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Canadiens Mailbag: Could Carey Price be traded to Seattle? – Sportsnet.ca

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MONTREAL — It’s been a tumultuous week-and-a-half, so I wasn’t exactly surprised to see 75 responses pour into my call for mail. I can’t get to them all, but want to get the ones that cover the most pertinent subjects in relation to the Montreal Canadiens’ current situation.

No lengthy preamble required. I’m diving right into the first question, which seems to be the one most Canadiens fans are curious about.

There’s more layers to this than a wedding cake. Let me stick my fork into each one here.

First: I agree that the system tweaks Canadiens coach Dominique Ducharme has tried to put in place have mostly taken hold. Second: it seems obvious — with 5-on-5 play so dominant and so little scoring to show for it — that line tweaks are in order. Third: when you see the first and third defence pairings as out of sorts as they were against the Winnipeg Jets on Thursday, you have to do something.

And perhaps the most important caveat you have here is about getting players on board with the new arrangements because Ducharme has been hailed as a great communicator and some of these changes require explanations to the players to ensure they embrace their new roles and maximize their potential within them.

Here’s how I would arrange the forward lines now that Josh Anderson appears poised to return from a lower-body injury.

DrouinNick Suzuki-Josh Anderson

Tyler ToffoliJesperi KotkaniemiBrendan Gallagher

Artturi LehkonenPhillip DanaultPaul Byron

Tomas TatarJake EvansCorey Perry

Now for the communication part.

The first thing I think Ducharme would want to do is tell Kotkaniemi this is his role for five games, and that he needs to play those five games like he did the last two in order to keep it. He needs to play like the Kotkaniemi who was in constant motion at both ends of the ice, working hard to get pucks turned over and making assertive plays.

Then a conversation with Toffoli is in order to let him know that this is an established top-six role he has more than earned in leading the team with 14 goals through 22 games and that he won’t be bouncing around regardless of what changes get made to the lines moving forward.

The most important conversation needs to happen with Danault, who’s being pulled away from Gallagher and Tatar to form a shutdown line with Lehkonen and Byron. We know the 28-year-old said in the off-season he wasn’t prepared for a purely defensive role, and it needs to be made clear this move will actually free him up to produce more offence than he would with Tatar and Gallagher.

Drouin told us that Ducharme likes to speak with individuals, but also likes to speak with lines as a whole. In his discussion with Lehkonen, Byron and Danault, he can tell them that he’s going to use them against top lines, that he’s going to put them out for every key defensive-zone start and that he saw how tenacious they were as a line in the summer playoffs. He can tell them that the Tampa Bay Lightning wouldn’t have won the 2020 Stanley Cup without the Barclay Goodrow-Yanni Gourde-Blake Coleman line playing this role and that the Dallas Stars lost it when Radek Faksa went down with an injury and couldn’t be there to centre Blake Comeau and Andrew Cogliano.

And then it’s time for a talk with Tatar, Evans and Perry, who need to know that they’re going to get heavy offensive-zone starts and be expected to be reliable at both ends of the ice. But also to reinforce that they’re going to get shifts coming out of the penalty kill and be given a chance to show some creativity in producing offence.

And an individual talk with Evans, to tell him to use his speed to drive the line at both ends, would be wise.

D pairings:

Alexander RomanovShea Weber

Brett KulakJeff Petry

Ben ChiarotJoel Edmundson

The first conversation needs to happen with Chiarot and Edmundson, to make them understand this isn’t a demotion. There was a bash-brothers dynamic to the Chiarot-Weber pairing that can prevail on this new pairing with Edmundson, and it would be good to explain to them that their job is to wear down the forwards and serve as a reliable duo in the final minute of a period or in a close game.

That Edmundson is comfortable on the right side makes this work. That both players skate well also helps. And they can both move the puck better than they’re given credit for.

Romanov’s mobility pairs well with Weber. And Weber’s experience pairs well with Romanov. The conversation with both should be about how they can complement each other and how the defence can be used in a more balanced way if they’re paired with each other.

No conversation is necessary with Petry and Kulak, who found their best cohesion back in the bubble and would have to know that’s what they must bring to the ice immediately.

This is a reasonable question to be asking given Carey Price’s struggles and goaltending coach Stephane Waite being fired this week as a direct result.

The move Canadiens general manager Marc Bergevin made was to address the trend of Price not performing well through the first two months of the season and to give him a new mentor in Sean Burke — who navigated the same peaks and valleys as an NHL goaltender for more than 800 games and can offer technical tweaks that haven’t been made to date.

But it was also made to put the onus on Price to get his game back to where it needs to be.

If he can’t do that in Montreal, you could understand why the Canadiens and Price might contemplate a change.

All that said, a change is extremely complicated and highly unlikely because of the contract he has. He must be protected for the Seattle Expansion Draft because he has a no-movement clause in his contract. And a trade is not only hard to pull off due to the cap implications, it’s almost impossible in the current financial climate to get another team to agree to pay out the terms of Price’s contract in its actual structure.

Prior to next season, Price will receive $11 million in signing bonuses, and he’s slated to make $13 million in total salary (including that $11 million) by the end of it. Even if the Canadiens agreed to pay the bonuses and then trade him, he’s due at least $5.75 million up front in each of his remaining four years under contract and his total salary never dips below $7.5 million in any season.

Even if Price comes to management and says he wants out, and even if they’re willing to deal him at a loss just to earn the cap space, the financial complexities are onerous for both the Canadiens and whomever their trade partner would be.

It sheds more light on the decision to fire Waite. Bergevin felt he needed to do something to get the Price he expects to see — not just now, but in the future.

The real question now becomes how much can Burke really help? If the answer is a lot, and if Price can find the magic that propelled him to be the best goaltender in the world for a long stretch, we stop talking about trade scenarios that are unlikely if not impossible.

I can always do better, but I do a lot to ensure that my question is not taken out of context and that it is asked in a way that generates a response that feeds my column.

And I don’t care if the subject answers the way I thought they would or not. None of us do. We all just want an answer that we can use to either prove, disprove, support or deconstruct a point.

Too many fans think the digital/print media is there to cross-examine the GM, the coach and the players. Some of them think we should just attack them. What they don’t understand is that we’re there to generate answers specific to what we’re writing about, not to just ask questions because the fans want to crucify someone.

And here’s an important thing to know about the Zoom availabilities: each journalist is limited to two questions per subject on a practice day and one question on a gameday. It is a live broadcast and public interaction that doesn’t allow for the conversational back-and-forth writers are accustomed to when permitted in the locker room.

There are questions I would ask off to the side to a player — where he and I can have a back-and-forth and he can gain a better understanding of why I’m asking and I can ease my way into some of the harder ones — that I would never ask in front of everyone and risk making him feel like I’m just trying to embarrass him.

This is an extremely complex thing and I understand why fans think some questions are bad, and why sometimes they don’t understand why a given question is asked.

I’m not perfect. I try to ask good questions, but sometimes, like anyone else, I trip up and don’t ask it the way I want to.

One more thing on this subject, since a question I asked Price this week created some sort of mini-controversy. I always strive to give the GM, the coach and the players an opportunity to address whatever narrative is floating around about them that I think needs to be deconstructed.

I can deconstruct the narrative that Price doesn’t care enough all by myself, and have even done so in the past. It’s been a persistent one over both our time here — we were both rookies in 2007 — and it’s one of the laziest and dumbest narratives ever, which has come into existence based mostly on the way he approaches media availability and the body language he gives off on the ice when things aren’t going well on the ice.

But my argument becomes much stronger with his words attached to it, hence giving him an opportunity to address it head on at Wednesday’s availability.

Here was my question to Price: “In your long experience in your career, we’ve had a lot of interactions with you. It’s changed over the years where I think you would probably agree the less you say the better it is for you, but at times it’s also led to the perception that you don’t care enough about what you’re doing. How do you feel about people taking on that perception?”

I would’ve liked for Price to have used that opportunity to passionately affirm just how much I — and anyone else who knows him — know he cares. Instead he chose to respond by saying, “It doesn’t matter to me anymore.”

I have no issue with that answer, even if it wasn’t the one I was looking for. Because even if I would’ve gone off, I’m not Carey Price.

Price is quiet, cool, calm and collected, even if a raging fire burns inside of him. He will not divert from his intention to not feed the beast in media interactions and, as I acknowledged in my question, I would even agree that it’s best for him that he doesn’t. As a reporter, I’d much prefer if he did, but I understand why he doesn’t. It’s his way of sheltering himself and keeping himself focused on what matters most — stopping the puck.

I was asked about this on Spittin’ Chiclets this week, and I’ll give you the Coles Notes on what I said.

For as good as Brady Tkachuk is — and he appears poised to go on and have a more prolific career — I would not have taken him over Kotkaniemi if I were Canadiens GM at the time.

The Canadiens had the third-overall pick and a desperate need at a barren position for more than two decades. Bergevin spent years trying to trade for and sign a top centre and concluded those routes weren’t going to get him what he wanted without weakening his team in other areas.

Kotkaniemi was the best centre available in the 2018 Draft. His stock soared ahead of that June day, and rightly so. Even if he was more likely to be drafted closer to fifth or sixth, the Canadiens weren’t able to trade down and secure his selection — Arizona was at five and facing the same issue, hell-bent on taking the best centre available, which they did with Barrett Hayton once Kotkaniemi was off the board. Detroit was at six and was interested in a centre as well, and they would’ve probably chosen one of those two instead of Filip Zadina.

If the Canadiens don’t take Kotkaniemi, we’re talking today about how they passed on their best chance of the last eight years to draft a franchise centre. And there was no way to know Pierre-Luc Dubois would ask out of Columbus at 22 years old just two years later. That was a total anomaly, too.

You deal with the reality you’re in, not the one that’s unforeseeable. That’s the issue with hindsight scenarios.

But even in hindsight, I’d have taken Kotkaniemi. And I believe Kotkaniemi will be the player the Canadiens thought they were getting when they drafted him.

He’s growing. He’s still one of the youngest players in the NHL. At his best, he makes others around him better and is a play-driving, two-way centre, and he has potential to become an excellent one — even if I don’t believe he’ll necessarily be a point-per-game player.

A puck-moving defenceman who can play at both ends and against top lines seems like an ideal move, if not a necessary one. As does acquiring a centre who can win faceoffs.

It’s no secret that the Nashville Predators are looking like a seller. Mathias Ekholm fits the bill as the defenceman and Brad Richardson fits as a faceoff specialist who also can play at a high enough level to do more than just win faceoffs.

The Canadiens have 14 selections in the upcoming draft and a boatload of excellent prospects, but in order to make it really work, they need to be able to send some salary back the other way or somewhere else.

Joel Armia, who you may have noticed was left without a line in my suggested lineup, seems like a prime candidate to move to free up space.

The Canadiens may not be able to get these two specific players out of Nashville, but one would think they’d have interest in both of them if they were made available.

Surely there are some other players around the league who fit these profiles, too. Players the Canadiens would be kicking tires on at this point.

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Washington Capitals 3-2 win ends Dallas Stars’ winning streak

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WASHINGTON (AP) — Tom Wilson, Dylan Strome and Taylor Raddysh scored to help the Washington Capitals end the Dallas Stars’ season-opening winning streak at four with a 3-2 victory Thursday night.

Wilson’s goal was his third in three games, Strome his second of the season and Raddysh his first since joining the team in free agency last summer. Charlie Lindgren made 22 saves as the Capitals wrapped up this early homestand with back-to-back wins.

The Stars fell from the ranks of the league’s unbeaten teams despite a short-handed goal by Colin Blackwell and one at even strength from Jason Robertson. Rookie Oskar Bäck set up Blackwell for his first NHL point.

Casey DeSmith was screened on two of the three goals he allowed on 26 shots.

LIGHTNING 4, GOLDEN KNIGHTS 3

TAMPA, Fla. (AP) — Nikita Kucherov scored the winning goal with less than a minute to play just 1:27 after Brandon Hagel had tied it and Tampa Bay rallied to beat Vegas.

Kucherov’s second goal of the game with 55 seconds left was his sixth of the season.

Janis Moser had a goal and two assists for the Lightning, who remain unbeaten. Andrei Vasilevskiy made 22 saves.

Brayden McNabb, Pavel Dorofeyev and Ivan Barbashev had goals for Vegas. Adin Hill turned aside 21 shots.

Jack Eichel, with two assists on Thursday, now has 10 points this season in five games and reached reached double-digit points faster than any other player in Vegas history. He is the 10th U.S.-born player to accomplish the feat.

After Barbashev put Vegas up 3-2 early in the second, Hagel pulled Tampa Bay even at 3 with 2:22 remaining in the third.

BLUE JACKETS 6, SABRES 4

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Kirill Marchenko and Mathieu Olivier each had a goal and an assist and Daniil Tarasov made 21 saves to help Columbus to a win over Buffalo.

Yegor Chinakhov, Adam Fantilli, Zachary Aston-Reese and Damon Severson also scored for Columbus, and Zach Werenski added two assists.

Ryan McLeod, Owen Power and JJ Peterka scored for Buffalo, and Jiri Kulich added his first NHL goal. Devon Lev stopped 19 shots for the Sabres (1-5-1), who have lost two straight road games and five of their first six overall.

CANUCKS 3, FLORIDA 2, OT

SUNRISE, Fla. (AP) — J.T. Miller scored 2:09 into overtime and Vancouver got their first win of the season, beating Florida.

Teddy Blueger and Quinn Hughes had goals for Vancouver, with Kevin Lankinen stopping 26 shots.

Anton Lundell got his fourth goal in the last three games for Florida and Jesper Boqvist also scored for the Panthers, who got 30 saves from Sergei Bobrovsky.

Florida remained without forwards Aleksander Barkov (lower body) and Matthew Tkachuk (illness).

DEVILS 3, SENATORS 1

OTTAWA, Ontario (AP) — Jacob Markstrom stopped 30 shots and lost his shutout bid in the final minutes as New Jersey beat Ottawa.

Erik Haula, Nathan Bastian and Paul Cotter scored for the Devils, who won for the third time in four games and improved to 5-2-0.

The Senators, who were coming off an 8-7 overtime victory against Los Angeles on Monday, struggled to beat Markstrom.

Brady Tkachuk was the only scorer for the Senators, beating Markstrom, with a power-play goal with 65 seconds remaining in the third period.

Anton Forsberg, making his second straight start and hoping to rebound after getting pulled Monday, made 32 saves in the loss.

Haula opened the scoring early in the second period and Bastian added a short-handed goal, giving New Jersey a 2-0 lead after 40 minutes. Cotter scored midway through the third.

RANGERS 5, RED WING 2

DETROIT (AP) — Artemi Panarin had his eighth career hat trick and New York rolled to a victory over Detroit.

Panarin became the first Rangers player to have multiple points in the first four games of a season. He scored twice on the power play. Vincent Trocheck also had a power- play goal and assisted on all of Panarin’s goals.

Jonathan Quick made 29 saves in his season debut. Victor Mancini also scored.

The Rangers have won the last five meetings, including twice this week. New York had a 4-1 home victory over Detroit on Monday night.

Moritz Seider and J.T. Compher scored for Detroit. Red Wings goalie Cam Talbot was pulled in the second period after allowing five goals.

KINGS 4, CANADIENS 1

MONTREAL (AP) — David Rittich made 26 saves a night after being benched in the second period in Toronto, helping road-weary Los Angeles snap a three-game losing streak with a victory over Montreal.

Los Angeles improved to 2-1-2 on a season-opening, seven-game trip necessitated by arena renovations.

Rittich rebounded after allowing four goals on 14 shots in a 6-2 loss to the Maple Leafs. Alex Laferriere, Mikey Anderson, Andreas Englund and Adrian Kempe scored.

Justin Barron scored for Montreal (2-3-0). Sam Montembeault stopped 28 shots. He made a save on Kevin Fiala on a penalty shot.

BLUES 1, ISLANDERS 0, OT

ST. LOUIS (AP) — Joel Hofer made 34 saves and assisted on Jake Neighbours’ goal at 2:04 of overtime in St. Louis victory over New York.

Hofer had his second career shutout in his and the team’s second overtime victory of the season.

Philip Broberg carried the puck into the New York zone and made a centering pass to Neighbours for the winner.

Islanders goalie Ilya Sorkin made 29 saves.

Blues defenseman Nick Leddy sat out because of a lower-body injury, the first game he has missed this season. Leddy played in all 82 games last season.

OILERS 4, PREDATORS 2

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — Brett Kulak scored twice and Connor McDavid added his first goal of the season to lead Edmonton to a victory over reeling Nashville.

Jeff Skinner also scored and Calvin Pickard made 25 saves for the defending Western Conference champion Oilers, who have won consecutive games after beginning the season with a three-game skid.

Filip Forsberg and Jonathan Marchessault scored and Juuse Saros made 32 saves for Nashville (0-4).

Forsberg’s goal midway through the first period gave Nashville its first lead of the season. That lasted less than six minutes before Kulak tied it.

Kulak sealed it with an empty-netter in the final minute for the defenseman’s first career two-goal game.

BLACKHAWKS 4, SHARKS 2

CHICAGO (AP) — Tyler Bertuzzi and Nick Foligno each scored a power-play goal, and Chicago beat San Jose.

Taylor Hall and Jason Dickinson also scored for Chicago. Connor Bedard and Teuvo Teravainen each had two assists.

Hall, who missed most of last season because of right knee surgery, put the Blackhawks in front 4:20 into the first period. It was Hall’s first goal since Nov. 5 and No. 267 for his career.

Tyler Toffoli and Fabian Zetterlund scored for San Jose, which trailed 3-0 early in the second. William Eklund and Mikael Granlund had two assists each.

The Sharks dropped to 0-2-2 under Ryan Warsofsky, who was promoted to head coach in June.

Petr Mrazek had 20 saves for Chicago, and Vitek Vanecek made 23 stops for San Jose.

KRAKEN 6, FLYERS 4

SEATTLE (AP) — Eeli Tolvanen, Jordan Eberle, and Shane Wright scored three goals in less than three minutes in the second period and Seattle held off a Philadelphia rally in a victory.

Tolvanen’s goal broke a 2-2 tie at the 14:57 mark. Eberle made it a two-goal game with a goal at 17:44. Eight seconds later, Wright scored to give Seattle a three-goal lead.

Jared McCann tied the game at 2-2 with the first of Seattle’s four second-period goals.

Cam York and Jamie Drysdale scored to pull Philadelphia within 5-4 in the third period, but Oliver Bjorkstrand responded with a goal to push Seattle’s lead to two with just over five minutes left in the game.

Scott Laughton scored twice for the Flyers in the first period, while Brandon Montour scored one in for the Kraken.

Chandler Stephenson had an assist in his 500th NHL game. Seattle’s Philipp Grubauer had 21 saves.

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Canada’s Dabrowski, New Zealand’s Routliffe out of Japan Women’s Open after walkover

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OSAKA, Japan – Canada’s Gabriela Dabrowski and New Zealand’s Erin Routliffe are out of the Japan Women’s Open tennis tournament.

Spain’s Cristina Bucsa and Romania’s Monica Niculescu advanced to the final on Thursday by way of walkover.

The fourth seeds were supposed to play the top-seeded Dabrowski and Routliffe in the semifinals.

Bucsa and Niculescu will next face third-seeded Ena Shibahara of Japan and Laura Siegemund of Germany in the final.

Dabrowski and Routliffe defeated Japan’s Shuko Aoyama and Eri Hozumi in the quarterfinals 6-2, 6-4 on Wednesday to advance.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Oct. 17, 2024.

The Canadian Press. All rights reserved.

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Mountain West commissioner says she’s heartbroken over turmoil surrounding San Jose State volleyball

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LAS VEGAS (AP) — Mountain West Conference Commissioner Gloria Nevarez said Thursday the forfeitures that volleyball teams are willing to take to avoid playing San Jose State is “not what we celebrate in college athletics” and that she is heartbroken over what has transpired this season surrounding the Spartans and their opponents.

Four teams have canceled games against San Jose State: Boise State, Southern Utah, Utah State and Wyoming, with none of the schools explicitly saying why they were forfeiting.

A group of Nevada players issued a statement saying they will not take the floor when the Wolf Pack are scheduled to host the Spartans on Oct. 26. They cited their “right to safety and fair competition,” though their school reaffirmed Thursday that the match is still planned and that state law bars forfeiture “for reasons related to gender identity or expression.”

All those schools, except Southern Utah, are in the Mountain West. New Mexico, also in the MWC, went ahead with its home match on Thursday night, which was won by the Spartans, 3-1, the team’s first victory since Sept. 24.

“It breaks my heart because they’re human beings, young people, student-athletes on both sides of this issue that are getting a lot of national negative attention,” Nevarez said in an interview with The Associated Press at Mountain West basketball media days. “It just doesn’t feel right to me.”

Republican governors of Idaho, Nevada, Utah and Wyoming have made public statements in support of the cancellations, citing a need for fairness in women’s sports. Former President Donald Trump, the GOP nominee in this year’s presidential race, this week referenced an unidentified volleyball match when he was asked during a Fox News town hall about transgender athletes in women’s sports.

“I saw the slam, it was a slam. I never saw a ball hit so hard, hit the girl in the head,” Trump replied before he was asked what can be done. “You just ban it. The president bans it. You just don’t let it happen.”

After Trump’s comment, San Diego State issued a statement that said “it has been incorrectly reported that an San Diego State University student-athlete was hit in the face with a volleyball during match play with San Jose State University. The ball bounced off the shoulder of the student-athlete, and the athlete was uninjured and did not miss a play.”

San Jose State has not made any direct comments about the politicians’ “fairness” references, and Nevarez did not go into details.

“I’m learning a lot about the issue,” Nevarez said. “I don’t know a lot of the language yet or the science or the understanding nationally of how this issue plays out. The external influences are so far on either side. We have an election year. It’s political, so, yeah, it feels like a no-win based on all the external pressure.”

The cancellations could mean some teams will not qualify for the conference tournament Nov. 27-30 in Las Vegas, where the top six schools are slated to compete for the league championship.

“The student-athlete (in question) meets the eligibility standard, so if a team does not play them, it’s a forfeit, meaning they take a loss,” Nevarez said.

Ahead of the Oct. 26 match in Reno. Nevada released a statement acknowledging that “a majority of the Wolf Pack women’s volleyball team” had decided to forfeit against San Jose State. The school said only the university can take that step but any player who decides not to play would face no punishment.

___

AP college sports:

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