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Edmonton Oilers emerge as serious Stanley Cup contender

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The Edmonton Oilers celebrate a goal scored by forward Leon Draisaitl against the Anaheim Ducks at Rogers Place in Edmonton, on April 1.Perry Nelson/USA TODAY Sports via Reuters

At this point, it is difficult not to see the Oilers as a serious contender to win the Stanley Cup. They had the best record in the NHL in March, boast the league’s top two offensive players and have much-improved goaltending.

They are two points behind Vegas with five games left in the regular season but are on a trajectory to win the Pacific Division and finish as the No. 1 team in the Western Conference.

On Saturday night Edmonton beat up on the Anaheim Ducks and officially clinched a playoff spot in a game in which Leon Draisaitl scored on a power play, short-handed and at even strength to reach 50 goals on the campaign.

It is the second successive year he has scored 50 or more and the third time in his career. Over the past five seasons he has more goals (229) than any other player. In that span Auston Matthews is second with 222 and Connor McDavid is third with 214.

The latter got his 62nd on Saturday and is now just four points shy of 150. The Oilers are the first team to have two 50-goal scorers since 1995-96 when Mario Lemieux and Jaromir Jagr did it for the Pittsburgh Penguins.

It is not out of the question that they will have three 100-point scorers: Ryan Nugent-Hopkins has 97, a career best, and Draisaitl has 120. If Nugent-Hopkins reaches the milestone, Edmonton will be the first team with three since Jagr, Lemieux and Ron Francis did it, also in 1995-96.

This is the fourth consecutive year the Oilers have reached the postseason. A year ago they lost to the Stanley Cup champion Avalanche in the Western Conference final.

It is hard to compare them but, with the exception of the Boston Bruins, the Pacific is likely just as tough as the Atlantic Division. Edmonton is 13-2-1 in its past 16 and 9-0-1 over its past 10 and has had to be to keep up in the standings. As of Sunday, Vegas was 7-2-1 in its past 10, Los Angeles was 6-2-2 and so was Calgary.

There are lots of iterations but here is an interesting one: The Flames have won three in a row to vie for a wild-card spot and could possibly face the Oilers in the first round if Edmonton wins the conference title.

Only a month ago the two teams that participated in a huge off-season trade – Calgary and Florida – looked as though they had little hope of going anywhere. The Panthers have at least temporarily passed Pittsburgh in the race for the second wild card.

The Oilers went 12-2-1 in March to match a franchise record for wins and points in a calendar month. McDavid was chosen as the NHL’s first star for March with 11 goals and 18 assists. Draisaitl was the second star; all he did was put up 11 goals and 17 assists.

Stuart Skinner, the team’s No. 1 goaltender, was the league’s rookie of the month. He went 10-1-1, winning one more time in 30 days than any netminder in Edmonton history. That’s right. Not even Grant Fuhr won more than nine in a month.

A lot of things seem to have come together at the right time for the Oilers. Nugent-Hopkins (35 goals) and Zach Hyman (34) are providing secondary scoring, Evander Kane has returned to form after a serious injury, Darnell Nurse registered his 42nd point on Saturday and Mattias Ekholm has made the defence much more formidable.

Even Jack Campbell, who has had a terrible first year with the Oilers, contributed with 36 saves and a shutout against the Ducks.

Skinner shut out Los Angeles on Thursday.

“My game hasn’t been at the level I expect it to be at any point this year,” Campbell, who lost the starting job to Skinner, said afterward. “Tonight was a great step for me personally.”

Campbell, who signed with Edmonton after three years in Toronto, is unlikely to see much if any action during the playoffs. But until now he has looked like the team’s weakest link and just pitched a shutout.

“He is such a great guy,” Draisaitl said. “All year he has been one of the best teammates I have ever been around whether things have gone his way or not. Hopefully this will turn a corner for him.

“Sometimes it takes a little longer when you join a new team.”

The Oilers look ready for another postseason run right now.

“You might look at me and shake your head because we just set a record for our organization with 12 wins in the month of March, but I think there is more there,” said Jay Woodcroft, the head coach. “We can develop a level of consistency to our game night in and night out that will prove very difficult starting in Game 83.”

 

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Flames re-sign defenceman Ilya Solovyov, centre Cole Schwindt

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CALGARY – The Calgary Flames have re-signed defenceman Ilya Solovyov and centre Cole Schwindt, the NHL club announced Wednesday.

Solovyov signed a two-year deal which is a two-way contract in year one and a one-way deal in year two and carries an average annual value of US$775,000 at the NHL level.

Schwindt signed a one-year, two-way contract with an average annual value of $800,000 at the NHL level.

The 24-year-old Solovyov, from Mogilev, Belarus, made his NHL debut last season and had three assists in 10 games for the Flames. He also had five goals and 10 assists in 51 games with the American Hockey League’s Calgary Wranglers and added one goal in six Calder Cup playoff games.

Schwindt, from Kitchener, Ont., made his Flames debut last season and appeared in four games with the club.

The 23-year-old also had 14 goals and 22 assists in 66 regular-season games with the Wranglers and added a team-leading four goals, including one game-winning goal, in the playoffs.

Schwindt was selected by Florida in the third round, 81st overall, at the 2019 NHL draft. He came to Calgary in July 2022 along with forward Jonathan Huberdeau and defenceman MacKenzie Weegar in the trade that sent star forward Matthew Tkachuk to the Panthers.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Sept. 18, 2024.

The Canadian Press. All rights reserved.

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Oman holds on to edge Nepal with one ball to spare in cricket thriller

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KING CITY, Ont. – Oman scored 10 runs in the final over to edge Nepal by one wicket with just one ball remaining in ICC Cricket World Cup League 2 play Wednesday.

Kaleemullah, the No. 11 batsman who goes by one name, hit a four with the penultimate ball as Oman finished at 223 for nine. Nepal had scored 220 for nine in its 50 overs.

Kaleemullah and No. 9 batsman Shakeel Ahmed each scored five in the final over off Sompal Kami. They finished with six and 17 runs, respectively.

Opener Latinder Singh led Oman with 41 runs.

Nepal’s Gulsan Jha was named man of the match after scoring 53 runs and recording a career-best five-wicket haul. The 18-year-old slammed five sixes and three-fours in his 35-ball knock, scoring 23 runs in the 46th over alone when he hit six, six, four, two, four and one off Aqib Ilyas.

Captain Rohit Paudel led Nepal with 60 runs.

The 19th-ranked Canadians, who opened the triangular series Monday with a 103-run win over No. 17 Nepal, face No. 16 Oman on Friday, Nepal on Sunday and Oman again on Sept. 26. All the games are at the Maple Leaf Cricket Ground.

The eight World League 2 teams each play 36 one-day internationals spread across nine triangular series through December 2026. The top four sides will go through to a World Cup qualifier that will decide the last four berths in the expanded 14-team Cricket World Cup in South Africa, Zimbabwe and Namibia.

Canada (5-4) stands second in the World League 2 table. The 14th-ranked Dutch top the table at 6-2.

Oman (2-2 with one no-result) stands sixth, ahead of Nepal (1-5).

Canada won all four matches in its opening tri-series in February-March, sweeping No. 11 Scotland and the 20th-ranked host Emirates. But the Canadians lost four in a row to the 18th-ranked U.S. and host Netherlands in August.

Canada which debuted in the T20 World Cup this summer in the U.S. and West Indies, is looking to get back to the showcase 50-over Cricket World Cup for the first time since 2011 after failing to qualify for the last three editions. The Canadian men also played in the 1979, 2003 and 2007 tournaments, exiting after the group stage in all four tournament appearances.

The Canadian men regained their one-day international status for the first time in almost a decade by finishing in the top four of the ICC Cricket World Cup Qualifier Playoff in April 2023 in Bermuda.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Sept. 18, 2024

The Canadian Press. All rights reserved.

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Vancouver Canucks will miss Demko, Joshua, others to start training camp

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PENTICTON, B.C. – Rick Tocchet has already warned his Vancouver Canucks players — the looming NHL season won’t be easy.

The team made strides last year, the head coach said Wednesday ahead of training camp. The bar has been raised for this year’s campaign.

“To get to the next plateau, there are higher expectations and it’s going to be hard. We know that,” Tocchet said in Penticton, B.C., where the team will open its camp on Thursday.

“So that’s the next level. It starts day one (on Thursday). My thing is don’t waste a rep out there.”

The Canucks finished atop the Pacific Division with a 50-23-9 record last season, then ousted the Nashville Predators from the playoffs in a gritty, six-game first-round series. Vancouver then fell to the Edmonton Oilers in a seven-game second-round set.

Last fall, Jim Rutherford, the Canucks president of hockey operations, said everything would have to go right for the team to make a playoff push. That doesn’t change this season, he said, despite last year’s success.

“The challenges will be greater, certainly. But I believe the team that we started with last year, we have just as good a team to start the season this year and probably better,” he said.

“As long as the team builds off what they did last year, stick to what the coaches tell them, stick to the system, stick together in good times and bad times, this team has a chance to do pretty well.”

Some key players will be missing as Vancouver’s training camp begins, however.

Canucks general manager Patrik Allvin announced Wednesday that star goalie Thatcher Demko will not be on the ice when the team begins it’s pre-season preparation.

Allvin did not disclose the reason for Demko’s absence, but said the 28-year-old American has been making progress.

“He’s been in working extremely hard and he seems to be in a great mindset,” the GM said.

Demko missed several weeks of the regular season and much of Vancouver’s playoff run last spring with a knee injury.

The six-foot-four, 192-pound goalie has a career 213-116-81 regular-season record with a .912 save percentage, a 2.79 goals-against average and eight shutouts across seven seasons with the Canucks.

Allvin also announced that veteran centre Teddy Blueger and defensive prospect Cole McWard will also miss the start of training camp after each had “minor lower-body surgery.”

Vancouver previously announced winger Dakota Joshua won’t be present for the start of camp as he recovers from surgery for testicular cancer.

Tocchet said he’ll have no problem filling the holes, and plans to switch his lines up a lot in Penticton.

“Nothing’s set in stone,” he said. “I think it’s important that you have different puzzles at different times.”

The coach added that he expects standout centre Elias Pettersson to begin on a line with Canucks newcomer Jake DeBrusk.

Vancouver inked DeBrusk, a former Boston Bruins forward, to a seven-year, US$38.5 million deal when the NHL’s free agent market opened on July 1.

The glare on Pettersson is expected to be bright once again as he enters the first year of a new eight-year, $92.8 million contract. The 25-year-old Swede struggled at times last season and put 89 points (34 goals, 55 assists) in 82 games.

Rutherford said he was impressed with how Pettersson looked when he returned to Vancouver ahead of camp.

“He seems to be a guy that’s more relaxed and more comfortable. And for obvious reasons,” said the president of hockey ops. “This is a guy that I believe has worked really hard this summer. He’s done everything he can to play as a top-line player. … The expectation for him is to be one of the top players on our team.”

A number of Canucks hit milestones last season, including Quinn Hughes, who led all NHL defencemen in scoring with 92 points and won the Norris Trophy as the league’s top blue liner.

Several players could once again have career-best years for Vancouver, Tocchet said, but they’ll need to be consistent and not allow frustration to creep in when things go wrong.

“You’ve just got to drive yourself every day when you have a great year,” the coach said. “You’ve got to keep creating that environment where they can achieve those goals, whatever they are. And the main goal is winning. That’s really what it comes down to.”

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Sept. 18, 2024.

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