Kamis, 30 September 2021

Afghan girls' soccer team settles in Portugal, welcomed by national women's captain - CBC.ca

Girls from the Afghanistan national soccer team who were recently granted asylum in Portugal have had a surprise visit from the captain of the senior team.

Farkhunda Muhtaj, a professional player who from her home in Canada spent weeks helping arrange their recent rescue from Afghanistan, flew into the Portuguese capital, Lisbon, for an emotional reunion with the girls' team late Wednesday.

As the sun set over the River Tagus, the girls aged 14-16 and their families gathered on the riverbank and hugged and kissed Muhtaj amid smiles and tears.

"They have dedicated so much, they have been so resilient, and to finally see them in person has been so emotional because I knew how much they went through," Muhtaj said.

After the U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan, the girls and their families tried to leave their country. They feared how their lives might change under the Taliban — not only because women and girls are not allowed to play sports, but because they were advocates for girls and active members of their communities.

The captain of the Afghanistan national women football team, Farkhunda Muhtaj, who lives in Canada, welcomes teammates in Portugal. (Carols Costa/AFP via Getty Images)

What made the rescue mission harder was the size of the group — 80 people, including the 26 youth team members as well as adults and other children, including infants.

"You are a fantastic nation for impacting the lives of so many girls and for supporting us in so many ways and providing these girls with asylum," Muhtaj said, thanking Portugal for taking them in.

The rescue mission, called Operation Soccer Balls, was coordinated with the Taliban through an international coalition of former U.S. military and intelligence officials, U.S. Sen. Chris Coons, U.S. allies, and humanitarian groups, according to Nic McKinley, a CIA and Air Force veteran who founded Dallas-based DeliverFund, a nonprofit that's secured housing for 50 Afghan families.

On Thursday, the girls practiced with Muhtaj at a soccer pitch in Odivelas, outside Lisbon.

The players, pictured training above, were forced to flee Afghanistan after the Taliban came to power. (Patricia De Melo Moreira/AFP via Getty Images)

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2021-09-30 19:02:43Z
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Bunting counting on ‘greasy rat’ role to land him Leafs roster spot - TSN

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TORONTO — Call Michael Bunting “a greasy rat” and he’ll grin. It’s because he must have had an excellent night.

Such was the case for Bunting when he scored a hat trick in the Maple Leafs’ 4-0 preseason win over the Ottawa Senators on Wednesday. It was teammate Kurtis Gabriel who interrupted Bunting’s intermission interview with the compliment, and while Bunting admits Gabriel “scared me a bit” jumping in with the comment, it was the type of praise Bunting appreciates. 

“I think that's the way I get into a game is getting the other team after me or to get in their head,” Bunting said after practice on Thursday. "I feel like that's when I'm playing my best. When they're chasing after me and not worried about the game that helps us out so I don't mind playing that role.”

Neither does coach Sheldon Keefe. 

“One thing I know about Michael Bunting is he usually leaves the game as one of the most hated players on the ice,” Keefe said. “I've come to expect that from him in terms of reactions that he gets from other teams. But I think that's a positive thing; he's not out there to make friends, he's out there to score goals and help this team win and he make some apologies about how he goes about it. I like that about him.”

Keefe has more experience watching Bunting than most, and is familiar with the unconventional path he took to the NHL. 

Growing up in Scarborough, Ontario, Bunting didn’t get recruited to any of the Greater Toronto Area’s elite squads and cut his teeth playing high school hockey. He finally earned one season with the AAA Don Mills Flyers’ U-18 team in 2012, and then was drafted 160th overall by the Sault Ste Marie Greyhounds in the 2013 Ontario Hockey League’s Priority Selection. 

It was in the Soo that Bunting met then-general manager Kyle Dubas (now GM of the Leafs) and Keefe, who was the Greyhounds’ head coach. Bunting parlayed a strong rookie season in the OHL (42 points in 48 games) into being selected by the Arizona Coyotes in the fourth-round, 117th overall, in the 2014 NHL Entry Draft. 

And then Bunting's real work began.  

The now 26-year-old would bounce around the American Hockey League for the next four years, not making his NHL debut until December 2018. He appeared in five games for the Coyotes and was sent back to the AHL, where he remained under another recall in March 2021.

Back in the NHL, Bunting never left. He tallied 10 goals in 21 games for Arizona to finish the season and became a coveted unrestricted free agent in July. Weighing multiple offers from interested parties, Bunting ultimately decided to sign a two-year, $1.9 million deal with the club he cheered for as a kid – and gave Toronto a hometown discount to boot. 

“I was a late bloomer,” Bunting said. “The road I took to get here isn't the normal one that everybody takes so I take pride in that and I [embrace] it every day that you can't take this thing for granted, it can go just as fast as it can come. You appreciate it a little bit more [because] it did take a little bit for me to get here, it has been a grind.”

Wayne Simmonds, who also grew up in Scarborough a few years ahead of Bunting, can appreciate his path to success more than most. 

"Scarborough sticks together," Simmonds said. "We had a lot of time to chat [since meeting in training camp] and [compare] our life's paths. Like how we grew up playing and both of us played double A. He didn't get to junior until he was 18 and I didn't play junior until I was 18 as well. So what we went through as young kids playing hockey was the same and we have a pretty strong bond because of that."

Just like Simmonds before him, Bunting is ready to make his mark on the NHL. Keefe slotted him onto a line with John Tavares and William Nylander to start training camp last week, and Bunting has tallied four goals in two preseason games thus far. And he hasn’t used exhibition as an excuse to go easy on the opposition, hence Gabriel’s approval of his pestering. 

“He certainly is a guy that makes no friends on the ice, and that's part of what makes him who he is,” Keefe said. “Just in terms of the hunger and the competitiveness he has around the net, [it’s] because he's always looking to get an edge on you. I'm really happy that he's gotten the results that he's gotten here in the first two games. It allows his confidence to grow, allows him to settle in here with us.”

When Zach Hyman left the Leafs for Edmonton in free agency last July, there was plenty of concern about who would take his place as a top-six left winger in Toronto. Bunting isn’t the same player as Hyman, but his skill set is something the Leafs are lacking. And Bunting has used all resources available to him in trying to perfect it.

Back in Arizona, Bunting picked the brain of former head coach Rick Tocchet on how to toe the line between skill player and general annoyance. Tocchet played more than 1,100 NHL games and scored 952 points doing just that. In stature, Tocchet was larger in stature (6-foot, 214 pounds) than Bunting (5-foot-11, 196 pounds), but he was happy to share tricks of the trade with a fellow Scarborough offspring. 

"I think he was a little tougher than me,” Bunting said of Tocchet. “But he’s not afraid to mix it up, and we would talk about that and he would give me advice about how [to] play on the edge and be able to put it in the net as well because he was able to put up numbers.”

So far, Bunting has been able to do exactly that in the NHL. Granted it’s still early in the Leafs’ exhibition schedule, and critics are quick to point out Bunting’s sample size last season was too small to really judge him on. But Bunting is used to being doubted – it’s helped create the player he is. And that’s everything the Leafs are looking for. 

“I know the history of Bunts...he's just got a chip on his shoulder, in terms of how he's how he's come up through the hockey ranks,” Keefe said. “He plays with a lot to prove every night and he's out there to try to make the best of every opportunity he can and I like those qualities about him. That’s what I think makes you believe a player like him always has a chance, and here he is in the NHL. Those are the kind of guys you don't want to bet against.”

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2021-09-30 23:06:20Z
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Rival Watch: New York media says Yankees ‘in peril’ after loss to Blue Jays - Sportsnet.ca

The Toronto Blue Jays entered a must-win game at Rogers Centre on Wednesday with guns blazing, starting off with a 4-0 lead over the New York Yankees and looking like a victory should have never been in doubt.

Though the Yankees crawled back to even the score at 5-5, that only set up more dramatics as Bo Bichette hit the go-ahead solo home run in the bottom of the eighth inning to push the Blue Jays to victory.

North of the border the story is clear: The Blue Jays kept their post-season hopes alive largely thanks to Bichette's heroics.

Head a little south, into the Eastern part of the United States, and the narrative changes. Instead of a Blue Jays triumph, it's a Yankees failure, and Gerrit Cole is to blame.

We’ve rounded up some takes to give you a taste of how things look south of the border. Here’s a closer look at what both national U.S. media and Yankees beat reporters are saying about the Blue Jays.

Yankees' Gerrit Cole comes up short again in Blue Jays loss: Is it time to worry about the $324 million ace? — NJ.com

This article by NJ.com's Bob Klapisch takes us straight to the point. Not only does he lament Cole's so-so performance where he allowed five runs in six innings, he questions the entirety of the four-time All-Star's contract.

Why does this nagging doubt keep hovering over Gerrit Cole, the fastball machine who was supposed to be immune to slumps? Cole is the Yankees’ best pitcher – of that there is no debate – but with the playoffs just around the corner he’s less reliable now than any point since signing that $324 million contract. If you’re a Yankees’ fan freaking out, imagine how the front office is feeling.

Cole didn’t have a terrible game against the Blue Jays Wednesday night. He wasn’t involved in the decision as the Yankees dropped a 6-5 heartbreaker. It tightened the wild card race all over again, so if you’re into late-September drama, there’s that.

But here’s the thing: Cole again failed to deliver a quality start, allowing five earned runs in six innings. The Yankees are trying suppress any outward sign of concern, but they need better from him. They need swing-and-miss dominance and the statement it makes in the opposing dugout. They need Cole to be invincible, not pitch like a No. 5 starter, not now. Not this late in September.

---

He did give credit where it's due to the Blue Jays, though.

(Cole is) rushing to the plate, over-accelerating his arm, hence the regression of what really makes Cole special. It’s not just control, it’s control within the strike zone. But that shouldn’t matter to a heat merchant, right? Cole typically throws hard enough to generate whiffs whenever, wherever. Except the Blue Jays aren’t your typical adversary. They feast on pitchers who think they can conquer with fastballs only.

Come at us, bro was the essence of Toronto’s challenge to Cole. And he fell right into the trap. Four of his first six pitches were fastballs 97 mph and up. Result? The Jays took an immediate 2-0 lead, thanks to George Springer’s leadoff double and Marcus Semien’s two-run HR.

RECAP: Yankees fall to Blue Jays 6-5 — YES Network's Yankees Postgame

In YES Network's post-game show, analyst John Flaherty mentions the various storylines coming out of the game, including Bichette's two home runs, but quickly jumps to what he felt stood out most. Of course, it was Cole.

"You have to win the games that he starts. He's got to be an ace. And when you're down 4-0 after three innings, you're down 2-0 after two batters in this game. And I can't quite figure out Garrett Cole tonight. I mean, he was challenging the Blue Jays with his fastball. We always praise him for making adjustments during the game, I don't know what he was thinking, Jackie. It took him three or four innings to go to the changeup a little bit more on off-speed. He was getting beat up with the fastball."

Watch it for yourself:

The Blue Jays sure would be fun to watch in October — ESPN.com

ESPN's Senior MLB Writer David Schoenfield gave the Blue Jays their due, highlighting Bichette's performance and the high-flying offence that could thrill in the postseason, instead of focusing on Cole and the Yankees' shortcomings.

Bichette is one of the rising young stars for the Blue Jays, but has played in the shadow of MVP candidates Vladimir Guerrero Jr. and Marcus Semien. He had already homered off Cole in the third inning, and after taking a 96-mph sinker low for ball one, he drove a 94-mph sinker on the insider corner to right-center, just clearing the scoreboard for the 6-5 lead -- an incredible display of bat speed to drive that pitch to the opposite field. Bichette exploded around the basepaths, slapping his chest and raising his arm as he rounded third base and eventually received a curtain call from the Blue Jays' fans.

--

I think most hardcore baseball fans who don't root for the Yankees or Red Sox would prefer to see the Blue Jays in the playoffs. TV executives, not so much. It's not just that we've seen the Yankees and Red Sox in the postseason so much over the decades -- and the Red Sox just won it all three years ago. It's simply that the Blue Jays are fun, imposing and, frankly, would be the more entertaining team to watch in October.

They have Guerrero. They have Semien, who notched his 44th home run with a first-inning blast off Cole, to set the single-season record for home runs by a primary second baseman, breaking Davey Johnson's record of 43 for the 1973 Braves. They have Bichette, who is hitting .295 with 28 home runs and 101 RBIs, meaning he and Semien became the first second base/shortstop combination with 100 RBIs in the same season since Bobby Doerr and Vern Stephens of the 1950 Red Sox. They have George Springer and the joyful Teoscar Hernandez. They have the likely Cy Young winner now in Robbie Ray (Cole's second bad start in three outings all but wraps it up for Ray). They have the home run jacket, adorned on the back with logos of all the countries represented on the team's multicultural roster and awarded in the dugout after each home run. They have Romano, the closer who is straight out of the 1980s with his moustache. They have those baby blue uniforms they wore on Wednesday, another relic of the '80s.

Yankees’ rally falls short as wild-card race tightens — New York Post

The New York Post's front page cover is all about Bichette, but ultimately Dan Martin's game column is about the Yankees missing an opportunity with Cole pitching.

Just when it seemed like the Yankees were about to put some distance between themselves and the rest of the AL wild-card pack, they took a step back with their ace on the mound.

They came all the way back from an early deficit, shaking off a rough start by Gerrit Cole, before their reliable bullpen finally faltered against Toronto’s tough lineup Wednesday in a 6-5 loss at Rogers Centre.

Bo Bichette took Clay Holmes deep to lead off the bottom of the eighth inning of a tie game and the Yankees couldn’t rally in the ninth.

The defeat snapped the Yankees’ seven-game winning streak, and with the Red Sox’s win over Baltimore, the Yankees’ lead for the top wild-card spot was cut to one game with four to play.

The Blue Jays’ plan was to attack Gerrit Cole’s fastball — and it worked. How will the Yankees respond? — The Athletic

The Athletic's Yankees writer Lindsey Adler started her piece with a subtle shot at the trigger-happy Blue Jays, and also focused on Cole's struggles.

In an important battle of the Blue Jays versus Gerrit Cole’s fastball on Wednesday night, Toronto’s swing-happy tendencies won out.

The Blue Jays badly needed to beat Cole and the Yankees to keep their wild-card contention alive, and they took a first inning 2-0 lead while showing their game plan for the evening was to lean on their signature aggressiveness, which is what makes them such a dangerous offensive team. The Blue Jays swing often, they swing early, and they swing at fastballs. Their approach worked: They didn’t give Cole any time to settle into his outing or fastball command before attacking his fastball, the foundation of his arsenal.

---

Much like Schoenfield, she gave Robbie Ray the nod for AL Cy Young after Cole's lacklustre performance.

The Yankees face a daunting challenge in their final game against the Blue Jays this season in facing left-hander Robbie Ray, who is likely to edge out Cole in the AL Cy Young race after Wednesday night’s outing.

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2021-09-30 16:28:00Z
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Maple Leafs make first roster cut — send William Villeneuve back to Saint John - Pension Plan Puppets

The Maple Leafs made their first cut, sending their only junior player back to the QMJHL.

After a good Traverse City tournament where his strengths and his weaknesses were revealed, William Villeneuve is taking what he learned in Leafs training camp back to junior hockey. He was rostered for some of the preseason games, and experienced an NHL road trip and practices, but he did not play.

He will be playing in his fourth junior season, but will not be free to join the Marlies this year, since his team, the Saint John Sea Dogs, will be in the Memorial Cup as hosts.

Expect to see Villeneuve at next year’s camp, battling for a spot on the Marlies.

The Maple Leafs play their Blue and White game on Friday, with more serious cuts expected on the weekend. It’s likely that a start will be made on splitting the AHLers out of the camp.

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2021-09-30 14:34:57Z
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Kraken @ Flames 9/29/21 | NHL Highlights - NHL

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2021-09-30 05:34:33Z
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Oilers @ Jets 9/29/21 NHL Highlights - NHL

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2021-09-30 03:21:59Z
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Rabu, 29 September 2021

Elks GM Sunderland issued vaccine medical exemption - TSN

EDMONTON — The Edmonton Elks say general manager Brock Sunderland is medically exempt from a team policy requiring staff to be fully vaccinated against COVID-19.

The club issued a statement Wednesday saying the exemption was granted following consultations with multiple physicians.

It did not offer any details on Sunderland's health.

The statement says every member of the Elks "remains committed to following public health best practices and adhering to the CFL's strict protocols" for players, coaches and support staff.

Thirteen Edmonton players tested positive for COVID-19 in August, forcing the team into isolation and leading the league to postpone a game against the Argonauts in Toronto.

The Elks (2-5) fell 34-24 to the Ottawa Redblacks on Tuesday and aren't scheduled to play again until Oct. 8, when they visit Winnipeg to take on the Blue Bombers.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Sept. 29, 2021.

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2021-09-29 23:28:35Z
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Blue Jays rewarded for sticking to process with critical win over Yankees - Sportsnet.ca

TORONTO -- Trusting good process in the face of bad outcomes can be difficult when there are plenty of games left and time for results to normalize, let alone when the schedule’s end is nigh and a season of work is at stake each time out. As the pressure rises, there’s temptation to fidget and tweak in pursuit of an immediate result.

“That's the thing, when it comes to these games, guys like to change what they do for some reason. When you've had success or not, whatever, I don't see why you would change at all,” centre-fielder George Springer said in the Toronto Blue Jays dugout Wednesday afternoon. “You can't play on emotion. You have to play on an even keel all night.”

Hours later, a wild 6-5 victory over the New York Yankees settled on an eighth-inning Bo Bichette thunderbolt to right-centre field that was his second homer of the night, put those very words to the test.

The Blue Jays battered Gerrit Cole for a 4-0 lead and Jose Berrios dominated through 4.2 innings before the American League wild-card leaders, who had been riding a seven-game win streak, stormed back to tie the game 5-5 in the seventh.

As their playoff hopes teetered on the brink, Adam Cimber survived a 10-pitch duel with Anthony Rizzo in the top of the eighth, induced a weak grounder to the mound from Aaron Judge and then spiked pulses on a 107.9 m.p.h. Giancarlo Stanton rocket Springer chased down in centre.

That set the stage for Bichette, who shot a middle-in sinker from Clay Holmes over the wall to electrify a crowd of 29,601 that clamoured for a curtain call he subtly obliged.

Those fans, as loud and boisterous as any crowd since the playoff runs of 2015 and 2016, remained on their feet while Jordan Romano nailed things down in the ninth.

A night after the Blue Jays dropped a 7-2 decision when Rizzo tied the game on a nearly impossible-to-hit pitch from Hyun Jin Ryu and Stanton turned a Trevor Richards changeup heading toward the dirt into a three-run homer, the rebound rewarded faith in process.

The win moved the Blue Jays (88-70) within two games of the Yankees (90-68) and moved them a half-game back of the Boston Red Sox (88-69), pending their game at Baltimore. They also pulled even with the Seattle Mariners (88-70), who were playing Oakland.

Bichette’s homers gave him 101 RBIs on the season, tied with Marcus Semien, who earlier in the game hit a two-run homer, his 44th, to establish a new record for second basemen. Combined with Vladimir Guerrero Jr., and Tesocar Hernandez, they gave the Blue Jays four batters with 100 RBIs for the first time in franchise history.

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2021-09-30 02:14:00Z
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Ole Gunnar Solskjaer has NO IDEA what he wants to do with his players at Manchester United | ESPN FC - ESPN UK

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2021-09-29 22:58:07Z
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Preseason Game #3: Toronto Maple Leafs at Ottawa Senators Preview, Projected Lines & TV Info | Maple Leafs Hotstove - Maple Leafs Hot Stove

A Maple Leafs lineup light on star power and heavy on bubble players will make the trip to Ottawa tonight for the third primer of the six-game exhibition season (7:00 p.m. EST, TSN4&5).

The Czech duo of David Kampf and Ondrej Kase will remain together for the second consecutive game after both scored (Kampf’s goal came shorthanded) and showed some burgeoning chemistry together in Montreal on Monday. In addition to his shorthanded goal, Kampf logged over four minutes on the penalty kill, won 65% of his draws, and put four shots on net.

This time, the pair will be flanked by PTO invite Nikita Gusev, who will need to show more than he did on Monday in Montreal if he’s to earn a contract, on their left wing. It appears as though Keefe is giving the Kampf-Kase duo a pretty hard look as a possible third-line combination for opening night, although it is early days still. The versatility of the pair, particularly Kampf, is something Sheldon Keefe has referenced multiple times throughout camp to date.

“The addition of Kampf gives us depth at center that, to me, we haven’t had in my time here,” Keefe said today. “I feel comfortable playing David Kampf against anybody at any time. That is a very important thing, as it is going to help manage the minutes of Matthews and Tavares a little bit, too.”

This is a point I made shortly after the Kampf signing: The demands on Matthews and Marner all over the ice were high last season relative to the league’s other elite forward duos who tend to start a higher percentage of their shifts in the offensive zone. If Keefe is going to manage the pair’s minutes more responsibly and do it in the right way — i.e. while keeping them flush with high-leverage offensive situations — a credible checking center like Kampf, if he’s up to the challenge (as he was in Chicago), can share some of the burden and becomes an important piece of the overall puzzle up front.

On the backend, 33-year-old defenseman Alex Biega will make his preseason debut. Of the Leafs‘ four options at right defense in this camp — Travis Dermott on his off side, Timothy Liljegren, Biega, and Brennan Mennell — Biega by far has the most experience playing regular shifts at the RD position at the NHL level, which shouldn’t be totally lost on us when contemplating the options for the opening-night roster.

As for Timothy Liljegren and Rasmus Sandin, both will be playing without their top-four veteran partners from last Saturday’s game (Muzzin and Brodie), which should provide a different type of test here tonight.

In the battle to stay in the mix for the 4C spot, Kirill Semyonov and Michael Amadio are looking to build on quietly solid performances in their first preseason games on Saturday (Adam Brooks, playing on Amadio’s left wing tonight, is also in this battle). Lined up on the left side with Gusev are two other players in the mix for the opportunity available on the team’s LW in Michael Bunting and Nick Robertson, with Bunting having the leg up for a top-six spot at the moment between his contract status, his goal-scoring success in the league last season (albeit in a small sample), and his strong first showing in preseason next to John Tavares last Saturday.

In net, Petr Mrazek will start from the puck drop tonight after entering Monday’s game for the second half and facing a very light workload (eight shots) with the Leafs already trailing by multiple goals.


Game Day Quotes

Sheldon Keefe on the opportunities for players on the bubble tonight:

Every game is important for guys on the bubble. You don’t get a lot of opportunities. This is a good one for them here today.

They are going to play against some of Ottawa’s best players. They are going to play a lot. They are going to play in some similar situations they might be in if they were to make our team or come play for us as callups. They are going to play in some situations that they think they maybe should be, and they will get those opportunities.

Without most of our top guys, there will be a lot of ice time, power-play opportunities, penalty kill opportunities, matchups — all of those kinds of things. They are not going to be there for much longer.

Keefe on Nick Robertson’s camp so far:

For me, you include the rookie tournament in his camp. We got a lot of feedback there. I was able to get viewings myself. I think he has done a really good job of working, being competitive, showing his skill set, and also, in the rookie tournament, he took on a leadership role in terms of setting the example. He is a guy who has been there and was one of the only guys in the group who had played in the NHL. That has been really positive.

In the early going here [at main camp], he has had some good moments in time. The biggest hurdle for him is the fact that we have a lot of depth here. He is still a young guy trying to find his way. He is trying to sort through being the dangerous top-six scorer we think he can be and we certainly think he has the ability to be.

That opportunity may not be available for him. He is trying to figure out how to do the other things really well and be good in the other areas of the game. He gets a chance to kill penalties and do things that he has done at the junior level. He killed penalties with the Marlies last year, which was important for us to give him those minutes to do so.

He is a young guy in the mix with older guys who are trying to compete for spots. He is certainly in the mix for us. He has a lot of tools we can utilize when the time comes for it.

Keefe on Kirill Semyonov’s camp to date:

Jim Paliafito identified him. He has come in as a guy who is coming off of a good season in the KHL. He was an important player on his team and helped them win a championship out there.

He is coming into a team that has added depth since his signing. He is competing for a spot. I have only watched him on video up until a week or so ago. I thought the other night, especially watching the game back again, he did a lot of really good things.

The number of power plays happening both ways affected his ice time. We probably didn’t get to see him as much as I was hoping, and we are hoping we can get him more involved here tonight. There have definitely been positive things there.

The language issue is always the biggest challenge for players who come over from Russia in particular, but he hasn’t picked up what we are trying to do very quickly. In practices, he is picking up on the drills and tactics. He is a smart player and a competitive player who showed the other night that he can also make plays and contribute on offense, too.


Toronto Maple Leafs Projected Lines

Forwards
#89 Nick Robertson – #15 Alex Kerfoot – #24 Wayne Simmonds
#97 Nikita Gusev – #64 David Kampf – #25 Ondrej Kase
#58 Michael Bunting – #94 Kirill Semyonov – #52 Josh Ho-Sang
#77 Adam Brooks – #18 Michael Amadio – #29 Kurtis Gabriel

Defensemen
#38 Rasmus Sandin – #33 Alex Biega
#48 Carl Dahlstrom – #23 Travis Dermott
#82 Filip Kral – #37 Timothy Liljegren

Goaltenders
#35 Petr Mrazek
#30 Michael Hutchinson


Ottawa Senators Projected Lines

Forwards
Stützle – Tierney – C. Brown
Sanford – White – Paul
Kelly – Ostapchuk – Sherwood
Goulbourne – Bishop – Sabourin

Defensemen
Del Zotto – Zaitsev
Aspirot – J. Brown
Brannstrom – Thomson

Goaltenders
Gustavsson
Sogaard

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2021-09-29 21:47:13Z
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With no margin for error, Blue Jays turn to Berrios against Yankees - Sportsnet.ca

The Toronto Blue Jays brought in Jose Berrios at the trade deadline to make an impact in big-game situations. Tonight, he'll get a chance to do just that.

Berrios will start against the Yankees, looking to help Toronto weaken the New York's grip on an American League wild-card spot.

The right-hander beat the Yankees in his lone start against them this season, tossing 6 2/3 innings of two-run ball on Sept. 9. He is 2-2 with a 4.79 ERA in four career starts against New York.

Live coverage of the Blue Jays versus the Yankees begins tonight at 7 p.m. ET on Sportsnet.

New York, following its 7-2 victory over Toronto on Tuesday to open the three-game series, will turn to Gerrit Cole

Toronto will start Jose Berrios (12-9, 3.48 ERA). The right-hander is 5-4 with a 3.50 ERA in 11 starts since he joined the Blue Jays in a trade-deadline deal with the Minnesota Twins.

Berrios beat the Yankees in his lone start against them this season, tossing 6 2/3 innings of two-run ball on Sept. 9. He is 2-2 with a 4.79 ERA in four career starts against New York.

Six pitchers held the Blue Jays to three hits as the Yankees stretched their winning streak to seven games.

Meanwhile, the Yankees got a three-run home run from Giancarlo Stanton and solo shots from Aaron Judge and Gio Urshela.

Stanton has homered in four consecutive games for the third time in his career and he has reached 35 in a season for the fifth time in his career.

"You've got to be prepared, you've got to do your homework and just zone in on what you need to do," Stanton said. "At the end of the day, it's still the same game we've been playing our whole lives. You've got to be able to overcome those moments."

The Yankees (90-67) occupy the first AL wild-card spot with a two-game lead over the Boston Red Sox (88-69), who hold the second spot despite losing 4-2 to the Baltimore Orioles on Tuesday.

The Blue Jays (87-70) remain one game behind the Red Sox, and they now trail the Mariners (88-70) by a half-game after Seattle beat the Oakland A's later Tuesday night.

-- With files from Stats Perform.

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2021-09-29 19:33:00Z
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Akim Aliu calls punishment of player who used racist taunt 'a complete embarrassment' - CBC.ca

Akim Aliu is calling the Ukrainian Hockey League's punishment of a player who used a racist taunt during a game a "complete embarrassment."

The league announced Wednesday that HC Kremenchuk player Andrei Deniskin has been suspended for three games, and faces a ban of an additional 10 games unless he pays a fine of 50,000 hryvnia (around $2,400 CAD).

During a game on Sunday, Deniskin taunted HC Donbass defenceman Jalen Smereck, who is Black, with a gesture that mimed peeling a banana and eating it.

The gesture was captured on video and has been widely circulated.

HC Donbass said on Twitter that it is demanding a tougher punishment for Deniskin.

Akim Aliu (29), seen above with the Calgary Flames in 2013, is among those criticizing the punishment as too lenient. (Mike Strasinger/The Canadian Press)

Punishment too lenient

Aliu, the chair of the Hockey Diversity Alliance, is among those criticizing the punishment as too lenient.

"How are we as POC [people of colour] ever supposed to trust the system when at every turn it fails to protect us. On and OFF the ice?" Aliu posted on Twitter.

Deniskin's actions have been widely condemned, with the International Ice Hockey Federation and NHL Players' Association among the organizations speaking out. Colorado Avalanche forward Nazem Kadri also spoke out saying the punishment wasn't enough for an "unacceptable action."

Smereck posted on Instagram on Tuesday that he is taking a leave of absence until Deniskin is "suspended and removed from the league."

Aliu, who is of Nigerian and Ukrainian descent, helped raise awareness of racism in hockey in 2019 when he alleged in a tweet that then-Calgary Flames head coach Bill Peters directed racial slurs at him when they were both in the minors a decade earlier.

Peters resigned soon after the allegations were made.

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2021-09-29 18:00:03Z
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Ukrainian Hockey Player Banned Just 3 Games For Racist Gesture - TMZ

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2021-09-29 14:25:00Z
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Player grades: McDavid leads the way as Oilers' skill, tenacity overpowers Kraken - Edmonton Journal

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Kraken 0, Oilers 6

Edmonton Oilers iced something close to their A team on Tuesday night, and the expansionist Seattle Kraken didn’t stand a chance.

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The Oilers scored early and often, eventually pounding home 6 goals, several of the highlight-reel variety. Lots of tic-tac-toe going on in the good end of the ice. Meanwhile at the other end, for the second straight game a pair of Edmonton netminders stopped everything that came their way, 34 shots in all as the Oil rolled to the 6-0 win.

Hockey isn’t supposed to be as easy as it has seemed to this early point, and trust me, it isn’t. But it’s a nice bit of fun for Oil fans to kick things off, a reported 13,627 of whom were on hand to watch. That’s 13,627 more than the official crowd at the previous 117 (!) games at Rogers Place, 75 of which occurred in the bubble playoffs of 2020.

The game was streamed on the Oilers website, making player grades even more of a shot in the dark than usual. Normally we count on the 7-second rewind to look at key sequences multiple times, and to do an underlying analysis of scoring chances at both ends of the ice. So there are a couple of arrows missing from the quiver just now; please take the following with an extra pillar of salt.

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Player grades


#8 Kyle Turris, 7. Had a solid game on a solid line with Shore and Perlini. Started early with a good give and go to set up Perlini, then followed up the rebound for a slot shot of his own. The same combination was rewarded twice later in the game, with Turris earning a pair of assists on Perlini snipes. Had 2 shots and 2 hits of his own.

#13 Jesse Puljujarvi, 8. All over the ice, and the puck. Had a couple of nice combinations with McDavid early. Took the net front role on Edmonton’s 5-on-3 and it took him all of 9 seconds to convert, tapping home Nuge’s fine pass. Recovered the puck after a dazzling McDavid sequence and smartly got the puck right back on 97’s stick to set the stage for Hyman’s tap-in. Hustled hard all night and was richly rewarded with 1-1-2, +2.

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#14 Devin Shore, 7. Lined up on the first penalty kill unit with PTO Colton Sceviour, a pair of Dave Tippett-style players if ever I’ve seen them. Did a nice job of it too, contributing positively to two clean kills in the opening frame and 2:36 on the night. Made a terrific return pass to Perlini to earn an assist. Dominated on the faceoff dot with 11/15=73% on a night the team as a whole was below 50%.

#16 Tyler Benson, 5. 12 quiet minutes, mostly on a quiet line with McLeod and Sceviour. Did make a nice backhand area pass into a space being flooded by teammates, enabling a zone entry with speed. On possibly his best opportunity his stick snapped in two. 1 shot, 1 hit, 1 block.

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#18 Zach Hyman, 7. Got a “welcome to Edmonton” goal in the first period by going to the blue paint with his stick on the ice to tap home a splendid McDavid feed. Added an assist on the powerplay by again driving the blue paint, this time with the puck. Showed his smarts on another sequence when he appeared to be first Oiler chasing a loose puck but realized McDavid was overtaking him from behind, so smartly stepped aside and set up shop in the slot while 97 retrieved the disc and fed it out for a good Hyman shot that rang the iron.

#19 Mikko Koskinen, 7. Came in midway through and shut the door the rest of the way, including the best stop of the night at either end when he robbed Morgan Geekie from close range. Did a good job fighting through traffic, and tracking the puck through screens. For good measure went 5-for-5 in the bonus shootout at the end of the night’s action. 16 shots in open play, 16 saves, 1.000 save percentage, putting him in a four-way tie among Oilers goalies!

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#22 Tyson Barrie, 6. It was he who broke up said shootout with a nifty deke in the fifth round for the only goal. Involved in the build-up of a couple of Edmonton goals.

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#25 Darnell Nurse, 8. Opened the scoring with an end-to-end rush on the penalty kill, or should I say an end-to-high-slot rush, from where he surprised Chris Driedger with a wrist shot. Added an assist later in the evening. Game high 25:17 with 8 shot attempts, 4 hits.

#29 Leon Draisaitl, 8. Great early steal and centring pass to RNH for a close-in chance that just missed the target. Made a terrific effort on the powerplay to dive for a loose puck and chip it to the point; seconds later on the saved possession Leon got tripped down low to set up the 5-on-3. Won the subsequent faceoff to key a quick conversion wherein all 5 guys on the unit touched the puck in a 9-second execution. He was the set-up man on a later 9-second powerplay, again winning the draw before making the killer pass to McDavid for the easy finish. Made a number of wonderful passes throughout and was strong on the defensive side of the puck. 3 shots, 2 takeaways, and 7/13=54% on the dot.

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#41 Mike Smith, 6. Stopped every shot that came his way, but created a few headaches for himself with some sloppy (shall we say “rusty”) puckhandling.   Took a rare penalty for a mishandle of the puck when he somehow put a one-handed chip over the glass. Helped kill the subsequent penalty with a good handle and 200-foot clearance. 18 shots, 18 saves, 1.000 save percentage.

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#42 Brendan Perlini, 8. Drew a penalty of a hook in the hands in the neutral zone, but fought through the check, dished the puck off to Turris, then headed to the net for the return pass and a decent chance. Scored an excellent goal on a “give and stay” play where he drove down the right wing, fed the puck to Shore in the slot, but held his position for the return pass which he rocketed home. Added a second on an outside shot in the third which probably should have been stopped.

#56 Kailer Yamamoto, 6. Made some fine plays on a line with Draisaitl and RNH. Did take a bad penalty after bobbling a puck 140 feet from his own net. Took a hit to make the (fine) play when he sent Draisaitl and RNH away on a 2-on-1 that barely failed.

#70 Colton Sceviour, 6. Started the first PK and immediately made a fine play to swat an aerial pass out of the air and force it out of the zone. Was good on that unit all night, leading all forwards in SHTOi with 2:59. Fairly quiet at even strength, and struggled with 2 turnovers in a rare-rare opportunity in a late 5-on-3 where Tippett clearly didn’t want to run up the score. (Mission accomplished!)

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#71 Ryan McLeod, 5. Own-zone turnover led to one Kraken chance, then a weak clearance on the PK led to another. 0 shot attempts, 0 hits, and 25% on the dot. Did have a couple of takeaways, one of which led to a good zone entry and pass, but too many plays died on his stick.

#75 Evan Bouchard, 6. Played 24:41 on the night, a few ticks behind Nurse for the team lead. Made a good play at the d line to control the puck and get it in the general vicinity of McDavid, who turned it into a scoring chance. Made a fine sliding block of a dangerous shot while on the penalty kill. He was solid on that unit, playing a team-high 4:13 as Tippett clearly wants to get the youngster some reps. His passing was off a smidge though got stronger as the game went on. Hard to believe the Oilers can ice two powerplay units without a spot for this talented point man on either of them.

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#80 Markus Niemelainen, 6. Stuck to defence but did a good job of it, consistently clogging the lanes, taking the body (a game high 6 hits) and contributing a fine shot block.

#81 Filip Berglund, 6. Very quiet, but not in a bad way. Strong on the penalty kill. Turned defence to offence with a good chip out of the d-zone into good ice that led directly to Perlini’s first goal. If he made a mistake at any point, I must have missed it. Plays a smart, subtle game which will bear repeated observation to get a true read on it. He should get a couple more looks in the pre-season.

#86 Philip Broberg, 6. Has been something of a hit magnet, both through the two rookie games and now the two NHL games as well. That came to a head in the third period when he was on the receiving end of a questionable knee from Nathan Bastian. Much more noticeable than in Calgary, jumping into the rush a few times and getting a couple of hard shots on net. Decisively won a couple of battles deep in his own territory.

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#93 Ryan Nugent-Hopkins, 7. As usual played in all situations, including a brief early 5-on-3 where his gorgeous short feed to Puljujarvi richly earned him a primary assist. Later rang the post after a terrific feed from Draisaitl on a 2-on-1.

#97 Connor McDavid, 9. Best player on the ice. (Breaking…) All over the ice in the opening frame, leaving submerged Kraken in his wake. Earned a brilliant assist on Hyman’s 5v5 goal, first dangling a badly-overmatched Seattle defender one-on-one for a chance that barely missed, then got the puck back and quickly found Hyman’s tape on the edge of the crease. Earned an assist and a goal on the powerplay. Displayed his uncanny hands on more than a few occasions, controlling the puck superbly. Made one hard rush up the left side, firing a high shot right from the icing line that forced an excellent stop. His relatively paltry 16:51 TOi led all Oilers forwards on a night Tippett rolled the lines; in that time the Oilers outscored their opponents 4-0.

Recently at the Cult of Hockey

STAPLES: NHL insider on Oilers’ options re Archibald

STAPLES: Will Turris take Archibald’s spot in the line-up?

STAPLES: Player grades vs Flames, as Oilers stomp a woeful Calgary squad

STAPLES: Massive opportunity here for Benson and Lagesson

LEAVINS: The Archibald conundrum

McCURDY at Oilers training camp

Follow me on Twitter @BruceMcCurdy

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2021-09-29 06:07:33Z
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Blue Jays lose control of playoff fate after setback vs. Yankees - 680 News

The Toronto Blue Jays’ post-season aspirations are now partly dependent on the help of others after a series-opening loss to the New York Yankees, although a Baltimore Orioles victory over the Boston Red Sox helped mitigate the damage.

Still, control over their fate was lost in a 7-2 setback to the wild-card leaders Tuesday night, when they couldn’t contain the Herculean duo of Aaron Judge and Giancarlo Stanton. The former homered in the third and brought home the go-ahead sacrifice fly in the fifth, while the latter delivered a back-breaking three-run homer in the seventh on a down and in changeup that perhaps only he is capable of launching 421 feet.

In combination with 6.2 innings of strong relief work once Jameson Taillon was forced from the game after re-aggravating the right ankle tendon injury he’d just returned from, the buzz around the first game of playoff consequence at Rogers Centre since 2016 — before a crowd of 28,769 — quickly fizzled.

The mettle and perseverance GM Ross Atkins rightly touted beforehand will now face its toughest test, with the Blue Jays (87-70) three games back of the Yankees (90-67) for the first wild card and still one game behind the Red Sox (88-69) for the second. The Seattle Mariners (88-70) are also a half-game in front, leapfrogging Toronto after a 4-2 win over Oakland.

“Just forget about tonight and be ready to play tomorrow,” manager Charlie Montoyo said of the approach his team needs to take while facing virtually no margin for error. “We’ve done it before so why not do it again.”

Pathways to the post-season remain, but to catch the Yankees, the Blue Jays must take the remaining two games of this series, win out against the Orioles to close their regular season and then count on the Tampa Bay Rays to win at least one game in New York this weekend.

To overtake the Red Sox, who have two more dates with the Orioles before finishing at the Washington Nationals, they’ll need to win two more wins than Boston in the five remaining games both teams have.

Neither scenario is impossible, and there’s the potential for intriguing tiebreakers, but the Blue Jays can’t put themselves in a position to require an unreasonable stumble from the teams they’re chasing.

“We’ve got to come back and try to win our next games — all these games are going to be very important,” Hyun Jin Ryu said through interpreter J.S. Park after allowing three runs in 4.1 innings in his return from the injured list. “I’m just going to get ready and prepare for my last game of the season and I hope that our players are in there to compete and try to do our best to until the very end.”

The Blue Jays seemed poised to begin this pivotal stretch on the right foot as Ryu took the mound with an uptick in his velocity, and escaped a bad-BABP-luck jam in the first by striking out Stanton and popping up Joey Gallo.

George Springer then played catalyst in the bottom half, walking off Taillon, stealing second on a full-count strikeout by Marcus Semien and scoring on Bo Bichette’s single.

The problem Judge and Stanton pose in this series first revealed itself in the third, when Judge axed a 106.4-m.p.h. laser over the right-field wall on a middle-middle cookie that deserved its fate.

The Blue Jays reclaimed the lead in the fourth when Corey Dickerson golfed a double to right on a Michael King curveball to plate Bichette. But Ryu couldn’t hold that edge in the fifth, when Anthony Rizzo dunked a cutter well off the plate into left field with two on and Dickerson’s throw home hit Gio Urshela, allowing the tying run to score.

Adam Cimber took over and induced a sac fly from Judge and the score remained 3-2 until the seventh, when Stanton got to a Trevor Richards changeup headed for his ankle. Most hitters probably foul the pitch off their foot if they make contact at all. Stanton just missed the facing of the third deck.

“I don’t know how you can hit a ball like that,” said Montoyo. “You’ve got to give Stanton credit for that… The ball was almost in the dirt and he hit it out.”

Part of the explanation is that Stanton, like Judge, is on a major hot streak. During the Blue Jays’ sweep at Yankee Stadium earlier this month, the duo went a combined 8-for-31 with one run scored while hitting into two double plays. On Tuesday, they went 4-for-7 with two walks, three runs scored and five RBIs.

If the Blue Jays can’t get them under control, they’re in trouble.

Ryu has one start left — Game No. 162 against the Orioles — and depending on how things play out, the season could be riding on it. Against the Yankees, he topped out at 93.1 m.p.h. — the sixth-hardest pitch he’s thrown this season — and averaged 91.4, a notable 1.4 m.p.h. above his season average.

The Blue Jays expected as much, with Atkins saying before this game that Ryu’s “just in a better position physically” and “about as close to 100 per cent as he can be.” Combined with some “subtle adjustments to his delivery,” Ryu moved closer to the form he showed Sept. 6, when he threw six shutout innings in an 8-0 win at the Yankees.

“Honestly, I didn’t really feel too much of a difference,” Ryu said of the difference he saw in the batter’s box last time versus this one. “I came in and pitched according to the game plan. I gave up a home run which was hanging and just left over the plate a little too much. And even the last hitter (Rizzo), it’s not something that pitchers can really control.”

The same now applies to the Blue Jays’ pursuit of a wild-card spot, one no longer solely in their own hands.

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2021-09-29 09:43:15Z
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Blue Jays undone by Yankees' cold-blooded discipline in crushing loss - Yahoo Canada Sports

The Blue Jays are young and hungry to prove their worth. But in the end, it was the Yankees' unwavering discipline that was the difference-maker.

The Blue Jays are young and hungry to prove their worth. But in the end, it was the Yankees' unwavering discipline that was the difference-maker.

TORONTO — This is the time when experience becomes pivotal.

With over 28,000 fans in the stands and their season on the line, the Toronto Blue Jays didn't need anyone to tell them Tuesday's game against the New York Yankees was a big one.

A young team, hungry to prove itself, walked onto the field at Rogers Centre two games back of a wild-card spot with a chance to make up for it against a direct rival in the Yankees. But it was New York's cold-blooded discipline that prevailed in the end.

"It wasn't so much us," said Blue Jays manager Charlie Montoyo after his team's 7-2 loss on Tuesday. "Their bullpen did a good job. Those arms are coming out of there and they're good pitchers."

The Yankees acted like they'd been here before from the very first pitch. They didn't budge when Bo Bichette drove in George Springer to give the Jays an early lead in the first, or when their starter, Jameson Taillon, was forced to exit the game with an aggravated ankle injury just 2.1 innings in.

New York's pitchers — six of them in total — allowed just three hits, while its offence combined for 11, twice coming back from one-run deficits and keeping their cool until the right opportunity presented itself.

"All these games are going to be very important," said left-hander Hyun-Jin Ryu after his start on Tuesday. "I'm going to prepare for my last start of the season and I hope that our players are going to compete and do their best until the very end."

In a game that looked like a nail-biter until the seventh frame, it seemed like luck just wasn't on the Toronto pitcher's side after dealing with neck issues last week. Ryu was solid, though far from spectacular. His velocity was up, but Ryu struggled to find his command, much to the benefit of Aaron Judge, who took advantage of a hanging sinker and crushed a solo shot in the third inning.

"I was able to execute my pitches tonight better than I was in previous outings," Ryu said after the game. "Overall I felt pretty good. ... Today, I came in and I wasn't really thinking about how many innings I was going to throw or how many pitches I was going to throw. I just wanted to focus hitter by hitter, and that's what I tried to do today."

Ryu's second earned run was the definition of a blip. With Gio Urshela at third, Anthony Rizzo sliced up a good pitch to right field for a single. Corey Dickerson had Urshela beat on the throw to home plate, but the ball hit the Yankees baserunner and deflected away, allowing him to score easily.

That ended Ryu's night, as he left with 4.2 innings pitched, six hits allowed, three earned runs, a walk and three strikeouts.

"It's not really something that pitchers can control," Ryu said of that strange RBI single to Rizzo. "It was a very frustrating hit, especially since it led to runs and gave up the lead. I think I can speak for all pitchers when I say that it was a very frustrating hit."

Bo Bichette's night may serve as a micro illustration of the entire Blue Jays season: Flashes of genius sprinkled by youthful yet costly mistakes. Bichette finished the game with two singles and an RBI, but a bad out at third base as he tried to advance on a wild pitch stained his otherwise great performance.

After a heads-up jump that allowed him to advance from first to second on a wild pitch by Clay Holmes, Bichette thought he had enough to go from second to third when Holmes had yet another errant throw. But Yankees catcher Gary Sanchez was faster, quickly recovering and sending the ball over to DJ LeMahieu, who tagged Bichette just in time to get an out call on the field.

After a lengthy review, as the Rogers Centre crowd pleaded for an overturn, umpire Brian Knight announced the call was upheld. Instead of a man in scoring position with the game very much within reach, the Blue Jays suddenly had nobody on and two out.

That New York made it 6-2 the very next inning didn't help at all.

Giancarlo Stanton, an 11-year MLB veteran and former National League MVP, was the one who blew it wide open for New York. Stanton kept his cool through a two-out, 2-2 count until he found a pitch to hit, sending it 421 feet off Trevor Richards for a three-run homer and a 6-2 Yankees lead in the seventh.

Richards certainly wasn't to blame for it, as Stanton's homer came off a well-placed, down-and-away changeup. The Yankees slugger is simply that good.

"I don't know how you can hit a ball like that," said Montoyo. "Richards has been good. You gotta give Stanton credit for that."

Urshela added a solo shot of his own off Anthony Castro in the ninth to seal the Yankees win when several of the available seats had already been emptied by disappointed Jays fans.

Lourdes Gurriel Jr. returned to Toronto's lineup after suffering a hand injury against the Minnesota Twins on Sep. 24. Still unable to play defence, Gurriel Jr. took the DH spot, with George Springer at centerfield and newly reinstated Cavan Biggio emerging as a bench option for Toronto's outfield.

The gut-wrenching loss severely diminishes the Blue Jays' chances of reaching a wild-card spot, even with the Red Sox's 4-2 loss to the Baltimore Orioles. Toronto now sits one game back of Boston, while the Yankees — now three up on the Blue Jays — assume the top position in the American League wild-card race with five games left in the season.

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2021-09-29 04:10:10Z
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