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With season on the brink, Flames’ offence drying up when it’s needed most – Sportsnet.ca

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No team in the NHL has allowed more goals than the Ottawa Senators.

Not even close.

Yet, there were the Calgary Flames, in the teeth of a desperate playoff push, unable once again to solve the division’s worst team.

Facing a 22-year-old rookie goaltender, the Flames turned his first NHL start into a masterpiece. Turning aside 35 shots in a 2-1 win over the Flames, fourth-stringer Filip Gustavsson earned his first win, and with it, the game puck that generally comes with it.

So frustrated by a game that saw the Flames throw 71 shot attempts at a suddenly stifling Senators squad, Rasmus Andersson punctuated Calgary’s second-straight loss by deciding he wasn’t willing to cough up the rubber keepsake for his fellow Swede.

As Brady Tkachuk skated down the ice, imploring the Flames defenceman to reconsider, Andersson eventually dropped the puck near the Flames bench, allowing Matthew Tkachuk to slap it away from his younger sibling.

Not a great look.

The hits just keep on coming for a Flames team starting to come to grips with the fact their season is on the brink with a staggering 23 games remaining.

Losing four of six to the youngest team in the division will help do that to a club.

And while defensive lapses led to both Ottawa goals, including Chris Tierney’s tie-breaking rebound with 2:36 remaining, this one was all about how inept Calgary’s offence has become.

“This team has some trouble scoring goals, this is a not a two-game thing — I don’t know where that comes from,” said Darryl Sutter, whose team went more than 120 minutes without a goal before Johnny Gaudreau gave his club brief life with a breakaway finish with five minutes left.

“This team has to check for chances and check well to have a chance to win. You want to be a playoff team, you’ve got to win 2-1 games. That’s the way it works.”

Gaudreau said after the game the coach’s new tight-checking system has nothing to do with stymieing Calgary’s 23rd-ranked offence.

“No, we had trouble scoring a few times throughout this season even with Geoff (Ward),” said Gaudreau, who hadn’t scored an even-strength goal since Feb. 11.

“We need to bear down on our chances. We’ve just got to finish. It has nothing to do with systems or anything like that.”

Here is the scariest revelation of all Monday night – the Flames felt they played well.

“I thought we were playing well and playing a lot in their zone,” said Gaudreau, who figured the team needed more traffic in front of Gustavsson, who rarely had to come up with big saves on second or third chances.

“Kind of looking back through the game, most shots from the point the goalie saw or they didn’t get through. Couple odd man rushes didn’t hit the net. We still had 30-something shots but we made it too easy on their goalie. We’ve got to be better than that.”

Asked how the players were when he made his post-game visit, Sutter was coy.

“They’re probably tired,” said Sutter, who figures his club has to go 16-7 the rest of the way, starting with a rare 3 p.m. MT start Wednesday in Ottawa again.

“I think we directed 70-some pucks at their net tonight, so eventually they’ll go in. I would say our top two lines in terms of scoring are going to have to produce higher-level scoring chances. But other than that, there’s not much to complain about. The effort is there, and we played almost a perfect road game. We made a couple mistakes and we need (Jacob Markstrom) to make a couple saves.”

They are also getting to the point where they’re going to need a small miracle to stay in the playoff hunt.

Fourth-place Montreal remains four points up on the sixth-place Flames with two games in hand as the Canadiens game against Edmonton was the first North Division contest postponed this season, after two Habs players were placed on the COVID-19 protocol list.

The Senators did well to beat Calgary at Sutter’s game, bottling up the middle of the ice after Ryan Dzingel took advantage of a bad Mark Giordano pinch to open the scoring midway through the first period.

With all that’s at stake with the Flames facing such a short runway, tension heightened for the Flames until Gaudreau took a brilliant Milan Lucic pass to break in alone and snap the shutout with five minutes left. Until that point, the Flames’ best scoring chance came from Zac Rinaldo, playing in just his third game of the year.

However, two-and-a-half minutes later Gaudreau was soft on the wall, allowing Drake Batherson to send the puck to the point where a Mike Reilly blast produced a long rebound Tierney swatted in.

“It hurts,” said Elias Lindholm, whose top line generated little on the night, dropping the Flames to 4-3 under Sutter.

“This was a game we needed to at least grab a point, but we didn’t.”

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Soccer legend Christine Sinclair says goodbye in Vancouver |

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Christine Sinclair scored one final goal at B.C. Place, helping the Portland Thorns to a 6-0 victory over the Whitecaps Girls Elite team. The soccer legend has announced she’ll retire from professional soccer at the end of the National Women’s Soccer League season. (Oct. 16, 2024)

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A German in charge of England? Nationality matters less than it used to in international soccer

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The question was inevitable.

At his first news conference as England’s newly appointed head coach, Thomas Tuchel – a German – was asked on Wednesday what message he had for fans who would have preferred an Englishman in charge of their beloved national team.

“I’m sorry, I just have a German passport,” he said, laughing, and went on to profess his love for English football and the country itself. “I will do everything to show respect to this role and to this country.”

The soccer rivalry between England and Germany runs deep and it’s likely Tuchel’s passport will be used against him if he doesn’t deliver results for a nation that hasn’t lifted a men’s trophy since 1966. But his appointment as England’s third foreign coach shows that, increasingly, even the top countries in the sport are abandoning the long-held belief that the national team must be led by one of their own.

Four of the top nine teams in the FIFA world rankings now have foreign coaches. Even in Germany, a four-time World Cup winner which has never had a foreign coach, candidates such as Dutchman Louis van Gaal and Austrian Oliver Glasner were considered serious contenders for the top job before the country’s soccer federation last year settled on Julian Nagelsmann, who is German.

“The coaching methods are universal and there for everyone to apply,” said German soccer researcher and author Christoph Wagner, whose recent book “Crossing the Line?” historically addresses Anglo-German rivalry. “It’s more the personality that counts and not the nationality. You could be a great coach, and work with a group of players who aren’t perceptive enough to get your methods.”

Not everyone agrees.

English soccer author and journalist Jonathan Wilson said it was “an admission of failure” for a major soccer nation to have a coach from a different country.

“Personally, I think it should be the best of one country versus the best of another country, and that would probably extend to coaches as well as players,” said Wilson, whose books include “Inverting The Pyramid: The History of Football Tactics.”

“To say we can’t find anyone in our country who is good enough to coach our players,” he said, “I think there is something slightly embarrassing, slightly distasteful about that.”

That sentiment was echoed by British tabloid The Daily Mail, which reported on Tuchel’s appointment with the provocative headline “A Dark Day for England.”

While foreign coaches are often found in smaller countries and those further down the world rankings, they are still a rarity among the traditional powers of the game. Italy, another four-time world champion, has only had Italians in charge. All of Spain’s coaches in its modern-day history have been Spanish nationals. Five-time World Cup winner Brazil has had only Brazilians in charge since 1965, and two-time world champion France only Frenchmen since 1975.

And it remains the case that every World Cup-winning team, since the first tournament in 1930, has been coached by a native of that country. The situation is similar for the women’s World Cup, which has never been won by a team with a foreign coach, though Jill Ellis, who led the U.S. to two trophies, is a naturalized U.S. citizen born in England.

Some coaches have made a career out of jumping from one national team to the next. Lars Lagerbäck, 76, coached his native Sweden between 2000-09 and went on to lead the national teams of Nigeria, Iceland and Norway.

“I couldn’t say I felt any big difference,” Lagerbäck told The Associated Press. “I felt they were my teams and the people’s teams.”

For Lagerbäck, the obvious disadvantages of coaching a foreign country were any language difficulties and having to adapt to a new culture, which he particularly felt during his brief time with Nigeria in 2010 when he led the African country at the World Cup.

Otherwise, he said, “it depends on the results” — and Lagerbäck is remembered with fondness in Iceland, especially, after leading the country to Euro 2016 for its first ever international tournament, where it knocked out England in the round of 16.

Lagerbäck pointed to the strong education and sheer number of coaches available in soccer powers like Spain and Italy to explain why they haven’t needed to turn to an overseas coach. At this year’s European Championship, five of the coaches were from Italy and the winning coach was Luis de la Fuente, who was promoted to Spain’s senior team after being in charge of the youth teams.

Portugal for the first time looked outside its own borders or Brazil, with which it has historical ties, when it appointed Spaniard Roberto Martinez as national team coach last year. Also last year, Brazil tried — and ultimately failed — to court Real Madrid’s Italian coach Carlo Ancelotti, with Brazilian soccer federation president Ednaldo Rodrigues saying: “It doesn’t matter if it’s a foreigner or a Brazilian, there’s no prejudice about the nationality.”

The United States has had a long list of foreign coaches before Mauricio Pochettino, the Argentine former Chelsea manager who took over as the men’s head coach this year.

The English Football Association certainly had no qualms making Tuchel the national team’s third foreign-born coach, after Swede Sven-Goran Eriksson (2001-06) and Italian Fabio Capello (2008-12), simply believing he was the best available coach on the market.

Unlike Eriksson and Capello, Tuchel at least had previous experience of working in English soccer — he won the Champions League in an 18-month spell with Chelsea — and he also speaks better English.

That won’t satisfy all the nay-sayers, though.

“Hopefully I can convince them and show them and prove to them that I’m proud to be the English manager,” Tuchel said.

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AP Sports Writer Jerome Pugmire in Paris contributed to this story.

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Maple Leafs winger Bobby McMann finding game after opening-night scratch

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TORONTO – Bobby McMann watched from the press box on opening night.

Just over a week later, the Maple Leafs winger took a twirl as the first star.

McMann went from healthy scratch to unlikely offensive focal point in just eight days, putting up two goals in Toronto’s 6-2 victory over the Los Angeles Kings on Wednesday.

The odd man out at the Bell Centre against the Montreal Canadiens, he’s slowly earning the trust of first-year head coach Craig Berube.

“There’s a lot of good players on this team,” McMann said of his reaction to sitting out Game 1. “Maybe some guys fit better in certain scenarios than others … just knowing that my opportunity would come.”

The Wainwright, Alta., product skated on the second line with William Nylander and Max Domi against Los Angeles, finishing with those two goals, three hits and a plus-3 rating in just over 14 minutes of work.

“He’s been unbelievable,” said Nylander, who’s tied with McMann for the team lead with three goals. “It’s great when a player like that comes in.”

The 28-year-old burst onto the scene last February when he went from projected scratch to hat-trick hero in a single day after then-captain John Tavares fell ill.

McMann would finish 2023-24 with 15 goals and 24 points in 56 games before a knee injury ruled him out of Toronto’s first-round playoff loss to the Boston Bruins.

“Any time you have success, it helps the confidence,” he said. “But I always trust the abilities and trust that they’re there whether things are going in or (I’m not) getting points. Just trying to play my game and trust that doing the little things right will pay off.”

McMann was among the Leafs’ best players against the Kings — and not just because of what he did on the scoresheet. The forward got into a scuffle with Phillip Danault in the second period before crushing Mikey Anderson with a clean hit in the third.

“He’s a power forward,” Berube said. “That’s how he should think the game, night in and night out, as being a power forward with his skating and his size. He doesn’t have to complicate the game.”

Leafs goaltender Anthony Stolarz knew nothing about McMann before joining Toronto in free agency over the summer.

“Great two-way player,” said the netminder. “Extremely physical and moves really well, has a good shot. He’s a key player for us in our depth. I was really happy for him to get those two goals.

“Works his butt off.”

ON TARGET

Leafs captain Auston Matthews, who scored 69 times last season, ripped his first goal of 2024-25 after going without a point through the first three games.

“It’s not going to go in every night,” said Matthews, who added two assists against the Kings. “It’s good to see one fall … a little bit of the weight lifted off your shoulders.”

WAKE-UP CALL

Berube was animated on the bench during a third-period timeout after the Kings cut a 5-0 deficit to 5-2.

“Taking care of the puck, being harder in our zone,” Matthews said of the message. “There were times in the game, early in the second, in the third period, where the momentum shifted and we needed to grab it back.”

PATCHES SITS

Toronto winger Max Pacioretty was a healthy scratch after dressing the first three games.

“There’s no message,” Berube said of the 35-year-old’s omission. “We have extra players and not everybody can play every night. That’s the bottom line. He’s been fine when he’s played, but I’ve got to make decisions as a coach, and I’m going to make those decisions — what I think is best for the team.”

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Oct. 17, 2024.

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