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SIMMONS: Hard to celebrate the anniversary of the Raptors' championship – Toronto Sun

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It doesn’t feel like a year has gone by.

It either feels like more time or less time has passed since the Toronto Raptors won the NBA championship and this country went wild.

Over 12 months, our perspective has been altered in this challenging year of demonstrations and COVID-19 and untimely deaths. The days seem longer and less identifiable. The weekends, especially now with summer coming, don’t feel much like summer weekends. Three months at home, with the occasional trip to the drug store or grocery store, has probably brought families closer together and, in many ways, has changed how we view the world and our own community.

One year ago in Oakland, it was electric. The great Steph Curry, maybe as terrific a shooter as we’ve ever seen, had one shot to send the NBA Finals to Game 7. He missed and the Raptors won the last three games ever played at Oracle Arena, all in their championship run of moments and miracles.

Some people have been holding on to the Joe Carter home run forever. Those moments never leave you. In Calgary, it’s the 1989 Stanley Cup. In modern Montreal, it was that most recent Cup 27 seasons ago from a team that used to win them every other year. In Edmonton, it was the blur of the ’80s, the Oilers and Eskimos dominating like no one before or since. In Winnipeg, it was just last November’s Grey Cup. Each market different. Each moment meaningful. But it was different when the Raptors won a championship. All of Canada seemed to celebrate as one.

That life-altering feeling may never go away, even now as we struggle through some of the largest challenges of our lives. The one-year anniversary of the Raptors championship is a lovely memory that will grow larger with time. Right now, it’s just hard to celebrate much of anything.

THIS AND THAT

Being a hub city for NHL games matters for money and business, not necessarily for hockey. By my rather rudimentary calculations, an NHL hub city will have to be able to provide some 15,800 nights of hotel rooms over eight weeks and 47,400 meals before the Stanley Cup final is even played. That’s a whole lot of local business and incoming taxes at a time when there isn’t much of either … The flaws in the NBA’s return to play are growing. The COVID-19 situation in Florida is rather drastic. Some NBA players don’t want to play for health reasons. Some don’t want to play for social reasons and all that is currently going on in with the racial discourse in America. This is getting more complicated than commissioner Adam Silver could have anticipated … It’s hard to be a commissioner in any sport. There’s no road map on how to deal with a world pandemic. It get more confusing when the laws of states and countries and provinces and borders all differ. Nothing prepared CFL commissioner Randy Ambrosie for this and he’s struggling to find a way to deal with all of the issues. It’s the weakest Ambrosie has appeared since taking the impossible job … There’s a reason CFL players are getting antsy about their season. This is normally the time of their first paycheque. None are coming now. None are coming for a while … Gary Bettman has to be happy about what he sees around him. The NBA is struggling to figure things out. Baseball is fighting with itself. Football season is far away. For once, the NHL looks like the smart guys in a world of confusion … It’s an August night. And on television you have a choice — playoff basketball, playoff hockey or, if it comes back, regular-season baseball. For me it’s easy: 1. Stanley Cup playoffs; 2. NBA playoffs. 3. Baseball … Sports owners don’t make their big money selling tickets and television rights. Their real play is the equity of the franchise. Ted Rogers bought the Blue Jays for $137 million US in 2002. The team is apparently worth $1.65 billion now. Numbers like that make the current baseball fight between players and owners all the more unnecessary.

HEAR AND THERE

This is how how challenging a hockey season it was for the Maple Leafs before the stoppage in March: As I sat down to complete my awards and all-star team ballot the other day, I registered just one Toronto vote. A third-place vote for the Lady Byng Trophy. That was it … Somehow in time, the meaning of the Masterton Trophy has changed: It is supposed to be awarded to the NHL player who best defines perseverance, sportsmanship and dedication. It’s morphed into the comeback from injury or illness award. I wish it would return to its former state …. This will be weird: The last two minutes of an NBA game without fans. So much of the atmosphere in the building comes from the natural noise of the partisans … In Pascal Siakam’s first two NBA seasons, he averaged 5.7 points a game. In his past two seasons, he’s at 20.2 and on the rise. He was 15th in the NBA in scoring when the season was halted in March … I watched Game 6 of the NBA Finals again the other day. What was stirring was how great Kyle Lowry, Siakam and Fred Van Vleet played. And how much that has translated to this season without Kawhi Leonard.

SCENE AND HEARD

Don’t know why I looked this up, but this is what you do when you don’t leave home: George Chuvalo fought nine times at Madison Square Garden, at what was then known as the Mecca of boxing. Among his opponents at MSG: A Hall-of-Fame list including Joe Frazier, George Foreman, Floyd Patterson and the best win of his career, Jerry Quarry. Chuvalo also fought 21 time at Maple Leaf Gardens, if you can believe that … Alex Mogilny should be in the Hockey Hall of Fame conversation this year, but his uneven career makes his case something of a challenge. He had eight pure Hall of Fame seasons and eight that might be considered so-so. What matters more, the dominant years or the other half of his career? The only sure-thing in this year’s class is Jarome Iginla. After that, there will be some push for Marian Hossa and Daniel Alfredsson and there should be a push (I say this every year) for the seemingly forgotten Doug Wilson … And then there are the goalies — Mike Vernon, Tom Barrasso, Curtis Joseph, Mike Richter — none of them sure things, all of them candidates you could make a case for … I can understand the shortages of toilet paper, hand sanitizer and disinfectant wipes. That makes some kind of sense. By why the shortage of Diet Dr. Pepper? How did that happen?

AND ANOTHER THING

I have known and been professional friends of Sheri Hargrave Forde and Duane Forde for more than 20 years. Sheri wrote a remarkably difficult, thought-provoking and  personal story of her life as a white woman married to a black man in Ontario, and the challenge that racism has played in their lives and their children’s lives.  If you haven’t read it, you should find it. Sheri related stories and used words that will make you uncomfortable. It’s her life. It’s her story. It doesn’t need censorship. No one should be telling her which words she can use and which ones she can’t … One problem in today’s social-based media world I have trouble reconciling: When one media person has a problem with another, why not pick up the phone and talk? Have a conversation. Listen to each other. Context always gets trampled on in online battles … Yes, racism is a problem in minor hockey. So is the cost of playing. So is referee abuse. So is parental behavior. It’s a long list, things that need to change and get better in minor hockey … Without university football this coming season in Canada, I wonder: If you’re the University of Toronto or York University, and combined you’ve had one winning season in 20 years, is it the time to consider dropping the sport and the cost involved? Is it worth continuing with programs of failure year after year? … John Tavares was the first pick in the 2009 NHL entry draft. To date, he has accumulated 769 points, 180 more than anyone else selected that year … Happy birthday to Penny Oleksiak (20), Ernie Whitt (68), R.J. Barrett (20), Willie de Wit (59), Glenn Michibata (58), Erica Wiebe (31), Sami Kapanen (57), Jamario Moon (40) and Devante Smith-Pelly (28) … And hey, whatever became of Robert Reichel?

MARTIN A MARVELOUS ‘MAYBE’ FOR JAYS

The Blue Jays were ecstatic that Austin Martin was available with the fifth pick in Wednesday’s MLB draft. They even pulled out the old ‘I can’t believe he was still there’ line that just about every team uses when making a selection.

But in this case, considering the rankings and pre-draft talk, the Jays may have come away with a steal in Martin. The key words being ‘may have.’

Of all the drafts in professional sports, baseball’s is the least reliable. Teams pay all kinds of money for prospects and only a small percentage of them ever turn out to be significant. The Jays hadn’t picked as high as fifth in years so there was a natural kind of excitement in selecting Martin, who many have called the best hitter in the draft.

But then, look backwards for a moment. In a 10-year period, from 2009-2018, not one of the players picked in the five slot wound up being a big-league star. Only one of the players, Drew Pomeranz, became a decent major-league player. The rest either tapped out or are still in the prospect phase.

Maybe Martin will be different. Maybe he will be the real thing. Maybe he will join the Jays on the rise such as Bo Bichette, Vladdy Guerrero Jr., Cavan Biggio and Lourdes Gurriel Jr. Maybe.

TALKING BASEBALL WITH CITO GASTON

Had a long, engaging conversation with Cito Gaston this week and wrote about his views of growing up in a racist America and his views of today, considering the current state of the country. But in between that, we talked baseball.

We talked about what it was like to have Hank Aaron as his first big-league roommate. We talked about the greatness of Willie Mays. He said Mays would hold the home run record today had he played somewhere other than Candlestick Park for 14 of his big league seasons. “He changed his swing for that ballpark,” said Gaston. “Imagine if he had played somewhere else.”

We talked about meeting Bobby Cox, playing with him on a Texas League championship team and how his relationship with Cox changed his life in baseball. We talked about him being drafted by the San Diego Padres in the expansion of 1968, which also brought the Montreal Expos, Seattle Pilots (now Milwaukee Brewers) and Kansas City Royals into the big leagues.

Cito was one of the last picks in the draft. Among those chosen before him, famous Expos names Coco Laboy, Mack Jones, Bill Stoneman, and the catchers John Boccabella, Ron Brand and John Bateman. You may have heard of them. Montreal also picked a guy named Jimy Williams before Gaston was selected as one of the Padres last choices.

Gaston was promoted to manager of the Blue Jays when Williams was fired early in the 1989 season. He didn’t remember Williams was part of the expansion draft some 20 years earlier.

Considering how far down the list he was chosen, Gaston remains in the Padres record books. After 51 seasons, he ranks 14th in at-bats, 15th in hits, 19th in home runs just ahead of his former Blue Jays batting coach Gene Tenace, 17th in games played.

Gaston, with back-to-back World Series wins, one of only two managers to do that in the past 40 years, doesn’t get enough attention anymore. His stories get more fascinating with time.

DROPOUT RATE FOR GIRLS IN MINOR SPORTS IS ALARMING

Canada won 22 medals at the last Summer Olympics, 16 of those were won by women. By that number, you might surmise what a great country this happens to be for female athletes.

Then consider this, some of the most famous athletes in the country are women: Brooke Henderson, Bianca Andreescu, Christine Sinclair and, before that, Hayley Wickenheiser.

And all that makes the release this week of something called The Rally Report all the more discouraging. For those who care about women’s sport, the results were somewhat heartbreaking.

The number of girls participating in sport in Canada is rather low and the dropout rate is particularly high. One out of every three girls in sports drops out in their adolescent years, according to the study. On the same scale, just one out of every 10 boys drops out.

The notion of gender equity in sports has always been a noble one, but it’s also unrealistic when 62% of all girls don’t participate in any kind of sport. How does this get changed? How do you change socialization? Maybe you can’t. But you have to try.

It starts with parents. It starts with local programs and school programs. It starts by removing stigmas, real or imagined, that playing sports can bring.

Sports can be life-changing for kids, for adults, for families. We need to do more in this country to make sports accessible and available and cool enough for young women to participate.

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Canada to face three-time champion Germany in Davis Cup quarterfinals

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LONDON – Canada will meet three-time champion Germany in the Davis Cup quarterfinals in Malaga, Spain this November.

Canada secured a berth in the quarterfinals — also called The Final 8 Knockout Stage — with a 2-1 win over Britain last weekend in Manchester, England.

World No. 21 Felix Auger-Aliassime of Montreal anchored a five-player squad that included Denis Shapovalov of Richmond Hill, Ont., Gabriel Diallo of Montreal, Alexis Galarneau of Laval, Que., and Vasek Pospisil of Vernon, B.C.

The eight-team draw for the quarterfinals was completed Thursday at International Tennis Federation headquarters.

Defending champion Italy will play Argentina, the United States will meet Australia and Spain will take on the Netherlands. Schedule specifics have yet to be released but the Final 8 will be played Nov. 19-24.

Tim Puetz and Kevin Krawietz were unbeaten in doubles play last week to help Germany reach the quarterfinals. The country’s top singles player — second-ranked Alex Zverev — did not play.

The Canadians defeated Germany in the quarterfinals en route to their lone Davis Cup title in 2022. Germany won titles in 1988, ’89 and ’93.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Sept. 19, 2024.

The Canadian Press. All rights reserved.

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Canadian men climb two places to No. 38 in latest FIFA world rankings

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Canada, fuelled by a 2-1 win over the U.S. and scoreless draw with Mexico, has jumped two places to No. 38 in the FIFA men’s world rankings released Thursday.

Of the top six CONCACAF teams, Canada was the only one to move up. Mexico was unchanged at No. 17 while the U.S. and Panama each fell two rungs to No. 18 and 37, respectively

Costa Rica slipped one spot to No. 50 and Jamaica two places to No. 61.

It marks Canada’s highest ranking under coach Jesse Marsch, who was hired in mid-May when the Canadians were ranked 50th. Since then, the team has climbed to No. 49, 48, 40 and now 38.

Canada has been as high as No. 33 in the men’s ranking, achieved in February 2022 under John Herdman with Canada, named the “Most Improved Side” in 2021 by FIFA, turning heads with an unbeaten run in CONCACAF World Cup qualifying.

The new rankings encompass 184 internationals involving teams from all six confederations including 2026 World Cup qualifiers in Asia, Oceania and South America.

The top 10 was unchanged with Argentina ahead of France, Spain, England, Brazil, Belgium, the Netherlands, Portugal, Colombia and Italy. But the gap at the top is closing with Argentina losing 2-1 away to Colombia and 3-1 at home to Italy.

Teams 10 through 15 were also unchanged. But there was movement after that in the form of Japan (, up two), Iran (No. 19, up one) and Denmark (No. 20, up one). Egypt (No. 31), Ivory Coast (No. 33), Tunisia (No. 36) and Algeria (No. 41) all jumped five places while Greece (No. 48) climbed six spots.

The biggest movers were Brunei Darussalam (No. 183) and Samoa (No. 185), who vaulted seven spots on the back of two wins apiece.

Qatar suffered the biggest drop, tumbling 10 places to No. 44.

San Marino remains at the bottom of the rankings in 210th place despite recording its first victory in more than 20 years, San Marino defeated Liechtenstein 1-0 on Sept. 5, ending a 140-game winless run since a 1-0 decision over the same opponent in April 2004.

Liechtenstein fell four places to No. 203.

Canada’s next match is an Oct. 15 friendly against Panama at Toronto’s BMO Field. The next men’s ranking will be released Oct. 24.

Follow @NeilMDavidson on X platform, formerly known as Twitter

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Sept. 19, 2024

The Canadian Press. All rights reserved.

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Carolina Panthers’ early-season struggles not surprising to Proline players

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It has been a difficult start to the NFL season for quarterback Bryce Young and the Carolina Panthers.

Carolina has dropped its opening two games after Sunday’s 26-3 loss to the Los Angeles Chargers. And Young, the first player taken in the ’23 NFL draft, was 18-of-26 passing for 84 yards with an interception while being sacked twice.

As a result, veteran Andy Dalton will start Sunday when Carolina faces the Las Vegas Raiders (1-1).

According to the Ontario Lottery and Gaming Corp., the Chargers’ win was the most accurately predicted moneyline selection by Proline bettors. A whopping 92 per cent of wagers were on Los Angeles beating Carolina with 92 per cent also picking the Chargers to cover -4.5.

In other action that went in favour of Proline bettors: Kansas City edged Cincinnati 26-25 (86 per cent correctly selected the Chiefs to win); Houston got past Chicago 19-13 (81 per cent); the New York Jets defeated Tennessee 24-17 (78 per cent); Pittsburgh beat Denver 13-6 (76 per cent), Washington beat the New York Giants 21-18 (73 per cent); and Seattle toppled New England 23-20 (62 per cent).

However, only five per cent of bettors had the Raiders upsetting Baltimore 26-23.

And there was one winner of Proline’s second week main NFL pool of $407,613.

In NFL futures bets after the second week of the season, the odds for offensive player of the year got shorter for running backs Breece Hall (Jets) and Bijan Robinson (Atlanta) and Detroit receiver Amon-Ra St. Brown. But they got longer for running backs Kyren Williams (Rams), Christian McCaffrey (San Francisco) and Jonathan Taylor (Colts).

Quarterbacks Bo Nix (Denver), Jayden Daniels (Washington) and Caleb Williams (Chicago) all had their odds for offensive rookie of the year go up while they went down for running back Ray Davis (Buffalo), tight end Brock Bowers (Raiders) and receiver Malik Nabers (Giants).

Quarterbacks Patrick Mahones (Chiefs), Aaron Rodgers (Jets) and Jalen Hurts (Eagles) all had their odds for regular season MVP go up. But quarterbacks Jordan Love (Packers), Lamar Jackson (Baltimore) and Joe Burrow (Cincinnati) all saw theirs go down.

Kansas City, Philadelphia and Houston had their Super Bowl odds increase while Green Bay, Baltimore and Cincinnati all decreased.

Not surprising, the week’s top events were all NFL games. In order, they were; Buffalo-Miami, Chicago-Houston, Cincinnati-KC, Raiders-Ravens; and Saints-Cowboys.

A Proline retail player cashed in a $26,183 winner from a $10 bet on a 12-leg major-league baseball parlay. Another won $24,602 from a $10 wager on a 12-leg NFL parlay.

A third received $1,737 from a $3 bet on a six-leg NFL parlay.

A digital bettor earned $2,927 from a $25 bet on a five-leg NFL parlay while a second had a $704.35 return from a $1 wager on a seven-leg NFL parlay.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Sept. 19, 2024.

The Canadian Press. All rights reserved.

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