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Canucks Takeaways: Clock ticking for team to gel ahead of important season

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The Vancouver Canucks‘ finely-crafted plan to continue building confidence, momentum and a winning culture has hit a little snag: the team is now winless in four pre-season games.

The Canucks fell to 0-2-2 and have scored just five goals after a fairly dismal 4-0 loss Saturday in Seattle against the Kraken.

It’s only pre-season for the National Hockey League, but the Canucks have looked little like the team that was glorious in defeat last season, missing the playoffs despite finishing 32-15-10 under Bruce Boudreau after a December coaching coach.

After blowing a two-goal, third-period lead on Thursday when a spartan Kraken lineup rallied for a 4-3 overtime win at Rogers Arena, the Canucks just didn’t look competitive in Saturday’s rematch. They were outshot 11-4 in the first period – at one point, shot attempts were 18-4 – and made it to the final period trailing 1-0 only because goalie Thatcher Demko was easily the best Canuck.

He looked like the Demko of last season. Too much so.

The Canucks relied an extraordinary amount on him last year, and unless Demko was excellent, the team didn’t win. Boudreau has stated the importance of changing that this season, making it easier on their MVP. Demko was outstanding on Saturday and it still didn’t matter as the Kraken scored three third-period goals, two on needless turnovers and one into an empty-netter, to improve to 3-0 on home ice in the pre-season.

The second-year expansion team has outscored the Canucks, Edmonton Oilers and Calgary Flames 10-0 in Seattle.

Even with a lineup that included three NHL-calibre forward lines and five NHL defencemen, the Canucks looked slow and sloppy with the puck and were significantly outplayed by the Kraken, which outscored Vancouver 7-0 over four-plus periods. The Kraken finished 32 points behind the Canucks last season.

“We couldn’t handle their speed a little bit,” Boudreau said. “And consequently, they get the (scoring) opportunities. We’re going to get better, but it’s just not happening as quick as I’d like it to.”

The coach has three more pre-season games, starting Monday in Edmonton, to get his team together.

TURNOVER AND ITS OVER

Down 1-0 to start the third, Canucks defenceman Tyler Myers blindly reversed the puck to the Kraken behind his own net in the opening minute, which left defence partner Jack Rathbone in no-man’s land and allowed Yanni Gourde to bury an open shot from the low slot at 58 seconds.

Six minutes later, Vancouver blue-liner Tucker Poolman forced a pass that was intercepted, then fell while trying to turn 180 degrees in transition, gifting Gourde a breakaway that he finished with a short-side deke on Demko to make it 3-0 at 7:15.

That was terrible puck management by two veteran defencemen.

Myers, at least, did some positive things, finishing with four shots on net – three of them good scoring chances – and led his team with a shot-share of 60.7 per cent.

There was nothing redeeming about Poolman’s game. He had one hit and three blocks but was crushed territorially, finishing with a 25 per cent Corsi, and an expected-goals-for of 11.1 per cent. It’s encouraging that 10 days since training camp opened, Poolman remains healthy after missing all but four minutes of the final three months of last season due to neurological complications from migraines.

But not only does he still look nothing like a player worthy of the $10-million, four-year contract he was bestowed as a free agent before last season, he hasn’t looked like an NHL player so far.

MEANWHILE, BACK ON DEFENCE

While there has been a great deal of public focus and debate about what will/should happen at the top of the Canuck defence with Quinn Hughes experimenting on the right side, his off-side, there are guys other than Poolman genuinely battling for places in the bottom half.

Rathbone has been good since camp opened but had his quietest of three exhibition games on Saturday. Kyle Burroughs played a spirited game on Thursday, and veteran Luke Schenn countered with his own physicality on Saturday.

The robust right-shot blue-liner had two hits and a knockdown on his first shift and finished the game with four hits and three blocks. The Canucks weren’t hard to play against, but Schenn certainly was.

“My personal opinion is we need to have a little more poise with the puck in the D-zone,” Schenn said. “And when we don’t have the puck, we’re stick checking, we’re too soft.

“We need to figure out what hard-to-play-against means and what that feels like. That’s the only chance you have of winning in this league.”

No wonder general manager Patrik Allvin declared before the last trade deadline that Schenn was essential to his plans, given the player’s character and leadership qualities. It seems unlikely that Boudreau won’t feel the same way about Schenn and his lineup if the two-time Stanley Cup winner continues to play with this level of bite while leading by example.

THUMB UP AND THUMB DOWN

It was nice to see fourth-liner Dakota Joshua display his size and physicality for a second straight game, matching Schenn’s four hits. But until a couple of sustained offensive-zone shifts in the third period, he and experienced linemates Jason Dickinson and Curtis Lazar had negligible impact on momentum, let alone the score.

Like Joshua, Lazar was a tactical free-agent addition in July, signed from Boston to give the Canucks a more robust and legitimate fourth line that would be difficult to play against. Like their team at the moment, they have a ways to go.

POWERLESS PLAY

With the lineup they dressed, the Canucks should have been better. The same goes for their power play. But the ineffectiveness of the man-advantage units was a little more understandable because Vancouver went without Hughes, Elias Pettersson and Andrei Kuzmenko.

Those three players – the elite PP quarterback, the best player of the Canucks’ camp and pre-season, and the tantalizingly-skilled newcomer – contributed to a 2-for-5 performance in Thursday’s OT loss to the Kraken.

Without them, the first unit Saturday looked plodding and predictable. The Canucks had only two power plays, but they came nearly back-to-back late in the second period when the score was 1-0. The top unit, which included first-stringers J.T. Miller and Bo Horvat, failed during the first opportunity to even set up in the offensive zone. And on the second chance, they generated only a flubbed shot for Tanner Pearson. There was no sizzle or speed without Hughes, Pettersson and Kuzmenko.

THE VIEW FROM 20,000 FEET

Second-overall 2021 draft pick Matty Beniers scored the opening goal for the Kraken, beating Demko in the second period with a shot that appeared to clip the stick of Canuck defenceman Oliver Ekman-Larsson. During his 10-game (and nine-point) NHL cameo at the end of last season, Beniers, 19, was the most dangerous Seattle player when the Kraken played the Canucks.

Shane Wright, 18, the fourth-overall pick in July, was tough to spot in two pre-season games against the Canucks. He still projects to be a Trevor Linden-type player in the NHL. But Beniers could be Mike Modano. We’re just saying.

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Olympic champion Maggie Mac Neil announces retirement from swimming

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Olympic champion Maggie Mac Neil announced her retirement from swimming Thursday.

The gold medallist in the women’s 100-metre butterfly at Tokyo’s Summer Games in 2021 made the announcement in an Instagram post alongside a photo of her swimming as a child.

“The little girl above would have never dreamed this is where her love of swimming would take her,” Mac Neil wrote. “I am so grateful for all the memories, people, and places I have gotten to experience just through swimming.

“I’m excited to begin the next chapter of my life journey, as I embark on discovering who I am outside of swimming.”

The 24-year-old from London, Ont., earned a complete set of medals in Tokyo after helping relay teams to silver and bronze medals.

Mac Neil’s five gold medals at the 2023 Pan American Games in Santiago, Chile, were the most by a Canadian athlete at a single Pan Am Games.

She was fifth in butterfly and was a member of two women’s relay teams that finished fourth at the recent Olympic Games in Paris.

“Anyone who I crossed paths with never, ever told me I couldn’t achieve my goal of going to the Olympics,” Mac Neil wrote. “It’s still surreal to be able to say I’m a two-time Olympian.”

She completed her master’s degree in sport management at Louisiana State University this year.

Born in China and adopted by Dr. Susan McNair and Dr. Edward MacNeil, Mac Neil’s mother wanted her to take swimming lessons for safety reasons because of the family’s backyard pool.

Mac Neil’s 2017 diagnosis of sport-induced asthma — which can be triggered by the swimming staples of heat and chlorine — forced a switch from longer distances to sprints.

Mac Neil became Canada’s first world champion in the women’s 100-metre butterfly two years later.

The nearsighted Mac Neil, who doesn’t wear contacts or prescription goggles, has seen multiple times a meme of her squinting hard at the scoreboard in Tokyo as she tried to decipher her result.

“I like to think it helps because I can’t see where other people are and I’m able to focus on my own race,” Mac Neil said before the Olympic Games in Paris. “That was definitely the case in Tokyo.

“I got that meme sent to me at least three times in January even though it’s been three years since.”

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Sept. 26, 2024.

The Canadian Press. All rights reserved.

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Rourke: Lions need ‘sense of urgency’ entering final stretch of CFL season

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VANCOUVER – Quarterback Nathan Rourke says the B.C. Lions “have to have a sense of urgency” as they prepare for their final four games of the CFL season.

“There’s a lot of importance in these last four games,” Rourke said after practice this week. “We’ve got to get it going.”

The Lions (7-7) want to get back on track when they face the Hamilton Tiger-Cats (5-9) at B.C. Place Friday night. B.C. is coming off an embarrassing 33-17 loss at home to the Toronto Argonauts two weeks ago that left them in second place in the CFL West.

Across the country, a three-game winning streak has put the Tiger-Cats back in playoff contention in the East.

Defensive back Jamal Peters said the Ticats never stopped believing in themselves, even when they started the season with five losses.

“We kept the faith,” said Peters, who leads the team with four interceptions. “We kept believing in one another and kept working. We knew we wouldn’t ever be out of it.”

The Lions started the campaign 5-1 but are 2-6 in their last eight games. They head into the weekend two points behind the first-place Winnipeg Blue Bombers and one ahead of the Saskatchewan Roughriders.

After looking strong in beating Ottawa and Montreal by a combined score of 75-35, the Lions managed just 222 total yards against Toronto. Rourke was pulled after completing six of 12 passes for 110 yards and no touchdowns.

“We’re trying to piece it together ourselves,” Rourke said in trying to explain why the Lions can be ferocious one game, then kittens the next. “At the end of the day it comes down to being able to play a complete game.

“That’s what all the good teams around the league do. They are able to play four quarters and have their offence help their defence.”

Rourke is 2-3 in the five games he has played since returning to the CFL after failing to land a job in the NFL. The Canadian-born quarterback has completed 79 of 126 passes for 1,099 yards, four touchdowns and seven interceptions. In the last two games Rourke has no touchdown passes and has thrown three interceptions.

Coming out of a bye week, Rick Campbell, B.C.’s head coach and co-general manager wanted to stop any talk of a quarterback controversy in Vancouver by saying Rourke remains the Lions starter.

“I don’t want to create any confusion,” said Campbell. “Right now this is what we’re doing. I want there to be clarity and not a debate going on.”

Veteran Vernon Adams Jr. was an early candidate as the league’s outstanding player before sustaining an injury and the return of Rourke. Adams was four of seven for 75 yards, no touchdowns and threw an interception when replacing Rourke against the Argos.

For the season Adams has completed 171 of 266 passes for 2,544 yards, 14 touchdowns and seven interceptions.

“We can win with either one of these guys,” said Campbell. “We’re going to go with the continuity Nathan has been playing with the last several weeks. We think we have room to improve and grow.”

One reason for the Hamilton turnaround has been Chris Jones joining the team as a senior defensive assistant after being fired as Edmonton’s head coach and general manager.

In the 10 games before Jones arrived, Hamilton allowed an average 33.4 points a game and gave up 3.5 touchdowns. In the four he has been a coach, the Ticats have given up 26.5 points a game and allowed 2.25 touchdowns.

Quarterback Bo Levi Mitchell also leads the CFL with 4,044 passing yards (322 completions on 473 attempts) and 24 touchdowns.

Campbell knows Hamilton comes to the West Coast riding a wave of confidence.

“We always know we’re going to get their best shot,” he said. “Our job it to focus on us and make sure that they get our best shot.

“When they get our best shot, we’re pretty good. We need to direct all our energy and focus on ourselves.”

HAMILTON TIGER CATS (5-9) at B.C. Lions (7-7)

Friday, B.C. Place

ORANGE SHIRT DAY: The Lions celebrate their fourth consecutive Orange Shirt Day Game to pay respect to Canada’s National Day for Truth and Reconciliation. Players will wear special Orange Shirt Day warmup jerseys, which will be raffled off in support of the Orange Shirt Society and Indian Residential Schools Survivors’ Society (IRSSS).

HOMESTREACH: The Lions play three of their final games at home. After Friday they host Calgary Oct. 4 and Montreal Oct. 19 before finishing the season with a bye. B.C.’s lone road game is an Oct. 12 visit to Saskatchewan.

BYE BYE: The Lions are 4-2 in their last six games after a week’s rest.

DOING THE STREAK: Hamilton is looking for it’s first four-game win streak since 2022.

THREE-PEAT: Lions running back William Stanback needs just 41 yards to reach 1,000 for the third time in his career.

CLOSE ENCOUNTERS: The two teams have split their last six games at B.C. Place, with five of them decided in the final three minutes.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Sept. 26, 2024.

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Serbia-Albania joint bid with political history set to win hosting of soccer’s Under-21 Euros

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NYON, Switzerland (AP) — Serbia and Albania are set to co-host the men’s Under-21 European Championship in 2027 in a soccer project that aims to overcome political tensions.

UEFA said Thursday only the Serbia-Albania bid met a deadline this week to file detailed tournament plans. Belgium and Turkey had declared interest earlier in the bidding process scheduled to be decided at a Dec. 16 meeting of the UEFA executive committee.

The Serbian and Albanian soccer federations teamed up in May to plan organization of the 16-team tournament played every two years that needs eight stadiums to host 31 games.

Albania soccer federation leader Armand Duka, who is a UEFA vice president, told The Associated Press in May that “it’s a 100% football project” with “a very good political message that we can get across.”

Weeks later at the men’s European Championship held in Germany, historic tensions between the Balkan countries — which in soccer included a notorious drone incident at a Serbia-Albania game in 2014 — played out at separate games involving their senior teams.

An Albania player was banned for games by UEFA for using a megaphone to join fans in nationalist chants, including targeting Serbia, after a Euro 2024 game against Croatia. Fans of Albania and Croatia earlier joined in anti-Serb chants, leading UEFA to impose fines for discrimination.

UEFA also fined both the Albanian and Serbian federations in separate incidents at Euro 2024 for fans displaying politically motivated banners about neighboring Kosovo.

After historic tensions were heightened by the 1990s Balkans conflicts, in 2008 majority ethnic Albanians in Kosovo declared independence for the former Serbian province. Serbia refuses to recognize that independence and considers Kosovo the cradle of its statehood.

An Albanian fans group daubed red paint on the federation offices in May when the cooperation with Serbian soccer for the Under-21 Euros was announced.

“We did have a few negative reactions from fans, mainly, and some interest groups,” Duka said then, “but not from the Albania government.”

UEFA has shown broad support for Serbia and Albania under its president, Aleksander Ceferin, who is from Slovenia.

The next annual congress of UEFA’s 55 national federations is in the Serbian capital Belgrade on April 3, and an executive committee meeting in September 2025 will be held in Tirana, Albania.

___

AP soccer:

The Canadian Press. All rights reserved.

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