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Tuesday, November 30, 2021

Kings' Brendan Lemieux suspended five games after biting Senators' Brady Tkachuk - Sporting News

Kings forward Brendan Lemieux won't skate for Los Angeles' next five matches.

Lemieux will sit out during a five-game suspension after he gnawed on Brady Tkachuk's left hand during the Kings' 4-2 victory on Saturday night. He will also forfeit $38,750 in salary. He initially was assessed a match penalty and ejected from the matchup, but the NHL Department of Player Safety announced the suspension and fine on Tuesday after further review.

The video review shows Lemieux engaging with Tkachuk from the back. Then, the two go down to wrestle on the ice. The camera angle shows Tkachuk's hands getting caught in Lemieux's face before they were forcibly separated by officials.

MORE: NHL's Penguins sold to Fenway Sports Group

Although Tkachuk got up and explained to officials that Lemieux bit him — he even showed off his bloodied right hand — the NHL explained that the suspension was a result of the first bite to Tkachuk's left hand as they fell to the ice.

"This is not a hockey play," the NHL said during the video review. "This is a player delivering a forceful, intentional and potentially dangerous bite to the hand of another player with sufficient force to puncture the skin. Such actions will not be tolerated.”

MORE: Why did the Canadiens fire GM Marc Bergevin?

The suspension — this time for biting — marks Lemieux's third of his career. He was most recently suspended for two games in 2020 for an illegal check on Avalanche forward Joonas Donskoi. He was also suspended for two games in 2018 for an illegal check to the head of then-Panthers forward Vincent Trocheck.

Lemieux has played in 14 games this season after being traded to Los Angeles from the Rangers on March 27. He totals four goals with an assist and five points.

Tkachuk is likely still unhappy with the Kings forward. After the Kings defeated the Senators at home on Saturday night, Tkachuk shared his thoughts on the incident. He ranted, shared a variety of insults and said, "Kids don't even do that anymore. Babies do that," per Ottawa Sun columnist Bruce Garrioch.

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Kings' Brendan Lemieux suspended five games after biting Senators' Brady Tkachuk - Sporting News
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Over 84% of people five and older in BC received their first COVID-19 vaccine - My PG Now

BC Health officials report that 84.8% of eligible people five and older have been given their first dose of a COVID-19 vaccine and 81.7% have received both shots.

91.5% of all eligible adults in B.C. have received their first dose, and 88.3% have received their second dose.

B.C. is reporting 358 new cases of the virus, 56 in Northern Health, 85 in Interior Health.

There are 2,889 active cases of COVID-19 in the province, 337 are in the north, 552 are in the interior.

The new/active cases include:

* 107 new cases in Fraser Health
* Total active cases: 1,018

* 53 new cases in Vancouver Coastal Health
* Total active cases: 443

* 85 new cases in Interior Health
* Total active cases: 552

* 56 new cases in Northern Health
* Total active cases: 337

* 57 new cases in Island Health
* Total active cases: 539

* no new cases of people who reside outside of Canada
* Total active cases: zero

From Nov. 22-28, people not fully vaccinated accounted for 58.2% of cases.

From Nov. 15-28, they accounted for 65.9% of hospitalizations.

Past week cases (Nov. 22-28) – Total 2,342

* Not vaccinated: 1,269 (54.2%)

* Partially vaccinated: 93 (4.0%)

* Fully vaccinated: 980 (41.8%)

Past two weeks cases hospitalized (Nov. 15-28) – Total 223

* Not vaccinated: 135 (60.5%)

* Partially vaccinated: 12 (5.4%)

* Fully vaccinated: 76 (34.1%)

Past week, cases per 100,000 population after adjusting for age (Nov. 22-28)

* Not vaccinated: 173.2

* Partially vaccinated: 41.8

* Fully vaccinated: 21.9

Past two weeks, cases hospitalized per 100,000 population after adjusting for age (Nov. 15-28)

* Not vaccinated: 28.6

* Partially vaccinated: 8.3

* Fully vaccinated: 1.7

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Over 84% of people five and older in BC received their first COVID-19 vaccine - My PG Now
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Los Angeles Kings forward Brendan Lemieux suspended five games by NHL for biting incident - ESPN

LOS ANGELES -- Los Angeles Kings forward Brendan Lemieux has been suspended for five games for biting Ottawa's Brady Tkachuk last weekend.

The NHL announced the discipline Tuesday night for Lemieux, who will forfeit $38,750 in salary while under suspension. The league posted video and a release on the NHL Player Safety page on Twitter.

The bite happened late in the third period of the Kings' 4-2 win last Saturday at Staples Center. Lemieux was prone on the ice and wrestling with Tkachuk and a linesman when he bit Tkachuk on the right hand.

Lemieux received a match penalty for his actions. Tkachuk was furious afterward, calling Lemieux's actions "the most gutless thing somebody could ever do."

"Kids don't even do that anymore. Babies do that," Tkachuk added. "I don't even know what he was thinking. He's just a complete brick head. He's got nothing up there. Bad guy, bad player, what a joke he is."

The 25-year-old Lemieux is the American-born son of infamous NHL agitator Claude Lemieux, while Tkachuk is the son of NHL veteran Keith Tkachuk, who racked up 2,219 penalty minutes in his two-decade career.

Brendan Lemieux joined the Kings last March in a trade with the New York Rangers. He has four goals, one assist and 32 penalty minutes -- 14 against the Senators -- in 14 games this season for LA.

The Kings hosted the Anaheim Ducks on Tuesday night.

It's been a tough run for the Senators, and this incident plays along with that as something a young team simply have to overcome. Ottawa is in last place in the Atlantic Division at 4-14-1.

"We're not going to look back or be negative about anything," Senators coach D.J. Smith said Tuesday. "We're going to be positive about everything going forward."

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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Five Lady Lions Selected to Academic All-Southland Soccer Team - Southeastern Lions Athletics

HAMMOND, La.  – Southeastern Louisiana University's Mya Guillory, Megan Gordon, Darby Gillette, Nadine Maher and Ellie Williams were all selected to the 2021 Academic All-Southland Conference Women's Soccer team, the league office announced Tuesday.
 
Guillory, Gordon and William were named to the first team while Maher and Gillette earned second team recognition.
 
Gordon, the Southland Midfielder of the Year, is making her third appearance on the yearly conference academic honors. The Clophill, England native started all 17 matches for the Lady Lions. Now the all-time program leader in games played (88), Gordon was also named to the first team All-Southland team last month for the second straight season. The senior finished her Southeastern career with a 3.92 GPA and will be obtaining a master's degree in Kinesiology in May.
 
Guillory, a forward out of Prairieville, Louisiana, is making her second straight appearance on the Academic All-Southland team. The junior led the Lady Lions in goals (5), assists (5), shots (36), shots on goal (23) and points (15). Also a first team All-Southland recipient, Guillory currently holds 3.47 GPA in Health Sciences.
 
Williams, out of Frisco, Texas, made her first appearance as a first team recipient Tuesday. The Lady Lions' forward had three goals, two assists, 19 shots and nine on goal during the regular season. The junior turned in a 3.94 GPA Finance to solidify her spot on Tuesday's team.
 
Gillette is making her debut on the Academic All-Southland team as she earned a 3.79 GPA in Kinesiology. The senior started 17 matches this season scoring two goals and also had two assists. Out of Meridian, Mississippi, Gillette received second team All-Southland defender honors this year.
 
Maher, the Lady Lions' goalkeeper is also making her debut on the league's academic honor after earning 3.53 GPA in Kinesiology The senior finished the regular season second in the conference in goals against average (.739) during league play allowing just 10 goals in 12 Southland matches. The Dublin, Ireland native was also a selection on the second team All-Southland team last month. Maher is slated to start Nursing School in the fall of 2022.

"I'm Really proud of our athletes," said SLU soccer head coach Chris McBride. "They do a great job of taking their academics seriously and as student-athletes they thrive in the classroom and on the soccer field."
 
With the Lady Lions receiving five selections to the 2021 Academic All-Southland team, SLU set an all-time program record for the most in the 26-year history of the program.

2021 Soccer Student-Athlete of the Year:Acelya Aydogmus, Northwestern State

2021 Southland Soccer All-Academic First Team

Pos. Name School Cl. Hometown GPA Major
F Olivia Draguicevich*2 Northwestern State Jr. Pflugerville, Texas 3.37 Communications
F Mya Guillory*2 Southeastern Jr. Prairieville, La. 3.47 Health Sciences
F Ellie Williams Southeastern Jr. Frisco, Texas 3.94 Finance
F Rachel Young* McNeese Jr. Surprise, Ariz. 3.21 Nursing
MF Isabella Beletic*2 UIW Gr. Corpus Christi, Texas 3.71 Communications
MF Megan Gordon*3 Southeastern Sr. Clophill, England 3.92 Kinesiology
MF Kyle Nolen* Northwestern State So. Richardson, Texas 3.97 Exercise Science
MF Anna Watson*2 McNeese Sr. Spring, Texas 3.06 Biology
D Eve Clarkson*2 UIW Jr. Whalley, England 3.90 Kinesiology
D Hallie Field*2 Northwestern State Jr. Frisco, Texas 4.00 Accounting/Business Admin.
D Nicole Henry*3 Northwestern State Sr. Tomball, Texas 3.36 Industrial Engineering Tech.
D Keely Morrow* McNeese Gr. Nevada, Texas 3.45 Health System Mgmt.
GK Acelya Aydogmus*^2 Northwestern State Sr. Cape Coral, Fla. 3.82 Health & Science Exercise
 
2021 Southland Soccer All-Academic Second Team
Pos. Name School Cl. Hometown GPA Major
F Noor Abukishk HBU Sr. Cairo, Egypt 3.67 Marketing
F Havana Johnson4 McNeese Gr. Coeur d'Alene, Idaho 3.56 Nursing
F Reaghan Lang A&M-Corpus Christi Sr. Fort Collins, Colo. 4.00 Kinesiology
F Samantha Palomino A&M-Corpus Christi Sr. Helotes, Texas 3.88 Kinesiology
MF Keeley Ayala2 UIW Sr. Wichita Falls, Texas 3.20 Communications
MF Ryan Ford HBU Jr. Frisco, Texas 3.91 Marketing
MF Emma Gibbs A&M-Corpus Christi Jr. Longmont, Colo. 4.00 Nursing
MF Talin Rizo HBU Sr. San Antonio, Texas 3.80 Kinesiology
D Payton Adams UIW Jr. Frisco, Texas 3.96 Rehabilitative Services
D Darby Gillette Southeastern Sr. Meridian, Miss. 3.79 Kinesiology
D Madison McComasky UIW Sr. Sydney, Australia 3.85 Biology
D Mia Salas HBU So. San Antonio, Texas 3.74 Kinesiology
GK Nadine Maher Southeastern Sr. Dublin, Ireland 3.53 Kinesiology
 
^ Southland Conference Student-Athlete of the Year
* Automatic selection; First Team All-Conference
2 Two-time All-Academic selection
3 Three-time All-Academic selection
Four-time All-Academic selection

SCORE ONE MORE CLUB/S CLUB
Fans interested in becoming active supporters of the women's soccer program are encouraged to join the Score One More Club.  Lion alums are encouraged to join the exclusive S Club, which is restricted to Southeastern athletic letter winners. All membership fees and donations to Score One More Club are available for the exclusive use of the Southeastern soccer program. Membership information is available by contacting the Lion Athletics Association at laa@southeastern.edu or (985) 549-5091 or visiting www.LionUp.com.
 
SOCIAL MEDIA
For more information on Southeastern Soccer, follow @LionUpSoccer and @chrismcbride88 on Twitter, like /SLUathletics on Facebook and subscribe to the SLUathletics YouTube channel.
 
 
 

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Vaccine for children aged five to 12 arrives in region: Education ministry - The Nelson Daily

The vaccine has arrived in the school district for children aged five to 11, the Ministry of Education has announced.

COVID-19 vaccination is now authorized by Health Canada for children five and older. 

BC Education Deputy Minister Scott Macdonald said in a press release through the schools Monday that clinics were not happening in schools during school time. 

“If that ever changes, please remember, like any other vaccine program that has taken place in schools, parents will always be notified for consent for any vaccination that may be offered,” Macdonald said in the statement.

At the elementary school level, a child will never be given a vaccination without a parent’s prior approval, the minister said.  

 

From the BC Centre for Disease Control

A question and answer from the release on vaccinating children 5-11 years old.

 

What are the benefits to getting children vaccinated against COVID-19?
While most children who get COVID-19 have a minor illness, a small number get very sick. Some children may continue to have health issues for long periods of time after the initial illness. Children are also able to pass on COVID-19 to other people in their families and communities.

Vaccinating children helps keep them safe as well as others around them – especially older adults, younger children and infants, and those with illnesses .

 

Who is eligible for the COVID-19 vaccine for children?

This vaccine is for any child between five and 11 years. If your child is four years old, you will not be able to get them vaccinated until after their fifth birthday. The vaccines are free and your children do not need BC Care Cards to receive them.

 

Who can provide consent for children to be vaccinated?

Parents/guardians, (including foster parents and prospective adoptive parents) and other custodial caregivers (for example, a grandparent who is raising the child).

Only one parent or legal guardian is required to give consent. The process for collecting consent may be different depending on the immunization clinic you attend.

 

Source: BC Centre for Disease Control

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Vaccine for children aged five to 12 arrives in region: Education ministry - The Nelson Daily
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Five players that have been electric so far this season for the Oilers - Oil On Whyte

Connor McDavid #97, Edmonton Oilers

Connor McDavid #97, Edmonton Oilers (Photo by Codie McLachlan/Getty Images) 

The Edmonton Oilers have been electric so far this season with a record of 15-5-0 through their first 20 games of the season.

So many different players have contributed to that success along the way, but today let’s call out five performances that deserved to be mentioned from Edmonton Oilers players.

Edmonton is one of the top teams in the Pacific Division, as of writing this they are second in the division behind only the Calgary Flames who have played two more games and have just one more point, so all things considered they are the top team right now.

If Edmonton were to continue to play to this level they would win 60 games and still have a couple games left in the regular season, while all things considered they are probably going to lose a few more games here or there, you cannot complain about the great first 20 games of the season. So let’s jump in with the list of five players that have been electric – these players come in no particular order.

1. Mikko Koskinen

Mikko Koskinen definitely helped save this season for the Oilers. After losing Mike Smith just three games into the season, it looked like Edmonton might be in trouble needing to lean on Koskinen through the past ten plus games, but Koskinen has been great during that time putting up a .912 save percentage and giving them the best chance to win every night.

Edmonton can outscore a lot of their issues, but they can only do that if their goaltending is making the saves they need him to make, so far Koskinen has done that. I know when Smith gets back into the net the team is going to be very happy to see him, but for now, Koskinen and Stuart Skinner have held their own for the team.

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Five players that have been electric so far this season for the Oilers - Oil On Whyte
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Five headlines for Tuesday morning - moosejawtoday.com

Here are 5 stories we are highlighting this morning.

1. Maxwell, Epstein were 'partners in crime,' prosecutor says

2. Canada confirms five Omicron cases; Ontario investigates two others

3. British Columbia extends gas rationing, state of emergency after floods

4. Saskatchewan moves to amend Constitution amid civil trial with Canadian Pacific

5. Karel Vejmelka has 46-save shutout as Coyotes upset Jets 1-0

For all the latest national and international news, as well as sports, keep visiting MooseJawToday.com and scroll down our page for the headlines.

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Five Oaks implements upgrades thanks to Trillium grant - Brantford Expositor

Article content

The Five Oaks Centre near Paris is using a grant from the Ontario Trillium Foundation to help it bounce back from the effects of the pandemic.

Article content

A non-profit intercultural and interfaith spiritual centre on Bethel Road offers summer camps, facility rentals, programs and retreats on 117 acres of trails, forest and fields alongside the Grand River.

Like many in the hospitality sector, Five Oaks saw a dramatic downturn in business due to COVID-19 restrictions on gatherings.

The foundation awarded Five Oaks a $148,400 Resilient Communities Fund grant to upgrade the dining room and kitchen of the 65-year-old building, said the centre’s executive director Michael Shewburg.

“This grant is helping Five Oaks rebuild and recover from the impacts of COVID-19 by purchasing equipment and renovating space to provide safe food services for the Five Oaks programs and community at large.”

Facility upgrades include the renovation of the dining hall, with smaller tables that can be spread apart or grouped together. Improvements to the kitchen’s layout and equipment were implemented, along with electrical and plumbing upgrades.

A new guarded cafeteria line, air purification, sanitization stations and hands free beverage area are also new features, combined with better accessibility for those with mobility issues.

“The impact of this Ontario Trillium Foundation grant cannot be underestimated,” Shewburg noted. “Five Oaks serves – and seeks to serve – a diverse range of groups who will all benefit from the improvements.”

He said the grant will help Five Oaks serve guests in an environment designed with COVID-19 safety in mind.

The Ontario Trillium Foundation last year invested about $112 million into 1,384 community projects and partnerships with the aim to build vibrant and healthy communities and strengthen the impact of the province’s non-profit sector.

bethompson@postmedia.com

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Monday, November 29, 2021

Canada now has five cases of Omicron variant - Reuters Canada

Medical personnel unload a patient from a Royal Canadian Air Force CC-130J Hercules transport aircraft which departed from Saskatoon, after the province of Saskatchewan said it would be sending patients with the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) from overloaded ICU wards to Ontario hospitals, in Kingston, Ontario, Canada October 28, 2021. REUTERS/Lars Hagberg

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MONTREAL, Nov 29 (Reuters) - A further two cases of the Omicron coronavirus variant have been detected in Ottawa, bringing Canada's total number of cases to five, Ottawa Public Health said late on Monday.

Earlier in the day, Quebec discovered its first COVID-19 case of the variant, health officials said.

Quebec Health Minister Christian Dube also told reporters that 115 travelers coming from countries affected by the new variant, primarily South Africa, were called and asked to isolate and test for COVID-19.

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Quebec's first case was a recent traveler to Nigeria, public health director Horacio Arruda said, similar to the two cases reported on Sunday by Ontario province. read more

The arrival of the new variant ahead of the Christmas holiday season comes as Quebec faces a recent increase in cases, mostly in the unvaccinated, Dube said. In the last 24 hours Quebec reported 756 new cases.

Dube urged travelers to rethink holiday trips and warned against large celebrations. The province limits gatherings in private homes to 10 people.

"The next few weeks will be critical," Dube said.

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Reporting By Allison Lampert in Montreal and Akriti Sharma in Bengaluru; Additional reporting by David Ljunggren in Ottawa and Akanksha Khushi in Bengaluru; Editing by Mark Porter, Angus MacSwan and Karishma Singh

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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How worried should recent home buyers be about their mortgage renewal in five years? - The Globe and Mail

Tyler Johnston and his wife, Dominique, bought a home in Halifax recently and spent more than they wanted as a result of fast-rising prices.Courtesy of family

Low mortgage rates are housing’s great enabler.

A recent home buyer named Tyler Johnston wonders how long this can last. He and his wife bought a home in Halifax recently and spent more than they wanted as a result of fast-rising prices. What made the purchase possible was aggressive saving for a down payment and a terrific five-year fixed mortgage rate of 2.19 per cent.

“I realize you simply do not have a crystal ball and that five years is a reasonably long time horizon,” Mr. Johnston, a millennial, wrote in an e-mail. “But it seems the fiscally responsible thing to do is to try and plan for a rate increase rather than being ambushed by it in five years. Are there economists or statisticians who take on this type of question?”

One who does is Beata Caranci, chief economist and senior vice-president at Toronto-Dominion Bank. Her view on rates five years from now should comfort Mr. Johnston and other recent buyers because it’s pretty low on drama.

In fact, the most alarming aspect of Ms. Caranci’s rate outlook isn’t where borrowing costs themselves are headed. Rather, it’s that there are signs the recent rise in consumer spending on goods is more than just a snapback from COVID-19 lockdowns. We could be entering a period of higher spending that degrades household budgets in a similar way to interest rate increases.

Ms. Caranci set the scene for her rate outlook by noting that rates are coming off their pandemic lows. “It’s very unlikely we will still be here in five years,” she said. “It would take the economy to be in a recession to be where we are today.”

Bank of Canada warns of elevated household debt as interest rates are set to rise

Mortgage rundown: Higher interest rates will bring lower interest rates

A recession is a possibility, she added. “But I would put that at a lower probability than Canada being in an expansion. The predominant state of the economy is to be in expansion.”

Rates on the five-year fixed mortgage Mr. Johnston and his wife have are influenced, to a large extent, by the yield on the five-year Government of Canada bond. That yield has already jumped this year to 1.5 per cent in late November from 0.4 per cent in early January.

Ms. Caranci said this increase is a function of financial markets adjusting to a rising rate outlook. How much higher could rates go? TD, a rarity among big financial institutions in publishing a long-range economic forecast online, sees an average five-year Canada bond yield of 1.95 per cent for 2026 and 2027.

One of the big unknowns in rate forecasting right now is how big a problem inflation will be in the years ahead. The cost of living hit an 18-year high of 4.7 per cent in October, which compares with a 30-year average of 1.9 per cent. If inflation is a result of temporary pandemic-related supply-chain issues, then it shouldn’t be a long-term influence on rates.

But Ms. Caranci also sees a demand-related side to inflation, which is that people are spending and buying goods at a surprising clip right now. “We are consuming more in terms of durable goods – cars and electronics and things like that – than we would have predicted would be the case back in 2019,” she said. “This hasn’t shown any kind of tendency to significantly ease.”

Inflation may have more staying power if spending stays strong, and that, in turn, could result in higher interest rates. The Omicron variant of coronavirus is still new and not fully understood, but it’s worth highlighting as a factor that could restrain rate increases by hurting economic growth.

Mr. Caranci said new home buyers should take some comfort from the fact that they were stress-tested by their lender to ensure they can afford higher mortgage rates than we have now. Future pay increases would also help offset higher mortgage costs. Recent trends for wages suggest they’re starting to rise faster than we’ve seen in a while, as a result of inflation.

One final thought from Ms. Caranci is that five years of mortgage payments at today’s low rates mean home owners renewing in five years will have built a solid amount of equity in their homes. If their payments on renewal are a strain, they can de-stress their finances by lengthening their amortization period a little.

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O'Leary: Five storylines for the Eastern, Western Finals - CFL.ca

We’ve reached the final four portion of the 2021 season.

The home teams triumphed in the Eastern and Western Semi-Finals, with Hamilton putting away Montreal and Saskatchewan pulling out a dramatic OT win over Calgary, setting the stage for a pair of big games that will take us to the 108th Grey Cup in Hamilton on Dec. 12.

The Riders get to pay a visit to their nemesis in Winnipeg, a team that’s had their number all season and all of the 2019 season, if you look back on it.

The Ticats make the trip up the QEW to visit their arch rivals in Toronto. The Argos took their season series 3-1, including a convincing Week 15 win that locked up first in the East Division.

As we head into these two big matchups, here are five storylines to follow for the week.

RELATED
» Ticats D-line dominates Als in Eastern Semi-Final win
» Watch: Hamilton D gets in five turnovers, six sacks
» Brett Lauther delivers in OT to send Riders to Western Final
» Watch: Riders’ onside kick leads to a TD to begin second half

IT’S LIKE LABOUR DAY GAMES (ALMOST) AT CHRISTMAS

Usually when we’ve got an offering of the Riders and Bombers and the Argos and Ticats, our thoughts go to hot, end-of-summer days at the midpoint of the season. It’s a treat to see the four of these teams battling for spots in the Grey Cup, under varying winter conditions. Toronto is expecting a temperature of zero C that feels like minus-three, with 1-3 cm of snow. In Winnipeg, fans are looking at more traditional winter conditions, with scattered flurries and a minus-nine C temperature that will feel like minus-14.

Both games could present challenges to the players but given the time of year they’re being held, Canadians know that the weather could be much, much more harsh.

A COUPLE OF RODNEY DANGERFIELDS IN ACTION

It was a theme that the Roughriders spoke openly about all week leading into their game against the Stamps. A nine-win team that was hosting a playoff game had received a lot of questions about how good it really is. Cody Fajardo and Co. certainly used it as a rallying point and the more they talked about it, the more it echoed over to the East Division. The Argos also finished with a 9-5 record but have been questioned through much of their journey this season, with fans and pundits wondering if the team can make a run in the playoffs against a more experienced Ticats team.

The questions around the Riders generally linger around offensive production and a lack of big plays through the season. Saskatchewan’s offence wasn’t pretty on Sunday, but Fajardo got the team to the end zone enough to put them in a position to win, with Brett Lauther‘s OT field goal sealing the deal for them.

The biggest concern over the Argos seems to be its talented roster figuring out what it is. Its offensive production is spread across the board and the team made a mid-season switch at quarterback, going with McLeod Bethel-Thompson and eventually trading Nick Arbuckle to Edmonton.

It’ll be interesting to see if the Argos take a similar I-get-no-respect approach this week.

THE RIDERS TRY TO GO DRAGON SLAYING

Everyone knows the Yogi Berra quote about baseball being 90 per cent mental and 10 per cent physical. The last time the Riders beat the Bombers was on Oct. 5, 2019. The Bombers got revenge in their next meeting, in the Western Final at Mosaic Stadium, en route to their Grey Cup win.

This year, the Bombers topped the Riders in Week 4 and 5 matchups, in a combined score of 56-17. Despite not playing football in 2020, the Bombers have come back and grown from their 2019 championship run. On Sunday night, coach Craig Dickenson called the Bombers the Goliath of the CFL. Riders’ DB Ed Gainey pointed to the free agency departure of Willie Jefferson, saying ever since the former Rider moved one province to the east, they haven’t been able to beat them.

Getting over the hump against the Bombers — even once in the regular-season this year — could have been the clearing of a big mental hurdle for this Riders team. Though if they were to do it on Sunday, it might do wonders for their confidence in the Grey Cup game.

Young teams with championship dreams often run into a powerhouse obstacle in their quest to win. We saw the Edmonton Elks deal with this with the Calgary Stampeders in 2014 before getting the best of them a year later. The example I always think of is Michael Jordan’s Chicago Bulls of the late 1980s running into the Detroit Pistons and failing year after year before breaking through in 1991. We all know what followed there. Are the Riders at that point yet? Can the Bombers’ grip on their perch atop the league be loosened? We’ll find out in the Western Final.

AN EDGE FOR THE RIDERS? 

On the field, we saw a great show of confidence from Riders’ kicker Brett Lauther on Sunday, as he strolled out in double OT, fully knowing he was going to make that 34-yard field goal to extend his team’s season. After he made the kick and the penalty on the play was deemed to go to Calgary, Lauther pointed at the imaginary watch on his wrist, letting everyone know this was his time.

That confidence gave way to some humility and appreciation for the moment by the time he got to his post-game interview. The Truro, N.S. native talked about his journey — he was on and off of practice rosters from 2015 to 2018 before landing with Saskatchewan — and how appreciative he was to have the opportunity to win a game like that for his teammates and the province.

You’re only as good as your last kick in football, but Lauther brings some great momentum into the Western Final and when you look at the Bombers, their one sore spot this season sits in their kicking game. Tyler Crapigna was lost to injury early in the season. Rookie Marc Liegghio (5-8 on field goals) gave it a shot, before Ali Mourtada took over and went 8-15. Sergio Castillo was signed on Oct. 19 and has gone 7-9, for a team-high 78 per cent.

Lauther is 40-47 on field goals this year, for 85.1 per cent. If it’s close on Sunday, you can bet Lauther will be more than ready to try to put it away.

TICAT BOUNCEBACK?

The Ticats had a golden opportunity in Week 15. They traveled to Toronto for a first-place showdown with the Argos. The result: A 31-12 loss, left a bitter taste in the mouths of the reigning East Division champions, who can only claim a single win in the four matchups they’ve had with the Argos this year.

The Ticats will at least roll into BMO Field with some good momentum this week, after a defensively-driven win over the Montreal Alouettes. The Ticats forced five turnovers in the win and shut down the league’s leading rusher in William Stanback (46 yards on 16 carries).

The defence may have made it an easier day for Jeremiah Masoli, who was stymied by the Argos’ defence in the Week 15 loss. Masoli will have to play at a higher level against the Argos, who added defensive guru Chris Jones as a consultant during the season. If the Ticats’ defence can turn it up for a second week in a row and make life uncomfortable for Bethel-Thompson and Masoli can in turn find success against Jones’ defence, the visitors would have a shot at playing at home for a Grey Cup a week later.

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Report: Robbie Ray finalizing five-year, $115M deal with Mariners - Sportsnet.ca

Reigning American League Cy Young winner Robbie Ray and the Seattle Mariners are reportedly finalizing a five-year, $115-million deal, according to Jeff Passan of ESPN.

The deal, Passan reported, will have an opt-out after the third season.

Ray, who was traded from the Arizona Diamondbacks to the Toronto Blue Jays along with cash for left-hander Travis Bergen in August of 2020, went on to sign a one-year, $8 million contract to stay with the Jays after being encouraged by his brief time with the team down the stretch of the '20 season.

In his commanding one-season run with the Blue Jays in 2021 that endeared him to fans, Ray transformed his career, rebounding from a troubled 2020 campaign which saw him pitch to an ERA of 6.62 in 12 appearances and an average of 7.8 walks per nine innings.

Ray posted a 13-7 record for Toronto this past season to go along with a 2.84 earned-run average and 248 strikeouts over 193.1 innings pitched.

The reports of Ray leaving the Blue Jays come one day after Toronto reached an agreement on a five-year, $110 million contract with right-hander Kevin Gausman.

The 30-year-old's departure marks the second pitcher from Toronto's 2021 staff to depart via free agency, joining Steven Matz, who finalized a four-year, $44-million deal with the St. Louis Cardinals on Monday.

Joining the pitching duo on their way out of Toronto is Marcus Semien, who reportedly agreed to a seven-year, $175-million deal with Texas after one stellar year with the Blue Jays in which he was named a finalist for the AL most valuable player award.

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Five NHL quarter-mark thoughts: Finding out what your team really is - Sportsnet.ca

A few thoughts from around the league as the NHL hits the one-quarter mark...

1. The season finally has a shape

It’s become accepted practice in hockey analysis to look at American Thanksgiving -- at roughly the quarter mark of each team’s 82-game schedule -- as an important checkpoint. The numbers tell us that 77 per cent of teams in a playoff position as of that date tend to make the post-season, meaning that teams on the outside looking in right now are likely starting to feel the landscape of their season take shape. It’ll be an uphill climb for them to get in, and that’s going to be their day-to-day from now on.

I say “from now on” because as a player there’s an ebb and flow to the season, and without a definitive turning point we’ve gradually come around a corner here.

For players, the first part of the NHL season is pure jockeying, individually and as a team. You jockey for the best linemates you can get, for special teams time, and to be in the good graces of the coaching staff. Everybody gets some opportunities in the first 20 games and those players who play well (or just get lucky) in those opportunities tend to see themselves get favourable positions within their own team, and with that, they get set up for “personal best” type seasons. Of course, the opposite happens too. From now on, it gets harder to take someone’s spot in the lineup, because the coach has done a lot of his mental sorting of the group.

As a team, you’ve had enough moments now that give you a sense of what your group is. The start of the season (the first five games or so) are exciting and everyone brings it and results don’t tell us a ton -- there’s loads of randomness as things settle. But as the season goes on, guys start picking up injuries and tiring by a per cent or two, and you start to see games where teams with the superior talent just "skills" themselves to a win or three. Under-talented teams that started hot run into some hard luck -- unable to find that one extra goal here and there -- and it becomes clear what they really are.

We’re at that point now for both teams and players. Teams that start en fuego like the Ducks and Sabres have come back to earth. Teams that started slow like the Lightning and Avalanche have found their way back. We’re into it now, meaning there are a few takeaways we can make.

2. The Ducks and Red Wings are legitimately better teams

Even with records of just over .500 in their past 10 games, both of these teams have shown enough speed and skill and improvement to make me believe they’re legitimately better. Oh weird, adding dynamic, exciting stars at both forward and defence helps, who knew?

Lucas Raymond and Moritz Seider, to go with Trevor Zegras and Jamie Drysdale, are among the handful of names I’m most excited about adding to the NHL this season. Zegras is italicized nasty out there, and Raymond is a dynamic offensive force, too. The first step in a rebuild is going from awful to watchable before becoming “good” and both of these teams are watchable now, thanks in large part to these four names.

3. The battle between scoring and goaltending has shifted

There was a time when the evolution of goaltending simply out-paced the evolution of shooting in the NHL. Goalies got better first, and our game suffered for it (assuming you like offence as most fans do), resulting in the league trying to limit the size of goaltending equipment.

At the same time goalies started putting on smaller gear the first wave of NHLers who grew up with truly functional, flexible, one-piece hockey sticks hit the NHL, and goalies were not ready.

Here’s scoring in the NHL by year over the past 10 seasons. The number on the right is goals per game by each team. Things ticked up steadily for a while there:

(via Hockey Reference.com)

You’ll notice scoring took a step back last season, which is tough to explain. It was the shortened bubble year, which means there was so much noise, so many unique circumstances, it’s tough to speculate what brought it back down from three goals per game.

This season, though, there’s been a bounceback in goaltending. Here’s the average save percentage in the NHL by year over those past 10 seasons. Look from 2014-15 and 2015-16 on.

Average save percentage had trended down every season since 2015-16, but has seen a marked tick back up this year. I’m guessing it’ll settle in at more like .911 or .912, but goalies are fighting back this year.

4. It’s Connor McDavid, that’s your answer to whatever the question is

I’ve been an NHL awards voter for six of the past seven years (not last year as they cut back the voter list with bubble limitations), and I’m going to let you in on a little secret: if it’s close between Connor McDavid and Leon Draisaitl for the Hart Trophy this year, it will not be a close decision in my mind. It’s Connor.

There’s a tendency in these sorts of decisions to try to come off as the smartest guy in the room and overthink it, or worse, to just look at the stats and say “Leon has three more points so he gets my vote,” but here's what I know.

Everything the opposition does starts with game-planning for McDavid, which means he’s having the most positive impact for his teammates. He’s the best player in the world and constantly draws the attention of five defenders when he’s on the ice. He shapes the structure of the opposition. McDavid is this same player on 31 other teams, to varying degrees. Draisaitl would be similar to this on all those teams I’m sure, but I’m not certain it doesn’t cost him a handful of points or more if he’s not a part of a power play unit with 97. Draisaitl’s not reliant on McDavid to score, that’s not the point, but he is uniquely built to capitalize on the mess that’s created when McDavid is swirling about.

Draisaitl may legitimately be the NHL’s second-best player at this point. I’ve featured him on Hockey Central before Oilers’ games about once a week all season long. But if the Oilers had to be without one player for a playoff series, and you let them choose who it would be, who do you think they’d sit, and who would they want to dress? Your answer to that should give you your answer as to who’s their most valuable player.

And finally,

5. With the fresh start in Montreal, it’s Vancouver’s turn

The Vancouver Canucks are flailing, to put it mildly. They’re awful, 11 points back of the Ducks for third in the division with four teams between them, and the negativity around the group is impermeable. Sometimes a roster is so irredeemable that no matter who’s in charge it isn’t going to change. That ain’t this.

It may be too late on this season for Vancouver, which is an indictment of the inaction thus far in itself, but that team deserves a new beginning, too. There is talent within the roster, there is moveable talent if you want to rejig for more competitive years ahead, and you don’t want your young core going to the rink every day to be summarily executed by whatever opposition lines up against them night after night after night.

As mentioned in point one, the season has taken some shape and hardened a bit, but it’s not impossible to change the course of events for the next 60 games here. The Canucks are dragging their feet while the players are out there drowning, waiting for a life preserver to better days. They deserve one.

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Five NHL quarter-mark thoughts: Finding out what your team really is - Sportsnet.ca
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Canucks at Canadiens: Five things you should know - Montreal Gazette

Montreal owned Vancouver last season in the all-Canadian North Division with a 6-0-3 record in nine games against them.

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Here are five things you should know about Monday’s game between the Canadiens (6-15-2) and the Vancouver Canucks (6-14-2) at the Bell Centre (7:30 p.m., SNE, RDS, TSN 690 Radio, 98.5 FM).

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Two in a row? The Canadiens, who have a 4-6-1 record at home, will be looking to win a second straight game for the first time this season. The Canadiens’ offensive stats got a boost Saturday night in Pittsburgh with three empty-net goals in a 6-3 win over the Penguins , but they still have a minus-29 goal differential for the season (the second-worst in the NHL behind Arizona’s minus-38) and have been outscored 74-25 in their 17 losses.

The first star: Jake Allen was the first star for the Canadiens on Saturday , stopping 47 of the 50 shots he faced while improving his record to 5-9-1 with a 3.02 goals-against average and a .902 save percentage. The Canadiens have a 2-9-1 record on the road and Allen has both of those road victories, facing a combined 95 shots in those two games. Allen stopped all 45 shots he faced in a 4-0 win over the Sharks in San Jose on Oct. 28.

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They all count: Josh Anderson scored two of the empty-net goals for the Canadiens on Saturday and Tyler Toffoli got the other one. Three of Anderson’s seven goals this season have been empty-netters and two of Toffoli’s five goals have been with no goalie. For Toffoli, who also had two assists Saturday, it was his first goal on the road this season. Toffoli leads the Canadiens in scoring with 5-10-15 totals, followed by Nick Suzuki (4-11-15) and Anderson (7-6-13).

Two struggling franchises: The Canadiens started to clean house on Sunday, announcing GM Marc Bergevin and assistant GM Trevor Timmins had been fired , while assistant GM Scott Mellanby resigned on Saturday . Canucks fans are probably waiting for the same thing to happen in Vancouver with only six wins in their first 22 games following Sunday night’s 3-2 loss to the Bruins in Boston . Much more was expected from the Canucks this season and the heat is definitely on GM Jim Benning and head coach Travis Green. J.T. Miller leads the Canucks in scoring with 7-12-19 totals, followed by Connor Garland (6-9-15) and Quinn Hughes (2-13-15). No. 1 goalie Thatcher Demko has a 6-10-1 record with a 3.07 GAA and a .904 save percentage. The Canucks have a 3-8-1 road record.

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Remember us? Montreal and Vancouver played each other nine times last season in the all-Canadian North Division with the Canadiens posting a 6-0-3 record while outscoring the Canucks 41-26. Those games against Vancouver are a very big reason why the Canadiens were able to squeak into the playoffs, earning the fourth and final spot in the division with a 24-21-11 record, four points ahead of the fifth-place Calgary Flames. The Canadiens had an 18-21-8 record against the other teams in the division. Toffoli had 8-5-13 totals in the eight games he played against Vancouver and finished the season as the Canadiens’ leading scorer with 28-16-44 totals in 52 games. This will be the first of only two games between the Canadiens and Canucks this season. The teams will play each other again on March 9 in Vancouver.

scowan@postmedia.com

twitter.com/StuCowan1

  1. Marc Bergevin's most notable successes as Habs GM were the playoff run in 2014 and last summer’s run to within three victories of a championship. He is seen here in a file photo.

    Jack Todd: Firings mark the end of a tumultuous 2021 for the Canadiens

  2. Canadiens owner and president Geoff Molson, seen in a file photo, will hold a news conference at the Bell Sports Complex in Brossard on Monday at 11 a.m.

    Stu Cowan: Habs take first steps in getting franchise back on track

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    Canucks at Canadiens: Five things you should know - Montreal Gazette
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    Sunday, November 28, 2021

    Five Star Senior Living COO Wigglesworth to Retire - Senior Housing News

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    Five Star Senior Living COO Wigglesworth to Retire  Senior Housing News
    Five Star Senior Living COO Wigglesworth to Retire - Senior Housing News
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    MLB free agency: Blue Jays, Kevin Gausman agree to five-year, $110 million deal - CBS sports.com

    kevin-gausman.jpg
    USATSI

    Free agent right-handed pitcher Kevin Gausman has agreed to sign with the Toronto Blue Jays for five years and $110 million, reports Jeff Passan of ESPN

    Gausman, 30, is coming off the best season of his career. He was 14-6 with a 2.81 ERA (145 ERA+), 1.04 WHIP and 227 strikeouts against 49 unintentional walks in 192 innings for the 107-win Giants. He posted 5.2 WAR, earning his first All-Star selection while finishing sixth in NL Cy Young voting and 21st in NL MVP voting. 

    Gausman had been pretty inconsistent through much of his nine-year career, showing flashes of his immense upside but also mixing in bad stretches. These last two years in San Francisco, he seems to have hit that next gear. Abandoning the sinker after 2017 and then much more heavily using the splitter these last three seasons would be the biggest changes in his pitch mix. 

    Overall, he seems to have tapped into that potential that once made him the fourth overall draft pick out of LSU and saw him ranked as a top-20 prospect in baseball as he was coming up through the Orioles' minor-league system a decade ago. He's a frontline starter at this point and is now being paid like it. 

    For the Blue Jays, it seems likely that this means they are parting ways with Cy Young winner Robbie Ray. Gausman would appear to just slide right into Ray's spot, especially since the Jays signed José Berríos to a seven-year, $131 million extension earlier this offseason. Here's how things look right now with six possible pitchers for the rotation: 

    RHP: José Berríos
    RHP: Kevin Gausman
    LHP: Hyun-jin Ryu
    RHP: Alex Manoah
    RHP: Ross Stripling
    RHP: Nate Pearson

    There's talent and flexibility in there. The top three pitchers in there have already flashed ace upside. Manoah was overall very good last year as a rookie. Pearson has yet to untap the potential that made him a top-10 prospect in baseball, but he has the ability and is only 25 years old. And Stripling can swing to the bullpen if need be. 

    As for the Giants, they'll have to look elsewhere to fill the void left by Gausman. Logan Webb is back, Anthony DeSclafani has re-signed and there have been reports Alex Wood is coming back. That's three rotation spots with Sammy Long and Tyler Beede right now possibly holding down the four and five spots. 

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    MLB free agency: Blue Jays, Kevin Gausman agree to five-year, $110 million deal - CBS sports.com
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    Take Five: The last surviving dove - Financial Post

    Breadcrumb Trail Links PMN Technology PMN Business Author of the article: Article content Of all the central banks which unt...