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Wednesday, June 30, 2021

{allcanada} Vasilevskiy, Price put on a show early in Cup Final Game 2

 

TAMPA, Fla. (AP) Goaltenders Carey Price and Andrei Vasilevskiy put on a clinic early in Game 2 of the Stanley Cup Final on Wednesday night to keep the score 0-0 between the Montreal Canadiens and Tampa Bay Lightning after the first period.

Price finished with six saves and Vasilevskiy 13 to go along with chants of ''Va-sy! Va-sy!'' from the crowd of over 18,000 at Amalie Arena. Vasilevskiy made an early stop when Montreal's Nick Suzuki found space in tight and got his right shoulder on a shot by Cole Caufield a little later.

Price was at his best on two successful penalty kills after the Canadiens streak ended at 32 late in Game 1. He also was fortunate when playoff leading goal-scorer Brayden Point missed the net high and wide off a rush just after Vasilevskiy's save on Suzuki.

Tampa Bay killed off the first half of defenseman Ryan McDonagh's double minor for high-sticking Philipp Danault with 1:32 remaing on the rest of it at the start of the second.

The first goal matters so much for the Canadiens, who play a different style when leading. They are 11-2 this postseason when scoring first.

Montreal's penalty kill benefitted from the return of forward Joel Armia, who missed the series opener after a brief stint in NHL COVID protocol.

Tough forward Brendan Gallagher, whose forehead was bloodied on a takedown Monday night, blocked a shot at 5-on-5 for the Canadiens without a stick early in Game 2.

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{allcanada} Elks announce DB Hightower's retirement

 

The Edmonton Elks announced Wednesday the retirements of American defensive back Forrest Hightower, national running back Alex Taylor, and national wide receiver Jimmy Ralph.

The 29-year-old Hightower spent the past three seasons playing in Edmonton. Hightower finished the 2019 season with 26 tackles, one interception, and one sack in 11 games.

Hightower, who started his CFL career with two seasons with the Ottawa Redblacks, recorded 136 tackles, seven interceptions, and two sacks in 55 career games.

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{allcanada} Andreescu makes early exit from Wimbledon, Shapovalov advances

 

LONDON — Bianca Andreescu made an early exit from Wimbledon, while Denis Shapovalov is heading to the third round at the grass-court Grand Slam for the first time in his career.

Andreescu, the women's fifth seed from Mississauga, Ont., was defeated 6-2, 6-1 Wednesday in her first round match against France's Alize Cornet.

The Canadian struggled with her service game, winning 57 per cent of first-serve points and just 24 per cent of second-serve points.

Andreescu also made 34 unforced errors to Cornet's seven.

It was Cornet's second win over Andreescu this month. She also beat the Canadian 7-6 (2), 7-5 in the second round of a WTA 500 event in Berlin.

"I obviously kind of stayed at the level I started the match, but she raised it," Andreescu said. "I don't know. I felt like I obviously could have raised my level a bit more, but during the match I felt like I couldn't.

"I tried to stay positive the whole match. But honestly, she played really well. She was taking control from the start. She served better today than in our last match too."

Rain in London has led to slippery playing surfaces at Wimbledon.

"Well, I don't think it affected my game, but, I mean, those points I think I lost — I maybe won one point out of the six or how many times I slipped," Andreescu said of the conditions.

"The courts are super slippery. I spoke to a couple other players, and they said it's not that normal, but this is something we can't really control."

Shapovalov, the men's 10th seed from Richmond Hill, Ont., advanced to the third round via walkover when his opponent, Spain's Pablo Andujar, withdrew. Next up for Shapovalov is wild-card Andy Murray of Britain. The two-time Wimbledon champion advanced with a 6-3, 4-6, 4-6, 6-4, 6-2 win over German qualifier Oscar Otte.

Also Wednesday, 16th-seed Felix Auger-Aliassime of Montreal advanced to the second round with a 6-3, 6-3, 6-3 win over Brazil's Thiago Monteiro.

Auger-Aliassime did not face break point had 13 chances to break Monteiro, converting four."

"I did save some break points, so that's always good when you're in this situation," Auger-Aliassime said. "I was giving myself a lot of chances on my returns. Now I can be happy with my performance, and I'm going to try to repeat that tomorrow."

Auger-Aliassime will face Sweden's Mikael Ymer in the second round.

Vasek Pospisil of Vancouver fell 6-4, 6-4, 6-4 to Frances Tiafoe of the United States in a second-round men's match.

Leylah Annie Fernandez of Laval, Que., lost her first-round women's match 6-1, 6-2 to Latvia's Jelena Ostapenko.

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{allcanada} Andersen, Maple Leafs have mutual interest in return: report

 

Frederik Andersen and the Toronto Maple Leafs have a mutual interest in the pending free agent goalie re-signing, his agent told The Athletic on Tuesday.

The 31-year-old can be an unrestricted free agent July 28, but he told the Maple Leafs through agent Claude Lemieux he would be comfortable sharing playing time with Jack Campbell. Lemieux told the website the Maple Leafs reached out to Andersen to gague his interest in returning.

Andersen is 149-74-36 with a 2.79 goals-against average, .914 save percentage and 13 shutouts in 268 games (267 starts) in five seasons with the Maple Leafs. He was 13-8-3 with a 2.96 GAA and .895 save percentage this season, when he missed 23 games with a knee injury.

"I'll definitely look back on these five years with a lot of good memories," Andersen said June 2. "So with regards to the future, I don't know what's in store yet, we'll have to see."

Campbell set an NHL record with 11 wins to start a season, breaking the mark of 10 set by Carey Price with the Montreal Canadiens in 2016-17. He was 17-3-2 with a 2.15 GAA, .921 save percentage and two shutouts, and had a 1.81 GAA and .934 save percentage in Toronto's seven-game loss to Montreal in the Stanley Cup First Round.

"He's such a great teammate and so supportive," Campbell said of Andersen. "He basically just said he was proud, and we will get it done together."

Andersen is one of 12 Maple Leafs eligible to become an unrestricted free agent, including forwards Joe Thornton, Jason Spezza, Zach Hyman and Alex Galchenyuk. He is 226-100-48 with a 2.65 GAA and .915 save percentage in 393 NHL games with the Anaheim Ducks and Toronto.

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{allcanada} 3 Keys: Canadiens at Lightning, Game 2 of Stanley Cup Final

 

Canadiens at Lightning

8 p.m. ET; NBCSN, CBC, SN, TVAS

Tampa Bay leads best-of-7 series, 1-0

TAMPA -- The Tampa Bay Lightning can take a 2-0 lead in the Stanley Cup Final for the first time when they play Game 2 against the Montreal Canadiens at Amalie Arena on Wednesday.

The Lightning won 5-1 in Game 1 on Monday, their fourth straight home victory. They split the first two games in each of their three previous Stanley Cup Final appearances (2004, 2015, 2020).

"I don't think we played our best game either," Lightning forward Tyler Johnson said. "I think both teams are going to keep getting better as the series progresses. I think we have another gear as well, so that's all we're really focusing on."

The Lightning will play without forward Alex Killorn, who sustained an undisclosed injury in Game 1. He was visibly in pain after blocking Canadiens defenseman Jeff Petry's shot with his left leg at 13:32 of the second period. Killorn played three shifts after that, and was out the final 19:04 of the third period.

Lightning coach Jon Cooper did not announce who would take Killorn's place in the lineup.

"Key part to our team, but it's the playoffs, guys are in and out," Cooper said. "You lose guys all the time. It's part of it and for tonight we're going to have to play without him."

The Canadiens could have forward Joel Armia back in the lineup after he was replaced by forward Jake Evans in Game 1. Armia was placed on the NHL COVID-19 protocol list Sunday but was removed Monday and skated during warmups.

Montreal assistant coach Luke Richardson said Armia and Evans each will be a game-time decision.

Richardson said the Canadiens as a whole have to play their systems better in Game 2.

"Managing that puck, playing 200 feet, and our battle level and compete level just has to rise," he said. "I'm sure it will. I think it has in every series. I know the guys are eager to get back and play a better game tonight. Those three things alone are going to give us a better chance in this game tonight and in this series."

Teams that take a 2-0 lead in a best-of-7 Cup Final are 46-5 (.902) winning the series. Each of the past three Stanley Cup champions lost Game 1 before going on to win the series.

Here are 3 keys to Game 2:

 

1. Getting in Vasilevskiy's face

The Canadiens have to take a page out of the Lightning's playbook from Game 1 and control the puck so they can get bodies and pucks to the net to make things difficult for Tampa Bay goalie Andrei Vasilevskiy.

Vasilevskiy made 18 saves in Game 1. The only goal he allowed was a shot by Canadiens defenseman Ben Chiarot that went off two Lightning players before going into the net.

"We believe that when we play the way we need to play, we play our game, we dictate the style of hockey that it is, we can play with anyone," Montreal forward Brendan Gallagher said. "I think we've shown that here through three rounds. Game 1 we got away from that. I don't know if it was being in the Final for the first time we tried to do a little bit too much, but made it a little bit easy on them, fed into what they do well and they took advantage of it, played a good game. For us tonight it's about getting back to our strengths and making sure we're controlling the style of the game."

 

2. Puck management against Point's line

The Lightning's top line of Brayden Point, Nikita Kucherov and Ondrej Palat took advantage of facing the Canadiens' line of Tyler Toffoli, Nick Suzuki and Cole Caufield in Game 1, scoring three goals when that line was on the ice and generating chances off turnovers.

Either the Canadiens have to figure out something different despite not having the last change advantage as the road team, or Toffoli, Suzuki and Caufield have to play better with and without the puck in Game 2 to stop the Lightning's top line from having another big game.

"Puck management is key," Suzuki said. "Had a few turnovers. Me personally, I had two. Just have to keep those down, be smart with the puck. I think once we get into the offensive zone we can outwork them there. It's just going to be key. It looks like they want to play against us all the time, so we have to do a better job."

 

3. Replacing Killorn

Killorn is a big loss for the Lightning because he plays in all situations, including on the second line with forwards Anthony Cirelli and Steven Stamkos, on the top power-play unit and the penalty kill.

"He's a depth veteran player you can depend on game in and game out," Cooper said. "He's the guy that probably the questions don't get asked about him after the game whether he had three assists or he made 40 saves or he did whatever, but you look at the score sheet and he's gobbled up 18 minutes, he's got some blocked shots, he's got some hits, he's got this, he's got that."

Cirelli or Palat likely will take Killorn's place on the power play. Forward Yanni Gourde could get more time on the penalty kill. Johnson could move up from the fourth line to replace Killorn on the second line.

 

Canadiens projected lineup

Artturi Lehkonen -- Phillip Danault -- Brendan Gallagher

Tyler Toffoli -- Nick Suzuki -- Cole Caufield

Paul Byron -- Jesperi Kotkaniemi -- Josh Anderson

Joel Armia -- Eric Staal -- Corey Perry

Ben Chiarot -- Shea Weber

Joel Edmundson -- Jeff Petry

Erik Gustafsson -- Jon Merrill

Carey Price

Jake Allen

Scratched: Jake Evans, Cale Fleury, Alexander Romanov, Lukas Vejdemo, Laurent Dauphin, Jesse Ylonen, Alex Belzile, Xavier Ouellet, Otto Leskinen, Michael Frolik, Brett Kulak, Tomas Tatar, Cayden Primeau, Charlie Lindgren, Michael McNiven

Injured: None

 
Lightning projected lineup

Ondrej Palat -- Brayden Point -- Nikita Kucherov

Tyler Johnson -- Anthony Cirelli -- Steven Stamkos

Barclay Goodrow -- Yanni Gourde -- Blake Coleman

Pat Maroon -- Ross Colton -- Mathieu Joseph

Victor Hedman -- Jan Rutta

Ryan McDonagh -- Erik Cernak

Mikhail Sergachev -- David Savard

Andrei Vasilevskiy

Curtis McElhinney

Scratched: Luke Schenn, Alex Barre-Boulet, Boris Katchouk, Taylor Raddysh, Gemel Smith, Mitchell Stephens, Daniel Walcott, Fredrik Claesson, Cal Foote, Ben Thomas, Christopher Gibson, Spencer Martin

Injured: Alex Killorn (undisclosed)

 
Status report

Evans played 11:55 in Game 1, the forward's first game since he sustained a concussion in the third period of Game 1 of the Stanley Cup Second Round against the Winnipeg Jets on June 2. ... If Joseph plays it will be his third game of the playoffs and first since May 20, when he played 9:42 against the Florida Panthers in Game 3 of the Stanley Cup First Round.

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{allcanada} ‘The Chair’: Sandra Oh Takes Her Place As English Department Boss In Teaser For Netflix Series, Premiere Date Unveiled

 
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Video: https://youtu.be/hphgnAZD03E

Class is now in session for Netflix's The Chair, starring and executive produced by Sandra Oh.

On Wednesday the streamer unveiled the premeiere date and a brief teaser for its upcoming half-hour dramedy series. Set to premiere August 20, The Chair follows Ji-Yoon (Oh), the Chair of the English department at a small university. The series comes from hails from writer, executive producer and showrunner Amanda Peet and Game of Thrones creators David Benioff and D.B. Weiss.

The series also features Jay Duplass, Holland Taylor,  Nana Mensah, Bob Balaban, David Morse and Everly Carganilla. Ji Yong Lee, Mallor Low, Marcia Debonis, Ron Crawford, Ella Rubin and Bob Stephenson round out the cast.

Peet and Oh executive produce with Peet's husband, Benioff, Weiss and Bernie Caulfield.

Watch the teaser above.

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{allcanada} Habs await Ducharme’s return for Game 3 of final in Montreal

 

TAMPA, Fla. (AP) — When the Stanley Cup Final shifts to Montreal for Games 3 and 4, the Canadiens expect to have coach Dominique Ducharme back behind their bench.

Ducharme was required by provincial protocol in Quebec to isolate for 14 days after testing positive for the coronavirus. That two-week period ends Friday, just in time for Game 3 against the Tampa Bay Lightning that night.

Canadiens players say Ducharme has actively participated in meetings virtually while assistant Luke Richardson handles the daily duties in person.

"He's involved in the process," defenseman Jon Merrill said Wednesday. "Not obviously as much as he was before he got struck with COVID, but he's definitely still a big part of this team and we look forward to seeing him when we get back to Montreal."

Lightning coach Jon Cooper said he empathizes with Ducharme missing out on the opportunity to coach the first two games of his first final.

"I know personally it would be killing you inside to miss the grandest ball of them all, and that's the Stanley Cup Final," said Cooper, who is coaching in his third. "This is a time you should enjoy, and for him to have a team be in the final and not be part of it, I feel for him, even if he's the competition. You want a team to have its full slate of players and the entire coaching staff. You really want guys to experience this and one day tell their kids, 'I coached in the Stanley Cup Final.'"

SCARRED GALLAGHER

Brendan Gallagher got up from being body-slammed to the ice late in Game 1 with blood streaming from his forehead looking like the face of playoff hockey. The tough-as-nails 5-foot-9 Canadiens forward was still sporting scars from that Wednesday but said he not suffered a concussion.

"They obviously asked," Gallagher said. "Any time you get hit in the head, they ask. I have a pretty specific way of reacting when I have a concussion. It usually involves me yelling a lot. I think the trainers understood, I was pretty calm. They've seen me when I have those things and there were no worries there."

Gallagher said he was checked again Tuesday and doctors were not concerned.

"I took a pretty good shot," he said. "The ice is pretty hard but felt fine and ready to move on."

Richardson said Gallagher's face "looks like a road map." He was never worried about Gallagher missing time in the final.

"Gally is Gally — he's got marks all over his face every game," Richardson said. "He'll be there battling and in everybody's face at the crease the same as he always is. He is a warrior and we count on him to be that way."

KILLORN OUT

Cooper ruled out forward Alex Killorn for Game 2 Wednesday night and called Tampa Bay's fourth-leading scorer "day to day in the series" because of an undisclosed injury. Killorn blocked a shot from Montreal defenseman Jeff Petry in the second period of Game 1 Monday night and only skated one shift in the third before leaving the bench.

Killorn has eight goals and nine assists in the playoffs, and only three total players have more points than his 17. He's a key part of Tampa Bay's power play and penalty kill.

"He brings immense value," Cooper said. "He plays multiple special teams, he kills penalties for us, he's on the top power play unit, he can check for us, he chips in on the goal scoring side of things. He's a depth, veteran player you can depend on game in and game out."

Mathieu Joseph and Mitchell Stephens are among the forward options, or Cooper could go back to dressing 11 with seven defensemen.

"It's the playoffs: Guys are in and out," Cooper said. "You lose guys all the time."

INCREASED CAPACITY

The Lightning got approval to host 18,600 fans for Game 2, up from 16,300 in Game 1. That's almost full capacity and a far cry from the 3,500 currently allowed at Bell Centre in Montreal. Canadiens executive vice president and chief commercial officer France Margaret Bélanger said the team is in talks with local officials and asked to increase capacity to 10,500 for Games 3 and 4.

"We certainly hope to welcome 10,500 fans and we'll be ready to because we're preparing," she said Tuesday. "We're wishing with all our heart to welcome our fans, so that our fans in very large numbers can transmit their energy to their team."

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Tuesday, June 29, 2021

{allcanada} McDavid of Oilers wins Hart Trophy as NHL most valuable player

 

Connor McDavid of the Edmonton Oilers won the Hart Trophy unanimously voted as the most valuable player in the NHL on Tuesday.

McDavid received each of the 100 first-place votes after he led the NHL with 105 points (33 goals, 72 assists), 21 ahead of teammate Leon Draisaitl. McDavid led the NHL in assists, even-strength points (68) and power-play points (37), and was second in goals and game-winning goals (11). It was the third time he led the NHL in scoring (100 points in 2016-17; 108 in 2017-18).

He is the second unanimous Hart Trophy winner in the 97-year history of the award, which was first presented in 1923-24. Wayne Gretzky earned each of the 63 first-place votes in 1981-82, following his 92-goal, 212-point season.

McDavid helped the Oilers (35-19-2) finish second in the Scotia North Division and advance to the Stanley Cup Playoffs, when they were swept by the Winnipeg Jets in the best-of-7 Stanley Cup First Round.

"My teammates are everything," McDavid said. "I really wouldn't be anywhere without them. … We had a special group this year, and obviously we didn't do what we wanted to do, but still so fun to be a part of and get Edmonton and the fans of Edmonton excited again for what's to come. Obviously not possible without [my teammates] and so lucky to be part of a great group."

The Edmonton captain scored at least one point in 45 of 56 regular-season games and had 33 multipoint games, including 18 with at least three points. The Oilers were 33-11-1 when McDavid scored a point and 2-8-1 when he didn't.

"Our team is just getting better as we go along here," McDavid. "We just had so many guys take the next step and I'm just a part of that. Obviously if we're all continuing to do that, we're going to go and do some special things in this league."

McDavid also won the Ted Lindsay Award as the most outstanding player in voting by the NHL Players' Association.

McDavid won the Hart Trophy in 2016-17 and was third in 2018-19, behind Nikita Kucherov of the Tampa Bay Lightning and Sidney Crosby of the Pittsburgh Penguins. McDavid is the second straight Oilers player to win the award after Draisaitl won last season and is the second Edmonton player to win it multiple times. Wayne Gretzky won it eight straight seasons from 1979-80 to 1986-87.

"Lastly, I'd just like to thank all the health care workers that helped us through such a difficult year and made our season possible," McDavid said. "… And obviously all the front line health workers across Canada and across the world, It wouldn't have been possible without them and together, we're fighting this thing off (COVID-19) and [getting] back to normal life."

Toronto Maple Leafs center Auston Matthews was second and Colorado Avalanche center Nathan MacKinnon was third as the other finalists for the award, which was voted on by the Professional Hockey Writers Association before the postseason began.

Matthews led the NHL with 41 goals in 52 games and scored 66 points and a plus-21 rating. He scored 12 game-winning goals, which led the NHL.

MacKinnon was eighth in the NHL with 65 points (20 goals, 45 assists) and was plus-22 in 48 games

2021 Hart Trophy voting

Points (1st-5th)

1. Connor McDavid, EDM 1,000 (100-0-0-0-0)

2. Auston Matthews, TOR 600 (0-69-19-6-4)

3. Nathan MacKinnon, COL 313 (0-6-40-19-14)

4. Sidney Crosby, PIT 223 (0-11-13-20-21)

5. Brad Marchand, BOS 134 (0-6-5-16-19)

6. Aleksander Barkov, FLA 125 (0-3-8-18-10)

7. Andrei Vasilevskiy, TBL 57 (0-2-2-8-9)

8. Leon Draisaitl, EDM 44 (0-2-3-3-6)

9. Mark Stone, VGK 39 (0-0-4-4-7)

10. Mikko Rantanen, COL 15 (0-1-1-1-0)

11. Juuse Saros, NSH 14 (0-0-1-2-3)

12. Cale Makar, COL 10 (0-0-2-0-0)

13. Adam Fox, NYR 5 (0-0-1-0-0)

13. Jonathan Huberdeau, FLA 5   (0-0-1-0-0)

15. Patrick Kane, CHI 4 (0-0-0-1-1)

15. Kirill Kaprizov, MIN 4 (0-0-0-1-1)

17. Sebastian Aho, CAR 3 (0-0-0-1-0)

18. Ryan O'Reilly, STL 2 (0-0-0-0-2)

19. Connor Hellebuyck, WPG 1 (0-0-0-0-1)

19. Mitchell Marner, TOR 1 (0-0-0-0-1)

19. David Pastrnak, BOS 1 (0-0-0-0-1)

Points allocation: 10-7-5-3-1 (1st-2nd-3rd-4th-5th)

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{allcanada} McDavid of Oilers wins Ted Lindsay Award

 

Connor McDavid of the Edmonton Oilers won the Ted Lindsay Award on Tuesday, given annually to the most outstanding player in the NHL as voted by members of the NHL Players' Association.

McDavid led the NHL with 105 points (33 goals, 72 assists), 21 ahead of teammate Leon Draisaitl, who was second with 84 points. The center led the NHL in assists, even-strength points (68) and power-play points (37) and was second in goals and game-winning goals (11). It was the third time McDavid led the NHL in scoring (100 points in 2016-17; 108 in 2017-18).

"To have your fellow peers recognize you, it really means a lot," McDavid said. "These are the guys we go up against each and every night and battle hard against. For them to recognize you, it really is a special feeling."

McDavid scored at least one point in 45 of 56 regular-season games and had 33 multipoint games, including 18 with at least three points. The Oilers were 33-11-1 when McDavid scored a point and 2-8-1 when he didn't.

He helped Edmonton (35-19-2) finish second in the Scotia North Division and advance to the Stanley Cup Playoffs, where the Oilers were swept by the Winnipeg Jets in the best-of-7 Stanley Cup First Round.

"It really is a team award, and I'm just so grateful to have so many great people in my life," McDavid said.

McDavid won the Ted Lindsay Award for the third time (2016-17, 2017-18), and is the second straight Edmonton player to win it, after Draisaitl last season. He is the seventh player to win it at least three times, joining Wayne Gretzky (five), Mario Lemieux (four) and Sidney Crosby, Jaromir Jagr, Guy Lafleur and Alex Ovechkin (three times each).

"I just feel so humbled and grateful to have won this award a few times," McDavid said.

The Oilers captain also won the Hart Trophy voted as most valuable player in the NHL by the Professional Hockey Writers Association.

Toronto Maple Leafs center Auston Matthews, and Crosby, a center for the Pittsburgh Penguins, were the other finalists for the Lindsay Award, which players voted on before the postseason began.

Matthews led the NHL with 41 goals in 52 games and scored 66 points with a plus-21 rating. He scored 12 game-winning goals, which led the NHL.

Crosby led the Penguins in goals (24), assists (38) and points (62).

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{allcanada} The Weeknd To Star In & Write Pop Singer Cult Drama Series ‘The Idol’ With Sam Levinson In The Works At HBO

 

The Weeknd will try his hand at acting with a drama series from Sam Levinson in development at HBO. The premium cabler is developing The Idol, which the "Blinding Lights" singer, otherwise known as Abel Tesfaye, would star in, co-write and executive produce.

Euphoria creator Levinson co-created the series with Tesfaye and Reza Fahim, a former nightlife entrepreneur-turned-writer who is also The Weeknd's producing partner.

The series follows a female pop singer who starts a romance with an enigmatic L.A. club owner who is the leader of a secret cult.

Joseph Epstein (Health and Wellness) will serve as showrunner and writer on the project. Levinson, Tesfaye, Fahim, Epstein, Ashley Levinson, Kevin Turen, Bron Studios' Aaron L. Gilbert will exec produce.

Mary Laws, who has written on Succession and Preacher, will write and co-exec produce. The Weeknd's manager Wassim "SAL" Slaiby and creative director La Mar C. Taylor will also co-exec produce.

Abel "The Weeknd" Tesfaye is represented by Slaiby at Salxco, Christian Carino at CAA, and Kenny Meiselas at Grubman Shire Meiselas & Sacks. Levinson is represented by WME, Stuart Manashil and Sloss Law. Epstein is repped by WME and Ken Gross.

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{allcanada} Suzuki, Canadiens look to contain Lightning's top forwards in Game 2

 

Nick Suzuki knows the Montreal Canadiens probably won't be able keep his line away from Tampa Bay Lightning's top line in Game 2 of the Stanley Cup Final at Amalie Arena on Wednesday (8 p.m. ET; NBCSN, CBC, SN, TVAS). So, they'll simply have to play better within the matchup.

Suzuki, Tyler Toffoli and rookie Cole Caufield had a long night against Tampa Bay forwards Ondrej Palat, Brayden Point and Nikita Kucherov in Montreal's 5-1 loss in Game 1 of the best-of-7 series Monday with three goals being scored at their expense.

Aided by a Caufield turnover, Point and Palat set up defenseman Erik Cernak, who gave the Lightning a 1-0 lead 6:19 into the game. Kucherov converted another turnover into a goal to give Tampa Bay a 3-1 lead 2:00 into the third period and scored again to make it 4-1 at 11:25 after Point beat Suzuki cleanly on a face-off.

"We had a few turnovers. Me personally, I had two," Suzuki said Tuesday. "Just have to keep those down, be smart with the puck. I think once we get in the offensive zone, we can outwork them there. It's just going to be key. It looks like they want to play against us the whole time, so we have to do a better job."

With the Lightning having the last change on home ice in Game 2, Canadiens assistant Luke Richardson acknowledged there's little Montreal can do to get away from that matchup. So, it will be up to Toffoli, Suzuki and Caufield to be smarter with their puck decisions and not make mistakes that give Palat, Point and Kucherov more scoring chances.

"I don't think it was their best night, for sure, but as a team I think we were all off of our game and we'll be back on our best game tomorrow," Richardson said. "There's not much you can do on the road. You can try and flip things around a little bit, but obviously the home team has last match. Whoever's out there, we talked about it, has to be on your toes. Obviously, when the Point line especially is out there, they're very dangerous."

Point leads the playoffs with 14 goals and is second with 23 points. Kucherov leads all players with 30 points (seven goals, 23 assists) in 19 postseason games. Palat has scored 10 points (four goals, six assists).

Toffoli, Suzuki and Caufield have proven they can be dangerous in the postseason too. Toffoli leads Montreal with 14 points (five goals, nine assists) in 18 games. Suzuki is second on Montreal with 13 points (five goals eight assists) in 18 games and Caufield, who was a healthy scratch for the first two games, is tied for third with nine points (four goals, five assists) in 16 games.

Caufield was a difference-maker offensively in the Stanley Cup Semifinals against the Vegas Golden Knights, leading the Canadiens with four goals. But that line couldn't generate much offensively in Game 1 against Tampa Bay. Caufield had two shots on goal, Toffoli had one and Suzuki had none.

Creating more offensively and forcing Palat, Point and Kucherov to defend more in their end in Game 2 would make Toffoli, Suzuki and Caufield's job easier defensively, too.

"We have to trust our own game," Suzuki said. "There's moments in the game where as long as we can use our skill and make the plays (they can), but you have to realize if you have nothing right in front of you, just to make a simple play and not to try to make something out of nothing. I think we got caught a couple times doing that. But when we were making plays, using each other, we had some good shifts in the offensive zone. Just need more of that."

Toffoli is a veteran of 72 NHL playoff games and the 29-year-old won the Stanley Cup with the Los Angeles Kings in 2014. But a lot of this is new ground for Suzuki, 21, and Caufield, 20.

The winner of the 2021 Hobey Baker Award as the top men's player in NCAA Division I ice hockey, Caufield signed with Montreal on March 27 after completing his sophomore season at the University of Wisconsin and played in 10 regular-season games before the playoffs. Suzuki is in his second playoffs after scoring seven points (four goals, three season) in 10 games last season.

So Caufield and Suzuki are going to go through some learning experiences. Richardson believes Game 1 was one of them. 

"I think they're growing every day, so today is another day to grow and tomorrow is another day to show that growth in your game," Richardson said. "You have to implement things that you learn every day and put it into your game and then grow and get better and it has to happen fast, especially in the Final here. So, expect everybody to be better, especially the younger guys and I think they're going to enjoy it.

"They'll have one more day of experience of being in the Final. That will help. And they're great players, so they're going to give us a good push tomorrow night to get us back even in the series."

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{allcanada} Shapovalov wins rain-delayed match in first round at Wimbledon

 

LONDON — Canada's Denis Shapovalov is heading to the second round at Wimbledon.

The No. 10 seed, from Richmond Hill, Ont., beat Germany's Philipp Kohlschreiber 6-4, 4-6, 6-3, 5-7, 6-4 in a first-round match on Tuesday.

Shapovalov was down 6-5 in the fourth set when rain halted play for three-plus hours.

Upon their return, the Canadian was not happy with the slippery conditions of the court and went on to lose the fourth set.

But Shapovalov broke the world No. 115 to take a 4-3 lead in the fifth set, and held on from there.

Shapovalov had 79 winners, 62 more than Kohlschreiber. But the German made far fewer unforced errors (22) than the Canadian (66).

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{allcanada} Canadiens’ Weber fined for slash on Lightning star Kucherov

 

TAMPA, Fla. (AP) — Shea Weber's wallet is a little lighter heading to Game 2 of the Stanley Cup Final.

The NHL on Tuesday fined the Montreal defenseman $5,000 for slashing Tampa Bay star Nikita Kucherov during the third period of the Canadiens' 5-1 loss to the Lightning in the opener of the best-of-seven series.

No penalty was called on the play, and Kucherov did not appear to be injured on Monday night. The fine imposed by the league's department of player safety is the maximum allowed under the collective bargaining agreement.

It's not the first non-call that's riled the defending Stanley Cup champions this postseason.

Kucherov missed the entire regular season while recovering from hip surgery but returned for the postseason. He missed most of Game 6 of Tampa Bay's semifinal series against the New York Islanders after taking a cross-check to the lower back.

In an unusual move in the closing minutes against the Canadians, Tampa Bay coach Jon Cooper put five forwards on the ice during a 5-on-3 power-play opportunity.

"They've got a great penalty kill over there," Lightning captain Steven Stamkos said. "It starts with their goalie."

Montreal had gone a playoff-record 13 consecutive games without allowing a power-play goal before Kucherov scored 5-on-4 with 1:10 remaining to cap the a bruising win.

The Lightning were relentless, covering the entire ice, setting a physical tone for the series. Canadiens forward Brendan Gallagher left the ice at one point in the third period, blood dripping from his forehead.

Assistant coach Luke Richardson, who has been filling in for Dominique Ducharme since Montreal's interim coach tested positive for COVID-19, said Gallagher was fine.

"Gally is Gally. He's got marks all over his face every game," Richardson said Tuesday.

"He had a little bit of a goose egg last night, but it seemed to be a bit better today. He doesn't look great, he looks like a road map right now," Richardson added. "But he'll be there battling and in everybody's face at the crease the same as he always is."

ELITE COMPANY

Kucherov is on track to lead the playoffs in scoring for the second straight year, amassing 30 points (seven goals, 23 assists) in 19 games. The Lightning star had two goals and an assist in Game 1 of the Stanley Cup Final, joining an elite group of hockey greats with multiple 30-point postseasons.

Wayne Gretzky did it six times during his Hall of Fame career. Mark Messier is next of the list with three, followed by Jari Kurri, Mario Lemieux and Kucherov with two. Kucherov finished last year's Stanley Cup run with 34 points (seven goals, 27 assists).

"He's obviously a super special player that doesn't come around too often. And to see the company he is in, with the production he's had the last two playoff runs is pretty remarkable," Lightning defenseman Victor Hedman said. "Speaks to what he has accomplished as a player, but also what we have accomplished as a team."

KILLORN QUESTIONABLE

Tampa Bay forward Alex Killorn's status is uncertain for Game 2 on Wednesday night after leaving the series opener with an undisclosed injury. Killorn blocked a shot from Montreal's Jeff Petry in the second period and played only one shift in the third.

"Hard to say right now but I'd throw him in the day-to-day category," Cooper said.

Only three players in the postseason have more points than Killorn. Mathieu Joseph and Mitchell Stephens figure to be candidates to go in the lineup in his place if Killorn can't play.

BELL CENTRE REMAINS AT 3,500

As much as Cooper wants Bell Centre to have more fans for Games 3 and 4 when the series shifts to Montreal, Canadiens executive vice president and chief commercial officer France Margaret Bélanger said Tuesday the capacity would remain at 3,500 for at least the first Cup Final game back in the city since 1993. The team had been trying to increase to 50% capacity, arguing with expert evidence that it would not have a negative public health impact.

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