
Canadiens D Lane Hutson claims Calder Trophy
June 10 - Montreal Canadiens defenseman Lane Hutson was named the winner of the Calder Memorial Trophy on Tuesday.
The trophy is awarded annually "to the player selected as the most proficient in his first year of competition in the National Hockey League." The award is voted on by the Professional Hockey Writers Association.
Hutson earned 165 of a possible 191 first-place votes and totaled 1,832 points, finishing well ahead of Calgary Flames goaltender Dustin Wolf (15, 1,169) and San Jose Sharks center Macklin Celebrini (11, 1,104).
The 21-year-old Hutson received the trophy at a surprise party his family had organized to celebrate his selection as a finalist.
Hutson led all rookies with 66 points, and his 60 assists tied the single-season NHL record for most by a rookie defenseman alongside Larry Murphy.
Celebrini, 18, played 70 games and scored 25 goals -- second among rookies behind the Philadelphia Flyers' Matvei Michkov -- and his 63 points tied with Michkov for second.
Wolf, 24, was 29-16-8 with a 2.64 goals-against average, .910 save percentage and three shutouts for the Flames, who selected him in the seventh round of the 2019 draft.
--Field Level Media
Hashtags

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


Daily Mail
22 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
BREAKING NEWS Knicks dealt ANOTHER blow in head-coach search as Hawks block interview with Atlanta's Quin Snyder
Add Quin Snyder to the list of NBA coaches the New York Knicks aren't allowed to speak with. ESPN's Shams Charania is reporting the Knicks requested permission to speak with the Atlanta Hawks head coach about their own vacant head-coaching position, only for the Hawks to firmly deny permission. Since firing Tom Thibodeau after the team's most successful season in a quarter century, the Knicks have also been denied permission to speak with Houston Rockets head coach Ime Udoka and the Dallas Mavericks ' Jason Kidd. MORE TO FOLLOW...


Daily Mail
44 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
USGA chief insists the 'juice is not worth the squeeze' of changing equipment testing despite Rory McIlroy driver debacle
The Rory McIlroy driver debacle will not lead to a change in equipment testing, according to the United States Golf Association. The USGA, which carries out the pre-tournament checks, had faced calls from Scottie Scheffler and Xander Schauffele to overhaul their procedures last month. Scheffler and McIlroy were both forced to change a non-conforming driver in the build up to the championship, after each was found to have become too springy, and the world No 1 went on to argue against the current method of randomly selecting only a third of each field for testing. Scheffler's view was that the entire field should have their equipment checked if the measure was to be considered fair. However, USGA chief Mike Whan, whose organisation is running this week's US Open, has dismissed that possibility, saying that the nature of any advantage and the prevalence of failures were both too small to justify. 'With what we're seeing today, it would be a greater interruption,' Whan said. 'The juice wouldn't be worth the squeeze.' He added: 'If I'm being honest with you, I think in terms of what happened at the PGA Championship, it made us more committed to not wanting to have this be the topic of the town because I think when you talked about a rules violation or somebody who's playing with a hot driver, that gets so much more sensational than the reality. 'I can tell you as a rules body, if we had concern about this incredible advantage, we would change the degree in which we test. 'But we think the testing that we're doing now is commensurate with the size of both the issue and the size of the reality of the issue. 'I know we tested this week. I couldn't tell you if we had failures, and if so, what those failures were at the time. 'I know that if we saw a trend that was alarming in terms of either how many or how far they were moving beyond (the permissible limit), we would change the way we approach it.'


BBC News
an hour ago
- BBC News
Club World Cup officials must be 'braver'
International referees' chief Pierluigi Collina has told officials to be "braver" with their offside decisions at the Club World Cup despite the introduction of speeded up semi-automated offside (SAO) enhanced SAO is programmed to notify assistant referees immediately with an 'offside, offside' message in their ear when a player who is more than 10cm offside touches the is quicker than the current SAO technology, which has to take into account actual positions before making a was only introduced into the Premier League on 12 April, before which the video assistant referee (VAR) made all offside is one of a number of initiatives that will be used at the Club World Cup in the United States, which starts on Sunday. Others include:Referees wearing body cams that allow live pictures to be shown immediately before the eight-second countdown for goalkeepers to release the making in-stadium announcements to explain VAR decisions, and the VAR pictures being shown to fans in real time inside the ground. The introduction of the enhanced SAO comes a month after Nottingham Forest striker Taiwo Awoniyi suffered a serious abdominal injury after crashing into a post during their Premier League draw against had been chasing the ball despite a clear offside that had not been the aftermath, Awoniyi's team-mate Ola Aina said the injury "would never have happened" had the assistant referee raised their flag enhanced element of SAO will not work in situations where a player who doesn't play the ball is offside, or in a crowded situation, so Collina says officials need the courage of their convictions."Since the very beginning we have told the assistant referee 'in case of doubt, keep the flag down'," said Collina, the Italian World Cup final referee who is now chairman of world governing body Fifa's referees' committee."If you raise the flag, it kills everything, including the possibility that the VAR can help you."But we are aware this has led to some consequences."Probably the assistant referees went a bit far. What was a doubt became bigger and bigger and bigger. There are possible offside incidents where top assistant referees, as there are in many competitions around the world, would not have this doubt."Despite the introduction of this [technology] we have also reminded our assistant referees to be a bit braver and more courageous in putting the flag up when the offside is offside. Two metres offside cannot lead to a doubt." Countdown for goalkeepers A new plan to speed up the game will be implemented both at the Club World Cup and the European Under-21 Championship, in which referees will only allow goalkeepers eight seconds to release the time will start once the goalkeeper has control of the ball. After three seconds, the referee will raise his hand in the air and count down from five to notify the goalkeeper he has to release. If he fails, the attacking side will be awarded a believes it will largely be a preventative measure and said a corner had been awarded twice in 160 games when it was trialled in South he feels it necessary given the amount of time some goalkeepers are taking to release the ball."The referees should be flexible," he said. "If a goalkeeper has the ball for 8.1 seconds it is not necessarily a corner."But we have had a lot of instances of goalkeepers keeping the ball for 25 seconds. There is nothing entertaining about that." VAR decisions explained but discussions won't be heard As in previous Fifa tournaments, the on-pitch referee will communicate VAR decisions and the reasons for them to supporters inside the the first time, fans at the match will be able to see the replays the officials are being there will still be no broadcast of the actual discussions taking place in the VAR is urging patience to those who cannot understand why football is not yet implementing something commonplace in other sports like rugby, cricket and all the major American sports."I cannot tell you if something more might be added in the future," he said. "But we need to do it when we are sure this will not affect the decision-making process."When they are doing their job, which is very difficult, the VARs and the referees are under pressure. Knowing everyone is listening may add some pressure."We are a work in process. We have not to forget that although VAR feels as though it has existed forever, the first match with it was 2016."We have to be patient." Live images from bodycams - but only before game Fifa have pledged to show live images from the referees' bodycams - which will be attached to their earpieces - before the game, both in the tunnel and during the warm-up and coin there will be no live images shown during the game and anything controversial or in bad taste, such as a player suffering a nasty injury, will not the images would be available to VAR, Collina cannot see how a camera next to a referee's eye would detect something the official had it will do, Fifa believe, is show the game from a unique vantage point and "enhance the storytelling".To that end, it is an entertainment concept."That is clear," said Collina.