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Oilers fail to show contender’s grit in loss to Sharks

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EDMONTON — Lose to the San Jose Sharks?

Sure, you can still lose to the San Jose Sharks. They’re pros, with a mix of veterans trying to save face after a lousy season, and a bunch of kids playing for jobs.

But get outworked by the San Jose Sharks? Shift after shift after shift? In your own building, in the thick of a playoff race? One game removed from a poor performance in Arizona that everyone basically wrote off as a Calgary hangover…?

“We were just flat. Emotionless,” said Edmonton Oilers captain Connor McDavid. “We’re at our best when we’re playing with emotion and being physical. In guys’ faces and playing the right way. Two nights in a row we’ve been pretty flat and maybe it’s a little bit of a letdown from those games in Calgary and whatnot, but we can’t make excuses for ourselves.

“We’ve got to be better.”

Hey, you don’t get to beat everyone, all the time. Heck, Detroit won on Thursday, and they never win.

But you should be embarrassed to be outworked the way the Oilers were on Thursday night, no matter who the opponent is. Should we wonder how a team that has tasted this little success play like a perennial playoff team that’s simply tuning up for the post season?

If this doesn’t end on Saturday against Nashville, then yes, we’ll be wondering.

Home of the Oilers

Everyone gave the Oilers a pass for a lethargic 3-0 loss in Arizona on Tuesday. After those emotional games against Calgary, even head coach Dave Tippett showed some understanding with his “They tried to try” quote down in Glendale.

What’s the difference two nights later?

“Six periods,” said Tippett. “Not good.”

“This was a game that we had to show up and play,” he continued. “We were not competing hard enough in the areas that you have to.”

McDavid came out flying, and scored on one of his patented 100-m.p.h. rushes at the 5:20 mark to make it 2-0 Edmonton. The Oilers didn’t score again until the 6:33 mark of the third period — after five consecutive by the Sharks, who were without their two best forwards in injured Logan Couture and Tomas Hertl.

On a night when Vancouver, Calgary and Arizona all lost, so too did an Oilers team that looked disheveled and disinterested. As if the realization of how important these points are stopped at the glass, and never made it from the fans to the players.

“It’s going to get hard to win,” Tippett warned, “and if you are not willing to pay the price to win, or willing to block shots, or box out men, or compete on a one-on-one battle for a loose puck in front of the net…

“If you lose the majority of those, you are not going to win many games. That is on us. San Jose played a hard game, they just wanted to compete. They have some people missing, they have a lot of young players competing hard. We got beat on too many of those compete plays and it cost us the games.”

Jeff Marek and Elliotte Friedman talk to a lot of people around the hockey world, and then they tell listeners all about what they’ve heard and what they think about it.

Fans will talk about how their team should have capitalized on losses by all the teams around them in the Pacific standings (except Vegas). But that’s not how it works.

You don’t play harder because Minnesota beat Vancouver. You don’t win that puck battle because Nashville won in Calgary.

If you’re Edmonton, you try to establish yourself as a true contender by being hard to play against every night — not just some nights. By being a team that refuses to lose two in a row, not when the second one is against a team well below you in the standings and you’re back on home ice.

It’s great to get up for games against Calgary and St. Louis. But winning teams, like winning players, learn to pay at a certain level every night. It doesn’t mean you win every night. It just means you compete to win every night.

It’s not that difficult to understand, Tippett stressed.

“When you are in a battle,” he explained, “there are two guys going to the net side by side. One guy wins and one guy doesn’t. We didn’t win enough of those.

“The St. Louis game, the Calgary game, they were simple hockey games. You put the puck ahead and you go hard after it, you compete on loose pucks you get pucks going to the net.

“It’s not like an extravagant math equation here.”

Edmonton didn’t compete hard enough on Thursday. They didn’t work hard enough, weren’t committed enough to their game, and watched a 2-0 lead fade into a 6-3 defeat because they played loose, pre-season hockey during a stretch-run game.

And they lost.

Of course they lost.

Like the coach said: This isn’t calculus.

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Fernandez and Dabrowski headline Canadian lineup for Billie Jean King Cup Finals

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TORONTO – Singles star Leylah Fernandez and doubles specialist Gabriela Dabrowski will anchor Canada’s five-player lineup when the team tries to defend its Billie Jean King Cup title in mid-November.

The 26th-ranked Fernandez, the 2021 U.S. Open finalist from Laval, Que., is the lone Canadian in the top 100 of the WTA Tour’s singles rankings.

Dabrowski, from Ottawa, is ranked fourth on the doubles list. The 2023 U.S. Open women’s doubles champion won mixed doubles bronze with Felix Auger-Aliassime at the recent Paris Olympics.

Marina Stakusic of Mississauga, Ont., returns after a breakout performance last year, capped by her singles win in Canada’s 2-0 victory over Italy in the final. Vancouver’s Rebecca Marino is also back and Bianca Andreescu, the 2019 U.S. Open champion from Mississauga, Ont., returns to the squad for the first time since 2022.

“Winning the Billie Jean King Cup in 2023 was a dream come true for us, and not only that, but I feel like we made a statement to the world about the strength of this nation when it comes to tennis,” Canada captain Heidi El Tabakh said Monday in a release. “Once again, we have a very strong team this year with Bianca joining Leylah, Gaby, Rebecca and Marina, making it an extremely powerful team that is more than capable of going all the way.

“At the end of the day, our goal is to make Canada proud, and we’ll do our best to bring the same level of effort and excitement that we had in last year’s finals.”

Fernandez, who beat Jasmine Paolini to clinch Canada’s first-ever title at the competition, is ranked No. 42 in doubles.

Canada, which received an automatic berth as defending champion, will play the winner of the first-round tie between Great Britain and Germany on Nov. 17 at Malaga’s Martin Carpena Arena.

Australia, Italy and wild-card entry Czechia also received first-round byes. The tournament, which continues through Nov. 20, also includes host Spain, Slovakia, the United States, Poland, Japan and Romania.

Stakusic is up 27 spots to No. 128 in the latest world singles rankings. Marino is at No. 134 and Andreescu, the 2019 U.S. Open champion, is ranked 167th.

Canada will look to become the first team since Czechia in 2016 to successfully defend its Billie Jean King Cup title.

Malaga will also host the Nov. 19-24 Davis Cup Final 8. The Canadian men qualified over the weekend with a 2-1 victory over Great Britain in Manchester.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Sept. 16, 2024.

The Canadian Press. All rights reserved.

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Penguins re-sign Crosby to two-year extension that runs through 2026-27 season

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PITTSBURGH – Sidney Crosby plans to remain a Pittsburgh Penguin for at least three more years.

The Penguins announced on Monday that they re-signed the 37-year-old from Cole Harbour, N.S., to a two-year contract extension that has an average annual value of US$8.7 million. The deal runs through the 2026-27 season.

Crosby was eligible to sign an extension on July 1 with him entering the final season of a 12-year, $104.4-million deal that carries an $8.7-million salary cap hit.

At the NHL/NHLPA player media tour in Las Vegas last Monday, he said things were positive and he was optimistic about a deal getting done.

The three-time Stanley Cup champion is coming off a 42-goal, 94-point campaign that saw him finish tied for 12th in the league scoring race.

Crosby has spent all 19 of his NHL seasons in Pittsburgh, amassing 592 goals and 1,004 assists in 1,272 career games.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Sept. 16, 2024.

The Canadian Press. All rights reserved.

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Slovenia’s Tadej Pogacar wins Grand Prix Cycliste de Montreal

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MONTREAL – Tadej Pogacar was so dominant on Sunday, Canada’s Michael Woods called it a race for second.

Pogacar, a three-time Tour de France champion from Slovenia, pedalled to a resounding victory at the Grand Prix Cycliste de Montreal.

The UAE Team Emirates leader crossed the finish line 24 seconds ahead of Spain’s Pello Bilbao of Bahrain — Victorious to win the demanding 209.1-kilometre race on a sunny, 28 C day in Montreal. France’s Julian Alaphilippe of Soudal Quick-Step was third.

“He’s the greatest rider of all time, he’s a formidable opponent,” said Woods, who finished 45 seconds behind the leader in eighth. “If you’re not at your very, very best, then you can forget racing with him, and today was kind of representative of that.

“He’s at such a different level that if you follow him, it can be lights out.”

Pogacar slowed down before the last turn to celebrate with the crowd, high-five fans on Avenue du Parc and cruise past the finish line with his arms in the air after more than five hours on the bike.

The 25-year-old joined Belgium’s Greg Van Avermaet as the only multi-time winners in Montreal after claiming the race in 2022. He also redeemed a seventh-place finish at the Quebec City Grand Prix on Friday.

“I was disappointed, because I had such good legs that I didn’t do better than seventh,” Pogacar said. “To bounce back after seventh to victory here, it’s just an incredible feeling.”

It’s Pogacar’s latest win in a dominant year that includes victories at the Tour de France and Giro d’Italia.

Ottawa’s Woods (Israel Premier-Tech) tied a career-best in front of the home crowd in Montreal, but hoped for more after claiming a stage at the Spanish Vuelta two weeks ago.

“I wanted a better result,” the 37-year-old rider said. “My goal was a podium, but at the same time I’m happy with the performance. In bike racing, you can’t always get the result you want and I felt like I raced really well, I animated the race, I felt like I was up there.”

Pogacar completed the 17 climbs up and down Mount Royal near downtown in five hours 28 minutes 15 seconds.

He made his move with 23.3 kilometres to go, leaving the peloton in his dust as he pedalled into the lead — one he never relinquished.

Bilbao, Alaphilippe, Alex Aranburu (Movistar Team) and Bart Lemmen (Visma–Lease) chased in a group behind him, with Bilbao ultimately separating himself from the pack. But he never came close to catching Pogacar, who built a 35-second lead with one lap left to go.

“It was still a really hard race today, but the team was on point,” Pogacar said. “We did really how we planned, and the race situation was good for us. We make it hard in the last final laps, and they set me up for a (takeover) two laps to go, and it was all perfect.”

Ottawa’s Derek Gee, who placed ninth in this year’s Tour de France, finished 48th in Montreal, and called it a “hard day” in the heat.

“I think everyone knows when you see Tadej on the start line that it’s just going to be full gas,” Gee said.

Israel Premier-Tech teammate Hugo Houle of Sainte-Perpétue, Que., was 51st.

Houle said he heard Pogacar inform his teammates on the radio that he was ready to attack with two laps left in the race.

“I said then, well, clearly it’s over for me,” Houle said. “You see, cycling isn’t that complicated.”

Australia’s Michael Matthews won the Quebec City GP for a record third time on Friday, but did not finish in Montreal. The two races are the only North American events on the UCI World Tour.

Michael Leonard of Oakville, Ont., and Gil Gelders and Dries De Bondt of Belgium broke away from the peloton during the second lap. Leonard led the majority of the race before losing pace with 45 kilometres to go.

Only 89 of 169 riders from 24 teams — including the Canadian national team — completed the gruelling race that features 4,573 metres in total altitude.

Next up, the riders will head to the world championships in Zurich, Switzerland from Sept. 21 to 29.

Pogacar will try to join Eddy Merckx (1974) and Stephen Roche (1987) as the only men to win three major titles in a season — known as the Triple Crown.

“Today gave me a lot of confidence, motivation,” Pogacar said. “I think we are ready for world championships.”

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Sept. 15, 2024.

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