Connect with us

Published

on

John Tavares said he didn’t want to leave Toronto. And that wasn’t lip service.

The Maple Leafs announced a four-year contract extension for Tavares on Friday, carrying an AAV of $4.38 million. Tavares was set to become an unrestricted free agent on July 1 but opted out of exploring his options by taking less to stick with the Leafs.

“Obviously left some money out there,” Tavares admitted on a media conference call Friday. “But I’ve done pretty well. I’m still doing pretty well. And I get to play for an amazing club in a great city, the place where I’m from, and for a team that’s got a real opportunity to win. It’s a real strong hockey team and there’s a tremendous amount of belief.”

The center is coming off one of his most productive regular seasons, collecting 38 goals and 74 points in 75 games. It was the second time in three years Tavares had eclipsed the 30-goal mark, while carrying over 18 minutes TOI per game and contributing to the top power-play unit. He is also just six goals away from 500 in his career, a mark achieved by only 48 NHL players to date. That consistent success is no accident, either. Tavares’ dedication to improvement — whether through on-ice work or off-ice recovery — has allowed him to remain an upper-echelon player worth investing in — by the only team he cared to suit up for.

“It never really got to the point where I had to really look at other [choices] and consider it,” Tavares said. “I look over the last few years and my belief is I can continue to play at a very high level, to play elite hockey and be a difference-maker and contribute to a lot of areas. I felt like my fit and obviously the comfort playing here for so long and where I’m at in my role and with the team, it just made so much sense and was the best fit.”

Tavares, 34, originally signed with the Leafs as a free agent on July 1, 2018. He captained the team from 2019 to 2024 before ceding the role to Auston Matthews. That’s another example of Tavares’ willingness to maintain his relationship with Toronto, which also extends to family life.

A native of the Toronto area, Tavares has put down roots with his three kids over the past several years and security ultimately outweighed any other factors.

“We would all agree there is going to be an opportunity for John to make a lot more money elsewhere,” GM Brad Treliving said. “And [Tavares’] focus was staying here and so his work and his commitment and his desire, it sort of steered the process on this negotiation.”

Treliving noted that given Tavares’ age, the four-year pact that has just dried could appear too long. It was a risk the Leafs were willing to take.

“We all expect aging curves to kick in at some point,” Treliving said. “John’s been able to defy it, and it’s a credit to the way he looks after himself, the commitment he has to his craft, his body. His preparation is second to none. So we expect John to be a really good player moving forward.”

Keeping Tavares in the fold was a key item on the Leafs’ offseason to-do list. Toronto is unlikely to re-sign pending UFA Mitch Marner to a contract extension, which will impact its top-six forward depth. Retaining Tavares as the team’s No. 2 center behind Matthews will help stabilize the Leafs up front.

That’s critical if Toronto expects to make another run at the postseason this year. The Leafs have qualified for the playoffs in every full season since Tavares arrived but have advanced past the first round only twice. This year they got further than ever, falling in Game 7 of a second-round series against the eventual Stanley Cup champion Florida Panthers.

It was another heartbreaking finish for Tavares and the Leafs. And while they haven’t made that elusive breakthrough yet back to a championship stage — and the disappointment continues to take a toll — Tavares is convinced the Leafs can get there.

“It only gets harder,” he said of falling short in the playoffs. “I think because my runway gets shorter and shorter. My belief in my ability is stronger than ever, but I’m clearly not on the front nine [of my career], but the back nine, and I am aware and realistic of that. The opportunities get fewer and fewer for a player that’s in my situation. It only gets more difficult as every opportunity passes and you’re not the last one standing.”

Tavares credited first-year head coach Craig Berube with establishing a new mentality for the club that served them well last season and provides a foundation to build on moving forward. The “different philosophy” suggests Toronto can head in a new direction that will, in theory, produce fresh results.

Only time will tell if Tavares was right to put his faith in the Leafs’ potential.

“There are really good signs for our team, our club,” Tavares said. “All our guys, just talking to a number of them since the end of the season, [there’s a sense of] just how badly we want to find our way and do something special here in Toronto that hasn’t been done here in a long time.”

Continue Reading

Sports

Freeman praises QB Carr’s ‘rare’ early success

Published

on

By

Freeman praises QB Carr's 'rare' early success

CJ Carr barely won the offseason competition to become Notre Dame‘s starting quarterback, but the second-year player has fully capitalized on his opportunity, and coach Marcus Freeman is taking notice.

“It’s rare to be a second-year college football player playing in your fifth [career] game and performing at a level he’s performing at,” Freeman said Monday. “It’s rare. But I think CJ Carr is rare.”

Carr recorded his first career 300-yard passing performance in Saturday’s 56-13 rout of Arkansas, finishing with 354 yards and four touchdowns, while completing 22 of 30 passes. His 294 passing yards in the first half marked the third-highest total in team history, and his four touchdowns were the second-highest total in team history. The four touchdowns also were tied for second most by a true freshman or redshirt freshman in Notre Dame history.

Through four games, Carr has 1,091 passing yards with nine touchdowns and two interceptions. He ranks second nationally in total QBR.

Carr, the grandson of longtime Michigan coach Lloyd Carr, competed with third-year sophomore Kenny Minchey in the spring and preseason camp. Minchey’s strong practice performances suggested he might get the first opportunity to start, but Freeman went with Carr, who saw action in only one game last fall and had no pass attempts.

“He has this unique trait that very few people have,” Freeman said. “He is … a competitive, selfless individual. It’s not about CJ Carr. He’s not so competitive that, ‘I want to be able to throw for this amount.’ It’s like, ‘Whatever we got to do to win, if I got to motivate, if I got to work, if I got to put my head down and run if I got to throw the ball,’ whatever it takes to win, like, he has that trait. He hates to lose, and then he’s mature in the way he prepares.”

Continue Reading

Sports

PSU, Franklin won’t let loss ‘define our season’

Published

on

By

PSU, Franklin won't let loss 'define our season'

Penn State coach James Franklin understands the continued focus on his big-game struggles, especially in the wake of Saturday’s overtime home loss to Oregon.

But Franklin can control how he views those games, and how he chooses to respond to the scrutiny. The Oregon loss dropped Franklin to 4-21 against AP top-10 opponents at Penn State, tied for the third-worst record by a head coach at a single school in the AP poll era.

“I try to answer the tough questions that you guys give,” Franklin told reporters Monday. “It’s not always easy to do. I wouldn’t say I enjoy this whatsoever, but I also understand you guys have got a job to do and these tough questions are going to come. I will also say that I’m not going to allow one loss to define our season. I’m not going to allow a few losses to define my career and what we have done here at Penn State, because although I don’t think a lot of people spend a ton of time on what we have done over our 12 years here.

“I get it. Nobody wants to hear this right now. There are a ton of positives.”

Franklin is 100-22 against non-top-10 foes at Penn State, and won 34 games in the previous three seasons. Last season, Penn State reached the Big Ten championship game for the first time since winning a title in 2016, and won its first two College Football Playoff games before falling to Notre Dame in the national semifinal.

Penn State dropped to No. 7 following the Oregon loss and visits winless UCLA on Saturday. The Nittany Lions could face consecutive top-10 opponents when they visit No. 1 Ohio State on Nov. 1, and then host No. 8 Indiana on Nov. 8.

Franklin cited inconsistency as a problem throughout the offense and noted how often Penn State was in third-and-long against Oregon. The Lions converted 6 of 15 third-down chances in the loss.

“You saw how we were structured last year in terms of how we would like to manage the offense and be able to run the ball, be able to stay ahead of the sticks, create manageable third-down situations, and also use that with the ability to go play-action pass and take shots down the field,” Franklin said. “Until you’re able to establish the running game, which we were able to do late in the game, which opened everything up from that point on, we have not been able to do it consistently.”

Franklin said Penn State’s sports information staff often sends him clips of how other coaches address tough losses, and that he doesn’t think those responses “would go over very well here.”

“Screaming, yelling, pointing fingers, we’re not going to do,” Franklin said. “Also, there is a part of making sure that I represent this program, this university the right way, and do it with class and integrity. That probably shows up in times like that more than other times. It’s not fun and easy when you care as deeply as we care.”

Continue Reading

Sports

Florida freshman WR Wilson to debut vs. Texas

Published

on

By

Florida freshman WR Wilson to debut vs. Texas

GAINESVILLE, Fla. — Florida has offensive help on the way with a freshman receiver who just might make a difference against No. 9 Texas on Saturday.

Dallas Wilson is practicing for the first time since injuring his left foot in training camp and is scheduled to make his collegiate debut against the Longhorns, coach Billy Napier said Monday.

Napier called Wilson’s availability “a big deal.”

“Three good days of work last week, and I thought he handled the load well,” Napier said. “He feels really good. So far, so good.”

Wilson, a 6-foot-3, 213-pound newcomer from Tampa, was the star of Florida’s spring game in April. He caught 10 passes for 195 yards and two touchdowns, and all indications in fall practice pointed to it not being a fluke.

But Wilson injured his foot late in camp, spent weeks in a protective boot and watched from afar as the Gators (1-3, 0-1 SEC) struggled to move the ball and find the end zone. Florida scored 16, 10 and 7 points, respectively, in consecutive losses to South Florida, LSU and Miami, raising speculation about Napier’s future in Gainesville.

Quarterback DJ Lagway has been the focus of the team’s offensive woes. The sophomore who went 6-1 as a starter last season missed most of the year dealing with injuries and looked rusty when the season began.

Although Lagway’s mechanics seemed improved in the team’s 26-7 setback at Miami on Sept. 20, his offensive line got manhandled and allowed way too much pressure for anyone to notice. Lagway completed 12 of 23 passes for 61 yards against the Hurricanes.

Napier used the off week to get Lagway more live-action reps in hopes of getting him “caught up.” But he also reiterated the need to “play better around him.”

“Each position group needs to step up,” Napier said. “More detail, eliminate errors, eliminate penalties, whatever the case may be. I just think more detail and better overall play around him. And, obviously, he needs to continue to get back closer to being himself.”

Adding Wilson to the mix should help.

The Gators haven’t shown much depth at receiver. Freshman Vernell Brown III has been Lagway’s go-to guy, catching 18 passes for 219 yards. But Eugene Wilson III, J. Michael Sturdivant and Aidan Mizell have been mostly underwhelming.

Dallas Wilson has been unable to help — until now. The Gators are confident he will change the narrative against the No. 1 scoring defense in the SEC.

“Just having him out is going to be amazing for us,” Lagway said. “His ability to go deep, his ability to make plays underneath and be able to make miraculous plays with the ball in his hands, it’s going to be great to have him back.”

Continue Reading

Trending