https://www.sportsnet.ca/hockey/article/andrei-denyskin-suspended-maximum-13-games-racist-gesture/

The Ice Hockey Federation of Ukraine has suspended Andrei Denyskin for three games, plus an additional 10 games that can be negated if he chooses to pay a ₴50, 000 fine instead, for the racist gesture he directed toward Jalen Smereck during a game on Sunday.

HC Donbass, who Smereck plays for, is urging the Federation to change its course, writing on Twitter that they “demand a reconsideration of the decision.”

The three games are a mandatory suspension, in accordance with the Ukraine Hockey Federation’s disciplinary code, for when a player uses gestures or expressions “related to racial discrimination.” The additional 10 games are the maximum amount allowable under the Federation’s rule.

The ₴50, 000 fine to negate the 10-game suspension amounts to $2,386.85 CAD.

“The Ukrainian Hockey League and I stand with Jalen Smereck and thank all of the fans and media who have offered their support to him,” Eugene Kolychev, the general manager of the Ukrainian Hockey League, wrote on Twitter. “The [UHL] believes that there is no place for racism in the world in which we live, let [alone] in the hockey community.”

The incident occurred in the second period of Sunday’s game between Donbass and Denyskin’s club, HC Kremenchuk. During a stoppage in play, Denyskin shouted at Smereck, who is Black, and then mimed unpeeling a banana and eating it. He was ejected from the game for doing so.

Denyskin later addressed the incident on Instagram, saying it was “a gesture that someone can consider as an insult in race” that he made after his emotions got the best of him. Denyskin went on to claim he respects “all people regardless of race or nationality.” Denyskin has since deleted the post.

Further disciplinary action can still be taken by the IIHF, which publicly condemned Denyskin’s racist gesture on Monday, calling his actions “a direct assault on the ideals and values of our game” while committing to investigate the incident further. It remains unclear at this time what the nature of that punishment might be.

“There is no place for such a blatantly racist and unsportsmanlike gesture in our sport and in society,” Luc Tardif, president of the IIHF, said in a statement earlier this week. “We will ensure that all necessary ethics violation investigations occur to ensure that this behaviour is sanctioned appropriately.”

News of Denyskin’s punishment comes one day after Smereck posted on Instagram saying he would “not play another game in the [Ukrainian Hockey League] until Andrey Denyskin is suspended and removed from the league.”

https://www.sportsnet.ca/mlb/article/biggio-returns-blue-jays-second-playoff-push-season/

TORONTO — Called up Tuesday and thrust into the most important series of the Toronto Blue Jays‘ season, the most important series Rogers Centre has seen in five years, a playoff series for all intents and purposes, Cavan Biggio doesn’t feel much has changed. He’s been playing playoff-style baseball with the triple-A Buffalo Bisons for weeks.

“Yeah, it’s been a lot of fun,” Biggio said Tuesday, standing in front of his sort-of new, sort-of old home dugout before the Blue Jays fell, 7-2, to the New York Yankees. “Down there everyone cares and pulls for each other just like they do up here. It’s definitely a similar feel.”

Similar in a couple ways. The Bisons began their season playing in Trenton, NJ while Buffalo’s Sahlen Field underwent a substantial renovation prior to hosting a portion of the Blue Jays’ home schedule in June and July. When the Blue Jays returned to Rogers Centre, the Bisons shifted home themselves and eventually won the franchise’s first division title since 2005, finishing the regular season with a 71-46 record and +144 run differential.

In non-pandemic times, that would have qualified Buffalo for a traditional postseason tournament culminating in a championship series. But this season’s playoffs are structured as a 10-game “Triple-A Final Stretch” in which each club plays a five-game home series and five-game road series. The team with the highest winning percentage over those 10 games is named champion.

So far, the Bisons are tied for second place with a 4-1 record through their first five-game series — three of the wins being walk-offs. And Biggio’s been right in the middle of it. Last Thursday, he walked to load the bases in the bottom of the 10th before Gregory Polanco won the game with a single. The next night he walked in the bottom of the ninth, this time ahead of Polanco’s walk-off homer. Sunday, he scored one of two runs on Christian Colon’s game-winning, ground-rule double.

“I can’t say enough about (Bisons manager) Casey Candaele and the rest of those players on that triple-A team,” Biggio said. “That clubhouse that they have down there, they keep it loose. … They have a lot of fun when they play the game. And the No. 1 thing down there is to win. And when you play like that, it just makes everything that much better.”

TD & Blue Jays MVP Spotlight
This season, TD and the Blue Jays celebrated off-the-field MVPs who embody the spirit of the game.

Playing part in a pair of postseason pushes is a bright-side reward for Biggio at the end of a trying season, the toughest he’s had since turning professional in 2016. Over 290 plate appearances with the Blue Jays, Biggio’s hit .215/.316/.350, good for an 82 OPS+ that stands in stark contrast to the 122 he posted in 2020 and the 113 he put up a season prior as a rookie.

And his peripherals don’t play a nicer tune. His strikeout rate is up, his walk rate’s down. His .293 wOBA is higher than what would be expected (.278) based on the quality of contact he’s made. After featuring a patient, selective approach over his first two MLB seasons — Biggio swung at the lowest rate of pitches outside the zone of any qualified hitter in 2020 — his chase rate increased five percentage points in 2021. Pitches he once took on his way to walks became ones he whiffed at on his way to strikeouts.

Of course, context matters. Biggio’s 2021 began with multiple balls in play deflecting off his right hand during spring training, bending his pinkie finger “the way it shouldn’t bend” and causing a blood blister that had to be drained. He carried those hand injuries into the season, playing through pain until it became too much and sidelined him for several days in mid-April.

A month later, he took his first of two trips to the injured list due to neck and back issues — a cervical spine ligament sprain, officially — that plagued him throughout the summer. And while on a triple-A rehab assignment during the second IL stint, Biggio collided with Josh Palacios as the pair chased a sinking liner, suffering a Grade 1 UCL sprain in his left elbow.

It’s not so easy to rediscover an approach and find consistency at the plate when you’re spending that much time off the field and everything hurts when you’re on it. Biggio has tinkered with a few approach adjustments and mechanical tweaks throughout the season, as most players do. But he hasn’t had much of an opportunity to find something that works or let an adjustment take because his playing time’s been so sporadic.

“It’s definitely challenging. But that’s a big part of this game. And it’s a big part of this game that I’ve never really had to deal with before,” Biggio says. “If you want to look at the silver lining, I’m glad I went through it the way I did. I was able to learn a lot about myself and about my body. And I’m going to use that later on in my career as I go.

“I think the biggest thing was just finding a good routine — not only for my body, but also in the cage, as well. Making adjustments; the ability to make adjustments game-to-game. I feel like my routine that I developed down there has been pretty good. And I’m going to continue that here.”

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The good news is Biggio’s healthy enough to play and squeeze a few more afternoons of batting cage work out of his season. Although he hit .197/.308/.318 with 10 walks and 23 strikeouts over the 19-game rehab assignment he just completed with the Bisons, the Blue Jays have been encouraged by the quality of his plate appearances, particularly over his last four games when he walked four times and came up with a couple hits.

“He’s back physically healthy — I think that’s first and foremost. And he’s had really good at-bats. He’s continued to have better at-bats with the team in triple-A,” Blue Jays general manager Ross Atkins said. “His versatility, the handedness, the plate discipline — they’re good complements to us.”

For now, Biggio says he’s been told to expect to play the outfield if he gets into any of Toronto’s remaining games. That’s where he spent five of his final eight games with the Bisons before being called up. But this is late-September baseball, so it’s probably best not to expect anything. And Biggio’s ability to play any position on the diamond save for shortstop and catcher could make his a useful, late-game puzzle piece as manager Charlie Montoyo plays matchups and optimizes his defence.

“The expectation is to contribute in any way possible. And I could play pretty much every position out there,” Biggio said. “Anything can happen in this game and over the course of a game. In a big situation, whatever it calls for, I’ll be ready for it.”

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More than anything, Biggio’s merely happy to go from one playoff push to another. Toronto’s postseason chances may have taken a significant hit with Tuesday’s defeat to the Yankees. But they’re still alive. Still capable of landing one final, improbable punch at the end of a season of improbabilities. And if asked, Biggio will be ready to play his part in it.

“The past couple of months, it’s been tough. Whether I was here rehabbing, watching the games from the dugout. Or if I was watching from my bed in my hotel room in Buffalo. You can see the energy and the amount of fun that everyone’s having — and there’s a little bit of FOMO there,” Biggio said. “But this means a lot, just to be here, be a part of the team again. I’m just looking forward to contributing any way possible. We’ve got a special team here. And hopefully we can keep it going.”

https://www.sportsnet.ca/mlb/article/blue-jays-lose-control-playoff-fate-setback-vs-yankees/

TORONTO — The Toronto Blue Jays’ post-season aspirations are now partly dependent on the help of others after a series-opening loss to the New York Yankees, although a Baltimore Orioles victory over the Boston Red Sox helped mitigate the damage.

Still, control over their fate was lost in a 7-2 setback to the wild-card leaders Tuesday night, when they couldn’t contain the Herculean duo of Aaron Judge and Giancarlo Stanton. The former homered in the third and brought home the go-ahead sacrifice fly in the fifth, while the latter delivered a back-breaking three-run homer in the seventh on a down and in changeup that perhaps only he is capable of launching 421 feet.

In combination with 6.2 innings of strong relief work once Jameson Taillon was forced from the game after re-aggravating the right ankle tendon injury he’d just returned from, the buzz around the first game of playoff consequence at Rogers Centre since 2016 — before a crowd of 28,769 — quickly fizzled.

The mettle and perseverance GM Ross Atkins rightly touted beforehand will now face its toughest test, with the Blue Jays (87-70) three games back of the Yankees (90-67) for the first wild card and still one game behind the Red Sox (88-69) for the second. The Seattle Mariners (88-70) are also a half-game in front, leapfrogging Toronto after a 4-2 win over Oakland.

“Just forget about tonight and be ready to play tomorrow,” manager Charlie Montoyo said of the approach his team needs to take while facing virtually no margin for error. “We’ve done it before so why not do it again.”

Pathways to the post-season remain, but to catch the Yankees, the Blue Jays must take the remaining two games of this series, win out against the Orioles to close their regular season and then count on the Tampa Bay Rays to win at least one game in New York this weekend.

To overtake the Red Sox, who have two more dates with the Orioles before finishing at the Washington Nationals, they’ll need to win two more wins than Boston in the five remaining games both teams have.

Neither scenario is impossible, and there’s the potential for intriguing tiebreakers, but the Blue Jays can’t put themselves in a position to require an unreasonable stumble from the teams they’re chasing.

“We’ve got to come back and try to win our next games — all these games are going to be very important,” Hyun Jin Ryu said through interpreter J.S. Park after allowing three runs in 4.1 innings in his return from the injured list. “I’m just going to get ready and prepare for my last game of the season and I hope that our players are in there to compete and try to do our best to until the very end.”

TD & Blue Jays MVP Spotlight
This season, TD and the Blue Jays celebrated off-the-field MVPs who embody the spirit of the game.

The Blue Jays seemed poised to begin this pivotal stretch on the right foot as Ryu took the mound with an uptick in his velocity, and escaped a bad-BABP-luck jam in the first by striking out Stanton and popping up Joey Gallo.

George Springer then played catalyst in the bottom half, walking off Taillon, stealing second on a full-count strikeout by Marcus Semien and scoring on Bo Bichette’s single.

The problem Judge and Stanton pose in this series first revealed itself in the third, when Judge axed a 106.4-m.p.h. laser over the right-field wall on a middle-middle cookie that deserved its fate.

The Blue Jays reclaimed the lead in the fourth when Corey Dickerson golfed a double to right on a Michael King curveball to plate Bichette. But Ryu couldn’t hold that edge in the fifth, when Anthony Rizzo dunked a cutter well off the plate into left field with two on and Dickerson’s throw home hit Gio Urshela, allowing the tying run to score.

Adam Cimber took over and induced a sac fly from Judge and the score remained 3-2 until the seventh, when Stanton got to a Trevor Richards changeup headed for his ankle. Most hitters probably foul the pitch off their foot if they make contact at all. Stanton just missed the facing of the third deck.

“I don’t know how you can hit a ball like that,” said Montoyo. “You’ve got to give Stanton credit for that… The ball was almost in the dirt and he hit it out.”

Part of the explanation is that Stanton, like Judge, is on a major hot streak. During the Blue Jays’ sweep at Yankee Stadium earlier this month, the duo went a combined 8-for-31 with one run scored while hitting into two double plays. On Tuesday, they went 4-for-7 with two walks, three runs scored and five RBIs.

If the Blue Jays can’t get them under control, they’re in trouble.

Ryu has one start left — Game No. 162 against the Orioles — and depending on how things play out, the season could be riding on it. Against the Yankees, he topped out at 93.1 m.p.h. — the sixth-hardest pitch he’s thrown this season — and averaged 91.4, a notable 1.4 m.p.h. above his season average.

The Blue Jays expected as much, with Atkins saying before this game that Ryu’s “just in a better position physically” and “about as close to 100 per cent as he can be.” Combined with some “subtle adjustments to his delivery,” Ryu moved closer to the form he showed Sept. 6, when he threw six shutout innings in an 8-0 win at the Yankees.

“Honestly, I didn’t really feel too much of a difference,” Ryu said of the difference he saw in the batter’s box last time versus this one. “I came in and pitched according to the game plan. I gave up a home run which was hanging and just left over the plate a little too much. And even the last hitter (Rizzo), it’s not something that pitchers can really control.”

The same now applies to the Blue Jays’ pursuit of a wild-card spot, one no longer solely in their own hands.

‘Don’t talk about my mom’: Canelo shows incredible reflexes as he trades blows with Plant at explosive press conference (VIDEO)

Hands are already flying long before Saul ‘Canelo’ Alvarez and Caleb Plant step into the ring for their super middleweight world title unifier, as the pair clashed in combustible scenes at a Los Angeles press conference.

Facing off for a staredown at the Beverly Hilton hotel, Mexican icon Canelo snapped after an X-rated exchange of words with Plant, shoving the American forcefully with two hands. 

Plant came back swinging with a left hand, which Canelo appeared to slip artfully before countering with a shot of his own.

The pair were eventually separated by their teams and security, although Plant was left with a cut below his right eye which he later said had come from his sunglasses being jammed into his face.

“You can say whatever you want to me, but not about my mother,” Alvarez said afterwards, adding the same message in a tweet which showed footage of the exchange.

Plant was seen dabbing at blood from his cheek and was patched up with a band aid. 

The 29-year-old American – who owns the IBF super middleweight title – continued to launch repeated barbs at Canelo when the pair sat down for a feisty press conference, repeatedly accusing the Mexican and trainer Eddy Reynoso of being “cheaters.”

Canelo, 31, was suspended for six months in 2018 after banned substance clenbuterol was detected in a drug test, although the Mexican star insisted it had come from tainted meat.  

“Taking illegal substances doesn’t happen because you’re confident, it happens because you’re afraid,” Plant said.

“That just gives me more confidence. I’ve dedicated a lot to this sport, and it will be my life’s work coming together in that one moment when I beat him. It would etch my name in the history books, and that’s what I’m here to do.”

The American also took to social media to dispute claims that he had come off second best in the scuffle, sharing an image which showed he had clipped Canelo slightly with his left hand. 

He also denied that he had insulted Canelo’s mother, pointing to the death of his own mother in 2019 as the result of an officer-involved shooting in Cheatham County, Tennessee. 

“You’ll never hear me talk about someone’s mother, kids or wife. When men go off to war they leave the women and children at home,” Plant wrote. 

“My mother was shot and killed by the police two years ago. Why would I ever bring anyone’s mother up and even if I didn’t give a f*ck, why would I open that door up just for someone to 1 up me and tell me ‘didn’t your mom get shot and killed by the police dummy?’” 

Most observers, though, were impressed with Canelo’s typically swift reflexes as he slipped Plant’s effort to catch him with his left hand.  

Canelo and Plant are preparing to meet in their title unification bout at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas on November 6.

WBC, WBA and WBO super middleweight king Canelo is widely considered as the world’s pound-for-pound number one. His only career loss in 59 fights remains a majority decision defeat to Floyd Mayweather in 2013. 

Plant is undefeated in 21 fights, winning 12 by knockout.  

Brawling NFL fans end up in lake as wild punch-ups break out between Cowboys & Chargers fans (VIDEO)

Social media footage has supported claims of several fights that allegedly broke out at the weekend between Los Angeles Chargers and Dallas Cowboys fans in and around the former’s SoFi Stadium.

The visiting Cowboys beat the hosts 20-17 with a last gasp field goal on Sunday after seeing a series of calls such as disallowed touchdowns go in their favor. 

Yet for the duration of the game, it felt more like a home fixture at Cowboys Stadium in Arlington for the Texans, who are well-supported in Los Angeles.

Remembering too that the Chargers only relocated from San Diego in 2017, their fans were drowned out in numbers not just when it came to booing from the terraces, but also in fights that broke out in the locale.

What has been described as a “WWE-style brawl” got rough outside the ground, with one of its participants tossed into the nearest lake with his backside showing as some of those present cheered.

Another Cowboys supporter followed him into the water, and then rained down punches as the soaked victim was trying to get back on his feet. 

Furthermore, there were also other fights that took place in the tailgate area where fans typically drink and barbecue in the car park before going in to watch the action.

In one two-minute video, a man holds back a female accomplice for a good while as she argues with a rival, then runs over to start a brawl himself before being jumped by several Cowboys enthusiasts.

The Chargers didn’t end up taking losses all afternoon both on and off the field, though. 

In the SoFi’s bathrooms, a mouthy Cowboys fan “wanted all the smoke and got left sleeping in p*ss”.

Also on rt.com

Twitter / @Just_A5
‘Welcome to Los Angeles’: Mass brawl breaks out in stands as fans erupt in NFL preseason game (VIDEO)