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Subban announces retirement from NHL at age 33 – TSN

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Former Montreal Canadiens and Nashville Predators start PK Subban announced his retirement from the NHL on Tuesday.

The 33-year-old scored five goals and had 22 points in 77 games last season with the New Jersey Devils as the team missed the playoffs. He made the announcement on social media.

“I remember my dreams of playing in the NHL and winning a Stanley Cup, similar to the guys on the Don Cherry Rock’em Sock’em tapes at the end of every volume, with the black eyes, broken bones, and tears of joy. To this day, I still dream about it,” Subban wrote in a post on Twitter and Instagram. “However, the end of this chapter is closing and after 13 years in the NHL, I have made the decision to retire.

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“I never looked at myself or ever felt I was “just a hockey player.” I always looked at myself as a person who happened to play hockey.  Having that perspective allowed me to enjoy every shift like it was my last, celebrate every goal with emotion, and play every game as if someone paid to watch me play who had never seen me play before.

“I want to thank my parents, Karl and Maria for literally being the best people I have ever met! I have been spoiled everyday with love and support from you, and I don’t know how to put into words how grateful I am for the sacrifices you guys have made for me. I’m so fortunate to have the best and most supportive brothers and sisters I could ask for.

“To all my fans that have supported me and continue to support me since the first day I stepped on to the ice, thank you! You picked me up when I was down, supported me through tough times and had my back through it all!

“To an amazing league that gave me the opportunity to compete at the highest level with some of the best athletes in the world. The NHL also provided me with a platform that allowed me to give back thru my charities. A sincere thank you to the many players that I either played with or competed against who brought out the best in me. A heartfelt appreciation to the Montreal Canadians, Nashville Predators and New Jersey Devils for each representing organizations with class and integrity.

“I look forward to the road ahead, and the many exciting opportunities to come. I’m excited to share what those are with you all when the time comes!

“With love, appreciation, and all the happiness I could ever hope for, P.K.”

Drafted in the second round (43rd overall) by the Canadiens at the 2007 NHL Draft, Subban won the Norris Trophy as the NHL’s best defenceman in 2013 and was on the NHL First All-Star Team in 2013 and 2015. After six seasons in La Belle Province, Subban was dealt in a blockbuster deal to the Nashville Predators in exchange for Shea Weber in June 2016. He was traded to the Devils in June 2019.

Internationally, Subban won back-to-back gold medals with Team Canada at the 2008 and 2009 World Junior Hockey Championships and won Olympic gold in 2014 in Sochi.

He is coming off an eight-year, $72 million deal with an average annual value of $9 million.

The Toronto native has 115 goals and 467 points in 834 career NHL games.

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Former CFL player, executive Lyle Bauer dead at age 65 – Winnipeg Free Press

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WINNIPEG – Lyle Bauer, a former CFL player and executive, has died. He was 65.

The Winnipeg Blue Bombers, the team Bauer played for and later served as CEO, announced Bauer’s death on its Instagram page Wednesday.

Bauer, a Saskatoon native, played his entire 10-year CFL career as an offensive with the Blue Bombers (1982-91). He was named the team’s top offensive lineman in 1988 and won three Grey Cups with the Blue Bombers (1984, 1988, 1990).

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Lyle Bauer in 2007, when he was CEO of the Winnipeg Blue Bombers. (Ken Gigliottie / Free press files)

Bauer, who played collegiately at Weber State in Utah, was inducted into the Blue Bombers Hall of Fame in 1998.

After retiring as a player, Bauer became Winnipeg’s assistant GM in 1992, a position he held for three seasons. He returned five years later in 2000 as team president/CEO with the franchise struggling financially.

Bauer helped the community-owned club regain its footing, on and off the field. During his front-office tenure, the Bombers reached the Grey Cup four times (1992-93, 2001, 2007).

Bauer helped create the Never Alone Foundation in 2004 after being diagnosed with throat cancer. The foundation assists cancer patients and their families in their battle with the disease.

“Lyle Bauer played a significant role for the Blue Bombers during his time with the club as a player, assistant general manager and team president,” Bombers president/CEO Wade Miller said in a statement. “He helped guide the team through some difficult challenges at the turn of the millennium and was a key component in the franchise’s rebirth in the early 2000s.

“Our thoughts and condolences go out to his family, his friends across the Canadian Football League and those he helped through the Never Alone Foundation.”

Bauer resigned from the Bombers on Dec. 17, 2009. In January 2010, the Calgary Stampeders announced the hiring of Bauer as their CEO and president.

Bauer remained with the Stampeders until January 2013.

John Hufnagel, Calgary’s special adviser, was a teammate of Bauer’s in Winnipeg and served as the Stampeders GM and head coach while Bauer was the franchise’s president.

“I greatly enjoyed working with Lyle, both as a teammate and in management,” Hufnagel said in a statement. “He was excellent in both roles and he was a great friend.

“On behalf of the Stampeders organization, I offer condolences to Lyle’s wife Heidi and their children as well as to all other members of his family and his many friends.”

CFL commissioner Randy Ambrosie called Bauer a “warrior.”


Lyle Bauer, a former CFL player and executive, has died. He was 65. The Winnipeg Blue Bombers, the team Bauer played for and later served as CEO, announced Bauer's death on its Instagram page. A Blue Bombers 1980s-style logo is unveiled at a press conference at Canada Inn Stadium in Winnipeg, Tuesday, April 24, 2012. THE CANADIAN PRESS/John Woods
Lyle Bauer, a former CFL player and executive, has died. He was 65. The Winnipeg Blue Bombers, the team Bauer played for and later served as CEO, announced Bauer’s death on its Instagram page. A Blue Bombers 1980s-style logo is unveiled at a press conference at Canada Inn Stadium in Winnipeg, Tuesday, April 24, 2012. THE CANADIAN PRESS/John Woods

“He grappled with opponents as a Winnipeg Blue Bomber o-lineman and fought for the franchise’s future as its president and CEO,” Ambrosie posted on X platform, formerly known as Twitter. “He worked in a similar role with the Calgary Stampeders and mounted his most courageous battle against cancer, as founder of the Never Alone Foundation.

“He was a deeply passionate man, who loved his community, his team, and, most of all, his family and friends, including many in the CFL. May he rest in peace.”

Leo Ezerins, executive director of the CFL Alumni Association, said Bauer was an important figure to the organization.

“He made the connections for us to the CFL league office in support of starting the CFLAA,” Ezerins said in a statement. “Over the years, through a partnership with the Never Alone Foundation, we worked together to raise awareness and funds for each of our organizations, which supported the CFLAA Support Fund.

“His absence will be deeply felt by all of us.”

The Never Alone Cancer Foundation echoed Ezerins’ sentiments.

“Lyle Bauer’s life was one of remarkable achievement and success,” the organization said in a statement. “Known not only for his illustrious football career but also for his profound dedication to founding the Never Alone Cancer Foundation.

“While his loss is deeply felt, Lyle’s memory will endure through the countless lives he touched and his unwavering commitment to community service.”

This report by The Canadian Press was first published May 1, 2024.

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Game 5 Analysis: Marner, Woll, and Knies keep the series alive for the Maple Leafs

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With their backs against the wall and without Auston Matthews, the Toronto Maple Leafs played their best game of the series in Game 5 and earned a series-extending 2-1 win. 

Mitch Marner played his best game of the series, leading a top line that was excellent all night long. John Tavares and Matthew Knies combined on the OT winner, while Joe Woll was game-savingly good in net, even on a night where Toronto generally won the territorial battle. In the process, the Leafs overcame the Matthews-sized hole in the lineup and another sharp game from Jeremy Swayman to send the series back to Toronto.

 

Turning Points

In a low-scoring game like Game 5, there aren’t too many flashpoint moments we can turn to that turned the game other than big saves made by the goalies. As a result, I’m going to do exactly that and use this section to talk about Joe Woll, whose performance in net kept the Leafs alive long enough to win it in OT. The goal he allowed in the first period was a tough luck bounce — trickling into the slot and right onto the stick of Trent Frederic, it was an incredibly tough shot for Woll to stop. I don’t fault him on it; it was a rough turnover and a poor bounce.

Woll was completely clean otherwise, making 27 saves on the evening. Your starting goalie needs to rise to the occasion in the biggest moments in the playoffs, and Woll did exactly that in his first start of the series. He wasn’t asked to do much in the first period, but the Leafs needed Woll’s prowess to deliver throughout the next 2.5 periods. In the second frame, Woll made a massive stop in tight on Jesper Boqvist, who got behind Morgan Rielly and received a perfect pass from Brad Marchand. Woll also stuck his toe out to get a piece of a fluttering shot to help kill off Boston’s lone power play of the game in the second period.

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The degree of difficulty increased into the third as the intensity of the game ramped up. Charlie Coyle and Marchand created a chance in tight, but Woll stood his ground and remained calm as Marchand’s shot fluttered wide. Later on, with the game still tied 1-1, Woll made the signature save of the night, extending his pad to deny Trent Frederic, who was in all alone. Frederic took it on his forehand, looking to tuck the puck far post, but Woll’s fluid extension held the post, and Frederic didn’t elevate the puck. That was Boston’s best look after the game was evened at one apiece. Woll’s save singlehandedly sent the game to OT.

That is when the true turning point arrived. The Bruins owned the first overtime shift and held the zone in the Toronto end, creating a chance for Charlie Coyle that required a good kick save from Woll. It wasn’t an A+, highlight-reel save like the one on Frederic in the third was, but it was an example of what Woll was so good at in this game: calm and composed, positional saves that limited second chances and kept providing the Leafs with opportunities to win it. This save in overtime was the one the Leafs needed to put them over the top.

 

When John Tavares drove the net around Matt Grzelyck, the puck kicked out to the far side with Jeremy Swayman down, and Matthew Knies flipped the puck into the yawning cage. All of this was possible because each one of the Woll saves was its own little turning point—pivotal plays needed to give the Leafs opportunities to crack the Swayman code and scratch out the necessary second goal. The Leafs don’t win this game without a sharp and steady Joseph Woll in net.

Notable Performances 

The biggest non-Joseph Woll story of this game is the play of the Leafs’ top line, consisting of Mitch MarnerTyler Bertuzzi, and Max Domi. Though Marner did not score a goal, he played his best game of the series by far, and that line cleaned up in the underlying numbers. Shot attempts were 23-12 in Toronto’s favor with those three on the ice, and from an eye-test perspective, Marner was as alive as we’ve seen him in the series. Bertuzzi and Domi looked as sharp next to #16 — as they had on the old line next to #34 — but Marner’s turnaround was the bigger deal. The Leafs need that version of Marner — buzzing around, confidently making passes as his line hems in the opposition — to keep going for (hopefully) the next two games of the series.

 

The line of John TavaresWilliam Nylander, and Matthew Knies was just as good, and they scored the big game-winning tally. I thought Nylander looked much closer to normal, sharper with the puck than he was in Game 4 as the night progressed. He still took a bad penalty — and I would’ve liked to see him cut around Swayman on his mini-break out of the box instead of going short-side (he hit the post) — but Nylander did have several sweet passes. One in the Boston zone to set up Joel Edmundson — for a shot that didn’t even come close to the net — could’ve been highlight-reel material if Edmundson was a better shooter. As for Tavares, you’ve gotta give him and Knies credit — it was the same combo that combined on the OT winner against Tampa in Game 6 last season. They’ve shown a bit of a clutch gene.

Unfortunately, as good as the top two lines were, the fourth line was up against it in the run of play. David Kämpf centering Connor Dewar and Ryan Reaves were underwater to the tune of two shot attempts for versus 11 against. It felt that those three were chasing the play around in their own end basically every time they were on the ice, and several of those big Woll saves came during fourth-line shifts. It feels like a lineup change could be in order for Game 6; something needs to change on this front, or it could sink Toronto in a future game of this series. Keefe shortened the bench to three lines and ran Dewar – Kampf – Jarnkrok instead of continuing to trot out this line-four combination.

With the Leafs badly in need of offense from the blue line, Jake McCabe scored a big goal, a point shot through traffic that reminded me of the goals that the Leafs scored on Andrei Vasilevskiy last year. They need to be taking more of those shots and play for rebounds against a goalie as dialed in as Swayman. Hopefully, McCabe’s goal will serve as visual evidence of that. He and Simon Benoit continue to hang in there against very difficult minutes — crucial parts of Toronto’s effort in this series. I thought McCabe was very solid and steady in this game, but Benoit was a little rockier, turning a puck over that led to Boston’s lone goal. Adjusting to playoff hockey has been a bit of a turbulent ride for the relatively-green Benoit (to no one’s surprise), as Boston’s forecheck pressure has been a lot for him to handle. It hasn’t been a death knell yet, but it’s something to keep an eye on moving forward.

 

Storylines for Game 6

1. Auston Matthews’ health. After three columns where William Nylander’s health was talking point #1, the health of Matthews is now the talking point for obvious reasons. It remains unclear what the ailment is — some sort of mix between illness and injury, it would appear — but it is obviously severe if it kept Matthews out of an elimination game. Can it be resolved before Game 6? The Leafs showed they could win without AM34 in Game 5, but it will be significantly harder to win two more against this Bruins team without him. The Leafs need Matthews back soon.

2. Home ice malaise. This storyline has become all too familiar for Leafs fans, with Toronto losing six straight home games in the playoffs. Their last win was Game 2 over Tampa Bay last season, a problem that has gone on far too long. While the players own some responsibility for it, it’s hard not to look at the scope of Sheldon Keefe’s tenure as Leafs head coach and not conclude that last change has become a liability for Keefe, who might be over-thinking and meddling to the point where it is disrupting the team’s rhythm.

Losing the way the Leafs have at home in the playoffs is unacceptable. Something needs to change, plain and simple. The players need to embrace the home crowd and not get too carried away off the energy, hunting reckless hits as we’ve seen in the past. Likewise, Keefe needs to ease off the steering wheel, stop hunting for matchups, and instead trust his lines. Leave the players in the hum of the game and let them do the talking on the ice. The players, for their part, need to embrace the simplified, lunch-pail approach they’ve displayed on the road — chipping pucks in behind the defense in the neutral zone and funneling pucks to the net with traffic, a formula that has led to success at TD Garden.

 

3. The goalie battle. The biggest change between Game 4 and Game 5 of this series came in the nets, with Joe Woll raising his game to match (and best) Jeremy Swayman. Obviously, Woll will go back in the crease for the Leafs and Swayman is very likely to stay there for Boston, but it remains up in the air whether Woll can replicate his Game 5 effort — And whether Swayman can remain this dominant, for that matter. The Leafs finally defeated Swayman in Game 5, their first win over him all season (regular season and playoffs), but they still only scored two goals. He sports a .952 in this series, and across the full season against the Leafs, Swayman has saved 211 of 221 shots for an almost unfathomable .955 SV%. He’s allowed 10 total goals in seven appearances against Toronto.

As much as we wonder, “Can Woll continue to match Swayman?” we should probably be asking, “At some point, the Leafs are going to have a breakthrough game against Swayman, right?”. Swayman is a damn good goalie, but no goalie can sustain a .955 over a large sample size. With each passing game, the sample size grows larger, and the probability that the Leafs will catch Swayman on an off night for once grows. Maybe Game 6 can be that off night.

4. Lineup configurations. It was a banner game for Toronto’s top six but not so much for the bottom six, which struggled mightily. Will Sheldon Keefe make a lineup change? If Auston Matthews returns, someone will have to come out of the lineup, and the obvious candidate would be Ryan Reaves, who hasn’t contributed much in recent games offensively and his turnover in Game 4 still stings. The fourth line needs to be freshened up after the dreadful effort in this one, so a change on that line makes the most sense.

 

Beyond the fourth line, though, there are other questions. Will the Leafs go back to a three-line spread attack if Matthews returns, after playing Nylander with Tavares and Knies — especially given the success Marner had with Domi and Bertuzzi? And if Matthews does not return, could we see someone like Noah Gregor draw in for Reeves anyway? I don’t anticipate any changes on defense after the way TJ Brodie played in his trial in Game 4, but maybe Keefe throws a curveball and plops Mark Giordano in. We shall see.

5. Bruins and the mind games. Despite the well-known playoff failures that have been deeply imbued in the psyche of the Leafs over the years, the demons of playoffs past are now in the heads of Boston as much as Toronto. The Bruins blew a 3-1 series lead to Florida last season, doing it in nearly the exact same way. The Panthers won G2 last year, lost both at home, then went into TD Garden and won Game 5 in OT to send it back home. The script is all too familiar for the Bruins, and the Leafs, as the underdog, can now play freely. The Bruins, on the other hand, may be liable to grip the sticks a little bit tighter and start to doubt themselves. The pressure is on one team now, and it’s not the Leafs for the first time in ages. We’ll see how those mind games and the pressure factors can affect Game 6.

 

 

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Maple Leafs star Auston Matthews misses must-win Game 5 against Bruins

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Auston Matthews was forced to watch with the Maple Leafs’ season on the line.

Battling an illness the better part of the last week, the three-time Maurice (Rocket) Richard Trophy winner as the NHL’s top goal-scorer made a brief appearance at Tuesday’s optional morning skate with Toronto down 3-1 to the Boston Bruins in the teams’ first-round playoff series.

There was hope Matthews would be able to suit up with the club facing elimination, but he didn’t take the ice for warm-ups at TD Garden for Game 5.

Leafs head coach Sheldon Keefe said after the morning session his best player was “working through things to try and make himself available.”

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Unfortunately for Toronto, he was unable to get there.

The 26-year-old centre had a monster Game 2 with a goal and two assists to help the Leafs even the series 1-1, but didn’t look like himself two nights later in a 4-2 loss.

Matthews, who led the NHL with the league’s first 69-goal regular season in almost three decades, then missed practice Friday for what the team initially called “maintenance.”

He was on the ice Saturday morning ahead of Game 4 and tried to give it a go before being pulled from the action by doctors in the second intermission as Toronto was pushed to the brink in a disappointing 3-1 defeat.

“Not one of those run-of-the-mill, everyday type of illnesses that sort of come and go,” Keefe said Sunday. “This one has lingered and the effects have lingered and gotten worse when he’s getting on the ice and asserting himself.

“We’ve just got to manage that and give him the time that he needs. We’re hopeful that it’ll turn.”

Keefe said Tuesday that Matthews was doing all he could to be out there with the group as it faced the daunting task of winning three straight against an opponent that had taken 10 of the teams’ last 11 meetings dating back to the 2022-23 season.

“I just look at the last couple of games [and] the way he’s given us everything that he’s got,” Keefe said. “This time of year, the players are going to do all that they can to get out there, and the medical team is going to do all that they can to make sure the players are available, while also making sure they’re taken care of.”

Keefe added medical professionals – not Matthews – would decide his Game 5 availability.

“Doctors make the call for the players and their best interests,” he said. “They won’t put anybody in harm’s way.”

The Leafs are 1-16 all-time when trailing a series 3-1, but Boston blew the same lead last season in the first round against the Florida Panthers.

This best-of-seven series began with roster questions on both sides.

Leafs star William Nylander’s status was unclear because of an undisclosed injury until he joined the fray in Game 4. The Bruins have been coy about their starting goaltender from the outset, but seem to have settled on Jeremy Swayman, who had won seven consecutive games against Toronto entering Tuesday.

Matthews became the first player since Mario Lemieux in 1995-96 to reach 69 goals, falling just one short of becoming the ninth in NHL history to hit 70.

Keefe was asked before Game 5 if there’s something other than an illness bothering his sniper.

He declined to provide any more information.

“I’ve already answered too many questions on the situation,” Keefe said. “We’ve been through this situation with [Nylander].

“Time of the year we’re not going to answer much else.”

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