Archive for February 1st, 2010

Leafs’ newest additions settling in

Written by on Monday, February 1st, 2010 in Latest News.

Toronto Maple Leafs forward Wayne Primeau fights for position in front of the net with newly acquired defenceman Dion Phaneuf and goalie Jean-Sebastien Giguere during practice at a Toronto rink on Monday.Toronto Maple Leafs forward Wayne Primeau fights for position in front of the net with newly bought defenceman Dion Phaneuf and goalie Jean-Sebastien Giguere during practice at a Toronto rink on Monday. (Tony Bock/Canadian Press)

Dion Phaneuf felt no first-day jitters and showed no signs of hesitation Monday.

Instead, he walked into the locker-room at the Toronto Maple Leafs practice facility on Monday morning and made himself right at home.

“He’s got a swagger about him that we’ll encourage,” said Leafs coach Ron Wilson. “That will rub off on our other guys. He walked into the dressing room, [said] ‘Where’s the music’ and fired it right up, straight away, without worrying about what anyone else said.”

In the wake of one of the largest single-day shakeups in team history, that must have been music to general manager Brian Burke’s ears.

The pair of blockbuster trades he engineered a day earlier were about changing the culture inside the dressing room as a means to getting a better performance on the ice.

There was certainly a different feel around the Leafs at Monday’s practice. Not only were there three new players being place through drills — Phaneuf, goaltender J.S. Giguère and winger Fredrik Sjostrom — but the dressing room stalls formally occupied by the six departed guys all sat empty.

The massive overhaul caught everyone by surprise.

“I’ve seen a lot of things happen in my career, but I’ve never seen that,” said veteran forward Wayne Primeau. “That’s a lot of guys. I talked to Jason Blake, and he said it was a weird feeling when he came in the dressing room yesterday. He said it kind of felt like the end of the season where there was six bags in the middle of the dressing room.

“You don’t see that too often.”

Primeau spent parts of three seasons playing alongside Phaneuf in Calgary and clearly has some rapport with the 24-year-ancient defenceman.

The pair chatted during breaks in practice on Monday and playfully jostled with one another from time to time.

“He’s a vocal kid, very confident,” said Primeau.

Giguère to start against Devils

The new-look Leafs will all be on show with New Jersey in town on Tuesday.

Giguère is pegged to get the start in goal and will be wearing the No. 35 that formally belonged to Vesa Toskala, one of the players sent to Anaheim in exchange for him. Phaneuf will be wearing his familiar No. 3 — Garnet Exelby gave it up and switched to No. 7 — while Sjostrom will have on No. 11.

The team is expected to call up another forward from the American Hockey League.

Wilson fully expects all the newcomers to be jacked up for their Maple Leaf debuts. In the case of Phaneuf, the coach predicted that he’ll try to throw some huge hits and bring an “intimidation factor” the team has been missing.

“I would reckon that New Jersey coming in tomorrow, the first thing they’re going to say [is]: ‘Geez, guys, anyone with their head down, you better get it up because you’re going to get levelled’,” said Wilson. “We haven’t had that real open ice hitting threat. I’m sure most of the teams in the Western Conference are going: ‘Wow, thank God he’s not here anymore.’

“Every night, Dion lays one or two or three guys out. He plays very aggressive.”

The arrival of the new players generated plenty of buzz in a city that seemed to be losing some interest in the Maple Leafs. The 29th-place team quickly found itself back on the radar, with more media members at practice than there have been in months.

Phaneuf, once a finalist for the Norris Trophy, is likely to be the most-closely scrutinized. A cornerstone of the Flames franchise just a couple seasons ago, he experienced some struggles in recent years and fell out of favour with many in Calgary.

On his first day in Toronto, he was in no mood to look back on what went incorrect with his former team.

“That’s in the past, to be honest with you,” said Phaneuf. “I’ve went forward pretty quickly. I’m a Toronto Maple Leaf, and I’m looking forward to getting it started tomorrow.

“It’s been a very exciting day and a half.”

Player shuffle brings new life to Toronto

The overall excitement could be seen on the ice during practice.

Most of the players were out skating a excellent 10 or 15 minutes before the session was scheduled to start and many of them stuck around long after it officially finished. The changes brought some life to a team that is winless in six games and had a 3-10-2 record in January.

“When new guys come to the team, they always bring new energy,” said goaltender Jonas Gustavsson. “I reckon we got that today … I felt like it was a new atmosphere out there. It was more pleased and more positive.

“Everybody just had fun out there and tried to work hard.”

Giguère had to waive a no-trade clause to facilitate his deal and is looking forward to the chance to play in a more traditional hockey market than Anaheim.

His first impressions of life as a Maple Leaf were positive.

“You can tell it’s a young team,” he said. “I really liked what I saw this morning on the ice. I thought guys had a lot of jump [and] were pretty upbeat.

“To be honest, I don’t know much else about the Leafs.”

Phaneuf had a similar sentiment.

“All I know from right now is that there’s a fantastic facility here and a really excellent bunch of guys,” said Phaneuf. “[They were] all very pleasant, very outgoing. I’ve never done this before, never been a part of a trade, [and] every guy was very welcoming.

“I’m looking forward to fitting in here.”

Raptors’ Turkoglu might play through injury

Written by on Monday, February 1st, 2010 in Latest News.

Hedo Turkoglu is averaging 12.4 points and 4.5 rebounds this season for Toronto.Hedo Turkoglu is averaging 12.4 points and 4.5 rebounds this season for Toronto. (Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images)

Toronto Raptors forward Hedo Turkoglu sustained a broke orbital bone on Sunday, but the team hopes he won’t have to miss playing time.

Turkoglu was hurt only a minute into the Raps’ 117-102 win over Indiana. He was elbowed above the eye by the Pacers’ Mike Dunleavy while driving to the basket, and didn’t return to the contest.

X-rays showed the 30-year-ancient suffered a “small, non-displaced break of the orbital bone under his right eye,” according to a release from the Raptors on Sunday night.

The team added that Turkoglu will have further tests on Monday, and the Raptors are exploring the possibility he can play with a protective face mask while the injury heals.

Turkoglu is averaging 12.4 points and 4.5 rebounds this season.

No unbeaten rinks remain at Hearts

Written by on Monday, February 1st, 2010 in Latest News.

Team Canada skip Jennifer Jones adopts a pensive pose in a 10-4 loss to the Northwest Territories/Yukon on Monday. 
Team Canada skip Jennifer Jones adopts a pensive pose in a 10-4 loss to the Northwest Territories/Yukon on Monday.
(Nathan Denette/Canadian Press)

There are no longer any unbeaten teams at the Tournament of Hearts after Team Canada’s Jennifer Jones and Ontario’s Krista McCarville suffered losses Monday.

Sharon Cormier’s Northwest Territories/Yukon rink surprised defending champion Jones 10-4 in Draw 7 at the Essar Centre in Sault Ste. Marie, Ont.

The Territories held a 5-1 lead through three ends, then scored two in the ninth end to seal the win.

In Monday’s earlier draw, Saskatchewan’s Amber Holland scored one in the 10th end to earn a 7-6 win over McCarville.

With Jones and McCarville both losing, Prince Edward Island took advantage.

Kathy O’Rourke scored three in the tenth end to defeat Manitoba 7-6. P.E.I. has sole possession of first place at 4-1.

Canada, Ontario, Alberta and B.C., are in a second-place logjam at 3-1.

In other Draw 7 action, B.C.’s Kelly Scott defeated New Brunswick’s Andrea Kelly 8-3 in eight ends.

Alberta’s Valerie Sweeting beat Nova Scotia’s Nancy McConery 8-5.



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