Selasa, 30 November 2021

Briere ranks high on list of candidates to fill Canadiens' GM vacancy - Sportsnet.ca

“It's important for the GM to have final say on the decisions, for sure. But to have two people to talk, debate and offer different perspectives to make the decisions makes us much better able to make the right decisions.” -- Geoff Molson.

Good concept outlined above, but allow us to present how we actually see the power dynamic playing out between new executive VP of hockey operations Jeff Gorton and whomever the owner of the Montreal Canadiens and Gorton decide will be the next general manager.

Surely Gorton didn’t leave the money still owed to him on his terminated contract with the New York Rangers to take a job with this title only to then relinquish control of the hockey decisions to the person he’s helping to hire. With nearly 30 years of front-office experience in various capacities in the NHL, and with other looming opportunities to head up operations for other teams likely available to him, he didn’t choose to come to Montreal only to give way to a first-time general manager.

This structure was obviously put in place because Molson is staying true to his commitment to appoint a GM who can communicate to the people of Quebec -- and to Canadiens fans around the world -- in both English and French, and Gorton only speaks English.

That leaves the man calling the shots in the shadows, which was probably as attractive as any other reason Gorton might have considered before accepting the role. The GM will alleviate him from having to be the team’s spokesperson, help with the operations, forge new relationships and then likely take on more and more responsibility as time goes on, while Gorton uses his own experience to do the heavy lifting of building out the staff and the plan.

“It’s important to find someone who complements the skillset that Jeff’s bringing us,” said Molson. “Someone who maybe has a bit of a different vision, someone who has an expertise that’s different, someone who learned from another organization and in a different way.”

We think that person should be someone who’s malleable. An upstart-type who’s willing to enter into this power structure and grow within it. Someone who’s well-respected throughout the hockey world, and someone who can help fill another important quotient former GM Marc Bergevin did throughout his near 10-year-long reign in Montreal.

“Berge played 1,000 games in the league and he knows the day-to-day grind of the season,” explained Canadiens defenceman Ben Chairot on Tuesday. “He knows exactly what we’re feeling and what we’re going through. That’s kind of what made him special and unique as a GM is he’s right in there with us and knows what we’re feeling after we come in after a loss or we come in after long road trip, and he was essentially a part of the team and another one of the guys. I think that’s why he had so much respect from the guys in the room.”

We can’t think of a candidate more suited to fill that mandate -- and every other requirement -- than Daniel Briere. And from what we’ve been told, the former Canadien is high up on the list of candidates being considered.

We’ll dig into the rest of them below, but Briere, who played close to 1,000 games in the NHL and produced at a near-point-per-game pace in 124 playoff games over an illustrious career, has been preparing for a job like this since he hung up his skates six years ago.

The 44-year-old went straight from the ice to the front office when he was brought on by the Philadelphia Flyers in October 2015. He started off in the organization he played for by shadowing team president and former GM Paul Holmgren, he later took on a role in player development that he’s still in to this day, and in 2017 he assumed vice-president and general manager duties of the team’s ECHL affiliate in Maine.

The Mariners were in their infancy and Briere was charged with building their team from the ground up. He was involved in everything from recruitment to logo design, according to this expansive piece from Radio Canada’s Martin Leclerc.

In 2018, Briere also began pursuing a degree in business administration at the most prestigious financial school in the United States, Wharton at the University of Pennsylvania. He did it because, even if he had already proven himself as a leader as a former captain of the Buffalo Sabres, he wanted to round out his profile.

It was during that year that the Mariners became the affiliate of the New York Rangers. While Briere did have some contact with Gorton, who was GM of the NHL club, most of his dealings were with former Sabres teammate Chris Drury, who was working underneath Gorton before succeeding him.

Still, Gorton would’ve been exposed to Briere’s kind manner, and have gotten a glimpse of what many around the hockey world have observed.

“He’s a great guy,” said a source we touched base with who’s close with Briere. “Molson said they want to hire a GM soon, and he’d be ready to go right away.

“And he wants this, there’s no question.”

The Gatineau, Que., native isn’t alone on that front.

Here are some other top candidates.

Patrick Roy

The Hall-of-Fame goaltender, who helped the Canadiens win their last two Stanley Cups before an ugly divorce from the team, spoke on Tuesday and made it abundantly clear he wants the job.

“Of course I’m saying to myself, ‘What do they have to lose giving me a try,’” Roy said when speaking to Le Journal De Quebec. “The club has been turning in circles since 1993, so what do they have to lose by seeing what I can do with it?

“At the same time, I understand the situation. The club belongs to Geoff Molson and it’s him who pulls the strings. It’s his team and maybe I’m not the guy for him, and I can accept that.”

Still, Molson and Gorton should give Roy a call.

We’re talking about a pure winner who recently had major influence on building what most consider to be the most talented team in the NHL over in Colorado.

However, if it’s generally perceived the current GM and coach of the QMJHL’s Quebec Remparts wouldn’t be willing to be a partner, let alone subservient to the new exec VP of hockey ops, it would have to do with his resignation as head coach of the Avalanche in 2016, when he felt his voice wasn’t being considered enough in personnel decisions GM Joe Sakic was making.

Roy sought to undo some of that perception on Tuesday, saying, “I’ve always been a guy who likes working as a team and I’m ready to learn, to listen and to develop on any team process. I’ve been working for 14 years with (Remparts owner) Jacques Tanguay and we’ve never had a problem.”

That said, we don’t think he should apologize for being who he is -- a passionate, strong-minded person who will fight for what he thinks is right.

Nonetheless, while Roy’s strong personality lends well to the conviction you need to operate with as GM, he’ll have to convince Molson and Gorton it won’t get in the way of the dynamic they’re looking to establish.

Meanwhile, the marketing appeal of a big reunion with the Canadiens -- mending a massive wound and, in some fans’ eyes, reversing a curse the team has been under since he was traded in 1995 -- should, at the very least, be compelling.

Mathieu Darche

Darche is a viable candidate for many of the same reasons Briere is. He’s a former player, he’s well-educated and he picked up valuable experience as a former VP of sales and marketing with Montreal cargo management company Delmar International before joining the Tampa Bay Lightning as director of hockey operations in 2019.

Now that he’s got two Stanley Cup rings, his profile has certainly risen. Riding shotgun with Julien BriseBois probably hasn’t hurt it.

But whether or not that profile is high enough for Molson and Gorton to offer him the job is debatable.

Martin Madden Jr.

The assistant general manager of the Anaheim Ducks is known as arguably the best evaluator of amateur talent in the NHL.

Close to two dozen prospects chosen under his watch since 2009 have played over 100 games in the world’s best league -- no other team in the NHL has done as well in this department -- and many fans are clamouring for him to bring those skills to a Canadiens team that will likely be drafting very high this summer and could be on the precipice of a rebuild.

While we see Madden Jr. as the optimal replacement for Trevor Timmins, who was in charge of Montreal’s last 17 drafts before he was fired on Sunday, we’re not sure he’d leave Anaheim for a sideways move. The Seattle Kraken tried to pry him away in 2021, but he opted to stay in Anaheim under executive VP of hockey ops and GM Bob Murray.

What’s interesting is that when Murray resigned and enrolled in an alcohol abuse rehabilitation program following an investigation into his “improper professional conduct,” it wasn’t Madden Jr. who replaced him.

“That’s probably because he’s spent almost all of his hockey career touring junior rinks and plucking out talent and never really entering rooms and dealing with pro hockey players,” a source said to us. “He’s a very nice man, but he’s more of an introverted man and I’m not sure how that plays with being GM in Montreal and in the role it appears they’re looking to fill.

“His track record is definitely impeccable, but he also hasn’t been too involved, if he ever has, in negotiating and signing contracts for players and dealing with rival GMs and so on.”

Still, Gorton has.

And even if there’s been some overlap between both men’s skillsets, Madden Jr. has to be considered a candidate.

Whether or not he can fulfil other business duties of the role and sufficiently relate to the public -- and to his players -- is in question.

Roberto Luongo

One of the game’s most popular personalities has been honing his experience as an executive with the Florida Panthers since 2019.

There’s no question Luongo, who could headline the 2022 Hall of Fame class after an illustrious and decorated playing career, fits much of the criteria outlined for the role in Montreal.

Whether or not the gold medal-winning goaltender would be compelled to leave the life he’s established in Florida to do the job with his hometown team is the big question.

If the answer is yes, an executive we touched based with sees him as an excellent fit.

“The people I talk to in Florida love working with him and consider him a really sharp hockey mind,” he said. “There’s a reason he’s an assistant GM for Canada’s Olympic team.”

---

Molson promised an exhaustive search, so there are sure to be some candidates overlooked in this space.

But here are some other names that might be considered:

Jocelyn Thibault

The former Canadiens goaltender, who was part of the Roy trade in 1995, is the GM of the QMJHL’s Sherbrooke Phoenix and was just named executive director of Hockey Quebec.

We asked him if he’d be interested in the job.

“I just arrived with Hockey Quebec, and I have a big mandate in front of me,” he said. “But if the Canadiens came calling, of course I would take the call.”

Stephane Quintal

After years of working for the NHL, sources have indicated the former Canadiens defenceman would have been more interested in a job as team president.

Vincent Damphousse

The former Canadiens captain, who works for RDS, said on that station on Monday that he’s not interested in the position.

Scott White

The Ormstown, Que., native has had plenty of success running the AHL’s Texas Stars since 2009 and was promoted to director of hockey ops with Dallas in 2013.

The former player for the Lac-Saint-Louis Lions moved up to assistant GM with the Stars in 2016 and, according to our sources, has major ambitions to one day become a GM.

John Sedgwick

The current director of legal affairs and VP of hockey ops for the Canadiens has done a masterful job managing the cap since joining the organization in 2013. Hailing from Toronto, his French is still sufficient enough for the position and he’s under contract for two more seasons after this one.

Martin Lapointe

Lapointe was originally brought on as director of player development in 2012. He was named director of amateur scouting and given a new three-year contract last January.

As for his candidacy for the GM job, it would be surprising to see him named considering how scouting and development have been major weaknesses for the Canadiens in the Bergevin era.

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2021-12-01 00:32:00Z
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Red-hot Leafs maintain road-warrior mentality ahead of season's 'toughest test' - TSN

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TSN Toronto Reporter Mark Masters reports on the Maple Leafs, who practised at Ford Performance Centre on Tuesday ahead of Wednesday’s game against the Colorado Avalanche.


The first game back from the West Coast can be a tricky one so Sheldon Keefe has come up with an interesting plan to try and keep his group in a groove. 

"My approach was that, essentially, today and tomorrow's game are an extension of the road trip," the coach said. "We haven't necessarily settled at home yet. I've already spent as much time in this building as I have at home since coming back."

The team flew back from California on Monday after wrapping up a 4-0-0 road trip. Keefe didn't make it through his front door until 6:30 p.m. A few hours later, he was back on the ice at practice. 

"We knew we couldn't push the guys too hard today," Keefe said following a 35-minute session. "I wanted the intensity to be high within that short time frame and I thought it was. I liked the pace and energy that we had. Once the whistle blew, I think that's the fastest I've ever seen the ice clear so that's a pretty good indication of where our guys are at."

The players haven't enjoyed a full day off since Nov. 19. There is a day off scheduled on Thursday. So, Wednesday's game against the Colorado Avalanche is a real mental test. 

"As much as it's a boost to be back home and playing in front of our fans tomorrow, we still haven't really recovered from the road trip," Keefe stressed. "We have to still be treating it like you're on the road where you got to take care of yourself, you got to make sure you're getting good sleep and staying focused on how we've played and what we've done to succeed on the road." 

It would be easy to relax and let the foot off the gas considering the 14-2-0 run the team is on. 

"Our mindset has to stay with where it was," Keefe said. "The fact we are still feeling a little weary from the road, that will help us stay in that mindset. That's what I was trying to reinforce today."

Leafs Ice Chips: Even at home, the road trip continues

The Maple Leafs have returned home following a perfect 4-0 road trip, which saw them outscore the opposition 18-4. Typically, teams returning from a California road swing sees a dip in play in their first game back on home ice, but as TSN's Mark Masters explains, head coach Sheldon Keefe is taking a different approach to avoid a let down.

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Toronto's incredible run has been fuelled not by a scoring surge, but by stingy defensive play. Since Oct. 26, Toronto leads the NHL in goals against per game (1.63). 

"Everyone's buying in and that's what it starts with," said forward Alex Kerfoot. "It really starts with a decision amongst the group that everyone really has to buy into it and everyone has to be on the same page. When, on an individual level, you're all committing to defence it really helps the team game as well and structurally we've been great."

"Everybody's doing what the game plan is and also some more," said goalie Jack Campbell, who leads the league in save percentage (.946).

The Avalanche lead the league in goals per game (four) this season. Colorado has won seven of eight games and Nathan MacKinnon is expected to return to the lineup on Wednesday. 

"We've been really consistent over the last little while with the way we're defending and just the mindset and the attitude," captain John Tavares said. "No question, we're probably going to have our toughest test with that tomorrow."

Despite just wrapping up the most successful month, by wins (12), in franchise history, no one seems too satisfied. On Tuesday, Tavares was quick to point out where his team can be better. 

"The last couple of games we probably haven't sustained momentum maybe as much as we would like," Toronto's leading scorer (22 points) said. "We can be a little better through the neutral zone. When that's going really well that's when we can really play with the puck and play to our strengths with the depth we have and the skill-sets that we got."

'The boys are having a blast': Leafs are 'buying in' and racking up wins

The Leafs went 12-2-0 in November setting a new franchise record for wins in a calendar month."The boys are just having a blast," said Jack Campbell after Toronto tied the franchise record with a seventh straight road win. The team's stingy defensive play has fuelled the hot streak. "Everyone's buying in and that's what it starts with," said Alex Kerfoot.

---

It seems like a long time since the Leafs lost four straight (0-3-1) in October. The team has looked much different on and off the ice since then. 

Toronto adopted a relaxed dress code at the start of the season, but when the losses piled up the team went back to the traditional suits approach. 

"Management just felt that they wanted to go back," Tavares revealed. "There was a mutual understanding of the expectations on a daily basis with giving us more of the freedom and [they] felt the standards we needed to be at weren't quite at the level."

Tavares explains why Leafs management scrapped relaxed dress code

Earlier this season, the Maple Leafs switched from the familiar hockey dress code of suits, to a more casual approach. Recently however, team management decided to return to traditional look on game days.

---

Petr Mrazek was a full participant at practice on Tuesday.

"Happy to be back, I can tell you that," the 29-year-old said. "It's been a tough start for me. I try to be positive and work hard to get back." 

Mrazek suffered a groin injury in his first start of the season on Oct. 14 in Ottawa. He hurt the groin again in his first game back on Oct. 30. 

"I started feeling it a little bit during the game but it wasn't as bad as in Ottawa so I finished the game," Mrazek recalled. "A few days after, we were looking at it and it wasn't getting any better."

Mrazek visited with a groin specialist, who advised him to shut things down. Tuesday marked his first full practice since then. 

Keefe says the plan is for Mrazek to ramp up his workload in the coming days before joining the Marlies for an American Hockey League conditioning stint this weekend. 

"It's frustrating," Mrazek said of his start in Toronto. "Hopefully it's going to have a great end. It's early in the season. The season's long." 

Mrazek returns to full practice for Leafs

Petr Mrazek says he's feeling good after being a full participant at Maple Leafs practice on Tuesday. Sheldon Keefe says they'll ramp up his workload over the next couple of days and he will hopefully see game action with the Marlies on the weekend.

Mrazek did travel with the team to California last week, which allowed him to continue to bond with his new teammates, including Kyle Clifford. The pair will forever be connected by the David Ayres game. On that fateful night – Feb. 22, 2020 – Hurricanes starter James Reimer got hurt and was replaced by Mrazek. Mrazek then got injured when he and Clifford collided while both going for a loose puck. 

"We did talk about that," Mrazek said with a smile. "We sit next to each other on the plane and [while] playing poker. All good. We talked about it a little bit. He said he was going to for a breakaway. He was making a joke about that. He's a great guy and those things, when you play against a team, happen."

After Mrazek departed, emergency back-up goalie Ayres, a 42-year-old, took centre stage and recorded the win. 

"You don't even think in that moment that you don't have any back-up on the bench," Mrazek recalled. "You just go for the puck if you have to and that's what happened."

Would he do the same thing again? 

"Yeah, I would go for the puck again," Mrazek said with a grin. 

But the Czech native is well aware that the Ayres game is still a sore subject in this city. 

What does he think about what happened after he left the game? 

"I don't think we have to talk about that," he said. 

Now teammates, Mrazek jokes with Clifford looking back on Ayres game

Kyle Clifford collided with Petr Mrazek last year which resulted in the infamous David Ayres emergency goalie game. Now being teammates, Mrazek says the two have shared some jokes over the incident while playing cards.

---

Keefe hasn't hesitated to tweak a winning lineup and he will make another change on Wednesday. Joey Anderson, who has five goals and two assists in 13 AHL games, will make his season debut with the Leafs.

"Joey is a guy who works extremely hard," Keefe said. "He is a versatile player. He has good defensive instincts and a great work ethic. We think he can help on the penalty kill. We liked his camp. We liked his start to the Marlies season. He has been up here a few times with us now and he has done well in our practices." 

Clifford, who made his season debut with Toronto on Sunday, will be scratched. 

Anderson played just one game with the Leafs last season (Jan. 26 in Calgary). It was a trying year for the 23-year-old from Minnesota. 

"Last year was very hockey-centric," he said. "I wasn't able to get away from the game ... Being in Canada, my family wasn't able to come and I'm really close with them. Normally they come and see me once or twice a month so that was tough. When I got here last year, I didn't know many players in the organization and I was living alone and it was tough for me to be kind of be sitting alone all day."

Anderson likes to blow off steam by golfing, bowling and, of course, visiting with family and friends.

"This year's nice," he said. "My family's been out here a ton. It's just been great to interact with people away from the rink again. Even being around the team and guys away from the rink has been, really, a blessing for me this year."

Anderson accompanied the Leafs to California at the start of the recent road trip, but was recalled to Marlies after just one day out West. That brief cross-continent trip allowed him to catch up with younger brother Mikey Anderson, who is a defenceman with the Los Angeles Kings. The pair had dinner and watched a couple of movies. 

"It was a really nice gesture," Anderson said. "Obviously, they know how tough last year was on everybody so they're trying to help everybody out and make sure guys are feeling good. As much as it helped me, I know it definitely was nice for him to see me as well. L.A. is a long way from home for us. Even though we can fly there, it's not the cheapest thing for our family to get out and see him and any time we can see each other it's a really special thing." 

Anderson makes season debut; appreciates gesture from Leafs

Recently-recalled Joey Anderson was in a regular sweater at Leafs practice, and will play against the Avalanche on Wednesday. During Toronto's recent California swing, the team brought Joey along for the trip, and while he didn't see game action, he was happy to re-unite with brother and Kings defenceman Mikey Anderson.

---

Auston Matthews scored in all three games during the California swing, but didn't rely on his patented wrist shot to start his first goal streak of the season. Instead, he converted on rebounds and deflections. 

"When it's not going in from the outside you just got to get to the net and I was fortunate to get a couple bounces, a couple good tips and able to cash in," Matthews said. "I can score from different areas so just try to get to the net. Obviously, that's where goals are scored a huge percentage of the time."

Matthews arrived in California having gone 10 games without a goal in five-on-five play, which was his longest drought since his rookie season. All three of his goals on the trip came at even strength. 

"He's a complete goal scorer," said Kerfoot. "You know that. We all know that. He can score in just about any way you can put the puck in the net. He's got great hands. He gets his stick on a lot of pucks. He battles hard to get to those areas and he's able to really dig pucks out of the front of the net, which is key because there's always loose pucks around there and he always seems to get the puck on his stick in those situations. And then he's got great hands in front of the net. He can make people look silly. There's not many guys who can beat goalies from the outside and he's one of them so there's not much more you can ask for out of a goal scorer."

After undergoing surgery on his left wrist in the summer and missing the first three games of the regular season, Matthews needed some time to get his touch and feel back. Now, after his three-goal outburst in California, Matthews is up to 10 on the season, which is tied for the team lead with Tavares. 

"He just does it all," said Campbell. "Some of it's just the touch. Some of it's the hand-eye coordination. You see him knocking down pucks all over the ice and creating chances, taking pucks away, knocking them down or stick lifting guys. It's really just fun to watch him and that line's buzzing for us." 

'He just does it all': Matthews starts a new goal streak the hard way

Auston Matthews scored in all three games during the Leafs swing through California without using his patented wrist shot. "When it's not going in from the outside you just got to get to the net," he said. Matthews is now up to 10 goals in 20 games. "He's a complete goal scorer," observed Alex Kerfoot. "He can score in just about any way you can put the puck in the net."

---

That line currently includes Michael Bunting. Since being promoted to left wing on the Matthews line, he has produced two goals and four assists in four games. 

"It's been great," the 26-year-old rookie said. "I hang out with both those guys pretty often off the ice so to play with them on the ice, it's a lot of fun. I just try and get open, try to retrieve pucks and let them play with their magic. Right now, we're rolling and hopefully we can keep that going."

Mitch Marner set up Bunting for a goal on a two-on-one rush on Sunday. 

"Mitch has great vision," Bunting said. "Probably one of the best visions in the NHL so I know whenever it's on his stick, I just have to find those soft spots and he'll find me. He made a helluva pass for my goal."

Bunting only had two even-strength assists during a nine-game run on the top line earlier this season. He looks a lot more comfortable now.  

"He is more comfortable," Keefe agreed. "While on the surface playing with players of that calibre is somewhat easier, there are some challenges that come with it that are more difficult than playing lower in the lineup. Some of that is mental — in fact, a lot of it is probably mental. That takes some time, especially for a player that is still really trying to establish himself in the league and trying to get comfortable in the league. That is part of why we reset him a little bit going back down with the expectation that he would move back up. He has gotten his opportunity here and I think he has done a good job."

Bunting says he's now more confident making plays with the puck alongside Matthews and Marner. He's never been shy on the bench, though. Bunting constantly runs his mouth during games whether talking to teammates or opposing players. 

"Oh, it's great," said Matthews. "I played with Matthew Tkachuk [at the U.S. National Development Program] so I'm kind of used to it. I like that. We're just always communicating, making it clear what we're seeing out there, what we want from each other and always trying to get a better feel for what we're looking for."

Chatterbox Bunting making most of second chance on Matthews line

Michael Bunting has two goals and four assists in four games since being promoted back to the Auston Matthews line. The agitating winger talks pretty much non-stop during games, which Matthews is used to courtesy his time playing with Matthew Tkachuk. Bunting hangs out with Matthews and Mitch Marner quite a bit off the ice, but it took some time to feel comfortable alongside them on the ice.

---

Lines at Leafs practice on Tuesday: 

Bunting - Matthews - Marner 

Kerfoot - Tavares - Nylander 

Engvall - Kampf - Anderson 

Ritchie - Spezza - Simmonds 

Rielly - Brodie 

Muzzin - Holl 

Sandin - Dermott 

Clifford - Liljegren 

Campbell 

Mrazek

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2021-12-01 00:39:14Z
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MCCARTHY: Tiger Woods fights to return after car crash severely injured leg - Toronto Sun

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Picture an injured Tiger Woods hobbling to the yard of his Florida home just to feel the touch of grass on his skin.

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“Sometimes I’d just crutch and lay on the grass for an hour because I want to be outside,” Woods told Golf Digest‘s Henni Koyack in a 40-minute interview released Monday.

That happened. So did the car crash. So did the 10 surgeries before the accident. So did the 2019 Masters win. So did the 82 PGA Tour wins. So did everything else that seemed impossible to imagine before Woods came along.

In his first public appearances since the February collision, Woods described what it was like spending three weeks in the hospital, and three months in a hospital bed at home following the crash that threatened to have his right leg amputated.

“It’s hard to explain how difficult it has been just to be immobile for the three months, just lay there and I was just looking forward to getting outside,” Woods said from the Hero World Challenge in the Bahamas on Tuesday. “That was a goal of mine. Especially for a person who has lived his entire life outside, that was the goal.”

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Now back on his feet, but admittedly in pain simply sitting for his first press conference since the accident, Tiger’s future goals on the golf course were made slightly more clear. In Monday’s interview with Golf Digest, Woods said his days as a full-time tour player are unequivocally over, but didn’t rule out playing select events much like Ben Hogan did following his 1949 car crash.

“After my back fusion, I had to climb Mount Everest one more time,” he said. “I had to do it, and I did. This time around, I don’t think I’ll have the body to climb Mount Everest and that’s OK.”

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On Tuesday, Woods reiterated his plan, strongly hinting that another limited comeback is indeed in the cards.

“To ramp up for a few events a year as I alluded to yesterday as Mr. Hogan did, he did a pretty good job of it, and there’s no reason that I can’t do that and feel ready,” he said.

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That comment immediately had people jumping to guess where he might make his return. Will it miraculously be two weeks from now at the 36-hole, cart-friendly, father-son PNC Championship where he looked so happy with son Charlie last year? Perhaps it will be the Masters in April, or the Open Championship at St Andrews in July?

“I would love to be able to play that Open Championship, there’s no doubt about it,” he said. “Physically, hopefully I can. I’ve got to get there first.”

There’s a big difference between preparing for a hit-and-giggle event with his son and taking on the best in the world at a major championship. And for the first time in his life there is reason to believe his desire to climb the mountain has waned.

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“I don’t foresee this leg ever being what it used to be, hence I’ll never have my back what it used to be, and clock’s ticking,” he said. “All that combined means that a full schedule and a full practice schedule and the recovery that it would take to do that, no, I don’t have any desire to do that.”

We apologize, but this video has failed to load.

Throughout both interviews, what jumps out is how at peace Woods seems with his current situation. Even before his accident, there was a sense that the game’s most intense competitor had found joy in finally taking his foot off the gas pedal. The Tiger we’ve seen following his unlikely 2019 Masters win, and this week, seems happy to wrap himself in the warm blanket of nostalgia. He was asked if it’s hard to potentially have his career ended by injury and not on his own terms.

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“No, it’s very easy, given the fact that I was able to come back after the fusion surgery and do what I did,” he said. “I got that last major and I ticked off two more events along the way.”

Who are we to argue?

What we’re witnessing is Tiger happy to see a future that he can enjoy. In many ways this fulfilled Tiger is the one we blamed him for not being his entire life, despite secretly admiring the never satisfied cut-throat version that perpetually ran himself into the ground.

Turning 46 at the end of the year, the golf world is hoping for another grueling comeback attempt, but there’s one last person who needs convincing.

“We had a talk within the family, all of us sat down and said if this leg cooperates and I get to a point where I can play the tour, is it OK with you guys if I try and do it. The consensus was yes,” he said. “Internally, I haven’t reached that point. … I haven’t decided whether or not I want to get to that point. I’ve got to get my leg to a point where that decision can be made. And we’ll see what happens when I get to that point, but I’ve got a long way to go with this leg.”

From your back, laying on the ground, nothing looks bigger than a mountain. In the months ahead we’ll find out how badly Tiger wants one last glimpse of how small the world looks from the top.

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2021-11-30 19:07:42Z
1195396656

Gushue's Olympic berth has N.L.'s past and present curlers celebrating - CBC.ca

Team Gushue booked an Olympic spot with a 4-3 win over Team Jacobs in the men's final of the 2021 Canadian Olympic curling trials on Sunday in Saskatoon. (Rick Elvin/The Canadian Press)

Local curlers in Newfoundland and Labrador were on the edge of their seats during the final of Canada's Olympic curling trials Sunday, and say Brad Gushue's win is another leap forward in an illustrious career.

Gushue is headed to the Olympic Games in February for the second time following a thrilling 4-3 victory over the Northern Ontario team skipped by Brad Jacobs.

Gushue previously represented Canada at the 2006 Games along with teammate Mark Nichols, defeating Finland to win the gold medal in one of Newfoundland and Labrador's most iconic sporting moments.

Jamie Korab — part of that team alongside Gushue, Nichols, Russ Howard and Mike Adam — was glued to the television Sunday night during the final match.

"It was honestly a roller-coaster," Korab said Monday.

"I checked my Fitbit monitor, and my heart rate got up to 100 beats a minute at times. You're almost living and dying on every shot.… But you could see the emotion from Brad and Mark and the boys when they won."

Jamie Korab, right, sweeps with Gushue on a delivery from Mark Nichols during the gold medal match at the 2006 Olympics. Korab said he was glued to the television during Sunday's final. ((Stephen Munday/Getty Images) )

Korab said watching the team also brought back memories of their win at the 2005 Olympic trials in Halifax and the whirlwind that came after.

"Just that emotion and seeing all that … there was a few things that popped up in my head about when we won and what we did right after," he said.

"You put so much effort into it, and only one team goes. And it's only every four years. I'm just ecstatic for them."

Gold medal showed success was possible for N.L. athletes

Curler Greg Smith was 10 years old when Gushue and his team won Olympic gold. He remembers watching the match with his parents and — as someone who had only recently started in curling — the impact it had on his life.

"I think the biggest thing for any athlete, whether they were in curling or not … is they realized that they could do it too, and that anything was possible being from Newfoundland and Labrador. We've had some real big curling moments, but that certainly is No. 1," Smith said.

Smith, who representing the province at the Brier in 2021, said he also remembers a surge in curling popularity following the win, and said it lit a fire underneath him to get better.

"It was a moment that made me realize once I get to a certain age — I was 10 at the time — that [if I] really put some work in, make sure you travel, do some events and you too could be at a higher level of curling," Smith said.

Curler Greg Smith represented Newfoundland and Labrador at the 2021 Tim Hortons Brier, and remembers watching Gushue win Olympic gold in 2006. (Mark Quinn/CBC)

A second trip to the Olympics will be a long time coming for Gushue, suiting up for Canada 16 years after his first Olympics, in Italy.

Both Smith and Korab believe the experience plays into the team being the favourite to win gold, fuelled by a powerful work ethic, experience on curling's biggest stage and the skills each member brings to the team.

"In that 10 years Brad was good, but it's the last four years that he's been no question the best team in the world," Korab said.

"What Mark brings to the team with his shot-making and how he kind of calms Brad down. What Brett brings, he's one of the best sweepers in the world.… You've got Geoff Walker. Quiet, doesn't say a whole lot, but you know he's gonna put the rock almost every time exactly where it got to go."

"They were really so sharp the whole week, so sharp the whole season. I really think they have a great chance of bringing home gold in Beijing," Smith added.

Read more from CBC Newfoundland and Labrador

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2021-11-30 18:57:57Z
1169713701

Oilers place Ceci in COVID protocol, cancel practice - TSN

The Edmonton Oilers placed defenceman Cody Ceci in the COVID protocol Tuesday and cancelled practice for precautionary reasons.

In other roster moves, the Oilers also moved Duncan Keith to injured reserve and recalled Markus Niemelainen from the AHL's Bakersfield Condors.

Ceci has one goal and six points in 20 games this season, his first with the Oilers after joining the team on a four-year, $13 million deal in free agency. The 27-year-old is averaging 20:08 of ice time this season. 

Keith sustained an upper-body injury in last Tuesday's loss to the Dallas Stars and was ruled day-to-day on Wednesday, according to head coach Dave Tippett.

The 38-year-old has one goal and five points in 17 games this season, his first with the Oilers after an off-season trade from the Chicago Blackhawks.

The Oilers are scheduled to host the Pittsburgh Penguins on Wednesday.

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2021-11-30 16:04:09Z
1196628012

Canadiens vs. Canucks game recap: Moving up a rung in the lottery order - Habs Eyes on the Prize

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  1. Canadiens vs. Canucks game recap: Moving up a rung in the lottery order  Habs Eyes on the Prize
  2. Canucks edge Canadiens in battle of troubled Canadian teams  Sportsnet.ca
  3. Canucks @ Canadiens 11/29/21 | NHL Highlights  NHL
  4. Canucks: 3 takeaways from 2-1 win over Montreal  The Canuck Way
  5. Garland scores winner as Canucks edge Canadiens to snap skid  Sportsnet.ca
  6. View Full coverage on Google News

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2021-11-30 11:00:00Z
1194306448

Ballon d'Or: Italy takes centre stage despite Messi win - Football Italia - Football Italia

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  1. Ballon d'Or: Italy takes centre stage despite Messi win - Football Italia  Football Italia
  2. Messi edges Lewandowski to capture record 7th Ballon d'Or  thescore.com
  3. Lionel Messi is well past his best but this seventh Ballon d’Or feels right  The Guardian
  4. Die Roten Robbery: Reactions as Bayern Munich’s Robert Lewandowski was passed over in Ballon d’Or vote  Bavarian Football Works
  5. PSG's Lionel Messi beats out Bayern's Robert Lewandowski to win record seventh Ballon d'Or  ESPN
  6. View Full coverage on Google News

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2021-11-30 08:56:14Z
1107388106

Senin, 29 November 2021

Blue Jays: Potential replacements for Marcus Semien - Jays Journal

Blue Jays

TORONTO, ON – OCTOBER 01: Marcus Semien #10 of the Toronto Blue Jays up ahead of their MLB game against the Baltimore Orioles at Rogers Centre on October 1, 2021 in Toronto, Ontario. (Photo by Cole Burston/Getty Images)

The Toronto Blue Jays will have a hard time finding someone to replace Marcus Semien, but that doesn’t mean there aren’t some interesting options out there

A single-season record 45 home runs by a second baseman. More than 100 RBI, an .873 OPS, the highest WAR in the American League among position players, and Gold Glove defense. All for $18 million.

That’s what Marcus Semien gave the Toronto Blue Jays in 2021. Semien bet on himself, signing a one-year deal with the club in hopes a stellar season would allow him to cash in during free agency. It worked, and Semien’s time in Toronto is already over after he signed a seven-year, $175 million deal with the Texas Rangers on Sunday.

It was brief, but Semien’s contributions to the Blue Jays will long be remembered. There was his walkoff grand slam in the miraculous comeback against Oakland in front of a raucous Rogers Centre crowd. There was the home run jacket, his mentoring of double play partner Bo Bichette, the way he moved over to second after a career spent playing shortstop without complaint.

“Marcus, man. What an incredible year. What an incredible career, really, he’s had,” General Manager Ross Atkins said on MLB Network earlier this month. “Also just fit in so well. I wish he could’ve spent more time in the city and the country. The fans across the country did fall in love with him. He didn’t get to spend as much time in Canada as we would like.”

The Blue Jays, who fell an agonizing one game short of a playoff berth in 2021, will have to try to replace Semien’s production in their lineup in order to take the next step as an organization. Atkins and the Blue Jays front office haven’t been afraid to spend money this offseason; they’ve already handed out $131 million to Jose Berrios and $110 million to Kevin Gausman. And they’re not done, as plenty of tantalizing options remain on the market for the Blue Jays to add and fill the gaping hole left by Semien’s departure.

“There’s some other interesting infielders available through trade and free agency that we’re having a lot of dialogue with,” Atkins said.

So who are there players? Here are a few who may find they way into a Blue Jays uniform in 2022 and, if not fully replicate Semien’s numbers, at least soften the blow of him leaving.

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2021-11-29 15:00:00Z
1156635399

Report: Robbie Ray finalizing five-year, $115M deal with Mariners - Sportsnet.ca

Robbie Ray, the reigning American League Cy Young winner, and the Seattle Mariners are reportedly finalizing a five-year, $115-million deal, according to Jeff Passan of ESPN.

The deal, Passan reported, will have an opt-out after the third season.

Ray, who was traded from the Arizona Diamondbacks to the Toronto Blue Jays along with cash for left-hander Travis Bergen in August of 2020, went on to sign a one-year, $8 million contract to stay with the Jays after being encouraged by his brief time with the team down the stretch of the season.

In his commanding one-season run with the Blue Jays in 2021 that endeared him to fans, Ray transformed his career, rebounding from a troubled 2020 campaign which saw him pitch to an ERA of 6.62 in 12 appearances and an average of 7.8 walks per nine innings.

Ray posted a 13-7 record for Toronto this past season to go along with a 2.84 earned-run average and 248 strikeouts over 193.1 innings pitched.

The reports of Ray leaving the Blue Jays come one day after Toronto reached an agreement on a five-year, $110 million contract with right-hander Kevin Gausman.

The 30-year-old's departure marks the second pitcher from Toronto's 2021 staff to depart via free agency, joining Steven Matz, who finalized a four-year, $44-million deal with the St. Louis Cardinals on Monday.

Joining the pitching duo on their way out of Toronto is Marcus Semien, we reportedly agreed to a seven-year, $175-million deal with Texas after one stellar year in Toronto in which he was named a finalist for the AL most valuable player award.

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2021-11-29 20:27:00Z
1188303873

Montreal Canadiens to hire French-speaking GM to pair with Jeff Gorton - ESPN

Owner Geoff Molson believes that fixing the Montreal Canadiens is a two-person job.

The Canadiens have stumbled to a 6-15-2 start after making the Stanley Cup Final last season. Marc Bergevin was dismissed Sunday after having served as Montreal's general manager since 2012.

It was a total housecleaning that saw assistant GMs Trevor Timmins and Scott Mellanby also leave the organization in the past few days.

Former New York Rangers GM Jeff Gorton was hired to a long-term contract as executive vice president of hockey operations. But Molson said "he's one of the two people that are going to do the job" of getting the Canadiens on track.

Gorton is an English-speaking executive, hired by a franchise with a long-standing commitment to having bilingual coaches and general managers because "in our own market, we have to respect the language, but we also have [English-speaking] fans all over the world," Molson said.

Hence, Gorton will hire a French-speaking general manager to work with him.

"The two of them will be working together to make good decisions for the good of the organization. When something has to happen that's team-related, the general manager has to be the final responsible person in making that decision and be accountable for it," Molson said.

While Molson said he's yet to ask any other NHL teams for permission to speak with their executives, Tampa Bay Lightning director of hockey operations Mathieu Darche and ECHL Maine Mariners GM Daniel Briere -- both former Canadiens players -- are among the names already being connected to the opening. Briere's team was a minor league affiliate of the Rangers when Gorton was in New York.

"I strongly believe this organization needs a fresh start," Molson said. "Not at the team level, but at the management level."

The fresh start begins with Gorton, who went from a successful stint as a player personnel executive with the Boston Bruins to the general manager's chair with the Rangers from 2015 to 2021. Gorton was credited with helping to lead New York's quick rebuild, albeit one aided by multiple draft lottery wins and players like Artemi Panarin and Adam Fox choosing to play in New York.

"Nobody's perfect in the hockey world, but I look at [the Rangers] today and it seems to be performing pretty well, so he must have done something right," Molson said.

The Canadiens owner that he spoke with NHL commissioner Gary Bettman for advice on hiring Gorton.

"Someone like Gary has a valued opinion," he said.

Molson sees this new management regime as a chance to innovate within the organization. On Monday, he spoke about creating a medical team dedicated to the mental health of players -- a decision that comes after star goalie Carey Price missed the entire season thus far after entering the NHL/NHLPA player assistance program.

Molson also talked about a dedication to more diversity on the hockey operations side of the organization.

"We have a pretty diverse group of people and many diversity programs [on the business side]. But on the hockey side, there's a big opportunity to introduce different perspectives into the organization. It's not easy to do, but it is certainly is a priority," he said.

Molson said he'll value the opinions of his new two-headed executive branch, while staying out of the day-to-day hockey operations of the team. That goes for their decision on head coach Dominique Ducharme, who signed a three-year extension through 2024 before the season, as well as for the ultimate direction for the Canadiens.

Molson said the Canadiens don't need a fresh start at the player level "at this stage." But if Gorton and his general manager want to tear down what Bergevin built, Molson isn't afraid of a rebuild.

"I'm not afraid of that word, and I think our fans wouldn't be afraid of that word, either," he said.

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2021-11-29 18:52:50Z
1193114198

Sheldon Keefe after the Maple Leafs' sweep through California: "I'm really proud of the group" - Maple Leafs Hot Stove

Sheldon Keefe, Toronto Maple Leafs post game
Sheldon Keefe, Toronto Maple Leafs post game

Sheldon Keefe addressed the media after his team’s 5-1 win over the Anaheim Ducks that extended the Leafs’ road winning streak to a franchise-record-tying seven games and improved their record to 16-6-1 on the season.


On the team’s performance to close out the California sweep:

I thought we regrouped after the first period. I thought Anaheim was definitely the better team in the first period. We were able to regroup and find our game in the second. In the first period, Anaheim made it real hard for us to get through the neutral zone. It is harder to sustain that in a second-period setting. That allowed us to really get our legs going.

That [second frame] was a good period for us. Obviously, we got a lead again. Jack Campbell was great all the way throughout. We gave up certainly a lot more volume than we would’ve liked, but I thought we defended pretty well, kept things to the perimeter, and we made good on opportunities.

It was just a good team effort all the way through and a great road trip for us. This is a challenging game to get through here at the end of a long trip. The guys dug in and got a win to let us go home on a nice, clean trip here. Really proud of the group.

On whether there is a difference between the team stringing together wins this season compared to its best periods of last season:

I think there are a lot of similarities. We had good stretches last season. That is why it is important that we continue to focus on one day at a time here and find that consistency.

That is what we have been talking about since day one. It has been a great November. The calendar is going to turn here. We are going to get back home after a long trip. We have a really good team waiting for us. We just have to focus on every single day. That is what we will do.

On Alex Kerfoot’s play on Nylander and Tavares’ line:

He has done an excellent job. In these last two games, in particular, he has been a real standout. He has been consistent and good throughout the season, but in these last few games, his speed, the way he is skating with and without the puck, driving play down the ice, defending, penalty killing — his game has just been really good. It has been a real nice fit with that line.

On Kyle Clifford’s first game back with the team:

I thought he was okay. I would have to watch his shifts back. He gave us energy. He was physical. I think he led our team in hits despite not playing a lot. He made a contribution that way. That is part of what he brings.

On Michael Bunting’s play since returning to the Matthews line:

He is more comfortable. While on the surface, playing with players of that calibre is somewhat easier, there are some challenges that come with it that are more difficult than playing lower in the lineup. Some of that is mental — in fact, a lot of it is probably mental.

That takes some time, especially for a player that is still really trying to establish himself in the league and trying to get comfortable in the league. That is part of why we reset him a little bit going back down with the expectation that he would move back up. He has gotten his opportunity here, and I think he has done a good job.

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2021-11-29 04:38:24Z
1192891951

Brad Gushue Punches Ticket to Beijing Olympics - VOCM

Brad Gushue of Newfoundland and Labrador defeated Brad Jacobs 4-3 to win the men’s final at Canadas Olympic curling trials.

Jacobs could have tied it with two in the last end but his shot rock spun a little too far, giving Gushue the dramatic win.

Team Gushue won the gold medal at the Turin Olympics in 2006.

Gushue says his rink came through in the big moments to earn a trip to the Olympics in Beijing.

He says his team is very good and has been for some time, plus they enjoy competing together.

Jennifer Jones had a dramatic victory of her own to win on the women’s side.

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2021-11-29 10:36:00Z
1169713701

Who will be the next Montreal Canadiens GM, and what's next for Marc Bergevin? - ESPN

The Montreal Canadiens' encore to their Stanley Cup Final appearance last season has been an abject disaster, as they have a 6-15-2 record. With general manager Marc Bergevin in the last year of his contract having not signed an extension, it felt like a regime change was coming.

Did it ever arrive on Sunday.

Owner Geoff Molson announced that Bergevin, assistant general manager Trevor Timmins and senior VP of communications Paul Wilson were all "relieved of their respective functions" with the franchise. That's after assistant GM Scott Mellanby resigned after he didn't get either Bergevin's job or a higher office. Former New York Rangers general manager Jeff Gorton has been hired as executive vice president of hockey operations and tasked with finding the next (bilingual) general manager of the Habs.

Here's a look at the decision and the fallout for the Original Six franchise, including who could take over for Bergevin.

Why did the Canadiens hire Jeff Gorton?

Gorton is viewed by many as the best available option for teams seeking a new general manager.

He learned under Harry Sinden in Boston and Glen Sather with the New York Rangers. After working as assistant general manager for several seasons with the Bruins, he was the interim general manager from March to July in 2006. During that stretch, the team drafted Phil Kessel, Milan Lucic and Brad Marchand; traded for Tuukka Rask; and signed Zdeno Chara and Marc Savard as free agents.

He became general manager of the Rangers in July 2015 and was credited for their quick rebuild during his tenure, which ended in May 2021. He traded away veteran players like Ryan McDonagh, Kevin Hayes and Mats Zuccarello for future assets. He also experienced some unparalleled luck in securing forwards Alexis Lafreniere (No. 1, 2020) and Kaapo Kakko (No. 2, 2019) in the draft lottery, star winger Artemi Panarin as a free agent and Norris Trophy winner Adam Fox via trade, as the Rangers were his preferred destination.

That the 2021-22 Montreal Canadiens, a franchise adrift in mediocrity, would hire Gorton isn't all that surprising ... except for the fact that he doesn't fit the bilingual prerequisite for a general manager. Instead, they got creative: Gorton was given the role of executive vice president of hockey operations to "ensure the continuity of the day-to-day operations of the hockey sector" while the team searches for a general manager who can "communicate with fans in French and in English."

Speculation around the league is that Gorton will be at the head of the table when it comes to personnel decisions, with a bilingual general manager working under him. That makes this an interesting hire: If language restrictions were off the table for this new role, might former Pittsburgh Penguins general manager Jim Rutherford have been worth a hard look as the head of hockey operations? He's been angling for a role that's higher up the food chain from general manager, and his track record is unmatched by available candidates.

But the Habs moved quickly on Gorton. He was their guy.


Who are the possible bilingual general manager targets for Montreal?

  • Mathieu Darche: The director of hockey operations with the two-time Stanley Cup-champion Tampa Bay Lightning, Darche played three seasons with the Canadiens from 2009-10 to 2011-12 before retiring. The 45-year-old assists general manager Julien BriseBois "in all aspects of player personnel decisions, analytics, player development, contract preparation and negotiation, budgeting, scheduling and cap tracking." And since they're not getting BriseBois to leave the cushy confines of Tampa Bay, perhaps Darche is the next-best thing. Multiple sources have indicated that Darche is an early favorite to land the gig.

  • Martin Madden: Madden is in his 14th season with the Anaheim Ducks and his second as assistant general manager. He's a native of Quebec City, and his father, Martin Madden Sr., was the general manager of the Quebec Nordiques from 1988 to 1990. The younger Madden was an amateur scout with the Carolina Hurricanes when they won the Stanley Cup in 2006 and was running the Ducks' drafts when they found diamonds in the rough like defenseman Sami Vatanen (106th overall, 2009), defenseman Josh Manson (160th overall, 2011), goalie Frederik Andersen (87th overall, 2012) and forward Ondrej Kase (205th overall, 2014). When Bob Murray recently resigned to seek treatment for alcohol abuse, the Ducks promoted assistant general manager Jeff Solomon to interim GM. Where does Madden fit into the Ducks' search for Murray's replacement?

  • Daniel Briere: Like Darche, Briere is a former Canadiens player, albeit for one season (2013-14). Unlike Darche, Briere has yet to earn substantial experience at the NHL level as an executive. That's not to say he isn't experienced: Briere, 44, was named vice president of operations for the ECHL's Maine Mariners in 2017 and became president and general manager for that franchise in 2021. Since NHL hiring seemingly always boils down to previous relationships, it's worth noting that Briere's Mariners were a New York Rangers affiliate when Gorton was the general manager at MSG.

  • Roberto Luongo: Could the 42-year-old former NHLer make the leap from heading up the Florida Panthers' goaltender excellence department to running the Canadiens? Luongo has been a special adviser to the Panthers' general manager since 2019. He's earned executive experience as the general manager of Team Canada at the 2021 world championships. He's also an assistant general manager for Canada's 2022 Olympic men's hockey team.

  • Patrick Roy: Speaking of former goaltending greats, there's always fan support for the notion of Saint Patrick blessing the franchise with his presence. He's managed and coached the Quebec Remparts of the QMJHL on and off for the past 16 years, spending three seasons behind the bench with the Colorado Avalanche as their head coach. He had player-personnel aspirations with the Avs and left the team when it was clear they weren't going to be fulfilled. Does he want to be a general manager or a coach? He'd probably take either gig in Montreal. But if it's the GM role, then there's only one question to answer: Can Roy allow Gorton to have ultimate control over the Habs?

  • Martin Lapointe: If the Canadiens were humoring internal solutions, one assumes the 48-year-old Lapointe would be in the mix. He's been director of player development with Montreal since Bergevin brought him aboard in 2012. He added director of amateur scouting duties to his plate earlier this year. He's signed through 2023-24, but it's hard to imagine Gorton staying in-house with his hire -- especially since a lack of player development is part of why the Canadiens are in this pickle.

  • Vincent Damphousse: A former Canadiens great whose name gets circulated by fans and media for a managerial role on the team. The 53-year-old has been an analyst for RDS. He was rumored to be up for a president of hockey operations gig above Bergevin's role, rumors that ran so hot that Molson himself had to quash them. But he's worked more in the Scandinavian spa business than he has in hockey operations in the past several years.

  • Pierre McGuire: McGuire was a runner-up to Bergevin for the Canadiens' general manager hire in 2012. At the time, he was an analyst for NBC Sports. Since July, he's been senior vice president of player development for the Ottawa Senators. He was previously an assistant general manager with the Hartford Whalers. If the Habs want a bilingual front-facing executive, they'd have a vocal one in the 60-year-old McGuire. But even as Ottawa GM Pierre Dorion has been extended through 2024-25, there's the perception that McGuire is next in the succession line with a franchise that may not have the prestige of the Canadiens but might have a clearer path to contention.


What's next for Marc Bergevin?

It's not every deposed general manager who gets to release a statement on the team's official website on the way out. "It is with my head held high and with lasting memories that I am leaving my position as general manager of the Montreal Canadiens. I wish this organization and my successor the best possible success for the future," Bergevin wrote.

His teams made the playoffs in six of his 10 seasons there, including a trip to the conference final in 2014 and the Stanley Cup Final last season. The Canadiens had the 10th-most postseason wins of any team during his tenure. His weaknesses as an executive were glaring: some specious contracts to veteran players, odd decisions on his coaches, and a draft and development history that frankly could be disqualifying for future endeavors. The best player the Canadiens drafted and developed under Bergevin plays for the Tampa Bay Lightning -- defenseman Mikhail Sergachev (who was traded for Jonathan Drouin).

That said, the 56-year-old will undoubtedly get another crack at being an NHL general manager. As for his immediate future, the New York Post reported in October that Bergevin "just might wind up in Los Angeles next season working with Kings president Luc Robitaille."

There's another interesting option: The Chicago Blackhawks' general manager job that was vacated when Stan Bowman stepped aside. Bergevin claimed he was unaware of the sexual assault accusations made by Kyle Beach against video coach Brad Aldrich in 2010, when Bergevin was director of player personnel for the Blackhawks. Would they hire anyone from that era, though?

If nothing else, Bergevin will be remembered as someone who zealously cared about the success or failure of the Montreal Canadiens. He didn't have a poker face when it came to on-ice results. And when they were good, like the way they were last season, Bergevin's buoyant reactions were like watching an executive morph back into an excited player.

"Despite the pitfalls, the organization that I led, with a lot of passion, has always recovered," he wrote. But it'll take some heavy lifting.


What's next for the Canadiens' new regime?

Head coach Dominique Ducharme was given a three-year contract extension after the Canadiens' run to the Stanley Cup Final while he was interim coach. That deal, reportedly worth $1.7 million annually, runs through 2023-24. It's tradition in the NHL for new executives to bring in their own coach. Ducharme is currently 21-31-9 in the regular season.

Bergevin leaves behind a significant salary-cap commitment. It starts with 34-year-old Carey Price, who makes $10.5 million against the salary cap through 2025-26 with a full no-movement clause. He's one of 17 players under contract for next season and 13 players the Canadiens have under contract through the 2023-24 season.

There are some pieces to build around here: promising young players like Nick Suzuki, Cole Caufield and Alexander Romanov; veterans like Brendan Gallagher, who should be wearing the captain's "C" for this team. The player who last wore the "C" was Shea Weber, and his loss from the lineup due to multiple injuries -- likely ending his career -- left a hole it's going to take a while for this team to fill.

Whoever steps in to help Gorton will have to figure out which parts stay and what parts go. But hey, it's only the Montreal Canadiens -- no pressure.

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2021-11-29 12:12:54Z
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