Edmonton Oilers sign centre Leon Draisaitl to eight-year extension | Canada News Media
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Edmonton Oilers sign centre Leon Draisaitl to eight-year extension

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EDMONTON – The Edmonton Oilers have signed star centre Leon Draisaitl to an eight-year contract extension, the club announced Tuesday.

The contract has an average annual value of US$14 million, the highest in NHL history.

Draisaitl played 81 games last season, scoring 41 goals and 65 assists for 106 points. He added another 10 goals and 21 assists through 25 playoff games, helping propel Edmonton to its first Stanley Cup final appearance since 2006.

He was set to become an unrestricted free agent next summer.

“This is a historic day for the Edmonton Oilers,” Oilers general manager Stan Bowman said in a statement. “Leon’s commitment to our team, our city and Oilers fans everywhere cannot be overstated. His desire to help bring a Stanley Cup title home to Edmonton is central to everything he does both on and off the ice.”

Draisaitl signed an eight-year, US$68 million contract extension in August 2017 that carried an annual average cap hit of $8.5 million — and quickly turned into one of the NHL’s bargains — that expires after the 2024-25 season.

The 28-year-old centre has 347 goals and 503 assists for 850 points in 719 regular-season games since getting selected third overall at the 2014 NHL draft.

Draisaitl was leading the league in scoring with 110 points (43 goals, 67 assists) across 71 contests in 2019-20 when the COVID-19 pandemic shuttered the sports world.

The Cologne, Germany, product won the Art Ross Trophy as a result, and then up picked up both the Hart Trophy as NHL MVP and the Ted Lindsay Award — given to the most outstanding player as voted on by the NHLPA membership.

Draisaitl, who suited up for the Western Hockey League’s Prince Alberta Raiders in junior, has six 100-point seasons to go along with an 84-point output during the NHL’s pandemic-shortened 2020-21 campaign.

He put up a career-best 128 points in 2022-23 when teammate Connor McDavid led the league with 153 after setting a personal high with 55 goals the previous season when Auston Matthews of the Toronto Maple Leafs topped the ledger with 60.

The Oilers struggled to find the right mix around Draisaitl and McDavid until finally breaking through when they made the 2022 Western Conference final before falling to the Colorado Avalanche, who went on to win the Stanley Cup.

Edmonton lost in the second round the following spring to the Vegas Golden Knights — another team about to hoist hockey’s holy grail — and then fell in this year’s final to the Florida Panthers after besting the Los Angeles Kings, Vancouver Canucks and Dallas Stars.

McDavid’s current contract, which carries a $12.5-million salary cap hit, runs through the 2025-26 season.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Sept. 3, 2024.

The Canadian Press. All rights reserved.

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Missing Nova Scotia woman was killed, man facing first-degree murder charge: RCMP

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HALIFAX – Police have accused a Nova Scotia man of murdering a woman reported missing from the province’s Annapolis Valley after U.S. authorities detained a suspect at the Houston airport as he was preparing to board a flight to Mexico.

The RCMP say they charged 54-year-old Dale Allen Toole with first-degree murder after he was extradited by U.S. authorities and landed at Pearson International Airport in Toronto on Thursday.

RCMP Insp. Murray Marcichiw said investigators have yet to find the body of 55-year-old Esther Jones, but he said police believe there was sufficient evidence to lay the murder charge.

The search for Jones began on Labour Day after family members reported her missing.

RCMP Cpl. Jeff MacFarlane, lead investigator in the case, says Jones was last seen Aug. 31 at the Kingston Bible College in Greenwood, N.S.

MacFarlane says the accused, who is from Tremont, N.S., was not a suspect until police received key information from the Jones family and the community.

He said police executed a number of search warrants at locations in and around Annapolis County, including the communities of Kingston, Greenwood and South Tremont.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Sept. 13, 2024.

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Call for more Muslim professors: Quebec says anti-Islamophobia adviser must resign

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MONTREAL – The Quebec government says Canada’s special representative on combating Islamophobia must resign, after she sent a letter to college and university heads recommending the hiring of more Muslim, Arab and Palestinian professors.

The existence of the letter, dated Aug. 30, was first reported by Le Journal de Québec, and a Canadian Heritage spokesperson says it was sent to institutions across the country.

In her letter, Amira Elghawaby says that since the start of the war between Israel and Hamas in October 2023, a dangerous climate has arisen on campuses.

She says to ease tensions educational institutions should be briefed on civil liberties and Islamophobia, and that they should hire more professors of Muslim, Arab and Palestinian origin.

It was this reference to hiring that drew the immediate indignation of Quebec’s higher education minister, who called on Elghawaby to resign, saying she should “mind her own business.”

Minister Pascale Déry says hiring professors based on religion goes against the principles of secularism the province adheres to.

Speaking to reporters in the Montreal area, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said that while each university will make its own hires, Elghawaby’s role is to make recommendations and encourage dialogue between different groups.

Later in Repentigny, Que., Premier François Legault criticized Trudeau for defending Elghawaby “in the name of diversity” and refusing to call for her resignation.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Sept. 13, 2024.

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B.C. accepts change for psychiatric care after alleged attack by mentally ill man

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VANCOUVER – A report into a triple stabbing at a festival in Vancouver’s Chinatown last year says the man accused of the crimes had been let out of a psychiatric care facility 99 times in the year prior without incident.

The report, authored by former Abbotsford Police chief Bob Rich, says the suspect in the stabbing, Blair Donnelly, was on his 100th unescorted leave from the BC Forensic Psychiatric Hospital on Sept. 10, 2023, when he allegedly stabbed three festivalgoers at the Light Up Chinatown Festival.

The external review, ordered by the provincial government after the stabbings, says Donnelly was found not criminally responsible for killing his daughter in 2006 while “suffering from a psychotic delusion that God wanted him to kill her.”

Rich’s report makes several recommendations to better handle “higher-risk patients,” including bolstering their care teams, improving policies around granting patient leaves, shoring up staff training in forensics and the use of “risk-management tools,” such as GPS tracking systems.

The B.C. Ministry of Health says it has accepted all of Rich’s recommendations and has already begun implementing them including “following new polices for granting leave privileges at the hospital.”

Court records show Donnelly is due back in Vancouver provincial court in March 2025.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Sept. 13, 2024.

The Canadian Press. All rights reserved.



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