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Moncton Wildcats coach receives award

Moncton Wildcats coach receives award

CTV News13-06-2025

Atlantic Watch
Gardiner MacDougall from the Moncton Wildcats was named Coach of the Year by the Canadian Hockey League.

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NCAA exodus hits Vancouver Giants again as D-man Colton Roberts jumps to Colorado College
NCAA exodus hits Vancouver Giants again as D-man Colton Roberts jumps to Colorado College

The Province

timean hour ago

  • The Province

NCAA exodus hits Vancouver Giants again as D-man Colton Roberts jumps to Colorado College

Mazden Leslie told the Giants last season that he wouldn't be back and that he'd go to Bowling Green State if he didn't land a pro spot Get the latest from Steve Ewen straight to your inbox Mazden Leslie (No. 47) and Colton Roberts congratulate one another during the Vancouver Giants' 6-2 win over the Everett Silvertips on Feb. 8 at the Langley Events Centre. Photo: Rob Wilton Photo by Rob Wilton Mazden Leslie told the Vancouver Giants last February that he was going to the NCAA rather than returning to the team this coming season, and now fellow rearguard Colton Roberts has done the same. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. THIS CONTENT IS RESERVED FOR SUBSCRIBERS ONLY Subscribe now to read the latest news in your city and across Canada. Exclusive articles by top sports columnists Patrick Johnston, Ben Kuzma, J.J. Abrams and others. Plus, Canucks Report, Sports and Headline News newsletters and events. Unlimited online access to The Province and 15 news sites with one account. The Province ePaper, an electronic replica of the print edition to view on any device, share and comment on. Daily puzzles and comics, including the New York Times Crossword. Support local journalism. SUBSCRIBE TO UNLOCK MORE ARTICLES Subscribe now to read the latest news in your city and across Canada. Exclusive articles by top sports columnists Patrick Johnston, Ben Kuzma, J.J. Abrams and others. Plus, Canucks Report, Sports and Headline News newsletters and events. Unlimited online access to The Province and 15 news sites with one account. The Province ePaper, an electronic replica of the print edition to view on any device, share and comment on. Daily puzzles and comics, including the New York Times Crossword. Support local journalism. REGISTER / SIGN IN TO UNLOCK MORE ARTICLES Create an account or sign in to continue with your reading experience. Access articles from across Canada with one account. Share your thoughts and join the conversation in the comments. Enjoy additional articles per month. Get email updates from your favourite authors. THIS ARTICLE IS FREE TO READ REGISTER TO UNLOCK. Create an account or sign in to continue with your reading experience. Access articles from across Canada with one account Share your thoughts and join the conversation in the comments Enjoy additional articles per month Get email updates from your favourite authors Roberts, 19, let the Giants know this week that he's going to suit up instead for the Colorado College Tigers this fall. The 2024 San Jose Sharks fifth-round draft pick has two more years of junior eligibility remaining. The WHL doesn't publish ice time stats, but Roberts was likely third on Vancouver last season. He seemed destined to play even more this coming campaign, the most logical successor to take over Leslie's spot on the first pairing alongside Ryan Lin, 17, last year's rookie standout. Leslie, 20, announced midway through last season that he wasn't going to come back to Vancouver this year, and would play for the Bowling Green State University Falcons if he didn't land a pro contract. The Giants traded Leslie's WHL rights in May to the Kelowna Rockets. The Rockets are hoping he gets an NHL deal and then is reassigned to the Rockets. Kelowna is guaranteed to play deep into next spring because they're hosting the Memorial Cup national championship tournament. Essential reading for hockey fans who eat, sleep, Canucks, repeat. By signing up you consent to receive the above newsletter from Postmedia Network Inc. Please try again This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. Vancouver has plenty of company with its WHL rivals in regards to losing players who would have been key contributors to the American collegiate ranks. The Victoria Royals are among the most notable teams right now, having forward Cole Reschny, 18, and defenceman Keaton Verhoeff, 17, cut ties with them to join the University of North Dakota Fighting Hawks. Reschny is expected to be a first-round pick in next week's NHL Draft. Verhoeff is touted as a possible top-10 selection in next year's NHL Draft. Medicine Hat Tigers winger Gavin McKenna, 17, is already being pegged as the No. 1 choice for next year's draft. He's said to be looking at schools for the fall. Former Vancouver Canuck Byron Ritchie is McKenna's family adviser and his son Ryder Ritchie, 18, recently told the Tigers that he'd be playing with the Boston University Terriers this coming season. He's a winger who was a 2024 Minnesota Wild second rounder. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. The NCAA announced last fall that for the first time they'd be opening up scholarship opportunities for this coming season to players from Major Junior leagues like the WHL. There was a school of thought in some junior circles that it would be mainly 20-year-olds who take advantage of that, but the NCAA has chased after the best and brightest. Roberts, for one, has two years of junior eligibility remaining. Verhoeff has the potential for four more years, although you'd expect him to play pro early as well. The Giants are trying to navigate all this without a coach or a general manager. The team announced in late April that it had agreed to part ways with GM Barclay Parneta, whose contract was up. In May, team announced that coach Manny Viveiros wouldn't be back for the third and final year of his deal because he had signed on as bench boss of Red Bull Salzburg, an Austrian pro team. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. A committee featuring vice-president of operations and assistant general manager Pete Toigo, director of player personnel Greg Batters and head scout Terry Bonner led the way for the Giants with the WHL Draft and the expansion draft involving the new Penticton Vees franchise. There's no word on who handled the Giants' side of the Leslie deal. The 6-foot-1, 202-pound Leslie was the second leading scorer among WHL defencemen last season with 72 points, including 21 goals. He could still get picked in next week's draft — NHL Central Scouting has him as the No. 133 North American skater — but at his age a free-agent deal is the better bet. He's been passed over in the past two drafts but has got free-agent invites to camps afterwards from the Toronto Maple Leafs and then Vegas Golden Knights. The 6-foot-4, 200-pound Roberts had six goals and 36 points for Vancouver this season. Giants forward Ty Halaburda, 20, has committed to Colorado College for the 2026-27 campaign. SEwen@ @SteveEwen

Riders down Argos 39-32 after Alford's 99-yard kickoff return
Riders down Argos 39-32 after Alford's 99-yard kickoff return

CBC

time3 hours ago

  • CBC

Riders down Argos 39-32 after Alford's 99-yard kickoff return

Social Sharing As Corey Mace prepared for overtime, Mario Alford took matters into his own hands. Alford's 99-yard kickoff return touchdown with nine seconds remaining in regulation time rallied the Saskatchewan Roughriders to a stirring 39-32 CFL win over the ailing Toronto Argonauts on Friday night. Alford's heroics came after Toronto's Nick Arbuckle capped a 70-yard, nine-play drive with an eight-yard touchdown pass to Kevin Mital. Arbuckle then found Dejon Brissett for the two-point convert to make it 32-32. And that had Mace, the Riders head coach, looking ahead to overtime. "Honestly, I was looking at my overtime sheet," Mace said. "I did think we had a chance, depending on how far we get the return whether we're going to play for overtime or be able to go kick [the game-winning field goal]. "Special teams did the rest. To have a walk-off like that was incredible." Arbuckle was 26-of-33 passing for 259 yards with two TDs and an interception. Mital had seven catches for 98 yards and the touchdown. Toronto head coach Ryan Dinwiddie cited two factors that worked against his club on Alford's return. First, he said game officials missed an illegal block that Dinwiddie couldn't challenge. Secondly, Toronto's kickoff team only had 11 men on the field. "Special teams, I thought, was pretty bad for a third week in a row," Dinwiddie said. "We've got to get that fixed." Ironically, it was Saskatchewan's special teams that allowed Toronto (0-3) an opportunity to force overtime. Arbuckle's heroics came after Brett Lauther missed a 33-yard field goal at 12:58 to put the Riders (3-0) ahead 32-24. Lauther missed three field goals and a convert in last week's 28-23 road win over Hamilton. "We would've been happy to get a decent return and play for a game-winner off Number 12 [Lauther]," Mace said. "We still would've put the trust in him. That's our guy and he'll continue to be our guy." Tommy Stevens' two-yard scoring run at 4:38 put Saskatchewan ahead 31-21. Lirim Hajrullahu's 25-yard field goal at 8:02 pulled Toronto to within 31-24. Saskatchewan's wins have all come against East Division teams. Trevor Harris completed 13-of-17 passes for 234 yards with two TDs and an interception while Dohnte Meyers had four catches for 125 yards and two touchdowns. "It seems like every game there's something going on that surprises us and brings some wild circumstances and tonight was no different," Harris said. "I'm just super happy for Mario, he's just an explosive returner." 'Selfish penalties': Dinwiddie A.J. Ouellette ran for 91 yards and a TD on 17 carries. But the teams combined for 29 penalties for 307 yards (Saskatchewan had 18 for 178 yards, Toronto had 11 for 129 yards) before a BMO Field gathering of 12,025. Saskatchewan had eight penalties for 125 yards combined over its first contests. "That goes to show you in this league you make it really tough to win when you're giving away free yards," Mace said. "We obviously have to get better at that, but to walk out of here with a win on a short week, we'll feel good about that." Dinwiddie didn't hide his disdain for Toronto's lack of on-field discipline. "I'm pretty embarrassed by it," he said. "They [Riders] were chirping all game. We got involved in the chirping game and it cost us. "We had selfish penalties, that's the one thing I hate. It isn't about you, it's about the team. We aren't even close to being there. We don't know how to not lose games. It's not about winning games, [it's] not losing games." Toronto — 0-3 for the first time since 2019 — came into the contest short-handed. Quarterback Chad Kelly (leg) and receiver/returner Janarion Grant both missed their third straight game for Toronto. Joining them among the Argos walking wounded were linebackers Wynton McManis (knee) and Jack Cassar (adductor), running back Deonta McMahon (ankle), receiver DaVaris Daniels (hip), defensive lineman Demarcus Christmas (Achilles) and offensive linemen Sage Doxtater (knee), Dylan Giffen (back) and Darius Ciraco (foot). Then in the first half, Toronto lost linebacker Kenneth George Jr. (leg) and defensive lineman Derek Parish (foot). Brissett and Jarret Doege also scored touchdowns for Toronto. Jake Herslow added a two-point convert while Hajrullahu booted a convert and three field goals. Lauther kicked five converts and a field goal. Hajrullahu's 24-yard field goal at 8:42 of the third pulled Toronto to within 24-13. Doege scored on a one-yard run at 12:59 before Arbuckle hit Herslow for the two-point convert to cut Saskatchewan's lead to 24-21. Harris threw a 70-yard TD strike to Meyers at 1:16, giving the Riders a 24-10 advantage. Hajrullahu's 56-yard field goal to end the second quarter cut Saskatchewan's halftime lead to 17-10. It followed the Riders' goal-line stand with 56 seconds left as Kevin Brown was stopped at the one-yard line to end a 17-play, 97-yard drive. Lauther gave Saskatchewan a 17-7 advantage with a 16-yard boot at 1:25. Harris put Saskatchewan ahead 14-7 with a 32-yard TD pass to Meyers at 11:54 of the first. It was set up by Alford's 35-yard punt return. Ouellette had a 25-yard TD run at 8:26. Arbuckle opened the scoring with a five-yard TD pass to Brissett at 4:50. The Roughriders will host the B.C. Lions on Saturday, June 28. The Argonauts will next visit Ottawa to face the Redblacks on Sunday, June 29.

Toronto Blue Jays top Chicago White Sox 7-1 with Bichette's homer, Berrios's solid outing
Toronto Blue Jays top Chicago White Sox 7-1 with Bichette's homer, Berrios's solid outing

Globe and Mail

time3 hours ago

  • Globe and Mail

Toronto Blue Jays top Chicago White Sox 7-1 with Bichette's homer, Berrios's solid outing

Bo Bichette's smashed the first pitch he saw for a solo home run and the Toronto Blue Jays never looked back in a 7-1 win over the Chicago White Sox on Saturday afternoon. Myles Straw and Nathan Lukes each had an RBI single in a three-run second inning for Toronto (41-35) after George Springer scored on a throwing error. Vladimir Guerrero Jr. tacked on another run in the seventh with a home run to deep left field. Davis Schneider added more insurance with a two-run double in the eighth. Jose Berrios (3-3) was solid, allowing one unearned run on two hits and three walks over 7 2/3 innings, striking out five. Yariel Rodriguez and Chad Green combined for 1 1/3 innings of scoreless relief. Andrew Benintendi hit into a fielder's choice in the sixth inning, with Miguel Vargas evading catcher Alejandro Kirk's tag to score for Chicago (24-53) after Guerrero threw straight home instead of tagging the hitter. Aaron Civale (1-4) pitched seven innings, allowing five runs on nine hits and a walk, striking out two. Jake Palisch allowed two more runs in his one inning of relief. Blue Jays: After seven relievers pitched in Toronto's 7-1 loss on Friday — a scheduled bullpen day — it was critical that Berrios go deep into the game to get the bullpen some rest. He delivered, throwing 95 pitches and earning a standing ovation from the 41,488 fans at Rogers Centre when he left the game in the eighth inning. White Sox: Despite allowing five runs, Civale actually managed to keep the scoring relatively low after coughing up nine hits and issuing a walk. His 96-pitch performance was also a relief to a beleaguered Chicago bullpen that has been tasked with closing, and sometimes starting, many games this season. Springer's baserunning from first to third continues to be a strength this season, with his speed on the basepaths forcing right-fielder Austin Slater's throw to third in the second inning. The ball went into the netting, allowing Springer to score and Ernie Clement to advance to third. Bichette needed 16 games to hit his first home run of the season, finally connecting on May 3. His solo shot in the first inning on Saturday was his 11th of the season, most on the Blue Jays. Chris Bassitt (7-3) gets the start as Toronto finishes its three-game series with Chicago with a Sunday matinee. The White Sox had not yet determined who their starting pitcher would be.

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