
‘Just leave it all out there'
The Winnipeg Jets are fighting for their playoff lives on Thursday night inside Canada Life Centre. But head coach Scott Arniel said the wildfire situation in various parts of the province brings some much-needed perspective their on-ice predicament.
'This is hockey. This is sport. That's real life,' Arniel said following the morning skate.
'It's getting close to home for all of us. There's a lot of people that are in tough situations right now. You pray for the safety for all of those people, but also for our first responders, our firefighters, everybody that's in the middle of that.'
JOHN WOODS / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES
Winnipeg Jets head coach Scott Arniel said Thursday he hopes the team can get a win tonight, especially as a morale boost for those affected by the wildfires.
JOHN WOODS / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES
Winnipeg Jets head coach Scott Arniel said Thursday he hopes the team can get a win tonight, especially as a morale boost for those affected by the wildfires.
Arniel, whose ties to this community run all the way back to the early 1980s and the 1.0 Jets era, said the organization is thinking of those on the front lines and everyone potentially in harm's way.
'We hope they're safe and doing what they have to do to protect everybody. It is unfortunate and we've seen it across this country there the last few years,' he said, adding the Jets would go out and try to do their part by giving people something to cheer about.
'At the end of the day, hopefully we can go out and win a hockey game for those people,' said Arniel. 'We know that they're all a part of — they may not be in the building (Thursday night) but they are a part of Manitoba and Winnipeg and they're behind the Jets.'
Is there such a thing as a first-place curse?
That seems to be the case this spring, where all four division champions were in danger of having their Stanley Cup dreams shattered in the second round of the playoffs.
The Pacific Division winning Vegas Golden Knights were eliminated on Wednesday night in five games courtesy of the third-place Edmonton Oilers.
The Jets (Central) and Washington Capitals (Metropolitan) both entered play Thursday trailing 3-1 in their best-of-seven series to the second-place teams in their divisions (Dallas Stars and the Carolina Hurricanes), needing three straight wins to keep playing.
And the top team in the Atlantic during the regular-season, the Toronto Maple Leafs, must win two straight elimination games starting Friday night against the third-place Florida Panthers.
What gives?
'When you get in the playoffs, all that stuff — other than having home ice — kind of goes out the window. Whatever team is up and running and playing their game consistently for five, six, seven games, however long it takes, that's what it's about at this time of year,' said Arniel.
'And there's a different brand of hockey that you often hear guys talk about. You see it some nights through the 82 games, but during the playoffs it's another animal. It's a whole different type of hockey. And the teams that can play it consistently the most are the ones who usually are standing at the end.'
Winnipeg, Washington, Vegas and Toronto finished first, second, third and fourth-overall in the NHL standings. Yet none of them may ultimately escape the round of eight.
Luke Schenn has been here before. Thursday night will be the 10th playoff elimination game he's played over the course of his career.
The two-time Stanley Cup champion had gone 5-4 in those situations, including the dramatic Game 7 triumph earlier this month against St. Louis.
FRED GREENSLADE / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES
Winnipeg Jets' Luke Schenn (right) said Thursday his little brother, St. Louis Blues' Brayden Schenn (left), is rooting for the Jets.
FRED GREENSLADE / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES
Winnipeg Jets' Luke Schenn (right) said Thursday his little brother, St. Louis Blues' Brayden Schenn (left), is rooting for the Jets.
So what advice did the oldest, most experienced player on the Jets have for his teammates?
'It's one game at a time really, that's all it comes down to,' Schenn said prior to the pivotal puck drop in downtown Winnipeg.
'Obviously you kind of learn some things throughout the series, make adjustments, and at the end of the day you play for the guy in the room next to you and just leave it all out there. You don't want to hesitate in a game like this, you want to be on your toes, be aggressive, and just it's exciting. These are the games that are exciting, that you play for.'
There have been 32 teams to rally from 3-1 deficits to win a series, which equates to about a nine per cent chance. Schenn, who hasn't been on any of those teams, said the key is to not look too far ahead.
'You look at it and you obviously think it's no question a tough task, especially a team that is playing pretty well right now,' he said. 'You kind of dumb it down a little bit almost and just kind of think of one thing at a time. There's no point thinking about the next one.'
The Los Angeles Kings are the last Stanley Cup champions to erase a 3-1 deficit on their way to hockey history, doing so in 2014 in the first round against the San Jose Sharks. They actually went a step further, as they originally trailed 3-0 before winning four straight contests.
'If you want to win the ultimate prize, there's tons of adversity and that's why it's so hard to win,' said Schenn, pointing to what the Jets already did against the Blues.
The trade deadline addition was held out of the Winnipeg lineup in Game 3 in Dallas but was back for Games 4 and 5. It sure sounds like that may have been injury-related rather than performance-related.
'There are some other things, I guess, just going on behind the scenes,' said Schenn. 'Different changes for different reasons and, at the end of the day, I'll keep that between what's going on behind closed doors.'
Schenn has been speaking daily with younger brother, Brayden, who is the captain of the St. Louis team which took Winnipeg to the limit in the first round. Brayden is now skating with Team Canada at the World Championships currently being held in Sweden and Denmark.
'I talked to him (Thursday) morning, he's having a good time over there and just obviously paying attention. Obviously he's rooting for the Jets now, there's no question about that,' said Schenn.
mike.mcintyre@freepress.mb.ca
X and Bluesky: @mikemcintyrewpg
Mike McIntyreReporter
Mike McIntyre is a sports reporter whose primary role is covering the Winnipeg Jets. After graduating from the Creative Communications program at Red River College in 1995, he spent two years gaining experience at the Winnipeg Sun before joining the Free Press in 1997, where he served on the crime and justice beat until 2016. Read more about Mike.
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Vancouver Sun
23 minutes ago
- Vancouver Sun
Why is the NHL tilted in Florida's favour? Lightning, Panthers hold six-year run on Eastern Conference dominance
Coral Gables, Fla. — It's Sunday night, and the arena parking lot is filled with people lugging hockey bags towards the main doors. But we're not in a small town in Canada. We're in Coral Gables, Fla., where hockey leagues are very much alive and well at the Panthers IceDen. There are three games going on three sheets of ice. But one stands out — the Panthers Warriors are on the wrong end of a 10-3 drubbing, but the team is notable. Its players are all veterans or people who support American vets, and the program is supported by the NHL club. 'It's the hardest sport I've ever played in my life,' said Ryan Teems, a 32-year-old U.S. army veteran. Start your day with a roundup of B.C.-focused news and opinion. By signing up you consent to receive the above newsletter from Postmedia Network Inc. A welcome email is on its way. If you don't see it, please check your junk folder. The next issue of Sunrise will soon be in your inbox. Please try again Interested in more newsletters? Browse here. Three years ago, Teems didn't even know how to properly tie up skates. But, now, he's playing regularly. 'I got out of the army in 2020 and somebody took me to a hockey game,' said Teems, who spent six years in the infantry. 'I'd never been to one. I watched it and fell in love. Then I bought Panthers' season tickets. And then I was going to the bathroom at one of the games, and right above the urinal, it said, $500 to learn to play, full equipment and all that. So that's when I got into it.' That learn to play clinic was sponsored by the Panthers. In 1998, the Panthers moved to what's now known as the Amerant Bank Arena in Sunrise, Fla., about a 40-minute ride on the expressway from Miami, if the traffic goes your way. It is the definition of a suburban arena, close to the freeway and surrounded by thousands of parking stalls. The team relocated its training facility to nearby Coral Gables, taking what was a two-sheet community hockey facility, adding a third rink with a dressing room, and re-christening it as the Panthers IceDen. But that wasn't enough. In 2023, construction was completed on a new $65-million dedicated Panthers practice facility in Fort Lauderdale. The team and municipal officials put together a plan for an arena with two ice sheets. The adjoining War Memorial Auditorium was renovated. It's got a food court, stage, and the Panthers even held their 2024 Stanley Cup ring ceremony there. It has a team shop, and Stanley Cup parties are hosted there. Most of the players live close to the IcePlex, and many ride bikes or Vespas to practice. The team also has golf carts on standby for players if they want to zip home and back. And like the IceDen, the IcePlex is open for community hockey and skating. Panthers' general manager Bill Zito has heard the complaints. He's heard sniping from different corners of the league, that Florida teams have unfair advantages over their NHL counterparts. The 2025 Cup final between the Panthers and Oilers marks the sixth consecutive season that a Sunshine State-based team has won the Eastern Conference. The Tampa Bay Lightning took three in a row, and now it's the Panthers' turn to threepeat in the East . These two are divisional rivals to the Montreal Canadiens, Ottawa Senators and Toronto Maple Leafs, so this is what these Canadian franchises are fighting, year after year. The rub? The fact that Florida has no state income tax. But that's not all. There's no inheritance tax, nor does Florida collect taxes on personal investments in stocks, bonds, mutual funds and the like. Compare that to Quebec, where the provincial tax rate is 25.75 per cent on those making $129,590 a year or more. Or Alberta, where it is 15 per cent on taxable income over $362,961 a year. Tax is a complicated thing for professional athletes. They pay based on where they play. So, for home games, the Lightning and Panthers players pay no state tax. But, if the Panthers are in Montreal for a day to play the Canadiens, they pay Quebec tax based on one day of their salaries. Still, for the majority of the season, Florida-based players are in the state and take advantage of a tax regime that is favourable. In fact, NHL deputy commissioner Bill Daly admitted ahead of Game 1 of the Stanley Cup Final that noise has been made to make the tax disparities an issue for the next collective bargaining agreement. The current CBA expires at the end of next season . But Daly said there is very little the league can do to mitigate tax differences. 'Certainly it's an issue that some of our franchises have raised as a concern,' said Daly. 'What I'd say at this point is that we don't share the level of concern that they have, and what I'd say on top of that is that these imbalances have existed forever. There's nothing new here.' Zito said the tax issue is 'marginal at best.' That's not to say that Zito doesn't think the Panthers have a competitive advantage, but it has to do with the spending to make the team's facilities the class of the NHL, and not to be afraid to spend on players in order to be a contender year in, year out. He said when management asked owner Vincent Viola to greenlight a new practice facility, it was done. 'And it's beautiful, and it allows us the flexibility to try to do the things that we think are necessary to try to win and to try to have an excellent organization,' said Zito. 'I think the players feed off it. They know that if the chicken isn't right, we're going to get a new chicken. And it all sort of transcends all that we do. It sounds silly, but it's true and it's real.' It has to be noted that Viola is not a stranger to the courts. In 2017, the Panthers reached a confidential settlement with Raphael Estevez, who once wore the Stanley C. Panther mascot costume. He sued for wrongful dismissal and claimed more than 1,000 hours of unpaid overtime. He claimed the job damaged his mental health. Viola and his son, Michael, are also named in class-action lawsuit launched by an iron workers' pension fund. It is alleged that the Violas were part of a scheme to buy back US$400 million out of the company they control, Virtu Financial, and steering it away from other investors. In 2023, the Securities and Exchange Commission launched legal proceedings against Virtu Financial and its subsidiary, Virtu Americas. The allegations were that Virtu Americas did not adequately protect information about its customers and their trades. 'Virtu Americas' failure to safeguard this information created significant risk that its proprietary traders could misuse it or share it outside Virtu Americas,' states the SEC's complaint. The allegations of security issues with Virtu have also led to a class-action lawsuit. Virtu pleaded to dismiss that case earlier this month. In 2017, U.S. President Donald Trump nominated Viola to be his Secretary of the Army, but the Panthers' owner later pulled himself out of the running for the job. There is an area where Florida's tax advantage is having an indirect effect on the hockey culture in the state. Since the COVID-19 pandemic got more people working from home, Florida's population has boomed. It is to the United States what Alberta is to Canada, the hotspot for in-country migration. Since 2020, almost one-quarter of America's intra-state migrants are choosing Florida. U.S. census stats show Florida's population is now at about 23.4 million, that's two million more people than lived in the state in 2020. A lot of those domestic migrants are coming from hockey-loving, northern states. Teems said the combination of the Panthers' build-it-and-they-will-come mentality is bringing more people to games, and more rec hockey players to the IceDen and IcePlex. 'Hockey started getting big, and the Panthers started making the playoffs, making those runs, and it got bigger and bigger,' he said. His Panthers Warriors teammate, Keegan Brown, agrees. He learned to play hockey when he was six years old at the IceDen. He's 29, and he started playing again four years ago. 'It's really picking up,' said Brown. 'Back in the day, I feel like no one is talking about hockey. It's really blowing up down here. I like it a lot.' And the Panthers' success is what is galvanizing it all. 'I feel like a lot of people like a winning team. Obviously, the Panthers weren't always like that. It was a tough beginning for them. Going from the roots back in the day, being nobodies where you could pay $30 and sit on the glass. Now, there's no way you can do that. 'They're fighting, they're dogs, they're shooting goals, everyone likes that.' Matthew Tkachuk was the key piece in a blockbuster trade with the Calgary Flames . It was a deal reminiscent of the NBA's sign-and-trade transactions. Tkachuk signed an eight-year, US$76-million deal with Calgary, and then was sent to Florida. Tkachuk said the pull of the Panthers is that players around the league know the team has a commitment to excellence. 'We've got such great ownership in the Violas,' he said. 'We've got great GM in Bill and the coaching staff, led by Paul (Maurice), is awesome, and it's all about winning. Winning and having fun. So I think that's what creates the culture, but I was just one of the lucky ones. I got to step into it a few years ago.' 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31 minutes ago
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Global News
35 minutes ago
- Global News
Top NHL draft prospects meet with McDavid and Marchand at Stanley Cup final
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