Uncategorized
‘It hurts to win’: Jack Eichel responds strong after massive Matthew Tkachuk hit
Published
4 months agoon

LAS VEGAS – Unable to change momentum in this lopsided Stanley Cup Final when he has the puck, Matthew Tkachuk decided to make an impact without it.
Hopping off the bench in the second period of an out-of-reach Game 2 and seeing puck carrier Jack Eichel cutting up centre ice with his head down, Tkachuk planted his feet, lowered his shoulder and crunched the Vegas Golden Knights’ top centre so hard and clean, Eichel’s helmet popped off, his right leg buckled, and he rushed painfully to the dressing room.
“It doesn’t matter who you are. You shouldn’t be going through the middle with your head down. You’re gonna get hit,” Tkachuk said, unapologetic. “It’s nothing. It’s not a big deal. He’s a really good player, and really good players can get hit too.”
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Except: It is a big deal.
Because Eichel, surprisingly, returned for the third period and, on his very first post-hit shift went hard on the forecheck and set up linemate Jonathan Marchessault for another goal.
“It’s a physical game. You’re going to get hit sometimes,” Eichel said. “It was definitely a big collision. I got my wits back about me and realized I was fine, and just kind of moved on.”
And because Eichel has kicked off this final with back-to-back two-assist games and now has racked up the third-most points ever by a first-timer to the playoffs (22).
And because the Golden Knights just cruised past Tkachuk’s Florida Panthers in a 7-2 romp, have tripled up their overwhelmed opponent by a total score of 12-4, and the gulf between the sides’ best players is widening by the minute.
Eichel responded to the collision by impacting the scoreboard. Tkachuk responded by taking two 10-minute misconducts, increasing his series PIM total to 36, and potting a meaningless goal in garbage time.
Let’s be clear: The hit was as clean as it was mean.
Eichel, who toe-picked his way to vulnerability, and Vegas coach Bruce Cassidy didn’t dispute it.
“It’s OK to get hit. This is part of the journey,” Cassidy said. “It hurts to win, and it’s not supposed to be easy. So, good for him.
“Great to see him come back. Not only does it give us juice, but sometimes it can take away juice from the other team if they see a guy come back.”
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Bingo.
The Panthers look juice-less.
They wouldn’t be the first group of men to fly home discombobulated after four nights in Vegas, and they now face the unenviable task of swiping four of five from hockey’s most organized, disciplined and dialed-in team.
We could point to Sam Bennett’s 10-game goal drought or Brandon Montour’s 10-game point drought or Radko Gudas’s questionable status for Game 3 and beyond.
But the two pillars of Florida’s remarkable run to Round 4, Tkachuk and goalie Sergei Bobrovsky, are crumbling.
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Bobrovsky has allowed eight goals on 46 shots through four and a half periods of work, is getting screened by his own defencemen, and got chased so swiftly Monday that coach Paul Maurice said he’d use two days to decide whether to start him in Game 3.
As for Tkachuk, his last great appearance on TNT was on the NBA panel.
He has taken three misconducts, committed a costly giveaway in Game 1, and seems more preoccupied with trying to antagonize Adin Hill and Alex Pietrangelo than imposing his hockey skills on the Knights.
For the record, Tkachuk says he was “surprised” at the misconduct he was handed after the Eichel hit but deserved the second one for whacking Michael Amadio’s stick out of his hand after a stoppage in play.
He then fired a plastic rat a fan had tossed on the ice towards the Knights’ bench.
The question must be asked: Have Tkachuk and the Panthers lost the plot with their preoccupation with trying to stir up the nonsense?
“I don’t think so. I just think we’re a big, physical team,” Tkachukc said. “That’s how we have played the last second half of the year and been successful. I just don’t think there’s teams that play as physical as we do. So, maybe you guys think that a little bit too much. But at the end of the day, it’s just how we play.
“If we were playing physical and [ahead] in the game, you guys would be like, that’s the recipe for success. So, we’re just sticking with our game.”
Eichel is sticking with his game, too, which means setting up his wingers, contributing to a suddenly hot Vegas power-play, and breaking up plays in the D-zone.
“I mean, he’s unbelievable right?” Marchessault said.
“It’s not just with the puck. It’s without the puck, the way he works everywhere on the ice. He’s one of those guys that makes everyone look better. He gets a massive hit there, goes into the locker room, first shift back in the third period, he gets on the forecheck, on the body, wins his battle, finds me. I mean, that’s the resiliency we have in that locker room, and it starts with your top guys and goes right through the lineup.”
Starts with your top guys.
Florida’s top guys are either MIA, off the rails, or threatening to turn into pumpkins.
If they don’t rein in the nonsense and deliver Thursday at home, they too will soon be caught with their heads down at centre ice — in the handshake line.
“We do have to tweak a few things,” Tkachuk admitted.
“They’re halfway there, and hopefully they’re thinking about that a little bit as they’re coming to Florida. I think that could work in our favour. But we definitely have to prepare, give everything in this one game here, and just get a little bit of momentum back.”
Fox’s Fast 5
• That Cassidy trusts his fourth line of William Carrier–Nicolas Roy–Keegan Kolesar to shut down the Nick Cousins–Sam Bennett–Tkachuk line tells you all you need to know about the depth of the Golden Knights.
Wanna talk depth?
“It is the biggest reason we are still here, why we beat Winnipeg, Edmonton, Dallas and why we’re ahead against Florida,” Cassidy said. “I just feel that we have the best team from player 1 through 20.”
• Very cool to see Buffalo captain Kyle Okposo in town to support ex-Sabres Eichel and Sam Reinhart.
• Speaking of former Sabres, because Radko Gudas got banged up in Game 1, Maurice surprised by dressing an 11-and-7 lineup, inserting seldom-used defenceman Casey Fitzgerald.
Fitzgerald’s appearance marked his first in 43 days. He skated just 8:08 in a Round 1 loss to Bruins. That Fitzgerald, who played limited minutes in just 27 games this season, is Florida’s next man up speaks volumes about the contrast in defensive depth between the two teams.
Gudas was taken out of the game — on his 33rd birthday, no less — by a solid reverse hit by Ivan Barbashev. No update was given on his health.
Massive concern.
• Connor Bedard got jokes.
• The piping-hot Jonathan Marchessault has 10 goals in his past nine games and might just shoot his way to a Conn Smythe Trophy.
“I have to face his shot every day. It’s unbelievable,” Hill said. “When he gets in tight, he’s probably one of the hardest guys in the league to stop. There’s a reason why he’s scoring.”
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In 2022, infielder Luis Arraez, then with the Minnesota Twins, was the only reason why Aaron Judge didn’t win the AL hitting Triple Crown: he took the batting title.
In the offseason, he was sent to the Miami Marlins in exchange for pitcher Pablo Lopez.
It was one of those rare trades that ends up working out for both teams.
Lopez blossomed into an ace with the Twins and Arraez had an even better season in South Florida.
He raised that .316 batting average from last year and turned it into a .354-average performance this year to win the batting title again, this time in the National League.
According to a tweet by the team, that’s a first.
Luis Arraez, a name for the history books. pic.twitter.com/DGL7lCLuWj
— Miami Marlins (@Marlins) October 1, 2023
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Arraez just became the first player in the history of baseball to win batting titles in the American and National Leagues in consecutive years.
Talk about a unique campaign!
He actually flirted with a .400 batting average in the first few months of the season.
Even if he “settled in” with the .354 batting average, it’s still more than any other hitter this year.
Both the Twins and Marlins missed the playoffs last year, but their respective trade acquisitions helped them take the next step.
In the specific case of Arraez, he totaled 203 hits, 30 of which were doubles, with three triples, and 10 home runs.
Miami needed all the offense it could get, and Arraez, without being a top slugger or OPS artist, was a blessing for their lineup.
He is currently dealing with a sprained ankle, but the team hopes to have him ready as the playoffs begin on Tuesday.
The post Luis Arraez Continued His Dominance In Miami appeared first on The Cold Wire.

The Cincinnati Reds gave their fans a playoffs push this season after their ugly showing in 2022.
They came up short in the end, but they reached the final weekend with tangible chances.
Still, this is a young team with several impressive prospects.
They will probably be back to fight for a place next year.
Whether or not they will have Joey Votto back on the roster remains a complete mystery, though.
In what could have been his last game as an active player, Votto was actually ejected because he was arguing balls and strikes from the dugout.
The player himself went to Twitter to address the issue and actually apologized for his behavior.
“I cannot holler at the umpire from our teams bench. He was completely justified in ejecting me. For those that wanted to see me play today, I am sorry,” he tweeted.
I cannot holler at the umpire from our teams bench. He was completely justified in ejecting me.
For those that wanted to see me play today, I am sorry.
— Joey Votto (@JoeyVotto) October 1, 2023
He actually took one at-bat, but fans really wanted to see him play because he is a free agent after the season and his future is a big question mark.
Votto, one of the most influential and high-profile Reds players of the millennium, has an expensive $20 million club option for 2024, with a $7 million buyout.
The Reds won’t pick up the option but might be able to bring him back on a cheaper deal… if he is up for returning another year.
That much is still unclear.
“As far as my future, my individual future, I’m still not there yet (…) I just don’t have an answer yet. We’ll see,” he said about his future.
This year, Votto had 14 home runs and a .747 OPS.
For his career, he has a .920 OPS with 356 long balls and 2,135 hits.
The post Joey Votto Comments On Shocking Ejection appeared first on The Cold Wire.
Uncategorized
Rugby World Cup: Final pool games may offer a few twists after predictable start
Published
10 mins agoon
October 2, 2023
Outside of Fiji’s rise and Australia’s demise, the first 3 1/2 weeks of the Rugby World Cup have been, in a large sense, predictable.
Yet none out of the big four of top-ranked Ireland, new No. 2 France and the southern hemisphere powers of South Africa and New Zealand are guaranteed a place in the quarterfinals heading into the final set of pool matches starting on Thursday and running through to Sunday.
Wales and England — which no one gave much thought to — are the only teams to have both feet in the last eight and the luxury of looking ahead.
So there might still be a twist or two when the remaining six quarterfinalists are decided in a furious four days of last-minute jostling.
Look out for Scotland, which holds the fate of both Ireland and defending champion South Africa in its hands. Italy could upset the campaign of host France and become the most unpopular team at the World Cup.
Scotland and Italy are very long shots for the quarters, but given almost everything has gone to script so far, maybe the pool stage can spring a last-round surprise.
SCOTLAND DECIDES
Pool B rests on Scotland’s game against Ireland at Stade de France on Saturday, when there’s a head-spinning series of possibilities involving winning bonus points, losing bonus points, points difference, and so on. All three teams, Ireland, South Africa and Scotland, could end up on 15 pool points, resulting in points difference in games between them becoming the decisive factor.
Calculators are at the ready.
The bottom line is Scotland has to win to have a chance at the quarterfinals and before any of the other calculations come into play. Title favourite Ireland’s knockout stage effectively starts a week earlier than it was hoping.
Ireland reinforced its status as rugby’s No. 1 with an epic backs-to-the-wall win over South Africa earlier in the pool stage and has won the last eight against Scotland since 2018, so any surprise would be enormous.
Scotland has nothing to lose. Ireland, after more than a year at No. 1, has everything on the line.
“I’d rather sit here than be Ireland,” said South Africa director of rugby Rassie Erasmus.
The Springboks have played all their pool games and can only watch on TV and, no matter what Erasmus says, the Boks won’t be sitting too comfortably given they could also be sent packing.
FRANCE’S FATE
Like Ireland, France has won three from three in its pool and has so far met all pre-tournament expectations of mounting a serious challenge for its first world title. Like Ireland, it could all be for zilch if France’s final Pool A game against Italy in Lyon on Friday goes the wrong way.
Italy is even more of an underdog than Scotland, having not beaten France since 2013, and having just come off a 96-17 grilling by New Zealand, a team France beat.
But pressure does funny things. Home pressure, especially.
France also has the added distraction of the injury saga of captain Antoine Dupont, its most important player, but who likely won’t be available against Italy on Friday night and whose future participation at the World Cup is still unclear because of a facial fracture.
“We won’t be complacent against Italy,” France assistant coach Karim Ghezal said. “We’ll be focused and concentrated. We know it’s going to be a different game. Rugby is a fighting sport.”
WHO ELSE?
The smartest money for the quarterfinals might be on three-time champion New Zealand, which looks fully recovered from its opening-game defeat to France and needs a win with four tries or more against rank outsider Uruguay to be sure of progressing. Given that the All Blacks ran 14 tries past No. 11 Italy last week, a similar rampage against No. 17 Uruguay in Lyon on Thursday is widely expected.
Argentina and Japan face a winner-takes-all contest in Pool D in Nantes on Sunday to progress behind England. The most relevant thing about Argentina and Japan might be that they hardly ever play each other. Their two meetings since the turn of the century both went Argentina’s way.
Fiji will follow Wales into the quarterfinals from Pool C and make its first Rugby World Cup knockouts since 2007 by beating minnow Portugal in Toulouse on Sunday, or even losing narrowly. That will confirm the earliest elimination ever for two-time champion Australia, which may well be the one big turn-up of the pool stage.
The only thing that can save Australia is Portugal winning its first World Cup game ever and, more than that, denying Fiji any losing bonus points.
“We’re still alive,” said ever-optimistic Australia coach Eddie Jones, whose team has played its four pool games but is hanging around in France in case something akin to a rugby miracle happens.
Amid all the possible surprises, Australia playing again at this World Cup would easily be one of the biggest.
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