Sunday, 31 December 2023

Former Raptors guard Goran Dragic retires after 15-year NBA career

MIAMI — Goran Dragic, a former All-Star guard with the Miami Heat and the leader of Slovenia’s team that won the EuroBasket championship in 2017, announced his retirement on Sunday.

Dragic spent 15 seasons in the NBA and played for seven teams — Phoenix, Houston, Chicago, Brooklyn, Milwaukee, Toronto and the Heat. He was part of the All-NBA team in 2013-14, the same season in which he was voted the league’s most-improved player, and made his lone All-Star appearance in 2018.

“I have lived my greatest dream and I am extremely grateful for the countless people in my life who have enabled me to play this long,” Dragic said. “It starts with my parents, Marinko and Mojca, my brother, Zoran, my kids, Mateo and Viktoria and their mother Maja, and the rest of my family who always allowed this passion of basketball to be a priority for me.”

Dragic intends to have a retirement celebration this summer in Ljubljana, Slovenia, likely after the Paris Olympics conclude. There are tentative plans to announce details of that celebration later this week.

The 37-year-old Dragic spoke often in recent years about what the 2017 EuroBasket win meant to him, especially considering that it is generally considered to be Slovenia’s finest moment in team sports. Dragic averaged 22.6 points and 5.1 assists in the nine games at that tournament and finished off the gold with 35 points in the title game win over rival Serbia, his father’s homeland. Slovenia is his mother’s homeland.

He became a national hero, receiving one of Slovenia’s highest civilian honours after that tournament, and was brought to tears by a gift of a jersey from the mother of one of his idols, the late star Drazen Petrovic.

“It was everything,” Dragic said.

A young guard on that 2017 Slovenia team that Dragic mentored: Dallas Mavericks star Luka Doncic.

“It was an amazing run for him,” Doncic said Saturday when word began to leak out of Europe that Dragic’s retirement announcement was imminent. “I’m just glad I know him, I’m glad I played with him and man, I learned a lot about him, especially about leadership in that tournament.”

Dragic was beloved in Miami, where he and his family continue to maintain homes. When he was a free agent in 2020, the Heat surprised Dragic with billboards in his native Slovenia, with slogans such as “Your second family is always with you.” That gesture, Dragic said, was deeply moving and led to him quickly re-signing with the Heat.

The left-handed Dragic was the 45th overall pick in the 2008 draft by San Antonio. He averaged 13.3 points and 4.7 assists in his career and averaged 20 points in a season twice — in 2013-14 with Phoenix, and 2016-17 with the Heat.

He helped Miami reach the NBA Finals in 2020, the season that ended in the bubble at Walt Disney World because of the COVID-19 pandemic. Dragic hurt his foot early in that series and appeared in only two games, an injury that seriously impacted Miami’s chances at a title.

“Can you do something for me?” he asked a reporter when that series against the Los Angeles Lakers ended, the Heat having lost in six games. “Tell the fans we really tried and I’m sorry. I really tried.”

Dragic thanked a long list of people for their involvement in his career, including David Stern and Adam Silver — the NBA’s two commissioners during his tenure — along with coaches, team executives and his agents Rade Filipovich and Bill Duffy.

“All good things come to an end but this dream of basketball will always be with me,” Dragic said.



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Bigger and better: Canucks’ defence undergoes huge transformation under Tocchet

VANCOUVER – In the 11 months since Rick Tocchet became head coach, the Vancouver Canucks have undergone a massive transformation on defence. They also have a bunch of new defencemen.

With Carson Soucy fully practising again Saturday and ready to return after missing seven weeks due to a cracked bone in his lower leg, the Canucks will soon ice one of the biggest blue lines in the National Hockey League. And this is even with their average size brought down by five-foot-10 Norris Trophy candidate Quinn Hughes.

Hughes and Tyler Myers are the only Vancouver defencemen who remain from the National Hockey League team Tocchet inherited last January.

General manager Patrik Allvin traded for defenceman Filip Hronek last March, signed unrestricted free agents Soucy and Ian Cole on July 1, and a month ago acquired six-foot-six Nikita Zadorov from the Calgary Flames.

It is not by accident that the Canucks have beefed up the blue line under Tocchet, who after a 4-3 loss to Vegas near the end of last season lauded the Golden Knights’ defence as the best in the NHL and a template for other teams.

“A big defence that can move the puck, and then jump up in the play,” Tocchet said last March. “I think the reason why (Vegas is) so good is their defence.”

And then as if to prove Tocchet’s point, the Golden Knights won the Stanley Cup with a defence that averaged six-foot-three and 216 pounds and further advanced the bigger-is-better blue-line movement that helped drive the Tampa Bay Lightning to two championships and three finals.

“History has shown, especially recent history, that having big guys on the back end seems to be a common denominator,” Myers, who is listed at six-foot-eight and 229 pounds, said after a second straight high-intensity practice at Rogers Arena. “But they’re also mobile and can make passes. It’s a matter of playing within our system, but I really like what we have on our D-corps right now and the size that we bring.

“I really like our size. I feel like our corps is hard to play against in that sense. But we also bring a lot of skill, especially with Huggy and Hronek. I think it’s a really good balance that we have going right now.”

The Canucks’ bottom four on defence – Myers, Cole, Zadorov and Soucy – are an imposing six-foot-five and 228 pounds on average, according to the NHL’s official (nudge, wink) roster listings. 

“Hrones and I are probably about the same size and after that, it’s just monsters,” depth defenceman Noah Juulsen said Saturday.

Given the chance to play while Soucy was out, Juulsen, six-foot-one and 201 pounds, has actually been Vancouver’s most physical defenceman, averaging 10 hits per 60 minutes of ice time. Recalled from the minors one month after Tocchet replaced Bruce Boudreau last season, Juulsen has proven over a small sample to be an NHL defenceman, and will likely be the Canucks’ seventh D-man when Soucy returns.

Factoring in the elite and dynamic top pairing of Hughes (5-10, 180) and Hronek (6-0, 190) the Canucks’ six-man defence will average six-foot-three and 213 pounds — remarkably close to the Golden Knights’ championship blue line in size.

Size, of course, is irrelevant if it can’t play. Actually, it’s detrimental when that’s the case. But the big bodies on Vancouver’s defence can all skate and make an outlet pass.

The Canucks are third in the NHL with 2.56 goals-against per game. And while a lot of that is due to the top-five goaltending of Thatcher Demko and Casey DeSmith, the team ranks 11th in shot-attempts-against per game at five-on-five, ninth in shots allowed and 11th in scoring chances surrendered. And Vancouver’s offence leads the league, scoring 3.78 times per game.

In an informal conversation with reporters after a recent practice, Tocchet indicated the Canucks fare even better within their own analytics data due to how they have prioritized protecting the front of its net and limiting cross-ice passes for the opposition.

In any case, a team that one year ago was inarguably one of the worst in the NHL defensively is now in the top third — and backed by elite goaltending.

“The narrative at the beginning of the season was, like, “Well, this team’s not very good and their defence is really thin,’” Cole said. “But I never thought that. I thought we had a really great group, and then we added Z (Zadorov), who’s been a good player for us. I think we have one of the stronger groups in the NHL in terms of just our ability to defend and also create a little bit offensively.

“I think it’s a really well-rounded, really solid group. Anytime you put good NHL hockey players together, six or seven or eight of us, and you also have good people and good personalities that can mesh in the right culture, and the right coaching staff, all of that goes into the recipe and you have every opportunity. . .  to become a really good group.

“In Pittsburgh when we won our second Cup (in 2017), Kris Letang didn’t play the second half of the year or the playoffs. We just had six really good NHL defencemen. We all just played a strong, really solid game and we won a Stanley Cup. So the thought that we need, you know, three or four All-Star defencemen, that’s not the case. We need to play really tight and really well within our system, and we need to rely on our forwards to help us, and we need to help them by getting the puck out of our end quickly. All these things feed off each other.”

Of the literal and figurative growth on the Canucks’ defence, Soucy said: “I think it’s just good players. We’ve brought in some guys that have pretty good experience — and in bigger roles and smaller roles. And I think we just have a good mix of guys who can bring it offensively. . .  coming from the bottom four, not always just Huggy and Fil. And then obviously those guys are just elite when they get going.”

Reminded Saturday of his comments from last spring about the Vegas defence, Tocchet said: “I mean, we’ve got some long defenceman. When Soucy gets back in the lineup, you look at our D and it’s very long and big. When you play a team in a seven-game kind of series, those are the teams that are hard to play against. So we’re trying to create that. But. . . you’ve still got to make plays, you’ve still got to protect the middle of the ice and stuff like that. We’re still not there yet, but we’re getting there.”

With Sunday off and another practice on Monday, the Canucks open their 2024 schedule Tuesday at home against the Ottawa Senators. If Soucy doesn’t play then, he’ll certainly return to the lineup during a seven-game road marathon that begins Thursday in St Louis.

“We all kind of like, you know, when there’s big defencemen that can skate,” Tocchet said. “I mean, if you can get those guys, get them. They’re hard to find, so it’s good that we have a bunch of those guys.”



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Senators’ Chabot set to return vs. Sabres after lower-body injury

Ottawa Senators defenceman Thomas Chabot confirmed to reporters ahead of the game against the Buffalo Sabres that he’s set to return after a month-long absence with a lower-body injury.

The 26-year-old only suited up for nine games this season after suffering a hand injury on Oct. 26, which kept him out until Dec. 01. This most recent stint on the long-term injured reserve came after sustaining a leg injury in a game against the Seattle Kraken on Dec. 2.

The Sainte-Marie, Que., native skated in a non-contact jersey on Dec. 30.

Coach Jacques Martin was asked about his potential return but said “I don’t know if he’s quite ready yet.”

In his limited ice time this season, Chabot has four assists and 20 blocked shots.

The Senators currently sit last in the Atlantic with a 13-18-0 record, good for 26 points.



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Saturday, 30 December 2023

Premier League roundup: Man City tops lowly Sheffield; Wolves dump Everton

MANCHESTER, England (AP) — Manchester City beat Sheffield United 2-0 and moved to within two points of English Premier League leader Liverpool on Saturday.

Goals from Rodri and Julian Alvarez at Etihad Stadium secured a comfortable win for the defending champions against the bottom-placed team.

Third-placed City moved ahead of Arsenal on goal difference and was behind Liverpool and Aston Villa. Villa was second on goal difference after beating Burnley 3-2.

While City has looked below its best at times this season, it has been able to stay in reach of the leaders. And with Kevin De Bruyne returning from a hamstring injury, manager Pep Guardiola can hope for improved performances in the new year.

They ended 2023 with back-to-back league wins after returning from Saudi Arabia and success in the Club World Cup last week. All five trophies won over the past 12 months — the Premier League, Champions League, FA Cup, European Super Cup and Club World Cup — were on show ahead of kickoff against Sheffield United.

That was a measure of the task for Chris Wilder’s relegation-fighting team. And the visitor never looked like causing an upset.

City dominated and Rodri struck in the 14th minute. The Spain midfielder collected a ball deep in Sheffield United’s half and drove forward to the edge of the box with no opposition player strong enough to stop him. He shot low into the corner beyond goalkeeper Wes Foderingham.

Despite controlling the game, City could not find a second before the break and it was Sheffield United which came close to a leveller.

William Osula looked set to beat Ederson from close range, but his effort was blocked by a late tackle from Manuel Akanji. From the resulting corner, Osula headed goalward and was denied by Ederson.

Phil Foden had a chance to double the lead early in second half when running through one-on-one with Foderingham, but the ball was pushed away by the keeper as he tried to take it round him.

When City got a second in the 61st, Foden was the creator, curling a cross for Alvarez to slide in and turn over the line.

One of the biggest cheers of the day came when De Bruyne emerged to warm up on the sideline. The Belgian hasn’t played since Aug. 11, the first league game, and was named as a substitute on Saturday.

Aston Villa 3, Burnley 2

In Birmingham, Douglas Luiz’s 89th-minute penalty sent Aston Villa past 10-man Burnley 3-2.

Villa looked set to drop points after twice taking the lead at Villa Park until Luiz’s late spot kick.

They moved up to second on the table and level on points with leader Liverpool, having played a game more.

The Midlands club has been the surprise of the season but has suffered over the Christmas holidays after drawing against bottom-placed Sheffield United and throwing away a two-goal lead in defeat to Manchester United.

Leon Bailey fired Villa in front in the 28th but that was cancelled out three minutes later by Zeki Amdouni.

Moussa Diaby finished in the 42nd to give the home team the lead at the break.

Burnley suffered a further setback when Sander Berge was sent off in the 56th, but Villa was frustrated again after Lyle Foster leveled in the 71st.

Then Aaron Ramsey’s foul on Jhon Duran in the box gave Villa the chance to take the lead for a third time. Luiz converted the penalty with a shot in off the bar.

It secured a 26th league win of 2023 for Unai Emery’s team, while Vincent Kompany’s Burnley remained second from bottom and five points from safety.

Chelsea 3, Luton 2

In Luton, Cole Palmer scored two goals and Chelsea survived a late fightback to beat Luton 3-2.

The England forward struck in each half at Kenilworth Road and provided the assist as Noni Madueke also got on the scoresheet.

But late goals from Ross Barkley and Elijah Adebayo set up a nervy finish for manager Mauricio Pochettino’s team as Luton threatened an unlikely comeback.

Chelsea has now won back-to-back games in the league for the first time since October, in what has been a troubled first season in charge for Pochettino. The win also ended a run of four straight defeats away from home.

Palmer has been a rare highlight for the London team since his move from Manchester City in the offseason.

He has now scored eight goals in 16 league games for Chelsea.

Adebayo made it 3-2 in the 87th to set up a tense finish although Chelsea held on.

Wolverhampton 3, Everton 0

In Wolverhampton, captain Max Kilman’s first goal in two years inspired Wolves to a dominant win over struggling Everton by 3-0.

The defender’s opener was followed by Matheus Cunha’s tap in and Craig Dawson’s strike at Molineux.

Wolves celebrated with teammate Mario Lemina’s shirt after the midfielder missed the game following the death of his father.

For the Toffees, their Christmas holidays decline continued. Four straight wins in December have been followed by three successive league defeats and a League Cup exit. They remain a point above the relegation zone after an insipid and powderpuff performance.

Wolves — with nine goals in their last three games — were unbeaten in eight games at home and earned a third straight league win for the first time in almost two years. Wolves remained 11th in an increasingly impressive season.

Crystal Palace 3, Brentford 1

In London, Michael Olise scored in each half as Crystal Palace ended its eight-game winless streak by overcoming Brentford 3-1 at a soggy Selhurst Park.

Palace bounced back from a sorry start to an afternoon that began with Keane Lewis-Potter’s opener for the Bees inside two minutes.

Olise ensured it was all square before the 15-minute mark and Eberechi Eze added another before the break. It was the first time Palace has scored more than one before halftime this season.

Neal Maupay came closest to clawing one back for the visitors, rattling the crossbar as the Bees staged a late surge, but Brentford slipped to a club-record fifth straight league defeat.

In his program notes, Palace manager Roy Hodgson expressed his “disappointment and frustration” at the fact he has “never had the opportunity” to work with a full squad this season.

The Eagles edged closer to full strength on Saturday, when forward Odsonne Edouard returned to the matchday squad and influential duo Olise and Eze started alongside each other for just the third time in this campaign.



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Quick Shifts: Maple Leafs’ options to solve their goaltending woes

A quick mix of the things we gleaned from the week of hockey, serious and less so, and rolling four lines deep. I resolve to stuff everything into this carry-on.

1. If we can agree that the Toronto Maple Leafs would be better off not playing Ilya Samsonov for a while, then we must put ourselves in Brad Treliving’s shoes and ask: What are the general manager’s options?

“I’m sure Tre is going to consider everything,” Leafs coach Sheldon Keefe said Friday night. “You’re already into your third goalie with Marty Jones here. Now you’re starting to get into our guys who are developing. Now you gotta think about them and putting them in positions to succeed and not derail their development that’s going well. At the same time, it’s the NHL.”

And thanks to their dynamic offence and some bonus points in overtime and shootouts, the Leafs are still a relevant NHL team — despite their 22nd-ranked goaltending (.892 team save percentage).

Treliving’s easiest but least appealing option is to do nothing: Simply ride the 33-year-old Jones, hold his nose through January’s trio of back-to-backs (Jan. 2-3, Jan. 13-14, Jan. 20-21), and hope that (a) Jones stays healthy, (b) that Joseph Woll returns healthy and in form sometime in February and (c) that, just maybe, a miracle pops up on the waiver wire.

“Back-to-back situations like we’re in right now, you’re gonna have to use both your guys. So, there’s times we’re gonna need Sammy,” Keefe said. “In between his starts, he’s going to have to continue to work and find himself. He’s a good goaltender. He’s a far better goalie than he’s played here this season.”

We don’t like that option.

The second easiest would be to either waive Samsonov to the farm (he’d clear) or get him to agree to an AHL conditioning stint with the Marlies.

Toronto could then recall a prospect the organization doesn’t want to rush: the more experienced Keith Petruzzelli, 24, is 4-3-1 with an .879 save percentage; and the more touted Dennis Hildeby, 22, is 7-5-2 with a .920 save percentage.

Door No. 3 requires looking for outside help.

Jaroslav Halak is a 38-year-old free agent backup who posted a .903 save percentage in the past two seasons with the Canucks and Rangers. He’s not up to speed, but he also won’t cost an asset.

A few middling NHL goaltenders could be had via trade. Names such as Jake Allen, Eric Comrie, Anton Forsberg and Dan Vladar — whom Treliving traded for and re-signed in Calgary — will pop up.

But with the Devils, Hurricanes and Oilers also poking around the goalie market, even the price for a replacement-level netminder is abnormally high right now.

The dream-scenario option would be Juuse Saros, who has another year on his Nashville contract at a $5-million cap hit, but the Predators are still in the hunt. And Saros would cost more than we believe Treliving is willing to spend. (What? A first-rounder plus Fraser Minten or Easton Cowan?)

Perhaps the best low-risk, low-investment option I heard is Louis Domingue.

The 31-year-old career backup was stellar this season in his one appearance for the New York Rangers, who are set with Igor Shesterkin and Jonathan Quick.

Domingue makes just $775,000 on an expiring deal and has been solid for AHL Hartford (8-2-2, .911).

Of course, the Rangers have Stanley Cup aspirations. They, too, are aware of the importance of goalie depth and won’t be in any rush to do a conference rival any favours.

2. A stray thought on the Samsonov fiasco but one that applies to a general NHL trend: Why are coaches so petrified of using the same goaltender on consecutive nights?

I understand that it’s uncomfortable to use the same guy on both ends of a back-to-back and that sports scientists can trot out data explaining that harms of wear and tear.

But at what point are you doing the rest of your team a disservice by sticking with a goalie who doesn’t have it? Because harming your group’s morale can’t be quantified on a spreadsheet, that means it doesn’t count?

When are you just shrugging and conceding points because, hey, only Martin Brodeur can play on consecutive nights?

Analytics are a wonderful tool, but breaking the pattern of the “smart” decision on occasion can awaken everyone’s attention.

3. The most valuable pending UFA of 2024 doesn’t even wear skates during the games.

Incredible that Carolina Hurricanes head coach Rod Brind’Amour has not signed an extension with his preferred franchise.

More incredible that Brind’Amour’s lack of job security has been such an under-discussed storyline this season. (Imagine how much noise there would be around his “lame duck” status if he worked in a Canadian market.)

Yes, Brind’Amour is the longest-tenured NHL coach to not guide his group to a Stanley Cup, but he has taken the Canes to two conference finals.

Carolina missed the playoffs nine straight springs before hiring Brind’Amour. Since, they’ve made the dance all five times and won seven post-season series. This, despite ownership not always spending to the cap.

Yes, Carolina is scuffling this season, but the 2021 Jack Adams winner still has his team in playoff position despite getting the worst goaltending in the whole league. (The Canes rank 32nd in team save percentage at .878.)

Aren’t bad goalies supposed to get coaches fired?

Owner Tom Dundon paid Brind’Amour less than market value during their previous negotiation, leveraging Brind’Amour’s love for Raleigh and its team to his advantage.

Brind’Amour knew it and accepted it. Money isn’t the only thing that buys happiness.

“I know it’s not going to be an easy negotiation. I can tell you that,” Brind’Amour told The David Glenn Show, heading into the final year of his agreement.

“At the end of the day, your salary is one area, but there’s a ton of other areas. There’s my relationship with my team and my owner and how we get to decide on who stays. I don’t know that any coach, in any sport, has what I have [with the Hurricanes], so that’s maybe priceless in some regard.”

While opposing GMs may dream of paying Brind’Amour what he deserves and acquiring such a respected motivator, there is mutual expectation that the sides will come to terms eventually.

“We are going to get it done, for sure,” Dundon told The Athletic‘s Pierre LeBrun on Sept. 25.

OK.

“I’d like to get it done if it’s going to get done, just because I don’t want to have the next [media] guy ask me the same question,” Brind’Amour told LeBrun. “The longer it goes on, everyone goes, ‘What’s going on here?’

“So, hopefully we get to it.”

Dundon is playing the hometown-discount card again, and he may well be financially prudent to do so.

But what theatre it would be if Brind’Amour — who banked an estimated $52.4 million as a player — decided he wanted his pay to match his worth.

4. Auston Matthews has scored 328 goals (244 even-strength, 53 game winners) through his first 513 games.

Alex Ovechkin scored 318 goals (210 even-strength, 53 game winners) through his first 513 games.

Yes, Matthews is outpacing the guy trying to catch Wayne Gretzky.

John Tavares, marveling at his teammate’s run of 15 goals over the past 11 games: “He’s just in one of those zones.”

5. What’s crazier?

That the Dallas Stars scored twice in the final 14 seconds of regulation to swipe two points from rival Nashville and give the Predators plenty to grieve about on Festivus?

Or that the Stars beat their own NHL record for the latest a team has scored a game-tying and go-ahead goal in regulation?

Back on Oct. 14, 1995, Mike Modano scored a tying goal at 59:44 and Guy Carbonneau potted the winner at 59:55 to upset the Boston Bruins. 

6. Kris Letang’s five assists in the second period, during Pittsburgh’s 7-0 thrashing of the Islanders Wednesday, marked the most points ever scored by a defenceman in a single NHL period.

Letang added a sixth assist, becoming the first road player do pick up six apples since Eric Lindros in 1997.

Just as wild: Letang became the first Penguin to record five points in a period. (Take that, Mario, Sid and Jaromir.) Only three other active players can lay claim to such a productive 20 minutes: Mika Zibanejad, Sam Gagner and Tage Thompson.

7. Some heart-warming holiday content, packaged with care by Sidney Crosby:

8. The “rookie wall” is a real phenomenon.

Be it NCAA grads, Canadian juniors or European pros making the leap to the show, no young player is fully prepared for the NHL’s 82-game gauntlet, with its relentless travel schedule and limited breath-catching breaks.

An assistant coach for years, Columbus bench boss Pascal Vincent has seen many a freshman lose energy around the all-star break.

Vincent is betting teenager Adam Fantilli can be an exception, however.

“Because of his maturity and he’s physically strong already,” Vincent said, “I don’t know if he’s going to hit that wall.”

To help the franchise’s prized centreman hurdle that wall, to ease the mental toll of the grind, Vincent tries to put Fantilli in positions to succeed. That means sheltering him from the opposition’s top line or throwing him out for offensive-zone draws.

We feel very fortunate to have him. Obviously, when you get those guys, it’s because your season wasn’t so good. But the bright side is, he’s one of us now. The young man is a powerful man as far as his physical abilities, but the one thing we don’t talk about enough is his mental strength,” Vincent said.

“He’s a very mature young man. Any he’s got this swagger. Like, he’s got this confidence — and not in the negative way whatsoever. He’s a very positive force, carrying this confidence that he can play at this level and be a difference-maker already. And he’s done it.

“He’s like a sponge — just really coachable. So, he’s a big component of our future and our present right now. He’s been adjusting really well.”

Fantilli himself said the nonstop travel has been the greatest challenge.

Ranked second in rookie scoring, Fantilli had a blast living with Patrik Laine for the first couple weeks and has gone for dinners with his more-seasoned teammates, picking the brains of the team’s veterans — Zach Werenski, Sean Kuraly, Erik Gudbranson — for advice on how to best take care of his body.

9. Good on Ethan Bear for earning a two-year contract (backloaded to the maximize his cash) with Washington so late in his unrestricted free agency.

Remember, UFAs must be under contract by the March 8 trade deadline to be eligible for playoff participation.

We’re looking at you, Phil Kessel and Zach Parise.

10. A role reversal has taken place on Broadway.

When New York Rangers defenceman Jacob Trouba entered the league as a Winnipeg Jets top-10 draft pick, Blake Wheeler ran the room in Manitoba.

Trouba’s the captain now. And Wheeler is the new guy, figuring out where he fits.

“He calls me ‘Skip’ now, which he never used to call me,” Trouba said, smiling. “‘Skipper.’ I guess like a baseball manager.”

Wheeler, 37, was slow to produce in his new threads but now has eight points in his past seven games.

He’s no longer getting the benefit of top-six minutes or prime power-play usage, but he is poised to finish on the plus side of the ledger for the first time in four seasons.

At $800,000, Winnipeg’s exiled leader is delivering fine value as a role player on a contender.

“As of most recent, I think this is the best that he’s played for us. His feet are moving. He’s generating offence; his line’s generating offence. He’s in on the forecheck. He’s playing physical. He’s a big body and seems to be hitting his stride a little bit,” Rangers coach Peter Laviolette said.

“Sometimes, it takes a minute when you change organizations. You’re trying to figure out where your seat is on the bus. And even if you’re an experienced player, like Blake, who’s been a captain of a team before, it’s still a new team. He’s come in here, and he’s figuring out his way to contribute.”

Trouba, 29, left Winnipeg four years before Wheeler, yet the two have always stayed in touch. Helps that both players’ wives are close friends, too. Naturally, Trouba was jacked when the Blueshirts grabbed Wheeler in free agency.

“I was excited. Really excited,” Trouba said. “I learned a lot from Blake. I had a lot to learn as a 19-, 20-year-old in Winnipeg, and he just looked out for me. I trained with him for a summer. He kinda spent a lot of time that he didn’t need to spend with me, and it’s kind of been fun to be with him on the other side.

“Our roles are little bit switched. I hope he’s enjoying it as much as I am. But it’s been fun to have him in New York and watch him enjoy the city.”

10. With Timothy Liljegren and now Mark Giordano healthy and back in action for the Maple Leafs, suddenly the club is carrying three D-men vying for one lineup spot: Simon Benoit, William Lagesson and Conor Timmins.

“We have options now,” Keefe said.

Benoit got first crack at that coveted 6D spot Friday, delivering with an aggressive performance and a willingness to drop the gloves with the taller, heavier, and more experienced Erik Gudbranson.

“That’s exactly what our group needed in the moment,” Leafs defenceman Morgan Rielly said.

“Sticks his nose into everything,” Keefe added. “He’s really impressed us. He’s come a long way, and I think he’s just going to continue to get better.”

Keefe is quick to praise the undrafted 25-year-old’s defensive instincts, competitive nature and coachability.

Benoit is a bargain at $775,000. He’s also a pending RFA with arbitration rights.

Considering Benoit’s age, Keefe’s appreciation for his game, and the Leafs only having three NHL D-men under contract for 2023-24, Toronto should consider extending him for third-pair money.

11. Something to watch, something to celebrate. (Because who doesn’t love goals?)

For the ninth consecutive season, the league-wide save percentage is riding a downward trend.

NHL goalies, as a collective, are operating at a save percentage of just .903 this season — the worst mark since netminders got punished to a .901 rate in 2005-06. Save rates hit a 60-year high in 2014-15 with .915 but have been gradually receding.

Why?

We asked a number of players and coaches, and plenty of theories were offered: expansion has weakened the goalie and defence pool; the hard cap has thrust underdeveloped goalies into the big leagues; the crackdown on goalie-pad size; the crackdown on defence infractions (cross-checking, holding, interference); increased skills training; stick technology improvement; rising power-play efficiencies; an increasing focus by coaches and analysts on the best way to score goals (i.e., more cross-seam passes and one-timers); and the rise of skill players and elimination of pure checkers in the bottom six.

Safe to say, plenty of factors are at play. It’ll be fascinating to see how low the average can go.

12. Proof that there is a Santa Claus … and that those goalie hugs aren’t just performative displays of affection:



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Former NHLer Nick Ritchie suspended eight games in Finnish league for punching opponent

Former Calgary Flames winger Nick Ritchie has been suspended eight games in the Finnish league after he repeatedly punched an opponent in the head while playing for Oulun Kärpät.

The incident happened as Ritchie was battling along the boards with his opponent, Markus Nurmi of HC TPS, before shoving him to the ice. Ritchie repeatedly punched Nurmi in the head, including after his helmet came off, and had to be halted by linesmen.

Ritchie has played 10 games for Kärpät this season and has a goal and four assists. He split last season between the Arizona Coyotes and Calgary Flames and had 26 points (13 goals and 13 assists) in 74 games. Ritchie was traded to Calgary at the deadline on March 3 in a move that sent his brother, Brett Ritchie, to Arizona.

The 27-year-old from Orangeville, Ont., was drafted in the first round, 10th overall, by the Anaheim Ducks in 2014. He has recorded 186 points (84 goals and 102 assists) in 481 games over eight seasons with the Ducks, Boston Bruins, Toronto Maple Leafs, Coyotes and Flames.



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Friday, 29 December 2023

Report: French goalie Hugo Lloris to join Los Angeles FC

One of the greatest goaltenders of our generation is coming to North America.

Longtime Tottenham Hotspur tender Hugo Lloris has verbally agreed to a permanent transfer to MLS’ Los Angeles FC, soccer insider Fabrizo Romano reported Friday.

Lloris’ transfer sees the 36-year-old veteran move across the pond to join the Western Conference Champions LAFC, who have made successive appearances in the MLS Finals.

The transfer will reportedly see Lloris sign a one-year contract with the MLS club that has an option to extend past the 2024 season.

The French keeper was a beloved player for Tottenham, as he spent the past 11 years with the club. The former Tottenham captain made 447 appearances for his club, finishing within the top 10 most appearances in club history.

His last appearance for Tottenham came in April 2023, before surrendering his captaincy to Heung-min Son in August. He continued to train with the club despite not being dressed for matchdays.

Lloris recently retired from International play, where he served as France’s most-capped player and captain, with 145 appearances. He led France two successive World Cup Finals, garnering a win in 2018.



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Thursday, 28 December 2023

Marc-Andre Fleury poised to pass Patrick Roy for second on NHL’s all-time wins list

Marc-André Fleury never dreamt of seeing his name alongside hockey’s goaltending greats. 

He just wanted to play. And play Fleury did, both on and off the ice. 

The kid from Sorel, Que., known for his competitive fire and infectious personality, including the odd well-timed prank on a teammate, adored Patrick Roy growing up. 

“Oh yeah,” Fleury said. “Big Montreal Canadiens fan.” 

Decades later, Fleury is poised to pass the four-time Stanley Cup champion for No. 2 on the NHL’s all-time wins list. 

He might have laughed off the notion all those years ago skating on the outdoor rinks northeast of Montreal, along with a colourful response. 

“Would have said you were (expletive) nuts … no way,” Fleury said back in the fall of eclipsing Roy’s 551 regular-season victories. “Never even thought I’d make it to the NHL.” 

Make it he did. Then he flourished. 

The last goalie taken first overall at the draft when the Pittsburgh Penguins selected him No. 1 in 2003, Fleury sits just one win shy of Roy. 

“Very fortunate to play this long and with many good teams,” said the 39-year-old Minnesota Wild netminder. 

The three-time Cup winner owns a record of 550-320-91 along with two ties in 998 career regular-season games.

And while Fleury, who could be playing out his final season, is on the brink of catching Roy, the top spot occupied by Martin Brodeur and his 691 victories remains secure. 

“So many years of consistency,” Fleury said of Quebec’s goalie giants. “They always found a way.”

In between Pittsburgh and Minnesota, Fleury also had a memorable stretch with the Vegas Golden Knights, leading the franchise to the Cup final in its expansion season before a brief stop with the Chicago Blackhawks. 

He left an impression at every stop. 

“One of the best guys I’ve ever met,” said Toronto Maple Leafs winger Ryan Reaves, who played with Fleury in Pittsburgh, Vegas and Minnesota. “So humble. Sometimes I wonder how I’m such good friends with him.” 

Vancouver Canucks head coach Rick Tocchet was with Fleury as an assistant when the Penguins won back-to-back Cups in 2016 and 2017. 

“One of my top players to be around,” Tocchet said. “Unreal human being.” 

Blackhawks defenceman Seth Jones said Fleury, who also won the Cup with Pittsburgh in 2009, left a mark during his half-season stint in the Windy City. 

“You hear stories of him lighting up a locker room, how hard of a worker he is,” Jones said. “To see it first-hand … natural-born leader.” 

The blueliner added the 2021 Vezina Trophy winner’s practice habits never wavered. 

“Never quit on a puck — second, third, fourth rebound — he’s fighting for it,” Jones said. “Just a competitor.” 

Wild forward Matt Boldy tried to not be star-struck when Fleury first arrived in Minnesota. 

“I’m not really like that where my jaw drops,” said the 22-year-old. “But that was a pretty cool moment.” 

Fleury also sits in high regard among opponents. 

“Pretty rare for a goalie to be a first-overall pick,” Toronto captain John Tavares said. “A lot of pressure. Amazing how well he handled it.” 

Fleury also endured tough times. He struggled in a couple series with the Penguins, and even lost the net to Matt Murray in the 2016 playoffs, but came back stronger. 

“Intense competitor, awesome guy off the ice,” Wild defenceman Alex Goligoski said. “He doesn’t care if he lets in four or five goals, as long as he wins. 

“And if he gives up one and has 50 saves, but we lose, he’s pissed.” 

Fleury has found himself behind Filip Gustavsson in Minnesota’s crease pecking order as he’s slowly inched towards Roy’s mark. 

Wild forward Frederick Gaudreau — a fellow Quebecer — said it’s been special to share space with a hero in both the game and their home province. 

“Born with that aura, that positive energy,” Gaudreau said. “I feel very grateful.” 

He added Fleury has offered fresh perspective simply by how he goes about his day. 

“Very important for professional athletes to keep your heart young,” Gaudreau said. “We started playing because it was fun to shoot or save a puck. It should stay that way. 

“There’s a business involved, but the core of everything should be always the fun.”

While Brodeur leads NHL’s all-time wins list, Roy is tops when it comes to playoff victories with 151. Brodeur is second with 113, followed by Fleury and Grant Fuhr, who both have 92.

“My main focus is always just trying to win that game,” Fleury said. “I always think about that first. 

“Whatever I can get afterwards, well, that’s pretty cool.” 

Those victories have piled up to the point where he’s on the cusp of claiming the No. 2 spot — and passing his childhood idol.



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USA’s Snuggerud completes first period hat trick to open up big lead over Switzerland



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Sabres place Tage Thompson on non-roster list, citing personal reasons

BUFFALO, N.Y. — Buffalo Sabres top-line centre Tage Thompson was placed on the team’s non-roster list because of personal reasons on Thursday.

Thompson did not play in Buffalo’s 4-1 loss to the Boston Bruins on Wednesday night. The team did not provide any other details on Thompson’s absence except to indicate he is expected to return for Buffalo’s home game against Columbus on Saturday.

Thompson’s nine goals are tied for fourth on the team, and he has 19 points in 26 games despite missing nine games with an injury to his left arm. The 26-year-old led the Sabres in scoring in each of the past two seasons, including a career-best 47 goals last year.



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Canucks’ Miller absence is unique, demonstrates emphasis on mental health

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