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Jets' GM and coach are proud of what players accomplished, but want improvements

Jets' GM and coach are proud of what players accomplished, but want improvements

CTV News21-05-2025

Winnipeg Jets' Gabriel Vilardi (13), Kyle Connor, left rear, Mark Scheifele, center rear, Neal Pionk (4) and Dylan Samberg, right, celebrate after Scheifele scored against the Dallas Stars in the second period of Game 6 of a second-round NHL hockey playoff series in Dallas, Saturday, May 17, 2025. (AP Photo/Gareth Patterson) (Gareth Patterson/AP)

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Canada men's head coach Marsch adds experienced Johnston, Osorio for CONCACAF Gold Cup
Canada men's head coach Marsch adds experienced Johnston, Osorio for CONCACAF Gold Cup

CBC

time24 minutes ago

  • CBC

Canada men's head coach Marsch adds experienced Johnston, Osorio for CONCACAF Gold Cup

Veterans Alistair Johnston and Jonathan Osorio will rejoin Canada later this month for the 2025 CONCACAF Gold Cup. Both are included in Jesse Marsch's 26-man roster, which also adds goalkeeper Tom McGill and defender Kamal Miller to those held over from the 23-player Canadian Shield Tournament, which begins Saturday at 3:30 p.m. ET with No. 30 Canada hosting No. 25 Ukraine at Toronto's BMO Field. The Canadians face No. 41 Ivory Coast next Tuesday at 8:30 p.m. "We're excited to be bringing a very strong squad to the upcoming Gold Cup," Marsch said in a statement. "We're very confident in the group and are looking forward to challenging for the title." Osorio (84 caps), Johnston (53) and Millar (47) bring a combined 184 caps to the squad. Osorio could skip the Shield tournament after suffering a shoulder injury with TFC on April 30. Celtic's Johnston had been dealing with a back issue. Fulback/wingback Richie Laryea, replaced by Zorhan Bassong due to injury in the CONCACAF Nations League Final roster in March, returned to action May 31 for Toronto FC from a hamstring injury that had sidelined him since March 1 and is part of both the Shield and Gold Cup squads. Midfielder Stephen Eustaquio is included in the Gold Cup roster even though his club, Portugal's FC Porto, is involved in the FIFA Club World Cup, which runs at the same time in the United States. The hope is he will be able to rejoin Canada at some point during the Gold Cup. McGill is added as the third goalkeeper on the roster, joining Maxime Crepeau and Dayne St. Clair. Osorio most experienced player There are 12 MLS players, including two from Toronto (Laryea and Osorio), two from CF Montreal (Nathan Saliba and Joel Waterman) and three from Vancouver (Sam Adekugbe, Ali Ahmed and Jayden Nelson). The roster ranges in age from 19 for Fulham defender de Fougerolles to 32 for Osorio, the most experienced player in the group. Canada opens Gold Cup play June 17 against No. 75 Honduras in Vancouver before heading to Houston to complete Group B play against No. 90 Curacao on June 21 and No. 81 El Salvador on June 24. The 16-team Gold Cup, the championship of North and Central America and the Caribbean runs June 14 through July 6 in 13 cities (all but Vancouver in the U.S.). The field includes No. 58 Saudi Arabia as a guest team. The winner and runner-up from each of the four groups advance to the knockout stage. Canada won the Gold Cup in 2000 and was third in 2002. The Canadian men lost to the U.S. in a penalty shootout in the round of 16 last time out in 2023. Mexico has won the title seven times and finished runner-up twice. The U.S. has lifted the trophy seven times and finished second on five occasions. Canada roster Goalkeepers Maxime Crepeau, Portland Timbers (MLS) Tom McGill, Brighton & Hove Albion (England) Dayne St. Clair, Minnesota United (MLS) Defenders Sam Adekugbe, Vancouver Whitecaps (MLS) Derek Cornelius, Olympique de Marseille (France) Luc De Fougerolles, Fulham (England) Jamie Knight-Lebel, Bristol City (England) Richie Laryea, Toronto FC (MLS) Alistair Johnston, Celtic (Scotland) Kamal Miller, Portland Timbers (MLS) Niko Sigur, Hadjuk Split (Croatia) Joel Waterman, CF Montreal (MLS) Midfielders Ali Ahmed, Vancouver Whitecaps (MLS) Tajon Buchanan, Inter Milan (Italy) Mathieu Choiniere, Grasshopper Zurich (Switzerland) Stephen Eustaquio, FC Porto (Portugal) Ismael Kone, Olympique de Marseille (France) Jayden Nelson, Vancouver Whitecaps (MLS) Jonathan Osorio, Toronto FC (MLS) Nathan Saliba, CF Montreal (MLS) Jacob Shaffelburg, Nashville SC (MLS) Forwards Jonathan David, LOSC Lille (France) Promise David, Royale Union Saint-Gilloise (Belgium) Daniel Jebbison, AFC Bournemouth (England) Cyle Larin, RCD Mallorca (Spain) Tani Oluwaseyi, Minnesota United (MLS)

From player to head coach, former NHLer Marco Sturm returns to Bruins
From player to head coach, former NHLer Marco Sturm returns to Bruins

CBC

time29 minutes ago

  • CBC

From player to head coach, former NHLer Marco Sturm returns to Bruins

Ex-forward to guide NHL club that missed playoffs for 1st time since 2016 The Boston Bruins hired Marco Sturm as head coach on Thursday to help the Original Six franchise get back to the playoffs after missing them for the first time since 2016. The Bruins picked Sturm to replace interim bench boss Joe Sacco, who took over from Jim Montgomery in November and led the team to a 25-30-7 record — much of it after a trade deadline roster purge. Sturm becomes the 30th head coach in Bruins history after spending the past three seasons as head coach of the American Hockey League's Ontario Reign. Sacco, a Bruins assistant and former Avalanche head coach, replaced Montgomery 20 games into this season, but with the team unable to challenge for a playoff berth general manager Don Sweeney traded away captain Brad Marchand and other veterans, and the Bruins stumbled to a 33-39-10 record overall, tied for the worst record in the Eastern Conference. Only three teams in the league were worse. CEO Charlie Jacobs said the results were "absolutely unacceptable" and apologized to the fans for the performance. "We owe you a better team, and we aim to deliver a better team," he said after the season. "I share your disappointment and, frankly, embarrassment on how poorly things played out over the course of this season." Sturm, who was a Bruins forward from 2005-2010, is a former head coach and general manager for the German national team and spent five seasons as an assistant coach with the Los Angeles Kings. Sturm's Ontario Reign team went 119-80-11-6 and made three consecutive playoff appearances. As a player, Sturm skated in 938 NHL regular-season games with Boston, Florida, Vancouver, Los Angeles and San Jose — the team the drafted him in the first round in 1996 — from 1997-2012. He recorded 242 career goals and 245 assists with a with a plus-59 rating. Sacco, others reportedly considered for job Sacco was a candidate for the permanent job. Others who reportedly received consideration were Washington Capitals assistant Mitch Love, former Blackhawks coach Luke Richardson and Bruins assistant Jay Leach. Montgomery, 55, was 120-41-23 in two-plus seasons in Boston. The Bruins finished with more than 100 points in each of his first two years, including a record-setting debut, when their 65 wins and 135 points were both the most in NHL history. But the team lost in the first round of the playoffs that season and advanced to only the second round last year. The struggles carried over into the new season, when Boston began 8-9-3 and Montgomery was fired. He was hired five days later by the St. Louis Blues and was given a five-year contract; the Blues reached the playoffs and lost in the first round in seven games to the Winnipeg Jets. Boston never improved under Sacco. Heading into the trade deadline with a three-game losing streak that left them at 28-28, the Bruins traded Marchand ³ the only remaining member of their 2011 Stanley Cup championship team — along with forwards Justin Brazeau, Marc McLaughlin, Trent Frederic and Charlie Coyle and defenseman Brandon Carlo to Toronto. And they left Sacco on the bench to ride it out. The depleted roster lost 10 straight games, the team lost only 12 in its record-setting 2022-23 season under Montgomery, and fell from possible playoff contender to the NHL draft lottery. Despite the disappointment, the Bruins signed Sweeney to a two-year contract extension, with team president Can Neely saying it would help to have stability in the front office during the coaching search. "I am confident in the plan he has followed these past few months, and excited for what's to come for our team," the former Bruins forward said of the former Bruins defenceman. "The expectations in Boston have always been clear. It's about winning championships."

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