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أمانة المدينة المنورة تنفذ مبادرة لتعزيز الوعي البيئي وتحسين جودة الحياة

أمانة المدينة المنورة تنفذ مبادرة لتعزيز الوعي البيئي وتحسين جودة الحياة

Saudi Salary21-04-2025

TORONTO - Mitch Marner had a goal and two assists as the Toronto Maple Leafs dumped the Ottawa Senators 6-2 to take Game 1 of their first-round playoff series Sunday. William Nylander and John Tavares, with a goal and an assist each, Oliver Ekman-Larsson, Morgan Rielly and Matthew Knies also scored for Toronto. Anthony Stolarz made 31 saves. Auston Matthews had two assists. Drake Batherson and Ridly Greig replied for Ottawa, which got 18 stops from Linus Ullmark. The best-of-seven matchup continues Tuesday with Game 2 at Scotiabank Arena before shifting to the nation's capital. The series opener marked the first playoff Battle of Ontario showdown in exactly 21 years when Toronto bested Ottawa 4-1 in Game 7 on April 20, 2004. The teams went in opposite directions after that, with Ottawa enjoying a long run of success, including a trip to the 2007 Stanley Cup final, while Toronto made the post-season just once between 2006 and 2016. The Leafs, who downed the Senators four times in the playoffs across a five-year stretch in the early 2000s, returned to the NHL's spring dance in 2017 — the last time the Senators made the post-season — with a young core led by Matthews, Marner and Nylander. The Senators' rebuild, meanwhile, took a lot longer than expected, but finally gained traction in 2024-25. Ottawa captain Brady Tkachuk made his playoff debut Sunday in his seventh campaign. Toronto, which has one series victory in nine tries in the Matthews-Marner era, opened the scoring at 7:09 of the first period when Ekman-Larsson fired past Ullmark's glove to ignite the rink and send fans gathered outdoors in Maple Leaf Square into a frenzy. Senators defenceman Jake Sanderson cleared a puck off his goal line later in the period, but Marner took a stretch pass from Matthews moments later and roofed a shot at 12:18 for a 2-0 lead. Ottawa got on the board exactly four minutes later when Batherson was fastest to a rebound Stolarz was unable to smother. The Leafs goaltender stopped Tkachuk on a breakaway early in the second before the Leafs' power play when to work when Tavares collected his own rebound at 4:07 to make it 3-1. The Senators got in more penalty trouble later in the period, and Toronto struck three seconds into a two-man advantage when Nylander ripped his team's fourth goal on just 10 shots at 7:19. Fabian Zetterlund had a great opportunity on an Ottawa power play late in the period, but Stolarz was there to keep the score at 4-1 through 40 minutes. Greig got the Senators back within two exactly four minutes into the third on a delayed penalty, but Rielly made it 5-2 just 45 seconds later on a shot that hit a Senators player in front. Knies rounded out the scoring on another power play at 13:13 to put a bow on an impressive Game 1 performance from the Atlantic Division winners. DIFFERENT PERSPECTIVE Leafs defenceman Brandon Carlo's only up-close experience with Toronto head coach Craig Berube before being acquired ahead of the NHL trade deadline from Boston was watching the veteran bench boss lift the Cup when his St. Louis Blues beat the Bruins in Game 7 in 2019. "I only had that image of him in TD Garden beating us," Carlo said. "But there's a reason why that happened, and I think he's a big part of it. I've loved his coaching and just the way that he is so relatable." KEEPING FOCUS Every playoff matchup is under a microscope. The Battle of Ontario is a different animal. "There's pressure," said Ottawa head coach Travis Green, whose playing career included a stint with the Leafs in the early 2000s. "Especially in this series, there's outside pressure, there's outside noise. I remember it from playing here how much pressure there is, but that's the exciting part." "It was fun — a lot of fun," he added. "Hopefully it's fun again." This report by The Canadian Press was first published April 20, 2025.

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أمانة المدينة المنورة تنفذ مبادرة لتعزيز الوعي البيئي وتحسين جودة الحياة
أمانة المدينة المنورة تنفذ مبادرة لتعزيز الوعي البيئي وتحسين جودة الحياة

Saudi Salary

time21-04-2025

  • Saudi Salary

أمانة المدينة المنورة تنفذ مبادرة لتعزيز الوعي البيئي وتحسين جودة الحياة

TORONTO - Mitch Marner had a goal and two assists as the Toronto Maple Leafs dumped the Ottawa Senators 6-2 to take Game 1 of their first-round playoff series Sunday. William Nylander and John Tavares, with a goal and an assist each, Oliver Ekman-Larsson, Morgan Rielly and Matthew Knies also scored for Toronto. Anthony Stolarz made 31 saves. Auston Matthews had two assists. Drake Batherson and Ridly Greig replied for Ottawa, which got 18 stops from Linus Ullmark. The best-of-seven matchup continues Tuesday with Game 2 at Scotiabank Arena before shifting to the nation's capital. The series opener marked the first playoff Battle of Ontario showdown in exactly 21 years when Toronto bested Ottawa 4-1 in Game 7 on April 20, 2004. The teams went in opposite directions after that, with Ottawa enjoying a long run of success, including a trip to the 2007 Stanley Cup final, while Toronto made the post-season just once between 2006 and 2016. The Leafs, who downed the Senators four times in the playoffs across a five-year stretch in the early 2000s, returned to the NHL's spring dance in 2017 — the last time the Senators made the post-season — with a young core led by Matthews, Marner and Nylander. The Senators' rebuild, meanwhile, took a lot longer than expected, but finally gained traction in 2024-25. Ottawa captain Brady Tkachuk made his playoff debut Sunday in his seventh campaign. Toronto, which has one series victory in nine tries in the Matthews-Marner era, opened the scoring at 7:09 of the first period when Ekman-Larsson fired past Ullmark's glove to ignite the rink and send fans gathered outdoors in Maple Leaf Square into a frenzy. Senators defenceman Jake Sanderson cleared a puck off his goal line later in the period, but Marner took a stretch pass from Matthews moments later and roofed a shot at 12:18 for a 2-0 lead. Ottawa got on the board exactly four minutes later when Batherson was fastest to a rebound Stolarz was unable to smother. The Leafs goaltender stopped Tkachuk on a breakaway early in the second before the Leafs' power play when to work when Tavares collected his own rebound at 4:07 to make it 3-1. The Senators got in more penalty trouble later in the period, and Toronto struck three seconds into a two-man advantage when Nylander ripped his team's fourth goal on just 10 shots at 7:19. Fabian Zetterlund had a great opportunity on an Ottawa power play late in the period, but Stolarz was there to keep the score at 4-1 through 40 minutes. Greig got the Senators back within two exactly four minutes into the third on a delayed penalty, but Rielly made it 5-2 just 45 seconds later on a shot that hit a Senators player in front. Knies rounded out the scoring on another power play at 13:13 to put a bow on an impressive Game 1 performance from the Atlantic Division winners. DIFFERENT PERSPECTIVE Leafs defenceman Brandon Carlo's only up-close experience with Toronto head coach Craig Berube before being acquired ahead of the NHL trade deadline from Boston was watching the veteran bench boss lift the Cup when his St. Louis Blues beat the Bruins in Game 7 in 2019. "I only had that image of him in TD Garden beating us," Carlo said. "But there's a reason why that happened, and I think he's a big part of it. I've loved his coaching and just the way that he is so relatable." KEEPING FOCUS Every playoff matchup is under a microscope. The Battle of Ontario is a different animal. "There's pressure," said Ottawa head coach Travis Green, whose playing career included a stint with the Leafs in the early 2000s. "Especially in this series, there's outside pressure, there's outside noise. I remember it from playing here how much pressure there is, but that's the exciting part." "It was fun — a lot of fun," he added. "Hopefully it's fun again." This report by The Canadian Press was first published April 20, 2025.

Defending champion Panthers keep winning even without Tkachuk, Ekblad and before Marchand debuts
Defending champion Panthers keep winning even without Tkachuk, Ekblad and before Marchand debuts

Al Arabiya

time25-03-2025

  • Al Arabiya

Defending champion Panthers keep winning even without Tkachuk, Ekblad and before Marchand debuts

Matthew Tkachuk has not been on the ice for the Florida Panthers since early February. Aaron Ekblad is not eligible to play again until Game 3 of the first round of the postseason, and Brad Marchand still hasn't debuted with his new team since joining at the trade deadline. Those are big holes down the stretch, and yet they keep on rolling. The Panthers won nine of their first 14 games since the NHL season resumed after the 4 Nations Face-Off break and remain atop the Atlantic Division with 11 left to play. Seth Jones has fit in perfectly since they acquired him from Chicago, and the defending Stanley Cup champions look primed for another playoff run. 'That's the way it goes,' said Sam Bennett, whose 12 points over this span are tied with captain Aleksander Barkov for second-most on the roster behind Sam Reinhart (13). 'You're going to be down important guys at important times of the year. In the playoffs, especially, there's going to be times that you lose guys, and it's up to us to step up, and every guy's got to play a little harder, play a little bigger when we have those really important guys out of our lineup.' Tkachuk, Florida's heart-and-soul top forward, was injured playing for the US at the 4 Nations on Feb. 15. Ekblad, the top-four defenseman in his 11th season in the league, was suspended 20 games on March 10 for performance-enhancing drugs. And the team knew Marchand would not be available right away after getting hurt March 1 in what turned out to be his final game with the Boston Bruins. Coach Paul Maurice said the 36-year-old was skating hard and could be back as soon as the end of this week, if not early April. Even without those guys, the Panthers have allowed opponents to score just two goals a game during this stretch–tied for the fewest in the NHL. 'What separates them and why I think they're the best defending team in the league is they protect the net front and the slot better than anybody in the NHL, for my money,' Washington Capitals coach Spencer Carbery said before his team beat Florida on Saturday. 'And that's partly the way that their structure is, so the system, but also the commitment to win your 1-on-1 (matchups) and protect that area is elite, elite, elite.' Maurice thinks the Panthers have handled the situation really well, absent a clunker of a 3–1 defeat at Montreal. After losing to Washington, the affable coach, who has been behind the bench for over 2,000 NHL games, deadpanned that, despite a sub-.500 road trip, 'We won't fold the season.' Overall, he has been pleased. 'We've been pretty good,' Maurice said. 'We've played playoff games without Bennett, without Barkov–without a number of players. … We just have some experience with it.' Since hiring Maurice and trading for Tkachuk in the summer of 2023, Florida has won seven of eight playoff series while making back-to-back trips to the final and captured the first championship in franchise history. The hope is to do more of that after getting Marchand and Jones, who has been playing big minutes–over 25 a game–in Ekblad's absence. 'He's been great,' forward Jonah Gadjovich said of Jones. 'He's been great on the ice and off the ice. He's a great guy, obviously a great player as well, so we're so happy to have him and his leadership around the locker room.' Inside the locker room, Gadjovich said being without top players is no excuse, so he and his teammates are not treating it as such. 'Obviously we're down a lot of guys right now, and I think we're looking forward to having them back whenever they come back,' he said. 'Whoever's in the lineup just has to do their job. We all know how to play. We all know Panther hockey and what's expected of us.'

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