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Calgary Flames promote Trent Cull to full-time assistant, announce Brad Larsen will return

Calgary Flames promote Trent Cull to full-time assistant, announce Brad Larsen will return

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The 51-year-old Cull made such a positive impact — on the penalty-kill units, in particular — that he's now been named a full-time assistant on Ryan Huska's crew.
The Flames are also thrilled to welcome back Larsen, a valuable sounding board for Huska since he has previous experience as both a player and a head coach at the highest level. Larsen, now 47, was hired as an assistant last June. He has been away from the organization since early December.
Lambert, who had one year remaining on his contract in Calgary, is the odd man out. He was responsible for the defence in 2024-25.
'Facing a challenging situation last season, Trent stepped in and was very impressive managing his assignments with our NHL club,' said Flames general manager Craig Conroy in Friday's announcement. 'We thank Dan for his contributions to the organization during the past two seasons and wish him every success with his future in the game.'
Cull's promotion means the Wranglers will be searching for a new shot-caller. With the stockpile of exciting prospects who will be developing next season at the AHL level, that's considered a very important post.
It has also proven to be a stepping stone to the NHL bench. Three of the Flames' current coaches — Huska, Cail MacLean and Cull — were previously in the top job for the farm team.

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Revolution score three times in second half to beat CF Montréal 3-0
Revolution score three times in second half to beat CF Montréal 3-0

Montreal Gazette

time25 minutes ago

  • Montreal Gazette

Revolution score three times in second half to beat CF Montréal 3-0

Club de Foot Montreal CF Montréal's struggles continued Saturday night at Saputo Stadium, with the Major League Soccer team dropping its fifth straight match, a 3-0 loss against the New England Revolution. New England (6-4-5) scored three times in the second half, taking advantage of a red card given to Montreal forward Giacomo Vrioni in the latter stages of the opening half. 'I just want to say that I'm proud of these guys, of how they fought for the entire game,' said CF Montréal interim head coach Marco Donadel in an abbreviated 50-second post-game press conference. 'The first half, 11 versus 11, I think that we dominated. Even at 10 versus 11, at the end of the first half and the second half. I just wanted to say that.' The Montreal bench boss refrained from taking any questions from members of the media, simply saying 'I want to stay on the bench for the next games and not be disqualified.' In addition, no players were made available after the game, with the team's media relations team calling it 'a club decision.' Donadel and the team's frustration likely stemmed from that straight red card issued to Vrioni in the 36th minute of play for what was deemed 'violent conduct' on New England defender Keegan Hughes. The former Revolution forward, who was acquired by Montreal from New England last January, and Hughes had been battling for the ball when Vrioni kicked his rival, who writhed in pain along the New England sidelines. Up to that point, Montreal had largely controlled play, outshooting New England 8-2 through the first 45 minutes and controlling possession 61 per cent of the time. However, the club failed to capitalize on its scoring chances, most notably on a chance by Caden Clark inside the box off a Dante Sealy free kick in the 23rd minute that was ultimately blocked by Revolution defender Tanner Beason. Montreal's Nathan Saliba (who accounted for the club's only shot on target of the half) and Vrioni also followed with chances of their own in the ensuing minutes. However, both of their attempts missed the target. Upon their return to the pitch for the second half, New England wasted little time profiting from their man advantage. After winning a free kick after being fouled by Montreal's Sealy, Revolution midfielder Peyton Miller accepted a cross from defender Ilay Feingold. Miller froze Montreal goalkeeper Jonathan Sirois, scoring his first career MLS goal with a left-footed deflection to the bottom right corner of the net. The Revolution doubled their lead in the 55th minute when Feingold made a run inside the right side of the box, using his left boot to beat Sirois. Feingold struck again in the dying minutes of the match, scoring from the right side of the box on a lateral feed from Miller in the 87th minute. All three of the Israeli international's goals this season have come in the past two games. With the team officially at the halfway point of its 2025 MLS season, Montreal (1-11-5) has yet to win a game on home turf (0-4-3). The club remains firmly entrenched at the bottom of the Eastern Conference standings, with eight points accumulated out of a possible 51. For New England, the win helped run their MLS unbeaten streak to nine games (5-0-4) dating back to April 12. It also marked the seventh straight road result for New England, tying a franchise record established in 2019. Revolution goalkeeper Aljaz Ivacic earned his seventh clean sheet of the season, helping New England improve upon its stingy defensive record since the start of this 2025 MLS campaign. The club has allowed only 14 goals through its opening 15 games, tops in the league. Piette hits 200 game mark Midfielder Samuel Piette became the first player in club history to appear in 200 career MLS games, all with Montreal. Already the franchise leader in games played, the Le Gardeur native, also paces Montreal in career starts (178) and minutes played (15,534). Saturday's match also marked the 30-year-old's 225th game across all competitions with Montreal, passing goalkeeper Evan Bush for sole possession of sixth place since the founding of the club in 1993. Card trouble In addition to Vrioni's red card, Montreal's Saliba and Joel Waterman were issued yellow cards. Both Saliba and Waterman entered the match on the MLS' caution accumulation warnings, meaning a single yellow card would likely result in a suspension for both players during the team's next match.

SIMMONS SAYS: What McDavid, SGA are doing, Canadian sports fans may never see again
SIMMONS SAYS: What McDavid, SGA are doing, Canadian sports fans may never see again

Toronto Sun

time27 minutes ago

  • Toronto Sun

SIMMONS SAYS: What McDavid, SGA are doing, Canadian sports fans may never see again

Get the latest from Steve Simmons straight to your inbox Simultaneously, Connor McDavid and Shai Gilgeous-Alexander are embarking on something Canadian sports fans may never witness again. Photo by Getty Images photos There is no highlight that can compare Shai Gilgeous-Alexander to the once-in-a-lifetime series-winning goal that Connor McDavid scored on Thursday night in Dallas. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. THIS CONTENT IS RESERVED FOR SUBSCRIBERS ONLY Subscribe now to read the latest news in your city and across Canada. Unlimited online access to articles from across Canada with one account. Get exclusive access to the Toronto Sun ePaper, an electronic replica of the print edition that you can share, download and comment on. Enjoy insights and behind-the-scenes analysis from our award-winning journalists. Support local journalists and the next generation of journalists. Daily puzzles including the New York Times Crossword. SUBSCRIBE TO UNLOCK MORE ARTICLES Subscribe now to read the latest news in your city and across Canada. Unlimited online access to articles from across Canada with one account. Get exclusive access to the Toronto Sun ePaper, an electronic replica of the print edition that you can share, download and comment on. Enjoy insights and behind-the-scenes analysis from our award-winning journalists. Support local journalists and the next generation of journalists. Daily puzzles including the New York Times Crossword. REGISTER / SIGN IN TO UNLOCK MORE ARTICLES Create an account or sign in to continue with your reading experience. Access articles from across Canada with one account. Share your thoughts and join the conversation in the comments. Enjoy additional articles per month. Get email updates from your favourite authors. THIS ARTICLE IS FREE TO READ REGISTER TO UNLOCK. Create an account or sign in to continue with your reading experience. Access articles from across Canada with one account Share your thoughts and join the conversation in the comments Enjoy additional articles per month Get email updates from your favourite authors Don't have an account? Create Account There is no natural comparison. Part of that comes from the difference in the games they play. Part of that comes from the singular genius that is McDavid. He does what no one else in his game can do. On occasion, he Secretariats the rest of the field. All Gilgeous-Alexander does is score and win, more than anyone else in basketball, purposefully and artistically leading the best team in the NBA, the Oklahoma City Thunder. Now the two young Ontario men, born one year apart in Toronto and Richmond Hill, respectively, are championship bound. McDavid leading the Edmonton Oilers to a second straight Stanley Cup final appearance; SGA leading OKC into its first championship series under this new group of players. What a time this is for Canadian sport — the best Canadian hockey player leading the best Canadian team to a possible championship season and the best Canadian basketball player leading the best NBA team to what looks like a certain title. Your noon-hour look at what's happening in Toronto and beyond. By signing up you consent to receive the above newsletter from Postmedia Network Inc. Please try again This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. Steve Nash never played for the NBA championship. McDavid has never won a Stanley Cup. This could — and should — be the year for McDavid's Oilers and certainly for Gilgeous-Alexander's Thunder. And that should link their names together, because nothing like this has ever happened simultaneously before. Pretty much everybody in Canada knows McDavid's name. He's all over television. He's everywhere you look. 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The third American goalie, Jeremy Swayman, had a tough regular season in Boston but a shutout in the gold-medal game at the world championship. Which means all bets may be off for February … When Canadian teams won eight Stanley Cups from 1984-93 — eight Cups in 10 seasons — all of the starting goaltenders were Canadian: Grant Fuhr four times, Patrick Roy twice, Bill Ranford and Mike Vernon being the others. Now Edmonton has a chance to win with the unflappable Stuart Skinner in goal … If a single Leafs player, including captain Auston Matthews, has publicly commented on the dismissal of team president Brendan Shanahan, I must have missed it … Don't expect Shanahan to say anything public about his time with the Leafs. He released a water-downed statement when he was let go. He's not looking to do post-Leafs newspaper or radio interviews. Like Greta Garbo, he wants to be alone … Thought the Buffalo Sabres would have been a perfect stop for Shanahan before they added Jarmo Kekalainen to their front office. The Sabres have some talent. What they need is direction … Not surprised that Leafs' associate coach Lane Lambert wound up as the head guy in Seattle. Lou Lamoriello raved about the job Lambert did as both an assistant and head coach with the Islanders. He said it wouldn't be long before he gets another head coaching opportunity … After Pat Quinn stopped coaching in the NHL, he told me that one of his largest regrets was how hard he was on officials. He would have liked to have a do-over in that area. I thought of that watching Rod Brind'Amour in the final game against Florida, screaming from the Carolina bench. I wish Brind'Amour could have a conversation with the late Quinn. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. Department of Rather Small Thinking: Attributing the success of the Panthers to the notion that Florida has no state tax, as some have done, is an insult to the work of general manager Bill Zito. In five years on the job Zito has traded for Matthew Tkachuk, Sam Bennett, Sam Reinhart, Eetu Luostarinen, Seth Jones and Brad Marchand, and claimed Gustav Forsling off waivers. That is spectacular work. He did all of that after inheriting Sergei Bobrovsky, Sasha Barkov, Aaron Ekblad, Anton Lundell and the players he eventually traded away. Zito also made terrific small signings such as Niko Mikkola, Evan Rodrigues and Carter Verhaeghe (who have all turned into a big signings). And he hired coach Paul Maurice. That's as good a five-year run as any GM has ever had … What doesn't get mentioned often: The team Florida beat out to originally sign Verhaeghe was the Leafs … Word out of Florida is that free agent Bennett would like to remain a Panther and they would like to keep him if the dollars work out. Also, word out of Florida is that the Panthers don't have a whole lot of interest in re-signing the veteran defenceman Ekblad … If Bennett is available, the Maple Leafs will be among those bidding for the centre from Holland Landing. He's the perfect fit, price aside, for the DNA roster switch the Leafs are attempting … Leafs apparently have no interest in Ekblad … If Bennett is unavailable in free agency, expect Treliving to be an active trader this summer … Should Bennett leave Florida, the returning to the NHL Jonathan Toews would be a perfect fit for the Panthers. Few players comprehend winning the way Toews does. And if you slide Lundell up to second-line centre — and he's capable of that — Toews would be an ideal third-line fit for Florida … Where wouldn't Toews fit, depending on the kind of contract he's asking for? He would probably fit in perfectly in Vegas, in Colorado, in Dallas, Montreal, Toronto, Winnipeg, Vancouver: We could go on … Toews has won three Stanley Cups, two Olympic gold medals, two world junior titles … Another fit for Toews: Anaheim, where former Chicago head coach Joel Quenneville has landed … Lane Hutson of the Habs, drafted 62nd overall in 2022, is the likely winner of the Calder Trophy as NHL's rookie of the year. He's just the latest high-end defenceman improperly identified by the NHL scouting fraternity. You can add Hutson to the list of misdiagnosed wonderful blue-liners such as Shea Weber (drafted at 49), Duncan Keith (54), Chris Chelios (46), P.K. Subban (43), Nick Lidstrom (53) and Adam Fox (66) … When Dave Hodge began hosting at Hockey Night in Canada, Darryl Reaugh was playing minor hockey in British Columbia. Hodge was at HNIC for 16 fine seasons, and later moved on for two decades of hockey broadcasting at TSN. So, how do NHL broadcasting voters explain the annual passing of Hodge, Ron MacLean, James Duthie and the late Don Wittman — four of the best of all time — for a team broadcaster such as Reaugh, who came after most of them. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. This is the stuff of baseball dreams: Aaron Judge vs. Shohei Ohtani, Yankees vs. Dodgers, on a weekend series at Dodger Stadium. Judge hit a home run in the first inning on Friday night. Ohtani followed up with a home run in the bottom of the first. Then, just to make it more fun, Ohtani hit a second one … The past four MVPs in the American League: Judge, Ohtani, Judge and Ohtani. The most recent NL MVP: Ohtani … There would be nothing wrong with the Blue Jays offence if it had a schedule with more games against the West Sacramento Athletics … Go figure the Blue Jays. They sweep the San Diego Padres at home then get swept in Tampa Bay by the Rays … Anthony Santander's month of May: 70 at-bats, 24 strikeouts, one double, two home runs, a batting average of .186 and an OPS of .582. That is beyond atrocious for the first-year Blue Jay … More interesting Canadian news: If Indiana gets to the NBA Finals, there will be two Montrealers playing head-to-head in the final. Lu Dort for OKC, Ben Mathurin for the Pacers. I don't think that's ever happened before … What many don't seem to understand about offer sheets in the NHL: All a player has to say is no, not interested, and the offer goes away … Should the Jays make a move in the AL East, that game-winning Bo Bichette home run in the series finale at Texas might be the team's most important hit of this wonky season … Congratulations to old friend and colleague Francois Gagnon, who got Hall of Fame recognition in the writers category, by being named winner of the Elmer Ferguson Award. Anyone who has been around hockey long enough is well aware of Gagnon's work out of Montreal, his passion for the sport, his insider knowledge, his dogged work ethic. Gagnon is pure Hall of Famer, in the arena and out … When Team USA won gold at the world hockey championship, I found myself thinking about the late trio of Bob Johnson, Art Berglund and Herb Brooks, how much they did for American hockey and how happy this win would have made them. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. Two things were obvious near the end of the sexual exploitation trial of hockey's David Frost in 2008. One, he was clearly guilty in the court of public opinion. Two, he was found not guilty by the presiding judge. Too many witnesses lied in the trial. Too many didn't hold up under cross examination. And too many conveniently changed their stories. For legal purposes, there was far too much doubt to find Frost guilty. There was also a mismatch in court between the defence attorney and the lead prosecuting attorney. And now, some of this seems to be repeating itself in a court room in London, Ont., where five former Team Canada junior players currently stand trial for sexual assault. Don't know what the verdict will be for the any of the accused players. The daily reports, though, remind me so much of the terribly frustrating trial of the junior hockey mogul Frost, where discovering the truth became a challenge all its own … When he was Blackhawks GM, Stan Bowman brought in puck-moving defencemen at the bottom of his roster late to bolster his team. He won Stanley Cups with Kimmo Timonen and Michal Rozsival. He's getting nice play now from the unlikely John Klingberg, who looked like he was finished when he tried to play for the Leafs … Big props to Victoria Mboko, the local tennis kid who had an impressive first major appearance at the French Open. There's nothing quite like Roland Garros in Paris for atmosphere. This tournament, she will remember forever … Happy birthday to Joe Namath (82), Paul Coffey (64), Iga Swiatek (24), Erik Karlsson (35), Roman Josi (35), Jim Craig (68), Kenny Lofton (58), Nikki Glaser (42), Jake (The Snake) Roberts (70) and Dave Roberts (53) … And hey, whatever became of Gizmo Williams? 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Inter Milan defender Bisseck to miss Germany games after getting injured in Champions League final
Inter Milan defender Bisseck to miss Germany games after getting injured in Champions League final

Winnipeg Free Press

time28 minutes ago

  • Winnipeg Free Press

Inter Milan defender Bisseck to miss Germany games after getting injured in Champions League final

MUNICH (AP) — Inter Milan defender Yann Aurel Bisseck will miss Germany's upcoming Nations League games after getting injured in the team's Champions League final loss to Paris Saint-Germain. Bisseck only made a short appearance in Saturday's final, going on as a substitute in the 54th minute, then off again in the 62nd with an apparent right leg injury. The German soccer federation (DFB) said Sunday that Bisseck had muscular problems at the back of his right thigh, ruling him out of the Nations League semifinal against Portugal in Munich on Wednesday, as well as the final or third-place playoff against Spain or France four days later. Germany coach Julian Nagelsmann called up Monaco defender Thilo Kehrer in Bisseck's place. Kehrer was to join the rest of the squad Monday at its training base in Herzogenaurach. The 28-year-old Kehrer has made 27 appearances for Germany, though none since June 2023. Mainz midfielder Nadiem Amiri left the camp Saturday and will miss the games with what the DFB said were 'adductor problems.' Nagelsmann had previously called up Mainz forward Jonathan Burkardt to replace the injured Stuttgart midfielder Angelo Stiller. Stiller wasn't fully fit but was involved in three of Stuttgart's four goals as it defeated Arminia Bielefeld 4-2 in the German Cup final. Winnipeg Jets Game Days On Winnipeg Jets game days, hockey writers Mike McIntyre and Ken Wiebe send news, notes and quotes from the morning skate, as well as injury updates and lineup decisions. Arrives a few hours prior to puck drop. ___ AP soccer:

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