SAN ANTONIO -- Family vacations, scouting, free agency, rest and relaxation,
playing in the European Championships.
Akeem Spence Buccaneers Jersey . The staff
and players of the San Antonio Spurs had a hectic off-season, but not even the
busiest day this summer could make them forget what might have been just three
months ago. San Antonio was five seconds away from winning its fifth NBA title
only to watch the Miami Heat rally for an improbable 103-100 overtime victory in
Game 6. Almost as heartbreaking was a 95-88 loss in Game 7 that gave the Heat
their second consecutive title and handed the Spurs their first series loss in
the NBA Finals. "Suffice to say Ive thought about it every day," San Antonio
coach Gregg Popovich said. "Im wondering if it will go away, Im anxious for it
to happen, but it hasnt happened yet." Returning to the court as a team should
help ease the pain. Thats what the players and coaches are hoping for. The Spurs
open a four-day training camp in Tuesday at the Air Force Academy near Colorado
Springs, Colo. "As time goes on, as we all know in our lives, you get back to
the day-to-day stuff pretty easily, because its the nature of life," Popovich
said. "Basketball might be like the 11th- or 12th-most important thing on your
list. So, its time to get over it." Thats the mentality the veteran Spurs take
into their 18th season under Popovich, but its one that will be different in a
number of ways. San Antonios Big Three of Tim Duncan, Tony Parker and
Manu Ginobili return to a roster basically unchanged from last season. Still,
the bench is going to look vastly different after assistants Mike Budenholzer
and Brett Brown left to become head coaches at Atlanta and Philadelphia,
respectively. "We really dont know yet (what impact the departures will have),"
Ginobili said. "But, for sure, were going to miss them. If any of us had a doubt
during the game we would go bother Brett probably before Pop because Pop is
doing so many things and controlling other stuff that if you have a question you
go to them because you knew they were going to think the same as Pop." Jim
Boylen, formerly of the Pacers, was added to the coaching staff along with
former Spurs player Sean Marks. Popovich joked he may turn over player
instruction during training camp to his Big Three because he will be too busy
"coaching the coaches." The Spurs have added Marco Belinelli, Corey Maggette,
Sam Young and Jeff Ayres, who changed his surname from Pendergraph in the
off-season, through free agency. Maggette and Young will compete to spell
Kawhi Leonard, the talented third-year forward who is expected to take on a
bigger role in the teams offence after a breakout campaign last year. Leonard
averaged 11.9 points and 6.0 rebounds last season and had a career playoff-high
22 points as well as 11 rebounds and three steals in Game 6 against Miami. "I
think Kawhi is the new Parker, Ginobili and Duncan kind of guy," Popovich said.
"Hes going to take over as the star of the show as time goes on. Hes been
phenomenal. Hes improved more quickly than any other player weve ever had
because his mindset is such that he wants to be great and he has all the reasons
to be so we have to put him in position where he can be a great player."
Leonards development will be needed on a veteran team that many thought was too
old to make it past the first round let alone to fall in a heartbreaking defeat
in the Finals. Can San Antonio overcome that disappointment for another
improbable run? The Spurs can look to their French teammates to see a rebirth is
possible. Parker, Boris Diaw and Nando De Colo took some of the sting out of
their Finals loss by defeating Lithuania on Sept. 22 to claim Frances first
title in the European Championships. "I had a great summer," Parker said.
"Obviously it was worth it. Big win for France, first win in history. That last
week it was an experience that you only live once in a lifetime; it was crazy in
France." Popovich was proud of his players, but jokingly said he wasnt going to
take it easy on Parker during training camp even though his All-Star point guard
spent most of the off-season playing for Frances national team. "No, what does
he make, like $200 million a year?" Popovich said with a wry smile. Still, the
jovial mood didnt quite hide the disappointment he said he continues to feel. A
former player and assistant coach with the Air Force Academy, Popovich said
holding training camp in a new environment should quicken the team bonding. "Its
going to be a lot of fun, just to do something different," Popovich said. "Take
them to altitude, take them to mountains; get them away from everything. It will
help the coaches. And look at the players that have been her for a while, it
will be good for them to meet the new coaches. Weve got some new players in
camp, so its a good camaraderie thing."
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an unusual move. "Im looking up at the board and hes got two hits given up and
one run, and Im taking him out after the fourth inning," Roenicke said.
Buccaneers Jersey . During the athletes
parade, the 23-strong Ukrainian team was represented by a lone flagbearer in an
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peninsula.
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. It says Pocklingtons lawyer filed the appeal Friday in a California court. CTV
Edmonton also says Pocklington gave a $100,000 cash deposit as part of the
conditions of his bail, and that he will be out on bail until his appeal is
heard.CHICAGO – Six days after he clinched the Cup for Chicago, Dave Bolland was
traded for the first time in his NHL career, sent back home to play for the
Leafs. Hours after the deal was finalized, the 27-year-old observed similarities
between the team he had just departed and the one he was set to join. "I think
this is one team like the Blackhawks team thats coming up and is going to do
great things – hopefully like we did (in Chicago)," said the Toronto native back
in late June. With a pair of Stanley Cups in the past four years and the
potential for more in the years ahead, the Chicago Blackhawks are a
representation of what the Maple Leafs would one day like to become. "I think
theyre a model for the league, not just our hockey club," said Randy Carlyle of
the defending champions, who topped the Leafs in a one-sided 3-1 decision at the
United Center on Saturday. That model has seen the Blackhawks grow from the
nothingness of a perennial bust in the late 90s and early 2000s into a feared
Cup contender, one that erased a 49-year drought in 2010 before celebrating once
more this past June. How did they do it and how might the Leafs follow (or be
following already) in their direction? The path began with the establishment of
a core. "The one thing that theyve been able to do is theyve collected a core
group of players and theyve built their team around them," Carlyle said. Fronted
by their captain Jonathan Toews and furthered with Patrick Kane, Patrick Sharp,
Duncan Keith, Brent Seabrook, Marian Hossa and Niklas Hjalmarsson (and Bolland
prior to his trade to Toronto), the Blackhawks established a fearsome foundation
from which to build their team. And because those key components were secure and
in place en route to victory in 2010, they were able to re-invent most of the
roster upon capturing the Cup once more in 2013. Only nine players in fact stuck
around to win both. "Theyve got a core group that they seem to have been able to
acquire and maintain and theyre just adding pieces around it," Carlyle said,
noting the additions of no. 1 goaltender Corey Crawford and playoff hero
Bryan Bickell to that mix in recent years. In Toronto, the building blocks are
gradually being put into place. Phil Kessel, Joffrey Lupul, James van Riemsdyk,
David Clarkson and Tyler Bozak have all been locked up and are considered key
components of the Leafs core, joined by Carl Gunnarsson, Nazem Kadri,
Morgan Rielly, and Jonathan Bernier. Contracts await Dion Phaneuf,
Jake Gardiner, Cody Franson, James Reimer, Bolland and a number of others this
summer. That foundation, while not yet at the level of the Blackhawks, has
improved considerably from where it was just a few years earlier. "Theyve built
from within their system," Cody Franson noted of the Chicago formula. "They
brought in pieces that were proper to the way that they wanted to do things and
I think weve done the same thing. Weve got guys that came up through our system
and are playing big roles and weve brought in guys like (Bolland) and
(Clarkson), guys that fit in with what were trying to accomplish here. I think
its a good way to do things." Unlike the folks in Chicago, the Leafs, led
initially in their reconstruction by Brian Burke and now by Dave Nonis, built
their foundation almost entirely from the outside. Of the aforementioned group,
only Gunnarsson, Kadri, Reimer and Rielly were drafted by the organization, the
others landing with the club either via trade or free agency. The Leafs have
mastered the art of the deal during their recent renovation, hitting home runs
in trades for Lupul, van Riemsdyk, Franson, Gardiner, Phaneuf and even Kessel
with whom there was previously much discontent. Still, the draft and development
record of the club could certainly stand to improve. Chicago has used the tool
as a driver to its success. "Theyve always seemed to be able to add a player
from the minors or youth," Carlyle observed of the Blackhawks, coached by Joel
Quenneville since 2008. In 2013, it was Andrew Shaw, a fifth round pick in 2011,
ending Game 1 against the Bruins with the triple-overtime winner. It was
Brandon Saad, a second round pick that same year, running shotgun with Toews
throughout the regular season. It was Marcus Kruger, a little-known fifth round
pick in 2009, killing penalties and grinding on the fourth line during the
playoffs. It was unexpected homegrown contributions of that kind that helped
lift the aforementioned cast of Toews, Kane, Hossa, Seabrook, Keith,
Hjalmarsson, Bickell and Crawford, all but Sharp and Hossa drafted and developed
by the organization. "They didnt have to trade for any of those guys," said
Franson, the 26-year-old drafted by the Predators in 2005 and traded to the
Leafs in 2011. "Thats all through their draft. If you can get guys of that
quality through your draft it only helps." Ted Dent, the head coach of the
Blackhawks AHL affiliate in Rockford, worked alongside Carlyle with the
Washington Capitals. "They ask him to provide a player a year or two players a
year to the Blackhawks," Carlyle said. "Thats what the development is supposed
to do; its supposed to provide players." Though they obviously benefited from
first round selections in Toews (third overall in 2006), Kane (first overall in
2007) and Seabrook (14th overall in 2003), the Blackhawks also cashed in on some
later round picks; Keith, Crawford and Bolland were second round selections,
Hjalmarsson a fourth round pick, Shaw, Saad and Kruger additionally found deep
into their respective drafts. Barren of quality prospects for years – notably
because top draft picks were traded – the Leafs management team has worked to
address the deficiency. Though still not at the level they would like, they
appear to be moving in a more positive direction. Besieged by injuries and the
10-game suspension to Clarkson (who will make his debut next week in Columbus),
the Leafs have reached into their minor league pool early this season with
20-year-olds David Broll and Josh Leivo. Though theyve made contributions, their
readiness as NHL regulars likely remains in the future. Generally speaking, the
Leafs arent yet at a point where they can round out their roster with internal
talent, but theyre slowly moving in that direction, notably with future assets
on defence. Rielly has already made the jump from junior this season, perhaps to
be joined down the line by Andrew MacWilliam, Stuart Percy, Matt Finn and
Tom Nilsson. Up front, the cupboard has potential NHL talent with Broll and
Leivo atop the list, but lacks the high-end caliber of prospects Chicago has
grown. Save for the 34-year-old Hossa, the Blackhawks core is also almost
brimming with relative youth, meaning the group has and will continue to grow
together. Nonis has pledged to adopt a similar formula with the Leafs since
taking over for Burke nine months ago. Of his major additions to the lineup this
past offseason – Claarkson, Bolland, Bernier – none are considered to be aging
or in decline.
George Johnson Buccaneers Jersey. Kessel,
recently signed to an eight-year extension, just turned 26. By investing in
talent that is still emerging, Leaf management hopes to develop a group that
will eventually flourish together as the Blackhawks did in 2010. "We were
building up to that kind of team," said Bolland, who made his return to Chicago
on Saturday. Not so dissimilar to the Leafs, the Blackhawks had missed the
playoffs in nine of 10 seasons before reaching the Western Conference Final in
2009. They were promptly dismissed by the veteran Red Wings in five games, but
made gains in experience. "They took it to us," Bolland recalled. "Weve never
been to the Western Conference Finals in how many years; it was a lot of guys
first time. It was a learning curve." The following year the Blackhawks not only
reached the postseason, but powered their way to the clubs first Cup since 1961,
topping the Flyers in six games. "It was a learning curve and we learnt from our
mistakes," Bolland said of the experience. Bolland believes the sting of the
Leafs Game 7 collapse last May will pay similar dividends down the line, a
chance to learn from the pain of defeat and ultimately take a step forward from
it. "Its a learning curve," he repeated. No path to a championship is the same,
but in Chicago there is, at the very least, a formula or model for replication,
not so much in the style of play but in the way the team was constructed. With a
sturdy core and impressive draft and development record, the Blackhawks molded
their club into perennial Cup contenders. Its a direction the Leafs can
certainly aspire to follow. "Its a long road to get there when you look at it,"
Bolland said of the path to a Cup. "Its not easy. But I think as of right now
for us, our path here is try to get there." Five Points 1. Humbled in defeat
Outshot 40-20, the Leafs were thumped 3-1 by the defending champs, dropping
back-to-back games for the first time this season. "They play a pretty
high-tempo game," said Carlyle afterward, "and we didnt seem to be able to keep
the pace up until the third period. We got desperate and we started to play a
lot more of a skating game and did a few things that we should be doing for 60
minutes versus 20 minutes." The Leafs mustered up only three shots in the
opening frame – for the second time this week – and were then outshot 20-6 in
the middle period. The Blackhawks scored three goals in those 20 minutes,
including the winner from former Leaf Michael Kostka. "Definitely the first 20
or 25 minutes were difficult," said Nazem Kadri, scoring the Leafs lone goal in
the second frame. "We were under siege a little bit and left Bernier out to dry.
Weve got lots better than that." Lacking any sustained fore-check, the Leafs
allowed a very mobile Chicago defence to burst out of its own zone with ease,
thus springing a highly potent transition game. "We werent able to shut that
down in the second period," Carlyle noted. Propped up by terrific special teams
and sturdy goaltending during a wobbly 6-1-0 start, the Leafs have seen those
areas predictably cool in recent days. As a result, many lingering faults have
been exposed, notably their ineffectiveness at even-strength defensively. "At
the end of the day we are 6-3 so you can stay a little bit positive with that,
knowing that we havent played our best hockey," said James van Riemsdyk, who
returned to the lineup after a two-game absence. "But as the year goes on things
tighten up and if you continue to make the same mistakes youre going to find
yourself on the wrong end of the score a lot of times." 2. More and more shots
for Bernier Jonathan Bernier faced more than 30 shots only four times in the
previous two seasons with Los Angeles (25 starts). On Saturday evening, he faced
more than 30 for the fifth time already this season, his team yielding 40 shots
in defeat. "Definitely, its an adjustment," he said of the increase in rubber.
"When you get 20 shots or 40 shots its a big difference." Bernier had faced 40
shots only once prior in his NHL career. He stopped 40 of 42 in a 3-2 win over
Phoenix while still with the Kings in Mar. 2013. An elite squad defensively in
recent years, the Kings held opponents to 25 shots per game last season,
third-fewest in the NHL. So far this season the Leafs are allowing a bloated 36
shots nightly, only the Senators ranking worse in that category. 3. Cooling off
Bernier has cooled after a scorching start to the season. The 25-year-old has
posted a .898 save percentage in his last three games played, this after a
sizzling .974 mark in his first four games as a Leaf. Of the three he allowed
against the Blackhawks, two were circled as goals hed like to have back. Unable
to catch to Bryan Bickells first attempt on goal early in the second frame,
Bernier was outlasted on the rebound by the Chicago winger. The second goal and
eventual winner from Kostka was a point shot through traffic, one that "was
picked up late" by the Leafs goaltender. "I think weve all got to look at
ourselves in the mirror and play better," he said. 4. More shots While theyve
yielded quite a few against, Kadri would like to see his team generate more
shots at opposing net minders. "Not every shot has to be a grade-A scoring
chance," he said. "It seems like when youre throwing it at the goalies pads,
through the goal-line, or just bad angles testing him, all of a sudden you get
rebounds and scoring chances generate that way. "Thats a page we ought to take
out of their book a little bit and understand that not every single chance we
have has to be a grade-A opportunity." The Leafs have been held under 30 shots
in all but two games this season, averaging about 27 per game, fifth fewest in
the league. 5. Bollands Chicago Return Bolland played 332 regular season games
for Chicago, adding 67 more in the postseason with a pair of Cups. He made his
return to familiar grounds on Saturday, receiving an in-arena tribute from the
club during the first television timeout. "The emotions are running high with
everything that went on here for the past seven or eight years," he said before
the game. Stat-Pack 40-20 – Shot differential between the Blackhawks and Leafs.
35.6 – Average shots against the Leafs this season. 10 – Points for
Joffrey Lupul this season, leading the team. 9-25 or 36 per cent – Tyler Bozak
in the faceoff circle against Chicago. 16:31 – Minutes for Carl Gunnarsson
against Chicago, a season-low. 3-1-0 – Leafs road record this season. Special
Teams Capsule PP: 1-5 PK: 1-3 Quote of the Night "Its the type of team you
measure yourself against. We should be excited about that." -Joffrey Lupul on
facing the Blackhawks, prior to a 3-1 defeat. Up Next The Leafs host the Ducks
at the ACC on Tuesday, the first time Randy Carlyle will face his former team.
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