LEAFS 3, COYOTES 1 POSTGAME QUOTES: “They gave me the puck after the game and I haven’t really thought about what to do with it, but it’s special, nonetheless. It has the Coyotes logo on it too, which is pretty meaningful for me and my family as well. It’s a special day in that sense, but one of the things I was really wanting to be mindful of was to not make today about me. I want to make it about the players and about the team. …” –SHELDON KEEFE.

HEAD COACH SHELDON KEEFE

On the play of the team tonight:

I think the guys just went out and played with confidence and felt like they could take control of the game. It takes some time to establish that and we had to find our way through the first period and I kind of felt out some things. I thought once we settled into the game, I thought we were full marks and the guys played well. More importantly than how we played I just thought we had good energy on the bench. I was really impressed. Obviously, it’s my first time being part of the group like that. The interactions with the players on the bench, the energy, the vibe, the reaction of the players on Barrie’s goal — you just see they really care for him as a teammate and really feel good for him. Those types of things are takeaways for me.

On his first game behind an NHL bench:

I thought it went well. It felt like a hockey game. I was a little behind on a couple of my line changes, I’d like to speed that up a little bit, but the players took care of me well there, I appreciated that. All in all, it did feel like a hockey game to me. I didn’t know how it was going to be. The whole day felt very comfortable, obviously I’m very happy about that and the credit for that goes to the support staff for the help they’ve provided, the assistant coaches and training staff for this transition. The players, they’ve been open-minded and welcoming and engaged. They just want to be coached and they allowed me to do that today and I appreciated that. We asked a lot of them on a game day, a lot of new things coming at them, tried to keep it as simple as possible, but, still, it’s new things coming at them and they have to mix up the routine and all those things. To come up with a pretty good effort, right until the very end of course, we had a mishap and we owe Freddie [Andersen] one, for sure. I’m just very happy.

On starting Barrie alongside Rielly:

We just talked about the fact we were probably going to mix and match our D pairings in different situations throughout the game. Offensive faceoffs, just at times when we think we can get them on the ice together and it’ll really help us offensively. We wanted to have a good first shift, we wanted to establish a good game and get the Matthews line going and thought it was a good chance to do that. Obviously, specific to Tyson, he’s a guy we’re trying to mix things up a little bit with here and get him going. Today obviously the goal is a big weight off his shoulders. We’re going to continue to try to do those things.

On what the group did best today:

I thought what we did best was they held on to the puck and I thought, through the neutral zone especially, got organized and used the skill and speed we’ve talked about. I thought that really established some really good play for us in the offensive zone and really, at times, allowed us to control the play. That was the thing I was most impressed with. I thought that might be the easiest thing for them given the ability of the players and that’s what I saw.

On seeing Pierre Engvall score his first career NHL goal:

Any time you see a guy score his first NHL goal it’s a big deal. I was happy it came on the penalty kill. That’s an area of Pierre’s game that wasn’t there before he came to the Marlies and he was given that responsibility and he has really learned to the point where I trusted him here in an NHL game to do it. I thought, not just the goal, he was good in other areas of the penalty kill as well. I used him and Andreas Johnsson today on the penalty kill as two new guys with lots of speed and tenacity on the puck.

On the team showing him enthusiasm after the win:

It makes you feel good, for sure. As I was saying, the biggest takeaway for me today is that we’ve got really good people here, good energy and it was really noticeable for me when that first goal went in, most of the guys are happy to score but it was different, it was a different feeling on the bench just because you can tell they care for one another and to see Barrie score that goal, it was a good moment. It really speaks to the character of the group and they’ve been really welcoming for me, they’ve been really engaged and listening. I couldn’t have asked for a better first day.

On what he’ll remember most about the day:

Oh man, I don’t think I’ve slept in a few days so I’m not sure I’ll remember any of this when I get up in the morning. The thing I’ll take away is just that the players made it so comfortable to coach them today. That’s what I’ll really take away. Just having my family here, my wife and kids, my mother-in-law is here — my in-laws and my wife are from here in Arizona — my parents have been able to make the trip. All of that, just having them be a part of this is probably the biggest thing.

On if he’ll keep any mementos from tonight:

They gave me the puck after the game and I haven’t really thought about what to do with it, but it’s special, nonetheless. It has the Coyotes logo on it too, which is pretty meaningful for me and my family as well. It’s a special day in that sense, but one of the things I was really wanting to be mindful of was to not make today about me. I want to make it about the players and about the team and I’m happy that it worked out good for everybody.

FREDERIK ANDERSEN (30 SAVES)

On tonight’s win:

I thought we played with pretty good confidence, pretty good pressure, but also at times when we needed to take it easy, I thought we were good at that too. It was a good step for us. I thought we really played well in the offensive zone as well. Guys were skating a lot and making room for each other and moving around. It was great to see.

On what stands out about new head coach Sheldon Keefe:

It’s too early to say. I don’t want to start talking too much, but I thought we came out and answered really good today and it’s going to be a testing time now to keep moving, keep moving forward after this and building on it.

On the importance of his first period glove save:

I thought it was nice to be rewarded off us having a good period and being up 1-0. Obviously, a huge goal by [Barrie] but, obviously, that felt good to make that save and keep it at zeros. Like I said, good to be rewarded for a good period and I thought we continued that throughout the game.

TYSON BARRIE (FIRST GOAL AS A MAPLE LEAF)

On scoring his first goal of the year:

I’m not going to lie, that feels good. Especially going into Denver tonight. I didn’t want to go in with no goals so it feels a little better.

On if that was the type of goal he’s used to scoring:

Yeah, I think I’ve done a good job jumping in in the past and kind of choosing some holes so that was what I’m accustomed to. It was nice to get that for sure.

On if he tried to be more involved offensively tonight:

Yeah, I think our whole team was a little more aggressive and had a little bit more speed through the neutral zone. We had a lot of fun out there tonight and I think it showed.

PIERRE ENGVALL (FIRST NHL GOAL)

On what he’ll remember about his first NHL goal:

I mean, just the feeling to score was unbelievable. Just so happy for it.

On his post-goal celebration:

I don’t really know. I was just so happy and tried to do something special for the first celly. I think I did it.

On if his teammates gave him a hard time after falling during his celebration:

I did a lot. We watched it – it was a PK goal – so we watched it, like, five times on the break. So, yeah, I got it.

AUSTON MATTHEWS (1 GOAL)

On which of the team’s three goals he liked the best:

I’d probably have to go with the first. Obviously, a great play by [Barrie], that’s a big monkey off the back for him. First goal for Pierre [Engvall]. A pretty special night for a lot of guys here and a big two points with everything that’s been going on the last couple of weeks and the last 36 hours.

On the emotions after tonight’s win:

I think a little bit of everything. I think we’re just excited we got back in the win column. We take a little pressure off ourselves and just continue to build on this. A new coach, obviously some stuff we need to work on, some stuff that’s going to change systematically. I thought tonight, with everything that he threw at us in a short period of time that he’d like to see, I thought we executed that for the most part. We’ll just try to build from there.

On what led to a more cohesive effort tonight:

I just think a little bit more freedom and we weren’t really just giving up the puck. I thought when something wasn’t there, we’d just kind of come back and hang on to it and we’d all come up and support each other. We didn’t have guys all over the place. That’s something that opens up stuff for us because we’ve got a lot of guys that can skate and are skilled with the puck and can skate through the neutral zone. Guys are using each other and when we support each other all over the ice we tend to have the puck on our tape for a majority of the game, which we did tonight.

MAPLE LEAFS 3, COYOTES 1 POSTGAME NOTES: Sheldon Keefe coached his first NHL game after being named head coach to replace Mike Babcock and gets a win.

TORONTO MAPLE LEAFS (10-10-4 – 24 Points) vs.

ARIZONA COYOTES (13-8-2 – 28 Points)

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 2019

 123OTFINAL
TORONTO1113
ARIZONA0011

GAME SUMMARY         |           EVENT SUMMARY        |           FACEOFF SUMMARY


ON THE SCORESHEET

  • Tyson Barrie opened the scoring for the Maple Leafs at 19:14 of the first period. Barrie’s first period goal was his first goal as a Maple Leaf. He has points (1-2-3) in three consecutive games. He has eight points (1 goal, 7 assists) in 24 games this season.
  • Pierre Engvall scored the second Toronto goal of the game while shorthanded at 16:49 of the second period. Engvall’s goal is his first career NHL goal and first career NHL point. He is the first Maple Leaf since Wally Boyer (Dec. 11, 1965 vs. Boston) to score his first career goal while shorthanded and the fourth player to do so in franchise history. 
  • Auston Matthews scored the third Maple Leafs goal of the night at 0:48 of the third period. Matthews has five points (4-1-5) in five games against Pacific Division opposition this season. He has 12 points (4 goals, 8 assists) in 10 games during the month of November. He is tied for third in the NHL in even-strength goals (11).
  • Ilya Mikheyev registered the primary assist on Barrie’s first period goal and later had the secondary assist on Matthews’ third period goal. Mikheyev has assists (3) in two consecutive games. He has five points (1-4-5) in five games against Pacific Division opponents this season. Tonight’s game is his first career multi-assist game. He has four multi-point games this season.
  • Jake Muzzin collected the secondary assist on Barrie’s first period goal. Muzzin has six points (2-4-6) in 10 road games this season. He has 17 points (6 goals, 11 assists) in 30 career games against the Coyotes.
  • William Nylander recorded the primary assist on Matthews’ third period goal. Nylander has three points (1-2-3) over his last five games. He has seven points (4 goals, 3 assists) in eight games against Western Conference opponents this season.
  • Frederik Andersen stopped 30 shots in the victory.

SHOTS ON GOAL (5-on-5 in brackets)

 1st2nd3rdOTTOTAL
TORONTO11 (11)14 (13)7 (7)32 (31)
ARIZONA13 (13)10 (7)8 (5)31 (25)
      

SHOT ATTEMPTS (5-on-5 in brackets)

 1st2nd3rdOTTOTAL
TORONTO28 (28)26 (25)17 (17)71 (70)
ARIZONA22 (22)16 (12)16 (12)54 (46)

ON THE ROAD AGAIN

Record on the Road4-7-0 (11 Games)
All-Time Record vs. Arizona38-53-8-2 (101 Games)
All-Time Record vs. Arizona on the Road17-26-6-0 (49 Games)
Record vs. Western Conference5-3-0 (8 Games)
Record vs. Pacific Division4-1-0 (5 Games)

MAPLE LEAFS LEADERS

Shots4 (Tavares)
Shot Attempts(Matthews)
Faceoff Wins13 (Tavares)
Faceoff Win Percentage75% (Kerfoot, Spezza)
Hits4 (Barrie)
Blocked Shots(Kerfoot)
Takeaways(Barrie, Spezza)
TOI22:54 (Ceci)
Power Play TOIN/A
Shorthanded TOI4:14 (Ceci)
Shifts28 (Holl)
5-on-5 Shot Attempt Percentage77.8% (Tavares – 28 for, 8 against)
  

RECORD WHEN…

Scoring first4-1-1
Lead after 13-1-1
Lead after 26-0-2
Do not score on the power play6-6-2
Do not allow a power play goal6-2-0
Score a shorthanded goal1-1-1
Outshoot opponent5-2-1
Thursday2-1-0

OF NOTE…

  • The Maple Leafs went 3-for-3 on the penalty kill and did not have a power play opportunity tonight.
  • Sheldon Keefe coached his first NHL game and first game as head coach of the Maple Leafs. Tonight’s win is his first as an NHL head coach.
  • Justin Holl and Jake Muzzin were on the ice for a team-high 34 Toronto shot attempts-for at 5-on-5 tonight. Holl finished the game with a 5-on-5 shot attempt percentage of 70.8 percent (34 for, 14 against), while Muzzin finished the game with a 5-on-5 shot attempt percentage of 68 percent (34 for, 16 against).
  • Auston Matthews was 5-for-8 (63%) when taking offensive zone faceoffs.
  • John Tavares won 89 percent (8 won, 1 lost) of his offensive zone draws.

UPCOMING GAMES:

  • Saturday, November 23, 7:00 p.m. at Colorado Avalanche (Sportsnet, TSN 1050)
  • Wednesday, November 27, 7:00 p.m. at Detroit Red Wings (Sportsnet, TSN 1050)
  • Friday, November 29, 4:00 p.m. at Buffalo Sabres (TSN4, FAN 590)
  • Saturday, November 30, 7:00 p.m. vs. Buffalo Sabres (Sportsnet, TSN 1050)
  • Tuesday, December 3, 7:00 p.m. at Philadelphia Flyers (TSN4, TSN 1050)

TORONTO FC HAS AT LEAST 23 PLAYERS RETURNING

TORONTO FC ANNOUNCES OFF-SEASON ROSTER MOVES
23 players currently set to return next season

Toronto FC announced today the following roster moves:

Toronto FC has exercised the contract options on defenders Auro Jr., Julian Dunn, Richie Laryea, Chris Mavinga and Justin Morrow. Midfielders Marky Delgado, Liam Fraser, Tsubasa Endoh and forward and Patrick Mullins.

Toronto FC has not exercised options on goalkeeper Caleb Patterson-Sewell, defender Ashtone Morgan, midfielders Aidan Daniels, Ryan Telfer and forward Jon Bakero.

Defender Drew Moor will be out of contract at the end of the year. In addition, the loan deal for forward Nicolas Benezet will expire at the end of the year.

            Captain and midfielder Michael Bradley’s contract will expire at the end of the year, however, the club is in discussions with Bradley and his representation regarding a potential new contract for 2020 and beyond.

Fourteen players are contractually guaranteed for the 2020 season: goalkeepers Alex Bono and Quentin Westberg; defenders Laurent Ciman, Omar Gonzalez, Eriq Zavaleta; midfielders Nick DeLeon, Griffin Dorsey, Erickson Gallardo, Noble Okello, Jonathan Osorio, Alejandro Pozuelo, Jacob Shaffelburg and forwards Ayo Akinola and Jozy Altidore.

“We’re excited to have consistency and bring back most of the team that helped us win the Eastern Conference Championship,” said Toronto FC General Manager Ali Curtis. “While we have had positive discussions with Michael and his representation, we also remain in contact with Nico and Ashtone regarding a potential return to the team for 2020. We have a strong group, and we hope to improve upon our 2019 campaign.”

Toronto FC’s 2020 roster as it currently stands:

Goalkeepers (2): Alex Bono, Quentin Westberg

Defenders (8): Auro Jr., Laurent Ciman, Julian Dunn, Omar Gonzalez, Richie Laryea, Chris Mavinga, Justin Morrow, Eriq Zavaleta

Midfielders (10): Nick DeLeon, Marky Delgado, Griffin Dorsey, Tsubasa Endoh, Liam Fraser, Erickson Gallardo, Noble Okello, Jonathan Osorio, Alejandro Pozuelo, Jacob Shaffelburg

Forwards (3): Ayo Akinola, Jozy Altidore, Patrick Mullins

-TORONTO FOOTBALL CLUB-

CANADA DEFEATS AUSTRALIA TO REACH THE SEMIFINALS OF THE DAVIS CUP BY RAKUTEN FINALS IN MADRID

CANADA DEFEATS AUSTRALIA TO REACH THE SEMIFINALS OF THE DAVIS CUP BY RAKUTEN FINALS IN MADRID
Canada to play in the third semi in its Davis Cup history
 
Madrid, Nov. 21, 2019 – After dominating Group F in the first stage of the Davis Cup by Rakuten Finals, Canada enjoyed a well-deserved day off before returning to the courts on Thursday to take on Australia, the winner of Group D. In the end, it was the decisive doubles that propelled Canada into the semifinals, thanks to a 2-1 win.
 
For this third showdown, BMW Canadian Davis Cup team captain Frank Dancevic once again chose Denis Shapovalov (Richmond Hill, ON) and Vasek Pospisil (Vernon, BC) to battle in singles, while Team Australia captain Lleyton Hewitt called up Alex De Minaur (18) and John Millman (48e). Millman was selected over Nick Kyrgios, who competed in the team’s two previous second singles matches.
 
For the third time in as many clashes, Pospisil got the tennis balls rolling for Canada. The 29-year-old overpowered John Millman (7-6(7), 6-4) to chalk up his third consecutive victory over a member of the Top 50. In the physically demanding first set, the World No.150 clawed his way back from 0-3 and two set points in the tiebreaker. In the second set, Pospisil earned his second break of the match at 5-4 to deliver Canada’s first point of the day.
 
“I was expecting to play Nick until an hour before the match, which is when the captains have to give their lineup. It took me five minutes to digest the news, and then I started focusing on my preparation,” confessed Pospisil. “I had to adjust my mentality on how I was going to play the match because they are two very different players.”
 
It was then up to Shapovalov to secure the nation’s ticket into the semifinals for the third time in its history. The World No.15 got off to a terrific start, relying on his offensive game to break his opponent at 2-1 and go on to win the first set 6-3. But De Minaur’s fierce sense of competition carried him back into the match and forced a third set in which he grasped the set’s only break point at 5-5 and served for the match. With the win (3-6, 6-3, 7-5), De Minaur kept Team Australia in the mix.
 
“I lost my concentration a little bit after playing a great first set. I think I also let my foot off the gas a little bit,” said Shapovalov. “But one the other hand, he also raised his level. He started serving much better. He played a great match and I felt like I was playing catch up for the second and third set. He deserves a lot of credit for the win, he was the better player today.”
 
A few minutes later, Pospisil and Shapovalov were back on Centre Court at Caja Magica to face John Peers and Jordan Thompson in doubles. The Canadians were raring to go. They locked in the first break point that gave them the first set. They got off to a rockier start in the second, falling behind 0-3, but played impressive tennis to neutralize the Australians and claim victory (6-4, 6-4) and send Canada to the semifinals.
 
“Going into the doubles, we had to make a decision. Félix being ready to go, we had many good options,” explained Pospisil. “Once we took the decision, we were ready to go on court and be very focus and intense from the first point. I thought Denis and I played great together tonight. We served and returned extremely well and I’m just happy we were able to do that in such an important match.”
 
“I’m extremely happy right now. It was a surreal week here. We had a great team, and I knew our players could beat anyone. But playing back-to-back matches like Vasek and Denis did is pretty incredible. It was physically and mentally demanding. And now, there’s no limit. With a bit of luck, we can go all the way,” declared Dancevic after all was said and done.
 
Today marked the teams’ first meeting since 1964. Canada and Australia had gone head-to-head on nine previous occasions in which Australia was undefeated. 
 
Canada will play in the Davis Cup semifinals for the third time in its history and the first since 2013, when the squad was eliminated by Serbia. Canada could get a chance for a rematch, since the team will face the winner of the showdown between Russia and Serbia that will be decided tomorrow. The semifinal is scheduled for Saturday as of 4:30 a.m. EST.
 
 
About Davis Cup
Davis Cup by Rakuten is the World Cup of Tennis. It is the largest annual international team competition in sport, with 133 nations entered in 2019. The competition is 119 years old, having been founded in 1900. In 2019, the all-new Davis Cup by BNP Paribas finals will be hosted at the iconic La Caja Magica in Madrid, Spain. Twenty-four nations will contest the Qualifiers on 1-2 February, competing in 12 locations around the world on a home-and-away basis. The 12 winning teams will join the 2018 semifinalists plus two wild card teams in an 18-nation Davis Cup season finale.
 
About Tennis Canada
Founded in 1890, Tennis Canada is a non-profit, national sport association with a mission to lead the growth of tennis in Canada and a vision to become a world-leading tennis nation. We value teamwork, passion, integrity, innovation and excellence. Tennis Canada owns and operates the premier Rogers Cup presented by National Bank WTA and ATP World Tour events and one professional ITF sanctioned event. Tennis Canada also owns and financially supports 13 other professional tournaments in Canada. Tennis Canada operates junior national training centres/programs in Toronto, Montreal, Vancouver and Calgary. Tennis Canada is a proud member of the International Tennis Federation, the Canadian Olympic Committee, the Canadian Paralympic Committee and the International Wheelchair Tennis Association, and serves to administer, sponsor and select the teams for Davis Cup, Fed Cup, the Olympic and Paralympic Games and all wheelchair, junior and senior national teams. Tennis Canada invests its surplus into tennis development. For more information on Tennis Canada please visit our Web site at: www.tenniscanada.com and follow us on Facebook and Twitter.
 
 

Raptors blog: VanVleet, Powell showcasing Toronto’s backcourt talent and depth — Toronto Sun

– Two straight Raptors blowouts (including Wednesday’s crushing of the Orlando Magic) has meant the fans go home happy, but they also miss a lot of the competitiveness of NBA basketball, which is too bad. The Hornets stuck around for a bit, then got absolutely steamrolled. Orlando was in the game for a half, but […]

Raptors blog: VanVleet, Powell showcasing Toronto’s backcourt talent and depth — Toronto Sun

Report: Magic star Nikola Vucevic to miss at least a month — High Velocity Sport

Report: Magic star Nikola Vucevic to miss at least a month Orlando Magic center Nikola Vucevic will miss at least a month after being forced from Wednesday night’s loss to the Toronto Raptors with a right ankle injury, according to The Athletic’s Shams Charania. Vucevic suffered the injury when trying to block a Raptors shot with […]

Report: Magic star Nikola Vucevic to miss at least a month — High Velocity Sport

Can James Harden really average 40 points per game in a season? — News Trends & Tech

James Harden is averaging 38.4 points per game through 15 games. Here’s why he can average 40 for the season, and other hot topics around the NBA. from USATODAY – Sports Top Stories https://ift.tt/37lDwBz

Can James Harden really average 40 points per game in a season? — News Trends & Tech

Maurkice Pouncey’s suspension reduced to two games — ProFootballTalk

Browns defensive end Myles Garrett‘s indefinite suspension for his actions last Thursday was upheld after an appeal this week, but Steelers center Maurkice Pouncey‘s hearing went a bit better for him. Pouncey was suspended three games last week for punching and kicking Garrett after Garrett hit Steelers quarterback Mason Rudolph in the head with Rudolph’s…

Maurkice Pouncey’s suspension reduced to two games — ProFootballTalk

MAPLE LEAFS AT COYOTES PREGAME NOTES: “Sheldon Keefe was named the 31st head coach in Maple Leafs history Wednesday after serving as head coach of the Toronto Marlies (AHL) for the past five seasons. In 319 regular season games, Keefe led the Marlies to a 199-89-22-9 record and won the Macgregor Kilpatrick Trophy as the AHL’s top team in the regular season on two occasions. He led the Marlies to a 38-21 record in four post-season appearances, including the franchise’s first Calder Cup championship in 2018.”

Sheldon Keefe was named the 31st head coach in Maple Leafs history on November 20, 2019. Prior to being named head coach, Keefe served as head coach of the Toronto Marlies (AHL) for the past five seasons. In 319 regular season games, Keefe led the Marlies to a 199-89-22-9 record and won the Macgregor Kilpatrick Trophy as the AHL’s top team in the regular season on two occasions. He led the Marlies to a 38-21 record in four post-season appearances, including the franchise’s first Calder Cup championship in 2018. Keefe joined the Marlies after a three-year stint as head coach for the Sault Ste. Marie Greyhounds of the Ontario Hockey League. In two seasons with the Greyhounds, the club posted a regular season record of 98-29-2-7 while reaching the second round (2013-14) and third round (2014-15) of the playoffs. Keefe also served as GM and head coach of the CCHL’s Pembroke Lumber Kings, capturing five consecutive league championships (20072011). Record with Maple Leafs: 0 Games, 0-0-0

TORONTO MAPLE LEAFS (9-10-4 – 22 Points) vs.

ARIZONA COYOTES (13-7-2 – 28 Points)

NOVEMBER 21, 2019 ▪ 9:00 PM EST

GILA RIVER ARENA (GLENDALE, AZ) ▪
TV: SPORTSNET ONTARIO ▪ RADIO: SPORTSNET 590 THE FAN

MAPLE LEAFS HISTORY versus ARIZONA

ALL-TIME RECORD:37-53-8-2 (100 Games)
ALL-TIME ON THE ROAD:16-26-6-0 (48 Games)
2018-19:0-2-0
LAST FIVE:2-3-0
LAST 10:2-7-1

MAPLE LEAFS CAREER LEADERS versus ARIZONA

GAMES PLAYED:Jake Muzzin (29), Jason Spezza (22), Tyson Barrie (21)
GOALS:Jason Spezza (9), John Tavares (9), Jake Muzzin (6)
ASSISTS:Jason Spezza (12), Jake Muzzin (10), Morgan Rielly (6), John Tavares (6)
POINTS:Jason Spezza (21), Jake Muzzin (16), John Tavares (15)
PENALTY MINUTES:Jake Muzzin (34), Nick Shore (8), Zach Hyman (6), Morgan Rielly (6)

MAPLE LEAFS – COYOTES TEAM STATS

 TORONTOARIZONA
GOALS FOR (Rank):72 (8th)61 (t-17th)
GOALS AGAINST (Rank):        79 (30th)49 (2nd)
POWER PLAY [%] (Rank):13/74 [17.6%] (18th)12/70 [17.1%] (20th)
PENALTY KILL [%] (Rank):57/78 [73.1%] (27th)55/67 [82.1%] (t-14th)
SHOTS (Rank):763 (2nd)672 (t-14th)
5-on-5 SHOT ATTEMPTS FOR (Rank):1161 (1st)940 (14th)
5-on-5 SHOT ATTEMPT % (Rank):53.5% (2nd)48.4% (24th)
FACEOFF % (Rank):53.8% (1st)48.8% (24th)

MAPLE LEAFS – COYOTES NOTES

FIRST MATCHUP BETWEEN CLUBS:Nov. 10, 1979 at WPG (Toronto 8, Winnipeg 4)
ALL-TIME RECORD:37-53-8-2 (100 Games)
ALL-TIME RECORD AT HOME:21-27-2-2 (52 Games)
ALL-TIME RECORD ON THE ROAD:16-26-6-0 (48 Games)
LAST WIN VS. OPPONENT ON THE ROAD:Dec. 28, 2017 (Toronto 7, Arizona 4)

MAPLE LEAFS MILESTONES vs. COYOTES

Martin MarincinFirst NHL point (Jan. 24, 2014 (EDM) vs. PHX)
Auston Matthews 100th career NHL game (Nov. 20, 2017 vs. ARI)
Jake MuzzinFirst NHL goal (Jan. 26, 2013 (LAK) at PHX)
William Nylander 100th career NHL point (Dec. 28, 2017 at ARI)

MAPLE LEAFS LEADERS

CATEGORYLEADER
GOALS14 (Matthews)
ASSISTS14 (Marner, Rielly)
POINTS27 (Matthews)
POWER PLAY POINTS(Marner, Matthews)
SHORTHANDED POINTS(Kapanen)
PIMs16 (Kerfoot, Rielly)
SHOTS86 (Matthews)
FACEOFF WIN%59.2% (Gauthier)
5-on-5 SHOT ATTEMPT %57.8% (Spezza)
BLOCKED SHOTS45 (Ceci)
TAKEAWAYS24 (Marner)
HITS50 (Muzzin)
TOI PER GAME25:11 (Rielly)
PP TOI PER GAME3:24 (Matthews)
SH TOI PER GAME3:25 (Ceci)


MAPLE LEAFS PLAYER NOTES

Frederik Andersen– Is 3-2-0 on the road this season with a 2.59 goals-against average and a .919 save percentage.
– Has a 7-3-4 record with a .933 save percentage and a 1.88 goals-against average in 15 career games against Arizona.- Fifth in the NHL in saves (489) and sixth in even-strength saves (386).
Tyson Barrie– Eighth among NHL defencemen in shots on goal (59).
– Has assists (2) in consecutive games heading into tonight.
Cody Ceci– Tied for 12th among NHL skaters in blocked shots (45).- One of 12 NHLers to have recorded at least 40 hits (40) and 40 blocked shots (45).
Travis Dermott– Has a 5-on-5 shot attempt percentage of 52.3 percent in 10 games since returning from injury.
Pierre Engvall– Made his NHL debut on November 19 at Vegas and played 9:27 in ice time.
Frederik Gauthier– Has won 61.0 percent (75 won, 48 lost) of his defensive zone faceoffs.
Justin Holl– Has a 5-on-5 unblocked shot attempt percentage of 53.2, which is the highest among Maple Leafs defencemen who have appeared in at least 10 games.
Zach Hyman– Scored his first goal of the season November 19 at Vegas.
– Averaging 18:05 per game in ice time through three games since returning from injury.
Kasperi Kapanen– Leads the Maple Leafs in road points this season with nine (4-5-9) in 10 road games.
Kasimir Kaskisuo


– Made his NHL debut on November 16 at Pittsburgh.


Auston Matthews

-Fifth among NHL skaters in goals (14).- Tied for fourth among NHL skaters in even-strength goals (10).- Fifth in the NHL in shots on goal (86).- Has recorded a goal and an assist in three career games at Arizona. – Has one goal, six assists in 10 games on the road and 13 goals, seven assists in 13 games at home.
Ilya Mikheyev– Leads the NHL in shorthanded shots on goal (10).- Leads all NHL rookies in shots on goal (54).
Jake Muzzin– Ranks third among Maple Leafs in time on ice per game (21:51).- One of five NHL defencemen to have registered at least 45 hits (50) and at least 45 shots on goal (45).
William Nylander– Averaging 18:33 per game in ice time against Pacific Division opposition, his highest average against a single division.- Has eight points (5 goals, 3 assists) through nine games in November.
Nic Petan– Has a 5-on-5 shot attempt percentage of 63.9 percent (115 for,
65 against) through nine games, which is the second-highest percentage among NHLers who have appeared in at least five games.
Morgan Rielly– Tied for seventh among NHL defencemen in points (3-14-17).- Tied for sixth among NHL defencemen in even-strength points
(3-9-12).- Sixth among NHL skaters in TOI per game (25:11).- 10th among NHL skaters in shifts per game (29.2). 
Nick Shore– Tied for second among all NHLers in defensive zone starts (145).
John Tavares– Has seven points (3 goals, 4 assists) in eight games since returning from injury on November 5 vs. Los Angeles.- Recorded eight points (3 goals, 5 assists) in seven road games thus far in 2019-20.- Leads the Maple Leafs in power play faceoffs won (58.8% – 40 won, 28 lost).

CURRENT POINT STREAKS

Tyson BarrieHas assists (2) in two consecutive games.
Jason Spezza Has goals (2) and points (2-1-3) in two consecutive games.

UPCOMING MILESTONES

John Tavares Two assists from 400 career NHL assists.Two games from 100 games as a Maple Leaf.

RECENT MILESTONES

Pierre EngvallFirst NHL game (November 19 at VGK)
Kasimir KaskisuoFirst NHL game (November 16 at PIT)

INJURY REPORT

Alex Kerfoot (Dental Fractures)Out indefinitely.
Mitch Marner (Ankle)On injured reserve.
Trevor Moore (Shoulder)On injured reserve.
 Man Games Lost: 49

RECENT TRANSACTIONS

November 18 Recalled forward Pierre Engvall from the Toronto Marlies (AHL).Placed forward Trevor Moore on injured reserve.

COYOTES NOTES

LAST GAME Coyotes 3, Kings 0 – Nov. 18, 2019 – Gila River Arena ARI Goals: Garland (10, GWG), Stepan (4, PPG), Chychrun (5, PPG) ARI Goalie: Antti Raanta (W) – 31 saves on 31 shots LAK Goalie: Jack Campbell (L) – 24 saves on 27 shots PP: 2-4 PK: 4-4 Notes: Vinnie Hinostroza skated in his 200th career NHL game…Antti Raanta secured his first shutout of the season and first since Mar. 31, 2018…The Coyotes recorded consecutive shutouts for the first time since March 29, 31 and Apr. 3, 2012…Conor Garland (1- 1-2), Christian Dvorak (0-2-2), and Nick Schmaltz (0-2-2) all recorded multi-point games.

RECENT TRANSACTIONS Nov. 9 – Assigned goaltender Eric Comrie to Tucson for conditioning (AHL) INJURY UPDATE (total man games lost to injury: 38 games) Niklas Hjalmarsson…IR…Lower Body

PACK FACTS Nick Schmaltz (1-7-8) leads the team in home scoring. The Coyotes five wins when trailing first are tied for the fourth-most in the NHL. Christian Dvorak leads the NHL with a 62.5 FO%. The Coyotes are 8-1-2 when Clayton Keller records a point this season. Arizona has outshot their opponent by 57 in the first period which leads the NHL. Oliver Ekman-Larsson is one goal away from tying Calle Johansson (119 goals) for the fifth-most by a Swedish-born player in NHL history. The Coyotes are 8-1-1 when scoring the first goal of the game and 7-0-0 when scoring a PPG. Derek Stepan ranks sixth among US-born skaters with 459 points since entering the NHL in 2010. The Coyotes 89.7% home penalty kill percentage is fourth in the League. The Coyotes are the only team that has played in at least three shootouts to not lose and they lead the NHL with an 83.3 shooting percentage. Phil Kessel enters tonight having played in 796 consecutive games, which is the third longest active streak (Keith Yandle: 818 games, Patrick Marleau: 806 games) and the seventh longest streak in NHL history. He last missed a game on Halloween night in 2009. Alex Goligoski entered the 2019-20 as one of four NHL defensemen to have at least 10 consecutive 20 assist or more seasons (Keith Yandle, Duncan Keith, Ryan Suter) and currently leads Coyotes blueliners in scoring with 1-10-11. Last year, Lawson Crouse set a franchise record with 288 hits, which ranked second in the NHL…His 533 career hits are the most by any player drafted in 2015. Among American-born players, Phil Kessel only trails Patrick Kane in goals and points since 2006-07. … Michael Grabner’s 22 career SHGs are second (Brad Marchand: 26 SHGs) among all active players.

UPCOMING GAMES

Thur. Nov. 21 7:00 p.m. Vs. TOR Gila River Arena FOX Sports Arizona 910 AM

Sat. Nov. 23 2:00 p.m. At LAK Staples Center FOX Sports Arizona+ 910 AM

Sun. Nov. 24 6:00 p.m. Vs. EDM Gila River Arena FOX Sports Arizona+ 910 AM

. STORYLINES VS. TORONTO Arizona wraps up a three-game homestand against the Toronto Maple Leafs. The Coyotes enter tonight having won four of their last five games and have gone 6-3-1 during their recent 10-game in 17 day stretch (Nov. 2-18). If the Coyotes post another shutout, it would be just the fourth time in franchise history the team shutout their opponent in three consecutive games. Oliver Ekman-Larsson’s next point will surpass him with Radim Vrbata for 11th on the franchise points list and his next assist will tie him with Randy Carlyle (226) for the fifth-most assists in franchise history. Derek Stepan is two assists away from 300 career NHL assists

. Season Series: 2/11 at TOR The Coyotes were 2-0-0 vs. TOR last season: at TOR: Jan. 20 (W, 4-2), vs. TOR: Feb. 16 (W, 2-0) ARI owns a 55-36-8-1 all-time record vs the Maple Leafs and are 26-16-6-1 at home. The Coyotes are 14-3-1 in their last 18 games against the Leafs. Phil Kessel recorded 181-213-394 in 446 career games with the Maple Leafs from 2009-15.

SCORING NOTABLES AGAINST THE MAPLE LEAFS :

Derek Stepan…4-16-20…26 career games Michael Grabner…9-5-14…22 career games Carl Soderberg…6-4-10…15 career games

SHUT DOWN, LOCK DOWN – Arizona’s 49 goals against are the second-fewest in the NHL, only trailing the New York Islanders (46 goals). – The Coyotes have posted consecutive shutouts for the first time since the team posted three consecutive shutouts from Mar. 27- Apr. 3, 2012… It’s also the sixth time in franchise history the team had a multi-game shutout streak. – The consecutive shutouts was the first time in franchise history the feat was done by two different goaltenders. – Since Jan. 1, 2018, the Coyotes have given up the second-fewest goals in the NHL (375 goals) and only trail the Dallas Stars (360 goals).

TALK OF THE TOWN – The Coyotes enter tonight with a 13-5-2 record in their last 20 games and have posted the third-most points in the NHL since that date (WSH: 30 points, NYI: 29 points). – Arizona won seven games in the month of October for just the sixth time in franchise history (1982, 1999, 2000, 2009, 2013). – The Coyotes became the first team in NHL history to defeat the past two Stanley Cup champions on consecutive nights on the road (Nov. 11-12). – On Oct. 25 and 28, the Coyotes came from two goals behind in both games and won, which was just the third time in franchise history (Mar. 18-20, 2010 and Feb. 21-23, 2012) that they won consecutive games after trailing by multiple goals.

KUEMPERATURE CHECK Darcy Kuemper went 13 consecutive games (Mar. 23-Oct. 22) allowing two goals or less which is a new franchise record and the 12th longest in NHL history…. He posted a 7-4-2 mark with a .954 SV% and 1.41 GAA during his record-breaking stretch. – Since Jan. 6, 2019, the 29-year-old’s seven shutouts the second-most in the NHL (Sergei Bobrovsky: 8). His next shutout will surpass Curtis Joseph (8 shutouts) for the sixth-most in franchise history. – His .937 SV% ranks second while his 1.85 GAA leads all NHL goaltenders. – Kuemper, along with Antti Raanta, are ranked among the Coyotes franchise leaders in 30 plus save shutouts.

Sheldon Keefe

GAME RECAP: Clippers 107, Celtics 104 — High Velocity Sport

GAME RECAP: Clippers 107, Celtics 104 Lou Williams scores 27 points and grabs 2 rebounds as the Clippers beat the Celtics. NBA News via NBA Basketball News, Scores, Standings, Rumors, Fantasy Games https://ift.tt/2vcJMIj November 20, 2019 at 11:24PM

GAME RECAP: Clippers 107, Celtics 104 — High Velocity Sport

MARLIES 2, LAVAL 1 (OT): “I was very fortunate to play under Sheldon for parts of three years now. When I came into the league it was a huge adjustment for me, probably a little harder than I thought it was going to be and he was there the whole way. He’s a great coach, he always tells you exactly what he wants from you and when he sees that your game’s not going the way he wants it to be, he straightens it out and shows you the things that you’re doing wrong.” –ADAM BROOKS.

TORONTO MARLIES (11-2-2-1 – 25 Points) vs. LAVAL ROCKET (10-6-3-0 – 23 Points)

WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 2019

 123OTFINAL
LAVAL10001
TORONTO01012

GAME SUMMARY    |    GAME SHEET |    PHOTOS    |      SCRUMS

SCORING SUMMARY

Laval: M. Peca (2) (D. Sklenicka)
Goaltender: C. Lindgren (19/21)

Toronto: S. Pooley (1) (T. MacMaster, B. Harpur), K. Agostino (9) (T. Liljegren, J. Bracco)
Goaltender: M. Hutchinson (32/33)

ON THE SCORESHEET

  • Scott Pooley scored at 3:03 of the second period. This is his first goal for the Marlies in his first game this season. Pooley has 13 points (10 goals, 3 assists) through 12 games with Newfoundland (ECHL).
  • Kenny Agostino scored the overtime winning goal at 4:35 of extra time. He now leads the Marlies in goals (9). Agostino has six points (5 goals, 1 assist) in four games.
  • Tanner MacMaster recorded the primary assist on Pooley’s second period goal. MacMaster has four points (1-3-4) in four consecutive games.
  • Ben Harpur registered the secondary assist on Pooley’s second period goal. Harpur has four assists through 13 games this season.
  • Timothy Liljegren picked up the primary assist on Agostino’s overtime goal. Liljegren has nine points (1 goal, 8 assists) through 14 games.
  • Jeremy Bracco had the secondary assist on Agostino’s overtime goal. Bracco leads the Marlies in assists (12). Bracco has four assists in three games.
  • Michael Hutchinson stopped 32 of 33 shots he faced. Hutchinson is now 2-0-0-0 on the season with a 0.943 save percentage and a 1.93 goals against average.

OF NOTE…

  • Toronto is undefeated at home this season. This is the most consecutive wins (7) at home since 2016-17. Toronto has outscored their opponents 30-17.
  • Assistant coaches Rob Davison and A.J. MacLean assumed duties behind the bench for tonight’s game against the Laval Rocket.
  • Sheldon Keefe finished his Marlies coaching career with a record of 199-89-22-9 (0.672) and was 15 games into his fifth season. He led Toronto to their first Calder Cup championship in 2018 and advanced to the Eastern Conference Finals twice. He also won the Macgregor Kilpatrick Trophy twice as the regular season champions.
  • Toronto was 3-for-3 on the penalty kill and was 0-for-1 on the power play.
  • Laval had a 33-21 edge in shots in all situations. Pontus Aberg and Kenny Agostino led the Marlies with three shots on goal.
  • The Marlies are 5-0-2-1 against North Division opponents and are 1-0-0-1 against the Rocket. This is the second of eight games this season against Laval this season.

REGULAR SEASON LEADERS

  • Goals: K. Agostino (9)
  • Assists: J. Bracco (12)
  • Points: P. Aberg 16)
  • PPG: E. Korshkov (4)
  • Shots: P. Aberg (52)
  • +/-:  B. Harpur (+10)
  • PIMS: G. Wilson (41)

RECORD WHEN…

  • The Marlies are 3-0-1-0 when trailing after the first period and 3-1-0-1 when tied after the second period.
  • Toronto is 5-2-1-1 when outshot by their opponent.
  • The Marlies are 2-1-0-0 in Wednesday games and are 5-2-0-1 in November.

CURRENT POINT STREAKS

  • Tanner MacMaster has points (1-3-4) in four consecutive games.

MARLIES UPDATES.

  • Darren Archibald (forearm strain) did not dress for tonight’s game against Laval. He has not dressed since November 6 against Rockford.
  • Kevin Gravel (illness) did not dress for tonight’s game against Laval.
  • Rasmus Sandin (rib contusion) did not dress for tonight’s game against Laval. Heleft Toronto’s game midway through the second period against Texas on November 16.

RECENT TRANSACTIONS

  • November 18: Recalled forward Pierre Engvall from loan by Toronto (NHL).
  • November 15: Recalled forward Scott Pooley from loan to Newfoundland (ECHL).
  • November 15: Reassigned defenceman Joseph Duszak by Toronto (NHL) to Newfoundland (ECHL).

POSTGAME QUOTES

ASSISTANT COACH A.J. MacLEAN

On the emotions around the team with the announcement of Sheldon Keefe as head coach of the Maple Leafs:
For me personally, (Sheldon) means everything, to my career. Along with my father and Kyle Dubas, they’re the people who’ve really groomed me to be where I am. Once I got done playing they took a chance on me in the Soo and every step of the way he’s been an incredible mentor and basically a big brother to me through life and through coaching. For here with the development of all the Marlies, he’s been absolutely incredible. He genuinely cares about every player that’s come through here. He puts a lot of time and effort in to make sure that each and every player has an opportunity to reach their maximum potential, and that’s our day-in and day-out process, is to try and get the players to their potential.

On if he spoke with Keefe following the announcement:
Briefly, just as a group (chat) we have, not one-on-one. But we got to talk to him a bit when the news came to us and we wished him all the best and told him how proud we are of him. We’re looking forward to watching him go.

On the benefits of giving personal attention to each player:
I think you just know if somebody cares about you, you go through a wall for them, and that’s what you see almost all the time here with the Marlies. The guys go through the wall for him. They really want to get better because us as a staff really want to see every player reach their potential and it all starts with him.

JEREMY BRACCO (1 ASSIST)

On Sheldon Keefe’s style of communication:
I think you know where you stand. I think you know where you are in the lineup, you know what you need to do, you know what you need to do to contribute to play a lot and he expects you to be better in the areas that you’re not so good at. He’s very easy to talk to about life, not even hockey. I’ve gone to him about multiple different things and he’s been there, open door policy, and I think that’s something they’ll appreciate up there.

ADAM BROOKS

On today’s win against Laval:
I mean obviously we knew that today was a crazy day and we knew going into this game that we didn’t want to use it as an excuse. We still have a great leadership group in there and we’re still led by two great coaches. We knew what we needed to do heading into this one and thanks to Kenny and a great play by Hutch, we were able to come out of there with the win.

On what Sheldon Keefe meant to his development:
He was huge. I was very fortunate to play under Sheldon for parts of three years now. When I came into the league it was a huge adjustment for me, probably a little harder than I thought it was going to be and he was there the whole way. He’s a great coach, he always tells you exactly what he wants from you and when he sees that your game’s not going the way he wants it to be, he straightens it out and shows you the things that you’re doing wrong. I can’t thank him enough for everything he’s done for us and the development that he’s done for so many guys that you’ve seen made that jump to the NHL. With a few more going this year already, it just shows what kind of coach that Sheldon Keefe is.


NEXT GAME:

November 23 vs Manitoba – 4:00 p.m. ET
November 24 vs Manitoba – 4:00 p.m. ET
November 29 at Rochester – 7:05 p.m. ET
November 30 vs Utica – 1:30 p.m. ET (Scotiabank Arena)
December 1 vs Utica – 4:00 p.m. ET

RAPTORS 113, MAGIC 97 POSTGAME QUOTES: “It wasn’t the prettiest game, I don’t think, but I thought we played pretty hard, like really hard in stretches. So that was good to see.” –NICK NURSE

(6-8) ORLANDO MAGIC, 97 VS. (10-4) TORONTO RAPTORS, 113

SCOTIABANK ARENA
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 2019

TORONTO RAPTORS QUOTES
NICK NURSE (HEAD COACH)
On the energy from the bench tonight …
All three of those guys are energy guys, Terence (Davis), Rondae (Hollis-Jefferson) and Chris (Boucher). Geez, they came out of there
with plus-21 and plus-22. That is a heck of a stint for those guys, two stints.
On the starters being a little off tonight …
A little bit, little bit. I thought we didn’t execute a bunch of our schemes early defensively. We just had some breakdowns and you could
see some clear lane layups in the half court, which we don’t like to see very often, if ever. But those guys (bench) provided a nice punch
and then the starters came back in and started playing. It wasn’t the prettiest game, I don’t think, but I thought we played pretty hard,
like really hard in stretches. So that was good to see.
On what you are seeing defensively from Rondae and Chris …
First of all, Rondae has been really good defensively. He has really been a big asset, we put him on a really good player when he gets
in there. Just his intensity, strength and foot speed have been great. He has been extra possession-getter, keeping balls alive. I think
those are big momentum plays and we haven’t had a lot of those this year, so it is good to see us get some of those. And Chris, when
Chris is amped up – and he has been pretty amped up most nights – he’s at the rim blocking a few shots, grabbing a few big rebounds,
offensive tip-ins.
On Chris’s positioning on offence …
I think the key to that is that you go consistently, no matter where you are, and you see a shot going up, you just take off flying. If you
go in there nine times in a row, you are probably going to tip a couple in, because you are flying hard. He’s got length, he’s got some
speed to use to get up in the air. He works at that a little bit, even when we are playing 4-on-0 or 5-on-0 in practice, he works on his
timing of trying to fly in there and chase those rebounds. That’s good, I think him and Rondae, both of them attacked the glass really
good for us.


PASCAL SIAKAM (18 points, 11 rebounds)
Are you surprised by how bench had been able to contribute?
I’m not surprised, but I think those guys always have that mentality. We’ve got some dogs ready to go out there. Chris stealing my
rebounds, TD just making plays out there. Those guys have been playing well.
Is Chris at his best playing instinctively?
I think he’s at his best that way. Continuing to just play hard and do what he does best without thinking like blocking shots, rebounding,
running, dunking and shooting threes, open ones. All those things he can do them every single night.
TERENCE DAVIS ll (19 points, eight rebounds, five assists)
Are you comfortable coming in off the bench?
It’s more comfortable. Getting the time in with those guys, getting reps in practice and just knowledge from them – and trust, gaining
their trust as a rookie. It takes time and I think I’m starting to get there.
What do you think the chemistry is between you, Chris (Boucher) and Rondae (Hollis-Jefferson)?
We are just hard-playing guys. Bring energy, on the bench today Chris told me, he just pointed out when we go in, we’ve got to pick the
energy up. It’s just about energy and the games will take care of itself.

CHARLOTTE HORNETS QUOTES
STEVE CLIFFORD (HEAD COACH)
On tonight’s game …
I like the way we played in the second half. We started the game fine. (When) we broke the lineup it was awful. Those guys (went)
down, but again … we didn’t defend after we broke the lineup in the first half. I thought (in) the third quarter we put ourselves in position.
The end of the third hurt us and then it got away from us with about seven and a half left. I thought the second half we actually played
— it’s misleading because of the final score — but the second half we played a lot better.
On the bench …
You’re playing a hole against a good team on the road, so you just can’t withstand those turnovers and really awful defence … They
staggered their lineups more too, so I mean, they didn’t play like a full second unit.
What would you want to see from your team if Nikola Vucevic and Aaron Gordon are out?
We’ll worry about that tomorrow. I’ll watch the film and we’ve got two days before we play, so you know, you have to wait … I always
say this is true, you get up in the morning, you say, ‘Who do we have?’ and then you figure out the best way to have a good day with
that group, that’s all you can do in this league.


On Mo Bamba …

I just told Jeff Weltman this year that he has made really good progress from last year. Go watch the films from last year. He’s playing a
lot better this year … I think he has a lot better idea of what the NBA game is all about and so, in that respect, he’s made good
progress.
NIKOLA VUCEVIC (three points, five rebounds, five assists)
How bad was it when you couldn’t get off the floor?
It was really painful when it happened. I’m not sure if I stepped on his foot (or if) my leg got tangled up in his leg … It was really painful.
It’s hard for me to put any pressure on (it), so we’ll see. I’m supposed to get an MRI tomorrow and then I’ll know more after that, but it’s
pretty painful right now so we’ll see how it goes.
How disappointing is it to suffer this injury when the team was starting to play better?
Very disappointing. I mean, injuries suck, but obviously, unfortunately they are part of the job we do … It’s obviously bad timing for us
as well. We had a very tough road trip and especially the worst timing (because) we’re playing better. Guys are going to step up. We’ll
see what happens with AG (Aaron Gordon). Hopefully his is not bad. We believe in the guys we have and hopefully the guys will step
up and we’ll keep playing well.


AARON GORDON (two points, two rebounds)
Feelings on the injury …
It was a little bit (of a) worse sprain than I’ve had. Usually I can roll it over and then kind of lace it up a little bit tighter and keep going. I
jumped all the way up and came all the way down on it. It hurts, man, not being able to play, not being able to help my team win, but it’s
just part of the game, so I’ll take my time and get back right.
Did you know it was hurt pretty bad?
Yeah, it was basically a full jump, so it was a max jump, and then I came down and I landed on the back of someone’s leg and it rolled
over. That’s when I knew it hurt a little bit more because I had jumped all the way up.
How tough is it to lose two starters on the team?
Like I’ve been saying all year, we’ve got really talented people in this locker room, so it is the next man up. People (have) to be ready to
step up in place and collectively fill that void. We’ll be able to do it.
KHEM BIRCH (12 points, four rebounds)
How do you rally the troops when you lose a couple of guys like that?
I mean, you (have) to just stay ready. We have a deep team, so everyone has to stay ready. A couple of us have been doing this for
two —I’ve been doing this for three — years, so it’s no excuses. You have to come ready. When your number is called you have to be
prepared and make an impact.
On playing in your home country …
It’s kind of crazy how it happened. I don’t wish an injury on anybody. It’s just crazy, you know, that someone gets hurt and I play in front
of my mom. My mom was sitting courtside – it’s great. I love playing in front of my home country.