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Edmonton Oilers rewarded for patient game with a 3-2 OT win in Detroit, win 9 straight

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Edmonton won their franchise-tying 9th consecutive win on Thursday with a 3-2 overtime win in The Motor City.

The Edmonton Oilers dominated the Detroit Red Wings on Thursday, out shooting the wings 47-17 in a patient performance. The only things that kept the Red Wings in this one was luck, some favorable calls (and non-calls) and the superlative goaltending of Detroit’s Alex Lyon. Lyon was quite righty awarded the game’s 1st Star.

After ensuring a plodding 15-minute review that took a goal away on Tuesday, it took the league seconds to ignore goaltender interference on Detroit’s 1-0. Then, the zebras waived off Evander Kane’s would-be winner for a hand-pass.

The NHL apparently had no recourse for Darnell Nurse’s OT winner.

Here is the tale of the tape…

CALVIN PICKARD. 7. Sharp early save on Fischer and then batted the rebound away himself. Good stop in close on Larkin a couple shifts later. Then after a long stretch with no shots steered aside a Kane shot with his stick at the 2nd of the 1st Frame. Cleaned up a bouncing puck that had eaten up Darnell Nurse with a high blocker save. A fine stop on Fisher. Double stops on Raymond to start the 3rd. Beaten on the 1-0 by a point shot which featured a clip of his glove in front which the NHL did not see fit to rule as Goalie Interference. Got a glove on a shot that subsequently rang off both posts and out. It would have been 2-0 Detroit at that juncture. Unlucky on the 2-2, a wild deflection off Nurse’s shin. You will take this from your organizational #3 netminder every day of the week and twice on Sundays.

CONNOR McDAVID. 7. Knocked David Perron off his feet with a hard hit in the 1st. A fine backcheck disrupted a Red Wings sortie. Dangerous shot on the first PP. Fed Hyman for a good late 1st Period chance. Sprung Hyman for a near-break in the 2nd frame. Could not stuff home a pretty back-hand pass by Leon, nore a good pass by Bouchard. Tied the game at 1 by grabbing a loose puck at the blueline, beating 3 Red Wings and then their goalie, with a nifty forehand back-hand tuck. Career point 906 ties him with Glenn Anderson for 5th in the franchise all-time. 2 hits, 7 shots. 53% on draws. 5v5 CF 35-15, 70%.

RYAN NUGENT-HOPKINS. 7. Solid work on the wall which led to an excellent Hyman chance in the 1st. Very nearly batted home a deflection after a hard play by Hyman behind the goal line. Helped win a critical zone clear on the PK after the failed Coach’s Challenge. Won a battle in front that enabled him to putt a pass back to Hyman for the 2-1. Fine work on the PK. +3. Playing some of his very best hockey.

ZACH HYMAN. 8. On a major-league roll. Rang a crossbar part way through the 1st Period. A head’s-up interception negated a Detroit attack. A dangerous chance late in the 1st after a McDavid feed. A poke check disrupted his charge to the net after a fine 3-way passing play. Helped create a close-in chance for Nugent-Hopkins late in the 2nd. Hammered home a Nugent-Hopkins pass for the 2-1. Primary assist on the OT winner. +3. 5v5 CF 34-15, 69%. Hard to imagine him not being an NHL All Star.

DARNELL NURSE. 7. Displayed excellent gap on a Patrick Kane rush in the 1st. Victimized by a bouncing puck forcing a sharp save by Pickard. It was a harbinger of things to come. Rocketed up the ice to create a short-handed 2-on-1 with Nugent-Hopkins. Just unlucky on the 2-2 as a pass deflect wildly off his shin pad, handcuffing Pickard who got a piece of it but could not find the rebound. Won the game in overtime by finding a puck that Detroit had chipped blindly into the slot and wristing it high and hard stick-side for the 3-2. High Dangers 5v5 2-2 while facing a parade of Detroit’s best.

CODY CECI. 6. A season high 3 1st Period shots. Excellent close on DeBrincat on a 2nd Period PK. Solid.

LEON DRAISAITL. 6. 1st Period shot block. Turn-around shot on a 1st Period PP plus a hard back-check to disrupt a Detroit short-handed chance. Could not quite convert a good Foegele pass in the 2nd. Intercepted an errant Larkin pass and nearly drained it 5-hole. A slick backhand pass to 97 who could not cash. In on a 3-way play that Foegele could not drain. A shift later, a phenomenal backhand pass that Foegele also could not finish. 3 shots. No points but a going concern for Detroit all game long. 80% on draws.

RYAN MCLEOD. 5. A tidy 1st period setup which Draisaitl could not get a handle on. Helped set up Foegele for a 3rd Period chance. 4 shots. But not as noticeable as he has been recently.

WARREN FOEGELE. 6. A bunch of demanding work along the walls in the 1st. A fine feed to Draisaitl early in the 2nd who just missed converting. 3rd Period shot at the end of a 3-way play with Draisaitl and McLeod. Could not drain a Draisaitl back-hand feed either. Good PK work.

MATTIAS EKHOLM. 8. A tower of power. Good shot block in the 1st. A double-clear on a 2nd Period PK. His hard shot nearly converted into the 1-0 on a baseball-like swing by Nugent-Hopkins. A major force in front on the 2-1 goal, a major reason that goal was scored and a well-deserved assist for his efforts. A hit and 4 shots in a team leading 24:13. And he consistently put put one Detroit spark after another. High Dangers 5v5 7-0 with him on the ice!

EVAN BOUCHARD. 4. Bouchard has taken a major step forward this season but was a turnover machine tonight. 1st Period shot. A turnover in the 1st and two more early in the 2nd. Then took an ill-advised holding penalty but his mates killed that off. Set up McDavid for a late 2nd Period look. Another turnover on the PP but recovered with a desperate stick. Another turnover in the 3rd. A hard finish on Copp in his own zone. The Fancy Stats made him look way better than he in reality was.

DEREK RYAN. 4. Terrific deflection just stopped by the Red Win goalie’s quick pad, the best save by either goalie in the 1st. Won a hard battle in his own zone leading to an important zone clear on the PK. He and Kane lost puck battles on the wall ahead of the 1-0. Made up for it somewhat with a hard-fought puck battle to clear the zone on a subsequent Detroit PP. Won a battle in front and brought down a puck that Kane hammered home. It was disallowed due to a hand-pass (which I think WAS the right call) but Ryan was flattened by a cross-check in the numbers that went uncalled. -2. No questioning the effort, the results were just not as good tonight.

EVANDER KANE. 4. 1st Period hit. Excellent back check early in the 2nd on Seider. He and Ryan lost a puck battle on the wall leading to the 1-0. Appeared to have won the game late but the goal was called back for a hand pass. -2. Had his moments in this one but not quite back to his usual level, yet.

MATTIAS JANMARK. 5. A high shot gave the goalie trouble in the back half of the 1st. A hard play in the Detroit zone drew an Oilers Power Play. Solid & reliable.

BRETT KULAK. 7. Was excellent in this one. Great stick may have saved a goal in the 1st. Whistled for a hook in the 2nd but his teammates killed that one off, too.5v5 CF of 19-6, 76%. High Dangers 3-1 with him on the ice.

VINCENT DESHARNAIS. 7. Sent a shot-pass into the high slot which Derek Ryan very nearly deflected home. A terrific PK shift in the 2nd with 2 interceptions and a shot block in the same shift. High Dangers 2-0 5v5. He was very good.

JAMES HAMBLIN. 4. Important shot block in the 1st, then same shift stole a puck which Janmark concerted into a good chance. Went pretty quiet after that. But in fairness, he did not see a lot of ice, either.

CONNOR BROWN. 4. Managed a close in shot on the PP in the 1st. Gave up way too much gap up top on the 1-0. Good on the PK. Otherwise, rarely seems “involved”. -2.

ADAM ERNE. 5. Punched a puck through coverage which Ceci managed to direct on net. 2nd Period hit. Solid zone clear deep into the 3rd.

Edmonton is 17-3-0 in their last 20, and sit at 22-15-1, 45 points…good for the first wildcard position in the West and a mere 3 points back of L.A. for 3rd in the Pacific.

The Oilers are in Montreal Saturday.

Find me on Threads @kleavins, on Instagram at LeavinsOnHockey, Mastodon at KurtLeavins@mstdn.social, and X @KurtLeavins.

 

 

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Homan wins, Dunstone upset to kick off curling’s PointsBet Invitational

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CALGARY – Gabby Wood says her curling team is ready for anything this season after facing the No. 1 women’s team in the world.

The Canadian women’s college champions took on Rachel Homan in the opening draw of the single-knockout PointsBet Invitational on Wednesday.

Wood’s Edmonton foursome took their lumps in an 11-2 loss, and will also take the experience of playing on arena ice and on television against the reigning Canadian and world champions.

“It’s a crazy first game of the season, so honestly, none of our opponents after this are going to seem that scary,” said the 20-year-old Wood.

The PointsBet Invitational that unofficially kicks off the Canadian curling season offers a purse of over $350,000, including $50,000 each to the men’s and women’s victors, to an eclectic 32-team field.

There’s a soccer FA Cup element as underdog junior, college, university, under-25 and club champions attempt to upset, and send home early, the likes of Homan and reigning Canadian men’s champion Brad Gushue.

And 13th seed Jordan McDonald provided those fireworks Wednesday by eliminating fourth-seeded Matt Dunstone 8-5 in an all-Winnipeg matchup.

“It means the world,” McDonald said. “It was an unbelievable experience out there today.”

Kaitlyn Lawes, who ranked fourth in Canada at the end of last season, beat recently crowned national women’s under-25 champion Taylor Reese-Hansen 5-2.

“Every time we get to play on arena ice, we’re really excited, and playing against a top team, that’s what we want to do. That’s where we want to be,” said Reese-Hansen. “These are the teams that we want to play against and see how we stack up, so it’s super valuable.”

National No. 8 Corryn Brown doubled university women’s champion Serena Gray-Withers 8-4 in the opening draw.

“It just makes us hungrier for more, to be honest, because we’re just super blessed with great ice, great rocks and great conditions here, so we just want to be back for more,” said Gray-Withers.

Selena Sturmay edged Ashley Thevenot 8-7 in the other women’s game to kick off the five-day cashspiel at Calgary’s WinSport Arena.

In the men’s draw Wednesday evening, Gushue defeated Canadian men’s club champion Dan Sherrard 12-4.

Kevin Koe, who played a three-man team after firing second Jacques Gauthier the previous day, downed university men’s champion Josh Bryden 8-4. Rylan Kleiter defeated Sam Mooibroek 5-2.

McDonald, who won last month’s national under-25 championship, kept the pressure on Dunstone with pressure draws and timely runbacks.

Dunstone attempted a tough angle raise to score one and force the PointsBet’s tiebreaking draw to the button, but missed to give up a steal of two.

“Playing a team like at all for us is a really big experience,” said McDonald, who said his team drew confidence from playing Reid Carruthers and Mike McEwen in the last year.

“We feel like we can hang with these teams a little more.”

Among Thursday’s games, defending men’s champion Reid Carruthers faces Felix Asselin, national women’s under-21 champion Allyson MacNutt squares off against four-time Canadian champ Kerri Einarson, and men’s under-21 champion Kenan Wipf faces 2024 Brier runner-up McEwen.

“We are just so grateful that they include the college champions, the university champions,” Wood said. “We don’t get a ton of opportunities to play on arena ice, and so that makes a huge difference developmentally.

“Having a chance, other than our nationals, to play on arena ice, on this big stage, to get to experience just a little bit of what the pros experience is just really exciting and really inspiring.”

Seven months after claiming the Scotties Tournament of Hearts title on the same WinSport ice, Ottawa’s Homan opened defence of her PointsBet crown by scoring four in the second end en route to victory.

“It’s great to get them on this kind of stage, on a national platform and getting some arena ice experience is really key for next gen to get as much experience as possible,” Homan said.

“There’s lots they can take out of it for sure. Lots of great throws and I thought they communicated well.”

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Sept. 25, 2024.

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Kevin Koe skipping a three-man curling team at PointsBet Invitational

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CALGARY – Kevin Koe will skip a three-man curling team for now.

The four-time Canadian and two-time men’s world champion dropped second Jacques Gauthier from his Glencoe Club team on the eve of the PointsBet Invitational that started Wednesday in Calgary.

Koe opened the event that offers $50,000 in prize money to each of the men’s and women’s winners with an 8-4 doubling of national university men’s champion Josh Bryden.

Koe, who also represented Canada in the 2018 Winter Olympics, says there wasn’t enough time to find a replacement for Gauthier for the PointsBet, and there won’t be enough time before next week’s first Grand Slam of the season, which is the HearingLife Tour Challenge in Charlottetown.

“We haven’t talked to anyone yet,” Koe said. “We’ll see who can come and play an event or two. I don’t think we’re going to rush out and grab someone right away, but come to an event with us and see how it goes.

“We’ll get through these next two weeks and start talking about it and seeing what our options are.”

A big-name curling free agent without a team in Koe’s home province is Brendan Bottcher. The skip of the No. 2 men’s team in Canada last season was supplanted on his team by Brad Jacobs.

When asked if it was a possibility Bottcher would join his team, Koe replied “no, it’s not.”

After skipping his own team for four years and representing B.C. in the 2023 Brier, Gauthier joined Koe, his cousin Tyler Tardi and Karrick Martin to play second for the 2023-24 season.

The team won a pair of tour events and made five finals with Gauthier on the squad, but didn’t qualify for playoffs in five Grand Slam appearances and went 2-6 at the Canadian championship in Regina to miss playoffs.

Koe went 2-3 in the ATB Okotoks Classic last week before Gauthier was axed.

The 25-year-old son of Canadian champion and television commentator Cathy Gauthier, said Wednesday in a statement posted on X, formerly known as Twitter: “Elephant in the room. I got cut yesterday.”

“I wasn’t sure if I should make a public comment on it, but I wanted to provide some clarity,” Gauthier wrote.

“The team decided I wasn’t performing to their standard and decided they’d pursue alternative options moving forward.

“It happens. Nothing is a given in this sport, and although I am surprised at the timing, I know I can be better as a player. I plan on using this as an opportunity to grow both as an individual and a curler, looking to improve in all areas.

“For now, it’s back to the lab.”

The 49-year-old Koe wants to skip a team that can qualify for, and win, next year’s Olympic trials, which he says is likely his last trials.

“We struggled at the end of last season and we had some good talks and meetings and thought we could turn it around at the start of the year,” Koe said.

“If the trials were a couple years away we probably would have been a little more patient. They’re 14 months away basically.

“They’re never easy, these moves. Jaques was a great teammate, great curler, best person, but we felt we needed to do what was best for the team.”

Koe finished last season ranked fifth in the men’s Canadian Team Ranking System.

Four teams ranked higher — Brad Gushue, Jacobs, Mike McEwen and Matt Dunstone — have pre-qualified for the 2025 Montana’s Brier in Kelowna, B.C.

Koe will have to win Alberta provincials to join them. Since Koe, Tardi and Martin live in Alberta, the team can recruit a player from outside the province.

“We’ve had a few people kind of inquire, but this was yesterday, right?” Koe said. “It’s a big week for us. We need some better results.

“We’ll start talking about it in a week or two. Maybe we’ll get some offers we weren’t expecting.

“We’re better than kind of the last half-year has shown, but it’s time for us to prove it.”

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Sept. 25, 2024.

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Vancouver Whitecaps down Toronto FC on penalties to clinch Canadian Championship

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VANCOUVER – The Vancouver Whitecaps have won their third straight Canadian Championship title, defeating Toronto FC 0-0 (4-2 on penalties) in the final at BC Place on Wednesday.

Defender Bjorn Utvik scored the decisive penalty for Vancouver, firing a shot into the left side of the net in the fifth round of kicks.

Goalkeeper Isaac Boehmer stopped seven on-target shots for the ‘Caps and Sean Johnson made two saves for TFC.

Toronto was the dominant side for much of the game, but Boehmer made a series of critical saves, including a penalty-kick stop on Toronto star Federico Bernardeschi in the 38th minute.

Vancouver earned its way into the final after edging Canadian Premier League side Pacific FC 2-0 in the tournament’s two-legged semifinal.

Vancouver, which hoisted the Voyagers Cup for the fourth time in its history, is now assured a place in next year’s CONCACAF Champions League tournament.

Bernardeschi proved tough for the ‘Caps to handle from the opening minute.

Thirty seconds into the match, the Italian launched a left-footed rocket that Boehmer tipped out of harm’s way.

Toronto controlled much of the play across the first half while Vancouver struggled to connect on passes early.

Boehmer kept the game scoreless in the 21st minute after Bernardeschi dished off to Richie Laryea. The Canadian defender fired a quick shot on net, only to see Boehmer knock it down.

Vancouver settled into the game and, in the 34th minute, got a prime opportunity when Brian White and Fafa Picault broke away from the Toronto defence. The duo raced into the penalty area, where White was taken down without a call.

Minutes later, TFC was awarded a penalty kick after Whitecaps defender Mathias Laborda hauled Laryea down near the goal line.

Loud boos emanated from the announced crowd of 12,516 as Bernardeschi lined up his shot. He took a few steps, then blasted a left-footed kick on net as Boehmer dove and punched the ball away to ecstatic cheers.

The score remained level at 0-0 as both sides headed to their locker rooms after the first 45 minutes. The first half saw Toronto control 71 per cent of the possession and outchance Vancouver 3-1 in shots on target, though the ‘Caps held a 6-5 edge in total shots.

The visitors came into the second half with renewed vigour.

TFC appeared poised to open the scoring in the 53rd minute when an unmanned Laryea collected the ball inside the penalty area. Boehmer came well off his line to challenge and when Laryea sent a rolling ball toward the net, the ‘keeper got a hand in its path for another save.

With neither side able to find the back of the net in regulation, the game went to penalties — and Vancouver pulled it out for a three-peat.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Sept. 25, 2024.

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