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Sports scoreboard for Monday, May 12, 2025

Sports scoreboard for Monday, May 12, 2025

Monday's Scoreboard
NHL
Second Round
Edmonton 3 Vegas 0
(Edmonton leads best-of-seven series 3-1)
Carolina 5 Washington 2
(Carolina leads best-of-seven series 3-1)

World Hockey Championship
Preliminary Round
At Stockholm, Sweden
Austria 3 Slovakia 2 (SO)
Sweden 2 Finland 1
At Herning, Denmark
Switzerland 3 United States 0
Czechia 7 Denmark 2

NBA
Conference Semifinals
New York 121 Boston 113
(New York leads best-of-seven series 3-1)
Minnesota 117 Golden State 110
(Minnesota leads best-of-seven series 3-1)

MLB
American League
Detroit 14 Boston 2
Kansas City 7 Houston 5
N.Y. Yankees 11 Seattle 5
National League
St. Louis 3 Philadelphia 2
N.Y. Mets 4 Pittsburgh 3
Atlanta 4 Washington 3
Chicago Cubs 5 Miami 2
Arizona 2 San Francisco 1
Interleague
Cleveland 5 Milwaukee 0
L.A. Angels 9 San Diego 5
Texas 2 Colorado 1

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‘Forget about the past': Fans weigh in on criticism of Wayne Gretzky over Trump ties
‘Forget about the past': Fans weigh in on criticism of Wayne Gretzky over Trump ties

CTV News

time2 hours ago

  • CTV News

‘Forget about the past': Fans weigh in on criticism of Wayne Gretzky over Trump ties

Former NHL player Wayne Gretzky, right, and his wife Janet Jones arrive before the 60th Presidential Inauguration in the Rotunda of the U.S. Capitol in Washington, Monday, Jan. 20, 2025. (Kevin Lamarque/Pool Photo via AP) EDMONTON — It wasn't long ago that some Canadians were up in arms about hockey legend Wayne Gretzky's ties to U.S. President Donald Trump's administration. But as the Edmonton Oilers skate their way through the Stanley Cup final, hockey fans say it's time to let bygones be bygones. 'I don't think it matters,' said Craig Hiscock, a longtime Oilers fan, as he posed Wednesday for a photo with a statue of Gretzky outside Rogers Place in Edmonton ahead of Game 1. 'Let's forget about the past. What he did here was a lot for the city, a lot for hockey.' The statue was vandalized in March and smeared with what appeared to be and strongly smelled like feces. On Wednesday, a hip-high metal fence was up around the bronze figure. An online petition started in February calling for a new name for Wayne Gretzky Drive also has about 14,000 signatures. Gretzky, the Ontario-born hockey star who led the Oilers to four Stanley Cup victories in the 1980s, recently drew the ire of Canadians for his public support of Trump, who has repeatedly expressed his desire for Canada to join the U.S and become its 51st state. The Great One was photographed with Trump several times at the president's Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida. In January, Gretzky and his wife, Janet, attended Trump's inauguration in Washington. Frustrations grew after he appeared as honorary captain for Canada at the 4 Nations Face-Off final with the United States. Video footage showed him giving the U.S. team a thumbs-up as he walked to the ice. Gretzky also congratulated Dallas Stars players in their locker room last month, after they advanced to the Western Conference final. The Oilers eliminated the Stars in five games and now have one win against the Florida Panthers in the Cup final. Game 2 is Friday night. Brian Foulken, who became a fan during the Gretzky era and collects Oilers merchandise, said Gretzky's accomplishments, including multiple scoring records that stand to this day, still resonate with people. As for the criticism, Foulken said people are going to have their own opinions. 'At the end of the day, (Gretzky) played here for a long time. The diehard Oilers (fans), we love him,' he said outside the arena before Game 1. 'He's an amazing player.' Foulken added that current Oilers captain Connor McDavid is inching closer to Gretzky-level greatness. Darren Rogers, a Gretzky fan since the Oilers' inception into the NHL in 1979, said Gretzky's leadership led the team to win multiple Stanley Cups. Politics aside, that accomplishment should matter more to people in the grand scheme of things, Rogers said. Gretzky was in Edmonton for Wednesday's game. And as storied as Gretzky is to the Oilers franchise, he appeared to still be catching up to this new generation's fan base. On an American sports network, he sat side by side with commentators, as they discussed the Oilers' new tradition of playing the pop song 'Pink Pony Club.' Players have been tight-lipped about the significance of the Chappell Roan hit, typically heard after the team plays 'La Bamba' by Los Lobos following a win. 'Pink Pony — is that a band or is that a song?' the 64-year-old Gretzky asked TNT Sports co-host Paul Bissonnette following the Oilers' 4-3 overtime victory in Game 1. '(Roan) sings a song, 'Pink Pony Club,' and it's famous. It's on the radio,' Bissonnette answered. 'It's the new generation, Wayne,' he added. Gretzky appeared disappointed to learn Roan isn't Canadian, but still seemed eager to check out the song. 'I gotta get that (as) my ringtone,' Gretzky said. This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 6, 2025. Aaron Sousa, The Canadian Press

Oilers better prepared for Panthers' physical play in this year's final: Knoblauch
Oilers better prepared for Panthers' physical play in this year's final: Knoblauch

CTV News

time6 hours ago

  • CTV News

Oilers better prepared for Panthers' physical play in this year's final: Knoblauch

Florida Panthers' Sam Bennett (9) checks Edmonton Oilers' Viktor Arvidsson (33) during the first period in Game 1 of the NHL Stanley Cup final in Edmonton, Wednesday, June 4, 2025. Kris Knoblauch pushed back at the notion his team had been bullied in last year's Stanley Cup final. The Edmonton Oilers head coach also agreed the group is better suited to face the Florida Panthers some 11 1/2 months later. 'We're more physical team,' he said. 'We're bigger, we're stronger.' The Oilers showed that in Game 1 of the 2025 title series. They have no intention of backing down. Edmonton delivered punishing blows to Florida's defence in Wednesday's 4-3 overtime victory, including a number of big hits on Panthers blueliner Aaron Ekblad, who played more than 33 minutes to top all skaters. Knoblauch said his team 'accepted that challenge and the physicality' in last June's seven-game Cup loss to the Panthers. The reality, however, is the Oilers are more physically ready to face the same opponent. Edmonton is minus winger Zach Hyman (dislocated wrist), but has a trainers' room that's otherwise largely unoccupied. Bruising winger Evander Kane sat out the final five games of the 2024 final before missing the entire regular-season following abdominal and knee surgeries. The Oilers also added size and toughness up front with the acquisitions of Trent Frederic, Vasily Podkolzin and Kasperi Kapanen. The hits sat at 51-51 when Leon Draisaitl ended the opener on an OT power play, but Knoblauch said it's about more than just making life uncomfortable against an opponent that does it better than most. 'It's important that not only you're finishing your checks, you have that physical presence, but winning a lot of battles,' he said. 'The bigger you are, typically you're stronger, you're winning more pucks.' Kane said his group has shown in this post-season it's comfortable with any style of game that's required. The Panthers, known for bending the rules in their favour with hockey's dark arts alongside what can be characterized as an 'accidentally-on-purpose approach' in certain moments, weren't able to nudge the Oilers off their axis Wednesday. 'We didn't really get too much into the after-the-whistle stuff,' Kane said. 'We kept it between the whistles. We're a team that has proven we're going to play hard throughout the entire playoffs, and just because we're playing Florida, that's not going to change.' Oilers defenceman Darnell Nurse said a combination of health and roster construction means the Panthers are facing a different animal. 'We're a team built for a lot of the physical edge,' he said. 'Not afraid of that. (We're) playing a really, really good opponent that brings up the physicality each night, and we have to match that.' The gamesmanship also Florida brings — accented by forwards Matthew Tkachuk and Sam Bennett — is something Edmonton knows will be coming. 'There are going to be those moments where the edge kind of takes over,' Nurse said. 'Our group, it's the type and style of play that we're very comfortable play with. 'And obviously they are too.' Rivalry renewed Kane and Tkachuk battled it out in the 2022 Western Conference final when the latter was still a member of the Calgary Flames. Kane's injury issues last year meant the matchup that usually includes plenty of on-ice banter didn't really feature in Florida's Cup win. That looks set to change after the pair went at it almost every time they were in the same vicinity in Game 1. Kane was asked what it's like to play against Tkachuk. 'Like another player,' he said. 'Just likes to talk a little bit more.' Taking it in Oilers defenceman Jake Walman is enjoying his first true playoff experience after getting acquired from the San Jose Sharks ahead of the NHL trade deadline. 'It lived up to the hype,' he said. 'I wouldn't want to be doing it with any other group of guys.' The 29-year-old from Toronto played more than 23 minutes Wednesday, blocked a game-high four shots, and directed 12 pucks on goal. 'Every game is going to be a challenge,' Walman said. 'I watched a lot last year when these (teams) were playing. I think we're playing against a better Florida team than they did last year.' This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 5, 2025. Joshua Clipperton, The Canadian Press

'Don't poke the bear': Did Oilers ace d-man go too far taunting Panthers player?
'Don't poke the bear': Did Oilers ace d-man go too far taunting Panthers player?

Edmonton Journal

time8 hours ago

  • Edmonton Journal

'Don't poke the bear': Did Oilers ace d-man go too far taunting Panthers player?

Article content After Tomas Nosek took the delay of game penalty near the end of overtime, Jake Walman let him know about it 😬 — B/R Open Ice (@BR_OpenIce) June 5, 2025 Was Walman's taunting of Nosek too much? That's how former Oilers d-man and Spittin' Chiclets podcaster Ryan Whitney saw it. 'He's played incredible but I didn't like this,' Whitney said of Walman. 'Take the PP and move on. Don't need to be testing hockey gods/karma with that.' Added Bill Horosz of the On the Prowl: Florida Panthers Den podcast, 'Don't poke the bear. Too late you already did.' Others saw Walman's action in a different light. On his 32 Thoughts podcast, Sporsnet's Elliotte Friedman noted Walman and perhaps also Oilers d-man John Klingberg had provoked Nosek. 'They made sure to get into Nosek's space on the way to the penalty box,' Friedman said, noting that this was something players on Toronto and Carolina hadn't done in the playoffs, never firing back as the bully boys of Florida kicked sand at them. But Edmonton is a different beast, Friedman said. 'Edmonton is making a point of saying, 'Normally, you guys are the ones who set the physical and verbal tone. You get others you get under other skin. We're coming at you with this too.' They're saying, 'We're not letting Florida do all the talking. We're doing some of the talking here too.' '

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