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Blues Dylan Holloway rushed to hospital after being struck in neck by puck

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ST. LOUIS (AP) — St. Louis Blues forward Dylan Holloway left Tuesday night’s contest against the Tampa Bay Lightning and departed the rink on a stretcher after being struck by a puck late in the first period.

Holloway was hit in the neck area by a puck with 2:37 remaining in the period, and proceeded to finish his shift, continuing to participate in the play before skating to the bench under his own power.

As play was stopped with 1:11 remaining for a high-sticking penalty that was later called off, teammates started calling and gesturing for assistance.

Blues trainer Ray Barile and medical staff from both teams tended to Holloway for several minutes before emergency medical technicians carted him off the bench on a stretcher.

“I was just sitting beside him and saw something was happening,” Blues forward Alexey Toropchenko said. “I told Ray. He knows what he’s doing. I was just kind of curious to what’s going on. Doctors came in and, like, I think everything is good right now. But we were worried, everybody.”

Holloway was seen raising his arm as he was carted off. The Blues later announced that Holloway was alert and stable and was rushed to a St. Louis area hospital for further observation.

“I think the only way I can put is if you’re at work, and you get a call, and one of your family members is sick, and you rush to the hospital,” Blues coach Drew Bannister said.

“Holly’s a family member. That was tough. I thought we, as a group, showed a lot of fortitude, and the way mentally being able to push through that, because the easiest thing to do is your head goes somewhere else. But, we were able to get updates on Holly and kind of put our minds at ease a little bit and refocus ourselves.”

Referees Wes McCauley and Cody Beach sent the teams to their locker rooms and started the first intermission after Holloway was transported off the bench due to the nature of the injury.

“It’s hard,” Blues captain Brayden Schenn said. “It’s your teammate. Then we got news that he’s going to be fine. And then, you have to wrap your head around it a little bit and go play a hockey game again, right?

“So that’s just, unfortunately, the reality of the sport, and it took us awhile to get going.”

St. Louis rallied to score three goals after falling behind 1-0 early in the second period to beat Tampa Bay 3-2.

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Niederreiter scores twice in 900th career game as Jets beat Utah 3-0

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WINNIPEG – Nino Niederreiter showed his veteran savvy in his 900th NHL career game on Tuesday.

The Winnipeg Jets forward scored twice and Connor Hellebuyck made 21 saves in a 3-0 victory over the Utah Hockey Club that kept the team’s early-season success rolling with a fourth consecutive win (12-1-0).

On his first goal, the 32-year Niederreiter lifted a Utah opponent’s stick in Winnipeg’s end, allowing the Jets to get the puck and head toward the visitor’s net.

Niederreiter then joined the rush, deked and put the puck around netminder Karel Vejmelka for a 2-0 lead at 7:30 of the third period with his sixth goal of the season.

“Obviously, the game wasn’t very pretty,” Niederreiter said. “There wasn’t a whole lot of flow out there. I think that is something that we knew and just had to stick with and do the little things right.

“Eventually, we would create our own luck and that’s what happened there.”

And what about his deke in front of 12,932 fans at Canada Life Centre?

“I still got it somewhere in there,” Niederreiter said with a smile. “It’s a great feeling, like I said. It’s a cool night to score a goal like that.”

His second goal — the 230th of his career — was into an empty net with 2:59 remaining. He also has 225 assists for 455 career points.

Gabriel Vilardi scored the first goal at 17:57 of the second period on the power play and Adam Lowry picked up two assists.

Hellebuyck recorded his second shutout of the season and 39th of this career.

Niederreiter signed a three-year contract extension with the Jets last December. The $12-million deal kicked in this season.

He’s now scored against 33 NHL teams, including the Jets.

“It’s a cool stat, but I think it also says that I’ve been traded a few times,” he said. “But I guess it gives me the chance to do that.”

Niederreiter was drafted in 2010 by the New York Islanders (fifth overall), becoming Switzerland’s highest NHL pick.

He’s also played for the Minnesota Wild, Carolina Hurricanes and Nashville Predators before being traded to the Jets in February 2023.

Jets head coach Scott Arniel was impressed by Niederreiter’s quick-thinking stick lift.

“We’ll throw that on the old system video,” he said. “But that’s just going the distance, coming all the way back and he creates that.

“We’re never out of it. You never know how a puck’s going to bounce. He just kept coming and obviously we turned that offence the other way.”

Arniel said the team recognized Niederreiter’s milestone.

“That’s special. That’s a lot of games,” Arniel said. “We had a little tribute to him, saw all his pictures from all the jerseys he’s worn and the places he’s played.

“He hasn’t changed a bit. He’s a big power forward and that line I thought was really good. They take that (Clayton) Keller line on, those skill guys. They did a really good job.”

Niederreiter is on a line with Lowry and Mason Appleton.

“Those guys on the PK were really strong,” Arniel added. “When that line plays like that they’re a force, they’re hard to handle. They wear teams down because they spend so much time in the offensive zone.”

Utah (5-5-3) ended a run of picking up points in three consecutive games (1-0-2).

Vejmelka stopped 25 shots for Utah in its second game of a four-game road trip.

“They know what to expect of each other. They play a really, really structured game, and they were patient tonight,” Utah head coach Andre Tourigny said of the Jets.

“I think that was a good chess game. They got one on the power play and from there they waited for the opportunity to have a killer goal. They did a good job.”

NOTES: Jets defenceman Josh Morrissey picked up his 14th assist of the season when his point shot with five seconds left in a power play was tipped in by Vilardi. … Kyle Connor had his franchise-record, season-opening points streak end at 12 games. He almost picked up an assist until Vilardi tipped in Morrissey’s shot.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Nov. 5, 2024.



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Leafs’ power play clicks minus injured Matthews in 4-0 victory over Bruins

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TORONTO – Auston Matthews took a seat Tuesday.

Minus the NHL’s reigning goal king, the Toronto Maple Leafs’ porous power play finally stepped up. The penalty kill was at attention, too.

Matthews sat out his team’s 4-0 victory over the visiting Boston Bruins with an upper-body injury on a night where the club’s special teams — finally — were in unison.

“Maybe everybody just has a little bit more compete to their game,” said Leafs winger William Nylander, who scored on a man advantage in the second period and set up another goal in the third. “It’s hard to cover for (Matthews), but everybody did their job.”

Toronto, which entered the game with an ugly 4-for-40 on the power play this season to sit 31st overall despite a boatload of offensive talent, connected three times off seven chances and killed all six Boston opportunities.

“I don’t think we’re going to get carried away thinking we got anything solved,” said Toronto defenceman Morgan Rielly, who had a goal and two assists on the man advantage. “It was a matter of time, it was about sticking with the process.”

That process included suiting up without Matthews against an opponent that had gone 8-0-0 over the teams’ last eight regular-season meetings, and beat Toronto in seven games in the first round of last spring’s playoffs.

Leafs head coach Craig Berube said following the morning skate his captain, who’s listed as day-to-day, has been “fighting through” the issue, but added it’s not related to past wrist problems.

Matthews has five goals and 11 points in 13 games this season. He picked up an assist and played more than 22 minutes in Sunday’s 2-1 overtime road loss to the Minnesota Wild.

“Everybody just needs to do their job out there,” Berube said following the morning skate of his group’s mindset without its best player. “I don’t think you focus on, ‘Oh, Auston’s not playing so what are we going to do?’ We’ve got a good team, got good players. People are going to get a little different look in situations, lines, things like that. They’re capable guys, good players.

“You’ve just got to go play.”

Leafs forward Max Domi centred the top line between Mitch Marner and Matthew Knies with the three-time Maurice (Rocket) Richard Trophy winner — including the 69 he scored in 2023-24 — looking on.

Marner and Knies each finished with a goal and an assist on the power play Tuesday as Toronto improved to a surprising 36-19-2 all-time in the regular season when Matthews is absent.

“These guys have had us for a little bit now,” Knies said post-game of the Bruins. “We were all a little bit frustrated here, and we wanted to play physical and get on them. It sucks losing your best player, but everyone stepped up. It showed that we have a lot of depth in this room.

“Great team effort.”

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Nov. 5, 2024.

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Emissions cap puts methane in spotlight; industry says low-hanging fruit already gone

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CALGARY – Oil and gas producers who have already made progress on lowering their methane emissions over the last decade say further large-scale reductions will be tougher to deliver.

The federal government published new draft regulations Monday that would require oil and gas producers in Canada to cut total greenhouse gas emissions by about one-third over the next eight years.

The bulk of the emissions from Canada’s energy sector come in the form of CO2 pollution from Alberta’s massive oilsands operations, which were responsible for 40 per cent of the oil-and-gas industry’s overall emissions in 2022.

But even though the oilsands are the primary driver of the industry’s emissions, it is the conventional or non-oilsands part of the oil and gas sector that will be expected to do a significant amount of the heavy lifting if the industry’s overall emissions are to fall by the target amount.

On Monday, Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault said federal government modelling suggests that about half of the cuts required under the new rules could come from the conventional sector in the form of methane emission reductions.

Chris Carlsen, CEO of oil-and-gas producer Birchcliff Energy Ltd. — which has drilling operations in Alberta’s Montney region — said he can’t see how that would be possible.

“We have made quite a significant improvement on methane emissions,” Carlsen said in an interview.

“But when you look at this emissions cap, to have half of that (reduction) come from methane is just unrealistic.”

Much of the public conversation around the federal emissions cap has centred on the oilsands, as well as a proposal by the Pathways Alliance group of oilsands companies to bring down their CO2 emissions by investing $16.5 billion to build a massive carbon capture and storage network in northern Alberta. (The Pathways Alliance has not yet committed to going ahead with the project.)

But methane, the second largest contributor to global warming after carbon dioxide, is produced as a byproduct of the conventional oil-and-gas drilling process. It can escape into the atmosphere as a result of leaky oil and gas equipment and facilities, or be released deliberately as a waste product through industry practices like venting and flaring.

Green groups and politicians have long viewed methane as the “low-hanging fruit” when it comes to reducing emissions from the oil-and-gas sector.

That’s because some of the measures required to address methane are simple and cost-effective, especially when compared to proposed decarbonization projects like the Pathways proposal.

“(Methane) is really one of the cheapest ways that we can see oil and gas emissions come down by 2030,” said Janetta McKenzie, oil and gas program manager for the Pembina Institute, a green energy think-tank.

“It’s something that can be done on a more short-term basis — it’s not a carbon capture plant.”

The industry has been making progress. Due in part to federal and provincial regulations, the oil and gas sector decreased its methane emissions by 45 per cent between 2014 and 2022, according to data from the Alberta Energy Regulator.

Much of these gains were achieved by plugging leaky equipment to cut down on so-called fugitive emissions, as well as cutting down on venting, a term that describes the direct release of unburned methane into the atmosphere from an oil or gas facility.

Additional federal regulations, likely to be finalized this fall, aim to ensure the sector achieves methane emission reductions of at least 75 per cent below 2012 levels by 2030.

The federal government has said its own analysis has showed the emissions cap targets are “technically achievable” and take into account the technologies that can be feasibly deployed within the next few years.

While that will take effort from the sector, McKenzie said, additional methane reductions are possible through better leak detection and repair, improved emissions reporting, and improved design standards for oil and gas storage tanks.

“The very lowest-cost actions have already been taken, and now what we are asking for is that next tranche of efforts,” McKenzie said.

“But it is still quite cost-effective, still quite achievable.”

The Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers declined to comment specifically on the role methane could play in meeting the terms of the emissions cap. In an email, CAPP president Lisa Baiton said the industry group needs more time to review the new federal regulations and the modelling behind them.

But Carlsen said when he looks around his company’s own operations, he’s not sure where additional significant methane reductions would come from.

“I can speak for our asset base and the flaring and venting that is happening now is only what needs to be done for safety purposes and the running of a gas plant,” he said.

“Can we do more with technology and continue to be more efficient? Yes, and we always want to work on that, but I don’t see a lot of low-hanging fruit.”

“You can show any cost curve diagram — getting the last 20 per cent is always the most expensive out of the whole thing,” he added.

“And it just doesn’t make sense to spend your money on that, for a company of our size.”

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Nov. 5, 2024.

Companies in this story: (TSX:BIR)



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