A few days ago we reported that the Carolina Hurricanes do not intend to keep the services of the striker Martin Necas nor the defender Brett PesceIn fact, they would prefer to turn a new page on these two issues.
Despite holding their own, Juraj Slafkovsky’s Slovakia lost 6-3 to Canada in the quarterfinals of the Ice Hockey World Championship in Prague, Czech Republic, on Thursday. The Maple Leaf will therefore play the semi-finals of the competition on Saturday. •
In just five weeks, NHL officials will travel to the Sphere in Las Vegas to conduct the league’s annual draft. Unless something changes by then, the Montreal Canadiens will have two players to choose from in the first round, i.e
The National Hockey League (NHL) playoffs are in full swing and some teams have taken a liking to them in recent years, which is not the case with the Canadian, who can however boast of dominance in a certain point.
The Laval Rocket announced last week that assistant coach Kelly Buchberger will no longer be with the team next season. However, it wasn’t the news we expected from Laval. • Also read: Jean-François Houle must continue his work • Also
Canada defeated the Czech Republic 4-3 after overtime at the World Cup in Prague on Tuesday. A goal from Dylan Cozens in extra time and in a numerically inferior situation gave André Tourigny’s players their seventh win in a row.
Due to the 1:5 defeat against Sweden on Tuesday, Slovakia has to settle for fourth place in Group B at the Ice Hockey World Cup. Juraj Slafkovsky’s team will face Canada in the quarterfinals. The Maple Leaf finished first in
For several years now, the Oilers have relied on a real two-headed monster in Connor McDavid and Leon Draisaitl. Both forwards are among the NHL’s elite and it’s hard to say they don’t play their part in the Oilers’ success.
The Canadian rugby union players ended the Pacific Four Series in the most beautiful way on Sunday. They were crowned tournament champions by defeating the New Zealanders, who were playing at home, 22-19 for the first-ever win in Canadian program
Juraj Slafkovsky is considered by The Athletic to be the worst first pick in recent history despite his promising second season in the National Hockey League. The Athletic’s outlook expert Corey Pronman has surveyed NHL scouts and executives since 2015