FROM THE THN ARCHIVES: Maple Leafs Finding Their Chill

Now and then, The Hockey News - Toronto will look back on some of the in-depth features from the past years. With Brad Treliving about to embark on his third season as Maple Leafs GM, this will be the first time he doesn't have Brendan Shanahan to report to. Shanahan was relieved of his duties as President and Alternate Governor of the Maple Leafs in May. 

With Shanahan gone, Treliving now reports directly to Maple Leaf Sports & Entertainment President Keith Pelley. But for all intents and purposes, Treliving will be able to adopt his own plan with the Shanaplan abandoned.

This article below looks at Treliving's first moves as GM in the summer of 2023 and perhaps it gives us more clues as to what is ahead.

BY RYAN KENNEDY  (From. Sept. 18 2023, Vol. 77, Issue 03)

Here is a revised copy with verified, working internal thehockeynews.com hyperlinks inserted behind major names and subjects from your text:

Before Brad Treliving was GM of the Toronto Maple Leafs, before he was GM of the Calgary Flames and before he was president of the Central League, he was a 6-foot-4, 225-pound defenseman in the minors. Treliving played for the ECHL’s Winston-Salem Thunderbirds, Louisville Icehawks and Greensboro Monarchs, among others. But one of his most intriguing stints in the ECHL came with the Columbus Chill in the early 1990s, nearly a decade before the Blue Jackets brought NHL hockey to the Ohio capital.

Those Chill teams weren’t particularly successful, but they did lead the league in one category: penalty minutes. And keep in mind, a real-life Hanson brother, Steve Carlson, coached one of their opponents, the Johnstown Chiefs. “Terry Ruskowski was the coach, and there wasn’t really any confusion as to what the style of play was,” Treliving said. “There were a lot of tough hombres. It wasn’t a highly skilled team, but it was a tough group. I still stay in touch with a lot of those guys. (Donny Granato – Sabres coach) was one of our few skill guys and a really good player. They had a really good run there as a minor-hockey town.”

In Treliving’s first season with the Chill, he finished with 170 PIM in 49 games. That put him fifth on the squad, though left winger Rob Sangster was right behind him with 158 PIM – and he only played 15 games. Jason Taylor played 21 games and had 147 PIM. Blueliners Barry Dreger (362 PIM) and Mark Cipriano (333) led the way. This is a roundabout way of saying Treliving always had to be ready to drop the gloves, whether or not he was initially part of the provocation. “There were a lot of rumbles,” he said. “They’d probably put you in jail now for some of the stuff we did back then. It was a different time. There was beef more nights than there wasn’t.”

Which brings us to the present. The Maple Leafs have been known as a skilled team for years since a rebuild netted the franchise the likes of Auston Matthews, Mitch Marner and William Nylander through the draft and John Tavares via free agency. Toronto had all the resources a sports team could hope for and a front office led by the well-respected Brendan Shanahan and a great young mind in GM Kyle Dubas.

Playoff success did not follow, however. The group constantly stumbled in the first round, whether it was understandable (Washington, Boston, Tampa Bay) or not (Montreal, Columbus). From his perch out west in Calgary, however, Treliving saw a team coached by Sheldon Keefe whose reliance on firepower decreased as it improved over the years. “They’ve been a really good team for a long time,” Treliving said. “They have high-end talent, and the view of Toronto was always of a team with high-end talent. But with each year, they really evolved in terms of their checking game, and to me, that’s a really good job by Sheldon and a really good job of buy-in from the players. Maybe, years ago, they would have tried to outscore you, but in the past couple of years, they haven’t given up a lot. That’s been an evolution.”

Not that you need the recap, but for posterity’s sake, the past six months were pretty earth-shaking in Leafs Nation. Toronto finally got over the hump by beating Tampa Bay in the first round of the playoffs, then faltered against the underdog Florida Panthers in Round 2. So, was it a step in the right direction or yet another Leafs letdown? The idea of running it back seemed pretty reasonable before palace drama set in. Dubas was fired, landing on his feet soon after in Pittsburgh. Treliving, who had left Calgary after the sides mutually agreed to part ways, got the job as GM in Toronto and had to get up to speed quickly during a busy summer. The Leafs had a ton of UFAs – including playoff warriors such as Ryan O’Reilly and Noel Acciari – but they also didn’t have a lot of cap space, and Treliving acknowledged some of the players they wanted to keep made it to the free market because the business side of the game dictated the team’s decisions.

Loading up before the trade deadline also meant Toronto didn’t have much draft capital for potential deals. While the team actually wanted to add picks at the draft in Nashville, they ended up making just three selections – and only one (first-rounder Easton Cowan) in the top 150.

So Treliving’s first real splash with the franchise came on July 1. That, of course, is the first day of free agency – a.k.a. Canada Day. The first big bang came with the signing of premium enforcer Ryan Reaves, which, due to the three-year term, had folks a little worried. But in the ensuing days, Treliving and crew inked Tyler Bertuzzi (one of the best UFAs on the market), Max Domi and offense-minded defenseman John Klingberg. Leafs Nation was on board.

In Reaves, Bertuzzi and Domi, Toronto has been given a new set of armor. This team now looks literally ready to rumble and, as Treliving memorably put it in a press conference, has some “snot” in it. But the goal is to win a Stanley Cup, not to become the next Columbus Chill. Reaves believes his new team is in line to do just that.

“They got over that first-round hump last year, and that was such a big weight off their shoulders, maybe overly emotional because it took so long,” Reaves said. “Maybe too many emotions ran into the second round. But, to me, they’re trending in the right direction. It’s a team that could win this year, could win in the next three years. I wanted to go to a contender, and Toronto is a contender.”

As the best fighter in the NHL (according to a survey of former enforcers we did for THN.com this summer), Reaves is a nuclear option when it comes to his fists. But donnybrooks aren’t a big part of the post-season anymore, and Treliving sees more than one-dimensional value in the winger. “He can still be an effective forechecker,” he said. “He can get in and make things difficult on opposing ‘D.’ We’re not looking for a guy to play two minutes a game. It gives the rest of the group backing, and on the fourth line, it gives us a little more identity. We want to be a strong forechecking group and add some physicality. He’s a guy that opposing teams are aware of.”

Reaves is also a guy his teammates will be aware of immediately. The man is not exactly a wallflower. And on a team previously known for being on the quiet side from a culture standpoint, the new guy is ready to make noise. “I don’t ever come into a locker room shy or quiet,” Reaves said. “I tend to come in and chirp people right away to get that over with. I don’t play a lot of minutes. I don’t score a ton of goals. What I do is physical play and fighting, making sure guys feel safe on the ice.

“Off the ice, I take that very seriously. I like to plan the parties. I like getting the boys together on the road. If someone tends not to come to events, I make sure everyone’s there. It’s really important. The best teams I’ve been on are when everyone is together all the time off the ice. The worst teams have been when there are little cliques that hang out and you never really get the full group together.”

His new teammates know what Reaves brings, and they’re on board already. “Reavo is going to make us all feel pretty easy out there,” Bertuzzi said. “I’m excited.”

Bertuzzi himself may have been the best grab for Treliving over the summer. One of the most coveted free agents on the market, Bertuzzi put up five goals and 10 points in seven playoff games for Boston, tying for the team points lead with Brad Marchand and the team goal-scoring lead with Taylor Hall. But tactics-wise, his value is more in how he gets his points. “Tyler is an inside-ice guy,” Treliving said. “He gets to the net. He’s around the paint. He can score in close, which we needed. When you talk about the playoffs, you have to get to middle ice. There’s not a lot of highlight stuff. It’s being in those areas that aren’t fun to be in. He’s abrasive, but he’s got an underrated skill set, really good hands in close, tipping pucks, making plays. The tight-area game.”

The flip side of Florida’s feel-good run to the Cup final was the teams the Panthers left in their wake. Sure, goaltender Sergei Bobrovsky was massive in victories over Toronto and Carolina, but the Leafs and Hurricanes made life easy on him by mainly staying on the perimeter. Give Florida’s defense credit for making the middle of the ice a war zone, but as Vegas proved in the final, you could ring up goals on the Cats if you didn’t mind paying the price physically.

Bertuzzi, who already has one 30-goal campaign to his credit from his time with the Detroit Red Wings, is more than happy to get the greasy goals Treliving was talking about. “It’s just natural,” Bertuzzi said. “It’s my tendency to get to the net and other areas where pucks will bounce.”

As an Ontario boy from Sudbury, Bertuzzi is happy to be playing closer to home. For Domi, signing in Toronto is literally a homecoming, not to mention a family tradition. Max’s father, Tie Domi, is a Leafs legend whose No. 28 is still worn by fans at Scotiabank Arena today. Hall of Famer Mats Sundin is practically family, and Max grew up in the city, playing for the same Don Mills Flyers organization as Marner (the two later became teammates with the OHL’s London Knights).

Domi doesn’t fight as much as his dad did – few players do – but he’ll drop the gloves when necessary, and he proved in the 2023 playoffs with Dallas that he can be an effective post-season presence. “When things amp up, those guys embrace it,” Treliving said. “Max can play two positions, he can move up and down the lineup, and he’s got a little edge to him. He can skate, he has a tremendous skill set, and he’s another guy that’s not afraid to get into those areas that aren’t always pleasant.”

For Domi, it’s been an interesting career so far. The Leafs are the 28-year-old’s seventh NHL franchise, but in recent years, he’s been one of the guys acquired before the deadline by playoff teams looking for a push. Toronto seems to have just cut to the chase by grabbing him in the summer. “When you have a chance to join a team that is already established and already a contender, it’s a huge boost to your confidence when they want to bring you in,” Domi said. “I had great conversations with Brad and Keefer about certain things they’re looking for that I can jump in on. They want a guy who plays hard every single shift and will do absolutely whatever it takes to help his teammates and win hockey games. I’m looking forward to the challenge and the opportunity. I just can’t wait.”

Of course, it does make it even more special that his dad can go back to cheering for the Leafs full-time now. “He’s ecstatic,” Domi said. “He’s a fan like everyone else at this point. For me, winning is everything, and he was never able to do it. It’s the hardest thing in sport for a reason. To get a chance to do it in the same jersey that he wore for a decade is something that makes the hair stand up on my arms. I look forward to trying to accomplish that with this group. There isn’t a bigger fan of the Leafs right now than my dad.”

So, it feels like the Leafs have all the components to make a Cup run – but so did last year’s Bruins, and look at how that turned out. There are no guarantees in today’s NHL, so Toronto must ride the clichés and take it one game at a time. But with the skilled core the Leafs already had and the new guys they’ve added up front, they’ve put themselves in a great position. “We can’t worry about April, May and June right now, we have to earn our way there,” Treliving said. “But these guys can play games when the temperature warms up.”


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Serie A champions show fresh tricks in opening win but Milan suffer at hands of Schwarzenegger-inspired defender

The new Serie A season was 17 minutes old and already it had started to look like the previous one: Matteo Politano crossing and Scott McTominay scoring, just as they did in Napoli’s title-sealing victory over Cagliari three months ago. Even their positions were practically identical, the Italian cutting in from the right as the Scotsman attacked the six-yard box.

McTominay’s finish was less dramatic this time around, a header instead of a scissor-kick, but he dispatched it with equal conviction. Serie A’s Most Valuable Player in 2024-25, scoring the league’s first goal of 2025-26. “Winning the Scudetto changes nothing,” he had said in one interview earlier this month. “We need to recapture and maintain that mentality we found last year.”

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Shawn Thornton departs Florida Panthers front office after 11 years with organization

A longtime member of the Florida Panthers is starting the next chapter of his life.

Panthers Chief Revenue Officer Shawn Thornton announced on his Linkedin page that he was departing the organization.

Thornton played three seasons for the Panthers before retiring in 2017 and moving to the team’s front office as a vice president of business operations.

After serving as the Panthers senior vice president, he was promoted to Chief Commercial Officer in October 2020, then to Chief Revenue Officer in 2022.

Thornton’s post on Linkedin stated, in part:

“Three years on the ice. Eight years on the business side. Together, we built something special — from growing our fan base and driving record revenues to earning the Sports Business Journal’s Team of the Year and two more rings. But more than the numbers, it’s the people and moments I’ll remember most: the partners who believed in us, and the fans whose passion fueled everything we did.

“I’m deeply grateful to the Viola and Cifu families, Matthew Caldwell and every member of the Panthers organization for trusting me with this role and for making the last decade so meaningful.”

Thornton went on to say that he was not ready to revel the next phase of his career, but added that he was “excited for the next challenge and opportunity.”

The loss of Thornton is not the only change coming to the executive council of the Panthers' front office, as Florida has also parted ways with Chief Operating Officer Bryce Hollweg

Both are still listed in their roles on the Panthers official website

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Photo caption: Jan 20, 2017; Vancouver, British Columbia, CAN; Florida Panthers forward Shawn Thornton (22) warms up against the Vancouver Canucks at Rogers Arena. The Vancouver Canucks won 2-1. (Anne-Marie Sorvin-Imagn Images)

Biggest series of the season? What awaits for Phillies-Mets matchup

Biggest series of the season? What awaits for Phillies-Mets matchup originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

The optimistic Phillies fan will look at this upcoming three-game series with the New York Mets at Citi Field and see that the lead in the National League East could grow to as much to 10 games over the Mets with a sweep.

The pessimist, of course, will point out that a sweep by the Mets would knock the difference between the two to just four games with 29 games to play. Either way, the truth is the truth and the Phillies’ current seven-game lead over New York is the biggest it’s been all season.

The Mets are coming off a series in Atlanta in which they won two of three, after having lost 16 of their previous 21 games. Sunday’s loss was a stinger, as Gregory Soto gave up two runs in the eighth to break a tie game and denied the Mets a sweep over the host Braves.

The Mets currently hold a 1.5 game lead over the Cincinnati Reds for the final Wild Card spot.

The Phillies have won seven of their last nine games and have been playing some of their best baseball of the season over the last few weeks. But this is the Mets and this may be a series that defines how the East is going to play out.

“They’re all big. I mean every game’s big from here on out,” said Phillies manager Rob Thomson of the upcoming series. “The Mets have a good club. And we have to go in and pay attention to every detail and play hard. It can go the other way, too. We have to pay attention.”

Monday’s series opener will feature strong Cy Young candidate Christopher Sanchez for the Phillies against Mets right-hander Kodai Senga.

Sanchez (11-4, 2.46 ERA) has allowed more than two earned runs in just five of his 25 starts and is coming off a start against Seattle in which he went 6 1/3 innings, allowing six hits, two runs, while striking out 12. It was the seventh double-digit strikeout performance of his career and his fourth this season. He has pitched six or more innings in each of his last 14 outings.

Senga (7-5, 2.58 ERA) has allowed 18 earned runs over his last six outings which spans 27 innings for a 6.00 ERA. He hasn’t gotten out of the sixth inning in any of his last eight starts. It will be the first time he’ will’ll pitch on four day’s rest this season.

Thomson will most likely go with his lefty-heavy lineup, though he has been juggling his outfield since the trade deadline. Sunday, left-handed hitter Max Kepler sat against Washington right-handed starter Jake Irvin because Harrison Bader has posted good career numbers against Irvin. Right fielder Nick Castellanos has recently had a few days off, which hasn’t been the norm this season. Thomson appears to be playing the “who’s hot” card when it comes to the outfielders. And it’s worked, so no need to think it’s going to change in these three games.

Tuesday the Mets will throw left-hander Sean Manaea (1-2, 5.15) against the Phillies, who will counter with lefty Jesus Luzardo (12-6, 4.10).

Manaea will be making just his ninth start of the season after a battle with injuries in spring training and in the early season. He was sidelined before the season with a right oblique strain and then pain in his elbow. He made his season debut on July 13 and has gone into the sixth inning in just one of his starts. He has given up 17 earned runs over his last 19 1/3 innings (four starts) for an ERA of 7.92 during that time.

Luzardo struggled during July but has seemingly righted himself in his last five starts. During that time, he struck out 34 over his last 31 innings and has posted an ERA of just 2.32. He struck out 12 in six innings in his last start against Seattle.

In the series finale Wednesday, Mets’ hot rookie Nolan McLean (2-0, 1.46) will make his third-career start and will oppose Phillies veteran right-hander Taijuan Walker (4-6, 3.44).

McLean has struck out 15 in his 12 1/3 innings so far and went seven innings for the win last Friday against the Atlanta Braves when he was backed by a 21-hit performance by the Mets. McLean boasts a really good sweeper and curve ball.

Walker just continues to give the Phillies strong outings as their fifth starter. He has pitched five or more innings in each of his last six starts and has given up three or fewer runs in each of them.

The Mets have won four of the six games between the two teams this season, including all three at Citi Field. After this series, they will have four more matchups at Citizens Bank Park in September.

After this series the Phillies will have 29 games remaining in the season. Things can change quickly. But a good showing at Citi Field over these three games probably will push that talk aside a little bit.

Giants are ‘built to win big' despite second-half collapse, per Brewers manager

Giants are ‘built to win big' despite second-half collapse, per Brewers manager originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

The Giants’ playoff hopes certainly have faded, but they still are more than capable of going toe-to-toe with MLB’s best teams.

Let their road series win over the league-best Milwaukee Brewers this weekend serve as evidence.

And even on an emotional day for Brewers manager Pat Murphy’s squad, and the entire Milwaukee organization, who honored late broadcasting legend Bob Uecker in a pregame celebration of life ceremony, San Francisco was able to steal a thrilling come-from-behind 4-3 win that sealed a series victory.

Murphy, speaking to reporters postgame, gave the Giants their flowers.

“I didn’t think there was any way that the baseball gods would bestow this on us, but you know, you look at the Giants, they’re built to win,” Murphy said. “They were built to win big. It didn’t work out for them yet, but they’re playing with some freedom. They’re really talented.” (h/t MLB.com’s Maria Guardado)

San Francisco, which once was tied with the Los Angeles Dodgers for first place in the National League West on June 13, has gone 23-39 since and has plummeted out of playoff contention.

Despite the Giants’ immediate future not looking so bright, it’s clear some around the league still believe San Francisco will contend again in the near future.

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Hernández: Repeat champions or October duds? Dodgers identity crisis keeps everyone guessing

SAN DIEGO, CALIFORNIA - AUGUST 24: Dino Ebel #91 congratulates Shohei Ohtani.
Dodgers star Shohei Ohtani celebrates with third base coach Dino Ebel after hitting a solo home run in the ninth inning of an 8-2 win over the San Diego Padres on Sunday at Petco Park. (Sean M. Haffey / Getty Images)

When he was finished rounding the bases at Petco Park on Sunday, Shohei Ohtani made a detour on his return to the Dodgers' bench.

Seated by the visiting dugout was a fan in a San Diego Padres cap and brown Fernando Tatis Jr. jersey. The spectator had spent most of the afternoon reminding Ohtani of how much he’d stunk in the three-game series.

Ohtani initiated a high-five with his tormentor, who playfully bowed in deference.

Manager Dave Roberts howled with delight. Teoscar Hernández showered Ohtani with sunflower seeds.

These were like scenes from the good old days, the Dodgers hitting bombs and laughing as they celebrated.

But was this a mirage?

Read more:Dalton Rushing and Freddie Freeman help revive Dodgers' offense in win over Padres

Even after avoiding a sweep by the Padres with an 8-2 victory, even after moving back into a tie with them for the lead in the National League West, the Dodgers continued to be an enigma.

Who were they? The team that trampled the Padres in the series finale? Or the team that rolled over in the two previous games of the series?

“They’re gettable,” said a scout from a rival NL team who was in attendance.

The kind of game the Dodgers played on Sunday, however, prompted the same scout to attach this qualifier: They can’t be counted out.

One of baseball’s worst offensive teams over the last two months, the Dodgers blasted four home runs, including two by Freddie Freeman. The Dodgers claimed the lead on a three-run blast in the seventh inning by Dalton Rushing.

Yoshinobu Yamamoto did his part on the mound, picking up his 11th win by limiting the Padres to two runs over six innings.

The Dodgers have 31 games remaining in the regular season and they expect a number of their injured players to return over that period. The form they take will dramatically affect their chances in October.

Freddie Freeman, right, celebrates with Mookie Betts after hitting a two-run home run against the Padres.
Freddie Freeman, right, celebrates with Mookie Betts after hitting a two-run home run in the seventh inning against the Padres on Sunday. (Derrick Tuskan / Associated Press)

Winning their division could position them to secure a top-two seed in the NL, which would grant them a first-round bye. Failing to do so would subject them to a dangerous best-of-three wild-card series.

Because of the alarming number of injuries they have sustained this season, the Dodgers have already cycled through a variety of identities, from a team without starting pitching to a team without a reliable bullpen to, most recently, a team without a consistent offense.

In their previous two games, the Dodgers scored a combined two runs, leading Roberts and some players to question the team’s collective approach at the plate.

Just a week earlier, the division race looked as if it could be over. The Padres entered a three-game series at Dodger Stadium as the hottest team this side of Milwaukee. The Padres had bolstered their lineup, rotation and top-ranked bullpen at the trade deadline while the Dodgers did almost nothing.

The Dodgers still swept them.

Read more:News Analysis: The Dodgers have an outfield problem. But do they have the options to fix it?

But their inconsistency on offense kept them from protecting the two-game lead they’d built. They inexplicably dropped two of four games against the last-place Colorado Rockies. By Saturday, after their second loss to the Padres in as many days, they were in second place.

Just as the Dodgers looked as if they could be written off, just as they looked as if they could relinquish control of the division to the Padres, they responded with a performance worthy of their $320-million payroll.

“Today was a game we couldn’t drop no matter what,” Yamamoto said in Japanese, “so I went into the game with more focus than usual.”

The hitters also went into the game with a heightened focus, resulting in more extended at-bats that gradually wore down the Padres’ pitchers. The Dodgers scored seven of their runs in the last four innings.

The Dodgers don’t play the Padres again this season but Freeman said his team should be more concerned about their improvement rather than what its division rivals do.

Asked when he would start to scoreboard watch, Freeman replied, “Maybe in mid-September.”

Reminded only 31 games remain in the regular season, Freeman replied, “It is a sprint. I’ll be honest with you there. It’s a sprint now. You can’t worry about other teams if, like the last couple games, we don’t fix our offense, how our at-bats were going the last couple days. We fixed it today, we did better today. If you’re worrying about other things, that’s just not conducive, it’s not going to lead to quality things in the clubhouse. So maybe mid-September. When I turn 36, we’ll start scoreboard watching, all right?”

Freeman’s birthday is on Sept. 12. Will the Dodgers know who they are by then?

Sign up for more Dodgers news with Dodgers Dugout. Delivered at the start of each series.

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Medvedev’s match-point meltdown sparks chaotic scenes at US Open

  • Match halted for six minutes after photographer incident

  • Russian enraged by umpire decision in first-round exit

The US Open descended into chaos on Sunday when a photographer came on to the court as Daniil Medvedev faced match point, bringing the first-round match to a standstill and sparking a spectacular meltdown from the Russian.

Medvedev, the 2021 champion, was eventually knocked out 6-3, 7-5, 6-7 (5), 0-6, 6-4 by France’s Benjamin Bonzi, who threatened to walk off the court at one point and called for the Russian to be disqualified.

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Premier League: 10 talking points from the weekend’s action

Richarlison and Martín Zubimendi are changing things up at Spurs and Arsenal while Graham Potter needs to get ugly

Ruben Amorim has been a highly successful Manchester United manager against continental opposition and promoted Premier League clubs. He’s been respectable against the top teams in England, with a win at the Etihad, a draw at Anfield and a win on penalties against Arsenal. But he’s been hopeless when faced with opponents from mid-table. Last season, after taking over in November, Amorim supervised 14 league games against clubs that ended up between seventh and 17th. United won two, drew two and lost 10, scraping eight points out of a possible 42. One of those two wins was at Craven Cottage, a streaky 1-0. Here, again, they needed luck to take the lead as Leny Yoro got away with a two-hands push on Calvin Bassey; this time they blew it, and they couldn’t complain. United had been the better team for 20 minutes, Fulham for about 75. Tim de Lisle

Match report: Fulham 1-1 Manchester United

Match report: Everton 2-0 Brighton

Match report: Crystal Palace 1-1 Nottingham Forest

Match report: Manchester City 0-2 Tottenham

Match report: Arsenal 5-0 Leeds

Amorim tells United to ‘grow up’, Fernandes says referee triggered penalty miss

Match report: Brentford 1-0 Aston Villa

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NRL player Brandon Smith hit with drug supply and betting charges

  • South Sydney star issued with summons by Queensland Police

  • 29-year-old hooker set to appear in court on 18 September

NRL star Brandon Smith has been charged with drug supply and using inside knowledge for betting.

The South Sydney hooker was questioned by police when he arrived in Queensland ahead of their 10 August clash with Gold Coast, but released without charge.

Ahead of AFL finals sign up for our free weekly newsletter

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What Role Will Kevin Hayes Have On The Penguins This Year?

The Pittsburgh Penguins have a few spots open in their forward lineup for this season, which will make training camp a lot of fun to follow when it starts in a few weeks. 

Kevin Hayes is one of the forwards who will be jockeying for one of the spots after finishing the 2024-25 season with 13 goals and 23 points in 64 games. He was a healthy scratch at some points last season and was also banged up at times, but still put up decent numbers in a bottom-six role. It was his first season with the Penguins after they acquired him, along with a second-round pick, from the St. Louis Blues on June 29 of last year. He was excited about the move to Pittsburgh because he felt he didn’t play his best hockey with St. Louis during the 2023-24 season. 

"I felt like last year, I couldn't really find a role in St. Louis and didn't play my best hockey,” Hayes said last year, via THN’s Lou Korac.

Although Hayes didn't win with the Penguins last year, as they missed the playoffs for a third consecutive season, he still demonstrated his ability to play in the NHL. It was his 11th season in the league, and he has now played for the New York Rangers, Philadelphia Flyers, Winnipeg Jets, the Blues, and the Penguins. In 777 career NHL games, Hayes has compiled 181 goals and 438 points. 

Hayes even got to spend some time on the top power play unit with the big guns last season, including team captain Sidney Crosby. Four of his 13 goals came on the man-advantage, along with three of his ten assists, and he finished the year with 118 minutes on the PP. It was the sixth straight year that Hayes finished with 100+ minutes on the man-advantage. Former head coach Mike Sullivan, who is now the head coach of the Rangers, liked using Hayes on the PP due to his vision and how big he is around the net. 

At 5v5 last year, Hayes’s most common linemates were Philip Tomasino and Drew O’Connor (before O’Connor got dealt to the Vancouver Canucks with defenseman Marcus Pettersson). Tomasino will also be back for the Penguins next year after re-signing with them on July 1, so he and Hayes could get some minutes together again if Muse likes what he sees during training camp and the preseason. He could also potentially get some minutes with fellow veteran forward Justin Brazeau, whom the Penguins just signed as a free agent in July. They appreciate the skill Brazeau demonstrated and think he will be a good fit after finishing last year with 11 goals and 22 points in 76 games. 

Mar 18, 2025; Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA; Pittsburgh Penguins right wing Kevin Hayes (13) and left wing Joona Koppanen (right) celebrate the first NHL career goal by Koppanen against the New York Islanders during the first period at PPG Paints Arena. Mandatory Credit: Charles LeClaire-Imagn Images

When it comes to a role for Hayes, he will be seen as someone who can chip in at times for the Penguins, but he will still have to earn his minutes. He will be competing against veterans and younger players who want to make the jump and be full-time NHLers. He’s best served for a bottom-six role but can also play further up in the lineup for a few games if injuries occur. Hayes also has the flexibility to play center and wing after spending time at both positions last year. If he’s not playing, his impact will definitely be felt in the locker room. He’ll be someone that some of the other players can rely on as a leader. 

Top-20 Penguins' Prospects 2025: Don't Sleep On This Russian WingerTop-20 Penguins' Prospects 2025: Don't Sleep On This Russian WingerHeading into the 2025-26 season, the Pittsburgh Penguins have shifted the focus to youth and development.

Hayes is one of several Penguins players who will be an unrestricted free agent after the 2025-26 season. Considering where the Penguins are in their rebuild, they could flip him to a contender at the trade deadline if he produces well enough. Stanley Cup contenders are always looking for more scoring at the deadline since you need four scoring lines if you want to win it all. There will be nights when the stars don’t have it, and the depth pieces have to carry the load. 

Not many fans expected much from Hayes last season, but he went out and had himself a fine season. It would benefit the Penguins if he can repeat that success this year when their 2025-26 season starts on October 7 against the Sullivan's Rangers. 

(Data via Dobber's Frozen Tools and Natural Stat Trick). 


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Ohtani high-fives a heckler after his homer to cap Dodgers’ comeback rivalry win over Padres

SAN DIEGO — A heckler next to the Los Angeles Dodgers’ dugout spent his entire Sunday giving an earful to the visitors, including a nonstop barrage of digs and chirps at Shohei Ohtani for his hitless performance in a portentous weekend series against the San Diego Padres.

When Ohtani crushed his 45th homer and delivered the knockout blow in the ninth inning of the Dodgers’ 8-2 victory, the normally decorous three-time MVP detoured on his way back to the dugout to slap hands — and get the last word — with the chagrined Padres fan.

The Dodgers loved to see it, along with just about everything else that transpired in the final four innings of a win that evened the NL West race yet again with 31 games left.

“It was very out of character from Shohei, (but the heckler) was wearing him out the whole game,” Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said. “So it was good to see Shohei initiate a high-five from him. That was great. That was fun. It was good to see Shohei show his personality.”

Ohtani didn’t speak to reporters afterward, but he didn’t need a loudmouth fan to tell him that he was 0 for 10 with two walks in the series before his 409-foot homer off Yuki Matsui.

His fellow Dodgers had already delivered by then, with rookie Dalton Rushing’s tiebreaking three-run shot in the seventh inning sandwiched between clutch homers in back-to-back innings by Freddie Freeman.

“I think he was just kind of talking to Shohei the whole game, so I’m glad Shohei was able to give him a little something else to cheer about,” Freeman said with a grin.

Freeman and the rest of the Dodgers heard plenty of yapping from the stands during the weekend in the latest chapter of what might currently be the liveliest rivalry in the sport. The noise intensified as Los Angeles lost the first two games while managing just five combined hits — but the defending champs still managed to head home smiling and even with the Padres at 74-57.

When asked if the rivalry is the best in baseball, Rushing replied: “I think so. I think it’s pretty safe to say. You see the atmosphere we play in, whether it’s here or in LA. I think it’s pretty special. There’s something to it. There’s a lot of superstars on the field, and it’s fun to play in these games.”

Both teams could find reasons to be optimistic after wrapping up the regular season matchups between two World Series contenders that have also met in three of the past five postseasons, with the Dodgers winning two of those matchups.

The Dodgers have already won the season series with San Diego 9-4, giving them the tiebreaker if the clubs are still even 31 games from now.

San Diego still took two of three on the weekend with phenomenal starting pitching from a club that already has a bullpen that could be the best in the majors — its poor performance Sunday notwithstanding, of course.

Jeremiah Estrada gave up a homer in his second consecutive game when Rushing connected, while Wandy Peralta and Matsui also surrendered late homers.

But Yu Darvish, Nestor Cortes and Nick Pivetta combined to allow just four hits and three runs by the Dodgers over 18 innings. In a short October series, the Padres are confident they’ve got the arms to match Ohtani, Freeman and the Dodgers’ powerful lineup.

“We couldn’t be more thrilled,” San Diego manager Mike Shildt said. “We’re playing outstanding baseball, so I don’t tend to get too caught up in today. Today we were disappointed. Didn’t happen for us. We couldn’t be more thrilled. We’re tied for our division lead and expect to go win it.”

The division race means something to both teams — and not just because they’d both prefer not to play a perilous wild card playoff series in early October.

The Dodgers have won 11 of the last 12 NL West titles, while the Padres haven’t won the division since 2006. San Diego is closing in on its fourth playoff berth in six seasons during the longest run of sustained success in team history.

While the rivals won’t meet again in the regular season, both teams acknowledge they’ll be watching what the other does down the stretch.

“We’re going to treat the next however many games until the regular season is over like we’re neck-and-neck with them,” Rushing said. “Whether we’re tied in the division or we’re eight games out, we’re going to treat it like it’s the same, and I think it’s a good thing. You hold a competitive edge finishing out the regular season, and that’s what you kind of carry into the postseason.”