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How close are Canada's NHL teams to breaking our Stanley Cup drought?
How close are Canada's NHL teams to breaking our Stanley Cup drought?

Hamilton Spectator

time19-06-2025

  • Sport
  • Hamilton Spectator

How close are Canada's NHL teams to breaking our Stanley Cup drought?

The 'Dominion Hockey Challenge Cup' donated by Lord Stanley of Preston was supposed to be awarded to the best Canadian hockey team when it was commissioned in 1892. As the Stanley Cup moved from an amateur challenge Cup to a professional annual trophy, 40 of the first 41 champions were Canadian, interrupted only by those pesky Seattle Metropolitans in 1917. Needless to say, Canadian hockey teams haven't had a run like that in a good long while. As the Edmonton Oilers flamed out for the second year in a row, losing again to the Florida Panthers, we're reminded — because we can't help ourselves — that a Canadian team hasn't won the Stanley Cup in 32 years. You can blame the salary cap, or that Canadian taxes make it harder to attract talent. You can say the pressure too intense in Canadian markets. Blame the border if you want. Regardless, Canadian teams have come close since Montreal last won the Cup in 1993. Calgary in 2004, Edmonton again in 2006, Vancouver in 2011, and Montreal in 2021. Are Canadian teams in the NHL now just lovable losers, like Charlie Brown having the football pulled from him by Lucy every time? Or are Canadians eternal optimists when it comes to hockey? Here's a look at the seven Canadian teams, and their chances of bringing the Stanley Cup home anytime soon. They are presented in order from their last Stanley Cup. Stanley Cup titles: 24, last in 1993. A handful of players remain from their unexpected run to the Cup final in 2021 and a rebuilding process since then paid off with a surprising playoff appearance this season. GM Kent Hughes has so far had a patient approach the fan-base bought into, and has an array of young talent led by rookie of the year Lane Hutson. A return to their status of Les Glorieux seems only a season or two away. Stanley Cup prognosis: In the next five years. Stanley Cup titles: Five, last in 1991. When you have two of the best players on the planet, you always have a chance. Leon Draisaitl's league-leading $14 million (U.S.) a year deal kicks in July 1. But they only have Connor McDavid guaranteed for one more year. They've been to the final two years in a row. Having the second-best goaltender in a series is not a good idea. GM Stan Bowman has to be on the lookout for a goalie. He doesn't have a great deal of cap wiggle room, about $12 million, and his priority will have to be restricted free agent defenceman Evan Bouchard. Cup prognosis: 2026 or bust. Stanley Cup titles: One in 1989 The Flames seem caught in the murky middle. Good enough to almost make the playoffs, not bad enough to get franchise cornerstone draft picks. GM Craig Conroy has a building block in goalie Dustin Wolf. But there's not a lot of support for Nazem Kadri and Jonathan Huberdeau. Conroy has more than $27 million in cap space this summer, but this team will be closer to a Stanley Cup contender by tanking the next couple of years. Cup prognosis: Get back to us in the 2030s. Stanley Cup titles: 13, last in 1967 With or without Mitch Marner, the Maple Leafs have an impressive array of talent, perhaps the highest level of talent in their post-Stanley Cup existence. That's a long time — 58 years, not that anybody's counting. Put them down for at least 100 points next season, maybe even the President's Trophy. The playoffs, though? That's quite another story. We've all seen it. Their lack of success is its own tragicomedy. This core group should have played for a Cup by now. What's the definition of insanity? Cup prognosis: There's always next year. Stanley Cup titles: Four, last in 1927 (a very different franchise with the same name) It took this core of young players longer than expected to make the playoffs. But the only thing more true than the Leafs bowing out early is the Leafs beating Ottawa in the post-season. The Brady Tkachuk-led team seems ready to make the leap. Jake Sanderson is the real deal on defence. Linus Ullmark is a quality goalie. Travis Green is a quality coach. And the ownership group led by Michael Andlauer seems ready to spend to contend. Cup prognosis: Coming soon to the nation's capital. Stanley Cup titles: 0, last appeared in final in 2011 They are a melodrama all unto themselves, and comic relief to the fan bases of the other Canadian teams. How they ruined what they had as recently as two years ago seems improbable. Once, the question was how far could elite defenceman Quinn Hughes and top forward Elias Pettersson take them? Now the questions are what happened to Pettersson, and will Hughes stay or try — as president Jim Rutherford mused publicly — to join his brothers Jack and Luke in New Jersey? Cup prognosis: Perhaps more cursed than the Maple Leafs. Stanley Cup titles: 0, never appeared in final. Can you imagine having a team this good and failing to make it to the Cup final? I guess you can if you follow the Leafs closely. That's life in Winnipeg, too. Great regular seasons. Early playoff exits. The thing that's hard to wrap your head around is Connor Hellebuyck. He won the Vezina this season as the league's top goalie. He always has good regular seasons, but he's a shadow of himself in the playoffs. A team that believes it has trouble attracting talent managed to get its top stars — Hellebuyck included — to commit. Now it's easy to wonder if the Jets committed to the wrong group. Cup prognosis: Perennial also-rans.

How close are Canada's NHL teams to breaking our Stanley Cup drought?
How close are Canada's NHL teams to breaking our Stanley Cup drought?

Toronto Star

time18-06-2025

  • Sport
  • Toronto Star

How close are Canada's NHL teams to breaking our Stanley Cup drought?

The 'Dominion Hockey Challenge Cup' donated by Lord Stanley of Preston was supposed to be awarded to the best Canadian hockey team when it was commissioned in 1892. As the Stanley Cup moved from an amateur challenge Cup to a professional annual trophy, 40 of the first 41 champions were Canadian, interrupted only by those pesky Seattle Metropolitans in 1917. Needless to say, Canadian hockey teams haven't had a run like that in a good long while. As the Edmonton Oilers flamed out for the second year in a row, losing again to the Florida Panthers, we're reminded — because we can't help ourselves — that a Canadian team hasn't won the Stanley Cup in 32 years. ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW You can blame the salary cap, or that Canadian taxes make it harder to attract talent. You can say the pressure too intense in Canadian markets. Blame the border if you want. Regardless, Canadian teams have come close since Montreal last won the Cup in 1993. Calgary in 2004, Edmonton again in 2006, Vancouver in 2011, and Montreal in 2021. Are Canadian teams in the NHL now just lovable losers, like Charlie Brown having the football pulled from him by Lucy every time? Or are Canadians eternal optimists when it comes to hockey? Here's a look at the seven Canadian teams, and their chances of bringing the Stanley Cup home anytime soon. They are presented in order from their last Stanley Cup. Montreal Canadiens Stanley Cup titles: 24, last in 1993. A handful of players remain from their unexpected run to the Cup final in 2021 and a rebuilding process since then paid off with a surprising playoff appearance this season. GM Kent Hughes has so far had a patient approach the fan-base bought into, and has an array of young talent led by rookie of the year Lane Hutson. A return to their status of Les Glorieux seems only a season or two away. Stanley Cup prognosis: In the next five years. Edmonton Oilers Stanley Cup titles: Five, last in 1991. When you have two of the best players on the planet, you always have a chance. Leon Draisaitl's league-leading $14 million (U.S.) a year deal kicks in July 1. But they only have Connor McDavid guaranteed for one more year. They've been to the final two years in a row. Having the second-best goaltender in a series is not a good idea. GM Stan Bowman has to be on the lookout for a goalie. He doesn't have a great deal of cap wiggle room, about $12 million, and his priority will have to be restricted free agent defenceman Evan Bouchard. ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW Cup prognosis: 2026 or bust. Calgary Flames: Stanley Cup titles: One in 1989 The Flames seem caught in the murky middle. Good enough to almost make the playoffs, not bad enough to get franchise cornerstone draft picks. GM Craig Conroy has a building block in goalie Dustin Wolf. But there's not a lot of support for Nazem Kadri and Jonathan Huberdeau. Conroy has more than $27 million in cap space this summer, but this team will be closer to a Stanley Cup contender by tanking the next couple of years. Cup prognosis: Get back to us in the 2030s. Toronto Maple Leafs Stanley Cup titles: 13, last in 1967 With or without Mitch Marner, the Maple Leafs have an impressive array of talent, perhaps the highest level of talent in their post-Stanley Cup existence. That's a long time — 58 years, not that anybody's counting. Put them down for at least 100 points next season, maybe even the President's Trophy. The playoffs, though? That's quite another story. We've all seen it. Their lack of success is its own tragicomedy. This core group should have played for a Cup by now. What's the definition of insanity? Cup prognosis: There's always next year. Ottawa Senators Stanley Cup titles: Four, last in 1927 (a very different franchise with the same name) It took this core of young players longer than expected to make the playoffs. But the only thing more true than the Leafs bowing out early is the Leafs beating Ottawa in the post-season. The Brady Tkachuk-led team seems ready to make the leap. Jake Sanderson is the real deal on defence. Linus Ullmark is a quality goalie. Travis Green is a quality coach. And the ownership group led by Michael Andlauer seems ready to spend to contend. Cup prognosis: Coming soon to the nation's capital. Vancouver Canucks Stanley Cup titles: 0, last appeared in final in 2011 They are a melodrama all unto themselves, and comic relief to the fan bases of the other Canadian teams. How they ruined what they had as recently as two years ago seems improbable. Once, the question was how far could elite defenceman Quinn Hughes and top forward Elias Pettersson take them? Now the questions are what happened to Pettersson, and will Hughes stay or try — as president Jim Rutherford mused publicly — to join his brothers Jack and Luke in New Jersey? ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW Cup prognosis: Perhaps more cursed than the Maple Leafs. Winnipeg Jets Stanley Cup titles: 0, never appeared in final. Can you imagine having a team this good and failing to make it to the Cup final? I guess you can if you follow the Leafs closely. That's life in Winnipeg, too. Great regular seasons. Early playoff exits. The thing that's hard to wrap your head around is Connor Hellebuyck. He won the Vezina this season as the league's top goalie. He always has good regular seasons, but he's a shadow of himself in the playoffs. A team that believes it has trouble attracting talent managed to get its top stars — Hellebuyck included — to commit. Now it's easy to wonder if the Jets committed to the wrong group. Cup prognosis: Perennial also-rans.

NHL playoffs overtime: How does it work? What's the longest game in history?
NHL playoffs overtime: How does it work? What's the longest game in history?

New York Times

time22-04-2025

  • Sport
  • New York Times

NHL playoffs overtime: How does it work? What's the longest game in history?

'Sudden Death' isn't just a hockey-themed action movie. It's a term commonly associated with overtime in the Stanley Cup playoffs — and it makes the NHL's postseason different from not only the league's regular season, but also the postseasons of North America's other major professional sports leagues. Advertisement As in a regular-season game, an NHL playoff game tied after regulation extends to overtime, where a team can win by scoring the next goal. But this is where the similarities end. A playoff game with no winner after the third period will pause for 15 minutes — an 'intermission' during which teams return to their dressing rooms and the ice surface is cleaned by machines. Upon returning, the teams will resume play at five-on-five for 20-minute periods, each followed by another 15-minute intermission, until a goal is scored. The team that scores is declared the winner, bringing a 'sudden death' to the losing team. Some other factoids about overtime in the Stanley Cup playoffs: Game 4 of the 1919 Stanley Cup Final between the Seattle Metropolitans and Montreal Canadiens ended in a 0-0 tie after two overtime periods. Players from each team had reportedly collapsed from exhaustion at the end of the second overtime period, and the tie result was ruled as final. Before Game 5, it was decided that future playoff games would be played until a winning goal was scored. A playoff game has been extended beyond four overtime periods on only five occasions: The Cup winner has been determined with an overtime goal 17 times. The most recent was Alec Martinez's goal in double-overtime for the Los Angeles Kings in Game 5 of the 2014 Final. The first example was Bill Cook of the New York Rangers in the first overtime of Game 4 of the 1933 Cup Final. There were 16 overtime games in the 2024 playoffs. Twelve were decided in the first overtime period, four in the second overtime.

Today in History: Mike Tyson sentenced on rape charges
Today in History: Mike Tyson sentenced on rape charges

Chicago Tribune

time26-03-2025

  • Chicago Tribune

Today in History: Mike Tyson sentenced on rape charges

Today is Wednesday, March 26, the 85th day of 2025. There are 280 days left in the year. Today in history: On March 26, 1992, a judge in Indianapolis sentenced former heavyweight boxing champion Mike Tyson to six years in prison on rape charges. (Tyson would ultimately serve less than three years of the sentence.) Also on this date: In 1812, an earthquake devastated Caracas, Venezuela, causing as many as 30,000 deaths. (The U.S. Congress later approved $50,000 in food aid to be sent to Venezuela — the first example of American disaster assistance abroad.) In 1917, the Seattle Metropolitans became the first American ice hockey team to win the Stanley Cup, defeating the Montreal Canadiens 9-1 to win the championship series, three games to one. In 1979, a peace treaty was signed by Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin and Egyptian President Anwar Sadat and witnessed by President Jimmy Carter at the White House. In 1997, the bodies of 39 members of the Heaven's Gate religious cult who took their own lives were found inside a rented mansion in Rancho Santa Fe, California. In 2013, Italy's top criminal court overturned the acquittal of American Amanda Knox in the grisly murder of British roommate Meredith Kercher and ordered Knox to stand trial again. (Although convicted in absentia, Knox was exonerated by the Italian Supreme Court in 2015.) In 2018, a toxicology report obtained by The Associated Press revealed that the late pop superstar Prince had levels of fentanyl in his body that multiple experts described as 'exceedingly high.' In 2021, Dominion Voting Systems filed a $1.6 billion defamation lawsuit against Fox News, saying the cable news giant falsely claimed that the voting company rigged the 2020 election. (Fox would eventually agree to pay Dominion $787.5 million in one of the largest defamation settlements in U.S. history.) In 2024, Baltimore's Francis Scott Key Bridge collapsed after being struck by a container ship, killing six maintenance workers on the bridge. (Maryland officials have announced plans to replace the bridge by late 2028.) Today's Birthdays: Basketball Hall of Famer Wayne Embry is 88. Former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi is 85. Author Erica Jong is 83. Journalist Bob Woodward is 82. Singer Diana Ross is 81. Rock singer Steven Tyler (Aerosmith) is 77. Actor-comedian Vicki Lawrence is 76. Actor-comedian Martin Short is 75. Country singer Ronnie McDowell is 75. Country singer Charly McClain is 69. TV personality Leeza Gibbons is 68. Football Hall of Famer Marcus Allen is 65. Actor Jennifer Grey is 65. Basketball Hall of Famer John Stockton is 63. Actor Michael Imperioli is 59. Country singer Kenny Chesney is 57. Actor Leslie Mann is 53. Google co-founder Larry Page is 52. Rapper Juvenile is 50. Actor Keira Knightley is 40. Actor-comedian Ramy Youssef is 34.

Today in History: March 26, Francis Scott Key Bridge collapse in Baltimore
Today in History: March 26, Francis Scott Key Bridge collapse in Baltimore

Boston Globe

time26-03-2025

  • Politics
  • Boston Globe

Today in History: March 26, Francis Scott Key Bridge collapse in Baltimore

In 1812, an earthquake devastated Caracas, Venezuela, causing as many as 30,000 deaths. (The US Congress later approved $50,000 in food aid to be sent to Venezuela — the first example of American disaster assistance abroad.) In 1917, the Seattle Metropolitans became the first American ice hockey team to win the Stanley Cup, defeating the Montreal Canadiens 9-1 to win the championship series, three games to one. In 1979, a peace treaty was signed by Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin and Egyptian President Anwar Sadat and witnessed by President Jimmy Carter at the White House. In 1992, a judge in Indianapolis sentenced former heavyweight boxing champion Mike Tyson to six years in prison on rape charges. (Tyson would ultimately serve less than three years of the sentence.) In 1997, the bodies of 39 members of the Heaven's Gate religious cult who took their own lives were found inside a rented mansion in Rancho Santa Fe, Calif. In 2013, Italy's top criminal court overturned the acquittal of American Amanda Knox in the grisly murder of British roommate Meredith Kercher and ordered Knox to stand trial again. (Although convicted in absentia, Knox was exonerated by the Italian Supreme Court in 2015.) In 2018, a toxicology report obtained by The Associated Press revealed that the late pop superstar Prince had levels of fentanyl in his body that multiple experts described as 'exceedingly high.' Advertisement In 2021, Dominion Voting Systems filed a $1.6 billion defamation lawsuit against Fox News, saying the cable news giant falsely claimed that the voting company rigged the 2020 election. (Fox would eventually agree to pay Dominion $787.5 million in one of the largest defamation settlements in US history.) In 2024, Baltimore's Francis Scott Key Bridge collapsed after being struck by a container ship, killing six maintenance workers on the bridge. (Maryland officials have announced plans to replace the bridge by late 2028.)

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