The Canadiens Dropped A Big Point

Samuel Montembeault had a tough time in New York - Photo credit: Brad Penner-Imagn Images

Another night, another crucial game for the Montreal Canadiens, who were taking on the New York Islanders on Thursday night in Long Island. After an emotive day for the Habs, in which Brendan Gallagher revealed he had recently lost his mother, Della, to cancer, it was time to get back to business to keep chasing a playoff spot.

A Tight-Knit Group

While Gallagher only announced his mother’s passing late on Wednesday night, we found out today that it happened some time ago when the Canadiens were in Calgary. Speaking to the media before the game, coach Martin St-Louis revealed it happened during the Canadiens’ trip out west earlier this month. He praised his team for how they stuck together to support their teammate in his hour of need and explained he did what he could to help the veteran get through the challenging event.

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St-Louis had lost his mother during the playoffs with the New York Rangers back in 2014 as they were facing the Canadiens. While it did bring back some memories for him, he explained not everyone deals with death in the same way, adding Gallagher felt like playing helped him cope with the ordeal.

The man himself looked at peace speaking about it with the media. Asked if tonight’s game would be a challenge, he explained that it had been since he found out, but the Ottawa game was the last one before the funerals, which were held on Wednesday. As “luck” would have it, her passing happened while the team was out west, and Gallagher said the whole team took a bus and came to the Gallagher family home to spend time with them, which was an appreciated unannounced visit. 

The Need To Separate Yourself

No matter how good an opposing goaltender is, when you dominate in shots as the Canadiens did on Thursday night, you must convert some of those opportunities. This might just be one of the topics touched on the most by St-Louis in the post-game pressers: his team’s inability to separate itself from the opponent when dominating.  

No scoring is one thing, but when you feed a monster like Ilya Sorokin, shoots, and he eats them all, his team’s confidence grows exponentially. When you have a goaltender like that behind you, you’re not panicking because you’re not scoring enough; you have “the man” back there.

Montreal’s dominance in the middle frame was evident, but they couldn’t score a single goal (that wasn’t called back for offside, that is), and as a result, the Islanders, full of confidence, were able to score a second power-play goal on the night. It's no small feat for the team with the worst power play before Thursday night’s game.

Some Saves Have To Be Made

On Tuesday night, when Samuel Montembeault gave Travis Hamonic a questionable goal, his teammates bounced right back and bailed him out, but on Thursday night, there were two questionable goals.

No one’s perfect, but a goal near side like the one in the first frame and a gut punch through the goaltender in the third will always be challenging to overcome for any team. On a contender, the goaltender is better than that. The coach has said he doesn’t want to overwork his starter in the past, so could we see Jakub Dobes on Saturday? It’s not out of the question, especially since the youngster beat the Colorado Avalanche 2-1 in the shootout back in January.

Thankfully for Montembeault, there might just be a new ghost in the rafters who travels with the Canadiens as well. For the second game in a row, Gallagher scored a goal and pounded his heart hard, dedicating an other lamplighter to Della, his mother.

The goal sent the game to overtime, but as a hockey game is not a Hollywood script; when Lane Hutson turned on the jets and lost the puck deep in the offensive zone in extra time, the Islanders got an odd-man rush, and Bo Horvat scored the game-winning goal. While the loss will be disappointing for St-Louis’ men, none of the Habs’ rivals in the playoff race won tonight, so the point lost doesn’t hurt too much.


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Warriors share positive Steph injury update before six-game road trip

Warriors share positive Steph injury update before six-game road trip originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

Take a sigh of relief, Dub Nation.

An MRI on Warriors superstar Steph Curry confirmed he sustained a pelvic contusion but no structural damage, the team shared in a release Friday morning.

Curry won’t travel with the team as it begins a six-game road trip Saturday against the Atlanta Hawks, and he has been ruled out of the game.

He will be re-evaluated Monday.

Curry sustained the injury during the third quarter of Golden State’s win over the Toronto Raptors on Thursday night after he had a scary fall under the basket. The star guard immediately grabbed his lower back in pain and went to Golden State’s locker room shortly after.

The Warriors later ruled Curry out of the game with a pelvic contusion. He finished the game with 17 points on 6-of-8 shooting and 2 of 4 from 3-point range.

In Year 16, Curry is averaging 24.2 points on 44.7-percent shooting from the field and 39.4 percent from long-range, with 4.4 rebounds, 6.0 assists and 1.1 steals in 32.2 minutes through 60 games this season.

After the Hawks, the Warriors will face the Miami Heat, New Orleans Pelicans, San Antonio Spurs, Memphis Grizzlies and Los Angeles Lakers before returning home on April 4 to face the Denver Nuggets.

Entering the road trip, Golden State is 41-29 and sixth in the Western Conference after an impressive 6-1 homestand.

The Heat are 11 games under .500 and on a nine-game losing streak. The Pelicans have a 19-51 record, and the Spurs are just above them in the Western Conference standings.

Golden State has the fourth-easiest remaining schedule in the West, per Tankathon, so the Warriors likely will be extra cautious with their superstar while banking on their other leaders, Jimmy Butler and Draymond Green, and key role players, to step up in Curry’s indefinite absence to ensure he’s fresh and ready to go come playoff time.

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Phillies rotation is better equipped if disaster strikes in 2025

Phillies rotation is better equipped if disaster strikes in 2025 originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

CLEARWATER, Fla. — It’s been said that the Phillies have one of the best top-to-bottom rotations in baseball going into the new season.

Of course, many who said it also thought the Eagles should be underdogs to Kansas City in Super Bowl LIX. As Yogi Berra noted, “It’s tough to make predictions, especially about the future.” Once the first pitch is thrown at Nationals Park on March 27, those rah-rah words will be worthless as Confederate money. All that will matter is how well they actually pitch.

And the best-case scenario is intoxicating.

Zack Wheeler replicates his 2024 dominance and wins his first Cy Young Award after two agonizingly close misses. Aaron Nola sidesteps the one-bad-inning syndrome that has dogged him recently and also earns Cy Young votes. Left-hander Ranger Suarez, who was scary good a year ago before a variety of ailments derailed him, goes wire-to-wire at the top of his form. Cristopher Sanchez continues to blossom. Jesus Luzardo, the signature offseason acquisition, bounces back from injuries and pitches as well as he did for the Marlins in 2022 and 2023.

But …

And you knew there was going to be a but …

Wheeler will turn 35 at the end of May. Including the playoffs, he’s pitched more than 200 innings each of the past two seasons, the first time he’s carried that workload in back-to-back years.

Nola has been remarkably consistent throughout his career but has fallen into a curious every-other-year pattern. Since his breakout season in 2018, his ERA has been much better in even-numbered years (3.07) than odd (4.32). The hope, then, is he breaks that mold in ’25.

Suarez was a beast through his first 15 starts in 2024 (10-1, 1.75) and largely ineffective after that (4-8, 6.17 in 12 starts with two trips to the injured list). He’s already dealing with back stiffness that may delay his start to the season. He’s also in his contract year, which some players embrace. And some don’t. Sanchez’ ERA also rose significantly in the second half, 3.79 compared to 2.96. And after a career year (10-10, 3.58, 208 strikeouts) for the Marlins in 2023, Luzardo was limited to 12 starts last year by elbow and lower back problems.

What will actually happen as the schedule unspools will almost certainly land somewhere in the middle of those two extremes. But write this down in ink: Every team will need more than their original five starters before it’s all over.

In 2024, MLB teams used an average of 12.87 different starting pitchers. Only the Mariners (7), Padres and Yankees (8) and Royals (9) needed fewer than 10. At the other end of the spectrum, the Dodgers, White Sox and Brewers required 17, the Angels 18 and the Marlins a staggering 20. Four full rotations’ worth.

The Phillies used an even dozen. President of baseball operations Dave Dombrowski is relatively satisfied that the organization is well-armed to withstand the unexpected challenges that will inevitably pop up along the way.

“As confident as one can be,” he said earlier this spring while sitting in his BayCare Ballpark office. “You never can have enough options if the wrong guys get hurt. But the reality is that I think we’re about as deep as we’ve been in starting pitching since I’ve been here.”

Here are some of the potential options:

Joe Ross

The 31-year-old right-hander was used as a swingman by the Brewers last season before signing a one-year, $4 million contract with the Phillies that includes bonuses which could add another $1 million if he stays on the active roster all season. It has to be noted, though, that he had a 4.98 ERA in 10 starts for Milwaukee compared to 1.67 in 15 relief appearances.

Andrew Painter

The Phillies are bringing their touted 21-year-old uber-prospect along cautiously coming off his July 2023 Tommy John surgery but the expectation is that he’ll make his MLB debut this season.

Taijuan Walker

He was considered a longshot coming into spring training after an ugly 3-7, 7.10 stat line last season, but pitched well enough in the Grapefruit League to allow the organization to believe it could still get some value from the remaining two years and $36 million on his contract … or make him attractive to another team looking for pitching.

Which starter might get promoted from the minors when a need arises often depends on how well each candidate is performing at the time, as well as how well their next scheduled start lines up with when the big-league club has the hole to fill. “Some of our young starting pitching is starting to progress where we feel like they can give us some depth,” Dombrowski said. That category would include:

Seth Johnson

The 25-year-old acquired from Baltimore at last year’s deadline made his MLB debut last September after putting up a 1.52 ERA in August at Double A Reading. He’s really thrown the ball well,” manager Rob Thomson said early in spring training. “His one start, first in the major leagues last year in Miami (8 H, 3 BB, 9 ER in 2.1 IP), I kind of take that with a grain of salt. He’s throwing strikes while he’s been here. “

Moises Chace

The 21-year-old, who came to the Phillies along with Johnson in the deal that sent Gregory Soto to the Orioles, had 124 strikeouts in 80.1 innings at three minor league levels last season but also walked 40. If he can improve his command, he could arrive sooner rather than later.

Mick Abel

The Phillies’ first-round draft choice in 2020 hasn’t lived up to expectations to this point, mostly due to control issues. But he still has the power arm that tantalized scouts and, at 23, still has a chance to put it all together. “He’s really growing up. He gained 10, 15 pounds over the winter and he’s strong,” Thomson said.

Jean Cabrera

Was added to the 40-man roster in December after pitching in 20 games (19 starts) for High A Jersey Shore and Double A Reading last year. He struck out 110 in 106.2 innings and had a 1.21 WHIP.

Tyler Phillips

After being called up in June, he went 3-0 with a 1.71 ERA in his first three starts. In his next three, though, his ERA was 13.91. But he’s experienced – 134 minor-league starts – and could be the right man at the right time if help is needed. Phillips is out of minor-league options.

Concluded Dombrowski: “I’m as comfortable where we are as you can be. But, again, you never know if it’s going to be enough.”

Lewis Hamilton takes first Ferrari F1 pole for Chinese GP sprint race

  • British driver to start alongside Verstappen on front row
  • Lando Norris in sixth after mistakes during qualifying

Lewis Hamilton landed his first pole position as a Ferrari driver by taking top spot for Saturday’s sprint race at the Chinese Grand Prix.

The 40-year-old, in only his second appearance for the Italian giants, saw off Red Bull’s Max Verstappen by just 0.018sec in Shanghai to ensure he will start from the front for Saturday’s 19-lap dash to the chequered flag. McLaren’s Oscar Piastri qualified third with Hamilton’s teammate Charles Leclerc fourth. George Russell took fifth for Mercedes, one place ahead of Lando Norris in the other McLaren.

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No wages and little clarity: what next in the Salford Red Devils fiasco?

As Salford and the RFL battle to see who can look the most shambolic, we answer the questions you might be asking

By No Helmets Required

Fiasco, farce, omnishambles, call it what you like – even Malcolm Tucker would struggle to put a gloss on events at Salford Red Devils and the RFL in the last few months. With their new owners repeatedly failing to lodge the funds that would guarantee the club can get through the season, Salford remain in special measures, administered by a governing body that has seen the majority of its board resign, other senior staff leave under black clouds and a former deposed leader return in a remarkable coup. As Salford and the RFL battle to see who can look the most shambolic, we answer the questions you might be asking.

How can Salford finish fourth last season and lose their first four games this time? Winning the battle of the pointless against Huddersfield on Thursday night was a rare moment of joy for Salford since bowing out of the Super League playoffs six months ago. On paper, Paul Rowley’s side should challenge for silverware. Instead, they have played like relegation fodder, their star players totally undermined by not being paid and their employers in disarray.

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Three things to note from Cagnoni's NHL debut in Sharks' loss

Three things to note from Cagnoni's NHL debut in Sharks' loss originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

Editor’s note: Sheng Peng is a regular contributor to NBC Sports California’s Sharks coverage. You can read more of his coverage on San Jose Hockey Now, listen to him on the San Jose Hockey Now Podcast, and follow him on X at @Sheng_Peng.

We have to remember to grade Luca Cagnoni’s NHL debut on a curve.

He’s a 20-year-old defenseman, the hardest position to learn in the NHL, playing his first game against the Carolina Hurricanes, arguably the most ferocious forecheck in the league.

I get there’s a lot of excitement for his debut, given his show-stopping rookie AHL campaign so far. The 2023 fourth-round pick is second among all AHL defensemen with 47 points.

But the AHL isn’t the NHL, as Cagnoni saw first-hand in a 3-1 San Jose Sharks defeat.

That said, there are three things that I liked about Cagnoni’s NHL debut.

More of these three positives, and less of the negatives — the 5-foot-9 defender was frustrated by the big bad Canes’ forecheck and was bodied at times — and he’s going to be just fine. No player is perfect, you’re just looking for, big picture, a consistent net positive effect on games.

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