbell said. “He is a good football player who has won a lot of games.

"I also appreciate that he has been such a good teammate and is such a good person and I like when good people and good teammates have success on the field, it is good to see.”

Whyte added a late 41-yard field goal to put B.C. up 16-0 at the half.

The Lions extended their lead four minutes into the third quarter as Evans hit Taquan Mizzell for a 23-yard passing major in his return to the lineup.

The Lions added a punt single on their next possession and led 24-0 after the third quarter.

It looked like Edmonton finally got on the board early in the fourth as Lions receiver Lucky Whitehead dropped the ball and Marcus Lewis ran it into the end zone, however it ended up being ruled an incomplete pass.

Edmonton’s Dean Faithfull attempted a 48-yard field goal but was short.

The Elks once again tried to avoid being shutout with a big 54-yard passing play from Cornelius to Dillon Mitchell got them in scoring range, but Cornelius was picked off on the next play by Garry Peters, meaning Edmonton would go eight full quarters without registering a single point against B.C. this year.

Cornelius completed 16 of 30 passes.

Whyte closed out the game with a 25-yard field goal for the Lions.

NOTES

Edmonton was without receivers Emmanuel Arceneaux (knee) and Ed Gainey (chest), while the Lions were without wideout Dominique Rhymes (knee), who has a league-best five touchdown catches.

The game was the first pro football contest to be broadcast in Punjabi. The Elks had also set a milestone in 2022 when they broadcast a regular-season matchup in Cree.

HOME WOES

To give the Elks’ home losing skid some added perspective, the Pittsburgh Penguins hold the NHL record with 14 straight losses on home ice in the 2003-04 season.

The NFL record for consecutive home losses sits at 14 straight, shared by the 1998-99 Dallas Cowboys and the 2008-2010 St. Louis Rams. The NBA record of 19 straight home losses goes to the 1993-94 Dallas Mavericks.

UP NEXT

The Lions are right back at it on Thursday in Winnipeg against the Blue Bombers. The Elks are off on a bye week.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published July 29, 2023.

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2023-07-30 03:45:00Z
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