
Oilers ahead in Western Conference Final
Edmonton Watch
CTV Edmonton's Evan Kenny recaps the Oilers earning a lead in the Western Conference Final against the Dallas Stars.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CBC
24 minutes ago
- CBC
Lane Hutson surprised with Calder trophy — becoming 1st Hab to win it in 53 years
The Montreal Canadiens defenceman takes home the NHL's top rookie honour — getting a message of congratulations from the legendary goaltender who was the last player from his team to take home the award.


National Post
an hour ago
- National Post
The work is just beginning for the Toronto Sceptres
Any advantage the Toronto Sceptres enjoyed in having just one of its established veterans taken in the expansion draft is going to be a short-lived one. Article content All six existing clubs gave up four players in the expansion draft process that stocked each of PWHL Vancouver and PWHL Seattle with their first 12 players. Article content Article content Toronto lost one of its first building blocks in the process with Sarah Nurse signing with Vancouver during the exclusive signing window both expansion clubs had in the five days priors to the actual draft. Article content Article content But on draft night all three of the Sceptres names called were coming off their rookie seasons. Julia Gosling, Izzy Daniel and defender Megan Carter were Toronto's first, second, and third round picks a year ago at the entry draft. Article content Because of their lack of tenure in the league, all three were also on entry level deals which becomes a problem for GM Gina Kingsbury beginning Monday when she goes looking to fill their spots with the opening of free agency. Article content 'It's difficult to lose all four of those athletes,' Kingsbury said Tuesday. 'They bring a tremendous amount of value to our organization and to our team. Three of those four came in just last season so more of an entry-level salary which doesn't free up a whole lot of room for us in this (upcoming signing period). Article content 'However obviously Sarah did carry a little bit of salary where we will have some space there, but it's definitely all different factors that come into play during this period of time and definitely something we are going to have to navigate in the next couple of weeks and ensure we can re-sign some of our key players.' Article content First on Kingsbury's list though is her own free agents and bringing as many of those back into the fold as possible. That list includes Natalie Spooner, Hannah Miller, Jesse Compher, Kali Flanagan, Hayley Scamurra and Maggie Connors and that's just the beginning of the list. It's actually 11 deep and while the goal is to bring them all back, again the economics of the situation likely won't support that. Article content You have the money they earned in their final years of the contract coming off the books but signing them for the same or less doesn't seem likely. Yes the salary cap increases to $1.34 million this year, an annual 3% bump as per the Collective Bargaining Agreement, but that won't offset the raises some of these free agents negotiate. Article content 'I do think we have a chance at re-signing them, from what they are telling me, where Toronto has been home for them,' Kingsbury said. 'They love our market. They love our fans. They love the city and enjoyed our staff and entire organization. So, I do think the familiarity of our market and how we have been operating over the last two years will definitely be a factor as well. We will try to be as competitive with the salaries as we possibly can and hopefully retain as many of those great athletes as we can here in the next couple of weeks.'


CTV News
an hour ago
- CTV News
Record-breaking Summer McIntosh inspires at Canadian swim trials in Saanich, B.C.
Roughly 800 athletes from across Canada are competing in the national swim trials on southern Vancouver Island, including Summer McIntosh. As swimmer Summer McIntosh breaks world records at the national swim trials, young athletes are looking up to her and travelling to Saanich, B.C., to watch her in action. The 18-year-old from Toronto took two world records in three days in the Vancouver Island community. McIntosh, a three-time Olympic champion, broke the records for the 200-metre individual medley and the 400-metre freestyle. 'I'm witnessing history, which is pretty awesome,' said Tayah Giesbrecht, a former competitive swimmer and lifeguard at Commonwealth Place, where the trials are taking place. 'There are kids from all over the Island who are growing up swimming, and they're coming down from three hours, four hours away just to see her race these events.' Other fans are competing in the same pool, including 17-year-old Loriane Price from Quebec. 'It's so crazy to see her (McIntosh) do that stuff. She's just like us,' Price said. 'It's special to me because it's not something that I'm going to see often. And like, when I see it, I feel motivated to break my own personal records.' Event organizers said roughly 800 athletes are competing in the trials, which run through Thursday. They're a selection event for athletes to achieve the paralympic, national and junior national teams. 'A world record in any sport is a big deal. And to have that happen in a community pool here is exciting,' said Jocelyn Jay, Swimming Canada's associate director of sport development. Saanich's Commonwealth Place pool last hosted the national trials in 2022. Organizers estimate event attendees are collectively spending millions of dollars in Greater Victoria. 'It's just an influx of sport tourism, which is exciting for our sport, but also the community,' Jay said.