Rabu, 21 September 2022

From curiosity to cornerstone, Zdeno Chara wraps up legendary career - Sportsnet.ca

The video at the top shows the view from Sportsnet’s set for Game 5 of the 2019 Stanley Cup Final. An enormous ovation for Zdeno Chara, three nights after taking a puck in the face that knocked him out of Game 4 — sort of.

Unable to play in the third period, he became the world’s highest-paid doorman. Chara sat on the bench, encouraging teammates despite being unable to play. There were times it looked like the Bruins would need to chain him to his seat to prevent him from going out there. 

After St. Louis won the Stanley Cup, Chara admitted he had multiple jaw fractures. “I think I’m able to tolerate pain,” he said.

Yeah, that’s an understatement.

When I started at Hockey Night in Canada, I did a lot of Senators’ games. That was a great team, highlighted by its run to the 2007 final. They were phenomenal to deal with, and Chara was a big part of that. There were some great memories:

• Wade Redden saying he was embarrassed to take off his shirt around Chara “and I’m not the only one.”

• Bryan Murray saying Daniel Alfredsson loved to challenge himself against Chara. One day after practice, Murray said the two were going on a bike ride together. (Chara’s love of cycling is well-known.) The next day, following a morning skate, Murray was asked how it went. He said Chara thought Alfredsson was wimpy for “quitting after five hours.” (Alfredsson rolled his eyes at this, denying it is true. For pure comedy, I choose to believe it is.)

• At the 2004 World Cup of Hockey, Slovakia had a poor tournament. During one of the intermissions in their last game, voices were raised behind the closed door of their dressing room. A team official looked at me. He said, “Chara.” Then someone else. The official said, “(Pavol) Demitra.” He shook his head. “They are destroying their teammates. They can’t stand to lose like this.”

• Upon being named Boston’s captain, hearing Chara called four-time Stanley Cup champion coach Al Arbour out of the blue to ask him about good leadership. The two lived not far from each other in Florida. Arbour said he’d never forget Chara’s booming voice when he first heard it over the phone. 

The Stanley Cup doesn’t seem small in many hands, but it sure looked that way as Chara unleashed that guttural yell upon lifting it in 2011.

Chara had two great gifts: size and will. The NHL has its obvious prejudices for big men. Just by being the dimensions he is, the monstrous defenceman was guaranteed some type of NHL career. But the true measure of his greatness is he never accepted that as being anywhere close to enough.

When he arrived at WHL Prince George in 1996, he was the definition of a project. The stories were legendary about how raw he was. But under Cougars coach Stan Butler — who Chara name-checked on Tuesday — the defenceman's legendary work habits began the process of developing him from curiosity to cornerstone. He is the greatest free-agent signing in NHL history. 

Chara never demanded anything of others that he wouldn’t demand of himself. He made sure new or young teammates felt involved and included. 

He didn’t just have “a career.” Teammates are going to be telling Chara stories for decades. That number is going to the rafters in Boston. He’s going to the Hall of Fame. 

Enormous person, enormous impact.

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2022-09-21 02:29:00Z
1575338409

Toronto Maple Leafs GM Kyle Dubas betting on team to earn his contract - ESPN

Toronto Maple Leafs general manager Kyle Dubas said he does not have a contract beyond the 2022-23 NHL season but doesn't see that becoming a distraction for himself or the team.

"I'm more than happy to go through the year and be evaluated on the year and then have the decision made, because I believe in our group," Dubas said on the first day of Toronto Maple Leafs camp on Wednesday.

Dubas was promoted to general manager in May 2018. The Leafs have made the Stanley Cup playoffs in all four of those seasons but haven't advanced past the first round of the NHL postseason since 2004.

He said team president Brendan Shanahan informed him at the end of last season, after the Leafs were eliminated in seven games by the Tampa Bay Lightning, that Dubas would enter this season without a contract extension.

"For me, in the end, it's best. I don't obviously decide what the organization wants to do. I can only control what I can do each day," Dubas said. "My view of it is that if we have the year that we're capable of and the team plays the way that it's capable of, my situation will get taken care of without issue. I don't worry about it."

Dubas was asked if his uncertain future could become a distraction for the team, much like a player waiting for a new contract might become in the dressing room.

"I know it won't be a distraction, because I won't let it be a distraction," he said.

Coach Sheldon Keefe, whom Dubas hired as Leafs coach in 2019, said he expects the general manager's attention will be squarely on this season and not his contract.

"He's absolutely focused on the end goal, which is to do what he can to help this team succeed and win the Stanley Cup. That's the sole focus for him," said Keefe, who has known Dubas since their junior hockey days. "I've worked with him for quite some time now. Been through a lot with him in different situations. He's never allowed anything to be a distraction, to the group or to the job that he has to do,"

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2022-09-21 16:19:37Z
1553426913

Selasa, 20 September 2022

Diggs scores three touchdowns for Bills in rout of Titans - Sportsnet.ca

ORCHARD PARK, N.Y. (AP) — If the Buffalo Bills are making some sort of loud statement by opening their season with consecutive routs, quarterback Josh Allen isn’t about to raise his voice.

As he did following a 31-10 win over the defending Super Bowl champion Los Angeles Rams, Allen dismissed questions about the message the Bills sent by throttling the Tennessee Titans 41-7 in Buffalo's home opener on Monday night.

“When we execute how we know we’re supposed to execute, success typically leads to success,” Allen said. “We’re just trying to be the best version of ourselves.”

It made no difference to Allen whether the Bills earned some vindication against an opponent that had defeated them in each of the past two seasons.

“It doesn’t matter who it’s against. Like, that’s a good team that we played,” he said. “For us to go do that was great.”

Allen threw four touchdown passes, including three to Stefon Diggs, and the Bills' defense did the rest, containing Derrick Henry and the Titans. Buffalo forced four turnovers, including linebacker Matt Milano returning the second of Ryan Tannehill’s two interceptions 43 yards for a touchdown.

Buffalo never trailed and blew the game open by outscoring the Titans 24-0 in the third quarter. The surge began in the final minute of the second quarter when Buffalo went ahead 17-7 on Allen’s 4-yard touchdown pass to Diggs.

Allen topped 300 yards passing for the 15th time of his career, completing 26 of 38 attempts for 317 yards, and sat out the entire fourth quarter. Diggs had 12 catches for 148 yards. He has exceeded 100 yards in each of his first two games, a feat accomplished previously for the Bills only by Hall of Famer Andre Reed.

“It was a lot left on the bone, really,” Diggs said with a shrug. “We had a lot of points. I think we had one punt and I think it came back to us. But just doing your job, and at this point we’re doing OK I guess.”

The Titans, coming off a 21-20 season-opening loss to the New York Giants, opened 0-2 for the first time since 2012.

The two-time defending AFC South champions face numerous questions about a defense that gave up 313 yards passing a week after allowing 238 yards rushing. Meantime, their offense mustered 187 yards, managed 12 first downs and had two of 11 drives finish in Bills territory.

“We got our (butts) kicked, plain and simple,” coach Mike Vrabel said after the most lopsided loss in his four-plus seasons coaching the Titans. “They outplayed us and they outcoached us, and that’s the definition of it. We’re going to go back to work and try to figure out how to win a football game.”

While Tannehill was benched after throwing his second interception, the Titans' Henry-led running game continued to be grounded.

The two-time rushing champion was limited to 25 yards on 13 carries while scoring on a 2-yard plunge.

“I pride myself on making plays and being a playmaker for this team. And I didn’t do that tonight,” Henry said. “They were the better team tonight in all three phases, the whole game. We just weren’t good enough. At all.”

Injuries affected both teams, the most serious involving Bills cornerback Dane Jackson, who hurt his neck in a troubling collision with a teammate and was taken to a hospital for evaluation. The Bills said Jackson had full movement in his limbs.

Coach Sean McDermott said Jackson was still awaiting test results. The entire Bills team gathered around Jackson as he was loaded into an ambulance on the field.

“You go from being a coach to just a human. That’s a real moment,” McDermott said. “Just praying for him. It’s an unfortunate situation.”

Tannehill finished 11 of 20 for 117 yards and was benched following Milano’s interception with 3:49 left in the third quarter. Rookie Malik Willis took over, and if Tannehill continues to struggle, Tennessee fans will want to see more of the young backup.

Vrabel stressed he benched many of his starters to protect them from getting hurt.

REMEMBERING SHOOTING VICTIMS

Bills Hall of Fame defensive end Bruce Smith asked fans for a moment of silence before the game to honor the memory of 10 people killed in shooting spree at a Buffalo supermarket in May.

“We stand united with the victims and the victims’ families,” Smith said.

“No one can erase their pain and suffering. But Buffalo, your acts of love and kindness will never be forgotten,” he added. “The national media, the national activists have all gone. But we are here right now. It is up to us to love these families. To be with them.”

INJURIES

Titans: LT Taylor Lewan did not return after hurting his right knee in the first quarter. ... RB Trenton Cannon did not return after hurting his right knee on the opening kickoff. ... LB Ola Adeniyi hurt his wrist. ... LB Bud Dupree hurt his hip. ... The Titans elevated receiver Josh Gordon from their practice squad some three weeks after he signed with the team.

Bills: S Micah Hyde sustained a neck injury. ... Milano did not return because of what was termed a stinger. ... DT Jordan Phillips hurt his hamstring. ... No. 2 WR Gabe Davis was inactive after hurting his ankle in practice on Saturday. ... DTs Brandin Bryant and C.J. Brewer were elevated from the practice squad to fill in for injured starter Ed Oliver (ankle) and backup Tim Settle (calf).

UP NEXT

Titans: Host the Las Vegas Raiders on Sunday.

Bills: At the Miami Dolphins on Sunday.

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2022-09-20 02:51:00Z
1565562643

Senin, 19 September 2022

Tom Brady's temper flares as Bucs snap skid vs Saints - The Globe and Mail

Tom Brady #12 of the Tampa Bay Buccaneers and Marshon Lattimore #23 of the New Orleans Saints argue during the fourth quarter of the game at Caesars Superdome on Sept. 18, 2022 in New Orleans.Chris Graythen/Getty Images

It certainly looked like the Saints were in Tom Brady’s head when the Buccaneers quarterback threw a tablet in the bench area and later jawed with New Orleans cornerback Marshon Lattimore after a drive-stalling incomplete pass.

How quickly a game can change when emotions spill over.

Brady helped incite a skirmish that led to the ejections of Lattimore and Bucs receiver Mike Evans, then threw a go-ahead touchdown pass to Breshad Perriman that lifted Tampa Bay to a 20-10 victory over New Orleans on Sunday.

“It’s an emotional game,” Brady said flatly. “A little bit of execution helps all the way around. I thought the defense played well again and the offensive line fought hard.

“Tough game all around,” Brady added. “That is a really good team, really well coached — a team we really struggle with. So, it feels good to win.”

Brady, who’d lost four straight regular-season meetings with the Saints, again struggled for the first three quarters of this latest, testy encounter between NFC South rivals.

Brady’s frustration was clear when he was caught on camera forcefully throwing a tablet to the turf with a healthy turn of his torso and full follow-through of his prolific right arm.

And after his third-down incomplete pass early in the fourth quarter, Brady was shouting at Lattimore when running back Leonard Fournette entered the fray and shoved the Saints’ star cornerback. Lattimore responded by shoving Fournette, and Evans rushed in and flattened Lattimore — much like he did in a 2017 game between these teams.

“I was just trying to have my teammate’s back,” Evans said. “I seen (Lattimore) punch someone. I wasn’t going to let that happen. ... We know when you come to New Orleans, it gets spicy.”

Evans was ejected, as he was five seasons ago. But this time, so was Lattimore, who did not speak with media after the game.

“It hurts to lose your best corner,” defensive end Cameron Jordan said. “Guys gun at him because they know he is one of the best corners in the league.

“When I saw the replay, (Lattimore) didn’t go after anybody. Somebody came after him,” Jordan said. “What do you want him to do in that situation?”

With Paulson Adebo sitting out with an ankle injury, Lattimore’s ejection left the Saints without their top two cornerbacks — and Brady took advantage.

On Tampa Bay’s next series, Brady marched the Bucs (2-0) to the New Orleans 28 and then hit Perriman in the back right corner of the end zone to make it 10-3.

“We lost a good player and they lost a good player. It was a physical ballgame,” Bucs coach Todd Bowles said. “I don’t know if it was a turning point. ... It could have gone either way. We knew we had to make some plays.”

The Bucs’ defense squelched the Saints’ comeback bid by intercepting Jameis Winston three times in the final 12 minutes. Jamel Dean made the first two picks — one on a deep pass intended for rookie Chris Olave at the goal line. Later, safety Mike Edwards returned an interception near the right sideline 68 yards for a touchdown to make it 20-3.

Brady finished 18 of 34 for 190 yards and the lone TD.

Winston, who had been limited in practice by a back injury, completed 25 of 40 passes for 236 yards and one late TD toss to Michael Thomas.

“Everyone in that locker room is playing with a banged-up something,” Winston said. “What is most important is offensively I have to do a better job of executing on third downs and I can’t give them the football.”

Tampa Bay didn’t score until Ryan Succop hit a 47-yard field goal with 3:09 left in the third quarter to tie it at 3.

The Saints (1-1) were threatening to retake the lead when safety Logan Ryan punched the ball free of running back Mark Ingram’s grasp at the Buccaneers 10, and linebacker Carl Nassib recovered.

“We were moving the ball well, going in to take control of the game. That just can’t happen,” Ingram said. “Whether it was a good punch, whether it was a rip, whatever it is, it doesn’t really matter.”

Wil Lutz’s 31-yard field goal on the game’s opening drive gave the Saints a lead that stood up throughout a first half in which Tampa Bay squandered two scoring chances.

Brady’s fumbled snap on third and short from the New Orleans 34 ended one drive. The Bucs also failed on a fourth-and-1 from the New Orleans 8 when Carl Granderson stuffed Fournette’s run.

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2022-09-19 02:38:37Z
1573858065

Kamis, 15 September 2022

Guerrero Jr. jumpstarts Blue Jays to win over Rays as slugger starts to turn corner - Sportsnet.ca

TORONTO — If you’ve been watching closely, the signs that Vladimir Guerrero Jr. is turning the corner after an extended cool spell have been there over the past week or so.

Check out this sampling of swings, beginning with a third-inning double Friday night at the Texas Rangers in which he turned around a 90.7 m.p.h. sinker from Dane Dunning and lined it 411 feet at 107.7 m.p.h. off the centre-field wall.

Here’s a fourth-inning base hit Saturday at 111.4 m.p.h. off a 92.9 m.p.h. sinker down and away from John King.

This is a first-inning double also ripped at 111.4 m.p.h. Sunday against a 92.4 m.p.h. cutter down and in from Martin Perez.

Finally, some deliverance for the Toronto Blue Jays slugger in Wednesday’s 5-1 victory over the Tampa Bay Rays when he turned on Drew Rasmussen’s 95.5 m.p.h. four-seamer and launched it 363 feet at 98.3 m.p.h. for career home run No. 100.

Notice a pattern?

Each swing did damage on a pitch in the bottom third of the strike zone, the area where opponents most often try to attack him and where contact regularly produces the groundballs that have become such a frequent talking point.

If Guerrero starts crushing there, well, good luck pitchers.

“He can hit any ball really hard,” said interim manager John Schneider. “Before he's a good power hitter, he's a really good hitter. It's just a matter of understanding what a team is doing to you and making the proper adjustments. He's got to see what their approach is. It was the same after the homer. But it's going to come with Vlad. He's that talented to where whether it's a line drive, on the ground or in the air, it's going to come.”

The homer was his first longball since Aug. 30 and second in the past 26 games, a span in which he’s batted .261/.303/.391. Not coincidentally, he’s been pitched down in the zone a whole lot, making it difficult to elevate the ball, which has led to some pressing, which has led to discussion about his swing decisions and all those groundballs.

Before the game, Schneider noted how when players are trying to make things happen at the plate, “those decisions get a little bit wider, if you will,” and that’s why he wanted to see Guerrero “take a walk and then swing at a hanging slider and hit it out, or hit it in the gap. That's where you kind of see that he's back.”

Of course, making opponents pay when they’re pitching him down is another path to forcing them up in the zone, where he may end up getting those hanging sliders and taking more walks.

“It all depends on the plan that the pitchers have and the plan that I have,” Guerrero said through interpreter Hector Lebron. “Sometimes you hit a homer and you think they're going to change the plan and then they continue to give you the same pitch.”

It’s clear that teams believe pitching him down is the way to go and with his groundball rate at 52 per cent, up nearly seven per cent from last season, opponents have contained him much better than a year ago.

Worth noting is that Guerrero is still among the 30 most productive hitters in the majors and the reason it feels like he’s having a down season is because of the heights he scaled a year ago.

Remember, if this is his floor, it’s a pretty damn elite floor.

At the same time, his MVP finalist 2021 season demonstrated just how high the ceiling is and it’s natural to think he’s going to live there on the regular. But opponents adjust, approaches change and the toll of wear-and-tear is different, which is why there’s variance in the performance of virtually all players from year-to-year.

Nothing is static in baseball.

“His natural path works well with four-seamers up in the zone and when it comes to hitting sinkers or down and in, you want to think more of an inside-out type of swing," said Blue Jays hitting coach Guillermo Martinez. “He works on that. That's something he worked on last year for the first time and that's how he was able to elevate a lot of balls. This year he's still worked at it, but for some reason he hasn't felt as comfortable with it. We really attacked it today and hopefully that's a sign of good things to come.”

Guerrero’s 28th homer of the season gave the Blue Jays (81-62) a 1-0 lead in the first inning and jumpstarted them to a third win over four outings versus the Rays (79-63) to remain atop the wild-card standings. The Seattle Mariners (80-62), 6-1 winners over San Diego, are a half-game back while Tampa Bay is now 1.5 games off the pace.

The all-star first baseman also brought home the game’s second run with a fielder’s choice in the second – on a slider belt-high but well off the plate – and Bichette immediately followed with an RBI single that made it 3-0. Santiago Espinal in the fourth and Raimel Tapia in the sixth added RBI singles that pushed the edge to 5-0.

With those two swings, Guerrero found a way to deliver some production on a night the Rays got no closer to the heart of the plate than the edges of the strike zone.

“Ideally you don't want to swing at their pitches. (Guerrero) knows if there's a guy that's throwing down and in on him, the job is to see it up and push him out and over,” said Martinez. “I always say that you have to understand the start of the pitch to understand that start of the swing. If it's a four-seamer, you want to get a little bit above it. If it's more of sinker, then you have to stay closed and stay inside it. When he's consistent doing that, he's very dangerous.”

The offence was plenty for Ross Stripling, who continued his remarkable season with another 6.1 innings of tremendous baseball, keeping the Rays under his thumb throughout. He allowed three hits, one of them a Harold Ramirez homer that opened the seventh, and left before facing nemesis Manuel Margot, who doubled in the second, a third time.

Stripling has now made 16 starts since taking Hyun Jin Ryu’s spot in the rotation, posting a 2.47 ERA in 87.1 innings, allowing only 12 walks and 65 hits with 73 strikeouts. He’s gone at least six innings in eight of those outings, including each of his past six starts, and if not for his emergence, the Blue Jays wouldn’t be charging toward the post-season right now.

“I’m proud of the way that I’ve competed and taken an opportunity and ran with it,” said Stripling. “I’ve done that in my career before, but this one feels a little bit more special – it’s the AL East, we're in a playoff run, the team really needed me when we lost Hyun Jin. Just happy that the coaching staff and front office gave me the runway to take off and then proud of myself for taking advantage of it.”

Guerrero, in his own way, is trying to do the same thing, faced with little to attack in his happy zones from stingy opposition pitchers. He conceded that he was anxious to hit homer No. 100, getting a little bit aggressive at times, and that when he connected, a feeling of “finally, I got it,” crossed his mind. “It feels great,” he added and it will only get better if this is an immediate springboard to many more.

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2022-09-15 02:24:00Z
1565208250

Selasa, 13 September 2022

"So unprofessional" - Tennis fans slam John McEnroe over US Open final commentary - TennisUpToDate.com

John McEnroe came under fire from tennis fans due to his 'biased' commentary of the US Open final between Alcaraz and Ruud.

McEnroe is a huge fan of Alcaraz and the way he plays the game which is widely known. However, tennis fans have taken an issue with his biased commentary which they pointed out on social media en masse. We bring you some of those comments below.

"John McEnroe’s clearly biased commentating is so unprofessional and such a turnoff. He needs to get his head out of Alcaraz’s ass. Alcaraz is a great player but John seems to forget that he also has an excellent opponent in this match. (His name is Ruud, BTW.)"

Pretty descriptive. How about this one:

"McEnroe stop calling the players “these young kids” challenge…impossible."

Or this one:

"John McEnroe is an *awful* commentator, an insufferable blowhard who adds few if any insights into his commentary, not current in how he thinks of the game, speaks in generalizations, has clear favorites in each match. Truly the worst."

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2022-09-13 08:58:00Z
1547729909