#iihf world championship 2022
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toasttt11 · 1 year ago
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octavia hughes
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Octavia Wren Hughes
Number: 8
Season: Second
Position: LW
Height: 5”10
Hometown: Manchester, New Hampshire
S/C: L
NHL: TOR
Prev School: University of Michigan
NHL
• Selected 2nd overall (first round) by the Toronto Maple Leafs in the 2021 NHL Draft.
International
Team USA
• 2023 World Junior Championship- Bronze Medal, 9 G, 8 A, 7 GP
• 2022 World Junior Championship- 8 G, 6 A, 5 GP
•2022 IIHF World Championship-13 G, 13 A, 10 GP
• 2021 World Junior Championship- Gold Medal, 13 G, 11 A, 6 GP
•2021 IIHF World Championship-14 G, 12 A, 10 GP
•2019 World U-17 Hockey Challenge- Silver Medal, 6 G, 7 A, 6 GP
Second Season (2023-2024)
Toronto Maple Leafs
36 G, 41 A, 77 P, 40 GP
Rookie Season (2022-2023)
Toronto Maple Leafs
65 G, 52 A, 117 P, 78 GP
Received the Rookie of the Year award.
Third in most points in the whole NHL.
Signed a Contract for 12 Million dollars for three years and a 1 million dollar signing bonus.
Freshman Year (2021-2022)
•First and only Year at University of Michigan, 45 G, 31 A, 41 GP.
•Big Ten Freshman of the year.
Before University of Michigan
• Played two seasons with the USNTDP.
• Totaled 224 points (138-97--235) in 124 games with the USNTDP, the most points and goals ever in USNTDP history.
• First on the team in scoring in 2019-2020 with 69 goals, 47 assists for 115 points in 61 games with the U17 and U18 team
• Scored 110 points (71-48--118) in 63 games with the U18 team in 2020-2021, First on the team in scoring.
Personal
• Born September 9, 2003
• Daughter of Jim and Ellen Hughes
• Has three siblings, Quinn, Jack, Luke.
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devilsupdates · 9 months ago
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Some world info on the devils that is playing in the world this won’t go in order of events.
Nico Hischier just set a new personal best in points at Worlds! 🫡 His primary assist on Kevin Fiala's PPG was his 10th point of the tournament (6GP), passing his 9 from 2019.
What an outlet pass out of the zone for Luke, he springs his teammates right out of there! From the far blueline sends the pass on the diagonal
USA takes a 1-0 lead on Kahzakstan.
Simon Nemec leads all Slovak defensemen through their five games with six points (1g-5a). His six points also tie a career-high at the tournament he set in 2022 (1g-5a, 8 GP).
Nico Hischier is currently the leading scorer among all forwards at this year's World Championship with nine points in five games (5g-4a). And he's second overall in the tournament scoring behind only his teammate Roman Josi’s 10 points. Just Nico being Nico. 🫡
Our Dawson seals the victory for Canada! Mercer once again on the ice for Canada defending a one-goal lead in the final moments the game. His second empty-netter of the tournament. Are we up?! Nico Hischier has a three-point game (1g-2A) going for Switzerland… all before the 4-minute mark of the second period. He’s factored in on 3 of the 4 Swiss goals against Denmark.
“My brother Jack was really disappointed he couldn’t come. It’s something he really wanted to do.” - Luke Hughes at Worlds Jack, of course, is recovering from surgery.
Ondrej Palat sets up Tomasek for Czechia’s fourth goal of the game against Austria.
Czechia getting a big boost on their Worlds roster as Martin Necas is on his way, less than 24 hours after the Hurricanes were eliminated from the playoffs. Czechia is hosting this year’s tournament.
The big man is back! Kurtis MacDermid re-ups with #NJDevils  on a three year deal!
Yesterday was a big day for our Simon Nemec. He etched his name in the IIHF history books. And all as a U20 player.
Big day for Nico Daws! Played his first game of Worlds, backstopping Canada to a 4-1 win over Norway *and* earning an assist on Canada’s 4th goal *and* gets a little kiss on the forehead! 😅 Way to go, Dawsy!
Your friend and mine, Luke Hughes with another point at the World Championship today. Secondary assist on Matt Boldy's first goal of the game.
We have re-signed forward Samuel Laberge to a one-year, two-way contract.
#NEWS: We have re-signed forward Brian Halonen to a two-year, two-way contract.
Akira Schmid posts a shutout for @SwissIceHockey against Great Britain. His first Worlds start. 15 saves. Nico Hischier with a goal and Jonas Siegenthaler with an assist. #NJDevils  reported for duty!
#MensWorlds goal-scoring leaders:
1. Oliver Kapanen, FIN - 5
2. Connor Bedard, CAN - 4
3. Nico Hischier, SUI - 3
Nemo! 🎯
Simon Nemec unleashes a bomb on the Slovak power play and puts Slovakia up 3-1 on the USA.
What a shot!
Hattrick for Nico Hischier against Austria - well done!
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grantmentis · 9 months ago
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2024 IIHF Women’s World Championships Season Wrap Up
All of our women’s worlds tournaments have finished, so here is a short summary of each tournament, who got promoted/relegated, and top performers.
As a quick disclaimer: how they do best players of each tournament tends to be a little different for each one, some have MVPs and some don’t, idk why
Championship / Top Division
Final standings
Canada (Gold)
USA (silver)
Finland (Bronze)
Czechia
Switzerland
Germany
Sweden
Japan
China (relegated)
Denmark (relegated)
Tournament MVP: Laila Edwards (USA)
Top goaltender: Sandra Abstreiter (Germany)
Top defender: Renata Fast (Canada)
All star team: Sanni Ahola (Finland), Renata fast (Canada), Caroline Harvey (USA), Laila Edwards (USA), Natalie Mlynkova (Czechia), Alex carpenter (USA)
Tournament summary: this is gonna be my longest short summary as this is the tournament I have the most coverage of.
We finally have USA and Canada at the best versions of themselves again, solid coaching for both, a mix of youth and vets, for the most part all healthy, making for a great gold medal game.
Germany is the biggest positive surprise this tournament. They went from ninth in 2022 to eighth in 2021 to sixth this year, that’s pretty big gains, abstreiter had a phenomenal tournament with the best save percentage despite one of the heaviest workloads, but I was also really impressed by the team defense. Both Welcke twins, Jobst-Smith, Franziska Feldmeier were huge this tournament.
China may have gotten relegated but I think this tournament was still a success for them, considering the significant roster changes they experienced, they were still able to hang with most of the group B teams. Jiahui Zhan was phenomenal in goal and kept them in games, which is such a big part of these tournaments. They don’t have the star power on offense yet, but what they do have is a program that is committed to funding the national team and providing a lot of centralization time to create a cohesive team, and that environment will start creating elite scorers in time.
Finland bounced back after being hammered with injuries last year, Ahola firmly has won the crease, and Nelli Laitinen solidified her capabilities as a top pair defender. Czechia saw a breakout tournament from Natalie Mlynkova that carried them to a fourth place finish even when the rest of their offense was struggling. Switzerland has been able to fill a Phoebe Stänz shaped hole in their lineup with Ivana Wey. Denmark struggled hard without Jakobsen, and shows clear signs of a federation neglecting their program and losing their players - they barely responded to Jakobsen’s retirement, and were the only national team not to secure some kind of way to watch for those in Denmark. Japan disappointed this tournament, and will need to find an elite goaltender if they hope to be in the top division again. Sweden didn’t have a lot of things go their way this tournament, but youth talent in goal scoring was a bright spot for them. They are an undeniably deep team if they can get it all clicking at the same time.
Division IA
Norway - promoted
Hungary - promoted
France
Austria
Netherlands
South Korea - relegated
Best goaltender: Ena Nystrøm (Norway)
Best defender: Annika Fazokas (Austria)
Best forward: Estelle Duvin (France)
Summary; For the first time since 1997, Norway has been promoted to the top division! Despite not having the offense other teams had, they only conceded six goals all tournament and only one was at even strength. They relied heavily on their young core like Emma Bergesen and Millie Rose Sirium to lead the way. Hungary was able to earn promotion despite missing Fanni Garát-Gasparics, and only scoring nine goals all tournament. They played near flawless defense, only allowing 91 shots against in 5 games (averaging around 18 against per game) and being perfect on the PK. France had arguably the best first line in this tournament, Estelle duvin - Chloe aurard - Clara rozier can hang with anyone, but was shut down by Hungary in the final game to lose the chance at promotion.
Austria had a WILD tournament, no one scored more than them, but they also had uncharacteristically struggling goaltending performance from the Luggin sisters who have been pretty consistently solid in international tournaments. Not much to worry about long term there, it happens in short samples, but tough break when offense was so good. More of the same for the Netherlands, who are looking for their next wave of young players to help propel this team, but Kayleigh Hammers continues to prove herself as a special talent. Lastly, South Korea was in the IA tournament for the first time, has a lot of work to do before they can be a mainstay here but this is the first step and is valuable experience
Division IB
Final rankings
Slovakia
Latvia
Italy
Great Britain
Slovenia
Poland
MVP: Karina Silajane (Latvia)
Top forward: Janka Hlinka (Slovakia)
Top defender: Laura Lobis (Italy)
Top goaltender: Pia Dukaric (Slovenia)
Short summary: Slovakia returns to division IA after slipping for a few years and being relegated last year. They were a clear step above most of the other competition in this tournament, especially defensively, but we are seeing the gap shrink. Pia Dukaric for Slovenia may be the most underrated goaltender in the world; she faced 308 shots this tournament in 5 games (about 61 per game) and only conceded 15 goals in that span. Slovenia would 100% be relegated without her. Latvia is playing in division IB for the first time since 2019 and had a funny tournament - they weren’t at the top of anything in team stats, but they were good enough at everything to be a very complete team and Karina Silajane was phenomenal in big moments.
Italy also impressed, though some frustration is probably there that they’ve finished in the same spot for the third year straight, they’re undoubtedly a better team than they were three years ago. Italy is the only team to beat Slovakia in this tournament, and were one of the best teams in terms of limiting shots against. Laura Lobis and Natalie Mattivi are a very legit first pair, and Martina Fedel is an elite goaltender. They don’t have a top goal scorer right now, but that may be coming in Matilde Fantin, who was not able to play this tournament due to injury. Poland fell hard this tournament going from second place last year to being relegated. Part of this is an shaky performance in net from Martyna Sass, who was great at the club level and usually solid in goal, but she played way more games than she normally does this year and may have been overtaxed at the end. She was not bad but Poland heavily relies on goaltenders to steal games. The other, bigger part is the offense completely disappearing - they only scored six goals, which will not get it done in any tournament. Finally, Great Britain was a confusing team this tournament, but despite offensive woes avoided relegation by keeping games close and pulling out wins versus Italy and Slovenia. They only scored six goals in the tournament and two were against the best goaltender in the tournament, which is how hockey is sometimes.
Division IIA
Final rankings
Kazakhstan - promoted
Spain
Mexico
Taiwan
Iceland
Belgium - relegated
Top goalkeeper: Arina Chshyokolova (Kazakhstan)
Top defender: Bridget O’Hare (Spain)
Top forward: Alexandra Shegay (Kazakhstan)
Summary: Kazakhstan was relegated last year and not looking to stay in this division for long. A solid u25 core has continued to show promise for them. Spain has really created a nice core for themselves with Vega Munoz, Bridget O’Hare, Alba Gonzalo, Claudia Castellanos, and Sofia Scilipoti - they dominated most teams but came up just short against Kazakhstan in the final game. That said, I’d wager a promotion is in their near future. Mexico continues to finish in third in this tournament as they have for a few years, with a lot of players born 2000 or later making up the roster, but we have to give 39 year old Claudia Tellez her flowers - it’s been a decade since she started playing at Worlds and still is putting up over a points game while also coaching the u18 team. Just a total legend. Mexican Goaltender Monica Renteria also had the best save percentage of the tournament at age 36, having also been on the initial women’s worlds team Mexico with Claudia a decade ago.
Taiwan could not score, but they did have an elite goalie tandem of Ai Chung and Tzu-Ting Hsu (Beauts fans, you may remember her from the 2019-2020 season, also goes by Tiffany Hsu) that kept them in games. Yun-Chu Huang was responsible for 5 of the teams 8 goals. Iceland continues to stagnate, but 19 year old defender Katrín Björnsdóttir was extremely impressive this tournament. Belgium was outmatched in their first chance at this division and was relegated, but has a few promising young players that may incident they’ll be back soon
Division IIB
Final standings
North Korea - Promoted
Australia
Hong Kong
New Zealand
Turkey
South Africa - relegated
Top goalkeeper: Erva Kanat (Turkey)
Top defender; Matilda Pethrick (Australia)
Top forward: Jong Su-hyon (North Korea)
Summary: we haven’t seen North Korea at the international stage since before the pandemic and didn’t really know what to expect in their return and then they came back and just dominated this tournament. North Korea and Australia were a clear step above the rest of the competitors, and North Korea ultimately got the promotion in a shootout goal by Hyang Jang. Keira Mok of Hong Kong was another goaltender with a stellar performance, and Nikki Sharp was great for Australia in terms of forwards. South Africa’s relegation comes as no surprise, as they’d been trending down for a few years.
Division IIIA
Final rankings
Ukraine - promotion
Romania
Lithuania
Serbia
Croatia
Bulgaria - relegation
Top Goaltender: Vilte Belicenkaite (Lithuania)
Top Defender: Diana Stolar (Croatia)
Top forward: Valeria Manchak (Ukraine)
Summary: a lot of these programs are very new to the women’s worlds circuit, with teams like Lithuania only competing in this capacity since 2019, Ukraine in 2019, or Serbia since 2021 (though they may have competed in other tournaments / formats). There’s a significant number of U18 players playing in this tournament because of that. Romania and Serbia were the most improved team from last year, Romania going from fourth to second and Serbia going from division B to finishing fourth.
Division IIIB
As Israel should not have been allowed to participate in this tournament due to the genocide they are carrying out, and I will not be acknowledging their participation or any of their players as a result.
Final rankings:
1. Thailand
2. Estonia
4. Singapore
5. Bosnia and Herzegovina
Top goaltender: Sofia Salamatina (Estonia)
Top forward: Apichaya Kosanunt
Summary; Thailand wins gold in its debut! What a fantastic start to women’s worlds for them, as they won every game and scored 20 goals while only ever giving up one. Strong defense meant they only saw 59 shots all tournament. Singapore also made their Women’s Worlds debut and got their first tournament win and saw Tiffany Ong score three goals.
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bitchinbarzal · 1 month ago
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can someone give me a primer on woller? the main things i have picked up from some fics ive been reading is that he likes lego and maybe plays piano
☕️
JOEY!!!
Our 26 year old, 6’3 lil squish
Born in Missouri, USA. He was drafted 62nd overall by Toronto in the 2016 draft. He played for Boston College.
He has a little brother, Michael currently at Florida Sourhern. He’s 21.
He loves Lego, plays piano, always smiling, prince like hair and loves LOVES Matthew Knies
From the NHL: Woll was a third-round pick (No. 62) of the Maple Leafs in the 2016 NHL Draft, winning his NHL debut (23 saves) 5-4 at the Buffalo Sabres on Nov. 13, 2021. He played for the United States at the 2017 and 2018 IIHF World Junior Championship, winning a gold and bronze medal, respectively. He was 16-4-1 with a 2.37 goals-against average and .927 save percentage for Toronto in the American Hockey League in 2022-23, when he was named a North Division All-Star and represented the Marlies at the 2023 AHL All-Star Classic.
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pyotrkochetkov · 8 months ago
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https://www.tumblr.com/pyotrkochetkov/751585197598900224/i-need-to-see-andrei-react-to-neci-winning-the
Why can’t he compete in events like that?
the IIHF (international ice hockey federation) that’s in charge of the world championships and olympics banned russian athletes from competing in response to russia invading ukraine back in 2022 and hasn’t reinstated them yet (i think they’ll be able to compete in 2026)
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mitchbeck · 7 months ago
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WOLF PACK MAKE POTULNY TEAM'S EIGHTH HEAD COACH
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By: Alex Thomas, Hartford Wolf Pack HARTFORD, CT – New York Rangers President and General Manager Chris Drury announced today that the club has named Grant Potulny Head Coach of the AHL’s Hartford Wolf Pack. Potulny is the eighth head coach in Wolf Pack history. Potulny, 44, has spent the last seven seasons as the Head Coach of Northern Michigan University. During that time, he guided the Wildcats to a record of 128-113-17 over the course of 258 games. The Wildcats won 20 games in back-to-back seasons, posting a record of 20-16-1 during the 2021-22 campaign and a record of 21-17-0 during the 2022-23 season. The Wildcats concluded the 2022-23 season by advancing to the CCHA Finals for the second time in three seasons. Before joining the Wildcats, Potulny spent eight seasons as an Assistant Coach at the University of Minnesota. During his time with the Golden Gophers, Potulny helped the club capture six regular-season conference titles and qualify for the NCAA Tournament on five occasions. Internationally, Potulny was an Assistant Coach for Team USA at the IIHF World Junior Championships in 2013, 2017, 2018, and 2022. Team USA won the event in both 2013 and 2017. Before joining the coaching ranks, the native of Grand Forks, ND, enjoyed a six-year playing career in the AHL. He appeared in 297 games, scoring 145 points (73 g, 72 a) with the Binghamton Senators, Hershey Bears, Springfield Falcons, San Antonio Rampage, and Norfolk Admirals. Potulny was selected by the Ottawa Senators in the fifth round, 157th overall, of the 2000 NHL Entry Draft. Before turning pro, Potulny played four seasons with the Golden Gophers, scoring 116 points (68 g, 48 a). In 2002, Potulny was named the NCAA Tournament’s MVP, leading the Golden Gophers to an NCAA National Championship. The Golden Gophers repeated as National Champions in 2003, with Potulny earning MVP honors in the WCHA Tournament. The Wolf Pack will open the home portion of their 2024-25 schedule on Friday, October 18th, at the XL Center! Full-season tickets, 20-game plans, 12-game plans, and flex plans for the 2024-25 season are on sale now! Visit  hartfordwolfpack.com or call 860-722-9425 for more details! About Oak View Group (OVG): Oak View Group (OVG) is the global leader in live experience venue development, management, premium hospitality services, and 360-degree solutions for a collection of world-class owned venues, and a client roster of arenas, convention centers, music festivals, performing arts centers, and cultural institutions. Founded by Tim Leiweke and Irving Azoff in 2015, OVG is the leading developer of major new venues, either open or under development across four continents. Visit OakViewGroup.com, and follow OVG on Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn, and X. ABOUT THE HARTFORD WOLF PACK: The Hartford Wolf Pack has been a premier franchise in the American Hockey League since its inception in 1997. The Wolf Pack is the top player-development affiliate of the NHL's New York Rangers and plays at the XL Center. The Wolf Pack has been home to some of the Rangers' newest faces, including Igor Shesterkin, Filip Chytil, and Ryan Lindgren. Follow the Wolf Pack on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and TikTok. HARTFORD WOLF PACK HOWLINGS Read the full article
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importantwomensbirthdays · 1 year ago
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Shelley Looney
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Ice hockey player Shelley Looney was born in 1972 in Brownstown, Michigan. In 1998, Looney scored the winning goal that secured USA's first Olympic gold medal in women's hockey. At the 2002 Olympics, she and her teammates won the silver medal in ice hockey. In 2005, Looney won a gold medal at the IIHF Women's World Championships. In 2022, she was selected as assistant coach for the US Women's National Hockey Team.
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pinoyaksyonnewsph · 1 year ago
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SM Skating’s Ice Castles and Cool Runnings Dreams
As films like “Ice Castles” and “Cool Runnings” have shown us, no individual aspiration, no team goal, is too far-fetched or ridiculous to dream for. SM Skating knows this all too well, as it has never let our being a tropical country become a hindrance to harboring big dreams of participating and excelling in sports events associated with the Winter Olympics.
Whether it’s Figure Skating, Speed Skating, or Ice Hockey; SM Skating has put forward the value proposition that the ice rinks that exist in particular SM malls can be more than just recreational or leisure pursuits.
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Young Filipinos enjoy icy fun together at SM Skating.
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Embark on an adventure of ice bumper cars with family and friends at SM Skating Megamall.
SM Megamall opened in 1992 with the country’s first-ever ice rink. What began as a novelty has transformed into Olympic-size rinks at SM Megamall, SM Mall of Asia, and SM Seaside City Cebu. These rinks now serve as official training grounds for those pursuing proficiency in Figure Skating, Ice Hockey, and Speed Skating.
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A young girl learns to skate with the assistance of a polar bear skating aid at SM Skating Megamall A young girl’s “Ice Castles” dreams, the hopes of a band of brothers to form an ice hockey team and compete globally, they all can see the SM ice rinks as the venue and first major step to making those pipe dreams come true.
A speed skater accelerates, leaving a streak of determination on the ice at the SM Skating Mall of Asia.
As the home to our national teams in Figure Skating and Ice Hockey, SM Skating and its ice rinks have played a crucial role in nurturing several multi-awarded athletes in these winter sports over the years. Notable figures include two-time Winter Olympian Michael Martinez, Isabella Gamez, and Alexander Korovin – the first Southeast Asian and Philippine pair to compete in the World Championships of Figure Skating.
Additionally, we take pride in 2022 National Champion and Junior Worlds figure skater Sofia Frank, 2022 National Medalist and GMA Sparkle Artist Charmaine Skye Chua (featured in the teleserye “Hearts on Fire”), and back-to-back National Junior Medalist Cathryn Limketkai.
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Isabella Gamez (right) and Alexander Korovin – the first Southeast Asian and Philippine pair to compete in the World Championships of Figure Skating and Top of Formthe 2022 National Champion and Junior Worlds figure skater Sofia Frank
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Our Philippines Men’s National Ice Hockey team recently garnered Gold in Division IV of the 2023 International Ice Hockey Federation (IIHF) Ice Hockey Championship. That’s quite a feat for a tropical nation in a team sport competition.
The Philippines Men’s National Ice Hockey team poses with their Gold in Division IV of the 2023 International Ice Hockey Federation (IIHF) Ice Hockey Championship.
While others may have downplayed harboring dreams of the Philippine flag being unfurled during a Winter Olympics medal ceremony, SM Skating has asked ‘Why not?’ and has laid the groundwork for raising that possibility.
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laresearchette · 2 years ago
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Friday, April 14, 2023 Canadian TV Listings (Times Eastern)
WHERE CAN I FIND THOSE PREMIERES?: JANE (Apple TV +) THE LAST THING HE TOLD ME (Apple TV+) SAGO MINI FRIENDS EARTH DAY (Apple TV+) RUGRATS (Paramout +) BLINDSPOTTING (Starz Canada) 9:00pm A BLACK LADY SKETCH SHOW (HBO Canada) 11:00pm
WHAT IS NOT PREMIERING IN CANADA TONIGHT? GOLD RUSH: WHITE WATER (Premiering on April 18 on Discovery Canada at 10:00pm) PERSONALITY CRISIS: ONE NIGHT ONLY (TBD)
NEW TO AMAZON PRIME CANADA/CBC GEM/CRAVE TV/DISNEY + STAR/NETFLIX CANADA:
AMAZON PRIME CANADA CARAVANA DAS DRAGS THE MARVELOUS MRS. MAISEL (Season 5) PEARL SALADE GRECQUE
CBC GEM SAVAGE DINNER (Season 1) SPACE EXPLORERS: MOONRISE ON THE ISS
CRAVE TV 21 JUMP STREET BLACK LADY SKETCH SHOW (Season 4, Episode 1) BLADE OF THE 47 RONIN BLINDSPOTTING (Season 2, Episodes 1-2) BOYZ N’ THE HOOD CASPER THE EXHIBIT: FINDING THE NEXT GREAT ARTIST (Season 1) JUST FOR LAUGHS 2022: THE GALA SPECIALS — JO KOY LAW & ORDER (Seasons 11 &12) NONE PUMPING IRON RAW DEAL SOMETHING BORROWED
DISNEY + STAR OSWALD THE LUCKY RABBIT (short) OZUR DILERIM
NETFLIX CANADA PHENOMENA QUEENMAKER (Season 1) QUEENS ON THE RUN SEVEN KINGS MUST DIE
GRAND SLAM OF CURLING (SN) 11:30am: Players' Championship - Draw #13 (SN) 3:30Players' Championship - Draw #14 (SN1) 7:30pm: Players' Championship - Draw #15
IIHF WOMEN’S HOCKEY (TSN5) 3:00pm: Placement Game (TSN/TSN5) 7:00pm: Placement Game
BILLIE JEAN KING CUP (SN Now/OLN) 7:00pm: Canada vs. Belgium
MLB BASEBALL (SN Now) 7:00pm: Twins vs. Yankees (SN) 7:00pm: Rays vs. Jays (SN1) 10:00pm: Cubs vs. Dodgers
NBA BASKETBALL (TSN) 7:00pm: NBA Play-In: Bulls vs. Heat (TSN/TSN4) 9:30pm: NBA Play-In: Thunder vs. Timberwolves
THE BLESSING BRACELET (W Network) 8:00pm: A single mother unearths a bracelet that she made years earlier, with each bead serving as a reminder to count the blessings in her life. As her faith is renewed, the blessing bracelet takes her down a path she never could have imagined.
PUSH (CBC) 8:30pm (SEASON FINALE): Bean heads to Las Vegas confronting her past, while Vic makes an important connection, and Brian recovers from surgery.
NLL LACROSSE (TSN3) 9:00pm: Desert Dogs vs. Roughnecks
SPACE EXPLORERS: MOONRISE ON THE ISS (CBC) 9:00pm: Life on the space station is a proving ground for humanity’s next missions to the Moon and beyond.
KILLER CHEER (Investigation Discovery) 9:00pm (SERIES PREMIERE): After the murder of a popular schoolgirl in broad daylight, detectives believe the killer must be from out of town; as the investigation unfolds, they discover the culprit is closer than anyone could imagine.
THE REAL HOUSEWIVES OF DURBAN (Slice) 9:00pm: The ladies are ready and willing to learn.
BLADE OF THE 47 RONIN (Crave) 9:00pm: Ancient Japanese Ronin warriors, set 300 years after 47 Ronin, in a modern-day world where Samurai clans exist in complete secrecy.
ALMOST UNSOLVED (Super Channel Fuse) 9:00pm (SERIES PREMIERE): The body of a brutally murdered young Indigenous woman is discovered in Manitoba; four suspect's names keep coming up, but with little evidence and no one willing to talk, it takes over a decade before a new officer finds a way to break the silence.
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toasttt11 · 1 year ago
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carter hughes
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Carter Reese Hughes
Number: 86
Season: Second
Position: C
Height: 5”8
Hometown: Toronto, Ontario
S/C: R
NHL: VC
Prev Team: Regina Pats
WHL
•Drafted first overall in 2019, the first WHL player with exceptional status, and won the Jim Piggot Memorial Trophy as the league's top rookie player in her debut season. In her third year in the WHL, she won the Bob Clarke Trophy as the league's leading scorer and was given the Four Broncos Memorial Trophy as its most valuable player, before also earning the Canadian Hockey League’s Top Scorer and Player of a year honors.
NHL
• Selected 1st overall (first round) by the Vancouver Canucks in the 2022 NHL Draft.
International
Team Canada
2023 World Championship- Gold Medal, 9 G, 8 A, 10 GP. Most Goals, Assists and Points in the tournament.
2023 U20 World Junior Championship - Captain, Gold medal, 11 G, 15 A, 7 GP
2022 World Championship- Silver Medal, 8 G, 9 A, 10 GP.
2022 IIHF World U18 Championship- Silver Medal, 8 G, 10 A, 6 GP
2022 U20 World Junior Championship -Captain, Gold medal, 10 G, 9 A, 7 GP
2021 World Junior Championship- Silver Medal, 10 G, 8 A, 7 GP
2021 World Championship- Gold Medal, 9 G, 7 A, 10 GP
2021- IIHF World U18 Championship, Gold Medal, 10 G, 8 A, 6 GP
2019 World U-17 Hockey Challenge- Bronze Medal, 5 G, 6 A, 6 GP
2019-2020
Regina Pats
71 G, 69 A, 67 GP
2020-2021
Regina Pats
15 G, 17 A, 15 GP
Assistant Captain
HV71 Jr.
3 G, 1 A, 4 GP
2021-2022
Regina Pats
86 G, 81 A, 56 GP
Captain
2022-2023
Vancouver Canucks
68 G, 62 A, 140 P, 78 GP
Received the Rookie of the Year award.
Second in most points in the whole NHL.
Signed a Contract for 13 Million dollars for three years and a 1 million dollar signing bonus.
2023-2024
Vancouver Canucks
72 G, 80 A, 162 P, 82 GP
Hart Memorial Trophy.
Personal
• Born June 8, 2004
• Daughter of Jim and Ellen Hughes
• Has Three siblings, Quinn, Jack, Luke.
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devilsupdates · 11 months ago
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Devils Acquire Kahkonen from San Jose | RELEASE
New Jersey sends Vanecek and a 7th-round pick in 2025 to San Jose
Kahkonen - 1920x1080
By
Devils PR
@NJDevils NewJerseyDevils.com
4:30 PM
The New Jersey Devils announced today that the team has acquired goaltender Kaapo Kahkonen from the San Jose Sharks in exchange for netminder Vitek Vanecek and New Jersey’s seventh-round draft pick in the 2025 NHL Draft. The announcement was made by President/General Manager Tom Fitzgerald.
Kahkonen, 27, joins New Jersey after spending parts of the last three seasons with San Jose from 2021-22 to 2023-24. The 6’2”, 215lbs. goaltender was traded to San Jose from the Minnesota Wild on March 21, 2022. Kahkonen began his NHL career with Minnesota and logged his NHL debut on Nov. 26, 2019, in a 3-2 win at New Jersey. He spent parts of three seasons with the Wild (2019-20 to 2021-22), and owns a career 48-63-15 overall record with a 3.36 goals-against average (GAA).
The native of Helsinki, Finland earned a career-high 16 wins and two shutouts with Minnesota in 2020-21, which set a franchise record for the most wins that a rookie goaltender earned in a single season. Additionally, he recorded a nine-game winning streak from February 18 to March 16, 2021 which marked the fifth-longest stretch that a rookie goaltender earned in NHL history.
Before his NHL experience, Kahkonen spent parts of two seasons with Minnesota’s American Hockey League (AHL) affiliate in Iowa from 2018-19 to 2019-20. He posted a 25-6-5 record with Iowa in 2019-20, while his 25 wins and seven shutouts ranked first for all AHL netminders. Additionally, his .927 save percentage and 2.07 GAA ranked in the top five for AHL goaltenders in 2019-20. He then earned the Aldege “Baz” Bastien Memorial Award as the AHL’s outstanding goaltender for the 2019-20 season.
Born on Aug. 16, 1996, Minnesota selected Kahkonen in the fourth round, 109th overall, in the 2014 NHL Draft. The Finnish goaltender also represented his home country at the International Ice Hockey Federation’s (IIHF) U18 2012-13 and 2013-14 World Junior Championship (WJC) and helped Finland win a Bronze Medal at the 2012-13 tournament. He then earned a Gold Medal with Finland at the 2015-16 WJC, after posting a 4-0-0 record with a .909 save percentage and 2.52 GAA.
Kahkonen was teammates with current Devils forward Timo Meier in San Jose from 2021-22 to 2022-23.
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noisynutcrusade · 2 years ago
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Crypto.com becomes official crypto and NFT sponsor of Ice Hockey World Championship
Cryptocurrency services and products provider Crypto.com has signed a two-year Official Sponsorship Agreement as the exclusive cryptocurrency and NFT sponsor of the 2021 IIHF Ice Hockey World Championship, as for a release over the weekend. The championship will be held in Riga, Latvia from 21 May – 6 June 2021, and then in 2022 in Finland. NFTs for the hockey championship The IIHF, for the…
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auroraliiga · 16 days ago
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#13 was also worn by Riikka Sallinen (née Nieminen, prev. Välilä)
Riikka Sallinen represented Finland at four Olympics and eight World Championships. She was the leading scorer at the inaugural women's Olympic ice hockey tournament in 1998 and at the World Championship in 1994 and 1997. Inducted into the IIHF Hall of Fame in 2010 and the Hockey Hall of Fame in 2022, her international career included two Olympic bronze medals (1998 & 2018) and seven World Championship medals (six bronze, one silver). She also holds the record as the oldest player (of any gender) to ever win an Olympic medal in ice hockey, which she did in 2018 at age 44.
If women’s hockey had had one singular league throughout its history what numbers do you think would be retired? (I know it doesn’t really work with teams and cities but just generally who deserves to have their number on a banner) Reblog with your thoughts!
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theelfmaiden · 3 years ago
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Finns, congrats on your Gold 🥇 Ice Hockey Medal, I'm very proud of your players, what a wonderful game it was!!!
🇨🇿❤️🇫🇮
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mitchbeck · 1 year ago
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kapteeniangie · 3 years ago
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SUOMI ON UUSI MAAILMANMESTARI!!!
WE WON!!!
SUOMI!
PERKELE!
TORILLE!
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