MONTREAL -- Montreal coach Michel Therrien made a minor tweak to his lineup and
it worked so well the Canadiens tied a 63-year-old franchise record.
Wholesale NFL Jerseys .Therrien shuffled his
third line against the Kings on Thursday night and the move paid instant
dividends as Montreal beat Los Angeles 4-1 to start the season 9-0-0. The last
time the Canadiens started that well was 1953.Therrien benched forward David
Desharnais, who was without a point in his last nine games. Usually on the wing,
Phillip Danault took Desharnais spot at center on the third line. Danault,
centering Max Pacioretty and Andrew Shaw, scored Montreals third goal.I loved
Danaults game, Therrien said. For his first game at center, he wasnt lost, he
looked natural. Sometimes a player loses himself when he changes position. He
was very comfortable out there.With the Canadiens already leading 2-0, Danault
put away Jeff Petrys rebound from a tight angle at 9:37 of the second period for
his fourth goal of the season. Former Montreal goalie Peter Budaj, out of
position after the initial save on Petry, was impeded by teammate Nick Shore and
couldnt get back to his crease.Pacioretty finished the game with two assists
while Shaw was plus-2 with three shots.I had some excellent linemates today,
Danault said. It was more a question of playing defensively today. It just means
youre playing against bigger lines. But thats just part of the game.Shaw and I
are great along the boards, and Max has an incredible shot. We complement each
other really well.Carey Price protected Montreals three-goal lead as the Kings
upped the pressure in the third period. Price made 11 of his 23 saves in the
third period, including a mystifying stop on Anze Kopitar halfway through the
frame.After an initial save on Drew Doughty, a sprawled-out Price somehow got a
glove on a shot from a wide-open Kopitar.I just threw a hand up and got lucky,
said Price, who has eight consecutive wins to start the season. One of those
things where you get lucky every once in a while.Added Kopitar: I dont know how
he did it, but he did it. Obviously a highlight-reel save. Youll probably see
that one for a while on TV.Price is 5-1-0 in his last six career starts against
the Kings. Montreals starting goaltender is 19-2-0 in his last 21 starts dating
to last season.Tyler Toffoli ended Prices shutout bid at 11:57 of the third
period with Brendan Gallagher in the box for high-sticking.Budaj wasnt as sharp
in his first start against his former club since being traded by Montreal to
Winnipeg in 2014.Looking for his third consecutive shutout, Budaj hadnt conceded
a goal in 140:57 when Paul Byron found the back of the net in the first
period.Daniel Carr added a second for Montreal 13:53 into the first period by
deflecting Andrei Markovs shot from the point.Those first two periods, we just
werent good enough, Kopitar said. Too many mistakes, too many turnovers, too
many broken plays. A speedy team like them, they capitalize on that.Alex
Galchenyuk added a fourth for Montreal into an empty net.Game notes Montreals
Greg Pateryn was a healthy scratch. . Former Montreal and Los Angeles G Rogatien
Vachon was honored in a pre-game ceremony. On Monday the league announced Vachon
would be inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame.UP NEXT:Kings: Visit the Ottawa
Senators on Friday.Canadiens: Host the Detroit Red Wings on Saturday.
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NFL Authentic Jerseys . -- On the field, it was business as usual
for Jameis Winston and No.
CHeap NFL Jerseys China . Walcott is
available for Saturdays home match against Southampton as Arsenal looks to
extend its two-point lead at the top of the Premier League. The Gunners are
currently the second highest scorers in the league but Wenger insists Walcott
will add something extra to his team.
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"I wrote 36 on my sheet at the beginning of the game," the Cincinnati coach
said, referring the yard line the ball would need to be snapped from. The Viv
Richards leg-side flick By Kamran AbbasiYou dont take Viv Richards down. Ive
seen him hit by a bumper and the ball slide off him like a sponge thrown at
granite. Ive seen him bowled for a duck and still swagger off the pitch. In the
mind of King Viv these are simply moments of odd luck in a bowlers favour, for
in his realm, in those royal 22 yards, an opponent is to be cut down with his SS
Jumbo.When you are growing up and you see a man like Richards bat, you want to
bat like him. When you are older, you realise youll never see a batsman like him
again. We know about the swagger. Others swagger too, but its never been so
natural or intimidating. We know about the gum-chewing smile, bum jutting
towards square leg in a straight-kneed stance, head cocked towards the bowler
atop shoulders that seem as broad as the body is tall. We know what follows is
beautiful brutality with no empathy for a bowlers impotence.We hear much talk of
modern batting, of switch hits and ramp shots. Richards didnt need any of those.
Richards style was to see ball, hit ball - anywhere. That isnt to say he couldnt
play orthodox. His off-drive was quite upright but imperious; the ball might
have been fired from a cannon. His pull was by arrangement with the bowler, who
barely finished his action before Richards was swaying to the off side to thump
him to the boundary. His on-drive was perfectly balanced, an exquisite blend of
power and timing.In defence, hed pat the ball down as if it was the head of a
docile kitten, to mock the lollipop deliveries of the worlds most fearsome
bowlers. But a Richards defensive stroke was a grand anticlimax, an obscene
waste of talent. Here was a man made for destruction.Speed, spin, late movement,
early movement, the ball took a hell of a beating. When the mood took him,
Richards stepped back a pace or two to free his arms and drive expansively
through the off side. Whether it was a four or six was a matter of whimsy. It
was unstoppable. It was signature. Indeed, all his moves were. He had so many
signatures that youd need an autograph book to capture them.But the one that
sticks with me is the way Richards played through leg. Yes, Richards was good
off his legs. Fire one at his body and he flicked it away, as any world-class
batsman might do, except with more venom. No, it isnt that routine stroke that
interests me. Richards did something else, something more breathtaking,
something that established his supremacy early in an encounter.Batting at No. 3,
he faced the worlds best. Lillee and Thomson. Botham and Willis. Imran, Kapil
and Hadlee. They spat venom and smelt blood. The pitches were rough, green or
uneven. Richards didnt wear a helmet. They wanted to humble the mighty West
Indies. They wanted Richards and his West Indians to grovel. Richards would
smile. Hed swagger. Hed chew gum. Hed prod the pitch. Hed pat a few heads of
docile kittens.The bowler felt on top, so chest-thumpingly on top that hed
deliver a ball of perfect length darting in at off stump. Instead of patting
back down the line, instead of stepping back and driving expansively through the
off side, which it was too early to do, Richards had a third way. He moved with
an effortless grace, as if merely readjusting that straight-kneed stance. His
front leg moved forward and across his stumps, more across than forward,
covering them, a certain lbw - for any man but King Viv, that is.Next, Richards
delivered his stroke, his signature move. Across his straight-kneed front leg,
in a feat of immaculate timing and rippling power, hed flick his hands over the
ball, a flick that began as a twitch of his mighty shoulder pivots and ended
with a snap of wrists, plucking it from its off-stump trajectory and pistoling
it into or over the leg-side boundary. The message was delivered. King Viv was
seizing control of his kingdom.Forward and across, with power and poise, from
straightened knees and mighty shoulders, he felled the worlds best bowlers. They
grovelled before him. If anybody else tried it, it looked like a slog, uncouth
and uncultured. When Vivian Richards moved forward and across and flicked to
leg, it was a shot of brutal beauty, a signature move to signal the
demolition.Kamran Abbasi is an editor, writer and broadcaster.
@KamranAbbasi****The Dhoni stumping By Sidharth MongaThe word evolution in the
context of wicketkeeping frustratingly ends at how Adam Gilchrist turned that
player into a batsman first and a gloveman second. Batting has evolved beyond
recognition with the advent of the two limited-overs formats and the
never-ending improvement in protective equipment and bats. Bowling has evolved
with slower balls, reverse swing and the doosra. Wicketkeeping, a job behind the
stumps, has only evolved in front of them.MS Dhoni the wicketkeeper is
different; yet when you think of a Dhoni signature it is always to do with his
batting: the helicopter shot, the quick running, the calculated finish. I have
not watched the Dhoni biopic, authorised and promoted by the man himself, and
produced by his friend and manager, but none of the promos shows him keeping
wicket, and I am willing to wager that the movie does not delve into that
aspect. It is a shame because, with due respect to collecting throws in front of
the stumps, wearing helmets while standing up to the quicks and the advance in
general athleticism, Dhonis stumping technique is the only evolutionary step in
the actual art of wicketkeeping.Wicketkeepers tend to follow the laws of physics
when they collect hard cricket balls. Which is, take the hands back to absorb
the blow and make sure the ball doesnt fall out. When it comes to stumpings,
especially when the ball is turning and bouncing, keepers go back with the ball
a little to collect it cleanly before moving towards the stumps. There is a
precious half-second lost there. Dhoni doesnt go back. His gloves are always
moving towards the stumps. It is as if along the way he just picks up a
stationary object and whips the bails off with it.It is an act whose finality is
beyond doubt. You miss the ball with Dhoni behind the stumps and you know you
have no time to get back. Usually on pitches with turn and bounce, you can
always hope to return to the crease because the more the action on the ball the
more a wicketkeeper has to go back with his gloves. This doesnt apply to Dhoni.
The impact is most visible when batsmen are stumped playing the forward
defensive. The ball dips a little and drags the back foot over, but it has to
turn past the bat to beat it, which means a regular wicketkeeper takes that much
time to allow batsmen to get back into the crease. With Dhoni you are stumped by
the time alarm bells ring in your mind.This is no party trick, and he has many -
for instance, sticking his right leg out perpendicularly to stop a late cut,
even as the hands follow the ball should it miss the bat. Dhoni almost never
misses a stumping or a catch even though his hands are never going back to
soften the blow. It is the reliability that makes it a signature move.By all
accounts, and by all I have seen in the India nets over the years, Dhoni hardly
practises keeping. He rarely talks about it. His fielding coaches have little
idea how he does it. Behind the scenes, though, he works hard and has done. He
spends a lot of time on his wicketkeeping in his houses in Delhi and Ranchi. A
current wicketkeeper on the circuit has had conversations with Dhoni about his
technique and he says Dhoni can manage it because he has done it since he was a
boy. Others dont even try.At a young age, as with many things he did in his own
way because of a mind that questioned norms, Dhoni knew he wanted to save time.
I am not sure if he ever watched or spoke to the only man I have seen pull off
such stumpings in international cricket, Sadanand Viswanath. Like Viswanath,
Dhoni trained himself to not let his elbows go behind his body when collecting
the ball standing up to the stumps. He never shied from wearing a helmet to
protect himself; being effective was better than looking flash. Then hours went
into perfecting the move. His strength, especially in the wrists, compensates
for the control he loses by not giving himself time.The result is an act of
beauty that hasnt been given its due. Indian broadcasters nowadays seem to have
a Kohli cam that captures everything Virat Kohli does on the field: running in
with the ball, reacting to the delivery, to the shot, appealing, celebrating,,
despairing, cheering, fighting, scratching his beard.
Wholesale Jerseys. The Dhoni stumpings are
already caught on tape from multiple angles, and before he goes for good, I hope
some producer decides to play them out for the world on loop. That would be a
trip.Sidharth Monga is an assistant editor at ESPNcricinfo****The KP surge By
Rob SmythIll never forget Super Saturday of the London Olympics: Kevin Pietersen
was batting. Pietersens awesome 149 against South Africa at Headingley left a
far greater imprint on my memory than the orgy of patriotism that accompanied
arguably Britains most celebrated day of sport. He didnt win a Test, never mind
a gold medal, but the ethereal majesty with which he took apart the best pace
attack in the world prompted a tremulous gratitude I shall always remember. The
visceral thrill was such that it was impossible to sit still - and not just
while the innings was going on. When I went home that night I tried to watch a
film, couldnt concentrate and put the highlights of the cricket on,
twice.Pietersen was associated with many shots - the switch hit, the slog sweep,
the flamingo - but his greatest skill was what we might call the KP surge: when
he would decide, as if on a whim, to take a bowler or an attack apart; when his
mere presence at the crease was a newsflash. It might only last half an hour or
an hour. That was enough: the resounding impact of the Pietersen surge meant it
was invariably match-winning. When he made a double-century against India at
Lords in 2011, his half-centuries came from 134 balls, 82, 85 - and finally 25
as he ran riot. He did not so much trouble the scorers as terrorise them. He did
it against all opponents and in all contexts; he could kick an opponent when
they were up or down. He did it in all formats too, but the elevated
significance of his Test-match surges made them the most exhilarating thing I
have seen in cricket.The best things about watching sport are genius,
unpredictability and partisanship. As an England fan, the Pietersen surge
involved all three. It was an almost psychedelic experience. Those innings were
a cure for shyness; they made you want to tell someone, anyone, that Pietersen
was on one. In sport its extremely rare for the reality to exceed the fantasy;
with Pietersen that happened on multiple occasions. He didnt deal in the
impossible; he dealt in the unimaginable, remixing existing shots and inventing
new ones. Its no surprise that the majority of his most famous shots came during
a surge, when he was in a higher state of concentration.In his superb book Kevin
Pietersen on Cricket, he observed that being in the zone did not, as we tend to
think, mean seeing the ball big; it meant seeing it slow. Two shots demonstrated
that better than others: the dreamy pull off Dale Steyn during his 149 at
Headingley, and the laziest driven six over extra cover off Pragyan Ojha in his
immense 186 in Mumbai later that year. There were a few exceptions, most notably
the chest-beating duel with Brett Lee during his Ashes-winning 158 in 2005, but
the Pietersen surge was usually defined by a serene control and an aura of
invincibility. He gave the worlds great bowlers a crash course in futility.There
was no pattern to when all this might occur, and he has struggled to understand
the frequency with which he entered the zone. The most common trigger seemed to
be defiance - of opponents, the media, poor form, or even, at Headingley in
2012, his own team-mates. He might be stimulated by the desire to show off, the
match situation or the weather. In Colombo in 2012, he decided he simply could
not bat time in the 45-degree heat. So he hit one six, and then he hit another,
and soon hed made 151 from 165 balls.That aura of invincibility could be
deceptive. For every legendary surge, there were three or four where he got
himself out just as word was spreading that something magical might be
happening. That jeopardy added to the thrill of the experience, and the reward
when he pulled it off was that you could sit at close of play trying to fathom
what you had just witnessed. As a sports journalist you can become
anaesthetised. The KP surge took me back to being a fan, and being a kid, lost
in the wonder of astonishing sport.Rob Smyth is the author of Gentlemen and
Sledgers: A History of the Ashes in 100 Quotations****The dry-pitch con job By
Andrew Fidel FernandoIf a government job is the most stable employment in South
Asia, cricket administration is perhaps the most volatile. Cricket Australia has
been stuck with James Sutherland for the better part of two decades. Giles
Clarke looks and sounds like Jurassic calcium deposit, and upholds the hairstyle
and values of an even earlier age. In South Asia - and Sri Lanka, in particular
- cricket governance is forever enlivened by summary firings, interim-committee
appointments, judicial injunctions, hostile takeovers, ad-hoc cocktail lunches,
impromptu travel junkets, temperamental office Wi-Fi, and so on.So when out of
this chaos order emerges, it does seem wondrous. And in no instance do
administrators, ground staff, team management and cricketers collude to such
consistently fruitful effect as in the preparation of dry tracks for foreign
teams.It begins with the curator. In years gone by there may have been some
head-scratching as to whether dry tracks are appropriate for certain visiting
teams. Helpfully, the cricket world has since organised itself into two distinct
groups: teams who can barely play spin, and teams who would rather
self-immolate.When the latter sort arrive at the ground, the curator smilingly
assures them that, of course, there will be some pace and bounce, not to worry,
it always looks like this before a Test, and actually, this is quite like the
one that South Africa had won a game on a few years back, youll see, and oh, put
the opposition in to bat definitely. Not long after, he instructs his ground
staff to scrub the surface down with coir brushes and warns them not to spill so
much as a bead of sweat while they do. The curator has, of course, been
instructed to prepare a surface just good enough to avoid ICC censure. Just to
make sure, board officials are buttering up the match referee, their guest of
honour in the extravagant pre-series tamasha. By the eve of the match a little
tension has built up, but the tourists are concealing their fears. The visiting
captain will make assertive, leader-like comments at his media appearance. They
know it will spin, but his men are up to the challenge, he will say. They have
trained so hard, they are the best-prepared outfit not just in the history of
cricket but also of preparation. And, he says, the top order did continuous
trust-falls and sang around the campfire in their team-building jamboree until
all memory of traumatic past tours was wiped out.But then the match begins and
things begin to go badly. The arm ball proves destructive initially, so the
batsmen meet and decide to watch closely for it. The turning ball duly wreaks
havoc the next day. Soon they begin to speak of spin bowling as if it is some
kind of voodoo. Physically they are deteriorating, like someone is sticking pins
into dolls made in their visage. Batsmen are sweating profusely in the heat.
They are developing tinnitus from the constant cawing of the vultures around the
bat. The legs are not quite moving as they should. The bowlers variations look
identical out of the hand, so maybe the eyes are packing up.By now, almost
everything the home spinners touch is turning into a wicket. They had smiled
graciously while the fast bowlers were given their token two overs with the new
ball, but before long, lost patience and strode to the bowling crease to
dispatch them to the boundary. That was cute, machan, but its time to really
start playing now. For much of the game, the fast bowlers trudge from position
to distant position in the field. By the end they have had less impact on
proceedings than, say, the sightscreen attendants.The home side eventually
saunters to victory. The usual post-match reflection follows. About 48 hours
pass. When another dry pitch is unveiled at the next venue, the visiting captain
cannot drum up any bravado. This time he knows what he is really looking at: a
funeral pyre.Andrew Fidel Fernando is ESPNcricinfos Sri Lanka correspondent.
@andrewffernando
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