Jonny Evans has fond memories of Zlatan Ibrahimovic. 👊🏼
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Jonny Evans has fond memories of Zlatan Ibrahimovic. 👊🏼
CANTLON: UCONN WINS HOCKEY EAST SEMIFINAL
BY: Gerry Cantlon, Howlings BOSTON, MA - The UCONN Huskies turned in a stellar three-period, three-zone performance, allowing them to knock off the regular season’s champion #11 Northeastern, 4-1. UCONN’s game plan included attacking the Northeastern defense and targeting captain Jordan Harris all night. “The way they play together is fun to watch, “remarked an emotionally exhausted but happy head coach Mike Cavanaugh. The team will play defending Hockey East and national champion UMASS tomorrow at 7:30 pm on NESN. SMALL PLAYS ARE KEY TO GOALS The third goal gave UCONN a two-goal cushion due to solid forechecking and a hit by Hudson Schandor on Jayden Struble, which forced a turnover in the Northeastern zone. It led to leading scorer Ryan Tverberg getting the puck. He went right to the net, made a great move to get past Tommy Miller, then outwaited goalie Devon Levi who dove out. Tverberg held on to the puck, shifted it to his backhand, and then tucked his 14th goal of the season inside the left post after going to his forehand at 4:32. “It was playing your own game nothing changed really, do what we always do. It’s great to be part of history. We will now focus on tomorrow, “said Tverberg in the post-game. Coach Cavanaugh played the emotional keys all week. “We showed video of Mark Messier talking about winning the Stanley Cup (with the Rangers in 1994), when nobody wanted to talk about it. We’ve talked openly about all our goals. People were afraid to say it and we’re trying to meet all these challenges head on. We weren’t star struck to be in the building.” Cavanaugh commented. UCONN was consistently finishing their checks all game long, and Northeastern could not gain any traction on goaltender Darion Hanson, who stopped Hughes from 25-feet out on a quick snapshot at 13:37. CAVANAUGH REACTS “I was happy with the way we competed today for sixty minutes. Last week we sat back a bit with the lead against BU. Today we didn’t, but this game, we were on our toes in the third period and played a strong game for the full sixty, and we’re very happy to be playing tomorrow. I’m very proud of my team,” UCONN head coach Mike Cavanaugh said hoarsely from his game-long elevated voice level required in the raucous, rowdy TD Boston Garden. Marc Gatcomb, the nearby Woburn product, put a cap on the game. His goal, the team’s fourth and eighth of the season, was also a product of another small play. Vlad Firstov took McDonough out to center, freeing up the puck for his teammate to put a backhander into the empty cage. That goal started the celebration at 17:52 as the UCONN faithful were ready to dance down Causeway and Canal Streets with UCONN banners in hand. “That was so much to watch and be a part of the last two minutes that was Husky hockey. We had a timeout and looking around seeing (everybody) it was so much fun. To see the level of UCONN support surprised me a bit. To see during warm ups, the whole UCONN section fill up, it motivated us. We’re gonna need them all tomorrow,” said Hanson. McDonough thought he got his 25th of the season with 4.3 seconds left, but after a video review, the play was ruled offsides nullifying his goal and cementing that it was UCONN’s night. A shot at the Lamoriello Trophy is now within UCONN’s grasp. GOALTENDERS In the second period, each team had their chances as Northeastern scored off the opening draw. Harris had a backhander go off a McDonough pass ten seconds in, but Hanson was atop his goal crease to make the save. Levi showed why he has the nation’s best save percentage as Jonny Evans sprung Turnbull free for a shorthanded breakaway at 5:32, and Turnbull made a smart deke. Still, Levi flashed his glove and snatched Turnbull’s bid and briefly UCONN’s hopes when it seemed they would again fall prey to Levi’s goaltending. Hanson did his version when Jack Hughes split the defense in two down the middle of Ryan Wheeler and Harrison Rees and went straight in on Hanson. Still, there was no room Hanson gave him as he repelled his break-in bid at 7:19 after Firstov blew a tire at the Northeastern blue line, and Harrist sent the loose puck up to Hughes. “I was focused on doing my job, not focused on anything else that can be detrimental (to our effort) do what I can to help the team win,” Hanson stated amidst the post-game pandemonium. SCORING RECAP UCONN made it to 2-1 at 13:47 of the second period. Harrison Rees sent an outlet pass to Chase Bradley. He got the first shot on Levi as he used Tyler Spott as a screen on the shot. It went off his glove, and a rare rebound was available. Bradley followed up on the play with a shot off the far post as Vladislav Firstov lifted Harris’s stick as he was going net-front, allowing Roman Kinal, who was pinching in from the left point, to fire in the eventual game-winner. It was his third of the year, and it came off a rebound. Jachym Kondelik nearly had a goal on a deflection at 15:19, but Levi was equal to the task. Kevin O’ Neil had an intense rush but lost the puck as it rolled off his stick at the last second. Then on a two-on-one break, Hudson Schandor’s pass attempt across meant for Ryan Tverberg was deftly broken up by Tommy Miller, thwarting a critical UCONN chance at the last second. Sam Colangelo of Northeastern on the left wing with a solid chance was turned aside by Hanson. Northeastern tied the game at one on their dangerous power-play, which has been UCONN’s game all season-long penchant for taking too many penalties occurred. All five players on the ice touched the puck as Gunnarwolfe Fontaine from the left-wing sent it back to Jordan Harris at the point in the umbrella format slipped it over to Aidan McDonough, and he made no mistake with his 24th on a one-time slapper from the right-wing circle at 14:13. UCONN got the all-important first goal of the game as Bradley moving across the slot, shot it toward the net. Nick Capone, cruising in front, swung his stick at the puck, got a piece of it, and Firstov put in the loose puck that hit him in the skate first for his 11th at 11:39. It was a physical encounter with several after whistle scrums-UCONN showed it had come to play and would not be intimidated, not backing off an inch-they had come to play. Carter Turnbull had an early wraparound chance stopped by Levi, and Hanson handled what came his way. NOTES 42 collegians have turned pro, including the latest Patrick Giles of BC signing a PTO with Charlotte (AHL), and Philip Lagunov, a transfer to Vermont from UMASS, signs with Tucson (AHL). Bo Hanson, no relation to UCONN’s Darion, is on his third college at Northern Michigan University, heads to the Wheeling Nailers (ECHL). Teammate Garrett Klee, son of former NHL’er Ken Klee, signs with the Kansas City Mavericks (ECHL). Gunnarwolfe Fontaine’s older sister Skylar is a big part of the Northeastern Lady Huskies Hockey champion program that lost in double overtime to Minnesota-Duluth 2-1 last night. The Yale women lost in the semi to Ohio State. Expect Harris to sign with Montreal and head to the Laval Rocket (AHL) in the coming days, signing a deal with Montreal GM Kent Hughes, father of his two Hughes boys (Jack and Riley), and may play for Martin St. Louis the interim Canadiens head coach the father of another teammate, Ryan St. Louis. UCONN HOCKEY HOME Read the full article
CANTLON'S CORNER: UCONN-UMASS BIG NIGHT
BY: Gerry Cantlon, Howlings STORRS, CT - The apex of UCONN’s Hockey East regular season rests with their fourth meeting this season with a national champion in the program’s Division I hockey history. UCONN begins a home-and-home series with the UMASS Minutemen starting tomorrow night at the XL Center in downtown Hartford at 7:00 PM. “Over the last few years, they have been the class of the league (and the country), and he (Greg Carvel) has done a fantastic job since he got there, and winning the national championship. “This year, he’s right there again. This is a solid team from their first line, defensive corps, and the goaltending of Matty Murray. From top-to-bottom, it’ll be quite a test for our club,” said UCONN Head Coach Mike Cavanaugh.” The second half of this battle in Amherst, MA, is Saturday at 7:30 PM in the Mullins Center. EVANS SPEAKS “We’re pretty even-keeled right now. We realize every game is big, and first place is on the line,” remarked rejuvenated UCONN senior Jonny Evans. The Huskies enter the game riding a six-game winning streak. They are 12-6 and in second place in Hockey East and have a 16-11 record overall. UMASS is tops in the conference at 11-5-2 and holds a 16-9-2 overall record. UMASS is ranked #10 nationally. However, for the second time in school history, UCONN comes in ranked at #20. “This is what we have strived for,” Cavanaugh said of this meeting between the number one and number two teams in the conference. “Since I came to UCONN, this has been my expectation. The vision was to play in these type of games late in February. Our team is excited. I’m sure UMASS is exited, and I’m excited for a big game tomorrow night at the XL Center.” SCOTT MORROW The play of Darien native and the nephew of former Hartford Whaler, his namesake, Scott Morrow, bears watching for UCONN. “His puck skills are outstanding and are as good as anybody in the league. That first power play unit moved the puck so well. They get the puck to the net quickly. They have great deception in their game. They make it look like they’re going to pass one way and then go another. We’re going to have to be very cognizant when he is out on the ice.” EVANS One of the reasons for the revived offensive output has been switching Evans from right-wing to center and pairing him with his former Junior-A teammate at Powell River (BCHL), Carter Turnbull. Over this stretch, they have combined for six goals in each of the last three games. Evans has been enormous, and his line has revived UCONN’s offense and made it highly effective. “We’ve had such balanced scoring having 18 goals in our last three games. Nobody has gotten more than two in a game. So that says a lot about the balance of our lineup,” Cavanaugh said. “Switching from center (early in the second semester) from the wing is the biggest change I’ve made; a little different position,” Evans said with a wry smile and soft laugh. “He (Cavanaugh) talked to me and said, ‘Hey, we’re gonna put you at center.’ I Iove to be back there and help the team anyway that I can. I played four years of junior (at center), so it felt comfortable to go back there.” NO MAGIC POTION Cavanaugh admits this wasn’t a magic elixir he concocted in his hockey lab in his basement. “I certainly like the results. I’d like to say a lot of thought and conversation went into it, but I was just trying to get him going. Give him a different look, and get his mind off why he wasn’t scoring.” While admitting he has work to do on his faceoffs, he’s also having some fun with it. He and his much-taller team captain, centerman Jachym Kondelik (eight goals in his last 13 games), have a friendly post-practice competitive ritual going. “After practice, we do some drills one-on-one with the other centerman, and then me, and Jachym do a little game thing head-to-head with each other. It’s kinda fun.” Evans said with a smile. “Its fun to get under a big guy like that. I try to get lower than him, honestly. ‘Try to get lower,’ Jachym says, and he is a pretty good centerman so I try to get tips from him. We’ve been doing it the last couple of weeks. We start out with five warm-ups and then do a best-of-five and see who wins and who gets bragging rights. He won last week. So I gotta get him this week.” MARC GATCOMB Along with Marc Gatcomb (the Gunn School), the whole line has been a big plus for the Huskies. Despite the switch, he does his best to stay within the structure Coach Cavanaugh has been preaching since September. “We all can skate pretty well. We’re a pretty fast line. Marc has a heavy game and Carter and I played together back at Powell River. We have a little chemistry and now we’ve played a bit together (here) and we’re clicking together.” ” We haven’t played much together in college, so let’s play like we did in Powell River; do our thing and go out there and enjoy it. It’s our last year here, and that’s all we’ve been doing out there is having fun.” The game at the XL will be on a regulation surface, while the game at the Mullins Center will be on the larger international surface, but Evans doesn’t feel the difference will faze him. He welcomes it. “We’re a fast team, so honestly a bigger surface is better for us. We can adapt to any ice surface we’re on.” The explosion of offense has been fueled by solid net-front play. “We’re in front of the house (net) more; getting the greasy goals, which is good. We’re not afraid to take it to the net.” The team has also gotten help from unexpected sources, such as Jarrod Gourley, who had two goals against BC for his first muti-goal game in two years (ASU- Brown Jan. 11, 2020, scoring the game-winner). UCONN MEN’S HOCKEY HOME Read the full article
Leicester confirm three-year Evans deal
Leicester confirm three-year Evans deal ##Championship ##Jonnyevans ##Leicestercity ##Premierleague ##Westbrom
Jonny Evans becomes Leicester City’s second signing of the current summer transfer window Leicester City have confirmed they have completed the signing of West Bromwich Albion defender, Jonny Evans on a three-year deal.
The 30-year-old has decided to pitch tent with the Foxes following the Baggies’ relegation from the Premier League last season.
Leicester triggered a clause in his contract…
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Evans edges closer to Leicester deal after completing medical
Evans edges closer to Leicester deal after completing medical ##Arsenal ##Championship ##Jonnyevans ##Leicestercity
Jonny Evans completes medical with Leicester City West Bromwich Albion skipper, Jonny Evans has edged closer to a deal with Leicester City after completing a successful medical.
According to a concrete report from BBC Sport, the Foxes will spend a fee of £3.5m on the Northern Irishman.
And that is set to be in two instalments which will be in accordance with a clause in his deal.
Meanwhile, Evans…
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Leicester set to beat Arsenal to Evans signing
Leicester set to beat Arsenal to Evans signing ##Arsenal ##Jonnyevans ##Leicestercity ##Premierleague ##Westbrom
Jonny Evans is currently in serious demand after West Bromwich Albion suffered relegation from the Premier League Reports suggest that Leicester City are set to beat Arsenal to the signing of West Bromwich Albion defender, Jonny Evans.
The Foxes have reportedly edged much closer to landing the signature of the Baggies skipper in the summer transfer window.
After the Baggies went into relegation…
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Tottenham to match Evans buyout clause
Tottenham to match Evans buyout clause ##Arsenal ##Arsenewenger ##Jonnyevans ##MauricioPochettino ##Premierleague
Jonny Evans will reportedly be available for a meagre fee of £3m due to a release clause should West Bromwich Albion suffer relegation from the Premier League Tottenham Hotspur are set to match the buyout clause of West Bromwich Albion central defender, Jonny Evans, according to reports.
The Lilywhites have reportedly expressed a keen interest in landing the signature of the Northern Ireland…
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United want Arsenal to pay £25m for Smalling
United want Arsenal to pay £25m for Smalling ##Arsenal ##Arsenewenger ##Chrissmalling ##England ##Jonnyevans
Chris Smalling is subject of a move to Arsenal Manchester United want Arsenal to pay a fee within the range of £25m for defender, Chris Smalling, according to reports.
The Gunners are allegedly looking to add more cover at the back when the summer transfer window finally kicks off.
They are also making preparations for when skipper, Per Mertesacker finally calls it quits at the conclusion of the…
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