logo
Goalie Gavin Betts perfect as Canada earns bronze at Hlinka Gretzky Cup

Goalie Gavin Betts perfect as Canada earns bronze at Hlinka Gretzky Cup

Yahoo10 hours ago
BRNO — Gavin Betts had a 22-save shutout as Canada earned bronze at the Hlinka Gretzky Cup with a 3-0 win over Finland on Saturday.
Cooper Williams, Ethan Belchetz and Daxon Rudolph supplied the offence as Canada won its 30th medal at the under-18 men's hockey tournament. The Canadians fell to the United States in a 4-3 shootout loss in Friday's semifinal.
'It was tough to lose in the semifinals because we came here to try to win gold, but sometimes things do not work out the way you want them to," said Belchetz. "We were a little down after yesterday's game, but we wanted to leave here with a medal and bring something home to our families."
Canada has won 25 golds, three silvers, and two bronzes since the international event was first held in 1991.
William Gammals stopped 27 shots in net for Finland.
The U.S. beat Sweden 5-3 for gold later Saturday.
The Hlinka Gretzky Cup will be held in Edmonton in 2026. It will be the fifth time the international under-18 showcase is played in Canada, with Alberta previously hosting three times (Edmonton – 2024; Red Deer - 2022; Edmonton and Red Deer – 2018).
Canada won gold at all three of those tournaments, defeating Czechia 2-1 in the 2024 final.
'We are thrilled to bring the Hlinka Gretzky Cup back to Edmonton next year, and to kick off the 2026-27 hockey season with the top under-18 players from eight countries competing for a gold medal,' said Dean McIntosh, Hockey Canada's senior vice-president of revenue, fan experience and community impact.
'This is a prestigious tournament with a deep history that is an important part of the international hockey calendar, and we look forward to hosting a world-class event for teams, players and fans next August.'
This report by The Canadian Press was first published Aug. 16, 2025.
The Canadian Press
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

B.C. Lions look to continue growth against Caleb Evans and the Montreal Alouettes
B.C. Lions look to continue growth against Caleb Evans and the Montreal Alouettes

Yahoo

time13 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

B.C. Lions look to continue growth against Caleb Evans and the Montreal Alouettes

VANCOUVER — Halfway through the CFL season, quarterback Nathan Rourke believes his B.C. Lions still have obstacles to overcome — namely, their own mistakes. The Lions (4-5) are coming off an overtime win against the Hamilton Tiger-Cats last week, but have seen some close games fall the other way this year thanks to one or two errant plays. During the victory in Hamilton, B.C. took eight penalties for a total of 65 yards, and had a giveaway, a fumble and an interception. 'I really feel like for this team, throughout the entire year, the only people really who can get in our way are us, right?" Rourke said. "We've certainly had our fair share of penalties and dumb mistakes and bad decisions. And it seems, at the end of the day, that's what's stopping us more than the other team. "So obviously, they're gonna make some plays and stuff like that, but I think we've done a good job managing that. We've just got to make sure that we clean up that stuff, and I think it'll be OK.' All season long, the Lions have been growing, said first-year head coach Buck Pierce. Now the team needs to learn from those lessons, he said. "That's really what I hope that we've taken from it, is, 'Hey, the past is the past. This is where we are. Understand where we are, understand what it takes for us to get better,'" he said. "I think I've seen some growth, and I've seen some guys, some light bulbs start to come on a bit, which is good. But we need to just continue to lift the group up, and everybody else gets to that level.' B.C.'s next chance to showcase its growth and climb the West Division standings comes Saturday when the Lions host the Montreal Alouettes (5-4). The Als dropped a 23-22 decision to the Edmonton Elks last week and are looking to snap a two-game skid. They're also looking for their first win against the Lions since Sept. 9, 2022. Montreal will turn to third-string quarterback Caleb Evans this week with both No. 1 Davis Alexander and backup McLeod Bethel-Thompson relegated to the six-game injured list. Saturday will mark Evans' first start since July 25 of last year when he helped the Als to a 20-16 win over the Saskatchewan Roughriders. The 27-year-old American is 6-10 in his first 16 CFL starts, but hasn't ever started against B.C. Alouettes head coach Jason Maas isn't concerned about swapping out another QB. 'We've won games with backups here, with guys that are second- and third-string quarterbacks here over the last three years," he said. "We did it already this year, we've done it with a backup quarterback, as people will say. … So you ask me where my belief comes from, it's been shown. We've won games, and that's all I need to see." Facing a quarterback who hasn't played much brings some unique challenges for a defensive unit. "We can't do as much tape on him, but we have enough to know what he's about," Lions defensive back Christophe Beaulieu said of Evans. "He likes travelling, so we'll take care of that, and we're ready to go. We're ready to go. Whatever he throws at us, we'll be ready.' Montreal and B.C. have already met once this season with the Lions taking a 21-20 victory back on June 5, thanks to a walk-off field goal from Sean Whyte. The visitors felt like they "got away with one" in that game, Rourke said. "It was good to be able to execute down the stretch when we needed to and put together a drive. It was good to see," the QB said. "But ultimately, I know for me, I've got to play better. And this is a great opportunity to do so at home, where we haven't been our best either. So hopefully we can put it all together this weekend.' MONTREAL ALOUETTES (5-4) AT B.C. LIONS (4-5) Saturday, B.C. Place NO RUSH: The Alouettes have been superb at limiting opponents' run games this season. Last week, the team held Edmonton running back Justin Rankin to zero yards on six attempts. Montreal is allowing a league low 4.4 yards per attempt on the ground in 2025. HISTORY BOOKS: Montreal has traditionally struggled against B.C., particularly on the road. The Lions hold a 50-36-1 edge in all-time meetings between the two teams, and are 32-9-1 at home against the Als. HOME FIELD ADVANTAGE?: The Lions have lost three straight games at B.C. Place and are at risk of matching their longest home losing skid since 2021 when the team dropped four in a row. --- With files from Daniel Rainbird in Montreal. This report by The Canadian Press was first published Aug. 15, 2025. Gemma Karstens-Smith, The Canadian Press

Rogers Charity Classic leader Miguel Angel Jiménez 'pushing everybody to be their best' on PGA Tour Champions
Rogers Charity Classic leader Miguel Angel Jiménez 'pushing everybody to be their best' on PGA Tour Champions

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Rogers Charity Classic leader Miguel Angel Jiménez 'pushing everybody to be their best' on PGA Tour Champions

The short-term challenge for stars of the PGA Tour Champions circuit is to win the 2025 Rogers Charity Classic. The long-term goal is to capture the coveted Charles Schwab Cup. Trouble is the same man — in fact, 'The Most Interesting Man in Golf' — stands in the way of both achievements. That's Miguel Angel Jiménez, the top-ranked player on tour and the confident one-stroke leader heading into Sunday's final round at Canyon Meadows Golf Club. 'He's kind of set the bar at the moment,' said New Zealand's Steve Alker, referencing Jiménez and his game both this weekend and throughout the 2025 season. 'He's pushing everybody to be their best,' continued Alker. 'I mean … what he's done this year in leading the money list, we've got some chasing to do. So every week, we're just going as hard as we can. 'You're probably going to need to pick up some victories to catch him.' First thing's first … Related Rogers Legends of Hockey: Common ground for Battle of Alberta goalies Calgary native Wes Martin feeling the love at 2025 Rogers Charity Classic 'I'm a bona fide movie star': Golfer Corey Pavin dishes on Happy Gilmore 2 role ahead of Rogers Charity Classic Alker or anybody else in contention needs to pick up some strokes Sunday on the 61-year-old Spaniard just to get one victory. If not, that would mean another tournament win for Jiménez — his whopping fifth of the calendar — to further distance himself from the field. Right now on the Schwab Cup money list, the colourful — and talented — 61-year-old boasts a cash grab of US$2,691,638. The next-best earner is American Stewart Cink on $1,991,382, while Alker himself follows third with $1,839,930. That's already a large gap favouring Jiménez. And the way he is playing, it seems the $375,000 winner's cut at Canyon Meadows is already in his pocket, making the chase to catch him on the season all the more challenging. On Saturday, he swung a magnificent eagle and seven birdies. The '2' hole-out on the par-4 eighth hole — using a nine-iron from about 130 yards — showed his swagger. He celebrated with by sheathing his weapon into an imaginary scabbard on his hip and then doing the cha-cha. 'Normal celebration when you make an eagle on a hole,' said Jiménez cheerfully. 'Must celebrate … no? Put the (sword) there (in the sheath), and I do (the dance).' Perhaps even more impressive was how he shook off a trio for bogeys, including those to start both nines, and didn't let a few shots off trees rattle him in posting a 7-under 63 and his tourney-leading 14-under 126 through 36 holes. 'I never miss a shot, you see?' said a joking Jiménez. 'Sometimes the trees come to be (in my way), you know? 'No … I'm human,' he continued. 'But overall, it's very fine. The game from the tee, apart from two or three holes, is very solid. 'Just the thing is you have to understand nobody's perfect.' Jiménez himself has been darn near perfect on the year, which has made for quite the challenge for the others on tour. And they know it. 'His standard of golf is certainly lifting everybody,' said Australia's Richard Green, whose magnificent 8-under-62 Saturday was the day's best to put him one stroke back of Jiménez. 'Obviously to compete with Miguel, you've got to be pretty much on your game. But he's got the runs on the board and the wins under his belt, which just helps with that background confidence. 'The win's within him, so everybody kind of knows that. And the guys that are chasing probably haven't won as much, so the pressure is on a little bit more.' After five runner-up finishes last year, including here at the Rogers Charity Classic, Green himself hasn't won yet on the PGA Tour Champions. But he's the guy with the next-best score — a 13-under-par 127 — to that of Jiménez heading into the final round. Alker then headlines a trio of next-up candidates to win Sunday, alongside raw rookie Tommy Gainey — who just turned 50 and made it through the qualifier to earn his debut — and Argentina's Ricardo Gonzalez, on 12-under 128. Gonzalez won the PGA Tour Champions' Trophy Hassan II last year in Morocco. Aussie Green himself is drawing from another source — that being redemption — to top the world leader Sunday. Green was the leader after Day 2 here last year but couldn't close the deal in the final round. And Ken Tanigawa ended up as the 2024 champ, with a 17-under 193 — two shots better than runner-up Green. 'I made a couple of changes to my game and a couple things that are a little bit different to how they were last year, and whether that makes a difference here, I'm not sure,' said Green, when asked if he can draw from last year's shortcoming at Canyon Meadows. 'The main thing is to be in a position with nine holes to play (Sunday). You know … focus on hitting good shots. It's all I can really do — just play each shot at a time and each putt at a time and do my best.' His best to catch a man on fire. That's no easy thing. 'Miguel's obviously having an amazing year, and he's going to be tough to beat,' added Green. 'So I'm going to have to play my absolute best golf. 'I'd have to say that (Saturday) was pretty close to some of my best golf. So if I can continue to do that, I'll be very happy. 'But it's the universe that will pick the winner.' These days, that universe — the one with the golf gods — seems to be siding with Jiménez. tsaelhof@

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store