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Canadiens provided with template to follow after being schooled by Kings

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LOS ANGELES — With just under 14 minutes to play in a game the Canadiens were losing 3-0, Gustav Lindstrom and Kaiden Guhle exchanged six consecutive passes behind their own goal line, each of them searching for a breakout option that never presented itself to them.

That’s when they coughed up the puck to the Kings for yet another quality scoring chance against.

It was the Kings’ fourth in a two-minute span, which is about what they averaged throughout the third period as they swarmed the Canadiens and stung them over and over again.

When the puck got out of Montreal’s zone, back it came, usually on an odd-man rush like the one Trevor Moore scored on to make it 4-0 Kings with 6:32 remaining.

Kings’ Moore doubles-up with two similar goals that eke just past Canadiens’ Allen

That, of course, was after the Kings had already broken the Canadiens’ will with the cat-and-mouse style that comes from the one-three-one neutral-zone scheme they deploy when leading. They first pressed the Canadiens — and not just up against the glass — with an aggressive forecheck to get a lead, and then they got that lead, sat back and, as Mike Matheson put it afterwards, forced them to “play in a way that we don’t like to.”

Every teammate of Matheson’s we spoke to praised the 13-3-3 Kings, with goaltender Jake Allen referring to them as the most unified team in the NHL and Brendan Gallagher calling them “really hard to play against.”

But the Kings also served up a template for the Canadiens to follow.

When we asked coach Martin St. Louis what they should take from this game, he decided to answer that there was something they should take from the Kings.

“I think, if anything, that offensive pace they play with, in terms of getting pucks back in our d-zone when they lose the puck, they’re hunting to get it back and there’s not much room,” St. Louis said.

He knows the Canadiens understand that’s the goal. He says all the time they should be committed to defending as soon as they lose the puck, that defence doesn’t begin in their own zone.

Kings’ Grundstrom takes aim and unloads blistering slapshot to open scoring vs. Canadiens

But St. Louis and the Canadiens also know they don’t have the pieces the Kings do — three world-class centres in Anze Kopitar, Phillip Danault and Pierre-Luc Dubois with size and strength on the wings and on defence — nor the experience to execute it as regularly.

Not that they won’t strive to.

“You can’t generate that without everybody working hard off the puck and everybody having some pace to their game,” St. Louis said. “That’s what we’re chasing. That’s what we want to look like in getting pucks back. When we do that, we’re hard to play against. We’ve just got to find more consistency in playing with that pace when we lose pucks.”

It’ll take time, even if the Canadiens can improve on it over the final 61 games of the season.

A healthy Kirby Dach will help next go around. Other additions made over the off-season will lead to more growth.

In the meantime, it was good for the Canadiens to see that style of play work so well from up close. Even if it was painful and frustrating for them to be the victim of it.

“We didn’t play a bad game,” St. Louis said. “They’re a team that forces you to really earn all your chances. They bring so much pace defensively. We were able to break that a bit in the second. It would’ve been fun to score then. We were there, but once they score the third, that changes everything.”

That’s when the Canadiens began chasing — and leaking — chances.

They’ll face the Kings again Dec. 7. They’ll face other teams who play similarly. They’ll have to borrow from L.A.’s style, but also make the adjustments that would’ve enabled them to break it a little.

“I think you have to bring speed and be very connected and be coming together,” said Matheson, who like Guhle and Lindstrom late in the game, spent a lot of his night looking for breakout options that weren’t available to him.

“I thought we did a good job of bringing speed and being connected a few times,” Matheson said, “and at other times one guy might have gone a little early, one guy might have come a little late off the bench or we were maybe getting antsy and impatient. When a team does that as well as they do in the neutral zone, you have to be very, very connected.”

If you’re not, you end up with just one shot on net in a period, like the Canadiens did in the first.

If you can’t capitalize on the chances you create in the second period and end up chasing a two-goal lead in the third, a team like the Kings will feast on the mistakes you become more prone to making.

There isn’t much else you can do from there, except learn from it and move on.

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Lawyer says Chinese doping case handled ‘reasonably’ but calls WADA’s lack of action “curious”

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An investigator gave the World Anti-Doping Agency a pass on its handling of the inflammatory case involving Chinese swimmers, but not without hammering away at the “curious” nature of WADA’s “silence” after examining Chinese actions that did not follow rules designed to safeguard global sports.

WADA on Thursday released the full decision from Eric Cottier, the Swiss investigator it appointed to analyze its handling of the case involving the 23 Chinese swimmers who remained eligible despite testing positive for performance enhancers in 2021.

In echoing wording from an interim report issued earlier this summer, Cottier said it was “reasonable” that WADA chose not to appeal the Chinese anti-doping agency’s explanation that the positives came from contamination.

“Taking into consideration the particularities of the case, (WADA) appears … to have acted in accordance with the rules it has itself laid out for anti-doping organizations,” Cottier wrote.

But peppered throughout his granular, 56-page analysis of the case was evidence and reminders of how WADA disregarded some of China’s violations of anti-doping protocols. Cottier concluded this happened more for the sake of expediency than to show favoritism toward the Chinese.

“In retrospect at least, the Agency’s silence is curious, in the face of a procedure that does not respect the fundamental rules, and its lack of reaction is surprising,” Cottier wrote of WADA’s lack of fealty to the world anti-doping code.

Travis Tygart, the CEO of the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency and one of WADA’s fiercest critics, latched onto this dynamic, saying Cottier’s information “clearly shows that China did not follow the rules, and that WADA management did nothing about it.”

One of the chief complaints over the handling of this case was that neither WADA nor the Chinese gave any public notice upon learning of the positive tests for the banned heart medication Temozolomide, known as TMZ.

The athletes also were largely kept in the dark and the burden to prove their innocence was taken up by Chinese authorities, not the athletes themselves, which runs counter to what the rulebook demands.

Despite the criticisms, WADA generally welcomed the report.

“Above all, (Cottier) reiterated that WADA showed no bias towards China and that its decision not to appeal the cases was reasonable based on the evidence,” WADA director general Olivier Niggli said. “There are however certainly lessons to be learned by WADA and others from this situation.”

Tygart said “this report validates our concerns and only raises new questions that must be answered.”

Cottier expanded on doubts WADA’s own chief scientist, Olivier Rabin, had expressed over the Chinese contamination theory — snippets of which were introduced in the interim report. Rabin was wary of the idea that “a few micrograms” of TMZ found in the kitchen at the hotel where the swimmers stayed could be enough to cause the group contamination.

“Since he was not in a position to exclude the scenario of contamination with solid evidence, he saw no other solution than to accept it, even if he continued to have doubts about the reality of contamination as described by the Chinese authorities,” Cottier wrote.

Though recommendations for changes had been expected in the report, Cottier made none, instead referring to several comments he’d made earlier in the report.

Key among them were his misgivings that a case this big was largely handled in private — a breach of custom, if not the rules themselves — both while China was investigating and after the file had been forwarded to WADA. Not until the New York Times and German broadcaster ARD reported on the positives were any details revealed.

“At the very least, the extraordinary nature of the case (23 swimmers, including top-class athletes, 28 positive tests out of 60 for a banned substance of therapeutic origin, etc.), could have led to coordinated and concerted reflection within the Agency, culminating in a formal and clearly expressed decision to take no action,” the report said.

WADA’s executive committee established a working group to address two more of Cottier’s criticisms — the first involving what he said was essentially WADA’s sloppy recordkeeping and lack of formal protocol, especially in cases this complex; and the second a need to better flesh out rules for complex cases involving group contamination.

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French league’s legal board orders PSG to pay Kylian Mbappé 55 million euros of unpaid wages

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The French league’s legal commission has ordered Paris Saint-Germain to pay Kylian Mbappé the 55 million euros ($61 million) in unpaid wages that he claims he’s entitled to, the league said Thursday.

The league confirmed the decision to The Associated Press without more details, a day after the France superstar rejected a mediation offer by the commission in his dispute with his former club.

PSG officials and Mbappé’s representatives met in Paris on Wednesday after Mbappé asked the commission to get involved. Mbappé joined Real Madrid this summer on a free transfer.

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Reggie Bush was at his LA-area home when 3 male suspects attempted to break in

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LOS ANGELES (AP) — Former football star Reggie Bush was at his Encino home Tuesday night when three male suspects attempted to break in, the Los Angeles Times reported Wednesday.

“Everyone is safe,” Bush said in a text message to the newspaper.

The Los Angeles Police Dept. told the Times that a resident of the house reported hearing a window break and broken glass was found outside. Police said nothing was stolen and that three male suspects dressed in black were seen leaving the scene.

Bush starred at Southern California and in the NFL. The former running back was reinstated as the 2005 Heisman Trophy winner this year. He forfeited it in 2010 after USC was hit with sanctions partly related to Bush’s dealings with two aspiring sports marketers.

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