'Got To Quiet The Noise': Craig Berube Reveals What He's Learned The Most Since Becoming Head Coach of the Maple Leafs

Apr 2, 2025; Toronto, Ontario, CAN; Toronto Maple Leafs head coach Craig Berube during a post game press conference after a win over the Florida Panthers at Scotiabank Arena. Mandatory Credit: John E. Sokolowski-Imagn Images

Craig Berube is set to embark on his first Stanley Cup Playoffs as head coach of the Toronto Maple Leafs. One day before his team takes on the Ottawa Senators in a best-of-seven first-round series, Toronto's bench boss was asked what he's learned the most about coaching the club.

"I think more than anything, it's the noise. There's a lot of noise. Got to quiet the noise," Berube said.

‘He’s Ready To Go’: Craig Berube All But Confirms Maple Leafs Goaltender Anthony Stolarz As Game 1 Starter Ahead Of Battle Of Ontario‘He’s Ready To Go’: Craig Berube All But Confirms Maple Leafs Goaltender Anthony Stolarz As Game 1 Starter Ahead Of Battle Of OntarioThe Toronto Maple Leafs held their first full skate of the 2025 Stanley Cup Playoffs on Saturday, a day before the puck drops for Game 1 against the Ottawa Senators. While head coach Craig Berube didn’t officially name his starting goaltender for Game 1, his words left little doubt, with all signs pointing to Anthony Stolarz getting the nod. 

The veteran player and coach led the St. Louis Blues to a Stanley Cup in 2019, but the rigours of dealing with the pressure in Toronto are quite different. The Maple Leafs, who have only won one playoff round since 2004, hired Berube to be their coach last summer after moving on from previous coach Sheldon Keefe.

The "noise" term was first used by former Leafs head coach Randy Carlyle, who used that term to describe the outside attention on the club back then.

'We'll See Tomorrow': Maple Leafs Reveal Lineup For Game 1 Against Senators, But Could It Change?'We'll See Tomorrow': Maple Leafs Reveal Lineup For Game 1 Against Senators, But Could It Change?The Toronto Maple Leafs aren't changing much ahead of Game 1 on Sunday against the Ottawa Senators.

This year, the Leafs are heavily favored to get past an Ottawa Senators club who are in the playoffs for the first time since 2017.

Under Berube, the Leafs have put more of a focus on defense and appear ready to bust through. But are they?

"I think we've changed, you know, coaches, stuff like that. Maybe we played a little bit of a different style of game that you maybe think is more suitable to the playoffs. But in the end, I mean, it's about executing and going out there and doing the right things, playing as a team, competing, physical, all that stuff," Matthews said.  "There's always different things, different circumstances when you go into a new season and stuff like that, especially when you have a new coaching staff and personnel, stuff like that."

Mitch (Marner) Really Held The Fort For UsMitch (Marner) Really Held The Fort For Us": Leafs GM Gives Strong Vote Of Confidence In Marner Ahead Of PlayoffsMitch Marner's performance in the 2025 Stanley Cup Playoffs could ultimately define his future with the Toronto Maple Leafs. If the Toronto Maple Leafs are to have any success during their 2025 Stanley Cup Playoffs, their top stars are going to have to perform and Mitch Marner is certainly no exception.  

Marner, who is possibly feeling the most pressure, given he is an unrestricted free agent at the end of the season and has been scrutinized for his past playoff performance, wasn't buying into the expectations, either.

"I don't think we're caring about any of that. We're focused as a team in here. We're not focused on anything outside of what people are saying," Marner said. "It's going to be a grind. You know it's going to be ups and downs. You just got to stay together and stick through it and, you know, lean on one another.

"It's not going to be perfect every single night. And you just got to be ready to pick each other up."


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New York Rangers Fire Head Coach Peter Laviolette

Peter Laviolette (Danny Wild-Imagn Images)

The New York Rangers organization announced on Saturday that they have fired head coach Peter Laviolette. The team has also let go of Phil Housley, who was Laviolette’s associate behind the bench.

Rangers GM Chris Drury forwarded a statement, saying, “I want to thank them both and wish them and their families all the best going forward. Peter is first-class all the way, both professionally and personally, and I am truly grateful for his passion and dedication to the Rangers in his time as head coach,” he said.

The Rangers had a disastrous season compared to their previous President’s Trophy-winning 2023-24 campaign. They ended that regular season with a 55-23-4 record and also advanced to the Eastern Conference final, losing to the Florida Panthers in six games.

However, this season, New York finished fifth in the Metropolitan Division and six points out of a playoff spot. This was Laviolette’s second season with the Rangers after being hired for the 2023-24 campaign. His record over those two seasons with the Blueshirts was 94-59-11 with a win percentage of .607. This past season, his team finished with a 39-36-7 record.

Drury touched on what their expectations were going off of last season and how they simply weren’t met. “After finishing with the best regular-season record in the NHL a year ago and making a trip to the Eastern Conference final, we came into this season with high expectations for ourselves,” he said. “Quite simply, we failed to meet those expectations.”

The Rangers GM added that their quest to find a new head coach begins “immediately.”

Late into the season, Laviolette had a hard-hitting quote that shocked the hockey world. After a 5-1 loss to the Tampa Bay Lightning on April 7, Laviolette was asked post-game about what his message was to the team after the game.

He replied, "I don't have a message right now. I don't go into the locker room after the game." That started discussions and rumors that his time with the Rangers could be over.

Before his time in New York, he had coached five other teams over 21 seasons. He began his career as a head coach with the New York Islanders in 2001-02. After that, he went on to coach the Carolina Hurricanes, where he won a Stanley Cup in 2006, the Philadelphia Flyers, Nashville Predators and Washington Capitals.

Aside from winning the Cup in 2006, he advanced to the Stanley Cup final two more times. Once with the Flyers in 2009-10 and the Predators in 2016-17.

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Flyers Will Face Tough Competition for Top NCAA Coach

Flyers coaching target David Carle coached USA at the 2024 World Junior Summer Showcase. (Photo: David Reginek, Imagn Images)

The search for the next head coach of the Philadelphia Flyers just got a lot more complicated.

On Saturday, the Anaheim Ducks announced that they have fired head coach Greg Cronin, marking the first vacated coaching position of the 2025 offseason.

The Flyers, of course, couldn’t even make it to the end of the 2024-25 season, as they fired their head coach, John Tortorella, back on March 27.

Tortorella, 66, was at odds with many at the end of his tenure with the Flyers, as his disciplinarian style and stubbornness rubbed one too many people the wrong way one too many times.

Cronin, 61, met the same fate in Anaheim a little less than a month later.

The common theme between the Ducks and the Flyers?

Both teams have young, talented cores with a healthy mix of veteran players, and both teams were burnt out by coaches whose methods do not resonate with today’s generation of athletes.

And both teams, presumably, will be after a young, successful, progressive coach who can help transform their culture, cultivate their young talents, and grow into something great over time.

This leads the Flyers and the Ducks to the NCAA’s top NHL head coaching candidate: University of Denver head coach David Carle.

Carle, 35, has served as Denver’s head coach for seven seasons now, winning the NCAA championship twice and finishing as a semifinalist once. Prior to taking the reins, Carle won a third total NCAA championship - his first - as an understudy to current St. Louis Blues boss Jim Montgomery.

And, with a 179-74-17 record, Carle knows as much about winning as most coaches you can find out there today.

Flyers forward Bobby Brink, a former star at Denver, tried his hardest to avoid directly vouching for his old bench boss.

“I know that he’s had so much success there. He’s a great coach,” Brink said of Carle at his exit interview Saturday. “I think that he’ll do well at the NHL level. He’s not confiding in me too much. I’m guessing he’s going to get interviews, and I think any team would be lucky to have him.”

Brink isn’t the only one putting two and two together, though.

In his latest “32 Thoughts” podcast, NHL insider Elliotte Friedman discussed the Flyers and Carle, noting that the Flyers and other NHL teams will have to make it “hard for him to say no.”

“I think the Flyers are like the Ducks,” Friedman added. “They’ve kind of said, ‘Ok, it’s been enough of this. It’s time to go for it a little bit.’”

So, if the Flyers and Ducks were not already superimposed by the highly-controversial Jamie Drysdale-Cutter Gauthier trade from last January, they are now.

A top college coach like Carle, or any coaching candidate, for that matter, will have to look at the Ducks and Flyers and choose between Matvei Michkov, Drysdale, Cam York, Tyson Foerster, Jett Luchanko, Alex Bump, Sean Couturier, Travis Konecny, Brink, a top 2025 NHL Draft selection, and no immediate goaltending solutions and Gauthier, Trevor Zegras, Troy Terry, Mason McTavish, Leo Carlsson, Pavel Mintyukov, Olen Zellweger, Jackson Lacombe, and two rock-solid goalies in John Gibson and Lukas Dostal.

Despite having coached both Brink and Terry, as well as Flyers prospect Massimo Rizzo, it is clear which team is best equipped to start winning, both now and in the future.

Another thing to consider, from Carle’s perspective, is each team’s respective recent head coaching history.

The Ducks have gone through just five coaches, including interim coaches, since 2011: Bruce Boudreau, Flyers adviser Bob Murray, Randy Carlyle, Dallas Eakins, and the recently fired Cronin.

For the Flyers, assuming Brad Shaw is not retained as the head coach, they’ll have gone through eight coaches since 2011: Peter Laviolette, Craig Berube, Dave Hakstol, Scott Gordon, Alain Vigneault, Mike Yeo, Tortorella, and Shaw.

At 35, Carle is a young guy with a young family. Will he risk his cozy and successful position at Denver for a potentially chaotic one in Philadelphia? Can the Flyers make assurances, and generally, a better offer, than other teams?

By making an offer to Carle to begin with, the Flyers would have recognized they are signing up for a long-term project with a long-term solution, rather than a long-term project with a short-term solution like Tortorella or Vigneault.

But, rest assured, they will have competition from the Ducks and other NHL teams. The 2025 coaching carousel is shaping up to be a crowded one.

Aston Villa 4-1 Newcastle United: Premier League – as it happened

Ollie Watkins was the star turn of a comprehensive Villa victory, as Unai Emery’s team closed the gap on the top five

McGinn tries to release Watkins down the left. Tonali comes across to put a stop to his gallop. But Tonali’s clearance only goes to Tielemans, who immediately returns it down the inside-left channel to Watkins. He shoots. A deflection off Schar sends the ball into the bottom left, past the wrong-footed, and rooted, Pope. What a start!

Newcastle get the ball rolling. They’re kicking towards the Holte End in this first half.

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Dodgers star Shohei Ohtani announces birth of his daughter with heartwarming post

Dodgers star Shohei Ohtani announces birth of his daughter with heartwarming post originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

Congratulations are in order for Dodgers superstar Shohei Ohtani and his wife, Mamiko Tanaka, who gave birth to their daughter.

Ohtani made the aww-inducing announcement in an Instagram post on Saturday, sharing that he and his wife are now the proud parents of a baby girl. This marks the first child for Ohtani and Tanaka, who was a professional basketball player in their native Japan.

“I am so grateful to my loving wife who gave birth to our healthy, beautiful daughter,” Ohtani wrote in his post. “To my daughter, thank you for making us very nervous yet super anxious parents.”

The couple, who routinely guard their privacy, did not share their daughter’s name or a photo of the newborn, but did share an image of the couple holding their daughter’s tiny feet. Decoy, the pair’s beloved Kooikerhondje, made a cameo in the announcement with a small photo of the pooch on the corner of the post.

In addition to showering his family with his gratitude, Ohtani also expressed his thanks to the Dodgers and the medical staff that has been supporting the new parents.

The two-way athlete announced in December that his wife was expecting their first child. Ohtani did not specify when the baby was born.

On Friday, Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said Ohtani was placed on MLB’s paternity list. Under the organization’s rules, Ohtani can miss up to three games during his paternity leave.

The Hockey News – Canucks Site Predicts The 2025 Stanley Cup Playoffs

May 29, 2023; Dallas, Texas, USA; A view of an NHL puck with the Stanley Cup logo and hockey sticks and the face-off circle during the third period of the game between the Dallas Stars and the Vegas Golden Knights in game six of the Western Conference Finals of the 2023 Stanley Cup Playoffs at American Airlines Center. Mandatory Credit: Jerome Miron-Imagn Images

The 2025 Stanley Cup Playoffs began on April 19, 2025. The team at The Hockey News - Vancouver Canucks site have made our predictions. Let us know in the comments if you agree or disagree with our picks! 

Latest From THN’s Vancouver Canucks Site:

New Canucks Reflect On Their First Season In Vancouver 

"I Love Where Our D Core Is At": Canucks Tyler Myers Reflects On The 2024-25 Season & Explains Why He Is Optimistic About The Future

Canucks Conor Garland Heading To 2025 IIHF Men’s World Championships

Round 1 

Adam Kierszenblat

Winnipeg Jets over St. Louis Blues

Colorado Avalanche over Dallas Stars

Vegas Golden Knights over Minnesota Wild 

L.A. Kings over Edmonton Oilers 

Washington Capitals over Montréal Canadiens 

Carolina Hurricanes over New Jersey Devils

Toronto Maple Leafs over Ottawa Senators 

Tampa Bay Lightning over Florida Panthers 

Izzy Cheung

Jets over Blues 

Avalanche over Stars

Golden Knights over Wild 

Oilers over Kings 

Canadiens over Capitals 

Hurricanes over Devils

Panthers over Lightning

Senators over Maple Leafs 

Round 2 

Adam: 

Jets over Avalanche

Golden Knights over Kings

Hurricanes over Capitals

Lightning over Maple Leafs

Izzy: 

Avalanche over Jets

Golden Knights over Oilers 

Hurricanes over Canadiens 

Panthers over Senators 

Conference Finals 

Adam: 

Jets over Golden Knights

Hurricanes over Lightning

Izzy: 

Avalanche over Golden Knights

Hurricanes over Panthers 

Stanley Cup Finals 

Adam: Jets over Hurricanes

Izzy: Avalanche over Hurricanes  

Stanley Cup Winner 

Adam: Winnipeg Jets

Izzy: Colorado Avalanche 

Conn Smythe Winner 

Adam: Connor Hellebuyck 

Izzy: Cale Makar

Points Leader 

Adam: Sebastian Aho

Izzy: Nathan MacKinnon

Best Goaltender 

Adam: Connor Hellebuyck

Izzy: Connor Hellebuyck

Breakout Player 

Adam: Logan Stankoven 

Izzy: Logan O’Connor 

Canadian Team To Go The Furthest 

Adam: Winnipeg Jets

Izzy: Winnipeg Jets

Make sure you bookmark THN’s Vancouver Canucks site and add us to your favourites on Google News for the latest news, exclusive interviews, breakdowns, and so much more. Also, be sure to leave a comment at the bottom of the page and engage with other passionate fans through our forum.

The Hockey News

Oilers' Leon Draisaitl Scored More Goals – And Bigger Goals – Than Anyone In The NHL

Leon Draisaitl (Perry Nelson-Imagn Images)

The NHL had only one 50-goal scorer this season in Leon Draisaitl of the Edmonton Oilers.

Not only did Draisaitl score a lot for the Oilers, but he scored a lot when it really mattered. He had the most goals and points that came at the most important moments, which is why he is The Hockey News' 2024-25 NHL Situational Scoring champion.

You know how they say that it doesn’t matter how, but how many? Well, with Situational Scoring, it doesn’t matter how many. It matters how many mattered, because the stat charts only the goals that are important.

Here's the chart with the top 25 to click on – check it out, see some of the surprising names and keep this in mind when people talk about the Hart Trophy race for the NHL's most valuable player. For the full explanation for Situational Scoring and the glossary, keep reading below, and leave a comment about your thoughts on the list.

NHL Situational Scoring: Top 25 Players In 2024-25NHL Situational Scoring: Top 25 Players In 2024-25Situational Scoring tracks the points that matter the most. Goals and assists are assigned a value depending on the situation and added up in the total (SS points). Scroll to the right for more numbers.

As the name suggests, it measures Situational Scoring, specifically which players produce offense at the most crucial times in the game. For example, an overtime-winning goal, like the one McDavid scored for Canada to finish the 4 Nations Face-Off with gold, is worth more than scoring when it's a blowout.

That's why a guy like Troy Terry of the Anaheim Ducks can be 105th in the actual scoring race but is tied for 23rd in Situational Scoring. (It's actually phenomenal what Terry did, considering the Ducks were third-last in league scoring and didn't score nearly as many big goals as better teams.) Or Vegas Golden Knights center Jack Eichel can be eighth and Colorado Avalanche defenseman Cale Makar ninth in NHL scoring but not crack the top 25 in this department.

As always, there are a couple of things to note, the most important being that goals are weighted more heavily than assists, with goals worth one point and assists worth half a point.

In this system, goals can be worth more than one point and assists worth more than half a point. For example, the first goal of a game is automatically worth two points, one for being the first goal of the game and one for putting that player’s team ahead in a game. An overtime goal is worth three: one for putting the team ahead, one for being the game-winner and one for the overtime goal. If that is the only goal in a 1-0 game, as it was for Mitch Marner against the Montreal Canadiens last weekend, it’s worth four.

It can all be a little confusing, so here’s a glossary:

FIRST: When a player scores the first goal of the game.

AHEAD: Any goal that puts a team ahead at any point in the game, including overtime.

TIED: Any goal that pulls a team into a tie at any point in the game.

COMEBACK: A goal that is scored when a team is trailing by two goals or more and is part of a series of goals that eventually ties the game, regardless of the ultimate outcome of the game.

WINNER: A game-winning goal, but not by the NHL’s definition. The game-winner in this category is the goal that puts a team ahead in a game to stay. So in other words, you could have a 7-6 game and maybe the first goal of the game was the game-winner.

OT: Overtime goal.

SO: Only shootout game-winning goals are counted in this category.

NHL: Where the player stands in the actual NHL scoring race.

Want to see how the rankings changed since the 4 Nations Face-Off break? Click here.

Ugochukwu stuns West Ham to move Southampton level with Derby’s total

Lesley Ugochukwu’s added-time equaliser ensured Southampton equalled Derby’s record-low Premier League points total with a 1-1 draw at West Ham.

The already-relegated Saints were still on course to be crowned the worst team in Premier League history after Jarrod Bowen fired the hosts into the lead. But they were not even the worst team at the London Stadium for long periods of a dreadful game, and they snatched a deserved point deep into added time when the Chelsea loanee Ugochukwu drove home through a crowded penalty area.

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Phillies rip 18 hits, hang on for victory over Marlins

Phillies rip 18 hits, hang on for victory over Marlins originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

The Phillies’ bats sure enjoyed an 80-degree April afternoon at Citizens Bank Park. 

The Phils piled up a season-high 18 hits Saturday and just about held on for an 11-10 win over the Marlins. Even many of their outs were loud. 

Taijuan Walker started for the Phillies. He didn’t have great command out of the gates but used his splitter well and escaped a first-and-third, no-out jam in the third inning. 

The Phillies had several near misses and hard-hit balls early against Miami’s Cal Quantrill, including J.T. Realmuto’s second-inning knock off the left field wall. 

They waited until the third to post a crooked number. Johan Rojas doubled to lead off the inning, darted to third base on Bryson Stott’s grounder to shortstop and cruised home on Trea Turner’s line-drive hit to left. 

Bryce Harper and Kyle Schwarber’s walks loaded the bases for Nick Castellanos with one out. Harper’s walked seven times over the past five games. Castellanos produced a sac fly and Max Kepler delivered a two-RBI double to put the Phils up 4-0. 

Miami got a run back in the fourth inning, but the Phillies’ offense kept the pressure on and Quantrill couldn’t complete the fourth.

After a Bohm single, Rojas lay down a bunt. Quantrill fielded the ball and considered going to second base, but he decided against it and Rojas wound up sprinting through first without a throw. Stott ripped a double to right-center that scored Bohm, and Rojas was (successfully) hot on his heels. Turner followed with a double that gave the Phillies a 7-1 lead. 

Both the bottom and top of the Phillies’ lineup were tremendous Saturday. Rojas and Stott picked up RBI hits in the fifth. Bohm recorded his first multi-hit game of April and Rojas notched his first three-hit game of the season. Stott was 3 for 5 with three RBIs and Turner went 4 for 5 with two RBIs. 

Phillies manager Rob Thomson pulled Walker after just 56 pitches, turning to Matt Strahm for the fifth inning. Walker’s final line was four innings, one run, one hit, three walks and two strikeouts. 

Carlos Hernandez had a rough sixth inning and Jordan Romano seriously struggled in the ninth, conceding six runs. The game suddenly became tense and Jose Alvarado was needed for the final out.

He got it. Miami’s Xavier Edwards lined out to right field, cementing the Phillies’ third win in a row. They’re now 13-8 on the season.

Sunday’s series finale will start at 1:35 p.m. The pitching matchup is Jesus Luzardo (2-0, 2.31 ERA) vs. Connor Gillispie (0-2, 6.63 ERA). 

Castellanos gets a DH day 

Castellanos served as the Phillies’ designated hitter Saturday. Schwarber played left field and Kepler slid over to right. 

Thomson has been cautious with Castellanos since he exited the Phillies’ win Thursday over the Giants because of left hip flexor tightness.

“We’re just trying to keep him off his feet for a day, limit as much running as we can. … Schwarbs is happy he gets to play (the field),” Thomson said. 

Brandon Marsh remained out with a right knee injury. According to Thomson pregame, Marsh was feeling “a little bit better” and likely would’ve been available in an emergency scenario. 

Another step for Painter 

Andrew Painter made his second rehab start Friday night for Single A Clearwater, throwing three scoreless innings. Thomson was pleased with his outing. 

“The velocity was good, he threw strikes, the secondary pitches were good. … Forty-nine pitches. Three hits, four strikeouts, no walks. It’s good,” Thomson said. 

Painter is scheduled to start next Thursday in Clearwater. He’ll again be around 50 pitches. 

Thomson said he envisions Painter hitting “120, 130” innings this season between the minors and majors, but “we don’t really know the number.” 

Ranger Suarez is set to continue his rehab progression with a start next Tuesday for Triple A Lehigh Valley. 

Phillies rip 18 hits, hang on for victory over Marlins

Phillies rip 18 hits, hang on for victory over Marlins originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

The Phillies’ bats sure enjoyed an 80-degree April afternoon at Citizens Bank Park. 

The Phils piled up a season-high 18 hits Saturday and just about held on for an 11-10 win over the Marlins. Even many of their outs were loud. 

Taijuan Walker started for the Phillies. He didn’t have great command out of the gates but used his splitter well and escaped a first-and-third, no-out jam in the third inning. 

The Phillies had several near misses and hard-hit balls early against Miami’s Cal Quantrill, including J.T. Realmuto’s second-inning knock off the left field wall. 

They waited until the third to post a crooked number. Johan Rojas doubled to lead off the inning, darted to third base on Bryson Stott’s grounder to shortstop and cruised home on Trea Turner’s line-drive hit to left. 

Bryce Harper and Kyle Schwarber’s walks loaded the bases for Nick Castellanos with one out. Harper’s walked seven times over the past five games. Castellanos produced a sac fly and Max Kepler delivered a two-RBI double to put the Phils up 4-0. 

Miami got a run back in the fourth inning, but the Phillies’ offense kept the pressure on and Quantrill couldn’t complete the fourth.

After a Bohm single, Rojas lay down a bunt. Quantrill fielded the ball and considered going to second base, but he decided against it and Rojas wound up sprinting through first without a throw. Stott ripped a double to right-center that scored Bohm, and Rojas was (successfully) hot on his heels. Turner followed with a double that gave the Phillies a 7-1 lead. 

Both the bottom and top of the Phillies’ lineup were tremendous Saturday. Rojas and Stott picked up RBI hits in the fifth. Bohm recorded his first multi-hit game of April and Rojas notched his first three-hit game of the season. Stott was 3 for 5 with three RBIs and Turner went 4 for 5 with two RBIs. 

Phillies manager Rob Thomson pulled Walker after just 56 pitches, turning to Matt Strahm for the fifth inning. Walker’s final line was four innings, one run, one hit, three walks and two strikeouts. 

He dealt with shoulder stiffness throughout the day.

“Just couldn’t really get extended too much on the glove side, especially in that fourth inning with my cutter and four-seamer into the lefties,” Walker said. “Couldn’t really get it there all the way. And we had that other long inning the next one.

“It kind of sucks because I feel like I was in a pretty good groove, getting a lot of ground balls. My splitter was working really well today. It just sucks having the bullpen have to cover for me.”

Walker’s slated to start next Friday against the Cubs and expected he’d be ready to pitch.

Carlos Hernandez had a rough sixth inning and Jordan Romano seriously struggled in the ninth, conceding six runs. The game suddenly became tense and Jose Alvarado was needed for the final out.

“I felt great out there, actually,” Romano said. “That’s the best my arm has felt in a long time. … I felt confident, honestly, in all my pitches. I don’t know. They were seeing it really well today. Everything I threw in there, it felt like they were pretty comfortable with it and obviously putting pretty good swings on it.

“But again, not exactly sure. Obviously, when I’m up in the count, need to make better pitches — 1-2, 0-2. But I still felt great out there, just got crushed.”

Romano said he’d review the video and look into whether he was tipping his pitches.

“I’ve got a lot of confidence in him,” Thomson said. “He’s got a great track record. As long as the stuff is good, you’ve got to believe in him.”

Alvarado ultimately sealed the deal. Miami’s Xavier Edwards lined out to right field, cementing the Phillies’ third win in a row. They’re now 13-8 on the season.

Sunday’s series finale will start at 1:35 p.m. The pitching matchup is Jesus Luzardo (2-0, 2.31 ERA) vs. Connor Gillispie (0-2, 6.63 ERA). 

Castellanos gets a DH day 

Castellanos served as the Phillies’ designated hitter Saturday. Schwarber played left field and Kepler slid over to right. 

Thomson has been cautious with Castellanos since he exited the Phillies’ win Thursday over the Giants because of left hip flexor tightness.

“We’re just trying to keep him off his feet for a day, limit as much running as we can. … Schwarbs is happy he gets to play (the field),” Thomson said. 

Brandon Marsh remained out with a right knee injury. According to Thomson pregame, Marsh was feeling “a little bit better” and likely would’ve been available in an emergency scenario. 

Another step for Painter 

Andrew Painter made his second rehab start Friday night for Single A Clearwater, throwing three scoreless innings. Thomson was pleased with his outing. 

“The velocity was good, he threw strikes, the secondary pitches were good. … Forty-nine pitches. Three hits, four strikeouts, no walks. It’s good,” Thomson said. 

Painter is scheduled to start next Thursday in Clearwater. He’ll again be around 50 pitches. 

Thomson said he envisions Painter hitting “120, 130” innings this season between the minors and majors, but “we don’t really know the number.” 

Ranger Suarez is set to continue his rehab progression with a start next Tuesday for Triple A Lehigh Valley. He was in Philadelphia on Saturday for a bullpen session.

O’Reilly and Kovacic sink Everton to boost Manchester City’s top-five hopes

The Premier League trophy Manchester City have proudly held for the past four years will be soon heading to one side of Stanley Park but, after exploding to life late against Everton, they took an important step towards Champions League qualification on the other. Nico O’Reilly and Mateo Kovacic sealed a victory that even Pep Guardiola may not have seen coming to edge City towards a place among the European elite for a 15th season in succession.

A goalless draw appeared the most likely outcome for most of a pedestrian contest but in a late twist, shaped by the positive impact of Guardiola’s substitutions and David Moyes’ subs having the opposite effect, City seized control of the closing stages and secure a ninth consecutive win at Goodison.

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Bournemouth falter in race for Europe as 10-man Crystal Palace scrape draw

It is unlikely anyone will remember this game fondly in years to come. Bournemouth missed the chance to make up ground in the race for European football next season as 10-man Crystal Palace stood firm after a week of two heavy defeats in which they conceded five goals twice.

A red card for Chris Richards at the end of the first half left his side with an uphill task to make it five successive home wins after the referee, Sam Barrott, had bizarrely decided against meting out the same punishment to Bournemouth’s Alex Scott.

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Blues-Jets Game 1 Gameday Lineup

Jake Neighbours (right) and the St. Louis Blues will battle Luke Schenn (5), Connor Hellebuyck (back) and the Winnipeg Jets in Game 1 of the Western Conference First Round starting on Saturday. (James Carey Lauder-Imagn Images)

This is what the St. Louis Blues were grinding for, for the past two months. On the outside looking in, it's all come to fruition now and to be on the grandest stage to be competing in the Stanley Cup playoffs is what it's all about.

The Blues, the second wild card from the Western Conference, open the best-of-7 Western Conference First Round on Saturday against the Presidents' Trophy-winning Winnipeg Jets (5 p.m.; FDSNMW, TNT, truTV, MAX, CBC, TVAS, SN, ESPN 101.1-FM) at Canada Life Centre.

It will be the second playoff meeting between the Blues and Jets, with the first taking place in 2019 when the teams also met in the first round, with the Blues winning in six games en route to their first Stanley Cup title in franchise history.

"It's very exciting," said Blues defenseman Cam Fowler, who will return to the postseason for the first time since 2018 with the Anaheim Ducks. "That's what all of us play for is to have the opportunity to compete for the Stanley Cup. I've certainly missed that feeling over those past few years so I'm grateful and excited to get this opportunity again. There's nothing like it. Playoffs in the NHL is as good as it gets in any sport. As an athlete competing in it, you just try and take in the moment and you enjoy it and know that it's going to be a battle. We have to appreciate it because the opportunity doesn't come around every year.

"We know it's going to be a difficult test, but you get yourself into the playoffs, anything can happen. We've got to prepare as best as we can and make sure that we're ready to go because going into Winnipeg is always going to be a challenge and they played great hockey throughout the course of the year but especially on home ice. We've got to make sure that we're ready for that challenge."

Plenty of storylines are in the air heading into the series, from the head-to-head matchup (again) between Blues goalie Jordan Binnington and Winnipeg's Connor Hellebuyck, who is the odds-on favorite to win the Vezina Trophy and is under serious consideration to also win the Hart Trophy; there's the Winnipeg 'White Out' that's encapsulated playoffs past with picturesque views.

"I'm super-excited and I'm looking forward to it," said Blues forward Zack Bolduc, who will make his NHL playoff debut. "I've been watching playoff games in Winnipeg growing up. You see all the white shirts in the stands. Now I get the chance to experience it and I'm looking forward to it."

And there's the brotherly battle between Blues captain Brayden Schenn and older brother, Winnipeg defenseman Luke Schenn.

"I love my brother, it's a unique situation, you never think you'd be playing as many games as we have and never played each other in the Stanley Cup (playoffs)," Brayden said, "but here we are. The type of games that we have to play are physical and be in your face type of hockey. I don't see me or Luke talking about this much longer. To each other, it's not about me vs. Luke. It's the Blues vs. the Jets and we'd like it to be like that. We understand it's brotherly competition, but at the end of the day, we respect our team, we respect the game and we're going to play each other hard and have a beer and laugh about it in the summer.

"... It's an intense building, it's fun. Hockey playoffs in a Canadian city, people embrace it. It's always fun to go on the road to start. ... We're looking forward to getting back there. It's a fun place to play and it's a good hockey team that's going to give us a good challenge."

The Blues had to go through a gauntlet to receive entry into the playoffs by going 19-4-2 in 25 games following the 4 Nations Face-Off break, including a franchise record 12-game winning streak when they were eight points out of a wild card position and made up that ground.

"I loved how we got here, but it's over and done with," Blues coach Jim Montgomery said. "I'm on to Winnipeg and I'm in the Stanley Cup playoff mode. This is such a cherished opportunity to be a part of the Stanley Cup playoffs. It's great we earned our way there, but now it's over and done with and it's what are we going to do now that we're here.

"I think playoffs are a completely different animal. In that sense, whatever we've done in the last two months to get ourselves ready for this, it helps. Just like the outstanding season that they've had for 82 games, helps them prepare for the playoffs, but it's a different animal. It's like going from civilization to the wild, wild west. It's completely different, and the way people react and how people respond, it's different because results are immediate. You don't have the next two games to correct things. You've got to correct them within games."

The series resumes with Game 2 on Monday (6:30 p.m.) before the series shifts to St. Louis for Game 3 on Thursday (8:30 p.m.) and Game 4 on Sunday, April 27 (noon).

"It’s loud, they’re passionate fans there and the city’s definitely excited and waiting for us," Binnington said. "It’s something that, looking back on it, is such an incredible experience to feel that energy and emotion and go out and just play hockey and do our best to play our game and win our game. It’s a great opportunity for us and we’re excited in here.

"We’ve put in the work and we caught our stride at the right time. We have to keep looking forward and keep mentally strong here and focusing on what we can do to win and just playing together and more of the same that we’ve been doing."

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An area the Blues worked on Friday and know they'll have to excel at in this series is net front presence and being able to box out the Jets at the other end.

Sounds simple enough but they're areas that could, along with special teams play, make or brake a team in a series.

"Really important. I think obviously when you’re facing a goaltender like Hellebuyck, it’s important to get traffic in front of him, create a lot of chaos in there," Blues forward Jake Neighbours said, "and obviously they have some big D, too, that are pretty good at boxing out and being physical and stuff like that. As forwards, winning those battles and getting to the net-front is going to be pretty important.

"Obviously I’ve never played playoff hockey, but I’d imagine (getting boxed out) are the frustrations you’re going to deal with. Nothing’s going to be for free out there. It’s going to be real tight. You have to work for every inch of space you want out there. It’s going to be tight checking, we know that, we expect that. I think when you go into it expecting those things, it’s a little bit easier not to get frustrated because you know it’s coming. We understand how hard it’s going to be to get there and create offense and we’re ready for that."

It's why Montgomery was urging his players to be more assertive in those areas on Friday.

"They are a really good net front team," Montgomery said. "Defensively, they haven't given up much. They defend their net really well. We've got to find way to get in front of Hellebuyck, who's had an outstanding year, and defensively, they're a team that always has an anchor in front of the net, always has someone there and we've got to make sure in our D-zone coverage, that we're boxing out or fronting pucks and our wings are getting out and taking away. They shoot a lot of pucks from their point men.

"The urgency that, as a coach you’d like to see for trying to bury pucks and attacking the blue paint was not at the level I’d like to see. We’re going to have to be good at it. They’re the best defensive team in the league. If you don’t make it hard on them, it’s going to be easy on them."

The Jets do more than just take away the middle of the ice, though.

"They protect the middle of the ice really well but I’ve got to say they protect lines well, they protect their net-front really well," Montgomery said. "In order for us to have success, we are going to have to, and this is true every playoffs, you’re not playing the teams that were out of the playoffs at Thanksgiving anymore. You’re playing the best teams in the league and they’re in the playoffs for a reason because they’re usually really good defensively. That’s first and foremost and then they can counter-attack and score goals."

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A couple roster updates include Robert Thomas, who is set to go after not skating on Thursday but being a full participant on Friday after leaving Tuesday's season finale, a 6-1 win against Utah Hockey Club, in the third period with a lower-body injury.

"Yeah he looks fine out there to me in practice and I talked to him at the end," Montgomery said. "He said, ‘All good.’"

As for Dylan Holloway, who missed the last five games with a lower-body injury of his own and has not skated with the team since, being termed week to week, there was no indication by Montgomery he would be traveling for the first two games. The balls are still up in the air as far as when/if Holloway would be available.

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They're not as hyped during games in the regular season unless they're marquee matchups, but now that the playoffs have arrived, they tend to be more magnified.

The home side obviously gets the upper hand on matchups, and that's why for Montgomery, he himself though has a luxury because of his willingness and trust whoever he uses in any situation.

"I find it much easier to just coach on your toes on the road," Montgomery said. "You put out your line and you dictate matchups and if it’s not a matchup you like, the players have to battle through it. Every time there’s a whistle, they’re going to get their matchup. So, as a coach, you just put out the guys you think are in favorable situations, whether it's offensive zone, neutral zone, defensive zone and you live with your decisions. You’re asking your players and you’re trusting your players to get the job done.

"It’s a huge benefit for us when your third- and fourth-line centers are Faksa and Sunny. They’re not only grizzled veterans, but they’re hard and they’re really good defensively and they’re really sound, they’re really physical and mean. So, when you have that, it’s a huge benefit as a coach because you can just throw them out at any time and if there’s an icing, you’re perfectly comfortable with it."

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Blues Projected Lineup:

Jake Neighbours-Robert Thomas-Pavel Buchnevich

Jimmy Snuggerud-Brayden Schenn-Jordan Kyrou

Mathieu Joseph-Oskar Sundqvist-Zack Bolduc

Alexey Toropchenko-Radek Faksa-Nathan Walker

Cam Fowler-Colton Parayko

Philip Broberg-Justin Faulk

Ryan Suter-Nick Leddy

Jordan Binnington will start in goal; Joel Hofer will be the backup.

Healthy scratches include Tyler Tucker, Alexandre Texier, Matthew Kessel and Will Cranley. Dylan Holloway (lower body) remains week to week. Torey Krug (ankle) is out for the season.

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Jets Projected Lineup:

Kyle Connor-Mark Scheifele-Alex Iafallo

Nino Niederreiter-Vladislav Namestnikov-Cole Perfetti

Brandon Tanev-Adam Lowry-Mason Appleton

David Gustafsson-Morgan Barron-Jaret Anderson-Dolan

Josh Morrissey-Dylan DeMelo

Dylan Samberg-Neal Pionk

Logan Stanley-Luke Schenn

Connor Hellebuyck will start in goal; Eric Comrie will be the backup.

Healthy scratches include Dominic Toninato, Haydn Fleury, Colin Miller, Ville Heinola and Chris Driedger. Nikolaj Ehlers (lower body) is week to week; Gabriel Vilardi (upper body) and Rasmus Kupari (concussion) are out.

Storylines Abound When In Opening Round Series Between Golden Knights And Wild, Including Several Head-To-Head Matchups

LAS VEGAS -- There are storylines aplenty across every NHL Playoff series, and will be as we get closer to the Stanley Cup Final.

When the Golden Knights open their series against the Minnesota Wild, it'll mark the second time the franchises meet in the playoffs.

Vegas won the first postseason battle in seven games, after the Wild turned back a 3-1 series deficit to tie the seven-game set, only to lose in the decisive final game at T-Mobile Arena.

Those still on the roster haven't forgotten. One guy on the roster - Marc-Andre Fleury - surely hasn't forgotten since he was with the Knights at the time. Now he'll back up Filip Gustavsson in what could ironically be the final series of his Hall of Fame career.

Head-to-head matchups from all three units also provide intriguing storylines.

SOURCE: Stathead

Gustavsson will be opposed by Adin Hill, who rose to fame when he came off the bench to lead the Golden Knights to a Stanley Cup title in 2023 after Laurent Brossoit got hurt eight games into the playoffs.

Hill finished the season with 32 wins, the fifth most in the league, and a 2.47 goals-against average and .906 save percentage. Gustavsson wasn't far behind with 31 wins, while finishing with a 2.56 GAA and .914 save percentage.

SOURCE: Stathead

Both teams have top-tier defensemen in Jared Spurgeon and Shea Theodore, who led the blueliners in points on the Wild and Knights, respectively.

Theodore enjoyed a better season than his counterpart, finishing 10th among all defensemen with 57 points. His 50 assists were the ninth highest in the league, while his 0.85 points per game ranked seventh. Spurgeon, who has 933 games played under his belt, had 32 points (7 goals and 25 assists) in 66 games played.

SOURCE: Stathead

Last, but certainly not least, we have two of the most electric forwards in the NHL, with Minnesota's Kirill Kaprizov and Vegas' Jack Eichel.

Kaprizov just recently returned to the lineup after missing February and March, but he was also leading the Hart Trophy conversation in December after opening the season with 23 goals and 50 points in his first 34 games. His scoring prowess at the time lifted the Wild to the top of the NHL standings.

Eichel, a Hart and Selke Trophy candidate, is having a career season. He racked up a career-best 94 points (8th in the NHL) behind 66 assists, another career-high, in 77 games. His 66 helpers ranked sixth among all skaters. His 1.22 points per game were eighth best, while his 34 power-play points were seventh highest. Coincidentally, his 11 points in nine games from Dec. 4-27 helped push the Knights to a deadlock with Winnipeg and New Jersey atop the league standings on Dec. 27.

The matchups run much deeper than these three, obviously, which goes back to many storylines that could unfold when the series gets underway Sunday night at 7 pm (pacific) inside T-Mobile Arena.

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