
Shania Twain on Calgary Flames goalie Dustin Wolf: ‘He's the cutest!'
Article content
In a post on social-media site X on Monday, Twain was singing a much different tune about Calgary Flames rising-star goaltender Dustin Wolf.
Article content
A person shared a photo of Wolf at the Calgary Stampede chuckwagon races in a 'Let's Go Girls' shirt, the title of another of Twain's chart-topping hits, and the Canadian country-music icon replied: 'He's the cutest!' She even added a heart-eyes emoji.
Article content
He's the cutest! 😍 https://t.co/C5xDtUxP1S
— Shania Twain 💎💎💎 (@ShaniaTwain) July 14, 2025
Article content
Not surprisingly, that post is racking up likes online.
Article content
Among the many replies, one fan wrote: 'A freakin' great goalie as well!!! #Flames'
Article content
Wolf was the runner-up this past season for the Calder Trophy as the NHL's rookie of the year and nearly backstopped the Flames to a surprise playoff berth.
Article content
The 24-year-old netminder has been hanging around the city for most of the off-season and seemingly was swept up in the excitement of the Calgary Stampede, spotted at both the rodeo and chuckwagon races.
Article content
Awooo to YAHOO!
Calgary Flames goalie Dustin Wolf joined Saddle Bronc Rider Ben Andersen for a little fit check before today's rodeo.
We may be partial, but we think Wolfie could spend his summers in the arena and his winters on the ice! 🏒🤠 @NHLFlames @dwolf2332 pic.twitter.com/HYlt6biY1J
— Calgary Stampede (@calgarystampede) July 12, 2025
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CBC
an hour ago
- CBC
Why is Sportsnet hiking streaming service by double-digits?
Canadian sports fans are tearing into Sportsnet after they learned its streaming service will be hiking prices by double digits before the next hockey season. Patrick Johnston, a sports columnist with The Province, says the frustration stems from 'the service itself.' According to Sportsnet, which is owned by Rogers Sports & Media, the changes will take effect Sept. 9.


Calgary Herald
an hour ago
- Calgary Herald
Two Canadian pizzaiolos among the world's 100 best pizza chefs
Article content An independent voting panel of 512 experts from 60 countries has recognized what locals already knew. Ryan Baddeley of Toronto's Pizzeria Badiali and Cédric Toullec of Halifax's Lou Pécou Artisanal Pizzeria make some of the best pizza in the world. Article content The third edition of The Best Pizza Awards, a 'celebration of global pizza excellence and innovation,' recently took place in Milan, Italy. Baddeley was named No. 51 for his 'refined yet nostalgic approach' to New York-style pizza by the slice. Toullec, whose ethos is 'rooted in sustainability and authenticity,' placed No. 93. Article content Article content Article content Italian pizza chefs dominated the 2025 ranking with 36 of the 100 spots, including the top three. 'Famed for his mastery of dough and pioneering techniques,' Francesco Martucci of I Masanielli in Caserta was crowned the world's best pizza chef. (Up from No. 5 in 2024.) Franco Pepe of Caiazzo's Pepe in Grani, 'A pioneer of terroir-driven pizza,' was named No. 2, down from the top spot in 2024 and 2023. Gabriele Bonci of Rome's Pizzarium, who earned the nickname 'Michelangelo of pizza' for his pizza al taglio (rectangular pies sold by the slice), rose one place from last year to round out the top three. Article content Article content Article content Jorge Sastre and Rafa Panatieri were the only other pizza chefs outside Italy to break the top 10. The friends placed No. 8 for the artisanal 'farm-to-pizza' pies they make at Barcelona's Sartoria Panatieri, which showcase organic, local and seasonal products. Article content Article content Alongside pizza chefs from countries including Brazil, India, Taiwan, the Philippines and the United States, Baddeley and Toullec were the only Canadian pizzaiolos to make the 2025 list. Article content Baddeley, a former fine-dining chef who worked at Toronto restaurants including Bar Isabel and Bar Raval, opened Pizzeria Badiali in 2021. It's since become a community fixture with lines around the block. 'Badiali is about more than just great ingredients — it's about heritage and craftsmanship. Using three-day fermented dough and premium Italian flour, each pizza balances crispy, airy texture with bold, familiar flavours,' The Best Pizza Awards said on Instagram.


Toronto Star
2 hours ago
- Toronto Star
New Leafs defenceman Henry Thrun grew up a Bruins fan. He's anxious to see the other side
Henry Thrun began his first media conference as a Maple Leaf with a confession. 'As much as I hate to say it, I was a Bruins fan growing up,' he said. Childhood loyalties aside, the 24-year-old defenceman, acquired in the trade that sent Ryan Reaves to the San Jose Sharks last week, said he was happy to be the newest member of the Leafs. Thrun grew up in the Boston suburb of Southborough, not to be confused with Scarborough, which means he'll arrive in Toronto relatively well-versed in at least a few recent chapters of Toronto's difficult post-season story arc. 'I knew the Toronto-Boston rivalry and kind of the history that they've seen in the playoffs, and just knowing how electric of a hockey market (Toronto) is,' Thrun said. 'When (Sharks general manager Mike Grier) told me I was traded, it was definitely a nice way for that phone call to wrap up, just knowing I was going to a city like Toronto, just knowing the history and the success that the team has had the past couple of years, with obviously the end goal still in sight. There's more to push for.' That there's 'more to push for,' of course, is a kind way of saying a team that has won two playoff series in its most recent nine playoff runs has massively underachieved. But achievement is relative. And Thrun, after spending the past two-plus seasons with the league's worst team in San Jose, would be taking a big step up in class if he can carve out a role with the Leafs. Exactly what that role will be is anybody's guess. Not that the trade didn't make sense. The Leafs had essentially given up on Reaves, who played in just 35 games last season and did not see the ice in the playoffs. Moving out the remaining year on Reaves' contract, with a $1.35-million (U.S.) cap hit, in exchange for the remaining year on Thrun's $1-million deal offered salary-cap savings. Still, Thrun, a fourth-round 2019 draft pick of the Ducks who signed in San Jose as a free agent after his junior year at Harvard, is far from a proven commodity as an NHL regular. He has played 119 NHL games as a second- and third-pairing guy on a bottom-feeding team. Grier told reporters in San Jose last week that the Sharks' depth chart was such that Thrun was going to be in tough to earn regular playing time this coming season. 'It's going to be heavy competition here (for spots in the lineup on defence),' Grier said. 'And at the end day, I think this (trade) might help Henry out as well.' If Thrun was going to have a hard time finding ice time on the back end of the reigning basement dwellers, it's difficult to know where he slots on a Leafs blue line where the top six spots appear spoken for. Then again, depth never hurts. And perhaps Toronto's perceived defensive surplus means it's the logical place from which to eventually pluck a trade piece to service GM Brad Treliving's self-announced need for another top-six forward. It's possible, of course, that the Leafs see untapped potential in Thrun, a left-shot blueliner who made the case on Monday that his puck-moving skills weren't exactly showcased in San Jose, where it's safe to say the Sharks spent plenty of time in their own end. Perhaps the game will look different for Thrun in Toronto, even if Reaves offered a cautionary view of life as a Leaf in his introductory media availability in San Jose last week. 'I started the season two years ago really well, and then things were just going really wrong for me. All of a sudden the whole city wanted me out of there. I don't think you see that in other organizations,' Reaves said. Reaves was right about his great beginning: In his first two games as a Maple Leaf in engaged in a pair of fights. But less than a month into his first of two seasons in Toronto the fundamental worth of carrying a so-called enforcer on an NHL roster was called into question when Boston's Brad Marchand delivered a dirty hit that injured then-Leaf Timothy Liljegren. That nobody on the Leafs, including Reaves, offered any sort of response did not sit well. Liljegren, of course, now plays in San Jose, where he and Thrun were neighbours and friends. 'I got to hear (from Liljegren) a little about Toronto, and just, you know how passionate the fans are and how first class in the organization it is,' Thrun said. 'So it's something that I've only heard good things, and I'm excited to see it all firsthand and experience it.'