
Dylan McIlrath, Arber Xhekaj fined for unsportsmanlike conduct
April 28 - Montreal defenseman Arber Xhekaj and Washington blueliner Dylan McIlrath were both fined the maximum amount by the NHL on Monday for unsportsmanlike conduct that took place during pregame warmups prior to Sunday's Game 4.
Xhekaj was fined $3,385.42 and McIlrath $2,018.23, the maximum allowable under the CBA based on the players' salaries.
The Canadiens and Capitals were also fined $25,000 each.
Xhekaj logged 12:51 of ice time in the Capitals' 5-2 win to take a 3-1 lead in the series.
McIlrath dressed for warmups but did not play. He has yet to play in the postseason.
Game 5 is Wednesday in Washington.

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The Independent
4 hours ago
- The Independent
George Russell keeps Canadian GP victory over Max Verstappen after late Red Bull protest
George Russell has kept his Canadian Grand Prix victory despite a dramatic late Red Bull protest – with the final result only confirmed five-and-a-half hours after the end of the race. Pole-sitter Russell held off the challenge of Red Bull 's Max Verstappen to clinch victory on the road – his fourth in Formula 1 and first of the 2025 season. Yet around 90 minutes after the race concluded, news emerged from the FIA that Red Bull had launched a protest against Russell for an undisclosed reason. Verstappen overtook Russell under the safety car late in the race, complaining that the Brit had brake-tested him. Yet at gone 9:15pm local time, nearly six hours after the 70-lap race concluded, the stewards dismissed Red Bull's protest over potential safety car infringements. It is the latest incident between arch rivals Russell and Verstappen, whose feud first blew up at the end of last season before reigniting in Spain two weeks ago, when Verstappen deliberately rammed into the Mercedes driver. Red Bull boss Christian Horner confirmed the protest in his post-race media briefing, detailing: "Two protests that we've put to the stewards, that we've asked them to have a look at. 'Firstly, relating to the erratic driving behind the safety car, where George very heavily braked, obviously looking in his mirror for Max. "The second one is very clearly the distance that was left behind the safety car that was well in excess, I think at least three times in excess, of the permitted distance. 'So, it's within our right to obviously protest that. So, we've lodged the protest." Asked further if Verstappen had encouraged a protest against his arch-rival, Horner replied: "No, not at all. Max was talking to you guys, and had no idea. 'It's within a competitor's right to raise a protest. It's €2000 per protest and we were surprised that they weren't noted and sent to the stewards." Verstappen had earlier explained how he saw the safety car period, in his post-race interview with Sky F1: "I think we were both trying to say to the safety car to speed up because he was only going 120kp/h, but maybe the safety car was doing that to give a bit more time to maybe get a race lap in. "Then I think George was trying to speed up to the safety car. I was trying to do the same, and once he tried to speed up the safety car, he backed out and then caused a bit of confusion. The FIA regulations state: 'In order to avoid the likelihood of accidents before the safety car returns to the pits, from the point at which the lights on the car are turned out, drivers must proceed at a pace which involves no erratic acceleration or braking, nor any manoeuvre which is likely to endanger other drivers or impede the restart.'


Reuters
4 hours ago
- Reuters
Antonelli's F1 podium debut likely to be first of many
MONTREAL, June 15 (Reuters) - Kimi Antonelli felt goosebumps in Canada on Sunday after becoming the first Italian driver in 16 years to finish on the Formula One podium. The 18-year-old Mercedes rookie made it to the bottom step this time but nobody doubted it would be the first of many for the third youngest F1 driver of all time to score a top three result. The last Italian on the podium was Jarno Trulli with Toyota in October 2009. "I knew Kimi coming up through the karting ranks, people were already saying great things, so I was keeping an eye on him," said Red Bull's four times world champion Max Verstappen who finished one place ahead and had his first podium at 18. "I think what's impressive is he's naturally quick. What I like is his level-headed, calm approach. Those are great qualities to have. I was never in doubt that the podium would come this year. "I'm very happy that it happened for him. It gives you more confidence. It's a nice boost. And it will only get better," added the Dutch driver. Antonelli has taken the seat vacated by seven times world champion Lewis Hamilton but the team have emphasised he needs time to learn and will make mistakes. In fact he has made very few in a season that has already seen him become the youngest driver to take a pole, albeit in a sprint, lead a race and set fastest lap. "I was just hoping for the race to finish, to be honest," said Antonelli of an afternoon where he seized third place from McLaren's championship leader Oscar Piastri on the opening lap and then held on. "I was even looking at the screen counting the laps because it was very stressful." Antonelli said the last few laps had been a struggle, with Piastri getting ever closer, but a late safety car after Piastri and teammate Lando Norris collided took the pressure off. Stepping out onto the Montreal podium and hearing the crowd at a circuit named after Ferrari great Gilles Villeneuve and in a city where there is a significant Italian community, was better than he had imagined. "I had massive goosebumps. That is definitely a moment I will remember for a very long time. It gives you a boost -results like this and this feeling, you can't buy this feeling," said the fan-voted 'Driver of the Day'. "It's an amazing feeling and you just want more. "Now the next goal is to win, to bring Italy back on top. This result was needed. It's also for all the Italian tifosi (fans) out there. "Imola (his first home race) was an incredible weekend for me in terms of support. It didn't go as well as I wanted, but seeing so much support already early on is great. So, this result is also for them."


BBC News
5 hours ago
- BBC News
Norris 'made a fool' of himself in Piastri collision
Lando Norris said he "made a fool" of himself in colliding with McLaren team-mate Oscar Piastri in the Canadian Grand 25-year-old Briton ran into the back of Piastri as they battled in the closing stages of the race, and Norris' mistake has left him 22 points behind the Australian in their fight for the with use of the DRS overtaking aid giving him a straight-line speed advantage, clipped the back of Piastri's car as he tried to grab the inside line into Turn Piastri had not left the space for the move to come off. Norris' front wing and right-front wheel hit the back of the rival McLaren and broke his suspension. Piastri was able to continue without said: "I didn't expect to pass Oscar on the outside into Turn One. It's just, I should never have gone for it, I guess is my complete hindsight thing."I thought he was starting to drift a little bit to the right, so I thought I had a small opportunity to go to the left. But it was way too much risk, especially on my team-mate."So, happy nothing happened to him. I paid the price for my mistake."The incident followed more than a kilometre of close racing between the team-mates, which McLaren have pledged to allow to continue this season. Norris has 'a lot of regret' Norris had dived for the inside at the hairpin and briefly grabbed the position as both were challenging Mercedes' Kimi Antonelli for the final podium position behind winner George Russell's Mercedes and Max Verstappen's Red cut back on the exit, and they ran side by side down the long back straight, with the Australian on the inside. Norris braked earlier on the outside for the final chicane, to give himself a cleaner run through the corner and faster exit on to the pit was terrific, clean, respectful racing, of the kind McLaren have been demanding from their drivers this season. Until it went said: "Our rule number one is to not make contact with your team-mate and it's what I did. McLaren is my family. I race for them, you know, every single weekend. I try and do well for them, more than I often try and do well for myself."So, when I let them down like this and when I make a fool of myself in a moment like today, yeah, I have a lot of regret."I've let down the team. So, that's going to stay with me for a little while. But at the same time, part of moving on is trying to put it behind you and crack on with the next weekend."Norris had no realistic option but to accept fault, but that does not always make a difference with racing drivers. And his decision to do so immediately defused any tension there might have been as a result of the said: "Lando is a very good guy, and it's in his character and in his personality to say exactly what he thinks. And if that's detrimental to himself, or if it's about himself, then it doesn't matter for him. And I think that's a great quality of Lando."It's good for the whole team going forward that we can have these conversations and go racing like this and have things not go the way we want, and get through them."Both men minimised the importance of the difference this had made to the gap between them in the championship, which is more than double what it was going into the race, but still with 14 races left and only 10 said: "Plenty more races left. I don't expect it to be easy. I don't expect to catch him easily. But I have to work hard for it and make less mistakes than I did this weekend." 'No doubt' McLaren support Norris McLaren are taking a mature, sporting and open approach to the fight between their drivers, based on a philosophy of fair competition. They have been saying all year that they considered it a question of when not if they were involved in an was in this spirit that team principal Andrea Stella took the situation."We never want to see two McLarens having contact," he said. "This is part of our principles. We saw it today."This is just a result of a miscalculation, a misjudgment from a racing point of view, which obviously should not happen, but at the same time is part of racing."And we did appreciate the fact that Lando immediately owned the situation. He raised his hand, he took responsibility for the accident, and he apologised immediately to the team. He came to apologise to me as team principal in order to apologise to the entire team."On this one I want to be completely clear; it's full support to Lando. We will have conversations and the conversations may be even tough."But there's no doubt over the support we give to Lando and over the fact that we will preserve our parity and equality in terms of how we go racing at McLaren between our two drivers."The situation would be different if Lando had not taken responsibility and apologised."In the heat of the moment, that looks like the worst disaster ever. But in reality, the strength of being racers comes from having a strong culture." Where does Norris go from here? Taking a step back from the immediacy of the drama, the bigger concern may be what it says about Norris and his state of mind - and raise questions as to what to do about has not been an easy season for Norris so far. He was very much McLaren's leading driver last year. He was the one who took a semblance of a title fight to Verstappen in the closing stages of the the expectation that McLaren would continue their strong form in the second half of last year into this, Norris was the championship favourite going into the the form between the two McLaren drivers has switched. Piastri has been the more convincing. He has five wins to Norris' two. He is ahead 8-4 on their qualifying head-to-head. And Norris has been making mistakes, particularly in has been saying all year that a lack of feel from the front axle of the car has been affecting his ability to predict its behaviour when taking it to the limit on one Canada, McLaren introduced a small tweak to the suspension geometry, around where the upper wishbone meets the front wheel, in an attempt increase feel. Stella said there were "no downsides from Lando's point of view", and Norris ran it all weekend. Piastri felt he didn't need it and continued with the original was probably the quicker McLaren driver in Montreal - he did a stunning lap on used tyres to progress beyond the first part of qualifying. But he again over-drove when it mattered, making mistakes on both of his laps in the final session, and ending up seventh on the said after qualifying that Norris had "just tried too hard", and pointed out that on his final lap he was on target for pole before brushing the wall at Turn Seven."The speed is there," Stella said on Saturday evening. "We just have to polish the fact that sometimes you sort of have to accept that you can't always go 100%, especially when a little mistake can be so costly."Stella has emphasised that McLaren have been working with Norris on his difficulties this the race, he was asked what more they could do to get him into the right headspace, if that was indeed the problem. But he said he did not see a connection between Norris' wider issues and the specifics of the collision in Canada."At the moment I wouldn't say that that's the reason why there was a misjudgment today," Stella said. "I think this is too long a shot in terms of correlating these two events."Definitely there will be good conversations, but they will happen once we are all rested and calm."Lando himself will have to show his character to overcome this kind of episode, make sure that he only takes the learnings, he only takes what will make him a stronger driver."