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Road closures, covered logos, VIP treatment: FIFA demands on Vancouver revealed

Road closures, covered logos, VIP treatment: FIFA demands on Vancouver revealed

CTV News18 hours ago
Details of the demands FIFA is making on the City of Vancouver and taxpayers in order to host the World Cup next year are finally becoming public.
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Raptors top seed for NBA Summer League playoffs thanks to prized rookie
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  • National Post

Raptors top seed for NBA Summer League playoffs thanks to prized rookie

The summer edition of the Toronto Raptors had many star pupils, but the most intriguing has been Collin Murray-Boyles. Article content The ninth selection of last month's NBA draft missed the first game, but helped lead the team to three victories after that opening blowout over Chicago, including Thursday night's plodding 81-69 win over Golden State. Article content Article content Toronto earned the top seed for the playoffs, which includes only four teams and has been extremely impressive. Article content Fourth-seed Sacramento will take on Toronto at 4 ET while No. 2 Oklahoma City plays No. 3 Charlotte two hours later. The championship game goes Sunday at 10 ET. Article content Six teams actually went 4-0, but these four advanced due to tiebreak procedures, leading with point differential. Toronto's ranked fourth in both points per game and fewest allowed in Las Vegas. The Raptors forced more than 25 turnovers a game, a ridiculous number even considering many Summer League opponents lack strong guard play and/or familiarity with each other. Article content While most squads shut down top prospects after two or three games, Toronto has made a point of taking aim at a summer title and letting its youngsters get lots of minutes. Article content Murray-Boyles has led the way. After a rusty start in his first game action in weeks due to a minor injury, the former South Carolina star got his fouls and turnovers under control in a dominant defensive effort against Denver, then went off for 20 points and was +22 in a game where almost every other player struggled mightily on offence (Murray-Boyles went 8-for-13, his teammates a combined 27% from the floor). Article content Article content Article content Murray-Boyles also grabbed six offensive rebounds, his second monster game on the offensive glass of the tournament and four steals. Article content Saturday, July 19 Article content

Cape Breton teenage hockey podcaster helping grow women's game
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CTV News

time25 minutes ago

  • CTV News

Cape Breton teenage hockey podcaster helping grow women's game

Fourteen-year-old Fallyn MacIntosh of Sydney, N.S., is as equally comfortable behind a microphone as she is on the ice. 'Pass The Puck is a teen podcast, created by teens for teens,' MacIntosh said. The podcast is focused on the female game. On Thursday, MacIntosh and her friend Mabella Scott interviewed Hockey Hall of Famer Cassie Campbell-Pascall. Other guests include several Professional Women's Hockey League (PWHL) players and Olympians. 'Honestly, I don't know how I turn off being a fan,' MacIntosh said. 'Like, when I saw Laura Stacey (of the PWHL's Montreal Victoire) I was like, 'Wow, this is real.'' MacIntosh has traveled to Montreal, Ottawa and Toronto to interview her hockey heroes, but this week a couple of them came to her. MacIntosh is taking part in a skills camp at the Membertou Sport and Wellness Centre run by Nova Scotian professional players Blayre Turnbull and Jill Saulnier. 'I think it's really impressive,' Turnbull said. 'There's not many young kids with that kind of ambition or creativity.' Hockey heroes Blayre Turnbull, left, Fallyn MacIntosh, centre, and Jill Saulnier are pictured. (Source: Ryan MacDonald/CTV News Atlantic) Turnbull has been featured on MacIntosh's podcast and agrees it is helping to grow the women's game, particularly off the ice. 'When I was a kid, you didn't understand your future in sport outside of being an athlete,' Turnbull said. 'So for Fallyn to be doing this and to be showing kids her age and even older that there's opportunities to be creative and think outside the box.' Later this month, the soon-to-be Grade 9 student will go back to Montreal where she hopes to chat with Canadian Olympic captain Marie-Philippe Poulin and TSN play-by-play commentator Kenzie Lalonde. MacIntosh hopes to be a sports broadcaster one day and is already thinking about where she might study after she graduates high school. 'Play by play in the Olympics - that would be a dream,' she said. Podcast Fallyn MacIntosh hosts the Pass the Puck podcast. (Source: Ryan MacDonald/CTV News Atlantic) For more Nova Scotia news, visit our dedicated provincial page

‘I feel young again': Running back James Butler hitting new highs with B.C. Lions
‘I feel young again': Running back James Butler hitting new highs with B.C. Lions

CTV News

time28 minutes ago

  • CTV News

‘I feel young again': Running back James Butler hitting new highs with B.C. Lions

B.C. Lions quarterback Nathan Rourke (12) hands off to James Butler (20) during first half CFL football action against the Montreal Alouettes in Montreal, Saturday, July 5, 2025. (Graham Hughes / The Canadian Press) VANCOUVER — James Butler doesn't mind standing outside of the spotlight. And on a B.C. Lions offence featuring the likes of quarterback Nathan Rourke and receivers Justin McInnis and Keon Hatcher, a running back might skirt attention. Not Butler. The 30-year-old American has been a star for B.C. this season. He leads the league in rushing yards with 474 and will look to add to the total Saturday when the Lions (3-3) host the Saskatchewan Roughriders (4-1). Last week, Butler amassed a career-high 171 rushing yards, 35 receiving yards and a touchdown as B.C. downed the Edmonton Elks 32-14. 'I feel young again, wearing my college number (20),' the running back said. 'It's easy for me to just fly under the radar and just try to be the little spark I can be.' Butler's success follows a difficult 2024 campaign where the University of Iowa product saw action in just 10 games for the Hamilton Tiger-Cats, tallying 522 rushing yards and two TDs. The numbers were well off the career-high 1,116 yards and seven majors he logged for the Ticats in 2023 and he was released by Hamilton in January. Just hours later, Butler signed with the Lions, the team where he started his CFL career in 2021 before breaking out with a 1,060-yard showing in 2022. The move reunited him with Rourke and the duo wasted little time in picking up where they left off. 'For us, there's so much trust,' said the Canadian QB, noting that Butler has found a way to up his game this season. 'I think he's been playing out of his mind. He's been playing better than I think he did in '22. … A lot of the times, I'm just watching. I've got the best seat in the house for watching him get to work." The admiration goes both ways. 'I feel like when you've got No. 12 back there, he just gives you a chance. Nate just gives you a chance, and he just makes plays,' Butler said. 'We always knew he's going to be destined for a great thing. 'So just being there, being back with him is nice. Even when I was with Nate (back in 2021 and 22), I was a little bit younger. So I just feel younger. I feel young again. It's nice.' Butler and Rourke will be in for a challenge Saturday when the Lions go up against the Riders. Saskatchewan is coming off its first loss of the season after dropping a 24-10 decision to the Calgary Stampeders last week. The Lions have already gone up against the Roughriders once this year, taking a 37-18 loss in Regina back on June 28. Despite the final score, B.C. felt the game easily could have had a different result if they'd done a few things differently, Butler said. 'I don't remember the score, but I never felt like we were really out of it, except maybe towards the end of the game,' he said. 'So I just feel like if we take care of the ball, I just feel like it'll be a different game.' The Riders will be without a star returner Mario Alford for the contest. The speedster left the game against Calgary in the first quarter due to an injury and did not practice with his teammates this week. 'That's Super Mario, man. That's a tough one to lose,' said Riders head coach Corey Mace. 'Certainly he's been playing out of his mind, I thought, to this point in the season. It just sucks. But ultimately, it sucks for him.' Alford will be replaced in the lineup by Drae McRay, a first-year receiver out of Texas Tech. The game will be an opportunity for a rookie who showed 'fearlessness' in pre-season play, Mace said. 'We all have confidence in Drae to be able to go out and execute and make plays,' the coach said. 'He showed to be really dangerous in the pre-season.' SASKATCHEWAN ROUGHRIDERS (4-1) AT B.C. LIONS (3-3) Saturday, B.C. Place MILESTONE WATCH: Lions linebacker Micah Awe leads the league in total tackles with 46 on the season. He's now two away from 500 across his CFL career. HISTORY BOOKS: Saskatchewan holds a 107-94-6 edge in all-time matchups between the two teams. The Roughriders have fared well in Lions' territory, too, going 51-50-2 at B.C. WHYTE HOT: B.C.'s Sean Whyte has made all 12 of his field goals this season and, alongside Hamilton's Marc Liegghio, is one of just two kickers who haven't missed this season. Whyte has made 25 consecutive field goals going back to last year, marking the sixth streak of 25+ over his CFL career. This report by Gemma Karstens-Smith of The Canadian Press was first published July 18, 2025.

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