TORONTO – There is still a long ways to go for a Raptors team that drew rave
reviews following their first full day of training camp.
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nearly a month left in camp, eight exhibition contests around the corner and 82
regular season games ahead of them. This was one day. Still, after a 2012-13
season laden with disappointment, the team will happily take the small victories
wherever and whenever they come. The end goal is far greater, but this is a
start. "Very high level," coach Dwane Casey said of his teams effort following
the first of two practices Tuesday afternoon. "We had a lot of little mistakes
but guys are playing hard, diving on the floor, knocking the crap out of each
other and thats what we need. "Well clean up the little things." Although the
majority of Caseys team has been in Toronto for a few weeks now participating in
individual and player-organized workouts, Tuesday marked the first day that
coaches could facilitate an actual practice. Not wasting any time, they held
two. Despite the long day, the team got through it unscathed and Casey was
impressed with the conditioning of his players, although he did note some
expected fatigue throughout the afternoon. As expected, there was an immediate
emphasis placed on defence after the team regressed on that end of the floor a
year ago. "[Defence] was a big focus," said Rudy Gay, who is in camp with the
Raptors for the first time after opening the previous seven seasons with
Memphis. "Its just picking up your level. Defence is all about competitiveness
and as long as we stay competitive and also stay true to our principles well be
a good defence team." Casey estimated that 90 percent of the days contact drills
were defensive in nature and anticipates that will mostly be the case for the
remainder of this week and perhaps into next. Not surprisingly, the tone was set
by one of the newest Raptors: spark plug Tyler Hansbrough who comes to Toronto
with a reputation for getting after it in games and in practice while also
getting under the opponents skin. "Tyler Hansbrough, I call him Freddy Krueger,"
Casey said, comparing the forward to the fictional horror movie character.
"Thats what made him such a great monster, every once and a while you think you
have him dead and here he comes back again, thats Tyler Hansbrough." "Hes added
that to our team, so either you stay with it, with that effort, or you get your
butt kicked and thats one thing thats really amped up the effort and the
intensity in practice and we need that." Passion, as Casey put it, is contagious
and has spread around this organization quickly, seemingly from the top. The
Raptors held a team meeting last night, prior to the start of training camp and
the person leading the charge was the very man who put this group - or at least
some of it - together. "Masai gave a passionate speech last night about what he
expects [and] the passion guys have to play with," Casey said. "Leaving all the
complaining and all the problems, all the issues, check them at the door and
then set the tone. Hes empowered everybody to do their job." "Our new GM is very
passionate and were taking his lead," point guard Kyle Lowry added. "It starts
at the top and we all take his passion, his ferocity and take it on the court
with us and to practice with us. The intensity that Masais bringing to us is
definitely a ramp up from anything Ive ever seen." The hope for Casey and this
organization is that the passion that filled the Raptors practice gym on day one
will stick around for the remainder of camp and throughout the season. For now,
the vibes are all positive but maintaining that togetherness through the
inevitable adversity of a long NBA season will be the clubs real challenge. "The
copouts are gone so now its about playing [and] having fun," said Casey. "How
you have fun is kicking peoples butt and competing and I think thats what were
seeing. "I hope thats what were seeing."
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and Matt Cooke also scored for Minnesota, which has won five of six. Kuemper
made five saves in the first, nine in the second, and nine in the third. The
rookies best save came with 2:17 left in the third period when he denied former
Wild forward Matt Cullen from just outside of the crease on the right side.
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with Rex Brothers for the closers role at spring training.
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. Galatasaray said in a statement on its website Monday that Mancini signed a
three-year contract and will be paid 3.5 million euros for the upcoming season,
with his salary upped to 4.Got a question on rule clarification, comments on
rule enforcements or some memorable NHL stories? Kerry wants to answer your
emails at cmonref@tsn.ca. Dear Kerry, Love the articles, big fan since the
beginning. Miss you on the ice. I am emailing in regards to the video of referee
Paul Devorskis last game with Vancouver. What is your take on the video of Paul
clearly making derogatory comments about Tortorella during the Anaheim game last
night (as Don Cherry would say "Dont read lips") and what would be the
consequences of something like this happening during a game for a
ref? ThanksJeff Yates --- Hi Kerry, Recently, Paul Devorski has drawn the ire of
Canuck fans of calling games slanted in the oppositions favour (including the
most recent example of giving the Ducks a seven-minute 5-on-3 advantage). I
wouldnt say the game against L.A. was refereed poorly, but I would suggest that
it wasnt Devorskis best game and Im guessing Tortorella had some comments about
the refereeing after the game ended yet Devorski ended up refereeing the next
game against the Ducks. I know there have been examples of referees coming in on
short notice (most notably the referees drafted in during the Stanley Cup
Playoffs after Jim Schoenfeld overturned his suspension and the referees held a
wildcat strike). After Stephane Augers battle with Vancouvers Alex Burrows, I
dont think Auger reffed games with Vancouver for a long time. How often are
referee assignments changed if something controversial happens in the previous
game? Thanks,GarethRichmond, BC Jeff and Gareth: I thought Wyatt Arndts blog
article published in The Province was well written and provided a very fair and
balanced account from all sides (If you havent done so please open it up in
Jeffs question and read it now).Let me be perfectly clear, there is no
justification for an Official (ref or linesman) to lose his composure and curse
back at a player, coach or even a fan. Regardless of just how difficult it
might be to "bite your tongue" in the heat of the moment, any profane outburst
from a ref becomes indefensible. A refs credibility and respect can be damaged
(at least temporarily) when negative emotions are inappropriately vented in
public as we witnessed in this situation. Im positive that referee Paul
Devorski regrets the poor conduct he demonstrated by sharing his feelings with
colleague Dan ORourke in what he thought to be a private exchange. He should
know that nothing is private anymore; if he didnt he does now. It matters little
that referee Devorski was the recipient of Vancouver Coach John Tortorellas
profanity-laced attack; lip reading aside! What matters most is that the referee
is entrusted with the authority to act as an impartial arbitrator and conduct
himself in a professional manner at all times. You can rest assured that Paul
Devorski has already been spoken to about this incident by someone from within
Hockey Operations and/or the Officiating Department. There are also times when
an Officials assignments will be altered to keep from throwing gasoline on
smoldering ashes that remain from a previous game or incident. Moving personnel
is not always easy with back-to-back games and especially on the West Coast.
While the referees conduct was inappropriate it demonstrates something none of
us should lose sight of. These guys are only human! There isnt a referee that
hasnt slipped up and cursed at one time or another. I know for sure I have. I
learned early in my career however that if I was expected to control the game
and the negative emotions that often surfaced in disputes, it was imperative
that I maintain control my own emotions. Believe me when I tell you there were
many times that this good intention was much easier said than done! I adopted
the adage, "Treat disrespect, with respect" tto gain leverage and exert control
in heated exchanges with players and coaches.
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quickly bring the temperature down, I incorporated non aggressive body language
(open palms vs finger point) and a monotone voice inflection (vs elevated volume
and shouting match). I attempted to quickly set the tone and establish an
element of control during the dispute through my actions by demonstrating a calm
but firm demeanor. I encouraged the other party to engage in a civil
conversation as opposed to a giving or receiving a profanity laced lecture.
Through the "conversation" that generally followed I listened as the player or
coach expressed their opinion. I then explained the reasoning behind my
decision. In the end we might just agree to disagree. Regardless of the eventual
outcome an effort was always made to solicit some form of civil decorum. To
maintain self-control as a referee it is important to feel your internal
emotional pitch rise and fall like the mercury of a thermometer (Think of any
bouts of road rage you have been a party to?). You better think before you speak
and when you do listen to yourself; the tone, the volume and how it is being
perceived. I was in a heated debate with a player one time when I stopped
abruptly in midsentence. I apologized for what I had just heard myself say to
the player that I deemed inappropriate; I knew he must have as well. I withdrew
my inappropriate comment by stating, "Im sorry, that came out the wrong way;
what I meant to say was this". It is especially important for the referee to be
part of the solution as opposed to part of the problem. Sometimes it takes
super-human strength to keep your emotions in check. In the 1974-75 season, I
was assigned to an IHL game in Flint, MI. Late in the third period I assessed
multiple penalties to Muskegon Mohawks defenceman Lynn Margarit following a
fight. Margarit amassed 301 penalty minutes that season and 2,100 during his
10-year IHL career. The player and I engaged in a heated, nose to nose debate
over the game misconduct he had received. In his rage, and as I opened my mouth
to speak, Margarit spat directly into my mouth! It immediately sickened me.
Every muscle in my body immediately shook with rage in readiness to drill this
guy. Somehow I was able to dig deep and maintained the self-control required of
a referee. In 1975, in an AHL game in Halifax, I was physically attacked by
Richard Lemieux - who played 274 games in the NHL for Vancouver Canucks, Kansas
City Scouts and Atlanta Flames. After receiving his third penalty of the game
Lemieux threw down his gloves at centre ice and charged at me. I squared to meet
him with open palms as a "sign of peace!" Lemieux refused my peace offering and
threw a left punch that I slipped and grabbed the sleeve of his jersey as his
fist went past my ear. His right hand punch, I caught in the air and was then
able to pull the jersey over his head. Thank goodness there were no "tie-downs"
in those days! Big Ken Houston jumped off his bench, placed me in a bear hug and
lifted my skates off the ice thinking that I was going to punch his now
vulnerable teammate just as the two linemen arrived on the scene. Following the
game Lemieux, Houston and coach Al MacNeil came to the Officials dressing room
and issued a sincere apology. NHL President Clarence Campbell suspended Lemieux
for 10 games in addition to imposing a hefty fine. The point in both of these
hostile and very aggressive confrontations with players is that if I, as a
referee, had not maintained control of my emotions and acted in a "professional"
manner, my officiating career would have ended before I even made it to the NHL.
On occasion, there are situations in a game that require superhuman strength for
a referee to fight the natural tendency to be, "only human."
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