Minggu, 31 Desember 2023

New women's professional hockey league, with hopes of staying power, ready to drop the puck - CTV News

No longer a far-fetched notion, the Professional Women's Hockey League is approaching reality and Sarah Nurse can't help but pinch herself.

On Monday, the 28-year-old Canadian national team forward will be on the ice in Toronto when her yet-to-be nicknamed team faces off against New York to open the new year and the PWHL's inaugural 72-game season.

"It means so much to me. It's something that I had dreamed of and envisioned all those years ago, but I didn't know it would actually come to fruition," Nurse said. "It's hard when you think of all the places that we've been over the last four years. And to be able to get here, with my Toronto team, has blown my expectations out of the water."

It wasn't easy. It took time and patience for the moment to arrive after past start-up leagues lurched from one crisis to another before ultimately folding because they lacked money, vision and foundational support.

Finally, the world's best players have one place to showcase their talents outside the four-year Olympic cycle and enjoying what it's like to have their voices heard.

"Seen and heard," Minnesota general manager and former U.S. national team captain Natalie Darwitz said.

"So often, it would be could we just get a seat at the table, right? And then, can we speak up at the table?" she said. "And now, you feel good about the table, and how do we grow that table, is kind of the path we're down."

Not lost on this generation of players is crediting those who preceded them, such as Darwitz and PWHL executive Jayna Hefford, never mind the help of one of women's sports most influential gender-breakers in former tennis star Billie Jean King, a PWHL board member.

"It's a long time in coming, and we're standing on the shoulders of players from past generations," Ottawa's Brianne Jenner said. "But I think our generation that kind of carried that balance of being grateful for every opportunity, but also not being happy with the crumbs is the attitude that's got us here."

Ultimately, the PWHL would not have been possible without King's influence and connections, and the deep pockets of Los Angeles Dodgers owner Mark Walter and his wife, Kimbra.

The Walters, who remain strictly behind the scenes, have committed to spending tens of millions of dollars to finance a centralized league that has a collective bargaining agreement with its players in place through 2031. And there's the heavy lifting that's already been done in six short months in which six markets have been established, (Boston, New York/Connecticut, St. Paul, Minnesota, Toronto, Montreal and Ottawa), more than 150 employees hired, dedicated locker rooms and training facilities built or renovated, and tens of thousands of tickets sold.

Toronto's 12 home games are essentially sold out, and Montreal was close. The lower bowl of St. Paul's Xcel Energy Center is expected to be filled for Minnesota's opener, and Ottawa' had sold about 8,000 tickets for its opener.

This is but a start, said PWHL board member Stan Kasten. He has played an influential role in getting the league off the ground in such a short period rather than put it off until next year even if it meant going without logos, nicknames and with a hastily reached broadcast deal finally announced on Friday.

"We have a long time to get them to where they need to be," Kasten said. "I'm cognizant we're going to make mistakes. But every mistake you see, ask if we're still at that mistake a year from now."

For all the iterations of women's hockey leagues past, be it the Canadian-based National Women's Hockey League that launched in 1999 and eventually became the Canadian Women's Hockey League that folded in 2019, or the U.S.-based NWHL that launched in 2015 and eventually became the Premier Hockey Federation before being bought out by Walter in June, the PWHL is regarded as having the best chance to succeed.

Boston forward Shiann Darkangelo has experienced nearly every step. Her stops included CWHL Toronto and Kunlun, China, and three NHWL/PHF teams ending with Toronto, where Darkangelo became the PHF's last captain to raise the Isobel Cup after the Six won the title in March.

"Absolutely, it's totally been worth it. I get to do what I love and get paid to do that," the 30-year-old Darkangelo said.

Hours after coaching Canada to a gold medal at the 2022 Winter Games, Troy Ryan urged business people and sponsors to come together in launching a pro women's hockey league because he believed it was viable.

It's now a reality for Ryan, who is coaching PWHL Toronto.

"It's amazing and, to be honest, it's a little bit surreal because it's happened so quickly," Ryan said. "A lot of people took a little leap of faith to join this journey."

What impressed Minnesota's Darwitz was seeing and interacting with so many women in positions of power while attending the PWHL's evaluation camp in Utica, New York, in early December. The PWHL features four female GMs, three female head coaches and, of the 34 board members and employees listed on the league's website, 20 are women.

"It's emotional. It's long overdue," she said. "We're used to walking into a room and it's usually one or two of us."

Darwitz spoke the same week the University of Delaware announced it was launching a women's hockey program -- another indication of the sport's growth.

"That's amazing," she said, before adding, "we still don't have Michigan" in noting the Big Ten school lacks a program.

"We're not there," Darwitz said. "But hopefully, one day, we are there."

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2023-12-31 13:51:40Z
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Winners and Losers from OG Anunoby trade to Knicks - NBC Sports

Toronto trading OG Anunoby was not a shock, there had been rumors and plenty of other interested teams for more than a year.

However, the surprise was the timing of this Dec. 30 deal and the haul the Raptors got back. After seemingly years of indecision, the Raptors made a move, and the Knicks paid a premium for a player on an expiring contract.

Who won this trade, and who lost? Let’s break it all down.

That starts with the details of the trade itself:
New York receives: OG Anunoby, Precious Achiuwa, Malachi Flynn
Toronto receives: Immanuel Quickley, RJ Barrett, 2024 second-round pick (via Detroit, likely pick 31 or 32)
(Also, both teams generated small trade exceptions.)

Winner: OG Anunoby

Anunoby was going to get paid no matter what happened. He’s a free agent to be (he will opt out of the $19.9 million he is owed next season because he is worth at least $12 million a year more on the open market) and there were teams lined up to pay him.

Instead, Anunuby is a winner in this trade because of opportunity. He didn’t fit perfectly with the Raptors, his usage rate was shrinking season after season as Scottie Barnes took on a larger role (as he should have, Anunoby is brilliant off the ball but never became the shot creator the Raptors hoped). Combine that with Pascal Siakam on the ball and Anunoby was getting squeezed in Toronto.

He will have a better fit in the offense with the Knicks, where his shooting is needed and he will not be asked to do much shot creation next to Jalen Brunson and Julius Randle (the offense will run through them). Anunoby gets a better fit in a brighter spotlight and that will be good for his career — and that next paycheck.

Tepid winner: New York Knicks

New York did not lose this trade — they got the best player in the trade. Anunoby is an elite on-ball defender, works well off the ball on the wing, is a more efficient shooter than Barrett, and should fit like a puzzle piece next to Brunson. In an Eastern Conference where the Knicks playoff run will mean facing some combination of Jayson Tatum, Jimmy Butler, Tyrese Maxey, Damian Lillard and Donovan Mitchell (among others), having Anunoby’s defense matters.

Also, the Knicks kept their powder dry by not giving up even one first-round pick — if a superstar does become available via trade this summer (or whenever) they will still be front-and-center with a strong offer.

However, giving up Quickley hurts — it’s not radical to think he is the best player in this trade three years from now. Would New York have been better off sending out Barrett and a first-round pick (plus salary filler) for Anunoby and keeping Quickley? Would Toronto have even gone for that?

Also, even with the addition of Achiuwa (and maybe Flynn, if he can crack the rotation), the Knicks bench just got worse. A lot more falls on Quentin Grimes and Josh Hart now.

Winner: Immanuel Quickley

Like many around the league, Quickley seemed caught off guard by the trade.

As noted above, the best player in this trade today is OG Anunoby. In a couple of seasons, it’s not ridiculous to say we’d answer that question Immanuel Quickley.

For reasons that frustrated and perplexed Knicks fans, Tom Thibodeau never seemed to fully trust Quickley. It’s not like Thibs buried him deep on the bench, but Quickley deserved more run than he was getting while the New York coach trusted Barrett, particularly in crunch time of games.

Now Quickley is about to get all the run he can handle, and for those who think the Knicks overpaid in this trade, that’s essentially a belief in Quickley. Opportunity has come knocking for the guard.

Loser: Knicks fans

Quickley has been a fan favorite — it’s easy to relate to and get behind the overlooked, underused guy. Now Knicks fans will watch him go to Toronto, to a roster that needs his exact skill set, and see him thrive. That will be a punch to the gut, especially if his game keeps developing.

Losers: 76ers, Pistons, any other teams considering Anunoby as a free agent target

This offseason’s free agent (or potential trade) class keeps shrinking. There was a time when teams held out hope Giannis Antetokounmpo might become available (he extended with the Bucks), or maybe Joel Embiid (he seems happy right now). Then there was the tier of potential free agents, and Anunoby was at or near the top of teams’ lists. Might as well cross him off now. There is no way the Knicks threw all these assets at Toronto without an assurance from Anunoby and his camp he would re-sign in New York (while there are rumors that it might be at a discount, we’ll believe that when we see it).

Winner: Toronto Raptors

It’s not about the particulars of this trade; it’s that they have finally picked a direction. There appears to be a plan. After letting Kyle Lowry and Fred VanVleet walk for free, after leaning too long into a three-forward rotation that didn’t work, and with a 12-20 team needing a new direction, the Raptors picked one. That’s a start.

Whether they won this particular trade is TBD. It’s too early to judge Toronto because: 1) It depends on how Quickley develops; 2) This is not a stand-alone trade — the Raptors have made it clear they are retooling and this is going to be Scottie Barnes’ team. That means Pascal Siakam will be on the move. What they get in that eventual trade rounds out this deal.

That said, you can see a path forward for Toronto: Start Quickley at the point next to Barnes (which means moving Dennis Schroder to the bench), with Barrett at the three and — for now — Siakam at the four, with Jakob Poeltl at the five and suddenly this is a pretty good team, one that fits together better than what we have seen in Toronto this season. Quickley and Barnes should thrive next to each other.

Also, getting that Detroit second-rounder, which is essentially a late first-round pick, is a good get in this trade for Toronto.

Winner: CAA Conspiracy theorists

Leon Rose left his job as the president of power agency CAA to become the Knicks president. Since then he hired CAA-represented Thibodeau and drew a CAA player, Jalen Brunson, as a free agent. Now he has to reach a new deal with Anunoby this season and… you guessed it, he is a CAA client.

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The Edmonton Oilers Connor McDavid. He got bottled up in the first period, then failed to cover Trevor Lewis in the slot on two 5-alarm shots. But he got Edmonton's first Grade A shot, hitting the crossbar on the power play from a tight angle. A moment late - Edmonton Journal

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Stuart Skinner came up big, first outplaying Cam Talbot in regular and over-time, then in the shoot-out, as the Edmonton Oilers beat the Los Angeles Kings 3-2.

The Kings dominated the first period, scoring twice. The Oil were superior in the second, scoring twice.

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The game went to OT, then won in the shootout as Derek Ryan scored to win it.

In total, the Oilers had 11 Grade A shots, the Kings 13, with the subset of most dangerous 5-alarm shots being Edmonton five, Los Angeles eight. Grade A shots on in on average 25 per cent of the time, 5-alarmers 33 per cent of the time.

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Cult of Hockey player grades

Connor McDavid, 8. Eight major contributions to Grade A shots, one goal and one assist in 25:52. He was bottled up in the first period, then failed to cover Trevor Lewis in the slot on a 5-alarm shot. But in the second period he got Edmonton’s first Grade A shot, hitting the crossbar on the power play from a tight angle. A moment later, taking the same shot, he threaded in Edmonton’s first goal off of Cam Talbot’s head. He then drove hard to the net on a rush and almost scored. Next he won the puck in the corner and set up Drai for a successful slot shot. In the third he broke in hard and almost beat Talbot yet again, first with a quick shot, then on the rebound. He scored in the shoot-out. Contributions to Grade A Shots (GAS): Even Strength +4/-1; Special Teams +4/-0

Zach Hyman, 5. Not his best game. McD set him up in the second for a wide-open slot shot, but Hyman failed to score. GAS: ES +1/-1; ST +0/-0.

Ryan Nugent-Hopkins, 7. He did strong work on the PK early on. He won a n-zone battle to set up McDavid’s rush chance in the second. In OT he saved the day with a huge stop on Kopitar’s wrap-around try.  He scored in the shootout. GAS: ES +2/-0; ST +01-0.

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Leon Draisaitl, 6. He was caught puck-watching on his first shift, allowing in Anze Kopitar for a 5-alarm backhand shot in the slot. He took a bad penalty early in the second, bashing Gavrikov. He got open in the slot in 4-on-4 play, took a pass from McDavid and harpooned in a goal to tie up the game. He almost jammed in McD’s slot pass on the power play in the third. He won a puck and almost jammed in a rebound shot with a few seconds left in the third. He got away with a great hook on Trevor Moore in OT to prevent a 5-alarm shot. He led the team with six shots. GAS: ES +2/-1; ST +3/-0.

Ryan McLeod, 4. He looked a bit out of sorts against the tough-checking Kings early on, was a bit better in the third. GAS: ES +0/-0; ST +0/-0.

Warren Foegele, 4. He stole a puck on the PK early in the second and fired on net, a rare early sign of life from the Oilers. He got beat by Dubois on a rush chance late in the second. GAS: ES +0/-1; ST +0/-1.

Derek Ryan, 8. Good game even before the shootout. Solid work on the PK and some good hustle at even strength. He won the game with the Oilers were a shootout goal. GAS: ES +1/-0; ST +0/-0.

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Connor Brown, 7. Excellent effort, not bad results. He got off a hard high slot shot, then a Grade A one-timer, in the third after his line worked the Kings with hard forechecking. GAS: ES +1/-1; ST +0/-1.

Mattias Janmark, 6. Good work on the PK and fine hustle all game. He won a puck at the blueline in the sequence where Brown got off his Grade A.  GAS: ES +2/-1; ST +0/-1.

James Hamblin, 6. Finds a way to help out. He charged back hard to break up a dangerous Kings rush in the first. He almost cashed in Lavoie’s board crashing shot at the side of the net in the third. GAS: ES +0/-0; ST +1/-0.

Raphael Lavoie, 5. He followed McDavid to the net in the second and almost jammed in a rebound goal. The refs gave him a ridiculous penalty when Kempe ran into him, and that marked the first time I’ve seen Coach K get upset on the Oilers bench. He got caught out of position on an L.A. 5-alarmer early in the third. But followed up with a hard-working shift where he drilled two shot on net. GAS: ES +2/-1; ST +0/-0.

Adam Erne, 5. He came to the defence of Ryan after #10 took a dirty hit from Doughty. Quiet game otherwise. GAS: ES +0/-0; ST +0/-0.

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Mattias Ekholm, 6. Another strong game, but he made an ill-advised pinch late in the second to give up a 2-on-1 but Quinton Byfield missed the. net with his shot. GAS: ES +0/-0; ST +0/-1.

Evan Bouchard, 7. Moved the puck well in 29:01 of icetime. He got beat by Grunsdtrom behind the net on the 5-alarm shot by Lewis in the first. GAS: ES +1/-1; ST +0/-0.

Cody Ceci, 7. Quiet game, good game.  GAS: ES +0/-1; ST +0/-1.

Darnell Nurse, 6. He got caught out of position on Kempe’s goal, not playing it cautious enough at the offensive blueline. Was otherwise hard, tough and effective. GAS: ES +1/-2; ST +0/-0.

Vincent Desharnais, 4. He struggled in this one. He got beat out of the corner early on, leading to one Grade A and one 5-alarm shots in bang-bang fashion. A moment later he and Ekholm allowed a pass out to the slot to Kevin Fiala, who ripped in the first L.A. goal. GAS: ES +1/-2; ST +0/-1.

Brett Kulak, 7. Another good game from the veteran. GAS: ES +0/-0; ST +0/-0.

Stuart Skinner, 9. He held his team in the game early on, then won it for them in overtime and the shootout. He gave up a big rebound but made an even bigger save off Kopitar early on. A moment later he sprawled to thwart Dubois on a wide-open net. He had little chance on Fiala’s one-timer goal. He thwarted a 5-alarm shot in a from Lewis. Kempe has a great shot, but his scoring snipe was far enough out that Skinner might well have stopped it. Huge save early in the second on a Doughty-to-Kopitar slap pass and tip shot, then another one on a rebound that fell to Lizotte in the slot., and yet again on a Doughty one-timer early in the third.

Connor McDavid behind the L.A. net celebrates his goal as Kings goalie Cam Talbot looks downcast, Mattias Ekholm in the foreground with his arms raised
Edmonton Oilers center Connor McDavid, right, and defenseman Mattias Ekholm, left, celebrate a goal by center Leon Draisaitl Photo by Mark J. Terrill /AP

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Canadiens’ penalty kill fails again in Florida, leaves no margin for error - Sportsnet.ca

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Sabtu, 30 Desember 2023

Professional Women's Hockey League different than leagues that came before - CP24

After nearly a quarter-century of women's hockey leagues that came and went, one shows signs of staying power.

The six-team Professional Women's Hockey League opens Monday afternoon with Toronto hosting New York at the downtown Mattamy Centre.

Toronto, Montreal, Ottawa, New York, Boston and Minnesota are the PWHL's original six teams. Ottawa's home-opener is Tuesday against visiting Montreal.

The first NWHL (1999-2007), the Western Women's Hockey League (2004-2011), the Canadian Women's Hockey League (2007-2019) and the NWHL 2.0 that begat the Premier Hockey Federation (2015-2023) took turns striving to be the league that could capture the attention and dollars of the corporate world and the public.

Lack of sustained financial investment, manpower or player unity impeded those leagues.

The PWHL has those three elements, although a key business and marketing blank still to be filled on the eve of its inaugural season was the announcement of actual team names.

A man with deep pockets adding women's hockey to his mega-portfolio of pro teams is the prime difference between the PWHL and its predecessors.

Los Angeles Dodgers controlling owner Mark Walter, who also has ownership stakes in the NBA's Los Angeles Lakers and Premier League's Chelsea Football Club, is accustomed to spending money to make money. The Dodgers committed in recent weeks over $100 million to two Japanese pitchers.

"Mark Walter is one of the most prominent sport owners in the world," said PWHL hockey operations senior vice-president Jayna Hefford.

"He knows professionalism, he knows excellence. He comes with the capital that's required, which is a big thing."

PWHL player salaries between US$35,000 and $80,000 are among several costs of constructing a league in just six months to operate at a professional level.

Walter's capital gave the PWHL the payroll to hire what board member and Dodgers president Stan Kasten stated was 120 people for league operations before November's training camps opened.

"This is the most backing that we've ever seen for a women's league in terms of having the resources to be able to hire the amount of people required to run each individual team, plus at the league level," Montreal head coach Korie Cheverie said.

"I saw, when I was a player, minimal staff members trying to wear multiple hats and do the job of five people versus just one job and their own job."

Hires include people who previously worked for the Toronto Blue Jays, the Vancouver Canucks, Winnipeg Jets ownership True North Sports and Entertainment, the WNBA and the National Women's Soccer League (NWSL).

"I met somebody who left their job from the Toronto Blue Jays that they had been at for over a decade," Montreal defender Erin Ambrose said. "They left a male professional sports team to come to a female brand new league, which I think speaks volumes in itself."

The PWHL is the first women's hockey league to claim it has the best players in the world under one umbrella, which is a marketing necessity.

"In many sports there have been multiple leagues until they get to the one. It's not unusual, I think, the path we were on," Hefford said. "Now that we have an opportunity to be the league, and eliminate the confusion that some may have . . . that makes us very different.

"Looking at past leagues, all of them are part of the journey and part of getting here. We're not here without those."

While top-name players who held out for the PWHL and those who played in the PHF were often painted as blocking progress toward one league, the PHF deserves an assist for extending players' careers to the PWHL's opening day.

"It gave a lot of players, seven teams' worth of players, a place to play for the last number of years," Montreal goaltender Elaine Chuli said.

Unprecedented in pro sport were the women and their new owner agreeing to an eight-year collective bargaining agreement before there was even a league. NHL management veteran Brian Burke brings his pro hockey experience to the helm of the players' association.

"It's been really awesome to see the business side of the league evolve, because in my mind, that's what's always been missing," Hefford said. "We've had great players before. We've had good hockey people before. We haven't been able to bring this many great people together because there hasn't been the investment."

Unlike the WNBA, which was operated by the NBA for its first five years, the PWHL gets underway with NHL involvement limited to consulting services.

But a television and digital rights package so lucrative in men's pro sports is a PWHL work in progress.

Watching the first season's games on a screen is a hodgepodge of linear TV and streaming by TSN/RDS, CBC and Sportsnet in Canada. TSN gets playoffs and the championship. All games will be streamed via on the PWHL's YouTube channel.

Air Canada and Canadian Tire, as well as several hockey and sports gear companies, are on board. Toronto, Ottawa and Montreal have declared sellouts for their home-openers, with Toronto selling out all 12 of its home games.

"Time will tell as long as the money and sponsorships, ticket sales (bring) revenues," Chuli said. "If there's just always a big loss at the end of each year, it makes it hard to sustain super long-term, but there's going to be some serious cash burn here at the beginning.

"It looks like sellouts for a lot of the games, so that's encouraging to see. Big brands and big sponsorships, that'll help the league too. As long as we have all that backing, it should go pretty well."

When it comes to the world's top sports properties in soccer, basketball and hockey, women get a smaller piece of the pie than men, but there is now some money to be made in women's sport.

The 2023 FIFA women's World Cup, for example, attracted what GlobalData estimated was a record US$307 million in sponsorship. That's a lot less than the reported $1.7 billion of the 2022 men's World Cup, but the women's side was hardly a loss leader.

An NWSL franchise is now valued as high as US$50 million.

"We finally are creating an entity that's also an investment and a return on investment," Ottawa head coach Carla Macleod said. "I think there's money to be had in women's sport."

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

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World Juniors Recap: Canucks' trio contribute to both goals as Sweden takes down Canada 2-0 - Canucks Army

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  1. World Juniors Recap: Canucks' trio contribute to both goals as Sweden takes down Canada 2-0  Canucks Army
  2. Sweden stifles Canada to take control of Group A at World Junior Championship  TSN
  3. 2024 World Juniors: What We Learned From USA's 4-3 Shootout Win Over Czechs  FloHockey
  4. WJC Takeaways: Sweden proving it’s their gold medal to lose  Sportsnet.ca
  5. Swedes edge Canada in thriller  IIHF

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2023-12-30 10:48:54Z
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Bratt has 4 points, Devils cruise past Senators for 3rd straight win - NHL.com

“That was a lot of fun,” Daws said. “Obviously, I was pretty nervous for the first period and getting the first couple of shots, but after that I kind of settled into it and settled into the pace of the game. I’m happy to get the win.”

Daws missed six months after having hip surgery in June. He was recalled Wednesday after a three-game conditioning stint with Utica of the American Hockey League.

“A great first game,” New Jersey coach Lindy Ruff said of Daws' performance. “He probably made three or four game-changing saves that, you know, momentum could’ve went either way.”

Jack Hughes and Luke Hughes each had a goal and two assists, and Tyler Toffoli and Dawson Mercer scored for the Devils (19-13-2), who have won three straight after losing three in a row.

“Everybody played fantastic,” Daws said. “It was a full 60-minute effort from everybody, which was huge. Obviously, I can’t take all the credit for the game; they did basically everything, they made my job really easy tonight.”

Drake Batherson and Jacob Bernard-Docker scored for the Senators (13-18-0), who had won two straight. Joonas Korpisalo made 24 saves.

“I don’t think that we were very effective,” Ottawa interim coach Jacques Martin said. “We didn’t play to our game. When I look at the game, we had a lot of frustrations tonight. To me, we took a step back. It reminded me a little bit about when I took over (on Dec. 18).”

New Jersey was 2-for-4 on the power play; Ottawa was 0-for-4.

“The penalty-killing did a fantastic job tonight,” Ruff said. “And part of it was we got a couple of big saves that allowed us to keep them off the board.”

Batherson gave Ottawa a 1-0 lead at 9:47 of the first period when he took a centering pass from Brady Tkachuk and slipped the puck under the outstretched glove of Daws in tight. It was Batherson’s fourth goal in four games.

Jack Hughes tied it 1-1 at 13:10 on the power play with a wrist shot from the left face-off dot that went under Korpisalo’s left arm.

“They obviously got a few goals on the power play tonight,” Batherson said. “That’s a really good top six over there. You give them time and space and they’re going to score. That’s what happened there.”

Bratt gave the Devils a 2-1 lead at 19:52, also scoring on the power play with a wrist shot into the top right corner from the right slot.

“This was a huge game for us,” Bratt said. “We really needed these two points. It was a full team effort and obviously Nico played great in net and helped us out getting this win.”

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2023-12-30 04:41:15Z
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Samsonov struggles again, Leafs errors costly in OT loss to Jackets - Toronto Sun

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Before any more armchair psychoanalysts try and figure out what’s gone wrong in Ilya Samsonov’s head, maybe call a lawyer, too, about lack of support.

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While four goals on the first 11 shots on net on Friday at Columbus did little for Samsonov’s shaken confidence, the Maple Leafs continue to do the Russian few favours, other than to try scoring their way past his and their mistakes.

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For the first time, the Core Four of Mitch Marner, Auston Matthews, William Nylander and John Tavares struck in the same road game. But they couldn’t hold a late third-period lead and lost 6-5 to the Blue Jackets on Johnny Gaudreau’s overtime goal.

Just as it seemed that Samsonov would get it together in the third period, young star Adam Fantilli rushed through the Leafs ranks to snap in the 5-5 equalizer. A couple of Samsonov stops in the extra period went for naught, after the Leafs sacrificed offence late in the game to over-compensate protecting their beleaguered goalie.     

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“We made bad mistakes at bad times (and) you can’t make those the way Sammy is going through (issues) right now,” coach Sheldon Keefe told reporters. “We scored five. We should win that game every time.” 

While Keefe didn’t want to speak for any moves general manager Brad Treliving might be considering, he indicated the plan was to keep letting Samsonov work through his slump — which includes four or more goals against in his past eight starts, and a save percentage well down in the .800s. 

Martin Jones is the only other healthy goalie while Joseph Woll recovers from a high ankle sprain and there is no appetite to rush Marlies’ Dennis Hildeby. 

Jones starts Saturday’s home game against Carolina to end the club’s calendar year and likely Tuesday against his first NHL team, the L.A. Kings, as Toronto begins a California road trip. 

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“Tough game for me,” said Samsonov, who wound up stopping just 15 of 21 shots. “Last three games, I haven’t seen a lot of luck. It’s easy to put your head down, just cry and be sad. But I need to continue to work and maybe next game, maybe the next three games, the luck is back.” 

At the other end, Elvis Merzlikins had to pull himself with an illness after one period, leaving Spencer Martin to claim the win.  

“When we’re on our game, we’re attacking,” Marner said of sitting back too much. “Stay on the stuff we do extremely well. 

“I have a ton of confidence (in Samsonov) and I hope he knows that this whole team is behind him. We haven’t done the greatest job of stopping Grade-A chances against him and a couple of those were Grade-A’s in front.” 

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Keefe’s 300th NHL game was Toronto’s third against the Jackets this month, the two teams totalling 27 goals, including the Leafs’ five-goal comeback in Toronto two weeks ago.

The Jackets, meanwhile, added to the group of bottom seven NHL clubs that have held the Leafs to a 3-6-2 record this season. Toronto has lost three of four against bottom-feeder teams this month.

At least the Leafs stuck to the script early on to keep pressure off Samsonov. Until Timothy Liljegren stumbled on a breakout to give Cole Sillinger a puck in the slot with maximum bodies in front.

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With a two-goal lead, the Leafs were slow on a shift change in which Brendan Gaunce scored, Samsonov’s puck control once again under scrutiny when he couldn’t find a high rebound that landed behind him.

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Marner had opened the scoring and then assisted on Matthews’ precision shot, his league-leading 29th goal. Matthews has been murder on the Jackets, netting 13 goals in 15 games against them and 15 in his past 11 overall.

He also became the fourth player in franchise history with a 15-goal month, joining Rick Vaive, who had 17 in January of 1983, Frank Mahovlich with 15 in December of 1960 and Babe Dye of the St. Patricks, 15 in February of 1921.

Nylander had another nifty delivery under the bar on a power play, but Samsonov couldn’t hold the lead. Big Dmitri Voronkov both screened and nicely deflected on a 4-on-3 power play from a needless Nylander minor. Then the Leafs defensive pair of Morgan Rielly and TJ Brodie coughed up an open look for Kent Johnson.

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Nick Robertson earlier ended a 14-game goal slump when he cruised through the slot and had a Liljegren shot deflect off of him.

Recommended from Editorial

  1. Auston Matthews of the Toronto Maple Leafs (R) celebrates a goal against the New York Rangers during the second period in an NHL game at Scotiabank Arena on December 19, 2023 in Toronto, Ontario, Canada.

    Leafs’ New Year’s resolution is to not leave any more points on the table

  2. Maple Leafs defenceman Mark Giordano warms up prior to playing against the Winnipeg Jets at Scotiabank Arena on March 31, 2022 in Toronto.

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With Mark Giordano back after 12 games recovering from a broken finger, William Lagesson joined Conor Timmins as a healthy scratch on defence. Giordano was with Liljegren, who was recently activated from an ankle injury as Simon Benoit held his spot in the lineup, now with Jake McCabe, an effective duo most of the evening.

But until they get the goaltending and defence straightened away, there’s little to celebrate.

lhornby@postmedia.com

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2023-12-30 03:56:15Z
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Jumat, 29 Desember 2023

Flyers score 3 in 2nd, end Canucks point streak at 9 - NHL.com

Egor Zamula, Sean Walker and Joel Farabee scored in the second for the Flyers (19-11-4), who have earned at least one point in 11 of their past 12 games (8-1-3).

“We played patient, waited for our opportunities. You get a couple of quick ones, it builds that momentum, and you go from there,” said Farabee, who also had an assist. “Really like how our group played coming off the (holiday) break. It would be easy to play loose and not play our system, but I really felt like every guy was pulling on the rope.”

Samuel Ersson saved 18 of 19 shots before leaving 2:36 into the third period because of dehydration. Carter Hart made eight saves in relief.

“That's the beauty of having two really good goalies,” Farabee said. “You know one guy is going to pick him up, and when both guys are in the cage, we have complete trust in both guys, so I don't think anyone skipped a beat there.”

Coach John Tortorella said Ersson “cramped up” but was getting intravenous treatment after the game and would be fine. Hart is expected to start the second game of a back-to-back at the Seattle Kraken on Friday.

“I thought Carter was outstanding,” Tortorella said. “All the time off we've had, the days off … to come in at that time a game, he probably had five or six shots but they were 10-bellers, they were great chances. Sam was really good, and I thought Carter cleaned it up for us in the third.”

Teddy Blueger scored, and Casey DeSmith made 21 saves for the Canucks (23-10-3), who were 7-0-2 during their point streak and lost in regulation for the first time since Dec. 5.

“We weren’t invested,” Vancouver coach Rick Tocchet said. “They came at us and we didn’t have any push. In the second I thought we came back a little back and then that five-minute implosion. … It’s going to get harder and harder. This is a learning lesson. We’ve got to be more invested in the game.”

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2023-12-29 07:29:43Z
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Flacco throws three TDs, Browns clinch playoff spot with win over Jets - TSN

CLEVELAND (AP) — Joe Flacco has turned a seemingly cursed season into a charmed one.

Cleveland's quarterback for just over a month, Flacco passed for 309 yards and three touchdowns and the Browns clinched an unlikely playoff berth — just their second since 2002 — despite numerous injuries this season with a 37-20 win over the New York Jets on Thursday night.

The Browns (11-5) are assured of a wild-card spot and still have a chance to win the AFC North and maybe the conference's No. 1 overall seed, something that seemed unfathomable just weeks ago as major injuries piled up.

But things have changed since Flacco arrived.

The 38-year-old quarterback improved to 4-1 as a starter with the Browns, who plucked the Super Bowl 47 MVP off his couch in New Jersey last month to hopefully rescue their season. He's done that and more.

In the final minutes, Browns fans chanted “Flac-co! Flac-co!” to a quarterback they once reviled with Baltimore and now revere.

“You don't know how many of these moments you're going to get,” Flacco said. “I'm going to remember this for the rest of my life.”

Flacco threw two TD passes to Jerome Ford in the first half as the Browns built a 20-point lead over the Jets (6-10), who chose not to re-sign the 15-year veteran after he spent three seasons with them — and after Aaron Rodgers tore his left Achilles tendon in Week 1.

Flacco torched New York for 296 yards in the first half and became the first QB in 34 games to go over 300 yards against the Jets. He's also the first Cleveland quarterback to pass for more than 300 in four straight.

While Flacco insisted revenge wasn't on his mind, but Jets receiver Garrett Wilson said the QB was out to prove something.

“He's wound like that,” Wilson said. “He told me at the end of last season, he wasn't going to be a backup. He was going to play and he held to that. Joe's a great guy. The type of teammate you want. He deserves everything."

The atmosphere was electric from the start inside Cleveland Browns Stadium as fans who have felt mostly heartbreak for decades got a chance to celebrate.

“It was special,” Flacco said. “This is obviously a unique situation for me, so I've got a lot of different emotions running through my head.”

The Jets were forced to start Trevor Siemian for the second week in a row with Zach Wilson sidelined by a concussion.

Siemian had some nice moments, but an overthrow late in first quarter was returned 30 yards for a TD by safety Ronnie Hickman to put the Browns up 20-7.

New York allowed a season-high in points and yards (428). Although the Jets gave up just 61 yards in the second half, they dug themselves too big a hole.

Jets linebacker Jermaine Johnson had a pick-6 in the second quarter when he beautifully deflected Flacco’s pass to himself and returned it 37 yards.

Nothing has been easy this season for the Browns, who have continued to win despite being overrun by injuries since the opener. Flacco is their fourth starting quarterback, they’re missing both first-team offensive tackles and 12 players — including QB Deshaun Watson and running back Nick Chubb — are on injured reserve.

So, it was fitting they went into their biggest game this season missing their starting kicker, punter and wide receiver Amari Cooper, who was coming off a franchise record-setting 265-yard performance on Sunday in Houston.

NEW GUYS

The Browns got their first looks at kicker Riley Patterson and punter Matt Haack, both signed earlier this week.

Patterson, filling in for an injured Dustin Hopkins, went 4 of 5 on extra points and made a 33-yard field goal with 2:54 left.

Haack averaged 51.7 yards on three punts.

GARRETT & GARRETT

Browns star defensive end Myles Garrett ended a five-game streak without a sack by taking down Siemian in the first half.

Wilson went over 1,000 yards receiving for the second straight season. He also did it as a rookie in 2022 and is one of 10 active players with two 1,000-yard seasons to start their career.

SCARY MOMENT

Browns wide receiver Elijah Moore suffered a head injury in the second quarter.

After catching a 22-yard pass from Flacco, Moore’s helmet was driven into the turf as he went down. He rolled onto his back and appeared to twitch as teammates quickly called for medical personnel.

Moore, who spent the past two seasons with the Jets, was helped off the field and escorted to Cleveland’s locker room.

INJURIES

Jets: WR Allen Lazard (illness) was among the team’s inactives. ... RG Jacob Hanson suffered a concussion and was replaced by Xavier Newman, who was helped off the fourth quarter with an unspecified injury.

Browns: Cooper came in listed questionable, but was expected to play. However, after he tested a heel injury during an on-field workout, the Browns opted to have him sit rather than risk more damage. ... CB Mike Ford Jr. (calf) got hurt covering a kick in the first quarter.

UP NEXT

Jets: At New England on Jan. 7.

Browns: At Cincinnati on Jan. 7.

___

AP NFL: https://apnews.com/hub/nfl

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Comfortable win in return to Shark Tank shows how far Oilers have come - Sportsnet.ca

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Kamis, 28 Desember 2023

Pistons lose 28th-straight game to tie record after blowing big lead vs. Celtics - Sportsnet.ca

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  1. Pistons lose 28th-straight game to tie record after blowing big lead vs. Celtics  Sportsnet.ca
  2. How Did Detroit Basketball Get Reduced to This?  The Ringer
  3. Detroit Pistons lose 28th straight game, tying NBA record for longest losing streak  CP24
  4. Pistons surrender 19-point halftime lead, fall in overtime to Celtics  Detroit Bad Boys
  5. Nets top Pistons for 27th consecutive loss  AM800 (iHeartRadio)

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Batherson scores twice, Senators rally past Maple Leafs - NHL.com

Parker Kelly and Brady Tkachuk scored, and Korpisalo made 34 saves for the Senators (13-17-0), who have won two in a row after a six-game losing streak. Vladimir Tarasenko had two assists.

“I think we had a slow start,” Ottawa coach Jacques Martin said. “I don’t think we were ready to play at the pace the Leafs came out with, and they got a 2-0 lead, but what I like is our resiliency, how we battled back, how we stuck with it.”

Matthew Knies and Tyler Bertuzzi scored, and William Nylander had an assist to extend his point streak to 12 games for the Maple Leafs (17-9-6). Martin Jones made 27 saves, and Auston Matthews had his personal seven-game goal streak end.

“We couldn’t score the third goal, or didn’t score the third goal, so we let them hang around,” Toronto coach Sheldon Keefe said. “I thought they were better than us in the second period for sure, and I think the period looks a lot worse because our power play gives them a freebie and gives them life and energy, and some of our details just slipped really on each of the goals against.”

Kelly scored short-handed to cut it to 2-1 at 10:17 of the second period when he took a pass from Claude Giroux on a 2-on-1 and beat Jones from the slot.

Batherson tied it 2-2 at 14:25 when he put in the rebound of Tim Stutzle’s shot.

“How we adjusted I thought was a big difference in the second period,” Martin said. “We started to get some pucks behind their defense, putting some pressure, creating some turnovers, creating some scoring chances and able to tie the game and continue on.”

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2023-12-28 07:41:15Z
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Rabu, 27 Desember 2023

Bedard's 1st OT goal gives Blackhawks win against Jets - NHL.com

Blackhawks coach Luke Richardson praised the 18-year-old's maturity.

"I mean, he's a good kid,” Richardson said. “He really gets along with all his teammates, and he’s coachable. He listens and he asks questions, and obviously he’s trying to implement things like that into his game. He’s got a humble background. He’s really good person. I don’t think he really wants all the attention, but he’s going to have to get used to it. It’s going to be there.

“I think he really likes just going out and playing, and you can see when he celebrates a goal, he really enjoys it. But when he gets to the bench, he’s not a guy who’s taunting the other bench or the other team or anything like that. He’s just all business and he’s ready to go back out and do it the next shift.”

Morgan Barron tied it 1-1 at 3:47 of the second period, taking a pass from Axel Jonsson-Fjallby and scoring with a wrist shot between Mrazek’s pads from the left circle.

“I felt like we carried the play for a lot of the game,” Barron said. “For the first game after the (holiday) break, you obviously want to come away with a win, but to get a point and to play well, it’s going to help us kind of get back on track. We’ll be able to move on from that game. They’ve got some talent over there, as well.”

The Jets flew into Chicago earlier in the day.

“It was a long day, for sure,” Barron said. “No excuses. There’s a lot of teams around the League right now that kind of dealt with the same thing today. Yeah, you can definitely feel the legs getting a little heavier as the game went on. I would have liked to see us all kind of roll the lines a little bit, keep the shifts a little shorter, but we got stuck out there defending sometimes. It’s part of the game. It’s nothing unique to our team.”

NOTES: Bedard (18 years, 163 days) is the third-youngest player to score a regular-season overtime goal in NHL history, behind Sidney Crosby (18 years, 101 days) and Jordan Staal (18 years, 153 days). ... Jets forward David Gustafsson took part in morning skate but was scratched because of a lower-body injury. Dominic Toninato replaced him in the lineup and had one assist in 8:23 of ice time in his season debut. … Blackhawks forward Jason Dickinson went 16-for-23 on face-offs.

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