https://www.sportsnet.ca/nfl/article/bengals-bucs-headline-favourites-week-4-nfl-odds/

The first overall picks from each of the past two NFL drafts will be in the spotlight when the Cincinnati Bengals play host to the Jacksonville Jaguars on Thursday night as strong 7.5-point favourites on the NFL odds for Week 4 at sportsbooks monitored by OddsShark.com.

Joe Burrow has shown no lingering effects of a knee injury that cut his rookie campaign short. Last year’s top pick has connected on seven total scoring passes while leading Cincinnati to a 2-1 start and a share of the AFC North division lead going into Thursday night’s matchup at Paul Brown Stadium.

Burrow’s performance has left the Bengals poised to close out September with a winning record for the first time since 2018. The former LSU star threw three touchdown passes in last weekend’s decisive 24-10 win in Pittsburgh. With the victory, the Bengals have now won and covered in four of their last six regular season outings.

Despite the growing signs of a turnaround after five straight losing seasons, though, the Bengals sit back at +12500 on the latest Super Bowl odds.

Conversely, the learning curve remains steep for this year’s top pick Trevor Lawrence. The Jaguars pivot has shown flashes of his vast potential during his NFL debut, but has been unable to halt the epic 18-game straight-up losing streak that Jacksonville rides into Thursday’s contest.

The Jaguars have seen each of their past seven defeats come by double-digit margins. That includes last weekend’s 31-19 loss to Arizona in a game which they led by nine points in the third quarter. In addition, the Jaguars have lost outright in three of four primetime appearances since 2015.

Elsewhere on the NFL Week 4 odds at online betting sites, the Los Angeles Rams host the Arizona Cardinals as 4.5-point chalk in a clash of undefeated NFC West rivals. As well, the surprising Carolina Panthers look to open their season on a 4-0 straight-up run for the first time since 2015 when they visit the surging Dallas Cowboys as 5-point underdogs.

And Sunday Night Football features a homecoming of sorts for Tom Brady, as the Tampa Bay Buccaneers visit the New England Patriots as 7-point favourites. Brady has made steady gains on the NFL MVP odds while throwing for 10 scores to date, but was limited to just one scoring pass in last weekend’s loss in Los Angeles.

Meanwhile, New England has struggled to generate offence during a middling 1-2 start. Rookie quarterback Mac Jones has found the end zone just twice while leading a Patriots attack that has averaged just 18 points per game so far this season.

https://www.sportsnet.ca/basketball/article/womens-team-head-coach-thomaidis-canada-basketball-agree-part-ways/

TORONTO — Lisa Thomaidis will not return as head coach of Canada’s national women’s basketball team, ending a run of nearly a decade at the helm of the program.

Canada Basketball said in a release Tuesday that the organization and Thomaidis have “mutually agreed to part ways.” Thomaidis’s contract expired at the end of September.

Thomaidis was named head coach of the women’s national team in 2013 and led the team to a FIBA world ranking of fourth, the highest in program history. She leaves with an 83-44 record at the helm.

However, the team fell short of expectations this summer at the Tokyo Olympics by failing to advance to the medal round.

The team was heavily impacted by restrictions around the COVID-19 pandemic, with the full squad going 18 months without playing together before an Olympic-opening loss to Serbia on July 26.

Prior to being named head coach, Thomaidis was an assistant coach for the previous 12 years after joining Allison McNeill’s staff in 2001.

Thomaidis has also been head coach at the University of Saskatchewan for more than 20 years, twice earning U Sport coach of the year.

Since taking over as head coach in 1998, she’s led the Huskies to seven Canada West titles and two national titles, including in 2020 in one of the last major sports events in Canada before COVID-19. The Huskies have reached the U Sports Final 8 tournament 13 times, including in 12 of the last 13 seasons.

https://www.sportsnet.ca/nhl/article/report-lightning-gm-julien-brisebois-agrees-contract-extension/

Tampa Bay Lightning general manager Julien BriseBois has agreed to a contract extension with the NHL club, according to Eduardo Encina of the Tampa Bay Times.

Encina reports BriseBois was entering the final season of his current deal. Terms of the contract were not immediately known.

BriseBois’ Bolts have won the Stanley Cup the past two years.

The 44-year-old native of Greenfield Park, Que., was promoted to GM from assistant GM in 2018.

BriseBois joined the Lightning as an assistant GM in 2010 after spending nine seasons in the Montreal Canadiens’ front office.

BriseBois was GM of the Hamilton Bulldogs, then Montreal’s AHL affiliate, when they won the Calder Cup in 2007.

https://www.sportsnet.ca/nhl/article/canadiens-notebook-drouin-feeling-love-guhle-standout-lines-take-shape/

MONTREAL — From Sunday’s Red-White scrimmage to Monday’s 5-2 win over the Toronto Maple Leafs, it was a love-in for Jonathan Drouin at the Bell Centre. One that left him saying, “I’m really happy to be back.”

“I’m happy, I feel like myself,” Drouin continued. “It’s fun to be playing hockey.”

It couldn’t have been a sharper contrast from what it looked like for Drouin last April, when he took to warmup in Calgary for a game against the Flames and then stepped off the ice for an indefinite leave of absence.

It was only revealed at the beginning of last week, months after Drouin missed the Canadiens’ remaining 12 games and their run through the Stanley Cup Playoffs to the final, that he had been suffering from anxiety and insomnia for years and that it had begun to affect him too much to continue playing.

Joy was an afterthought for Drouin at that time, but it’s front of mind right now. The 7,500 fans in attendance Sunday cheered the Ste. Agathe, Que., native at every opportunity and made him feel it.

“It warmed my heart,” Drouin said. “There might have even been a little tear, I don’t know if you saw it, but it was really cool to come back and get an ovation like that.”

There were more of them on Monday, as Drouin carried over chemistry with new linemates Josh Anderson and Christian Dvorak to notch two assists.

The three of them combined for three goals and nine points in the win over the Maple Leafs.

It was only a pre-season game, but it was chicken soup for Drouin’s soul. This whole camp has been that so far; an ideal start to regain his footing in the Canadiens’ room and in the NHL.

Lines mostly set?

Interesting revelation from Canadiens coach Dominique Ducharme, who was asked if Drouin-Dvorak-Anderson was a line he had in mind or one borne of necessity after Mike Hoffman was injured prior to leaving for Montreal and Brendan Gallagher was absent from the start of camp due to “family reasons.”

“We had a good idea of what we wanted to do, but there are certain key points or positions where we have battles and need to see what happens,” Ducharme said. “But I’d say we were pretty sure in our winger duos. We’ll see, but we made our lines hoping we could start this way and work on it for three weeks during training camp.

“So, to see Dvorak’s line have a good game was a positive for us.”

That’s one less thing to figure out, with Cole Caufield — upon his return from an upper-body injury in about a week’s time — completing a line with Tyler Toffoli and Nick Suzuki.

Here’s another: Gallagher taking Rafael Harvey-Pinard’s place on a line with Jake Evans and Joel Armia, who appears to have taken confidence from his excellent playoffs — and the four-year, $13.6-million contract he signed thereafter — into this camp.

Sure, the Canadiens’ heart-and-soul winger was in Caufield’s place at Tuesday’s practice, but it’s an easy conclusion to come by that he’ll complete the Evans-Armia duo by the time camp reaches its final phase and the start of the regular season comes into view.

Which brings me to this: boy, did I ever get hammered by the fans for initially placing Hoffman, a five-time 25-goal scorer who’s topped out at 36, on the team’s fourth line to start when I put out this notebook a couple of weeks ago, but I might end up being right. I’ll get hammered now for my suggestions for the other lines, too, but my thinking was that Hoffman would be on the top unit of the power play and rove around the lineup at five-on-five, where he’ll be deployed for what would amount to fourth-line minutes.

I argued you’d see the 31-year-old move up when a goal — or a spark on a given line — is needed, and that he could be the go-to finisher and offensive driver on a fourth line that would start most of its shifts in the offensive zone.

I don’t know that it would’ve been Ducharme’s plan out of the gate, with Hoffman signing a three-year, $13.5-million deal with the Canadiens to likely play a more prominent role, but it might prove to be the one he opts for if Armia carries momentum into the games that matter. Hoffman could be out another three weeks with a lower-body injury, and that obviously puts him behind the eight ball to start, as I wrote about last week, but his absence might have given Ducharme a better sense of how he can achieve the optimal balance to get scoring and defensive reliability out of all four of his lines.

One thing Ducharme said, after we wrapped our one-hour conversation last week, was that we’d likely see a lot of movement on his lines throughout the season. And one thing that feels clear, just looking at the paper composition, is that there are a number of combinations he can come up with that can work.

Dvorak sprinting out of the gate

Scoring a power-play goal and notching three assists is a fine way to make your debut as a Montreal Canadien, but there’s much more to Dvorak’s game.

There’s even more to it than Ducharme assumed there was after diving deep on the player who was traded to the Canadiens from the Arizona Coyotes for two draft picks following Jesperi Kotkaniemi’s departure for Carolina on a $6.1-million offer sheet at the beginning of September.

“I knew he was a complete, solid hockey player,” the coach said. “I see little things (that make me realize) he’s even smarter than I thought.

“As a person, he’s a really focused guy. He’s having fun quietly with the guys, but he comes in and he’s pretty business. I think that’s one of the reason he’s reacting that way on the ice is because he pays attention to every little thing that a hockey player needs to be paying attention to be successful, and there’s a reason he’s playing that way — his focus, the way he handles himself. I think he’s going to become, down the road, like a really quiet leader. Just the way he plays will influence a lot of his teammates.”

Dvorak plays the right way, and that will do much to account for the loss of Phillip Danault to the Los Angeles Kings in free agency. We knew that already.

Personally, I didn’t realize how fast he was. I didn’t think that was a hallmark of his game, but he appeared to be perfectly in step with two of the team’s biggest burners on Monday.

Sign up for NHL newsletters

Get the best of our NHL coverage and exclusives delivered directly to your inbox!

NHL Newsletter




*I understand that I may withdraw my consent at any time.

Kaiden Guhle standing out

Nothing like jumping over the boards 26 times and playing a team-leading 23:44 in your first-ever NHL exhibition game to get your feet wet, eh?

Kaiden Guhle’s debut was a near-perfect dive off the highest platform; an impressive performance that certainly caught his coach’s attention.

How so?

“Composure,” said Ducharme. “He’s not showing any sign of being nervous or anything else and things like that. He’s pretty calm, confident. I think he’s confident in the right way. He knows that he’s got things to learn, but he’s a great kid.

“A lot of people that had him on their team talk about (him) being maybe captain material. We can see why because of the way he handles himself.”

I mused on Twitter that Guhle, facing a room full of reporters for the first time at the Bell Centre, had ice on his foot and ice in his veins after he calmly answered a series of questions with an freezer bag taped over a battle wound suffered blocking a shot on a second-period penalty kill. Others in the room called him a mini Shea Weber, noting that he was reminiscent of the always-measured Canadiens captain.

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.

I think he left that impression when he deflected recognition of his innate ability to properly read the play and gap up in the neutral zone with confidence — a trait Drouin praised him for, and one he was asked about to try to discover where that comes from.

“It’s the forwards that are tracking back that allows me to step up,” Guhle said, “and they did a great job of that tonight.

“Good team effort.”

Weber would’ve thrown in the word “obviously” a couple of times, but this type of answer was straight out of his book.

Here’s what I thought was most compelling: this was an A-performance from Guhle, and he had to have known it was being received as that by the nature of the questions he was fielding, but his own assessment of it was even-keel.

I snuck in a final question at his avail, a Columbo-style — how many of you are too young to get this reference? — “Just one more thing, Kaiden…How do you think you played today?”

“Solid,” Guhle said. “Simple. Tried to do my best and help the team out. I think it was a solid game. Obviously, there’s some things you can do to improve, but it I thought I was pretty decent. But again, team won, so it makes it a lot better.”

Like Ducharme said, the kid is confident in the right way.

https://www.sportsnet.ca/nhl/article/new-jets-nate-schmidt-brenden-dillon-already-just-fit-right/

WINNIPEG — The importance of the seven simple words Adam Lowry dispensed should not be discounted.

Winnipeg Jets training camp is only six days old, but so much of what the organization hopes to accomplish this season is dependent on how a pair of off-season additions on defence are able to find their respective footing in this latest stop.

Lowry is one of the Jets’ resident quote machines, happy to dispense knowledge when asked about virtually any topic.

When a query about Nate Schmidt and Brenden Dillon was posed, Lowry didn’t need much time to find the words to describe his initial impressions of the newcomers.

“They’ve kind of just fit right in,” said Lowry, who would add plenty of context as his answer continued. “Different players and different styles, but both pieces that, in years past, we’ve been missing. (Dillon) is huge. He’s going to be great on the back end. I think he compliments some of our smaller d-men really well. You’ve seen what he’s done in his career. He’s a great defender. He moves the puck well, he’s big and he’s hard to play against. He makes going to the net really miserable.

“And (Schmidt), he’s loud, he’s fun to be around. He moves the puck well, he’s a great skater. I think they both come in and fit in and, hopefully, that continues and we see the positive impacts they have on their team.”

Sign up for NHL newsletters

Get the best of our NHL coverage and exclusives delivered directly to your inbox!

NHL Newsletter




*I understand that I may withdraw my consent at any time.

Before we unpack the rest of that answer, let’s start at the beginning.

It’s one thing to identify a deficiency on a roster, but finding the right skill set and personality to fit can be a greater challenge, especially when it comes to having the salary-cap space available — not to mention the assets required to acquire the players.

Schmidt and Dillon are also known as great people and great teammates, so it does not come as a surprise they’ve been able to fit in seamlessly. But sometimes a situation that looks to be a perfect fit in almost every way doesn’t always work out for a variety of reasons.

It’s no secret the Jets were looking for an upgrade on the back end after a couple of seasons of transition. Both the Washington Capitals and Vancouver Canucks had players they needed to allocate significant contracts to, which left Schmidt and Dillon available.

Jets GM Kevin Cheveldayoff was quick to strike on both deals, securing a longer-term solution instead of a Band-Aid, given the term left on the contracts for Schmidt (four years) and Dillon (three years).

Schmidt had to waive his no-trade clause for the deal to go through, while Dillon had to wrap his head around the fact a club that signed him to a four-year deal was sending him packing only a few months after he’d made a commitment to them. Adjusting to a new situation isn’t always easy, but it’s clear Schmidt and Dillon seem to be ahead of the game.

When an organization adds a couple of veterans, it’s fun to pontificate about where and they might fit on the depth chart. On that front, it wasn’t a surprise to see Schmidt alongside Josh Morrissey and Dillon on a pairing with Neal Pionk, giving Jets head coach Paul Maurice multiple options to consider for the primary shutdown role.

Schmidt should help provide some stability for Morrissey, who has rotated through a large number of D partners since the departure of Jacob Trouba to the New York Rangers in the deal that brought back Pionk.

“He’s the total package of what we need. He fits in in every way,” said Jets captain Blake Wheeler. “A guy that can get up and down the ice, move the puck and bring a little bit of flavour to the locker room, too.”

As for Dillon, he brings an element the Jets haven’t had an abundance of on defence since the 2019 off-season departures of Dustin Byfuglien, Ben Chiarot, Tyler Myers and Trouba.

On the opening day of training camp, Maurice referred to it as texture.

Schmidt saw plenty of Dillon when both were playing in the Pacific Division, with the Vegas Golden Knights and San Jose Sharks respectively, and he was able to put together his own scouting report, which was aided by some feedback from the forwards who had to battle with him in the corners and in front of the net.

“I know that our forwards never liked going against him,” said Schmidt. “So that’s always a good thing to hear when you get a guy like that (on your team). That rough, tough, rugged nature doesn’t really translate off the ice. He’s awesome.”

When you look closely at the defence corps as a whole, the Jets will play a more physical game — even though there’s still ample skill sprinkled throughout the group.

“Yeah, it’s a mentality and mindset. Those guys (Dillon, Logan Stanley) do bring a tougher edge to the club and it has a ripple effect on us,” said Pionk. “It’s not just necessarily dropping the gloves. You can be tough in a lot of ways. You can take a big hit to make a play, you can throw a big hit, you can block a shot — that’s toughness. You don’t have to drop the gloves.”

Schmidt was a bundle of energy as he spoke with reporters for more than 11-and-a-half minutes on Tuesday afternoon — his first group session since training camp began.

Naturally, he was asked about what he’s learned so far about his new defence partner.

“Man, peeling back the layers of this Josh Morrissey is a treat of mine coming in. It’s fun for me. I really enjoy it. Just getting to know him and the rest of our group as well,” said Schmidt. “I talk a lot. He listens a lot. I think I’ve reeled him into the tractor beam a few times, the 20-minute tractor beam.”

In that tractor beam, Schmidt is getting to know the tendencies of his partner and looking for what makes him tick, gathering information to help make this partnership a successful one.

Thanks to a mutual friend in Dallas Stars goalie Braden Holtby, Schmidt knows that Dillon is one of the guys he can count on when he needs to lighten the mood or try to fire his teammates up.

There’s also an immediate and unifying bond Schmidt shares with Dillon and Pionk, as the trio are all undrafted free agents who have carved out impressive paths to becoming top-4 defencemen who play prominent roles.

Dillon provided a glimpse into his psyche on Day 2 of training camp, when he openly discussed the chip on his shoulder that only got bigger after this trade to the Jets. It’s not the type of thing that weighs him down, but there’s little doubt it provides some additional fuel.

“Winnipeg is getting a really motivated Brenden Dillon,” said Dillon. “I want to be the best player I can be in all facets. I want to learn. I want to get better.”

As far as the high expectations for this Jets team go, Schmidt welcomes them with open arms — even if he chose his words wisely when asked to weigh in on the subject.

“I’ll try and be short,” said Schmidt. “That group will decide how far we go. That’s really the best way to look at it. Because it’s in the room. How we play and how we decide to conduct ourselves, that will determine how far we go.

“There’s a lot of things that can happen, a lot of things that have to go your way in a year to win the whole thing. But I really think we have a group that can… determine where we go this year.”