Jeff and Elliotte discuss the ongoing Jack Eichel situation in Buffalo and wonder if the NHL should get involved, provide some updates on the contract negotiations between Vancouver and their high profiled RFAs, what’s happening with Travis Hamonic, Brady Tkachuk and the Senators continue talks, questions in New Jersey as they deal with an unvaccinated player on their roster, the Blues lock up their GM and make a trade with the Sens, Arizona hires John Ferguson Jr. as their assistant GM, and Elliotte attends his first NHL game in his backyard in a very long time.
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/nhl/article/5-maple-leafs-notes-marner-willing-try-something-new-power-play/
TORONTO – And now for something completely different.
Mitch Marner is a versatile, adaptable sort of star player.
Over the course of his hockey life, he’s played centre and wing. He’s driven offence and been tasked with shutting down some of the toughest forwards in the business. He has run the power play and volunteered to assume a prominent position on the Toronto Maple Leafs’ penalty kill.
So, it’s noteworthy that Marner is now trying something he’s never done at any level: move from the flank to the slot on the power play.
“I’ve never played it, to be honest, so it’s definitely something new to me,” Marner said Monday, before jetting to Montreal for the Leafs’ 5-2 preseason loss.
“I love to try new things, so I’m excited to give that give it a shot. Hopefully, I get used to it pretty fast.”
The rearrangement of Toronto’s beleaguered top power-play crew is no small storyline heading into 2021-22.
Despite loading their 5-on-4 unit with more than $40 million worth of talent, the 2020-21 Leafs’ power-play tumbled to 16th overall (20 per cent) in the regular season, then converted on only 13 per cent of those opportunities in their seven-game collapse to Montreal. (Among all playoff teams, only Vegas and Nashville’s power plays were less effective.)
Coach Sheldon Keefe watched his high-powered superstars go just plus-2 in 23 power-play chances in a series in which the Leafs lost three one-goal games.
Yep. Power-plays matter.
The PP’s ineffectiveness turned to ugly when Marner vehemently shot down an unverified rumour that he had refused to accept a coaching staff request to move off the half-wall last season.
“It’s a complete lie,” said Marner after the season, visibly upset by the idea. “It sucks that stuff like that’s being said, but I’m not surprised either.
“I think everyone can see I’ll try and play any role I can to help this team win.”
So disastrous was Toronto’s 2021 power play that it cost assistant coach Manny Malhotra his primary responsibility.
Keefe has flipped the PP to new assistant Spencer Carbery’s purview, and changes are already underway.
“Tough conversation, you know, because [Malhotra] was brought here to do a job. But Manny’s a team guy, and he’s still very much involved in everything that we’re doing off the ice, including the power play,” Keefe said.
“Spencer’s a great coach. He’s got a good vision and a good plan and has that perspective as a head coach [with the Hershey Bears] in terms of how things play out.
“The biggest thing is just fresh voice, fresh eyes, good ideas. And just like it seems a good fit for us, given what we went through last season.”
Marner scored 20 goals last season, all even-strength.
Even though he saw more PP minutes (3:08 per game) than any Leaf not named Auston Matthews, and even though he’s striving to develop into a dual shooting threat, Marner never scored once on the man-advantage.
Yet despite cries from the outside to adjust the formation and try William Nylander on the flank, Marner stayed put.
That changes under Carbery.
The assistant’s first look at Nylander on the flank resulted in a power-play goal Saturday in exhibition, as John Tavares tipped a Nylander shot 10 seconds into a PP.
“It’s not really a big deal. I like to play whatever,” Nylander said. “As long as you’re on the powerplay, it’s fun.”
Marner’s teammates believe he’ll adapt fine to the bumper spot, and Carbery has been showing him video of Brayden Point’s slot work on Tampa Bay’s deadly PP as an example.
From the middle, Marner can feed Matthews or Nylander for one-timers — or fire the puck on net himself to create havoc and loose pucks for a net-front guy, like Nick Ritchie, to bang home.
“He’s just so smart, he can play anywhere. I think he just wants to be productive, be helpful. He wants to be in the middle of the ice, wants to get lots of puck touches, and he’s very good at that,” Morgan Rielly said.
“Being the middle, I think he’s gonna get lots of action. I mean, he’ll go wherever anybody tells him to go. He just wants to help the team.”
Kase set to be Keefe’s Swiss army knife
While Nick Ritchie and Michael Bunting appear to have penciled themselves in as Toronto’s brand-new top-six wingers, Ondrej Kase has all the tools and experience to steal some of that ice time in event of injury or underperformance.
Keefe believes Kase’s troubled injury history has lessened the level of hype he’s gotten so far in Toronto, but the coach is excited to see what he can contribute in a variety of roles.
“He’s got a really good skillset, both offensively — the ability to make plays and finish plays — but also he’s tenacious on the puck. So, I think he can move up and down our lineup and play anywhere we feel we need him,” Keefe said.
“It’s evident when you watch him that he’s an NHL player.”
Kase finished off a beauty pass by Rielly Monday and tied a game-high with four shots on net during his first peek in a Leafs sweater.
A 20-goal man for Anaheim in 2017-18, Kase could potentially slide onto the Leafs’ second power-play unit. But Keefe is also going to try him out on the penalty kill, as the coach searches for the best winger to take up some of Zach Hyman’s PK minutes.
“[Kase] hasn’t had a great deal of time on the penalty kill in his career, but I’m hoping to get him some looks there,” Keefe said. “From a skillset standpoint, in terms of how he skates, his anticipation, he’s hungry on the puck — those are all the things we want on our penalty kill. He seems to have those traits.”
ONDREJ KASE
What a feed from Rielly pic.twitter.com/FC9U8LF6eS
— Omar (@TicTacTOmar) September 28, 2021
Make-or-break season for Liljegren?
Time flies.
Although it seems like yesterday Timothy Liljegren garnered headlines as a promising first-round draft pick in this city — a right-shot defenceman, finally! — the prospect reminded us Monday that he’s now spent the bulk of four seasons with the Marlies.
Rare is the player who breaks through and establishes himself as a bona fide after that many tours on the minor league circuit. (Justin Holl, for example, is the exception, not the rule.) At some point, the potential needs to pop.
So… where does that leave the 22-year-old Swede heading into a training camp where he’s clearly the seventh-best D-man?
“Tough to tell. Going into my fifth year, I need to play good,” Liljegren said. “It’s my fifth year. I need to get things done, you know.
“I gotta fight for my spot on the roster. That’s what I’m focusing on.”
That means cleaning up turnovers, playing sound positional hockey, and chipping in offence when he spots a chance.
Liljegren believes he “grew a lot as a person” from a tumultuous 2020-21 campaign that saw him jostling from the AHL to the taxi squad and eventually sneaking into a pair of late-season NHL games.
Keefe has paired Liljegren with the laid-back Jake Muzzin in camp, hoping the veteran’s wisdom and calming presence rubs off.
And yet, barring an injury to a member of the top six, we don’t see Liljegren suiting up on Opening Night.
“I can’t focus on other things,” Liljegren said. “I just have to focus on playing a good game.”
Nylander impressed by Fernandez’s U.S. Open run
William Nylander tends to keep his public commentary concise.
So, after 16 months passed without an original tweet, the star forward was compelled to break his silence while taking in September’s incredible U.S. Open women’s final between Britain’s Emma Raducanu and Canada’s Leylah Fernandez.
Both unseeded. Both entering the tournament as teenagers.
“I thought it was amazing. Both young women doing an unbelievable job,” said Nylander, an avid tennis player himself.
“I can just imagine for both girls, they probably didn’t think they were going to be in the final. And all of a sudden, they’re there — 20,000 fans, and the entire world’s watching on TV. I mean, it’s pretty cool to see what they were able to do.”
Maple Leafs lineup for preseason Game 2
Ritchie-Brooks-Marner
Gusev-Kämpf-Kase
Mikheyev-Semyonov-Simmonds
Seney-Der-Arguchintsev-Anderson
Rielly-Dermott
Dahlström-Holl
Rubins-Menell
Campbell
Mrazek
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.
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.
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/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.
