adplus-dvertising
Connect with us

Sports

GAME 6: It’s over! Edmonton Oilers eliminate Kings in wild shootout

Published

 on

“To get it done here is really big. It gives us a day to regroup, rest up a bit and get ready for another really good test in Vegas”

People always like to say that the two best words in sports are Game 7, but those people aren’t from teams and cities with a chance to wrap things up in Game 6.

For them, the two best words are ‘It’s Over.”
And, after a long night of drama at Crypto.com Arena capped an equally-compelling series, Edmonton and the Oilers get to say exactly that, after eliminating the Los Angeles Kings in six games.Kailer Yamamoto scored the winning goal with 3:02 left in a 5-4 victory, letting goaltender Stuart Skinner off the hook for a third period giveaway and sending Edmonton on to the second round where they’ll face the Vegas Golden Knights.

“It was a really strange series, a really tight series, hard fought series,” said Oilers captain Connor McDavid. “It’s a good sign our group battled through; those tight games are what brings a group together.“Up and down the lineup we had contributions. Both goalies stepped up in the series. We had seven D-men play and a bunch of different forwards stepping up at crucial times. That’s what hockey is all about. It’s a good sign for our group.”

300x250x1
L.A.’s urgency and survival instincts kept things close — they came back from 1-0 down in the first period and 3-1 down in the second and 4-3 in the third — but weren’t enough to withstand an Oilers team that was in no mood for a Game 7.“Game 7, you just never know what could happen,” said McDavid. “A break here or a break there, a call here or there, you’d like to avoid it at all costs.

“To get it done here is really big. It gives us a day to regroup, rest up a bit and get ready for another really good test in Vegas.”

In a series that never lacked for drama, maybe the biggest shocker of all six games came with Edmonton up 4-3, on the power play and with time winding down in the the third period.

Skinner’s stick gave out on a pass attempt and the puck slid right to Phillip Danault on the doorstep. The freebie tied things up with 12:14 to play.

“When I got the puck it didn’t feel like there was anything different, it felt totally fine,” said Skinner. “I was trying to hit (Evan Bouchard) with a nice, hard, crisp pass and kind of snapped it on the bottom.“Free goal for that guy. That stuff happens. It’s about how you bounce back from that, how you respond to moments like that. I thought we did a great job.”

That could have been it, but the Oilers steadied themselves and won it on Yamamoto’s seeing-eye shot in the waning moments.

“I was having flashbacks to Game 4 against Calgary last year,” said McDavid, referring to the Flames scoring on Mike Smith from 160-feet midway through the third period last year to tie it 3-3.

“It’s good that we’ve been in that situation before where a weird one goes in where you feel like you’re doing a lot of good things. The game is tied and you really didn’t do anything wrong.”There was supposed to be a terrible first period storm awaiting the Oilers in Game 6, but it never really came.

McDavid scored first for Edmonton just 1:25 into the first period to settle everything down and the opening period was pretty much even after that.

Kings defenceman Sean Durzi tied it on low wrister from the point at 8:12, but Klim Kostin restored the lead four minutes later with his second of a playoffs and the Oilers were up 2-1 at the first intermission.

Edmonton surged ahead in the second period on Leon Draisaitl’s power play goal at 4:06. With a 3-1 lead they finally had a little breathing room.

But it didn’t last long.The penalty trouble that haunted Edmonton early in the series came back to bite them again, in a big and costly way.

Nick Bjugstad took a minor for holding Anze Kopitar at 5:22 and Adrian Kempe made it 3-2 at 6:36. If that wasn’t enough, Mattias Ekholm got the stick up on Phillip Danault at 7:17 and Kevin Fiala tied it 3-3 at 8:16.

That’s the third time in the series the Kings have come back from 2-0 down and it should have been enough to shift momentum to L.A.’s favour.

But it wasn’t.

The Oilers did some fighting back of their own on another goal from Kostin at 10:54 to set up the third period excitement.

 

728x90x4

Source link

Continue Reading

Sports

Blue Jays’ Chris Bassitt announces birth of child to cap ‘perfect weekend’

Published

 on

The Toronto Blue Jays had a memorable few days in New York, thanks to a three-game sweep of the Mets, but that’s not the biggest reason starting pitcher Chris Bassitt is all smiles these days.

Bassitt and his wife, Jessica, welcomed their second child over the weekend, with the veteran right-hander reporting that both mother and baby are doing well.

“Perfect weekend complete,” Bassitt wrote on Twitter. “Momma and Colson are doing great.”

Jessica went into labour Friday, while her husband took his normal turn in the Blue Jays’ rotation. Bassitt channelled all of his “dad strength” in that outing against the Mets, firing 7 2/3 innings of shutout ball with eight strikeouts in a 3-0 Toronto win. In a cruel twist from the universe, the start of the game was delayed more than 90 minutes due to inclement weather.

300x250x1

Once his outing was over, Bassitt rushed back to Toronto via private plane to be with Jessica for Colson’s birth. He made it in plenty of time, tweeting Saturday morning that the baby hadn’t arrived yet.

The 34-year-old will now be able to enjoy a few days with his family, as the Blue Jays placed him on the paternity list Saturday. Reliever Jay Jackson took his place on the 26-man roster.

Blue Jays pitcher Chris Bassitt dominated the Mets in his outing Friday. (Photo by Vaughn Ridley/Getty Images)
Blue Jays pitcher Chris Bassitt dominated the Mets in his outing Friday. (Photo by Vaughn Ridley/Getty Images)

Bassitt’s Blue Jays teammates gave him even more reason to cheer by eking out a 2-1 victory Saturday before getting the brooms out with a 6-4 win in the series finale.

Brandon Belt was the hero Sunday, connecting for a go-ahead, two-run home run in the seventh inning after Toronto squandered an early 4-0 advantage. Vladimir Guerrero Jr. also went deep for the Blue Jays, while Whit Merrifield delivered a two-run double in the second inning.

Next up, Toronto welcomes the Houston Astros to Rogers Centre for a four-game series that begins Monday. Bassitt is listed as the probable starter for Wednesday’s contest.

 

728x90x4

Source link

Continue Reading

Sports

Rory McIlroy (T-1) falls back on short game, stays positive with chance at Memorial

Published

 on

DUBLIN, Ohio – Rory McIlroy will set out Sunday afternoon at Jack’s Place looking to secure the second leg of the “Legends Slam” with a swing that’s well short of perfect and no shortage of would-be spoilers lurking.

He couldn’t be happier.

For the third consecutive day at the Memorial, McIlroy leaned on luck and grit to keep pace with the co-leaders – Si Woo Kim and David Lipsky – at 6 under par with 10 other players within two shots of the lead. Betting lines will undoubtedly favor the world No. 3 against the other contenders, but the truth is he has no idea what to expect when he sets out in the week’s final group.


Full-field scores from the Memorial Tournament

300x250x1

“I don’t think I hit a green from the eighth hole through the 14th hole, and I played those holes in even par,” McIlroy shrugged following his third-round 70. “Chip in on 12 [for birdie] and got it up-and-down from some tricky spots. I was really happy with how I scored out there and how I just sort of hung in there for most of the day.”

If McIlroy’s happy-to-be-here take doesn’t match with his world-beater persona, it’s the honest byproduct of a swing that he’s repeatedly said is a work in progress. Saturday’s round on a hard-and-fast course was the most-recent example of his very real struggle.

There was the chip-in for birdie at No. 12 from 25 feet and scrambling pars at Nos. 8, 11, 13 and 14. The major champion, whose career has been written with an overwhelming driver and sublime iron play, has now fully embraced the scrappy life.

“Embracing it,” he smiled. “There was a couple of shots out there when I missed the greens that I was sort of looking forward to hit. I think it’s embracing that challenge and embracing the fact that you’re probably not going to hit more than 12 or 13 greens out there. I think with how my short game’s been this week it’s something I’ve been able to fall back on, which has been great.”

To be fair, Rory is still Rory off the tee. He’s eighth this week in strokes gained: off the tee and second in driving distance, which at Muirfield Village is an accomplishment considering host Jack Nicklaus’ mission is to take driver out of the hands of the game’s top players.

Where the challenge has come is from the fairway and, despite his lofty status among the leaders, Saturday’s effort was his statistically worst of the week with just 7 of 18 greens in regulation and a loss to the field (1.71 shots) in strokes gained: approach the green.

Still, he’s the easy favorite with 18 holes remaining and for good reason. Other than Kim, who has four PGA Tour victories including the 2017 Players Championship, the next six players on the board have a combined four Tour victories.

“It’s a big tournament and I’ve got quite a bit of experience in that and you would like to think that gives you a little bit of an advantage,” McIlroy said. “Everyone’s going to go out there tomorrow and, regardless of where you are in the tournament, this golf course makes you a little uncomfortable anyway. So, everyone’s going to be feeling like that. With the way the leaderboard is and how bunched it is, it’s just going to come down to who can sort of hold their head the most coming down the stretch.”

 

 

 

Scottie Scheffler isn’t happy with what he’s been putting out on the course as of late, despite some solid results.

 

Considering his own assessment of his swing, keeping a positive outlook doesn’t seem to be a problem for McIlroy this week. It might have something to do with what has admittedly been a rough couple of weeks, which stretch back to his missed cut at the Masters. Or it might just be the opportunity.

When he won the Arnold Palmer Invitational in 2018, it was two years after that tournament’s host and legend had died. For a player who grew up idolizing The King, it was a bittersweet accomplishment and a part of why Sunday at Muirfield Village is likely to mean more than the sum of its parts.

“To be able to walk up that hill from 18 and get that handshake from Jack would be pretty nice,” he said. “I won Arnold’s tournament a few years ago, but he had already passed by that time. So it would be so nice to be able to do it and have Jack be there.”

It’s been an interesting year for McIlroy both on and off the course, which at least partially explains a lightness in his step that had been missing. There was also a message from his sports psychologist, Bob Rotella, last week that appeared to resonate with the 23-time Tour winner: “You are going to win your fare share of golf tournaments. You tee it up to see what your fare share is.”

 

728x90x4

Source link

Continue Reading

Sports

Vladimir Guerrero Drives Home Winning Run, Jays Beat Mets

Published

 on

Jays 2 Mets 1

Off the top, I’m pretty sure that’s the worst job we’ve seen from a plate umpire this year. He had no clue where the strike zone was. John Schneider got thrown out of the game after a particularly bad strike call on Vladimir Guerrero in the ninth.

Fortunately, Vlad still doubled down the third base line to bring in the winning run. Pretty amazing job after being down 1-2. George Springer had a one-out single and steal.

Our only other run came in the sixth. Brandon Belt led off with a double. Matt Chapman walked. Two outs later, Alejandro Kirk, singled home Belt.

300x250x1

We had the bases loaded in the first but couldn’t get a run in. There were other chances but no luck.

In all we had 10 hits. Springer, Bichette, Belt and Kirk had two each. Chapman, Merrifield and Kiermaier had the 0 fors.


Jose Berrios was terrific. 5 innings, 4 hits, 3 walks and 6 strikeouts. 1 earned, scoring in the second inning, when he gave up a single to Starling Marte and a double to Daniel Vogelbach. But then he got three quick outs, and the Mets didn’t do much against him the rest of the way.

Trevor Richards, Nate Pearson (getting the win) and Erik Swanson (save #1 of the season), each pitched a scoreless inning. I didn’t understand pulling Richards after the one inning, but it all worked out. I think Pearson would have stayed out for another inning if the Jays didn’t take the lead.


Jays of the Day: Vlad (.310 WPA), Belt (.222), Swanson (.177), Berrios (.164), Pearson (.098) and Richards (.082).

The Other Award: Merrifield (-.376 for his 0 for) and Kiermaier (-.175 for his 0 for).

Tomorrow the Jays go for the sweep with Yusei Kikuchi (6-2, 4.47) vs. Kodai Senga (5-3, 3.44). It is to be a 1:30 Eastern start, but then today’s was to be a 4:00 Eastern start but the Mets had Al Leiter talking for 30 minutes about how great he was.

 

728x90x4

Source link

Continue Reading

Trending