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May 26: Lowville Memorial Day parade and military honors

May 26: Lowville Memorial Day parade and military honors

Yahoo18-05-2025

Lowville American Legion's Memorial Day parade and military honors on Monday, May 26, at 11 a.m.
Wrath-laying ceremony to follow the parade with military honors. Refreshments served at the Lowville American Legion, Veterans of Foreign Wars and Marine Corps League.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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Mark Kastelic plans to use hard work to impress new Bruins coach Marco Sturm
Mark Kastelic plans to use hard work to impress new Bruins coach Marco Sturm

Boston Globe

timea day ago

  • Boston Globe

Mark Kastelic plans to use hard work to impress new Bruins coach Marco Sturm

Related : 'I think my mind-set will be the same as a year ago,' mused Kastelic, reached via telephone at his dessert home in recent days. 'Just try to earn the coach's trust, prove what kind of player I am and what I can bring to the team, try to earn everything out on the ice and just be hungry, as always.' Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up That attitude, particularly given roster needs in the wake of general manager Don Sweeney's wheelings and dealings around the March trade deadline, could lead to expanded playing opportunities for the hard-nosed 'Nasty Kasty.' Advertisement The strapping (6 feet 4 inches, 225 pounds), right-shot forward proved last season to be a strong, dependable, and valued force in the bottom six. Prior to suffering a late-season concussion, he showed impressive flashes of speed, abundant willingness to play a contact game, and an old-time Bruins penchant for fisticuffs (total: 10 bouts). The 2025-26 Bruins not only need Kastelic, they need more like him, from the top six on down. Advertisement One potential area of opportunity for Kastelic, one that neither Jim Montgomery nor Joe Sacco explored in his first season in Boston, could be the power play. Framed another way, after seeing how the Bruins struggled on the advantage last season, why not give the big beast a try? Tell him to park that frame at the top of the blue paint and don't come back till that red light starts flashing like a five-alarm fire. For the record, the power play would not be a novel role for Kastelic. He played a lot of net-front PP in his latter junior days with WHL Calgary. He scored 95 goals across his last two seasons with the Hitmen, a total beefed up by his work on the advantage. Granted, playing roles in junior often don't translate to the NHL, especially at the skill spots, but there's no denying he has the size, will, and reach to be, at the very least, a worthy candidate. Kastelic also would be the last guy to knock on Sturm's door and even so much as suggest it. 'I don't think I've ever asked for a lot of things in my life, and my career,' he said. 'I think my mind-set is just to earn everything I get, whether that's power-play time or penalty-kill time, or just more ice time. If something's not going well, or I want more, I just try to prove by my action that I want more, or just being early in the rink, just showing that I care. That's my approach. Advertisement 'Obviously, I'd love an opportunity on the power play, and I have that confidence in me — even in the junior and minor league level, I feel I had success at that. It's just a matter of getting an opportunity then hopefully have success.' Related : Now feeling '100 percent' recovered from lingering concussion symptoms that led to his season getting cut short, Kastelic remained in the Hub until just after Memorial Day. He worked out frequently at Warrior Arena, crediting Kevin Neeld (director of performance) and Tim Lebbossiere (assistant performance director) for their guidance, and enjoyed exploring the city, particularly around his Seaport neighborhood. Kastelic said he enjoyed frequent visits with Rip , his golden retriever, to a local dog park, though they had yet to bump into Seaport neighbor Charlie McAvoy and Otto , the defenseman's celebrity dog about town. Among the fittest members of the Black and Gold, Kastelic spends long hours training in the summer. Though he didn't share roster time with Zdeno Chara here, Kastelic has a Z-like work ethic. He said he often logs two off-ice workouts a day in the weight room and sometimes incorporates outdoor track work as a third session. 'So when September comes,' he said, 'and it's two sessions — one skating, one lifting — it feels easy by comparison.' Prior to leaving for junior hockey 10 years ago, his eyes fixed on making it to the top of the hockey hill, Kastelic often trained on 'water tower hill' near his former Desert Vista High School in Ahwatukee, Ariz. The big tower sits atop a sharp slope, he said, of some 200-250 meters. He would challenge himself with flat-out sprints to the top, or mark off different lengths for shorter bursts. Advertisement 'Something I've been doing for 15 years now,' he said. 'Every summer I go there to run, do sprints, and some longer runs. It's kind of a bonding thing, too, my mom and dad will come and it's kind of a family affair. We'll all work out together.' His mother, Susan , and father, ex-NHLer Ed Kastelic , the 61–year-old former Whaler, don't sign on the full sprint to the top. 'Uh, yeah,' said their ready-to-run-through-a-wall son. 'I mean, everyone has their own levels, but . . . ' In about 10 weeks, Kastelic will fly back to Boston for Year 2 as a Bruin, his first under a new deal to pay a total $4.7 million across the next three seasons. As for his role, and how a new coach envisions what he can do, perhaps there is another level here for Kastelic. Clean slate. Fresh start. For everyone. Kastelic celebrates a goal in October. John Tlumacki/Globe Staff TOP SHELF Mostly hits, some misses During Marco Sturm , Don Sweeney noted his urgency to upgrade the roster ahead of next season. It's a remote chance that the No.7 pick in the upcoming draft, the primo pick in the GM's possession, would provide immediate thump. Sweeney hinted he'd consider dealing it on or before June 27 as a means of bringing in a plug-and-play NHLer. Related : Worth noting, while there's no guarantee that top-10 picks mature into regular NHL contributors, your faithful puck chronicler reviewed 10 drafts (2009-18) and it showed all but 10 of the 100 top-10 picks across those draft classes did carve out NHL careers — and a large percentage will return for duty in 2025-26. Advertisement Some of those have reached their mid-30s and have played in 1,000-plus games, including five of the top six picks in 2009: John Tavares , Victor Hedman , Matt Duchene , Brayden Schenn , and Oliver Ekman-Larsson . Related : The No. 7 pick in 2009, Nazem Kadri , is on target to crest the 1,000-game mark in November, his fourth season with the Flames. It took the talented Kadri three seasons of back-and-forth tuneups in the AHL/NHL before he finally cracked the Maple Leafs' varsity full time at age 22. It takes most kids a couple of years or more before they are ready for the daily NHL grind. The top-10 picks who proved to be busts in those 10 aforementioned drafts: 2009 — Dallas (No. 8), Scott Glennie , C. Total NHL games: 1. 2010 — Atlanta (No. 8), Alexander Burmistrov , C Total games: 348. NY Rangers (No. 10), Dylan McIlrath , D; Total games: 92. 2012 — NY Islanders (No. 4), Griffin Reinhart , D; Total games: 37. Pittsburgh (No. 8), Derrick Pouliot , D; Total games: 226. Tampa Bay (No. 10), Slater Koekkoek , D; Total games: 186. 2014 — NY Islanders (No. 5), Michael Dal Colle , LW; Total games: 112. 2016 — Vancouver (No. 5), Olli Juolevi , D; Total games: 41. 2017 — NY Rangers (No. 7), Lias Andersson , C; Total games: 110. 2018 — NY Rangers (No. 9), Vitali Kravstov , RW; Total games: 64. Some rough rides there for the respective amateur scouting departments, particularly for the Blueshirts with their three swings and misses in 2010, 2017 and 18. Here in the Hub of Hockey, where the Bruins last muffed a top-10 pick in 2007 (No. 8, Zach Hamill , C, 20 games), there is an enduring penchant to play the what-if-they-drafted-this-guy-instead? game. Well, the Rangers in 2010 chose McIlrath ahead of Cam Fowler (12), Brock Nelson (30), and Justin Faulk (37). In 2017, they opted for Andersson instead of Martin Necas (12), Nick Suzuki (13) or Robert Thomas (20). And the following year, Kravstov was their guy over Evan Bouchard (10) or Noah Dobson (12). Advertisement Plug in any three of those alternatives in 2010, '17, and '18, and maybe the Rangers aren't about to embark on yet another major retool, directed by a new coaching staff topped by Mike Sullivan . Former top-10 pick John Tavares (left) has played in more than 1,000 games in his NHL career. Adrian Wyld/Associated Press ETC. Trade scenarios worth considering? To move up from the No. 7 spot in the draft, the Bruins likely would have to add an asset or two, be it by sacrificing someone on the varsity, or yield a prospect (roster talent already too thin), or a pick from, say, the second round (No. 51 or 61). None of those scenarios is likely unless the Islanders cared to part with No. 1 — about the same chance Alexei Zhamnov returns to Causeway in a role other than backup Zamboni driver. The more logical move would be for GM Don Sweeney to drop in the order, find a partner to swap first-round picks as a means to acquire a player, likely a winger, who can provide immediate offensive impact. The Sidney Crosby . Kreider, 34, is coming off his least-productive season (22-8–30) as a pro. He scored only six of those 22 goals on the man-advantage. He ain't what he was, but he was hurt a bunch last season and a return to the far east end of Comm. Ave. might have been a refreshing reboot. Would it have been enough, say, for the Bruins to flip their No. 7 to New York for the Rangers' No. 12 and also take Kreider (and his $6.5 million cap hit for two more seasons) off the Blueshirts' books? Possibly, judging by the modest accompanying assets that were exchanged in the Rangers-Ducks swap. The Ducks indeed absorbed the full retail price remaining on Kreider's deal. Conjuring potential trade scenarios around the flip of first-round picks amounts to throwing darts, but the process is worth examining, and it's particularly relevant for a Bruins team that watered down the roster's whiskey at the trade deadline. With Kreider gone, how about No. 7 to the Canucks for No. 15 and Scituate homeboy Conor Garland , on target to be an unrestricted free agent July 1, 2026? While not prolific, Garland (to be 30 in March) has proven to be an effective top-six winger (either wall). He also scored a career-best seven PPGs this past season while submitting an overall 19-31–50. Granted, not nearly as jazzy as acquiring Kreider, but also less risk. Garland is sort of a downsized version of Morgan Geekie . The only payroll commitment is Garland's his one year at $4.95 million. Finally, keep in mind that two clubs are holding two first-round picks, the Sharks (Nos. 2, 30) and Canadiens (Nos. 16, 17). With that kind of juice, they can shop, potentially work their way into three-way exchanges. The Sharks have a load of young talent, especially at forward. The Canadiens don't look like a good fit for a swap with the Bruins, and Boston-Montreal trades have been few over the years. Times, though, are different. It's the Original 32 now (at last count) and need can knock tradition right out of the rink. The Rangers moved Chris Kreider to the Ducks on Thursday, taking one potential trade target off the board for the Bruins. Phelan M. Ebenhack/Associated Press Being patient with Letourneau Dean Letourneau , the Bruins' first-round pick last June, was challenged to produce offense this past season as a Boston College freshman. The towering (6-7) pivot, who turned 19 in February, finished with a meager 0-3–3 line in 36 games with the Eagles. Ryan Nadeau , the Bruins' director of amateur scouting, said the club 'knew it was a huge jump' for Letourneau to go directly from high school hockey to Division 1 college competition, forcing him to face some players four or five years older and with far more NCAA experience. 'It's a little bit different path,' noted Nadeau. 'Even a lot of the kids his age who do go [to Division 1] have played at the National Team Development Program or in the USHL. So it was a big jump. We went in, anticipating there would be a lot adversity for Dean this year.' Letourneau, chosen No. 25, was the club's first Round 1 draft pick since 2021 ( Fabian Lysell ). The Kings chose 6-3 winger Liam Greentree (Windsor) at No. 26. He finished third in OHL scoring this past season with 119 points. 'We have a lot of patience with where these players are going and what their path looks like,' said Nadeau. 'It's a long process, and I know people do tend to lose patience, and it's easy to look around and look at certain other draft picks that are piling up numbers. But each draft pick has a different path and a different way to get to the end goal. I think Dean is in a good spot and is doing a lot of work to continue to evolve and grow his game.' Loose pucks Lias Andersson , after flaming out with the Rangers, spent three seasons (2020-23) in the Kings' organization and enjoyed by far his best pro season under Marco Sturm's tutelage at AHL Ontario in 2022-23. Andersson was the Reign's No. 2 scorer (31-28–59) that season, then chose to sign as a free agent with the Canadiens that summer. Now 26, he played this past season with Biel HC in Switzerland. No doubt a stretch, but it could be worth Sturm finding out if Andersson, a 6-1, left-shot pivot, is interested in another kick at the NHL can . . . Only 32 NHLers these last three seasons topped Garland's 244 games played. Two were Bruins: Charlie Coyle (247) and David Pastrnak (246) . . . Ex-Bruins captain Brad Marchand remains on target to hit the UFA market July 1 and is rumored to be seeking $8 million a year for 2-3 seasons. He has had a phenomenal postseason with the Panthers. But $16 million-$24 million for a guy who turned 37 last month? It might not be all that preposterous, largely because the cap, about to move to $95.5 million next season, projects to $113 million by 2027-28. A team could figure he's worth $24 million, while also calculating his game will be worn thin by age 40, yet keep his AAV tamped down by writing him to a seven-year deal. Based on $24 million, the cap hit over seven years would be some $3.4 million a year. Because Marchand is age 35-plus, the CBA does not allow him to be bought out. But if he can provide a team with the kind of jump for three years that he's provided the Panthers with these last three months, Years 4, 5, 6, and 7 will be little more than a sales tax. Kevin Paul Dupont can be reached at

Lynch: Oakmont mugged some top stars at the U.S. Open, but hope isn't lost. Well, for most
Lynch: Oakmont mugged some top stars at the U.S. Open, but hope isn't lost. Well, for most

Yahoo

time3 days ago

  • Yahoo

Lynch: Oakmont mugged some top stars at the U.S. Open, but hope isn't lost. Well, for most

OAKMONT, Pa. — Martin Luther King Jr. wasn't a sports psychologist but his advice on accepting finite disappointment while not losing infinite hope might have utility for competitors who step to the tee at Oakmont Country Club, even if it's awfully hard to observe that guidance until cards are signed about six hours later, often attesting to a total that falls short of aspirations. The numbers posted Thursday at the 125th U.S. Open—or in round one at any tournament, for that matter—count about as much as a presidential election poll on Memorial Day. There's a long road ahead with more potholes than the Pennsylvania turnpike that bisects this storied venue outside Pittsburgh. A couple of years back, Xander Schauffele and Rickie Fowler both shot 8-under-par 62s to lead at Los Angeles Country Club. By week's end, Fowler was 5 under and tied fifth while Schauffele was tied 10th, five worse than his first day total. Adam Hadwin led at 4 under after day one at Brookline in '22, which was three better than he finished. A year earlier, Russell Henley and Louis Oosthuizen were 4 under after 18. Oosthuizen ultimately finished second, but improved his total by only one stroke over the last three days. The '20 first round leader, Justin Thomas, lost 11 shots after this opening 65 at Winged Foot. Advertisement Which is all to say that the USGA won't even give J.J. Spaun a sleeve of logoed, limited flight golf balls for his opening 66 at Oakmont. The U.S. Open stands alone among major championships in that a player almost never claims to have gotten the most from their round, that they ran the gauntlet without squandered opportunities and dropped shots. Spaun can about say that though of his bogey-free score, a hugely impressive feat at Oakmont, which typically dispatches even highly skilled golfers with the briskness of a hitman who is double-parked. There were 434 rounds played in the last Open here in '16, and the only bogey-free one came Thursday from Dustin Johnson, who went on to win. Scores that would be dismissed as mediocre most weeks are worthy of popping champagne corks here. 'That's up there, up there in the top ten of any rounds that I've played,' said Bob MacIntyre, who shot an even-par 70. 'It is just so hard -- honestly, every shot you're on a knife edge.' Thomas Detry, another potential member of Europe's winning Ryder Cup squad in September, was almost giddy after a 69. 'I think I played some of the best golf that I've ever played,' he said. Advertisement Names customarily found at the glamorous end of the leaderboard in professional golf's weekly circus could only be located after a significant scroll as round one wore on at Oakmont. Rory McIlroy was solid for a dozen holes but stumbled late to a 74. That tied him with some guys who have previously figured out the U.S. Open (Matt Fitzpatrick, Wyndham Clark, Lucas Glover) and one who hasn't (Phil Mickelson). Shane Lowry has been in good form this season and had the 54-hole lead here in '16, but will need to work to play more than 36 this time after a 79. Bryson DeChambeau tried to bludgeon the course into submission, but tapped out with a 73. Cameron Smith was two worse, Patrick Cantlay three. As afternoon turned to evening, Johnson continued to play like a man who'd rather be fishing, Justin Thomas struggled to keep himself in shouting distance of the lead, and even world No. 1 Scottie Scheffler was performing the alien task of recording bogies on his scorecard. Even the feel-good tale from final qualifying—the former Oakmont caddie turned Indiana dentist, Matt Vogt—was extracted without novocaine with an 82. Only a handful of the aforementioned are really out of the reckoning at this Open. Johnson may have won at 4 under nine years back, but Angel Cabrera was 5 over the time before. Those who are a handful over par after round one might unknowingly be sitting on the winning score come day four (or five, if the weather turns as nasty as some fear). Schauffele dismissed that protectionist mindset after his opening 72. 'Not on Thursday, no. Way too soon,' he said. But many of his peers will be thinking in those terms. Thursday brought finite disappointment for some, but it is only Thursday, it is a U.S. Open, and it is Oakmont. So there is hope that—if not exactly infinite—is far from extinguished. This article originally appeared on Golfweek: Oakmont mugged some top stars in first round US Open but hope not lost

Lynch: Oakmont mugged some top stars at the U.S. Open, but hope isn't lost. Well, for most
Lynch: Oakmont mugged some top stars at the U.S. Open, but hope isn't lost. Well, for most

USA Today

time3 days ago

  • USA Today

Lynch: Oakmont mugged some top stars at the U.S. Open, but hope isn't lost. Well, for most

Lynch: Oakmont mugged some top stars at the U.S. Open, but hope isn't lost. Well, for most OAKMONT, Pa. — Martin Luther King Jr. wasn't a sports psychologist but his advice on accepting finite disappointment while not losing infinite hope might have utility for competitors who step to the tee at Oakmont Country Club, even if it's awfully hard to observe that guidance until cards are signed about six hours later, often attesting to a total that falls short of aspirations. The numbers posted Thursday at the 125th U.S. Open—or in round one at any tournament, for that matter—count about as much as a presidential election poll on Memorial Day. There's a long road ahead with more potholes than the Pennsylvania turnpike that bisects this storied venue outside Pittsburgh. A couple of years back, Xander Schauffele and Rickie Fowler both shot 8-under-par 62s to lead at Los Angeles Country Club. By week's end, Fowler was 5 under and tied fifth while Schauffele was tied 10th, five worse than his first day total. Adam Hadwin led at 4 under after day one at Brookline in '22, which was three better than he finished. A year earlier, Russell Henley and Louis Oosthuizen were 4 under after 18. Oosthuizen ultimately finished second, but improved his total by only one stroke over the last three days. The '20 first round leader, Justin Thomas, lost 11 shots after this opening 65 at Winged Foot. Which is all to say that the USGA won't even give J.J. Spaun a sleeve of logoed, limited flight golf balls for his opening 66 at Oakmont. The U.S. Open stands alone among major championships in that a player almost never claims to have gotten the most from their round, that they ran the gauntlet without squandered opportunities and dropped shots. Spaun can about say that though of his bogey-free score, a hugely impressive feat at Oakmont, which typically dispatches even highly skilled golfers with the briskness of a hitman who is double-parked. There were 434 rounds played in the last Open here in '16, and the only bogey-free one came Thursday from Dustin Johnson, who went on to win. Scores that would be dismissed as mediocre most weeks are worthy of popping champagne corks here. 'That's up there, up there in the top ten of any rounds that I've played,' said Bob MacIntyre, who shot an even-par 70. 'It is just so hard -- honestly, every shot you're on a knife edge.' Thomas Detry, another potential member of Europe's winning Ryder Cup squad in September, was almost giddy after a 69. 'I think I played some of the best golf that I've ever played,' he said. Names customarily found at the glamorous end of the leaderboard in professional golf's weekly circus could only be located after a significant scroll as round one wore on at Oakmont. Rory McIlroy was solid for a dozen holes but stumbled late to a 74. That tied him with some guys who have previously figured out the U.S. Open (Matt Fitzpatrick, Wyndham Clark, Lucas Glover) and one who hasn't (Phil Mickelson). Shane Lowry has been in good form this season and had the 54-hole lead here in '16, but will need to work to play more than 36 this time after a 79. Bryson DeChambeau tried to bludgeon the course into submission, but tapped out with a 73. Cameron Smith was two worse, Patrick Cantlay three. As afternoon turned to evening, Johnson continued to play like a man who'd rather be fishing, Justin Thomas struggled to keep himself in shouting distance of the lead, and even world No. 1 Scottie Scheffler was performing the alien task of recording bogies on his scorecard. Even the feel-good tale from final qualifying—the former Oakmont caddie turned Indiana dentist, Matt Vogt—was extracted without novocaine with an 82. Only a handful of the aforementioned are really out of the reckoning at this Open. Johnson may have won at 4 under nine years back, but Angel Cabrera was 5 over the time before. Those who are a handful over par after round one might unknowingly be sitting on the winning score come day four (or five, if the weather turns as nasty as some fear). Schauffele dismissed that protectionist mindset after his opening 72. 'Not on Thursday, no. Way too soon,' he said. But many of his peers will be thinking in those terms. Thursday brought finite disappointment for some, but it is only Thursday, it is a U.S. Open, and it is Oakmont. So there is hope that—if not exactly infinite—is far from extinguished.

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