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I Watched This Game: Garland’s milestone night leads Canucks over Golden Knights

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Monday night was Conor Garland’s 400th career NHL game and J.T. Miller made sure everyone knew it.

When Garland arrived at the rink, every single player on the Canucks was decked out in a bright blue t-shirt with Garland’s name and face emblazoned on it, commemorating the milestone event. Miller had them made for the team, though he regretted not making enough for everyone in the organization to wear one.

“We had a meeting today and I’m like, ‘What are these t-shirts?’” said head coach Rick Tocchet. “I look and 23 guys got Gars t-shirts on. That’s pretty cool.”

It was a chirp, of course, from a master of chirping. 400 career games is a milestone, yes, but not one that typically gets much attention. Players who reach 1,000 games get a silver stick but there are no sticks made of lesser precious metals for previous centennial milestones along the way.

The funniest thing is, the t-shirt wasn’t even Miller’s idea.

“That was my idea,” said Garland after the game. “Not for me! For someone else. They got me.”

“I gotta admit, it was his idea to get somebody else and I thought that was a great opportunity to get him with it,” said Miller. “I’m sure he told you it was his idea…It’s good to see the guys get a chuckle.”

Notably, Elias Pettersson played his 400th career game just one week ago on April 2, also against the Golden Knights. If Pettersson was indeed the original target, perhaps the timing was just ever so slightly off with his 400th game coming on the road.

That kind of silly joke can make a serious difference for a team like the Canucks, who have had to strike a balance between their business-like approach and keeping things light across a long, 82-game season.

“Of course! I wish it wasn’t me on it,” said Garland when asked if a goofy t-shirt can help the group. “That’s what Millsy does so well for us. It’s nice to come in and everyone has a laugh in the morning. It was a big game for us tonight and it relieved some stress. I know one guy wore it to the game — that was uncalled for.

“But it’s nice. It is. It’s a long year and when you’re in a bit of a stretch, you can use something like that and that’s what makes Millsy Millsy.”

The lightness certainly seemed to help in the game against the Vegas Golden Knights. Despite falling behind early, the Canucks rallied, led by none other than the man of the hour, Conor Garland, who had a two-goal game. The crowd even chanted Garland’s name, not after one of his goals, but after a power move down the wing where he set up a scoring chance with a one-handed pass.

Meanwhile, Brock Boeser hit a big milestone of his own with his 40th goal of the season, while J.T. Mille reached 100 points for the first time in his career with three assists.

“I wouldn’t say my milestone’s the same,” said Garland self-effacingly. “It’s games played, I just have to put my gear on. They’re getting 100 points and 40 goals, that’s the cool stuff. Those guys are elite players.”

After the game ended and Garland was named the first star, the crowd chanted Garland’s name again. When rinkside reporter Kate Pettersen mentioned he had scored his 100th career goal in his 400th career game, the crowd roared, cutting off any attempt he might have made at actually answering her question. Garland seemed to get a little misty-eyed and perhaps a little embarrassed by the adulation, and said, “That’s good for me, thanks guys,” before saluting the crowd as he left the ice.

“I might go down as the worst player ever to have their name chanted in a stadium,” said Garland. “It’s obviously cool. That’s the reward of playing in a Canadian market, playing in a big market like Vancouver. The first two years were tough for our whole group; this one’s been pretty good. If the environment’s anything like that in the playoffs, it’s going to be a really cool place to play.”

As much as 400 games may not seem like much against some of the grander totals played by NHL stars, it’s a major accomplishment for someone like Garland. He was a fifth-round pick in his second year of eligibility and worked his way up to the NHL despite a couple of underwhelming seasons in the AHL and a stature that is very generously listed as 5’10” by the NHL.

“Obviously, he’s not the biggest guy but he shows heart and he finds a way,” said Elias Pettersson.

“Not many people probably thought I could ever come here but when you make it and you get your foot in the door, you never want to have it slam shut on you,” said Garland. “It’s just about staying and playing as hard as you can for as long as you can.”

Garland played his 400th career game on Monday night and all he got was this lousy t-shirt when I watched this game.

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  • Tocchet has known Garland the longest of anyone on the team, having coached his first three seasons with the Arizona Coyotes. So, it was extra special for him to see Garland get lauded by the crowd.
  • “The players kid me that he’s my favourite, you know, teacher’s pet sort of thing,” said Tocchet. “There’s a little bit of fun there. Millsy always busts my balls about that…[Garland] had to change his game into being a more complete player…I told him when we were practicing, ‘You’re not a 17-minute player, you’re just not.’ And he looked at me and goes, ‘Well, you better make me one.’ It helped my career, to be honest with you. Like, ‘Yeah, you’re right, I’ve got to help you out.’ We have a good bond, me and Gars.”
  • The Canucks started this game with two excellent shifts and looked hungry to make up for their last loss to the Golden Knights but it was completely undone by a Brock Boeser penalty on the backcheck and a quick power play goal by Jack Eichel to open the scoring. The puck went right through Arturs Silovs like he was Kitty Pryde.
  • That was Vegas’s first shot of the game and they scored their second goal on their second shot. Carson Soucy inexplicably left Eichel — who is, I would remind you, Jack Eichel — all alone on a Vegas rush and Jonathan Marchessault found him with a cross-seam pass for a wide-open net after Silovs failed to push all the way across the net on the pass. Perhaps Silovs assumed that Soucy must have been covering someone in front of the net and that Marchessault’s pass was going to that someone rather than a player 20 feet away from Soucy.
  • That could have been a breaking point for the Canucks but they instead rallied thanks to the most urgent PP since I drove eight hours straight on a road trip without a rest stop break. With both Pettersson and Garland screening a Quinn Hughes’ point shot, Logan Thompson coughed up a rebound to the side of the net and Garland did the spade work to shovel it in to make it 2-1.
  • Pettersson and Garland provided the screen again on the Canucks’ second goal, this time mashing together side-by-side to make a double-wide screen. Like Sir Mix-A-Lot, Thompson had a big round thing in his face as he tried his best to look around the right side of Pettersson’s butt, only for Hughes’ point shot to go past Thompson on his left.
  • After getting beaten for two goals on two shots, Silovs settled in admirably, recovering to stop 20 of 21 shots the rest of the way. His biggest save came on a similar cross-seam pass as Eichel’s second goal but this time Silovs read it like a children’s picture book — quickly and easily — sliding across to rob Noah Hanifin.
  • Silovs had one more shaky moment to get through, however, as an undisciplined penalty by Soucy away from the play gave the Golden Knights their third power play of the game. Silovs couldn’t quite get a good look at Hanifin’s wrist shot from the point and whiffed on it with his blocker to make it 3-2.
  • After that, the Canucks took over the game, with Brock Boeser scoring his 40th goal of the season to tie things up a few minutes later. Boeser took a pass from Pettersson, then wheeled to the top of the offensive zone. His check, anticipating a drop pass to Hughes, stepped away from Boeser, giving him room to rotate into a shooting position like a Marder III Tank Destroyer and whip the puck past yet another Pettersson screen.
  • “That sucks,” quipped Miller about his now-former linemate hitting 40 goals. “I’ve been telling him he can’t score without me, so he’s been shoving it in my face a little bit right now. He’s a hell of a player and he’s proved that he can score a lot of goals in this league and I’m really glad to see all of that coming together for him…I’m just really happy for him.”
  • “[Pettersson’s] net-front was terrific,” said Tocchet. “He was in front for all three goals. It’s hard to be in front of the net taking an ass-kicking and I thought that was the key [for him].”
  • Soucy had a bit of a rough night but he made a fantastic play on what turned out to be the game-winning goal. He neatly knocked down the puck in the neutral zone, then skated up the left wing. His cross-ice pass didn’t connect with Garland, but Dakota Joshua jumped on the loose puck and fed it back to Miller for a cross-body one-timer that Thompson couldn’t snag, dropping the rebound into the crease for Garland to jam in for his second of the game.
  • Miller’s assist on the goal was his third of the night, bringing him to 100 points on the season, a new career high after reaching 99 points two years ago. He’s just the seventh player in franchise history to hit the century mark.
  • “You know I downplay everything but it’s pretty special,” said Miller. “We have a lot of work to do and I keep going back to that. I mean, I’ll have an extra beer tonight but other than that, it’s going to be something I can maybe enjoy in the summer.”
  • Garland certainly seemed to appreciate Miller’s accomplishment, giving him a playful smack on the arm on the bench after watching the replay on the big screen.
  • “Two years ago in Edmonton, we were on the same line,” said Garland, referencing the team’s final game of the season in 2022 when Miller was stuck on 99 points. “I must have missed, like, three or four in the third, so I always tell him it’s my fault he didn’t hit [100 points].”
  • The third period saw the dirtiest play of the game from Brett Howden, who hauled Nikita Zadorov down from behind in what was part can-opener and part slew-foot. Zadorov is lucky he didn’t blow out his knee or badly twist his ankle on the play, which hopefully wasn’t retribution for Zadorov’s hit on Howden in their last meeting, because if that was an intentional attempt to injure Zadorov, that would make it far worse than if it was just getting tangled up in the heat of the moment.
  • The Canucks played an outstanding third period to defend their one-goal lead, giving the Golden Knights little room to operate. I thought Ilya Mikheyev was solid all night but was particularly good on a third-period penalty kill to hold the lead. Hopefully, it’s a sign of things to come from Mikheyev.
  • Pettersson made a big defensive play to break up the Golden Knights’ most dangerous offensive zone possession of the period. With Anthony Mantha holding the puck down low, Pettersson took away the passing lane tot he slot, then took away the puck, forcing it up the boards where Mikheyev and Boeser were able to clear the zone. Then Mikheyev pursued the puck up ice to get it deep and ensure his linemates could change behind him. It was a bunch of little things adding up to a huge play.
  • As involved as Pettersson was all night, it’s kind of amazing he only ended up with a single assist. He came inches away from scoring an empty net goal with a bank shot off the boards, which would have been pretty cool. Instead, it was an icing, which only sounds pretty cool, on account of the ice.

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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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B.C. Lions lean on versatile offence to continue win streak against Toronto Argonauts

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VANCOUVER – A fresh face has been gracing the B.C. Lions‘ highlight reels in recent weeks.

Midway through his second CFL campaign, wide receiver Ayden Eberhardt has contributed touchdowns in two consecutive games.

The 26-year-old wide receiver from Loveland, Colo., was the lone B.C. player to reel in a passing major in his team’s 37-23 victory over the league-leading Montreal Alouettes last Friday. The week before, he notched his first CFL touchdown in the Lions’ win over the Ottawa Redblacks.

“It’s been awesome. It’s been really good,” Eberhardt said of his recent play. “At the end of the day, the biggest stat to me is if we win. But who doesn’t love scoring?”

He’ll look to add to the tally Friday when the Leos (7-6) host the Toronto Argonauts.

Eberhardt signed with B.C. as a free agent in January 2023 and spent much of last season on the practice squad before cementing a role on the roster this year.

The six-foot-two, 195-pound University of Wyoming product has earned more opportunities in his second season, said Lions’ head coach and co-general manager Rick Campbell.

“He’s a super hard worker and very smart. He understands, has high football IQ, as we call it,” Campbell said.

The fact that Eberhardt can play virtually every receiving position helps.

“He could literally go into a game and we could throw him into a spot and he’d know exactly what he’s doing,” the coach said. “That allows him to play fast and earn the quarterback’s trust. And you see him making plays.”

Eberhardt credited his teammates, coaches and the rest of the Lions’ staff with helping him prepare for any situation he might face. They’ve all spent time teaching him the ins and outs of the Canadian game, or go over the playbook and run routes after practice, he said.

“I’ve played every single position on our offence in a game in the last two years, which is kind of crazy. But I love playing football,” he said. “I want to play any position that the team needs me to play.”

While B.C.’s lineup is studded with stars like running back William Stanback — who has a CFL-high 938 rushing yards — and wide receiver Justin McInnis — who leads the league in both receiving yards (1,074) and receiving TDs (seven) — versatility has been a critical part of the team’s back-to-back wins.

“I think we’ve got a lot of talented guys who deserve to get the ball and make big plays when they have the ball in their hands. So it’s really my job to get them the ball as much as possible,” said quarterback Nathan Rourke.

“I think that makes it easy when you can lean on those guys and, really, we’re in a situation where anyone can have a big game. And I think that’s a good place to be.”

Even with a talented lineup, the Lions face a tough test against an eager Argos side.

Toronto lost its second straight game Saturday when it dropped a 41-27 decision to Ottawa.

“We’ll have our hands full,” Rourke said. “We’ll have to adjust on the fly to whatever their game plan is. And no doubt, they’ll be ready to go so we’ll have to be as well.”

The two sides have already met once this season when the Argos handed the Lions a 35-27 loss in Toronto back on June 9.

A win on Friday would vault B.C. to the top of the West Division standings, over the 7-6 Winnipeg Blue Bombers who are on a bye week.

Collecting that victory isn’t assured, though, even with Toronto coming in on a two-game skid, Campbell said.

“They’ve hit a little bit of a rut, but they’re a really good team,” he said. “They’re very athletic. And you can really see (quarterback Chad Kelly’s) got zip on the ball. When you see him in there, he can make all the throws. So we’re expecting their best shot.”

TORONTO ARGONAUTS (6-6) AT B.C. LIONS (7-6)

Friday, B.C. Place

HOME FIELD ADVANTAGE: The Lions boast a 4-1 home record this season, including a 38-12 victory over the Redblacks at Royal Athletic Park in Victoria, B.C., on Aug. 31. The Argos have struggled outside of BMO Field and hold a 1-5 away record. Trips to the West Coast haven’t been easy for Toronto in recent years — since 2003, the club is 4-14 in road games against B.C.

CENTURION: B.C. defensive back Garry Peters is set to appear in his 100th consecutive game. The 32-year-old from Conyers, Ga., is a two-time CFL all-star who has amassed 381 defensive tackles, 19 special teams tackles and 16 interceptions over seven seasons. “Just being on the field with the guys every day, running around, talking trash back and forth, it keeps me young,” Peters said. “It makes me feel good, and my body doesn’t really feel it. I’ve been blessed to be able to play 100 straight.”

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Sept. 12, 2024.

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