Minggu, 31 Maret 2024

McDavid 'carrying' Oilers, forces way into thrilling NHL scoring race - NHL.com

MacKinnon leads the NHL with 127 points (47 goals, 80 assists) in 74 games; Kucherov has 126 (42 goals, 84 assists) in 72 games.

“It’s nice, I guess; it’s a position I’ve been in many times before,” McDavid said following the game. “We’re playing for things bigger than that. We’re playing to make sure our game is in order and we’re still playing for positioning. Lots of hockey left -- 10 games left -- you never know what can happen down the stretch and we’ll see what happens.”

McDavid has won the Art Ross as the League scoring champion five times (2017, 2018, 2021, 2022, 2023) in his first eight seasons. It seemed unlikely he would make it four straight with 10 points (two goals, eight assists) in his first 11 games this season, tied for 107th in the scoring race.

He’s been rapidly climbing the ladder since.

“Not [surprised] at all, but at the same time, we were all struggling early on, so to see him on top right now, it’s pretty awesome,” Oilers defenseman Mattias Ekholm said. “You (media) guys have seen his game in the last three months; it’s been unbelievable how he’s been carrying us. He’s the best player in the world, and there is no shock to my mind that he’s there.”

McDavid missed two games with an upper-body injury sustained during a 3-2 overtime loss against the Winnipeg Jets on Oct. 21, and did not look his dominant self upon his return.

Edmonton got off to 3-9-1 start, which prompted the firing of coach Jay Woodcroft and hiring of Kris Knoblauch on Nov. 12. Since the change, McDavid has 115 points (27 goals, 88 assists) in 59 games. He has 125 points (29 goals, 96 assists) in 70 games overall and is on pace to become the first player to have 100 assists in a season since Wayne Gretzky had 122 for the Los Angeles Kings in 1990-91.

The Oilers (45-23-4) have won three in a row and trail the Vancouver Canucks by four points for first place in the Pacific Division with a game in hand. They are four points ahead of the third-place Vegas Golden Knights and have played two fewer games.

“Never count Connor out or never think he can’t do something,” said Knoblauch, who also coached McDavid at the junior level with Erie of the Ontario Hockey League (2012-15). “He made it very difficult for himself to get to where he is in scoring right now, but I don’t have enough words or time to talk about what Connor can do.

“I was thinking about it today on the bench, and I was amazed when I was watching him in Erie and doing the things that he was doing and that was in junior hockey, and he’s doing the same things here in the National Hockey League. It’s amazing.”

Like all great players McDavid finds ways to elevate his game. Last season, it was scoring 64 goals on his way to winning the Art Ross by 25 points over teammate Leon Draisaitl (153-128). This season, he is striving for 100 assists, joking at one point in the season he was done shooting the puck and was strictly going to focus on setting up his teammates.

Kucherov and MacKinnon have provided another form of motivation for McDavid, giving him a target to strive towards, although the Stanley Cup remains the ultimate prize.

“They are putting together two great years,” McDavid said. “They are two great players who are always right there as well. I think they’ve both played really well and they’re both playing with some special players, just like me here. It’s been fun to watch those two.”

Heading down the stretch, the scoring lead could change a number of times between the three players before it is settled. Everything could come down to an exciting conclusion when the Oilers visit the Avalanche in the final game of the regular season on April 18.

“I did an interview prior to the All-Star Game talking about how with those things I’ve kind of been there and done that, not to say it doesn’t matter or it’s not important, because it is -- those things are great,” McDavid said. “But we’re playing for more than that.

“We’re not playing for individual accolades or things like that. If it happens along the way, great. If not, we move on anyway.”

Adblock test (Why?)


https://news.google.com/rss/articles/CBMiUmh0dHBzOi8vd3d3Lm5obC5jb20vbmV3cy9jb25ub3ItbWNkYXZpZC1mb3JjZXMtd2F5LWludG8tdGhyaWxsaW5nLW5obC1zY29yaW5nLXJhY2XSAQA?oc=5

2024-03-31 13:48:34Z
CBMiUmh0dHBzOi8vd3d3Lm5obC5jb20vbmV3cy9jb25ub3ItbWNkYXZpZC1mb3JjZXMtd2F5LWludG8tdGhyaWxsaW5nLW5obC1zY29yaW5nLXJhY2XSAQA

Even in meaningless games, Calgary Flames’ Nazem Kadri still playing with pride - Sportsnet.ca

{* public_profileBlurb *}

{* public_displayName *}

{* public_name *} {* public_gender *} {* public_birthdate *} {* public_emailAddress *} {* public_address *} {* public_phoneNumber *}

Adblock test (Why?)


https://news.google.com/rss/articles/CBMic2h0dHBzOi8vd3d3LnNwb3J0c25ldC5jYS9uaGwvYXJ0aWNsZS9ldmVuLWluLW1lYW5pbmdsZXNzLWdhbWVzLWNhbGdhcnktZmxhbWVzLW5hemVtLWthZHJpLXN0aWxsLXBsYXlpbmctd2l0aC1wcmlkZS_SAXJodHRwczovL3d3dy5zcG9ydHNuZXQuY2EvbmhsL2V2ZW4taW4tbWVhbmluZ2xlc3MtZ2FtZXMtY2FsZ2FyeS1mbGFtZXMtbmF6ZW0ta2Fkcmktc3RpbGwtcGxheWluZy13aXRoLXByaWRlL3NuLWFtcC8?oc=5

2024-03-31 06:32:00Z
CBMic2h0dHBzOi8vd3d3LnNwb3J0c25ldC5jYS9uaGwvYXJ0aWNsZS9ldmVuLWluLW1lYW5pbmdsZXNzLWdhbWVzLWNhbGdhcnktZmxhbWVzLW5hemVtLWthZHJpLXN0aWxsLXBsYXlpbmctd2l0aC1wcmlkZS_SAXJodHRwczovL3d3dy5zcG9ydHNuZXQuY2EvbmhsL2V2ZW4taW4tbWVhbmluZ2xlc3MtZ2FtZXMtY2FsZ2FyeS1mbGFtZXMtbmF6ZW0ta2Fkcmktc3RpbGwtcGxheWluZy13aXRoLXByaWRlL3NuLWFtcC8

‘We! Want! 60!’: Auston Matthews makes history in Buffalo - Sportsnet.ca

{* public_profileBlurb *}

{* public_displayName *}

{* public_name *} {* public_gender *} {* public_birthdate *} {* public_emailAddress *} {* public_address *} {* public_phoneNumber *}

Adblock test (Why?)


https://news.google.com/rss/articles/CBMiWWh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LnNwb3J0c25ldC5jYS9uaGwvYXJ0aWNsZS93ZS13YW50LTYwLWF1c3Rvbi1tYXR0aGV3cy1tYWtlcy1oaXN0b3J5LWluLWJ1ZmZhbG8v0gFYaHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuc3BvcnRzbmV0LmNhL25obC93ZS13YW50LTYwLWF1c3Rvbi1tYXR0aGV3cy1tYWtlcy1oaXN0b3J5LWluLWJ1ZmZhbG8vc24tYW1wLw?oc=5

2024-03-31 04:20:00Z
CBMiWWh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LnNwb3J0c25ldC5jYS9uaGwvYXJ0aWNsZS93ZS13YW50LTYwLWF1c3Rvbi1tYXR0aGV3cy1tYWtlcy1oaXN0b3J5LWluLWJ1ZmZhbG8v0gFYaHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuc3BvcnRzbmV0LmNhL25obC93ZS13YW50LTYwLWF1c3Rvbi1tYXR0aGV3cy1tYWtlcy1oaXN0b3J5LWluLWJ1ZmZhbG8vc24tYW1wLw

Danielle Collins wins Miami Open on her final try, topping Elena Rybakina in straight sets - TSN

MIAMI GARDENS, Fla. (AP) — Danielle Collins had the perfect send-off at her final Miami Open, beating Elena Rybakina 7-5, 6-3 on Saturday to capture the title in her home state before an adoring crowd that included Andre Agassi and Martina Navratilova.

The 30-year-old Collins announced at the Australian Open that this season would be her last because she's suffering from endometriosis, a painful ailment that affects the uterus.

On her fourth match point, Collins hit a backhand crosscourt winner, then bent over for 10 seconds without moving.

“That game took a lot out of me and Elena was pushing me all around the court,” Collins said. “At the end I was just like, ‘Thank God.’ It all caught up to me.”

Collins was teary-eyed during the on-court trophy ceremony.

“To the fans, I’ve played a lot of tennis, a few finals, and nothing close to this,” Collins said. “In my home state, to come out here in front of thousands of my best friends pushing me to get over this hurdle, I was getting very emotional. It was an incredible environment. I’ve never experienced anything like it.”

Ranked No. 53 and unseeded, Collins was animated throughout the two-hour match against the fourth-ranked Rybakina, pumping her fist and staring up at the crowd that featured a big American flag in the third row. It was too much for the ragged Rybakina, who hit several backhands long.

It was the third career title and first since San Jose in 2021 for Collins, who became the lowest-ranked women's champion at Miami. She leaves with $1.1 million in prize money and will move up to 22nd in the rankings.

Collins said her impending retirement has motivated her to win more titles. This was the biggest of her career and her first in a Masters 1000-level event.

“I feel this tournament is the most centered I’ve been,” she said. “It sounds a little yoga, hippy-dippy but I think about that stuff a lot.”

Collins, who won NCAA singles titles at Virginia in 2014 and 2016, had never had Agassi attend one of her matches.

“Andre was my (service) return idol,” Collins said. “I can’t tell you how much footage I’ve watched of Andre. When I saw him out here, I almost teared up. It was surreal.”

Collins saved 10 of the 11 break points she faced. Rybakina, meanwhile, had played four prior three-set matches in the tournament and said it took a toll.

“She’s playing very aggressive,” Rybakina said. “I think just these first few shots of the point, you need to be very reactive. Physically I was not at my best so I couldn’t push myself. Maybe I should have maybe just risked a little bit more when I had these break points.”

Rybakina saved two break points while trying to serve her way into a first-set tiebreaker. Collins finally seized the set as the Kazakh player nervously poked a backhand deep on the third set point.

In the second set, Collins broke at 4-4 as Rybakina hit a swinging volley into the net, then pounded another backhand long on break point.

Serving for the match, Collins jumped to a 30-0 lead, fell behind 30-40, then finally sealed it on the fourth match point.

“They wanted me to win so bad, I didn’t want to let the crowd down,” Collins said. “Elena does not give up. I just had to hang in there.”

Her immediate plans were to enjoy Miami.

“Now I get to celebrate,” Collins said. “I had so many family members fly in. We’re going to have a great weekend. And I have a night out on the town. I haven’t done that in a while if I can stay up for it and wear a non-tennis outfit.”

OTHER MATCHES

Sunday’s men’s final pits Australian Open champion Jannik Sinner against tournament surprise Grigor Dimitrov.

Following his wins over Carlos Alcaraz and Alexander Zverev, Dimitrov will vault into the top 10 for the first time since 2018.

The Bulgarian also has a prominent fan in the stands in retired legend Serena Williams, who watched Friday’s semifinals. They became pals a while ago when Williams was on the tour. A tournament official said Williams and her sister, Venus, used to call Dimitrov their “little brother.’’

“She’s amazing,” Dimitrov said late Saturday after his three-set win over Zverev. “We stay in touch. We nearly speak on a daily basis. She said, ‘I’m gonna come watch.’ I was like, ‘OK.’ It’s always very humbling to have such a supporter in your corner, and I think just before the match she came, we had a little chat. It’s friendship, man.”

In the men’s doubles final Saturday, top-seeded Rohan Bopanna and Matt Ebden beat Ivan Dodig and Austin Krajicek, 6-7, 6-3 (6), with the title decided on a 10-point tiebreaker.

___

AP tennis: https://apnews.com/hub/tennis

Adblock test (Why?)


https://news.google.com/rss/articles/CBMifWh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LnRzbi5jYS90ZW5uaXMvZGFuaWVsbGUtY29sbGlucy13aW5zLW1pYW1pLW9wZW4tb24taGVyLWZpbmFsLXRyeS10b3BwaW5nLWVsZW5hLXJ5YmFraW5hLWluLXN0cmFpZ2h0LXNldHMtMS4yMDk3MzYw0gEA?oc=5

2024-03-30 21:34:24Z
CBMifWh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LnRzbi5jYS90ZW5uaXMvZGFuaWVsbGUtY29sbGlucy13aW5zLW1pYW1pLW9wZW4tb24taGVyLWZpbmFsLXRyeS10b3BwaW5nLWVsZW5hLXJ5YmFraW5hLWluLXN0cmFpZ2h0LXNldHMtMS4yMDk3MzYw0gEA

Sabtu, 30 Maret 2024

Brad Gushue beats Czech Republic, Germany on opening day of men's curling worlds - CBC Sports

Canada's Brad Gushue defeated the Czech Republic's Lukas Klima 9-8 in an extra end on Saturday at the world men's curling championship in Schaffhausen, Switzerland.

Gushue, from St. John's, made a hit-and-stick for the victory in the round-robin opener at the IWC Arena.

His team of Mark Nichols, E.J. Harnden and Geoff Walker returned to the ice a short time later and posted an 8-5 win over Germany's Marc Muskatewitz.

WATCH l Gushue downs Germany to improve to 2-0 at men's curling worlds:

Gushe captures 2nd win for Canada on opening day of men's curling worlds

2 hours ago

Duration 0:59

Canada's Brad Gushue beats Marc Muskatewitz of Germany 8-5 at the World Men's Curling Championship. The Canadian team improves to 2-0 after defeating the Czech Republic earlier in the day.

Gushue will next face defending champion Bruce Mouat of Scotland, who posted a 10-3 victory over South Korea's Park Jong-duk.

In other early games, American John Shuster opened with a 5-3 win over Switzerland's Yannick Schwaller and Sweden's Niklas Edin dumped Wouter Goesgens of the Netherlands 8-1.

The top six teams in the 13-team field will qualify for the weekend playoffs. Canada is looking for its first gold medal at this event since Gushue's 2017 title in Edmonton.

WATCH l Gushue opens with extra-end victory over Czechs:

Canada's Gushue opens men's curling worlds with victory in extra end

6 hours ago

Duration 1:17

Canada's Brad Gushue defeats Lukas Klima of the Czech Republic 9-8 in the opening draw at the World Men's Curling Championship.

Adblock test (Why?)


https://news.google.com/rss/articles/CBMia2h0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmNiYy5jYS9zcG9ydHMvb2x5bXBpY3Mvd2ludGVyL2N1cmxpbmcvd29ybGQtY3VybGluZy1jaGFtcGlvbnNoaXAtYnJhZC1ndXNodWUtbWFyY2gtMzAtMS43MTU5ODk30gEgaHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuY2JjLmNhL2FtcC8xLjcxNTk4OTc?oc=5

2024-03-30 17:18:57Z
CBMia2h0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmNiYy5jYS9zcG9ydHMvb2x5bXBpY3Mvd2ludGVyL2N1cmxpbmcvd29ybGQtY3VybGluZy1jaGFtcGlvbnNoaXAtYnJhZC1ndXNodWUtbWFyY2gtMzAtMS43MTU5ODk30gEgaHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuY2JjLmNhL2FtcC8xLjcxNTk4OTc

2024 World men's curling championship: Scores, schedule and standings - Sportsnet.ca

[unable to retrieve full-text content]

  1. 2024 World men's curling championship: Scores, schedule and standings  Sportsnet.ca
  2. World Men's set to begin in Schaffhausen  worldcurling.org
  3. Canada defeats Czechia in extra end at world men's curling playdowns  CP24
  4. Brad Gushue gets past Czech Republic in extra end at men's curling worlds  CBC Sports
  5. Watch~ Men's Curling Championship 2024 Live Stream In Scotland  SooToday

https://news.google.com/rss/articles/CBMibGh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LnNwb3J0c25ldC5jYS9jdXJsaW5nL2FydGljbGUvMjAyNC13b3JsZC1tZW5zLWN1cmxpbmctY2hhbXBpb25zaGlwLXNjb3Jlcy1zY2hlZHVsZS1hbmQtc3RhbmRpbmdzL9IBAA?oc=5

2024-03-30 12:58:00Z
CBMibGh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LnNwb3J0c25ldC5jYS9jdXJsaW5nL2FydGljbGUvMjAyNC13b3JsZC1tZW5zLWN1cmxpbmctY2hhbXBpb25zaGlwLXNjb3Jlcy1zY2hlZHVsZS1hbmQtc3RhbmRpbmdzL9IBAA

Aaron Civale sparkles, Brandon Lowe hits 4th career grand slam to propel Rays over Blue Jays - TSN

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (AP) — Aaron Civale allowed one run over six innings and Brandon Lowe hit his fourth career grand slam to lead the Tampa Bay Rays to a 8-2 victory over the Toronto Blue Jays on Friday night.

Sporting retro Devil Rays uniforms the team will wear for 13 Friday home games this year, the Rays rebounded from a lopsided opening loss and drew a crowd of 18,653 at Tropicana Field — down from the announced sellout of 25,025 the AL East rivals attracted the previous day.

Tampa Bay improved to 12-3 in the throwback jerseys they've donned on Devil Rays Days since the start of last season.

Civale, a trade deadline acquisition who helped the Rays withstand injuries and make their fifth straight playoff appearance, limited the Blue Jays to George Springer's solo homer and three singles before turning over a five-run lead to the bullpen.

“He just kept commanding the baseball," Rays manager Kevin Cash said. "It’s elite command we know that he has. Felt like today he had everything going — cutter, curveball and the fastball.”

Chris Devenski pitched two scoreless innings and Jason Adam yielded a sacrifice fly in the ninth while finishing a six-hitter.

Toronto starter Chris Bassitt (0-1) won a career-high 16 games last season, tying Tampa Bay's Zach Eflin for the most in the American League. The right-hander began strong, striking out his first four batters, but ran into trouble in the third when shortstop Bo Bichette's fielding error helped the Rays load the bases with no outs.

Lowe's grand slam to right-center on a 2-2 pitch traveled 444 feet. The second baseman had 21 homers and 68 RBIs last season, but spent two stints on the injured list and didn't play after Sept. 21.

“It’s nice to have him in the lineup. If we can keep him in the lineup we’re going to get a lot of those swings,” Cash said.

Randy Arozarena's RBI single made it 5-1 in the fifth. José Caballero drove in a run in the sixth and defending AL batting champion Yandy Díaz tacked on a two-run single in the eighth.

Bassitt allowed six hits and five runs — four earned — over five innings. The 35-yearold right-hander didn't feel he pitched poorly.

“I felt really good. I felt I threw my pitches, basically where I wanted them ... (except for) one pitch," Bassitt said. “Obviously he’s an unbelievable hitter, had 20-plus homers whatever he had last year. I just can’t make that mistake.”

Springer also homered in Toronto's 8-2 victory on Thursday. Alejandro Kirk drove in the Blue Jays other run with his sacrifice fly off Adam.

TRAINER'S ROOM

Blue Jays: RHP Kevin Gausman (shoulder fatigue) had a bullpen session. Manager John Schneider said the right-hander remains on target to start Sunday or Monday and throw about 70 to 75 pitches. ... C Danny Jansen (fractured right wrist) is doing long toss and started taking dry swings with a bat.

Rays: Caballero was hit by a pitch in his right hand in the third inning, but remained in the game.

UP NEXT

RHP Zack Littell (3-6, 4.10 ERA in 2023) starts for Tampa Bay in the third game of the four-game series. Toronto counters with LHP Yusei Kikuchi (11-6, 3.86), who's 5-1 over nine outings against the Rays with a 3.48 ERA.

___

More AP MLB: https://apnews.com/hub/mlb

Adblock test (Why?)


https://news.google.com/rss/articles/CBMifGh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LnRzbi5jYS9tbGIvYWFyb24tY2l2YWxlLXNwYXJrbGVzLWJyYW5kb24tbG93ZS1oaXRzLTR0aC1jYXJlZXItZ3JhbmQtc2xhbS10by1wcm9wZWwtcmF5cy1vdmVyLWJsdWUtamF5cy0xLjIwOTcwNzjSAQA?oc=5

2024-03-30 01:36:15Z
CBMifGh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LnRzbi5jYS9tbGIvYWFyb24tY2l2YWxlLXNwYXJrbGVzLWJyYW5kb24tbG93ZS1oaXRzLTR0aC1jYXJlZXItZ3JhbmQtc2xhbS10by1wcm9wZWwtcmF5cy1vdmVyLWJsdWUtamF5cy0xLjIwOTcwNzjSAQA

Canadiens’ Kaiden Guhle suspended one game for slashing Flyers’ Konecny - Sportsnet.ca

{* profilePhotoCustom *}

{* public_profileBlurb *}

{* public_displayName *}

{* public_name *} {* public_gender *} {* public_birthdate *} {* public_emailAddress *} {* public_address *} {* public_phoneNumber *}

Adblock test (Why?)


https://news.google.com/rss/articles/CBMia2h0dHBzOi8vd3d3LnNwb3J0c25ldC5jYS9uaGwvYXJ0aWNsZS9jYW5hZGllbnMta2FpZGVuLWd1aGxlLXN1c3BlbmRlZC1vbmUtZ2FtZS1mb3Itc2xhc2hpbmctZmx5ZXJzLWtvbmVjbnkv0gFqaHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuc3BvcnRzbmV0LmNhL25obC9jYW5hZGllbnMta2FpZGVuLWd1aGxlLXN1c3BlbmRlZC1vbmUtZ2FtZS1mb3Itc2xhc2hpbmctZmx5ZXJzLWtvbmVjbnkvc24tYW1wLw?oc=5

2024-03-29 23:05:00Z
CBMia2h0dHBzOi8vd3d3LnNwb3J0c25ldC5jYS9uaGwvYXJ0aWNsZS9jYW5hZGllbnMta2FpZGVuLWd1aGxlLXN1c3BlbmRlZC1vbmUtZ2FtZS1mb3Itc2xhc2hpbmctZmx5ZXJzLWtvbmVjbnkv0gFqaHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuc3BvcnRzbmV0LmNhL25obC9jYW5hZGllbnMta2FpZGVuLWd1aGxlLXN1c3BlbmRlZC1vbmUtZ2FtZS1mb3Itc2xhc2hpbmctZmx5ZXJzLWtvbmVjbnkvc24tYW1wLw

Jumat, 29 Maret 2024

Game in 10: All four lines contribute offensively, Maple Leafs clean it up defensively in sound team win over Washington - Maple Leafs Hot Stove

The Maple Leafs got the response they needed after a leaky home loss to New Jersey as a no-stress 5-1 win over the Capitals nipped their two-game losing slide in the bud.

Your game in 10:

1.   Outside of Auston Matthews‘ second shift of the game where he nearly swatted in a rebound and TJ Oshie’s desperation play defensively prevented a sure 2-on-1 goal from Matthews to Tyler Bertuzzi, the team’s start to this game wasn’t totally solid. There were a few chaotic own-zone sequences before the Mark Giordano penalty on Alex Ovechkin. Similar to the Edmonton game, though, the team’s much-maligned PK stepped up against a hot power play and helped settle the team into the game.

This was as good of a PK as we’ve seen from the Leafs all season. There was no second-guessing or confusion on the triggers; Connor Dewar, David Kampf, Bobby McMann, and William Nylander applied pressure aggressively and in a coordinated manner. The Capitals hardly had a second to breathe with the puck in the zone. It looked like the more successful iterations of the team’s PK from earlier in the Dean Chynoweth era.

Consistency has been the challenge all year and Mitch Marner is yet to return, but it’s becoming more and more evident that Dewar adds a piece who is going to help the cause now that he’s had some time to acclimate; he covers ice and anticipates well (he broke up multiple plays on the two Capitals power plays).

The garbage-time Oilers goals and the bounce off of McCabe’s skate in Carolina make the numbers look bad, but the process has been really good at times in each of these last three games against good power plays (Hurricanes, Oilers, Capitals). We’ll see if they can build on it or if it reverts to form against the upper-echelon power plays of Florida and Tampa next week.


2.   Not long after their first kill, the Leafs opened the scoring on a nice play from Matthew Knies where he jumped on a broken play in the neutral zone, attacked the slot off the rush, recovered the puck, and set up Mark Giordano drifting in off the point. The shot was nicely placed as Giordano dusted off some of the offensive instincts and shooting ability that once saw him score 21 as a defenseman.

It was natural to start wondering if Giordano’s concussion incident was going to be his final shift in a Leaf/NHL sweater. The piling up of Timothy Liljegren, Joel Edmundson, and Morgan Rielly‘s injury situations opened the door, and it was great to see Giordano get a moment in the sun after all he has been through this year. The goal and point to the sky for his late father was one of the better feel-good moments of this Leafs regular season.


3.    The other encouraging early sign for the Leafs was the play of Joseph Woll, who hasn’t always been at his sharpest early in games since returning from injury. He allowed early goals against vs. Carolina, New Jersey, and twice against Boston in the first 10 minutes or so of the first period.

Woll needed to make maybe his biggest save of the night just past the midway mark of the first when Nick Jensen roasted TJ Brodie off the half-wall and walked in alone for a patient deke that Woll stuck with to make a nice pad save.

It was a bit of a wobbly start in their own end, but Leafs settled into the game after that big save.


4.   There was an encouraging sign for Auston Matthews’ status for this game based on the morning skate lines, which seemed to show a placeholder (Marner on RW, Domi in the middle) with the expectation that Matthews would play. Fortunately, he did dress, and he did dominate.

Somehow, he didn’t end up on the scoresheet outside of one assist (Charlie Lindgren had his number), but he was a beast in this game from his second shift onward.  On the opening shift of the middle frame, Matthews winning a puck race/battle on the forecheck retrieval and then his strength on the puck down low in the corner — he took a hard shove into the glass and shielded the puck before exploding out of the corner into space away from his check — started the sequence for the Tyler Bertuzzi bank goal off the goalie for the 2-0 Toronto lead.

Matthews was tilting the ice all night for the team and finished with a team-leading 20 shots for, sixc  against in his five-on-five ice time while firing 10 shots on goal individually in just 18:50 of ice time (and winning 71% of his faceoffs). After Keefe called out the leadership group following the New Jersey loss, Matthews responded in exactly the dominant manner you would hope he would while playing through illness to boot.


5.   Point shots for tips don’t get much more open than the Capitals’ 2-1 goal. After three Leafs converged on one Capital on the wall — Bertuzzi committed to a hit on the puck carrier on the boards with Matthews already committed, and the puck made it through — Nick Jensen had loads of time and time to step in and shoot. Nic Dowd was on his lonesome in the slot to tip it past Woll.

That set the stage for a huge swing moment at 2-1. Dylan Strome undressed Conor Timmins inside the blue line, but Connor Dewar, without taking a penalty, made a nice desperate defensive play to disrupt the deke as Strome was cutting across Woll.

On the transition rush the other way, it was hard not to picture Noah Gregor in the same position as Ryan Reaves on this play flying down the ice ahead of everyone and firing a low-percentage shot at the goalie’s crest. Reaves set the zone before the Leafs scored a nice cycle goal, finished off by Dewar picking up the loose change for his first as a Leaf.

It was no surprise Keefe called it a “coach’s goal” afterward — good defensive play (by the eventual goal scorer) leading to offense at the other end, and an ugly goal off the cycle with traffic in front by a fourth line playing to its identity.


6.  After the New Jersey debacle, it was notable that the Leafs conceded next to no odd-man rushes or breakaways in this game. There were a few moments where an individual defenseman got beat 1v1 inside of their structure, leading to one-on-one situations with the goalie (Brodie was beaten off the wall by Jensen, Timmins was beaten by Strome), but they maintained F3, didn’t make low-percentage gambles up ice, and kept everything in front of them for the most part. They didn’t get in their own way and the offense came naturally as they pulled away throughout the game.

They had a few shaky own-zone sequences in the first 10-12 minutes of the first period, but after Giordano scored and they received one big save from Woll on Jensen, they locked it down well.  After conceding six in the opening frame, the Leafs gave up three total high-danger chances in the final 40 minutes, including just one in the third. The Capitals are no offensive juggernaut (particularly at five-on-five), but that’s about as clean of an effort as you’re going to see protecting the lead over the final two periods.

Keefe seemed to press the right button after the New Jersey game in terms of raising alarm, calling out the leaders, and getting the team’s attention about re-committing to the structure this late in the season.


7.   The Leafs scored the put-away 4-1 goal early in the third period to make the final period satisfactorily uninteresting. John Tavares set up Bobby McMann on an odd-man rush for a goal that snuck through Charlie Lindgren. It was another quick goal to start a period in the game for the Leafs, but it actually started with a bit of a broken play in their own zone on the breakout.

Nylander put the puck behind Simon Benoit, but Benoit did the right thing by just haggardly banging it off the glass (have to appreciate Benoit recognizing that the oh-shit meter is ringing alarm bells there and playing within his limitations). After the Capitals misplayed it in the neutral zone, it sent Tavares in for the 2-on-1. The Leafs’ under-manned defense did a pretty good job of simply flipping pucks when the situation called for it rather than forcing plays in this game.


8.   Speaking of Simon Benoit, this was a really solid game from him. He picked up the assist on the McMann goal, but he also made a number of nice defensive stops that allowed the Leafs to transition back onto offense. He threw five hits while finishing just behind Brodie for the most five-on-five minutes on the defense.

Assuming Rielly-Lyubushkin and Edmundson-Liljegren are all healthy and represent two of the playoff pairs, it’s pretty hard to look at the body of evidence 70+ games into the season and conclude that Benoit-McCabe shouldn’t receive the first look over Brodie – McCabe in the playoff lineup.

Prime Brodie was indispensable on this Leaf team with his ability to defend the rush effectively with good gaps and a good stick, retrieve pucks well with his feet, and make clean exit plays with consistency. The current Brodie has lost a full step, is prey for forecheckers, and is producing nothing offensively without thriving in the physical intensity/competitiveness piece of the game (never his strength). Besides betting on the experience in the hopes that it all suddenly clicks back into place, it does not leave much argument for Brodie over the younger, tougher Benoit, who works alongside McCabe and bolsters the scrappy identity they’re trying to foster on the blue line as they hope to overcome the obvious limitations in talent on the defense.


9.  Tyler Bertuzzi was in the right place at the right time on the forecheck to jump on a total gift from Trevor van Riemsdyk to make it 5-1, giving him his 11th goal in his last 15 games.

Bertuzzi’s quote about having “no idea” what’s leading to more goals besides “doing the same thing and getting lucky,” as well as Keefe’s quote about Bertuzzi scoring from the below goal line tonight after he couldn’t score from above it into empty nets before, were funny and accurate. He has seen an uptick in high-danger chances in the last 15 games (playing more alongside Matthews recently probably plays a big role), but even after his six-shot game vs. Washington, he is shooting at essentially the same rate per 60 as his first 55 games.

With a little more than a minute more per game in ice time and some opportunity alongside a top-five player in the world, he’s getting some well-earned bounces, gaining confidence from those bounces, and he’s doing it at the time of year when he’s typically ramped up and thrived historically. He wasn’t brought here for gaudy regular season numbers; he was brought in to score greasy and important goals when the going gets toughest. It’s trending in the right direction at the right time.


10.   The Leafs doubled up the Caps in shots on goal at 48-24, all four lines were on the ice for a 5v5 goal, and every single Leaf finished as a plus-player for just the second time this season.

Paired with the Panthers’ loss, this sound team win gives the Leafs everything to play for in their biggest matchups of the year against Tampa and Florida next week, but first, the week ends with a quietly interesting game on Saturday vs. Buffalo. The Leafs owe the Sabres one in that building after the 9-3 debacle in December. A statement win would be a good tone-setter heading into a big week.


Game Flow: 5v5 Shot Attempts


Heat Map: 5v5 Shot Attempts


Joe Bowen & Jim Ralph Game Highlights

Adblock test (Why?)


https://news.google.com/rss/articles/CBMiUmh0dHBzOi8vbWFwbGVsZWFmc2hvdHN0b3ZlLmNvbS8yMDI0LzAzLzI5L2dhbWUtaW4tMTAtbWFwbGUtbGVhZnMtY2FwaXRhbHMtZ2FtZS03Mi_SAQA?oc=5

2024-03-29 17:41:45Z
CBMiUmh0dHBzOi8vbWFwbGVsZWFmc2hvdHN0b3ZlLmNvbS8yMDI0LzAzLzI5L2dhbWUtaW4tMTAtbWFwbGUtbGVhZnMtY2FwaXRhbHMtZ2FtZS03Mi_SAQA

Cult of Hockey Player Grades: Strong 4-1 Edmonton Oilers win over L.A in possible 1st round preview - Edmonton Journal

Article content

The Edmonton Oilers won a big divisional battle on Thursday, a 4-1 victory over the Kings creating a 5-point spread between Edmonton and L.A. in the Pacific. Vegas slides into 3rd place but is 4 back of the Oil.

Edmonton won both ends of the specialty teams battle (PP ½, PK 2/2) and the goaltending showdown (Skinner over Talbot).

Article content

L.A. had 33 shots on net…but they are volume shooters. Overall, a sound defensive performance by the home club.

Advertisement 2

Article content

Here is the tale of the tape…

Edmonton Oilers Player Grades

STUART SKINNER. 8. Steady 1st from Skinner but without a lot of serious work. But he had to be very sharp early in the 2nd as the Kings pressed with 7 unanswered shots, making solid saves off Moore (2-on-1) and Lewis. Stuffed Kempe a few shifts later. With the game still 1-0 Skinner stoned Kempe and then Kopitar in tight. Those were tide-turning saves as just shifts later his mates scored the 2-0. Precious little chance on the 3-1, it was a bang-bang play after a turnover. Big glove save off a Roy point shot. Then helped close it out late in the 3rd with big stops on Dubois and a 1-timer off Kempe’s stick. Stopped 32 of 33. Named the game’s 2nd Star. Looked to be in playoff form.

CONNOR McDAVID. 9. Hit the 120-point mark for the 3rd consecutive season with the 1-0 in the first, knocking down a Mattias Ekholm point shot then back-handing it home for a 4v4 goal. Levelled a hard check on Lizotte late in the 1st frame. No call from the Zebras when he was dropped while cutting hard across the slot. Wins the faceoff after a bad icing by L.A. and ends up with the secondary assist on the 2-0. Earned the primary assist on Bouchard’s 3-0 goal with a pass from behind the goal line. A rare turnover in his zone with possession and the net empty at the other end but eventually cleared the zone on that series. Fought relentlessly through the Kings withering trap. Ended up +3. Named 1st Star.

Article content

Advertisement 3

Article content

RYAN NUGENT-HOPKINS. 6. Fine defensive performance. An excellent clear on the 1st Period PK. Blocked shot and then a steal and clear on the same 3rd Period PK. Hard battle and clear of his own zone in the 3rd. Superb back-check forced an L.A. off-side.

ZACH HYMAN. 6. Good backhand chance from a 3-way passing play with Bouchard and McDavid. Could not convert a sneaky inside pass from Ekholm late in the 1st. Called for a 3rd Period Interference infraction. But then drew a slashing call leading to the 3-0. 5 shots.

DARNELL NURSE. 7. A tower of strength. High Dangers 6-2 5v5 on Darnell Nurse’s stingy watch. Delivered 7 hits to lead the squad. His elite-level speed was a definite edge over a team like the Kings with average boots by comparison. Both sides of this 1st pairing (tonight) were excellent.

CODY CECI. 7. His best effort in a long time. Ceci got a shot on net off a lovely Draisaitl pass in the 1st. The two teamed up in a similar fashion early in the 2nd. Showed particularly good patience deep in his own end and the net empty, found a lane, and drained a 193-foot shot right up the gut for the 4-1. High Dangers 5v5 5-2.

Advertisement 4

Article content

LEON DRAISAITL. 8. Smart stick to end an L.A. sortie early in the 1st. Erased a pending Oilers PP with the tiniest slash on an L.A. player but it was ‘right’ in front of the referee. Just missed potting a bounce off the back boards on a shot-pass by Bouchard. Thumped Roy with hard hit mid-way through the 1st. A terrific pass to Ceci for a chance. Found Ceci again in the 2nd for a point-bank chance. Dangerous shot through a screen. A hard, power move behind the net leads to a pass throw at Henrique in front for the 2-0. Won the faceoff on the 3-0 and ultimately earned the secondary assist. Hard backcheck on Kempe. A spectacular backhand pass set up Henrique in the high slot. Had a rough night in the faceoff circle until it really mattered. Then, won 3 D-zine faceoffs with the Kings net empty, earning a primary assist on the 4-1 with his 3rd win. 3 assists, +3. 3rd Star.

ADAAM HENRIQUE. 7. “Go to the net, kids”. Henrique was rewarded for doing just that, on the ice with sparse seconds remaining in the 2nd after a bad Kings icing. A Draisaitl pass deflected off Henrique’s shoulder right at the top of the crease and in, sending dejected L.A. to the room with a 2-0 deficit after 2. Could not drain a hi-light reel pass from Draisaitl in front. 6 hits.

Advertisement 5

Article content

WARREN FOEGELE. 5. Hard 2nd Period hit on Doughty. Worked hard on the fore check, responsible without the puck. Just did not have a lot of numbers to illustrate a good effort.

MATTIAS EKHOLM. 5. Earned the primary assist on the 1-0 with a point shot that McDavid converted. A fine pass up the middle for Hyman late in the 1st. A glaring giveaway behind his own goal line, leading to the 3-1. A rare night on the bad end of High Dangers 5v5 (4-6).

EVAN BOUCHARD. 8. He was excellent. Secondary assist on the 1-0. Sifted a hard pass off the back wall which Draisaitl nearly swept home for the 2-0. Excellent stick check of Kempe in front. A sweet pass up the middle to spring McDavid and Hyman on a break. Played a 2nd Period 2-on-1 expertly. Part of the sequence on the 2-0. Hammered home the 3-0, a one-timer high glove off a McDavid feed. It was his first since a goal versus L.A. back on February 26th. Involved in the 3-1 against but I had no problem with Bouchard’s decision to pinch in the neutral zone.

RYAN McLEOD. 5. Fine pass by Ryan McLeod led to a break between Kane and Perry. But his best work was without the puck. Very responsible. Sawed off in 5v5 CF. His speed in between Kane and Perry seems to work well.

Advertisement 6

Article content

EVANDER KANE. 6. Set the tone for the game by thumping Drew Doughty with a heavy check in the first, whistled for a questionable trip on the play. Delivered another heavy hit on Englund when he returned. Crisp pass across to perry on a good chance on a 2-on-1. Kane finished up with 6 hits and a string North-South game.

COREY PERRY. 5. Career NHL game number 1,300. Good feed to McLeod in the 2nd who must missed. Tried to deke Talbot 5-hole on a 2-on-1 with Kane. 3rd Period blocked shot.

BRETT KULAK. 5. The far superior member of the Oilers 3rd pairing tonight. Bailed out his D-partner on a bad pinch as Kulak swept the puck away from the gaping Edmonton net. Sawed off on High Dangers 5v5.

VINCENT DESHARNAIS. 3. Struggled. Drew a 2nd Period slash. 2nd Period turnover with a soft pass behind his own net, a harbinger of bad things to come. Yet another giveaway led to point-blank shots by Kempe and Kopitar. Ill-timed pinch led directly to a Grade A chance against.

DEREK RYAN. 5. This line decidedly lost the shot-shares battle but all 3 were so solid defensively they still receiving passing grades. Good anticipation for an interception high in his own zone in the 2nd.

Advertisement 7

Article content

MATTIAS JANMARK. 5. Hard play along the wall to earn a zone clear on the PK in the 1st. Clever deflection on a 3rd Period shorthanded chance. 4 hits. Coach trusted him out on the ice late to protect the lead.

CONNOR BROWN. 5. Nice zone clear on a 1st Period PK. Set up Janmark for a dangerous chance shorthanded.

Edmonton’s record now sits at 44-23-4, 92 points. They remain 2nd in the Pacific, opening up a 5-point gap between them and L.A., 4 points up on Vegas. And the Oilers have 2 games on hand on the Golden Knights, 1 on the Kings.

Prior to the game, Official Kyle Rehman was recognized for his 1,000th NHL game. We do not pull punches here when it comes to officiating. We also recognize meaningful accomplishments.

Find me on Threads @kleavins, on Instagram at LeavinsOnHockey, Mastodon at KurtLeavins@mstdn.social, and X @KurtLeavins.

Recently, at The Cult…

McCURDY: Are the Edmonton Oilers better or worse since the trading deadline?

STAPLES: Oilers show their grit in 4-3 win over Winnipeg Jets

LEAVINS: Oilers loss to Leafs begs important questions.

Article content

Comments

Join the Conversation

This Week in Flyers

Adblock test (Why?)


https://news.google.com/rss/articles/CBMiqgFodHRwczovL2VkbW9udG9uam91cm5hbC5jb20vc3BvcnRzL2hvY2tleS9uaGwvY3VsdC1vZi1ob2NrZXkvY3VsdC1vZi1ob2NrZXktcGxheWVyLWdyYWRlcy1hZnRlci1hLXN0cm9uZy00LTEtZWRtb250b24tb2lsZXJzLWVmZm9ydC1vdmVyLWwtYS1pbi1wb3NzaWJsZS0xc3Qtcm91bmQtcHJldmlld9IBAA?oc=5

2024-03-29 04:33:08Z
CBMiqgFodHRwczovL2VkbW9udG9uam91cm5hbC5jb20vc3BvcnRzL2hvY2tleS9uaGwvY3VsdC1vZi1ob2NrZXkvY3VsdC1vZi1ob2NrZXktcGxheWVyLWdyYWRlcy1hZnRlci1hLXN0cm9uZy00LTEtZWRtb250b24tb2lsZXJzLWVmZm9ydC1vdmVyLWwtYS1pbi1wb3NzaWJsZS0xc3Qtcm91bmQtcHJldmlld9IBAA

‘Something I promised’: Mark Giordano dedicates comeback goal to Dad - Sportsnet.ca

{* public_profileBlurb *}

{* public_displayName *}

{* public_name *} {* public_gender *} {* public_birthdate *} {* public_emailAddress *} {* public_address *} {* public_phoneNumber *}

Adblock test (Why?)


https://news.google.com/rss/articles/CBMiZ2h0dHBzOi8vd3d3LnNwb3J0c25ldC5jYS9uaGwvYXJ0aWNsZS9zb21ldGhpbmctaS1wcm9taXNlZC1tYXJrLWdpb3JkYW5vLWRlZGljYXRlcy1jb21lYmFjay1nb2FsLXRvLWRhZC_SAWZodHRwczovL3d3dy5zcG9ydHNuZXQuY2EvbmhsL3NvbWV0aGluZy1pLXByb21pc2VkLW1hcmstZ2lvcmRhbm8tZGVkaWNhdGVzLWNvbWViYWNrLWdvYWwtdG8tZGFkL3NuLWFtcC8?oc=5

2024-03-29 03:57:00Z
CBMiZ2h0dHBzOi8vd3d3LnNwb3J0c25ldC5jYS9uaGwvYXJ0aWNsZS9zb21ldGhpbmctaS1wcm9taXNlZC1tYXJrLWdpb3JkYW5vLWRlZGljYXRlcy1jb21lYmFjay1nb2FsLXRvLWRhZC_SAWZodHRwczovL3d3dy5zcG9ydHNuZXQuY2EvbmhsL3NvbWV0aGluZy1pLXByb21pc2VkLW1hcmstZ2lvcmRhbm8tZGVkaWNhdGVzLWNvbWViYWNrLWdvYWwtdG8tZGFkL3NuLWFtcC8

Kamis, 28 Maret 2024

Matthews game-time decision for Maple Leafs against Capitals with illness - NHL.com

TORONTO -- Auston Matthews will be a game-time decision for the Toronto Maple Leafs against the Washington Capitals at Scotiabank Arena on Thursday (7 p.m. ET; SN1, MNMT) because of an illness.

"It's going to be on how he feels throughout the day," Maple Leafs coach Sheldon Keefe said.

The forward did not participate in Toronto's morning skate. Max Domi took his place as the center on a line between Tyler Bertuzzi and Mitch Marner, a right wing recovering from a high-ankle sprain sustained March 7 and will be out the next two games.

Matthews leads the NHL with 59 goals, one from becoming the ninth player in NHL history with at least two 60-goal seasons. He scored 60 in 73 games in 2021-22, when he won the Rocket Richard Trophy, Hart Trophy and Ted Lindsay Award. He had one goal and nine shots in 23:44 of a 6-3 loss to the New Jersey Devils on Tuesday, which extended his point streak to five games (four goals, seven assists).

He missed one game this season with illness, a 7-0 win against the Pittsburgh Penguins on Dec. 16.

"Of course, it's an adjustment when your best player is out of the lineup," Domi said, "when anybody is out of the lineup, but I think we've done a great job all year of guys stepping up when they have to, and we just have to continue to do that."

Toronto defenseman Morgan Rielly will miss his second straight game with an upper-body injury.

"He just remains day to day," Keefe said. "We're hopeful he's going to bounce back here. The one thing that is good is once he gets through this day or two here, it's not going to be a lingering situation. It's not going to be an injury that's ongoing. Once he's past it, he's past it so we just need to give him some time."

Adblock test (Why?)


https://news.google.com/rss/articles/CBMiRWh0dHBzOi8vd3d3Lm5obC5jb20vbmV3cy9hdXN0b24tbWF0dGhld3MtcGxheWluZy1zdGF0dXMtdnMtd2FzaGluZ3RvbtIBAA?oc=5

2024-03-28 15:50:18Z
CBMiRWh0dHBzOi8vd3d3Lm5obC5jb20vbmV3cy9hdXN0b24tbWF0dGhld3MtcGxheWluZy1zdGF0dXMtdnMtd2FzaGluZ3RvbtIBAA

Canucks place goalie Thatcher Demko on long-term injured list - CBC.ca

The Vancouver Canucks have placed all-star goalie Thatcher Demko on the long-term injured reserve list retroactively.

"It's just cap related," coach Rick Tocchet said after practice Wednesday. "We get some cap relief, that's all it is." 

The 28-year-old netminder has been considered week to week since being sidelined with a lower-body injury midway through Vancouver's 5-0 win over the Winnipeg Jets on March 9.

That injury designation hasn't changed, Tocchet said.

Demko boasts a 34-18-2 record this season, with a .917 save percentage, a 2.47 goals-against average and five shutouts.

Casey DeSmith has taken over the starting job for Vancouver, going 3-2-1 since Demko's injury. He has a .899 save percentage on the season with a 2.73 goals-against average and one shutout. 

The earliest Demko could be back in the Canucks' lineup is April 6 against the Kings in Los Angeles.

He's expected to be a key piece as Vancouver (45-19-8) prepares for its first playoff appearance since the COVID-shortened 2019-20 campaign. 

Canucks general manager Patrik Allvin also announced Wednesday that the club has called up forward Arshdeep Bains from the Abbotsford Canucks of the American Hockey League. 

"I'd like to see where [Bains is] at," Tocchet said, noting he isn't sure whether the 23-year-old winger will slot into the lineup when the Canucks host the Dallas Stars on Thursday. 

WATCH | Bains makes NHL debut

Surrey, B.C.'s Arshdeep Bains makes Canucks debut

1 month ago

Duration 2:20

Arshdeep Bains from Surrey, B.C., has made his NHL debut with the Vancouver Canucks Tuesday night against the Colorado Avalanche. As CBC's Joel Ballard reports, it's been a hard-fought journey for the hometown kid to the big leagues.

Bains played five games for the NHL team in February before being sent back to Abbotsford. 

"He went down, he's done a couple of things that we like, and he's got some speed," Tocchet said. 

Vancouver may get another forward back in the lineup Thursday. 

Dakota Joshua practised in a full-contact jersey on Wednesday for the first time since suffering an upper-body injury in Vancouver's 4-2 win over the Blackhawks in Chicago on Feb. 13. 

The physical winger, who's set to become an unrestricted free agent this summer, has a career-high 26 points (13 goals, 13 assists) this season.

Sitting out injured "hasn't been fun," Joshua said.

"It feels like forever," he said. "But at this point, that's behind me and I'm moving forward."

Adblock test (Why?)


https://news.google.com/rss/articles/CBMiT2h0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmNiYy5jYS9uZXdzL2NhbmFkYS9icml0aXNoLWNvbHVtYmlhL3RoYXRjaGVyLWRlbWtvLWluanVyeS0xLjcxNTc4MjfSASBodHRwczovL3d3dy5jYmMuY2EvYW1wLzEuNzE1NzgyNw?oc=5

2024-03-27 23:19:16Z
CBMiT2h0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmNiYy5jYS9uZXdzL2NhbmFkYS9icml0aXNoLWNvbHVtYmlhL3RoYXRjaGVyLWRlbWtvLWluanVyeS0xLjcxNTc4MjfSASBodHRwczovL3d3dy5jYmMuY2EvYW1wLzEuNzE1NzgyNw

Vasilevskiy stops 23 as surging Lightning beat Bruins - Sportsnet.ca

{* public_profileBlurb *}

{* public_displayName *}

{* public_name *} {* public_gender *} {* public_birthdate *} {* public_emailAddress *} {* public_address *} {* public_phoneNumber *}

Adblock test (Why?)


https://news.google.com/rss/articles/CBMiX2h0dHBzOi8vd3d3LnNwb3J0c25ldC5jYS9uaGwvYXJ0aWNsZS9uaGwtcm91bmR1cC12YXNpbGV2c2tpeS1zdG9wcy0yMy1hcy1saWdodG5pbmctYmVhdC1icnVpbnMv0gFeaHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuc3BvcnRzbmV0LmNhL25obC9uaGwtcm91bmR1cC12YXNpbGV2c2tpeS1zdG9wcy0yMy1hcy1saWdodG5pbmctYmVhdC1icnVpbnMvc24tYW1wLw?oc=5

2024-03-28 02:53:00Z
CBMiX2h0dHBzOi8vd3d3LnNwb3J0c25ldC5jYS9uaGwvYXJ0aWNsZS9uaGwtcm91bmR1cC12YXNpbGV2c2tpeS1zdG9wcy0yMy1hcy1saWdodG5pbmctYmVhdC1icnVpbnMv0gFeaHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuc3BvcnRzbmV0LmNhL25obC9uaGwtcm91bmR1cC12YXNpbGV2c2tpeS1zdG9wcy0yMy1hcy1saWdodG5pbmctYmVhdC1icnVpbnMvc24tYW1wLw

Senators score 5 in 1st, cruise past Sabres - NHL.com

“I thought that we were ready to go,” Ottawa coach Jacques Martin said. “We got some pucks at the net, we got people at the net. Took advantage of our opportunities and, I think, built a nice lead. And then I thought, in the third period, we continued again. Our goaltending was good. Made some key saves. But I thought we shut them down in the third period good.”

Shane Pinto had a goal and three assists, and Brady Tkachuk, Boris Katchouk, Jakob Chychrun and Drake Batherson each had a goal and an assist for the Senators (31-36-4), who have won three in a row. Korpisalo made 34 saves.

“If you want to win, you need balance,” Pinto said. “And we had that tonight and it's going to be big for the back-to-back tomorrow (against the Chicago Blackhawks) to have that same thing. So, going to need all the guys on board.”

JJ Peterka and Connor Clifton scored for the Sabres (34-34-5), who have lost four of six. Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen allowed four goals on nine shots before he was replaced by Devon Levi, who made 31 saves in relief.

“We wanted, I guess, to play as individuals,” Clifton said. “I’m disappointed we let ‘Upie’ down, he’s the heart and soul of this team. He’s kept us in so many games, and just to not show up and play that careless style, give them freebies all over the place. … Yeah, obviously, the first 20 really dictated the rest of the game.”

Artem Zub gave Ottawa a 1-0 lead at 2:37 of the first period. He stuffed in a loose puck on the goal line after Katchouk’s shot was redirected by Mark Kastelic between Luukkonen’s pads.

Katchouk made it 2-0 at 4:56, tipping Parker Kelly’s shot from the top of the right face-off circle past Luukkonen.

“It's keeping the consistency with good effort, right habits,” Katchouk said. “The small things matter so much in this game. And obviously, it worked out tonight with the tip. But kudos to my linemates. ‘Kels’ and ‘Kassy,’ they worked hard to get the puck as well. Those two battle hard every night as well. We feed off each other, and it's good to play with them.”

Adblock test (Why?)


https://news.google.com/rss/articles/CBMiS2h0dHBzOi8vd3d3Lm5obC5jb20vbmV3cy9vdHRhd2Etc2VuYXRvcnMtYnVmZmFsby1zYWJyZXMtZ2FtZS1yZWNhcC1tYXJjaC0yN9IBAA?oc=5

2024-03-28 02:29:09Z
CBMiS2h0dHBzOi8vd3d3Lm5obC5jb20vbmV3cy9vdHRhd2Etc2VuYXRvcnMtYnVmZmFsby1zYWJyZXMtZ2FtZS1yZWNhcC1tYXJjaC0yN9IBAA

Rabu, 27 Maret 2024

Here's what we know about the allegations against Shohei Ohtani's interpreter, Ippei Mizuhara - CTV News

LOS ANGELES -

Only a week has passed since the Los Angeles Dodgers abruptly fired Ippei Mizuhara, the interpreter and constant companion of their new $700 million slugger, Shohei Ohtani.

But the biggest story of baseball's spring is still murky -- and shocking -- as the regular season begins in earnest Thursday.

The scandal encompasses gambling, alleged theft, extensive deceit and the breakup of an enduring partnership between the majors' biggest star and his right-hand man. Investigations are underway by the IRS and Major League Baseball, and Ohtani publicly laid out a version of events Monday that placed the responsibility entirely on Mizuhara.

Here are the basics as Ohtani and the Dodgers prepare for their home opener against St. Louis on Thursday:

Why was Ippei Mizuhara fired by the Dodgers?

Ohtani claims his close friend repeatedly took money from his accounts to fund his illegal sports gambling habit. Ohtani also says he was completely unaware of the "massive theft," as his lawyers termed it, until Mizuhara confessed to him and the Dodgers last week in South Korea, where the team opened its regular season against the San Diego Padres.

Mizuhara has given more than one version of his path to this trouble, which was catalyzed by the IRS' investigation of Mathew Bowyer, an alleged illegal bookmaker. Mizuhara has consistently said he has a gambling addiction, and he abused his close friendship with the Dodgers superstar to feed it.

Did Shohei Ohtani ever bet on sports?

That's the biggest question to be answered in Major League Baseball's investigation, and the two-time AL MVP emphatically says he has never gambled on sports or asked anybody to bet on sports for him.

Further, Ohtani said Monday he has never knowingly paid a bookie to cover somebody else's bets. Mizuhara also said Ohtani does not bet, and Bowyer's attorney said the same.

Mizuhara told ESPN on March 19 that Ohtani paid his gambling debts at the interpreter's request, saying the bets were on international soccer, the NBA, the NFL and college football. If that were true, Ohtani could face trouble even if he didn't make the bets himself -- but ESPN said Mizuhara dramatically changed his story the following day, claiming Ohtani had no knowledge of the gambling debts and had not transferred any money to bookmakers.

MLB rules prohibit players and team employees from wagering -- even legally -- on baseball. They also ban betting on other sports with illegal or offshore bookmakers.

What's next for Ohtani?

Ohtani has played in every Dodgers game since the story broke, and he is expected to be their designated hitter in most regular-season games this season while baseball's investigation continues.

Ohtani says his legal team has alerted authorities to the theft by Mizuhara, although his team has repeatedly declined to say which authorities have been told, according to ESPN.

Ohtani's new interpreter is Will Ireton, a longtime Dodgers employee and fluent Japanese speaker who has filled several jobs with the team in everything from game preparation and analytics to recruiting free-agent pitches. But Ireton won't be Ohtani's constant companion, and manager Dave Roberts said Tuesday he's optimistic that Ohtani will become closer to his teammates without the "buffer" provided for years by Mizuhara.

What don't we know?

MLB's investigation of Ohtani's role in the events could last weeks or months, and it's unlikely to be publicized until it's complete. No one outside of Ohtani's inner circle knows what it will find or how serious any repercussions could be, and nobody outside the circle is making informed speculation about the process.

One major question looms: How did Mizuhara have enough access to Ohtani's bank accounts to get the alleged millions without Ohtani knowing? Is the slugger overly trusting, or is he wildly negligent in managing his vast fortune, which includes years of lavish endorsement deals in addition to his baseball salaries? Why didn't the team around him, including his agent, do more to prevent the possibility of the theft he claims?

Finally, where is Mizuhara? Anybody who knows isn't saying. He was fired in South Korea and apparently didn't travel home with the Dodgers. Japanese media have visited his home in Southern California to look for him. Although he was born in Japan, Mizuhara's life is in the U.S. -- but his life will never be the same.

Adblock test (Why?)


https://news.google.com/rss/articles/CBMihAFodHRwczovL3d3dy5jdHZuZXdzLmNhL3Nwb3J0cy9oZXJlLXMtd2hhdC13ZS1rbm93LWFib3V0LXRoZS1hbGxlZ2F0aW9ucy1hZ2FpbnN0LXNob2hlaS1vaHRhbmktcy1pbnRlcnByZXRlci1pcHBlaS1taXp1aGFyYS0xLjY4MjQyNDPSAQA?oc=5

2024-03-27 14:46:00Z
CBMihAFodHRwczovL3d3dy5jdHZuZXdzLmNhL3Nwb3J0cy9oZXJlLXMtd2hhdC13ZS1rbm93LWFib3V0LXRoZS1hbGxlZ2F0aW9ucy1hZ2FpbnN0LXNob2hlaS1vaHRhbmktcy1pbnRlcnByZXRlci1pcHBlaS1taXp1aGFyYS0xLjY4MjQyNDPSAQA

Keefe rips Maple Leafs' 'immature' performance in loss to Devils - Sportsnet.ca

[unable to retrieve full-text content]

  1. Keefe rips Maple Leafs' 'immature' performance in loss to Devils  Sportsnet.ca
  2. Allen shines early, Devils down Maple Leafs  TSN
  3. Matthews scores No. 59 in Maple Leafs loss to Devils  NHL.com
  4. Sheldon Keefe's scathing review of the Leafs' 6-3 loss to NJ: "I hated lots about our game... Hopefully, the players hate it as much or more than I do... It was immature from our most experienced leaders"  Maple Leafs Hot Stove
  5. New Jersey Devils down Toronto Maple Leafs 6-3  CP24

https://news.google.com/rss/articles/CBMiY2h0dHBzOi8vd3d3LnNwb3J0c25ldC5jYS9uaGwvYXJ0aWNsZS9rZWVmZS1yaXBzLW1hcGxlLWxlYWZzLWltbWF0dXJlLXBlcmZvcm1hbmNlLWluLWxvc3MtdG8tZGV2aWxzL9IBAA?oc=5

2024-03-27 04:13:00Z
CBMiY2h0dHBzOi8vd3d3LnNwb3J0c25ldC5jYS9uaGwvYXJ0aWNsZS9rZWVmZS1yaXBzLW1hcGxlLWxlYWZzLWltbWF0dXJlLXBlcmZvcm1hbmNlLWluLWxvc3MtdG8tZGV2aWxzL9IBAA

Player grades: Edmonton Oilers Winnipeg Jets - Edmonton Journal

Article content

The Edmonton Oilers took a tight-checking game to overtime and beat the Winnipeg Jets 4-3 on a great goal by scoring ace Zach Hyman.

In total the Grade A shots were 15 for the Oilers, 16 for the Jets, with the subset of 5-alarm shots eight for the Oilers, five for the Jets.

Article content

Cult of Hockey game grades player grades

Connor McDavid, 7. Quiet for the first half of the game. He was late on the backcheck but still able to get a stick on Nino Niederreiter to deny him a 5-alarm shot in the second. A moment later he was part of the passing combo play to set up Edmonton’s first goal. He went wide, then set up RNH’s power play goal, the third for Edmonton. Contributions to Grade A Shots (GAS): Even Strength +3/-1; Special Teams +2/-0.

Advertisement 2

Article content

Zach Hyman, 8. He came close to scoring in the first, almost slamming in a rebound off Mattias Ekholm’s outside shot. Otherwise was part of tight-checking game and made little noise until he charged up ice in OT and slammed in the winner. GAS: ES +4/-1; ST +0/-0. 

Ryan Nugent-Hopkins, 7. He watched his missed shot a moment too long late in the first, leading to a 3-on-2 rush and Sean Monahan’s breakaway. He was puck-watching, as opposed to covering off the danger man, Mason Appleton, on Winnipeg’s first goal. He went hard to the net and slammed home McDavid’s pass for Edmonton’s third goal. making up for previous mistakes. He got a late penalty on a missed call by the refs, getting blame when a Winnipeg player got his stick into a teammate’s face. But he got some justice, taking the puck up ice, then going to the net on Hyman’s winning goal. GAS: ES +2/-2; ST +1/-1. 

Leon Draisaitl, 6. High event game, some good on the attack, but some bad on defence. He slammed a cross-seam pass on net early in the second. GAS: ES +3/-3; ST +1/-0. 

Adam Henrique, 6. Quiet but no major mistakes in tough game. He led the forwards with 2:50 on Edmonton’s solid PK. GAS: ES +0/-0; ST +0/-0. 

Article content

Advertisement 3

Article content

Warren Foegele, 7. He was flying out there, looking at home in the Top Six. Charged up ice, made a great move, then set up Draisaitl for a one-timer early in the second. He made a fine pass to set up Draisaitl on Edmonton’s first goal. GAS: ES +2/-0; ST +0/-0. 

Ryan McLeod, 5. Quiet game but did his job well enough, including on the PK. GAS: ES +1/-0; ST +0/-0. 

Evander Kane, 6. He was out to hit and hammered Nate Schmidt with a hard one late in the first. He got a breakaway in the second but could not drain his shot or the rebound. He tied for Nurse and Hyman with the shot lead for the Oilers, with six. GAS: ES +3/-0; ST +0/-0. 

Corey Perry, 6. He took a fight with Mount Logan Stanley, elevation 12-feet, 11-inches, early to drag his team into the game. He got a hard shot on net on a scramble play in the second. GAS: ES +1/-0; ST +0/-0. 

Mattias Janmark, 5. Part of Edmonton’s winning PK effort, quiet otherwise. GAS: ES +0/-0; ST +0/-0. 

Derek Ryan, 7. Came up big in a game just as he is battling for a spot in the line-up. He chased the puck around the boards early on the PK, leading to Mark Scheifele’s 5-alarm harpoon. He charged the net and caused confusion on Brown’s goal. Brown hit him with a pass early in the third and on his net drive he drew a penalty. GAS: ES +2/-0; ST +0/-1. 

Advertisement 4

Article content

Connor Brown, 7. He smoked in a slot shot for Edmonton’s second goal, his first crunch time goal of the year. He charged up ice and set up Ryan for a Grade A shot early in the third. He allowed the pass leading to Brendan Dillon’s goal in the third. It was Brown’s third goal in six games. GAS: ES +2/-2; ST +0/-0. 

Mattias Ekholm, 5. Lots of mistakes, a few good plays. He fell down at the blueline, causing a 3-on-2 early on and a flurry of dangerous Jets shots. He let in Ehlers breakaway early in the second but the Jets forward missed the net. He set up Brown for his goal. GAS: ES +2/-4; ST +0/-0. 

Evan Bouchard, 5. He leaked a few Grade As in the first, giving up too much space, then failing to cut out a pass. Excellent stretch pass to kick off the rush on Edmonton’s first goal. GAS: ES +2/-4; ST +0/-0. 

Darnell Nurse, 7. Plenty to like from Nurse in this one, many solid attacking plays. He got called on a soft penalty early on. He made a thrilling stretch pass to set up Kane’s breakaway in the second. He stood up for Perry in the second, taking on Brendan Dillion after the Jet hit Perry hard. He did great work killing off Edmonton’s four-minute penalty, blocking one key slot pass, then charged up ice for a Grade A shot off his own. He led the team with five hits. GAS: ES +6/-4; ST +0/-0. 

Advertisement 5

Article content

Cody Ceci, 6. He got his old job back with Nurse, not a bad idea given Desharnais’ struggles in that role. Great pass to kick off a dangerous Oilers rush early in second. He allowed the outside shot on the first Winnipeg goal. He made another fine stretch pass on Brown’s goal-scoring sequence. GAS: ES +2/-3; ST +0/-0. 

Vincent Desharnais, 6. He executed an unintentional Total Eclipse of the Sun screen on Skinner on Winnipeg’s second goal. but was otherwise sound. He led the team with 4:42 on the PK. GAS: ES +1/-2; ST +0/-0. 

Brett Kulak, 5. His iffy pinch early in the game led to a 2-on-1 and 5-alarm Ehlers shot. But generally got the job done. GAS: ES +1/-2; ST +0/-0. 

Stuart Skinner, 6. Strong start to the game, but could not make the saves to hold the lead in the third. Super save two minutes in on a streaking Ehlers, then another on Scheifele a few shifts later. Stopped a nasty Ehlers tip late in the first. He kicked out a rebound that was cashed in on Winnipeg’s first goal. He was screened by Desharnais on the second goal and had little chance on Sean Monahan’s goal, Winnipeg’s third.

At the Cult of Hockey

McCURDY: Great news, as top young forward returning to Oilers organization

Article content

Comments

Join the Conversation

This Week in Flyers

Adblock test (Why?)


https://news.google.com/rss/articles/CBMijgFodHRwczovL2VkbW9udG9uam91cm5hbC5jb20vc3BvcnRzL2hvY2tleS9uaGwvY3VsdC1vZi1ob2NrZXkvcGxheWVyLWdyYWRlcy1lZG1vbnRvbi1vaWxlcnMtc2hvdy10aGVpci1ncml0LWluLXRvdWdoLTQtMy13aW4tb3Zlci13aW5uaXBlZy1qZXRz0gEA?oc=5

2024-03-27 04:07:30Z
CBMijgFodHRwczovL2VkbW9udG9uam91cm5hbC5jb20vc3BvcnRzL2hvY2tleS9uaGwvY3VsdC1vZi1ob2NrZXkvcGxheWVyLWdyYWRlcy1lZG1vbnRvbi1vaWxlcnMtc2hvdy10aGVpci1ncml0LWluLXRvdWdoLTQtMy13aW4tb3Zlci13aW5uaXBlZy1qZXRz0gEA