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Todd: Cayden Primeau's stock plummets along with Rocket's AHL title hopes

Todd: Cayden Primeau's stock plummets along with Rocket's AHL title hopes

Ottawa Citizen02-06-2025

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It happened to Laval's Cayden Primeau in Charlotte on Sunda y and if Primeau was fortunate in anything, it's that it was an AHL game in a distinctly minor-league arena.
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For the second straight game, Primeau was awful. He gave up four goals on 16 shots before he was again relieved by young Jacob Fowler — and there wasn't a good goal among them. Primeau consistently took himself out of the play, failed to track the puck, flopped and floundered.
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The contrast when Fowler came in was brutal. Fowler made saves look easy, simply by being in position and refusing to panic. If you didn't know better, you would have sworn that Primeau was the 20-year-old and Fowler was the one about to turn 26 in August.
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Laval head coach Pascal Vincent was on the defensive after, trying to explain why he went back to Primeau. Fowler might have kept the Rocket in it against the experienced Checkers, but it's doubtful he could have won the series, which Laval trails three games to zero going into Game 4 in Charlotte Tuesday night.
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It's really boys against men, young prospects facing NHL veterans like winger Jesse Puljujarvi, goaltender Kaapo Kahkonen and 35-year-old centreman Zac Dalpe. Fowler might be the only player on the entire Laval roster who has had a good series, while coming on in relief.
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But the real damage has been done to Primeau's career. A restricted free agent attempting to attract the interest of another NHL team after a successful season and two solid rounds in the playoffs, Primeau has once again demonstrated a tendency to come undone under pressure.
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When you aspire to be a goaltender in the NHL, it's not a good look.
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Sir James: The Alouettes' quarterback situation seems pretty well set with Davis Alexander anointed as the starter, McLeod Bethel-Thompson to back him up and Caleb Evans as third string.
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But after watching some of the throws James Morgan made in an exhibition game on a soggy Friday night in Ottawa, he showed enough for the team to keep him on the roster. A 6-foot-4, 230-pound quarterback with an arm like that? Whew!
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Queen Victoria: Canadian successes on the women's side of tennis have been scarce of late. Leylah Fernandez doesn't have the hit, Bianca Andreescu doesn't have the head and when last seen, Genie Bouchard was losing at the trendy sport of pickleball.

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