Wednesday, 2 October 2024

Utah HC send first-round pick Tij Iginla back to WHL’s Kelowna

The Utah Hockey Club are sending Tij Iginla back to the WHL’s Kelowna Rockets.

Iginla’s start to his first NHL training camp was delayed by a lower-body injury. He appeared in two pre-season games and recorded an assist while averaging 12:24 of ice time.

“I really like his skill set. He has good execution, he’s creative offensively. I think he was in a tough spot. He missed an important part of the camp where we were talking structure and all of it,” Utah head coach Andre Touringy told KSL Sports. “So, he had to jump in the action without having a lot of reps… for an 18-year-old guy who did not have a lot of reps in our structure, I liked his game.”

Iginla was selected by Utah at sixth overall in the 2024 NHL Draft making him the first draft pick in team history. He saw his stock rise in his draft year after scoring 47 goals and 84 points in 64 with Kelowna.



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Tuesday, 1 October 2024

‘Pinch me’: Why Steven Lorentz and the Maple Leafs are a good mix

TORONTO — You can fill that sucker with all the Clamato and vodka and Worcestershire sauce and celery sticks the party can handle. But you cannot edge the Stanley Cup with lemon and spices to complete the championship Caesar experience, it turns out.

The keepers won’t allow it. That’s where they draw the line.

“I asked if we could put, like, the rimmer on it. They said, ‘No, you can’t rim the Cup,’ ” says a smiling Steven Lorentz, who may not have stopped smiling since his final night as a Florida Panther.

“It’s a sacred trophy.”

These are the things you learn when you become a champion and spend a summer day with the world’s greatest drinking vessel and, for the Kitchener-Waterloo native, early Oktoberfest centrepiece.

“I got some German roots. So, we ate sausage and sauerkraut out of it,” Lorentz adds.

Just an hour’s drive west from his hopeful new NHL home, the depth forward grinded through his 16-hour day with Lord Stanley, spreading joy to the cancer ward of the children’s hospital, where he knows current and former patients; hitting up his local gym to prove what training can bring; welcoming the town to his boyhood Waterloo rink, RIM Park, for a few hours; then guzzling rim-free libations from a 34-pound chalice till midnight with friends and family in his fiancée’s backyard.

“You feel it in your back at the end of it,” Lorentz admits during a training-camp chat outside the Toronto Maple Leafs‘ practice facility, where he’s been striving to make the opening night roster.

“The Cup’s heavy. Like, you’re using your knee to throw it up. It was quite the day. But it’s worth being sore for a week after lifting it all day and giving people drinks out of it.”

Lorentz, 28, is easygoing, chatty, and instantly likeable. He’s an affable conversationalist seemingly free of the nerves one might expect from a seventh-round pick and fringe fourth-liner playing hockey without a contract.

If there is a juxtaposition bubbling here, that’s because Lorentz has been living one since the horn sounded on Game 7.

Lorentz — an eight-season pro, three-league, six-team journeyman — can’t describe what it feels like to win the Cup, but that doesn’t prevent him from attempting. It’s all a blur, he says, yet he remembers “that night clear as day.”

Most indelible are the faces in crowding the Cats’ locker room as beer sprayed like Champagne and hugs flowed like wine.

“Not just the players, but the family and friends that come in, and the management and their families and stuff. It just shows you how many people it takes to do something like that,” Lorentz marvels.

“And we wouldn’t be there without any of them. All those people in that room, they did their fair share to get the job done. So, it would be quite special to do something like that in this city here.”

Yes, Lorentz had other offers. He could have signed elsewhere for more money and better security in free agency. But the Ontario-born dreamer took a flyer — a PTO with a cap-tight, winger-heavy roster — for a chance to repeat.

This time with the team he grew up worshipping as a kid westbound on the 401.

On Day 1 of camp, Lorentz obtained a photo of himself in a Maple Leafs sweater and fired it off to his father, Mark.

“My God, that’s just too cool,” Dad responded.

“I’ve never worn blue and white in my life,” Lorentz goes on. “I’m looking in the mirror like… pinch me. You know, I had my Sundin jersey, I had my Curtis Joseph jersey, all that stuff growing up. And now my jersey’s got LORENTZ on it. So, it’s pretty special.”

If Lorentz sounds like a man who’s making the cut, that’s because we suspect he will.

Despite suffering a minor upper-body ailment in the first week of camp, the six-foot-four, 216-pounder has been practising as a mainstay on centre David Kämpf’s fourth unit, and GM Brad Treliving is very targeted with his PTOs. (Noah Gregor was essentially a sure thing last fall, and Max Pacioretty’s agent has already made it public that a contract is forthcoming.)

The message Lorentz received upon accepting the invite: Don’t change a thing.

So, he’s been commuting daily from his folks’ place in Waterloo to camp in Etobicoke with the goal of flipping his autumn audition into a Toronto winter home of his own.

“It’s not always about taking the best players, but taking the right players,” Lorentz says.

“To build a winning team, seeing what I saw last year, it’s guys that bring what they do best, and it’s not trying to go and do too much. You know, I’m not going to go out there and try to score 50 goals this year. We got guys on the roster that can do stuff like that.”

What Lorentz vows to do is whatever coach Craig Berube asks. He already has a firm grasp of what that’ll be.

“Check hard. Play defence. Be good on the penalty kill. And just bring that energy. That’s what I’ve been doing, and that’s how I’ve had success in my NHL career so far,” Lorentz says.

“The simpler I play, the better. Just fly under the radar and do the right things on both sides of the puck.”

Within 15 hours after the Panthers wrapped their championship parade down A1A (Beachfront Avenue!), half a dozen of them were free agents, scattering like seashells.

Another paradox: Just as Lorentz became bonded for life with his teammates, they were no longer together (Maple Leafs signee Oliver Ekman-Larsson notwithstanding).

“We knew it was coming. It’s just tough, because you don’t really get a lot of time to think about those pending free agents, where you’re going to be next year. It’s a lot of thought that goes into it, like families and stuff. So, it was weird,” Lorentz says. Another smile: “But we’re all happy. We’re all still champions, right? Can’t take that from us.”

Lorentz reveals that “a bunch of teams” expressed interest in signing the speedy left shot to improve their PK and help tilt the ice on D-zone starts.

However, after doing his homework on the Leafs’ culture and coaching staff, touring the Ford Performance Centre, and speaking with Berube and Treliving, the player’s choice became clear. Geography and the romance of playing for the laundry he used to cheer for didn’t hurt.

“I’m not a guy who’s just going to jump on the first offer and the most amount of money. I want to be in the right spot, a team that I believe is going to do well,” Lorentz says.

“I thought for a few years now that my game could kind of suit well in this system, especially with the top-level talent in the top lines. I thought I could come in and use my size and my speed and carve out an identity in the bottom six.

“Just watching this team over the years, it’s frustrating seeing the potential they have and then it just seems like they come up short. Which is unfortunate, because there’s a little kid in me that still wants them to do well and hoist that Cup, right? So, it was a no-brainer when I came down here at the end of summer and did a little walk through the facilities.”

On Lorentz’s right quadriceps walking through Leafs HQ is tattooed an outline of the Stanley Cup — a forever reminder of the 2024 glory, the indelible blur, and the most delicious Caesar in Waterloo (lack of rimmer be damned).

Lorentz is quick to joke that he has two legs for a reason.

Yet before he and the Maple Leafs can begin sketching plans for the blank canvas that is his left quad, Lorentz needs to put that ink on a new contract.



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Watch Live: The Fan Hockey Show debut

Matt Marchese and Mike Futa host The Fan Hockey Show, daily from noon to 2 p.m. ET on Sportsnet 590 The Fan and Sportsnet 360.



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Raptors’ Scottie Barnes excused from start of camp due to personal reasons

Toronto Raptors star Scottie Barnes will be away from the team to start training camp.

According to the Raptors on Tuesday, Barnes did not travel with the team to Montreal due to personal reasons.

However, he is expected to join the team later in the week.

The 23-year-old attended media day Monday in Toronto.

Barnes averaged 19.9 points, 6.0 assists and 8.2 rebounds over 60 games last season.

He enters this season in the final year of his rookie deal, with a five-year, $224-million contract he signed in July set to begin in the 2025-26 season.



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Cyle Larin slowly warming up with first La Liga goal since May



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Monday, 30 September 2024

Six to watch in the American League wild-card series

A.J. Hinch is back in the post-season and back in Houston and even though it’s with the Detroit Tigers and not the Astros, well, let’s get the garbage-can-banging jokes out of the way right now, shall we?

Hinch has managed the hell out of the 2024 Tigers. His ace and Game 1 starter just won the American League Triple Crown but the pitcher who would have been his nominal No. 2 was traded at the trade deadline. No problem: Hinch’s team rolled with Keider Montero, a whole lot of wishful thinking and a sturdy bullpen. The Tigers will open a best-of-three series at Minute Maid Park on Tuesday after a regular season in which they had the most relief innings pitched in the majors (55 innings more than the runners-up Chicago White Sox but for oh-so different reasons) and the second-most pinch-hit appearances.

Hinch’s fingerprints are all over his team, just as they were all over the Astros scandal in a buck-stops-here kind of way

Hinch, of course, was suspended for a year in November, 2019 (and fired on the same day) as part of a series of disciplinary decisions resulting from the Astros’ sign-stealing scandal. Hinch had managed the Astros since 2015, leading them to two World Series, including the franchise’s first win in 2017. Other than Astros general manager Jeff Luhnow, who was also fired and now owns baseball teams in Mexico and Spain, you can make the case that Hinch lost more than anyone involved in the scandal.

Other than getting booed on the road and nasty looks from their peers, the players skated by in return for cooperating with the commissioner’s office — under the protection of the Major League Baseball Players Association. Shoot, even Hinch’s bench coach, Alex Cora, had already won a World Series with the Boston Red Sox when his retroactive suspension came down. He was fired and rehired a year later and signed a three-year, $21-million extension this season.

Hinch did great one fortuitous break: he lost out to the ghost of Tony La Russa Jr., when White Sox owner Jerry Reinsdorf interceded in his teams managerial search in 2021. Apparently, Hinch wasn’t old school enough for Reinsdorf.

The Astros have made the post-season eight consecutive seasons and have played in seven consecutive AL Championship Series, but this will be only the second time they’ve had to do so through a wild-card series. They beat the Minnesota Twins 2-0 in 2020, took down the Oakland Athletics in four games before losing the ALCS to the Tampa Bay Rays in seven games.

If the Tigers and Astros both dropped the hammer to seize post-season berths, the exact opposite can be said of the teams the Baltimore Orioles/Kansas City Royals series. Both limped in — between Aug. 28 and Sept. 22, the Royals had two separate seven-game losing streaks — but the series will feature several of MLB’s brightest young stars, including the likes of Gunnar Henderson, Colton Cowser, Cole Ragans and transcendent Bobby Witt Jr. Considering the Orioles’ evisceration last season when they were swept out of their AL Division Series in three games by the Texas Rangers, somebody’s post-season pedigree is about to begin being made.

Here, then, are Six To Watch in the AL wild-card series:

Zach Eflin, SP, Orioles: Corbin Burnes’ acquisition before the start of the season addressed the issue of who would be the Orioles ace and, by extension, Game 1 starter in any post-season series. Which brings us to Eflin, who will take MLB’s second-best walks-per-nine-innings into an expected Game 2 start. Eflin isn’t Tarik Skubal — who was the topic of trade talks between the Orioles and Tigers at the deadline — but considering the loss of Grayson Rodriguez since July 31 with lat/teres discomfort, general manager Mike Elias’ acquisition on July 26 of Eflin from the Tampa Bay Rays for three minor leaguers looks prescient.

You wonder about the five walks Eflin issued in his last start — against the New York Yankees — after allowing just 19 bases-on-balls in his previous 27 starts. He has also given up five HRs in his last four starts. And Eflin was just so-so in a post-season start for the Rays last season after turning in strong strong relief work for the 2022 Philadelphia Phillies. But with Game 1 a toss-up at the very, very best in terms of starters, Eflin’s ability to keep things in order in Game 2 could be vital for a team with a bullpen that has been third-worst in ERA since the All-Star Break.

Lucas Erceg, RP, Royals: The last time the Royals were in the post-season was 2015, when they won the World Series a year after losing in the Fall Classic. One of the trademarks of those teams was a lock-down, three-headed back end of the bullpen built around Greg Holland, Wade Davis and Kelvin Herrera. That trio was so dominant that when Holland missed the 2015 playoffs, Davis assumed the closer’s role without a hiccup. This season, the bullpen has been a point of concern, yet they’d gone 27 2/3 innings without allowing an earned run until Travis d’Arnaud’s walk-off HR on Saturday.

The Royals bullpen has pitched to an ERA of 2.00 down the stretch, second only to the Cleveland Guardians. Erceg — acquired at the deadline from the Oakland Athletics — has emerged as the closer, recording 11 saves and holding opponents to a .194 average while striking out 31 and walking three over 25 innings, and posting a 0.84 WHIP. Given some of the concerns surrounding the Orioles bullpen, this could be an area where the Royals have a quiet edge.

• Tarik Skubal, SP, Tigers: I mean, let’s save the over-thinking for subsequent rounds, shall we? The consensus AL Cy Young favourite, Skubal spent most of the first half of 2024 hearing he was likely going to be traded to a — quote — “contender” at the deadline. He’s with a contender, all right. Skubal’s quality of stuff allows him to dominate hitters in the zone and he isn’t picky: he’s given up three extra-base hits (one home run) in 89 plate appearances by cleanup hitters, striking out 24 and walking four. That’s just a sample of his dominance.

Beyond the stuff and numbers, though, you can make the case that no other starting pitcher in this post-season carries as much weight on their shoulders: Hinch’s aggressive bullpen use depends on his only bona fide starter going really deep in Game 1. A blip in a short series would be deadly.

Kyle Tucker, OF, Astros: Yordan Alvarez’s status for the wild-card series was up in the air as late as Sunday, and even if his sprained knee is deemed fit, it stands to reason that in the very least he will be compromised. Chas McCormick, meanwhile, is rehabilitating from a fractured hand. The Astros also have questions around Justin Verlander and the bullpen — especially closer Josh Hader — is wobbly. And with there being a real sense that Alex Bregman’s imminent free-agent departure will pull away another thread from a team that is as close to dynastic as any in recent years— man, Kyle Tucker could write himself large after a couple of so-so post-seasons. Tucker, who is eligible for free agency after next season, has been on a tear since being reinstated from the Injured List, batting .365 with two doubles, four homers, nine RBI and a 1.041 OPS.

Adley Rutschman, C, Orioles: By dint of personality and the degree of respect he has in the Orioles clubhouse, there is something that has been Jeter-esque about Rutschman since he broke into the Major Leagues. And while it might seem unfair to say it is time for the Orioles to lay down a post-season marker … well, it’s time for the Orioles to lay down a post-season marker. Just ask Bo and Vladdy how quickly a window of opportunity gets snuffed out. Rutschman has had a difficult second half, hitting just .211 and at one point suffering through a career-high 22-game homerless streak. His slug at Camden Yards? Gone. Disappeared. He has had six multi-RBI games since the All-Star Break, albeit three in the last 15 games and since July 7 is flirting with .200 average against lefty pitching. (Hello there, Cole Ragans.) After a 1-for-12 outing in his first taste of post-season play in 2023 … well, again: it’s time.

• Bobby Witt Jr., SS, Royals: The AL’s Most Valuable Player (Non-Aaron Judge Division) will make his post-season debut in the first year of an 11-year, $288.8-million contract after a regular season in which he became the first player since Mookie Betts (2018) to lead the Majors in batting average during a 30-homer/30-steal season. His 210 hits are the most by a shortstop since Derek Jeter led MLB with 216 hits in 2012. No other player in history has posted multiple 30/30 seasons within his first three big league campaigns. So, he’s good. Given the uncertainty surrounding Vinnie Pasquantino’s health and Salvador Perez’s sudden loss of slug, there’s even more riding on his shoulders

JEFF BLAIR’S PREDICTIONS
• Astros defeat Tigers, 2-1
• Orioles defeat Royals, 2-1



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Sunday, 29 September 2024

NHL fines Canadiens defenceman Arber Xhekaj $3,385 for unsportsmanlike conduct

The NHL has fined Montreal Canadiens defenceman Arber Xhekaj $3,385.42 for unsportsmanlike conduct in Saturday’s game against the Toronto Maple Leafs.

The NHL’s Department of Player Safety announced the fine on Sunday, after Xhekaj was assessed 17 minutes in penalties and a game misconduct for going after Toronto’s Cédric Paré in the first period.

The amount is the maximum allowed under the collective bargaining agreement the league has with the players.

The penalties came after Canadiens winger Patrik Laine was injured in a collision with Paré less than four minutes in the game. Laine drove across the Toronto blue line toward Paré and their knees collided, sending the Finnish sniper down in a heap.

No penalty was called on the play.

Less than a minute later, Xhekaj was on the ice and began pursuing Paré to engage him in a fight. When the Toronto forward refused to engage, Xhekaj began punching him in the back of the head as he fell to the ice.

Xhekaj was assessed five minutes for fighting, two minutes for being the instigator, a 10-minute misconduct and a game misconduct.

Paré was not assessed a penalty.

The play drew comparisons to the Todd Bertuzzi-Steve Moore incident from 2004. Bertuzzi, seeking retribution from Moore for a hit on Canucks teammate Markus Naslund, attempted to engage Colorado’s Moore in a fight. When Moore would not, Bertuzzi began throwing punches anyway, knocking the Avalanche forward unconscious with a blow to the side of the head. In the ensuing melee, Bertuzzi and several other players wound up on top of Moore, who suffered three fractured vertebrae in his neck, in addition to a concussion and facial lacerations.

Moore never played pro hockey again, while Bertuzzi was eventually charged with assault causing bodily harm. Bertuzzi eventually pled guilty in a plea bargain that provided him with a conditional discharge.

In 2014, an out-of-court settlement was reached in a lawsuit Moore had launched against Bertuzzi. The details of that agreement are confidential. Moore had been asking for $68 million in damages prior to settlement.



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Anaheim Ducks Team Preview: Can they get into the playoff race?

It’s been seven years since the Anaheim Ducks last made the playoffs, but the 2024-25 season can be looked back on as one in which the team...