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Leafs turn in ugly performance, losing to Sabres on the road – The Globe and Mail

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Buffalo Sabres forward Jimmy Vesey puts the puck past Toronto Maple Leafs goalie Frederik Andersen during the third period.

Jeffrey T. Barnes/The Associated Press

There is a lot to like about Buffalo. Clamorous hockey fans that are ever-so-patient. A crowd that sings along to O Canada. Great wings. There is sushi in the press box, for goodness sakes. So blue collar yet so very civil.

On the other hand, there is no other city in the NHL that torments the Maple Leafs as much. By comparison, playing in Boston for them is easy. Consider this, as impossible as it may seem: Toronto’s hockey team has played 110 games in Buffalo and has won 32 times. Yes, really.

It’s not the KeyBank Center. It is Toronto’s frozen pad of futility.

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It happened again on Sunday, with the Maple Leafs turning in an ugly performance at the least convenient time. The Sabres, who have fallen out of contention for the playoffs, steamrolled a team which is desperately battling for postseason play.

Jack Eichel did what he always does against Toronto. The Sabres centre broke a 2-2 tie in the third period, which paved the way for a 5-2 victory. It started a series in which the Sabres scored three times in 1 minute 31 seconds to salt the game away.

The goal was the 33rd of the season for Eichel, who is having the best year of his career. He is on a pace for 45 goals and 104 points and has been held without a point in only four of the past 40 games.

As good as he is against everybody, he saves his best for the Maple Leafs.

He has 14 goals and nine assists in 17 games in his career against them.

The loss was the second in three games for Toronto, which plays at Pittsburgh on Tuesday night. Sidney Crosby and co. then come to Scotiabank Arena on Thursday. Those are two potentially treacherous games for a team that got slapped silly by the Sabres.

“We just haven’t been able to put a full 60 minutes together,” Toronto captain John Tavares said. “We need to find the sense urgency we need to have. We have to find a way to raise our game.”

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Buffalo did everything but score in the first. They outshot the Maple Leafs 16-5. They outhit them, blocked 11 of their shots and won more faceoffs. It is another game in which an opponent got a jump on them.

“I thought we were fine to start the game,” Leafs head coach Sheldon Keefe said. “It got away on us in the second half of the first and then all through the second period, for the most part we weren’t really even in the building.”

At one point, the Maple Leafs went more than 10 minutes without delivering a shot. Over 60 minutes they were outshot 36-22.

Frederik Andersen, back in the crease after a day off on Saturday, looked like a Big Dutch boy sticking his finger in a dike, or at least damming up a leaky defence. Several times, a large contingent of followers who had driven across the border chanted his name.

Eventually he sagged against a relentless attack. He finished with 31 saves. All the diving and flopping around he did to stave off the Sabres was to no avail.

Buffalo got on the board first when Colin Miller banked a slap shot off the boards to Johan Larsson, who flipped it in from nine feet away less than two minutes into the second period. Then Conor Sheary tipped one in to put Buffalo up 2-0 with 9:42 remaining.

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The Sabres were 22-1 coming into the game when leading after the second period. The Maple Leafs have won only three games all season when trailing after two periods. It wasn’t going to happen this time either.

Yegor Korshkov, who was called up on Saturday from the Marlies of the American Hockey League, got Toronto on the board with 8:31 left in the second period. It is the Russian rookie’s first goal and point and it came in his first NHL game.

Zach Hyman then tied at 2-2 early in the third. It was Hyman’s 18th of the season and fourth in four games.

Toronto looked poised to at least scratch out a point on what had been an abysmal night and then things went sour again.

Andersen allowed three goals on 19 shots in a loss to the Dallas Stars on Thursday when he returned after sitting out four games with a neck injury. He was not as shaky against the Sabres; he simply could not hold back the tide.

It was the fourth and final meeting between the teams and the second game in a back-to-back for the Maple Leafs. Jack Campbell filled in for Andersen and had 25 saves in 4-2 victory over Ottawa on Saturday night. He is 3-0-1 since he was acquired in a trade with Los Angeles.

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The Sabres started the year 8-1-1 but went 1-for-37 on the power play in November and are now trailing badly in the playoff race. They are nine points in arrears for the second wildcard position in the Eastern Conference and eight behind Toronto, which sits third in the Atlantic Division.

The Maple Leafs have 22 games remaining with nine against teams ahead of them and six against those who are close behind. A loss to the Sabres doesn’t help. Every point is crucial.

Toronto and Buffalo split the four games between them. Buffalo, predictably, won both of its games at home.

Such a nice place, Buffalo. For everyone but the Maple Leafs.

“It is hard to win hockey games,” Hyman said. “Teams are good. We have to be better, clearly. We’re not proud of that tonight.”

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After 20 years at the top of chess, Magnus Carlsen is making his next move

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STAVANGER, Norway (AP) — Few chess players enjoy Magnus Carlsen‘s celebrity status.

A grand master at 13, refusing to play an American dogged by allegations of cheating, and venturing into the world of online chess gaming all made Norway’s Carlsen a household name.

Few chess players have produced the magical commodity that separates Norway’s Magnus Carlsen from any of his peers: celebrity.

Only legends like Russia’s Garry Kasparov and American Bobby Fischer can match his name recognition and Carlsen is arguably an even more dominant player. Last month, he beat both men to be named the International Chess Federation’s greatest ever.

But his motivation to rack up professional titles is on the wane. Carlsen, 33, now wants to leverage his fame to help turn the game he loves into a spectator sport.

“I am in a different stage in my career,” he told The Associated Press. “I am not as ambitious when it comes to professional chess. I still want to play, but I don’t necessarily have that hunger. I play for the love of the game.”

Offering a new way to interact with the game, Carlsen on Friday launched his application, Take Take Take, which will follow live games and players, explaining matches in an accessible way that, Carlsen says, is sometimes missing from streaming platforms like YouTube and Twitch. “It will be a chiller vibe,” he says.

Carlsen intends to use his experience to provide recaps and analysis on his new app, starting with November’s World Chess Championship tournament between China’s Ding Liren and India’s Gukesh Dommaraju. He won’t be competing himself because he voluntarily ceded the title in 2023.

Carlsen is no novice when it comes to chess apps. The Play Magnus game, which he started in 2014, gave online users the chance to play against a chess engine modeled against his own gameplay. The company ballooned into a suite of applications and was bought for around $80 million in 2022 by Chess.com, the world’s largest chess website.

Carlsen and Mats Andre Kristiansen, the chief executive of his company, Fantasy Chess, are betting that a chess game where users can follow individual players and pieces, filters for explaining different elements of each game, and light touch analysis will scoop up causal viewers put off by chess’s sometimes rarefied air. The free app was launched in a bid to build the user base ahead of trying to monetizing it. “That will come later, maybe with advertisements or deeper analysis,” says Kristiansen.

While Take Take Take offers a different prospect with its streaming services, it is still being launched into a crowded market with Chess.com, which has more than 100 million users, YouTube, Twitch, and the website of FIDE the International Chess Federation. World Chess was worth around $54 million when it got listed on the London Stock Exchange.

The accessibility of chess engines that can beat any human means cheating has never been easier. However, they can still be used to shortcut thousands of hours of book-bound research, and hone skills that would be impossible against human opponents.

“I think the games today are of higher quality because preparation is becoming deeper and deeper and artificial intelligence is helping us play. It is reshaping the way we evaluate the games,” especially for the new generation of players, says Carlsen.

At the same time, he admits that two decades after becoming a grand master, his mind doesn’t quite compute at the tornado speed it once did. “Most people have less energy when they get older. The brain gets slower. I have already felt that for a few years. The younger players’ processing power is just faster.”

Even so, he intends to be the world’s best for many years to come.

“My mind is a bit slower, and I maybe don’t have as much energy. But chess is about the coming together of energy, computing power and experience. I am still closer to my peak than decline,” he said.

Chess has been cresting a popularity wave begun by Carlsen himself.

He became the world’s top-ranked player in 2011. In 2013, he won the first of his five World Championships. In 2014, he achieved the highest-ever chess rating of 2882, and he has remained the undisputed world number one for the last 13 years.

Off the table, chess influencers, like the world No. 2, Hikaru Nakamura, are using social media to bring the game to a wider audience. The Netflix series “The Queen’s Gambit” burnished chess’ unlikely cerebral sex appeal when it became one of the streamer’s biggest hits in 2020.

And in 2022 Carlsen’s refusal to play against Hans Niemann, an American grand master, who admitted to using technology to cheat in online games in the past, created a rare edge in the usually sedate world of chess. There is no evidence Niemann ever cheated in live games but the feud between the pair propelled the game even further into public consciousness.

Whether chess can continue to grow without the full professional participation of its biggest celebrity remains to be seen.

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Top figure skaters ready to hit the ice at Skate Canada International

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Canadian pairs team Deanna Stellato-Dudek and Maxime Deschamps along with ice dancers Piper Gilles and Paul Poirier headline a strong field at Skate Canada International. The Canadians say they’re excited to perform in front of a home crowd as the world’s best figure skaters arrive in Halifax. (Oct. 24, 2024)

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Nico Echavarria shoots another 64 to lead the Zozo Championship by 2 shots after the second round

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INZAI CITY, Japan (AP) — Nico Echavarria shot a 6-under 64 on Friday — matching his 64 on Thursday — to lead by two shots over Taylor Moore and Justin Thomas after the second round of the Zozo Championship in Japan.

Thomas shot 64 and Moore carded 67 with three others just three shots off the lead including Seamus Power, who had the day’s low round of 62 at the Narashino Country Club.

Thomas has twice won the PGA Championship but is winless in two years on the PGA Tour.

Eric Cole (67) and C.T. Pan (66) were also three behind heading to Saturday.

Nick Taylor, of Abbotsford, B.C., is the top Canadian at 5-under and tied for 16th.

Ben Silverman, of Thornhill, Ont., is two shots back of Taylor and tied for 31st.

“I’ve never had a lead after 36 holes,” said Echavarria, a Colombian who played at the University of Arkansas. His lone PGA win was last year in Puerto Rico.

He had a two-round total of 12-under 128.

“I’ve had it after 54, but never after 36, so it’s good to be in this position. There’s got to be some pressure,” he added. “Hopefully a good round tomorrow can keep me in the lead or around the lead. And how I said yesterday — the goal is to be close with nine holes to go.”

Rickie Fowler, a crowd favorite in Japan because of his connections to the country, shot 64 to go with an opening 68 and was four shots back going into the weekend. Max Greyserman was also four behind after a 68.

“It would be amazing to win here,” said Fowler, whose mother has Japanese roots. “Came close a few years ago.”

Fowler tied for second in 2022

Fowler described his roots as “pretty far removed for Japan, but I’m sure I have relatives here, but I don’t know anyone. Japanese culture’s always been a fairly big part of life growing up. I always love being over here.”

Japanese star Hideki Matsuyama shot his second 71 and was 14 shots off the lead.

Defending champion Collin Morikawa shot 67 and pulled within eight shot of the lead, and Xander Schauffele — British Open and PGA winner this season — shot 65 and was 10 behind after a 73 on Thursday.

“I feel like I’ve got a good game plan out here,” Morikawa said, another player with Japanese connections. “I just have to execute shots a little better.”

“I am the defending champ, but that doesn’t mean I’m immediately going to play better just because I won here,” he added. “It’s a brand new week, it’s a year later. I feel like my golf game is still in a good spot. I just haven’t executed my shots. When that doesn’t happen it makes golf a little tougher.”

Schauffele turned 31 on Friday and said he was serenaded before his opening tee shot. He also has ties to Japan. His mother grew up in Japan and his grandparents live in the Tokyo area.

“Nice way to spend my 31st birthday,” he said.

___

AP golf:

The Canadian Press. All rights reserved.

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