Connect with us

Published

on

ARLINGTON, Texas — Justin Verlander allowed six earned runs and struck out six in pitching into the fourth inning of his first injury rehabilitation start Sunday for the Houston Astros‘ Triple-A Sugar Space Cowboys.

The 41-year-old right-hander, a three-time Cy Young Award winner, threw 46 of 65 pitches for strikes against Oakland’s Las Vegas Aviators. Verlander retired his first four batters, then allowed hits to his next six. Five of those were for extra bases, leading to five runs.

The Aviators won the game 10-6.

Verlander began this season on the 15-day injured list with inflammation in his right shoulder.

Carlos Pérez hit a tying solo homer in the second, Daz Cameron doubled and Hoy Park singled. Brett Harris hit a two-run triple, and Max Muncy and Esteury Ruiz hit consecutive RBI doubles.

After a 1-2-3 third, Park reached on an error leading off the fourth, and Verlander was pulled following a walk to Harris and Muncy’s RBI double that led to an unearned run.

“Stuff looked good, 95, threw some good sliders and some changeups,” Astros manager Joe Espada said. “Hopefully he feels good tomorrow. I that that’s the most important thing, how he bounces back.”

Verlander, reacquired by Houston from the New York Mets last July, is expected to make at least one more rehab start in the minors. He was 13-8 with a 3.22 ERA in 27 starts last year.

Astros right-hander Shawn Dubin also made his first rehab appearance, striking out two of four batters and throwing 16 of 22 pitches for strikes. He began season on the IL due to a right forearm strain.

Information from The Associated Press was used in this story.

Continue Reading

Sports

New Leafs: Toronto eyes big changes after exit

Published

on

By

New Leafs: Toronto eyes big changes after exit

Another disappointing end for the Toronto Maple Leafs could — and should — be a catalyst in a potentially painful new beginning for the organization.

That was the message from Leafs’ management on Friday in the wake of Toronto bowing out in a first-round Stanley Cup playoff series for the sixth time in seven full seasons. The Leafs already axed head coach Sheldon Keefe on Thursday, and attention turns now to how Toronto will handle expectations for its expensive core of players who failed to deliver when it matters most.

Toronto’s president Brendan Shanahan didn’t immediately have all the answers but pledged — again — to try finding them.

“It’s not our intention to single out any one individual or any one small group of this team out,” said Shanahan. “We’re talking about the whole team. What we are saying is that it is certainly becoming evident that we have to assess all of those things and assess whether or not we have to make some very difficult decisions this summer to make the team better. There’s a time where you look at the age and the development of players and you talk about patience. And then there comes a time where you see certain patterns and trends repeat themselves, and results repeat themselves.”

The Leafs have invested over $40 million in four forwards — Auston Matthews, William Nylander, Mitch Marner and John Tavares — with the return of a single playoff series win last season when Toronto bested Tampa in six games. The Leafs promptly lost to Florida in the second round.

When players spoke with media earlier in the week, there was a sentiment of belief in the core to eventually push Toronto over the line. Shanahan agreed that he wanted the Leafs to be confident in themselves, but the “unacceptable” outcomes piling up year after year remained a glaring issue.

“I don’t question their dedication,” said Shanahan. “But I do question just our ability as a group to get it done in those difficult times. And that’s why we have to make some changes and we’ll continue to look at changes with a goal in mind of what makes the Maple Leafs better not just in the regular season but come playoff time.”

The Leafs had a strong regular season, wielding the league’s second-best offense, which averaged 3.63 goals per game and finished with 102 points to put them third in the Atlantic Division. The Leafs were matched with Boston in the first round and swiftly fell behind 3-1, only to force a Game 7 where they lost in overtime.

For all Toronto’s scoring success through the regular season, the Leafs averaged the fewest goals per game (1.71) of any team in the playoff field. It’s a problem that’s hampered the Leafs repeatedly.

“That [lack of scoring] is the question that we have to ask ourselves,” said Shanahan. “It happens too often. It’s a question of coaching. It’s a question of messaging. And it’s also a question of personnel. We haven’t gotten those results. So that’s something we have to work on.”

In the NHL’s hard salary cap world, having a majority of space eaten up by a handful of players isn’t necessarily a recipe for winning championships — or, in the Leafs’ case — more than one playoff round.

“You can have a viewpoint and say we’ve invested in four players; you’ve got X percent of your salary cap tied up there, and if we spread it all around, you’re going to have more depth,” said GM Brad Treliving. “But we are where we are. This is the situation we are in right now. Those are really good players. We’ve got to dig into why we’re ending up with the same result, year after year after year. And adjust accordingly.

Both Matthews and Nylander inked long-term deals with the Leafs through 2028 and 2032 respectively, but Marner and Tavares are both entering the final seasons of their deals, which include no-move clauses. Toronto isn’t ruling out asking one or both to rescind those and facilitate a move.

“Everything is on the table,” said Shanahan. “We will discuss everything. I don’t think it serves the Toronto Maple Leafs in any fashion to discuss those things prematurely, to discuss those individuals prematurely. Our focus right now is on finding a new head coach and certainly that new head coach will have an important voice as part of our decisions going forward.”

Treliving wouldn’t discuss who the Leafs were eyeing in the coaching search but said the club would be “thorough” in exploring its options. The sting of what Toronto had just been through in its postseason failure was clearly still top of mind in how Treliving and Shanahan were approaching their next steps.

“I don’t believe you throw a body on the tarmac just to say we’ve done something,” said Treliving. “The meetings that we have with the players, they understand that we’ve fallen short. I think we’re at a point where we see this repeatable, that we’ve got to dig into it. The results and sitting here today, when we think we should still be playing, isn’t acceptable.”

One thing Toronto did provide clarity on was Shanahan’s status moving forward. The three-time Stanley Cup champion took over his role in 2014 and is believed to have one year remaining on his current contract, though Shanahan declined to confirm his status in that respect on Friday.

Maple Leaf Sports & Entertainment CEO Keith Pelley gave Shanahan his full backing.

“Brendan Shanahan is the president of the Toronto Maple Leafs,” said Pelley. “He’s a champion.”

But will the Leafs ever be ones under him? That’s the only goal for management to accomplish now. The looming months will determine whether they’ve finally given the Leafs’ core long enough to make that a reality.

“I don’t have regret showing faith in people,” said Shanahan. “You don’t want to let [fans] down; you want to deliver. And if I felt that the players felt differently than that, in spite of the fact that they haven’t delivered, I might feel differently about them as well. So, we have to give them all the tools and we have to make changes where we think changes are going to help our team. You want to help them see things through.”

Continue Reading

Sports

Bruins’ Maroon: Tkachuk fought dirty vs. Pastrnak

Published

on

By

Bruins' Maroon: Tkachuk fought dirty vs. Pastrnak

BOSTON — Boston Bruins forward Pat Maroon believes Florida Panthers star Matthew Tkachuk fought “dirty” during his much-discussed brawl with Bruins winger David Pastrnak in Game 2.

With the Panthers leading 6-1 on Wednesday night, Pastrnak and Tkachuk dropped the gloves in a rare fight between two superstar players and former finalists for NHL MVP honors.

Maroon felt that Tkachuk broke a fighting code by delivering a few punches to Pastrnak after the Bruins winger had fallen to the ice.

“Obviously I don’t like how he hit him on the ground twice. I think that’s dirty,” the veteran winger said. “It’s the game within the game, but I don’t like the aftermath of it.”

Maroon said that he’d be careful about exacting retribution against Tkachuk and that it likely would not be through another fight.

“I mean, Tkachuk’s not going to fight me. If I go out there and take a dumb penalty and they got a power play, my job’s not accomplished. So can’t look at it like that. I just got to take numbers,” he said. “I mean listen, let’s be realistic: I’m probably never playing against Tkachuk anyway.”

Panthers coach Paul Maurice said he didn’t believe Tkachuk did anything over the line in the fight. “Did you guys see it more than once?” he asked during his pregame news conference Friday ahead of Game 3. “It you watch it a bunch of times, I would say the answer would be ‘no.'”

Two days after the fight, both locker rooms were still buzzing about Pastrnak and Tkachuk throwing down.

“I mean, it was pretty awesome. Anytime you see two big-time players going at it, especially in the playoffs, it’s a lot of fun. It shows two good competitors going at it, and I think it’s really good for the game,” Panthers winger Carter Verhaeghe said.

Maroon remained impressed that Pastrnak took the fight. “I think Pasta did a good job. That’s what leaders do. He stood up for the team. He took charge. You got to love that kind of stuff out of your leader,” he said.

Game 2 was a chaotic one between the playoff rivals, with a combined 148 penalty minutes, including 12 misconduct penalties. It also produced its share of memorable moments, from the Tkachuk fight to Panthers defenseman Brandon Montour giving Bruins star Brad Marchand a taste of his own medicine.

In the 2018 playoffs, Marchand tried to agitate his opponents by licking the face of Tampa Bay’s Ryan Callahan and the neck of Toronto’s Leo Komarov. The NHL reached out to the Bruins and Marchand to say the behavior was “unacceptable” and could lead to supplemental discipline.

In Game 2, as Marchand and Montour were in a scrum, the Panthers defenseman make a licking motion at the Bruins forward.

“It was the heat of the game, I guess. Honestly, it wasn’t really planned or thought out. He was in my face,” Montour told ESPN.

Montour said he was aware that the moment went viral after the game.

“I got a lot of texts with the licking emoji and whatnot,” he said. “When [Marchand does] those things, you have to kind of take the joke, I guess. Maybe for the rest of his career.”

Game 3 is scheduled for 7 p.m. Friday in Boston.

Continue Reading

Sports

Jockey fined for ‘touching a rival’ during Derby

Published

on

By

Jockey fined for 'touching a rival' during Derby

LOUISVILLE, Ky. — Jockey Tyler Gaffalione was fined $2,500 Friday for “touching a rival with his left hand” near the finish of the 150th Kentucky Derby.

The Kentucky Horse Racing Commission’s ruling was posted on its website. Gaffalione was aboard Sierra Leone, who finished second behind Mystik Dan. The jockey touched Forever Young, who finished third at Churchill Downs last weekend.

Sierra Leone lugged in and bumped Forever Young three times in the stretch, but jockey Ryusei Sakai didn’t claim foul.

Chad Brown, who trains Sierra Leone, has said Gaffalione was trying to make room for his left-handed whip.

The stewards did not issue an inquiry on the race. However, they ordered Gaffalione to attend a film review of the race. The stewards, in their discretion, can take disciplinary action against a jockey following the review. The 29-year-old rider was fined, but not suspended.

Continue Reading

Trending