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Canadiens Farm Team Drops Game Four After Jacob Fowler Falters

Canadiens Farm Team Drops Game Four After Jacob Fowler Falters

Yahoo24-05-2025

Pascal Vincent had made it clear before the start of the third round that he fully intended to alternate his goaltenders, and while Cayden Primeau had a great game on Wednesday night for the Laval Rocket, it was Jacob Fowler who led them onto the ice on Friday night. The move is understandable from a developmental standpoint. After all, Fowler is the Montreal Canadiens' goaltender for the future, but it can be tricky to mix development and results. We got a prime example on Friday night.
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With Primeau riding the pine, Fowler gave up four goals on 14 shots before he was pulled from the game, but Vincent stood by his decision to give him the nod:
You can't develop solely when it suits you. We have to see our young players. It's in games like these that we need to see them. Fowler joined us to play hockey. I am comfortable with the decision. [To play Fowler on Friday night]
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Those four goals might not have been a death blow for the Rocket if Devon Levi had played like he had since the start of the third round, but unfortunately for Fowler and co., it was the real Levi who turned up between the pipes of the Rochester Americans last night. He saved 22 of the 23 shots he received, with Laval's sole tally coming off a rebound that Joshua Roy only had to tap in.
The Amerks don't owe the win to Levi, though. Josh Dunne had the game of his life, scoring four points in the 5-1 victory. The 26-year-old centerman was undrafted and started his pro career with the Columbus Blue Jackets organization. He mainly played for the Cleveland Monsters for four seasons before joining the Buffalo Sabres' farm team last offseason. His two goals and two assists on the night give him seven points in as many games since the playoffs started.
Meanwhile, Fowler wasn't the only one to have a tough night. Logan Mailloux, who has been very good since the start of the playoffs, was in the box for two of the Americans' goals, a costly lack of discipline, and he committed a turnover that led to another goal. Like it or not, Mailloux is still young, and off nights are just part of the development process, growing pains as they call them.
With the series now tied at two games apiece, the fifth and final game will take place at Place Bell on Sunday afternoon. The 4:30 PM tilt will be a winner-takes-all battle that promises to be entertaining. Primeau will be back in the net in accordance with the alternating system, and it will be his chance to show that he can be clutch when it matters.
Photo credit: Jamie Germano / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images
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Donald Trump's travel ban undermines Gianni Infantino's World Cup vision
Donald Trump's travel ban undermines Gianni Infantino's World Cup vision

New York Times

timean hour ago

  • New York Times

Donald Trump's travel ban undermines Gianni Infantino's World Cup vision

Gianni Infantino could scarcely have been more emphatic when taking to the stage at the FIFA Congress in Asuncion, Paraguay, last month. A meeting had been held with the White House Task Force in the preceding days, and assurances had seemingly been given that hardening immigration policies would not carry a price for the looming Club World Cup and the 2026 World Cup. Advertisement 'The world is welcome in America,' said Infantino, FIFA's long-serving president. 'Of course, the players, of course, everyone involved, all of us, but definitely also all the fans.' Infantino might well have delivered that promise in good faith, but it has not taken long for that cheerfully optimistic assessment to appear misguided. Any notion of the world being welcome must now carry an awkward asterisk. A travel ban against 12 countries was signed by U.S. President Donald Trump on Wednesday, halting movement into the United States for those deemed to be from high-risk territories. Citizens of Afghanistan, Myanmar (Burma), Chad, the Republic of Congo, Equatorial Guinea, Eritrea, Haiti, Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan and Yemen will be banned from entering the U.S. starting on Monday. 'Nothing will stop us from keeping America safe,' Trump said in a video announcing the executive order. And least of all, it seems, a World Cup that the U.S. will share with neighbours Canada and Mexico next summer. Although the new ruling will continue to permit entry to athletes, coaches and support staff who attend major sporting events — initially, only the World Cup and Olympics were specifically cited, but the White House clarified to The Athletic on Thursday that the Club World Cup and Concacaf's Gold Cup also fall into this category — fans will not be granted entry. Only 'immediate relatives' of those involved can hope to be exempt. Trump has outlined his reasons, rooted in national security, but the policy shift has given FIFA and Infantino a headache. 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Trump indicated there is time for this to change ahead of next summer with the list of banned nations 'subject to revision based on whether material improvements are made.' That the Club World Cup and Gold Cup, both starting this month, have now been included in the list of 'major' sporting events might also indicate a willingness to add flexibility to a hardline stance. Advertisement It is nevertheless a problem that will take some spinning. Either Infantino knew the travel ban and its implications were in the post, but just did not want to let on in his public comments last month, or Trump's capricious nature has caught another supposed ally off guard. The latter feels more probable but still does not reflect well on Infantino after all the meetings, the gifts and photo opportunities of the last six months. Infantino remains that most voraciously political animal who maintains politics have no place in football's harmonious little world. Yet Trump's gear shift on immigration is a reminder about how that vision remains as fanciful as ever.

Why this Cup final is already different. Plus: The PWHL gets expansion right
Why this Cup final is already different. Plus: The PWHL gets expansion right

New York Times

time2 hours ago

  • New York Times

Why this Cup final is already different. Plus: The PWHL gets expansion right

Red Light newsletter 🏒 | This is The Athletic's hockey newsletter. Sign up here to receive Red Light directly in your inbox. Good morning to everyone except whoever keeps putting those multi-day gaps in the Stanley Cup Final schedule. The rematch between the Panthers and Oilers is finally underway — let's dig into it. Last night's Game 1 offered a few things we didn't get at all in last year's seven-game prequel. A Leon Draisaitl goal. Any Oilers goal at all in the opener. And most importantly: sudden-death overtime. Yes, we all got to ride our motorcycles out of the helicopter last night, something that hadn't happened in either of the conference finals. I won't keep you in suspense, here's how it ended: That's Draisaitl burying the winner on the power play off a pass from, who else, Connor McDavid. Yes, an overtime power play, which can only mean one thing: The dreaded puck-over-glass rule showed up, with Florida's Tomas Nosek making the mistake that ended up deciding the game. 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Canada names 26-player Gold Cup squad: Takeaways as Jonathan David included
Canada names 26-player Gold Cup squad: Takeaways as Jonathan David included

New York Times

time3 hours ago

  • New York Times

Canada names 26-player Gold Cup squad: Takeaways as Jonathan David included

Canada has named its 26-player squad for this summer's Gold Cup tournament. Jonathan David, on the cusp of a career-altering move with many top European clubs waiting to pounce, was named to his first Gold Cup squad since 2019. Other European-based players on the team include Tajon Buchanan, Stephen Eustaquio and Alistair Johnston. As Marsch chose the 26 players to represent Canada at the Gold Cup, he clearly did so with one prevailing thought: who are the players that will give Canada the best chance to win their first trophy since 2000? The Gold Cup is held every two years and features the best teams from Concacaf but doesn't always draw the best players from each national team. The Gold Cup comes at the end of long European seasons. Many players opt for rest and recovery instead of partaking in a tournament often filled with domestic and MLS-based players. Canada's 2023 Gold Cup squad, for example, was missing out on the likes of European-based stars including Alphonso Davies, Jonathan David, Stephen Eustaquio and Tajon Buchanan. Advertisement Yet with a little over one year to go before the World Cup and Canada riding a wave of internal belief that winning a trophy would elevate their game, Marsch has secured buy-in from some of his top players on the Gold Cup. He might be able to boast arguably the most star-studded roster throughout the entire tournament. Goalkeepers: Maxime Crepeau (Portland Timbers), Dayne St. Clair (Minnesota United), Tom McGill (Brighton & Hove Albion). Defenders: Sam Adekugbe (Vancouver Whitecaps), Derek Cornelius (Olympic Marseille), Luc de Fougerolles (Fulham), Jamie Knight-Lebel (Crewe Alexandra), Richie Laryea (Toronto), Alistair Johnston (Celtic FC), Kamal Miller (Portland Timbers), Niko Sigur (Hadjuk Split), Joel Waterman (Montreal). Midfielders: Ali Ahmed (Vancouver Whitecaps), Tajon Buchanan (Villareal CF), Mathieu Choiniere (Grasshopper), Stephen Eustaquio (Porto), Ismael Kone (Rennes), Jayden Nelson (Vancouver Whitecaps), Jonathan Osorio (Toronto FC), Nathan Saliba (CF Montreal), Jacob Shaffelburg (Nashville). Forwards: Jonathan David (Lille), Promise David (Union Saint-Gilloise), Daniel Jebbison (AFC Bournemouth), Cyle Larin (Mallorca), Tani Oluwaseyi (Minnesota United). 'We have a great group and if you ask any one of them, they want to be a part of (the Gold Cup),' Cyle Larin, who plays his club soccer in La Liga with Mallorca, told The Athletic. 'Even the European-based guys, they're playing all season and coming to the national team. It's important for us to keep building.' Considering it will be under one year from when Canada kicks off the Gold Cup until the start of their 2026 World Cup, this roster is a clear look at what type of team Marsch could bring to the World Cup with David, Buchanan, Eustaquio and Johnston all included. Alphonso Davies and Moise Bombito, both locks for the 2026 World Cup roster, are the only key players missing from the Gold Cup squad. Davies tore the anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) in his right knee in March, while Bombito is recovering from wrist surgery. Advertisement Marsch and his staff made just four changes from the team he brought to Halifax and Toronto for a June training camp and friendlies against Ukraine and Ivory Coast. Canada will play against Honduras, Curacao and El Salvador in Group B. Their Gold Cup begins June 17 in Vancouver before moving to Houston for their final two group-stage matches. Mauricio Pochettino's United States' Gold Cup squad is missing several key players, some of whom made the decision, along with U.S. Soccer, to prioritize rest after their club seasons. And while it's still unclear whether David will play in the Gold Cup (A summer transfer to a team playing in the Club World Cup is not unlikely), the buy-in that Marsch got from his players to play in a tournament they normally would not is impressive. The 2023 Gold Cup squad featured 11 European-based players. There are 14 European-based players in this Canada squad, including most of their stars. There is a clear understanding from some of Canada's European-based players on the importance of winning a trophy before the World Cup. They're treating this tournament with newfound urgency. 'The World Cup is next year and we're not going to be together for that long. We have a couple of camps towards the World Cup, but this is a big tournament. This is probably when we're going to spend the most time together,' Eustaquio said. Is Marsch's Gold Cup squad an indication of who he wants to bring to the World Cup? After all, there are no teenaged players vying for their first taste of international experience at the Gold Cup. The squad is filled with players Marsch trusts. As such, he seems to be using the Gold Cup as his last trial run before the World Cup. He's going to want to see how this group gels in a tournament environment. Advertisement 'I feel that us as a team, we've grown so much that we feel that we're really close to winning a trophy. This is the last opportunity before the World Cup that we have to win (a trophy),' Eustaquio said. Davies and Bombito are locks for the World Cup roster, which means two players on the Gold Cup roster will come out. But otherwise, it's difficult to make a strong case that any players not in this Gold Cup roster deserve to be in the 2026 roster. After a year on the job, Marsch's vision for his team is certainly coming into focus. The Gold Cup presents the last chance in a tournament setting for Canadian players to solidify their spots in Marsch's preferred World Cup starting XI. Cyle Larin has long been part of a forward partnership with David. But Larin's form and playing time have dipped, which has opened the door for three young forwards to vie for a starting spot. Out of Daniel Jebbison, Promise David and Tani Oluwaseyi, Marsch will invariably lean on one or two of those players to push for Larin's starting job. Who Marsch brings first off the bench and how they respond to Marsch's tactical demands will reveal plenty about who could line up alongside Jonathan David to start the 2026 World Cup squad. In the middle of the park, look for Marsch to lean on Nathan Saliba to challenge Ismael Kone for the latter's starting spot. Marsch sees genuine potential in Saliba's ball-playing abilities, while Kone has struggled to put his stamp on performances for Canada as of late. When you add in Eustaquio missing Gold Cup games to play for Porto in the Club World Cup, Saliba may never get a better chance to make good on his potential for Canada ahead of 2026. Finally, Marsch has said that Johnston will be joining Canada 'at some point' in the Gold Cup. With a reduced role, this summer will be the time for 21-year-old Niko Sigur to showcase that he's ready to start games for Canada. Expect him to be leaned on the right back position. 'I think I'm going to have some more responsibility, especially since Alistair's not here. And then obviously with (Stephen Eustaquio) going away as well, so I'm not sure where exactly I'm gonna play for sure, but I'm ready for a bigger role,' Sigur said. (Top image:)

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