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Alice Munro, a winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature, was perhaps the most acclaimed short-story writer of our time. After her death, last year, her youngest daughter, Andrea Skinner, revealed that Munro's partner, Gerald Fremlin, had sexually abused her starting when she was nine years old. The abuse was known in the family, but, even after Fremlin was convicted, Munro stood by him, at the expense of her relationship with her daughter. In this episode, the New Yorker staff writer Rachel Aviv joins the magazine's editor, David Remnick, to talk about how and why a writer known for such astonishing powers of empathy could betray her own child, and how Munro touched on this family trauma in fiction. “Her writing makes you think about art at what expense,” Aviv tells Remnick. “That's probably a question that is relevant for many artists, but Alice Munro makes it visible on the page. It felt so literal—like trading your daughter for art.”Follow The New Yorker Radio Hour wherever you get your podcasts. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices
“My life has gone rosy, again,” Alice Munro told a friend in a buoyant letter of March 1975. For Munro, who was then emerging as one of her generation's leading writers, the previous few years had been blighted by heartbreak and upheaval: a painful separation from her husband of two decades; a retreat from British Columbia back to her native Ontario; a series of brief but bruising love affairs, in which, it seems, Munro could never quite make out the writing on the wall. “This time it's real,” she wrote, speaking of a new romantic partner, Gerald Fremlin, the emphasis acknowledging that her friend had heard these words before. “He's 50, free, a good man if I ever saw one, tough and gentle like in the old tire ads, and this is the big thing — grown-up.”The judgment would prove premature. In July 2024, two months after Munro's death at age 92, Andrea Skinner, the youngest of her three daughters, revealed in an essay in The Toronto Star that Fremlin had sexually abused her. Unlock full access to New York Times podcasts and explore everything from politics to pop culture. Subscribe today at nytimes.com/podcasts or on Apple Podcasts and Spotify.
Rachel Aviv reports on the terrible conundrum of Alice Munro for The New Yorker. Munro was a winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature and perhaps the most acclaimed writer of short stories of our time, but her legacy darkened after her death when her youngest daughter, Andrea Skinner, revealed that Munro's partner had sexually abused her beginning when she was nine years old. The crime was known in the family, but even after a criminal conviction of Gerald Fremlin, Munro stood by him, at the expense of her relationship with Skinner. In her piece, Aviv explores how, and why, a writer of such astonishing powers of empathy could betray her own child, and discusses the ways that Munro touched on this family trauma in fiction. “Her writing makes you think about art at what expense,” she tells David Remnick. “That's probably a question that is relevant for many artists, but Alice Munro makes it visible on the page. It felt so literal—like trading your daughter for art.”
In an essay published earlier this month, Andrea Skinner, the daughter of the lauded writer Alice Munro, detailed the sexual abuse she suffered as a child at the hands of Munro's second husband, Gerald Fremlin. The piece goes on to describe how, even after Skinner told her of the abuse, years later, Munro chose to stay with him until his death, in 2013. On this episode of Critics at Large, Vinson Cunningham, Naomi Fry, and Alexandra Schwartz discuss the revelations, which have raised familiar questions about what to do when beloved artists are found to have done unforgivable things. They're joined by fellow staff writer Jiayang Fan, an avid reader of Munro's work who's been grappling with the news in real time. Together they revisit the 1993 story “Vandals,” which contains unsettling parallels to the scenario that played out in the Munro home. Have the years since the #MeToo movement given us more nuanced ways of addressing these flare-ups than full-out cancellation? “It's not a moral loosening that I'm sensing,” Schwartz says. “It's more of a sense of, Maybe I don't want to throw out the work altogether—but I do need to wrestle.” Read, watch, and listen with the critics:“My Stepfather Sexually Abused Me When I Was a Child. My Mother, Alice Munro, Chose to Stay with Him,” by Andrea Skinner (The Toronto Star)“Vandals,” by Alice Munro (The New Yorker)“How My Mother and I Became Chinese Propaganda,” by Jiayang Fan (The New Yorker)“The Love Album: Off the Grid,” by Diddy“Ignition (Remix),” by R. Kelly“Monsters: A Fan's Dilemma,” by Claire Dederer“Manhattan” (1979)New episodes drop every Thursday. Follow Critics at Large wherever you get your podcasts.
On this week's show, the panel begins by dissecting Longlegs, director Osgood Perkin's viral horror movie starring Nicolas Cage that's sweeping the box office. Aided by a clever marketing campaign, Longlegs is undoubtedly the summer's “you gotta see it” horror flick, but does the Silence of the Lambs copycat live up to the hype? Then, the three jump (or is it herkie?) into Greg Whiteley's latest docuseries, America's Sweethearts: Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders, which follows the Texan squad from auditions through the grueling NFL season, revealing a quietly devastating portrait of worker exploitation and modern femininity along the way. Finally, the trio is joined by Slate critic Laura Miller to parse through an extreme controversy in the literary world: Last week, Alice Munro's daughter, Andrea Skinner, published an Op-Ed in the Toronto Star detailing the sexual abuse she suffered as a young girl at the hands of her stepfather – abuse that the Nobel Prize-winning author had known about, but chose to ignore. (Read Laura's essay for Slate; check out the Star's reported piece.) In the exclusive Slate Plus segment, the panel rips into Longlegs and all of its glorious plot holes in a classic spoiler special. Email us at culturefest@slate.com. Endorsements: Stephen: Dodie Smith's I Capture the Castle and this essay by Anna Leskiewicz for The New York Review: “The Small-Girl's Proust.” Dana: In honor of Shelley Duvall (who passed away last week), a two-part endorsement: (1) Austin Film Society's tribute to Duvall, which premiered at the 2020 Texas Film Awards. (2) Watching a Shelley Duvall movie that's new to you! (Dana suggests Brewster McCloud directed by Robert Altman.) Julia: A special Scandi-Candy report: (1) Norway's national candy, Kvikk Lunsj, which carries the reputation of a Snickers bar in that part of the world and sports the Fjellvettreglene (Norwegian for “the mountain code”) on the wrapper's back. (2) Fredag Slik, or “Friday sweets,” a Danish tradition where families head to the candy store together at the end of the week. Podcast production by Jared Downing. Production assistance by Kat Hong. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
On this week's show, the panel begins by dissecting Longlegs, director Osgood Perkin's viral horror movie starring Nicolas Cage that's sweeping the box office. Aided by a clever marketing campaign, Longlegs is undoubtedly the summer's “you gotta see it” horror flick, but does the Silence of the Lambs copycat live up to the hype? Then, the three jump (or is it herkie?) into Greg Whiteley's latest docuseries, America's Sweethearts: Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders, which follows the Texan squad from auditions through the grueling NFL season, revealing a quietly devastating portrait of worker exploitation and modern femininity along the way. Finally, the trio is joined by Slate critic Laura Miller to parse through an extreme controversy in the literary world: Last week, Alice Munro's daughter, Andrea Skinner, published an Op-Ed in the Toronto Star detailing the sexual abuse she suffered as a young girl at the hands of her stepfather – abuse that the Nobel Prize-winning author had known about, but chose to ignore. (Read Laura's essay for Slate; check out the Star's reported piece.) In the exclusive Slate Plus segment, the panel rips into Longlegs and all of its glorious plot holes in a classic spoiler special. Email us at culturefest@slate.com. Endorsements: Stephen: Dodie Smith's I Capture the Castle and this essay by Anna Leskiewicz for The New York Review: “The Small-Girl's Proust.” Dana: In honor of Shelley Duvall (who passed away last week), a two-part endorsement: (1) Austin Film Society's tribute to Duvall, which premiered at the 2020 Texas Film Awards. (2) Watching a Shelley Duvall movie that's new to you! (Dana suggests Brewster McCloud directed by Robert Altman.) Julia: A special Scandi-Candy report: (1) Norway's national candy, Kvikk Lunsj, which carries the reputation of a Snickers bar in that part of the world and sports the Fjellvettreglene (Norwegian for “the mountain code”) on the wrapper's back. (2) Fredag Slik, or “Friday sweets,” a Danish tradition where families head to the candy store together at the end of the week. Podcast production by Jared Downing. Production assistance by Kat Hong. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
本期岛上主播:筱狸 7月7日,在加拿大作家、诺奖得主艾丽丝·门罗逝世近两个月后,她的小女儿安德莉亚·斯金纳(Andrea Skinner)通过媒体揭露,其继父,即门罗第二任丈夫杰拉尔德·弗雷姆林曾在1976 年对9岁的她实施性虐待。1992年,斯金纳将这个埋藏已久的秘密告知了母亲,但门罗并未对此表示同情,甚至在短暂分居后选择继续弗雷姆林共同生活。 残忍的事实令无数人震惊、感叹且困惑:作为读者,我们如今该如何看待门罗和她的作品?继一个月前的“门罗故事会”之后,本期跳岛FM,主播筱狸请来了作家童末和南京大学英文系教授但汉松,一起从这起作家丑闻聊起,再次回到门罗与她的作品,细辩作者、作品与读者之间的关系与边界。 终生书写女性故事的女作家,原来一直隐藏着和她的作品同样黑暗的秘密。社交网络上,“文学只是一种巧言令色”标语式地刷屏,“取消门罗”的呼声如荒原上的火星四处蔓延。当门罗原谅了不该原谅的人,我们还应该“原谅”她吗? 激愤之余,我们也不得不面对一个有些难堪的事实:门罗并不是历史上第一个道德有污点的作家。我们对艺术作品的评价应当受到创作者道德水准的影响吗?检视作者不完美的良心,究竟是中国人老话说的“知人论世”,还是一种无谓的苛求?而当门罗——如同她之前的许许多多人一样——选择将所有的行动力和天才保留在文学的边界之内,我们又可以如何校正和警示自己? 【本期嘉宾】 童末,写小说与评论,作品有长篇小说《大地中心的人》、短篇小说集《新大陆》等。现居北京与贵州。 但汉松,南京大学英文系教授。 【本期主持】 筱狸,媒体人、文学评论人。新浪微博:BeulahDong 【时间轴】 00:13 艾丽丝·门罗丑闻事件始末与其生平简介 02:20 嘉宾在知晓门罗家庭丑闻后有何感受? 03:51 第二次蜜月,第三次死亡:与门罗再次猝然相遇 07:40 阿特伍德,乔伊斯·卡罗尔·欧茨等作家对门罗事件的回应 14:21 作为女性作家前辈偶像的门罗“塌房”,对我们有何警示 16:24 反对取消门罗的两条原因 17:38 为什么说门罗从来没有文过饰非,也不是巧言令色? 26:00 内部视角下的门罗:细节、丰富、心灵史 29:02 当阅读时遭遇两难的“门罗时刻”,我们只能咀嚼"痛苦的愉悦" 32:17 为什么门罗所有的行动力都仅局限于写作之中? 37:01 门罗的故事在多大程度上是自传性的? 45:26 关键词一“厌女”:门罗笔下的女性是怎样的? 55:11 关键词二“家庭破坏者”:很多时候家庭秩序反而是施害者 58:04 现实中门罗的一些婚姻家庭生活细节与创作经历 1:13:23 寻求“完美的良心”?作家里没有完美的道德样板 1:18:38 当门罗原谅了不该原谅的人,我们还应该原谅她吗? 【节目中提到的】 人物 乔伊斯·卡罗尔·欧茨,美国小说家、诗人、评论家、剧作家、编剧。 代表作品有《人间乐园》《他们》和《奇境》等。 玛格丽特·阿特伍德,加拿大小说家、诗人、文学评论家。国际女权运动在文学领域的重要代表人物。代表作有《使女的故事》《圣约》等。 雷蒙德·卡佛,“美国二十世纪下半叶最重要的小说家”。代表作有《当我们谈论爱情时,我们在谈论什么》等。酗酒成性,曾因骗取失业金被指控,伤害并抛弃了最爱他的妻子玛丽安。 诺曼·梅勒,美国著名作家,凭借《夜幕下的大军》和《刽子手之歌》两度获得普利策奖。酗酒、吸毒、家暴,长期负债,结婚六次,有数个私生子。 保罗·德曼,比利时解构主义评论家及文学理论家。曾在二战时撰写反犹作品。 艾玆拉·庞德,美国著名诗人、文学家、意象主义诗歌代表人物。与法西斯为伍,被称为"背叛了美国的诗人"。 克努特·汉姆生,挪威作家,1920年诺贝尔文学奖获得者,代表作有《大地的成长》等。希特勒的追随者,德国侵略挪威后仍发表赞扬希特勒侵略行为的文章。 T·S·艾略特,美国著名诗人、评论家、剧作家,曾获1948年诺贝尔文学奖。代表作有《荒原》等。厌女,撰写反犹诗歌。 欧内斯特·米勒尔·海明威,被认为是20世纪最伟大的小说家之一。1954年获诺贝尔文学奖。代表作有《老人与海》《太阳照常升起》等。酗酒、吸毒,结婚四次,曾侵犯幼女,最终抑郁自杀。 让-雅克·卢梭,法国十八世纪启蒙思想家、哲学家、教育家、文学家,民主政论家和浪漫主义文学流派的开创者,启蒙运动代表人物之一。主要著作有《论人类不平等的起源和基础》《社会契约论》《爱弥儿》《忏悔录》等。最初拒绝与身为女仆的情人结婚,并将5个孩子送进孤儿院,默许朋友奸污自己的情人,最终在晚年与情人步入婚姻。 作品 《快乐影子之舞》《熊从山那边来》《忘情》《你以为你是谁》《科利》《逃离》《公开的秘密》《破坏分子》《好女人的爱情》《渥太华山谷》《乌特勒支停战协议》《拨弄》《沉寂》【加】 艾丽丝·门罗 《历史的运用与滥用》【加】 玛格丽特·麦克米伦 【出品人】蔡欣 【制作人】何润哲 广岛乱 【文案编辑】Viann 【运营编辑】黄鱼 不理 荔枝 【后期剪辑】崔崔 【视觉顾问】孙晓曦 【视觉指导】汐和 【平面设计】心心 公众号:跳岛FM Talking Literature 跳到更多:即刻|微博|豆瓣|小红书
Andrea Skinner, hija menor de Alice Munro, dijo que su padrastro empezó a abusarla sexualmente de ella a los 9 años de edad, pero su madre se quedó con él a pesar de conocer la situación.
Guest: Deborah Dundas, opinion section editor at the Toronto Star A chilling revelation has surfaced almost a month after the death of Canada's literary giant, Alice Munro. Andrea Skinner — who is Munro's daughter — has revealed in the Toronto Star that her stepfather Gerald Fremlin sexually abused her when she was nine years old. She was only able to tell her mother in a letter when she was in her 20s. Her mother chose to remain with Fremlin, even after discovering the abuse. For nearly five decades a conspiracy of silence has loomed over the family — casting a chill over the legacy of Canada's Nobel laureate — and raising questions about how society appears to view and protect its icons while uncomfortable truths and complicit silence lurks just beneath the surface. More than anything else, this is the story of a survivor and her courage to speak out so others might follow. A warning that his episode contains descriptions of child sexual abuse and might be triggering. Please take care while listening. Audio sources: CBC This episode was produced by Sean Pattenden and Saba Eitizaz
After months of pressure by MPs, corporate sponsors and its own members across the country, Hockey Canada announced on Tuesday that its CEO and entire board was stepping down. A parliamentary committee has been probing Hockey Canada's handling of 2018 sexual assault allegations since July. During that time, further allegations of group sexual assault have emerged, and Hockey Canada has confirmed a fund that draws from minor hockey memberships was used to settle claims. A new wave of financial and political pressure began last week, after then-interim board chair Andrea Skinner spoke to the committee. Her defence of the organization's leadership included giving CEO Scott Smith an “A” grade for his performance – drawing laughter from some MPs. Today on Front Burner, CBC senior reporter Ashley Burke joins us to explain why Hockey Canada resisted the push for new leadership for so long, and what still needs to be done before we see substantial change in hockey culture.
MLB – Major League Baseball Playoffs – Divisional Series – Best of Five Yesterday Philadelphia Phillies 7, Atlanta Braves 6 (PHI Leads 1-0) Houston Astros 8, Seattle Mariners 7 (HOU Leads 1-0) New York Yankees 4, Cleveland Guardians 1 (NYY Leads 1-0) Los Angeles Dodgers 5, San Diego Padres 3 (LAD Leads 1-0) Phillies 7, Braves 6 – Castellanos’ bat, glove help Phillies top Braves 7-6 in NLDS Nick Castellanos drove in three runs and made a potentially game-saving catch in the ninth inning, lifting the Philadelphia Phillies over the reigning World Series champion Atlanta Braves 7-6 in the opener of their NL Division Series. The Phillies have won three straight games to begin these playoffs, hardly looking like a team making its first postseason appearance since 2011. They followed up their wild-card sweep of the St. Louis Cardinals with a victory over the team that finished 14 games ahead of them in the NL East. It wasn’t easy. Matt Olson hit a three-run homer in the ninth off Zach Eflin to bring the Braves within a run. Astros 8, Mariners 7 – Alvarez hits 3-run HR vs Ray in 9th, Astros jolt M’s in ALDS Yordan Alvarez smashed a game-ending, three-run homer with two outs in the ninth inning off Robbie Ray, wrecking Seattle’s strategy of using a Cy Young Award winner in a rare relief role and vaulting the Houston Astros over the Mariners 8-7 in their playoff opener. Trailing all game after a poor start by Justin Verlander, the AL West champion Astros overtook rookie star Julio Rodríguez and the wild-card Mariners at the end to begin their best-of-five Division Series. Houston was down 7-5 when rookie pinch-hitter David Hensley was hit by a pitch from Seattle closer Paul Sewald and Jeremy Peña singled with two outs. Mariners manager Scott Servais then made the bold move to bring in Ray. Alvarez homered on Ray’s second pitch. Yankees 4, Guardians 1 – Cole cruises, Bader, Rizzo bash, Yanks beat Guardians 4-1 Gerrit Cole cruised for most of the night, Harrison Bader and Anthony Rizzo homered and the New York Yankees beat the Cleveland Guardians 4-1 in their AL Division Series opener. Not even another Josh Donaldson baserunning blunder could slow the Yankees, who have won six straight postseason games against Cleveland dating to a comeback from a two games to none deficit in the 2017 Division Series Dodgers 5, Padres 3 – Turner, Dodgers start fast, hold off Padres in NLDS opener Trea Turner homered and doubled as the Los Angeles Dodgers started fast and held off the San Diego Padres 5-3 in their NL Division Series opener. The Dodgers raced to an early 5-0 lead and appeared to be on their way to another blowout of the Padres. Los Angeles dominated in the regular season, owning a 14-5 advantage and outscoring San Diego 109-47. The 111-win Dodgers claimed the NL West and the Padres finished second, 22 games back. With Sandy Koufax watching from the owners’ box, 17-game winner Julio Urías retired the first eight batters. Chris Martin, who had two saves this season, pitched a perfect ninth. Struggling closer Craig Kimbrel was left off the Dodgers’ roster for this best-of-five matchup. Game 2 is Wednesday night in Los Angeles. Today Philadelphia (Wheeler 12-7) at Atlanta (Wright 21-5), 4:37 p.m. (PHI Leads 1-0) San Diego (Darvish 16-8) at Los Angeles (Kershaw 12-3), 8:37 p.m. (LAD Leads 1-0) NHL – National Hockey League – Regular Season Start Last Night New York Rangers 3, Tampa Bay Lightning 1 Vegas Golden Knights 4, Los Angeles Kings 3 Tonight Chicago Blackhawks at Colorado Avalanche, 9:30 p.m. NBA – National Basketball Association – Preseason Last Night Oklahoma City Thunder 115, Detroit Pistons 99 Chicago Bulls 127, Milwaukee Bucks 104 Tonight New York Knicks at Indiana Pacers, 7:00 p.m. NBA – Draymond Green fined but not suspended, set to rejoin team Draymond Green has been fined but won’t be suspended by the Golden State Warriors for a violent punch to the face of teammate Jordan Poole last week. Coach Steve Kerr said after a preseason win against Portland that Green would return to practice Thursday then play for the defending NBA champions against the Nuggets on Friday night and again in the season opener Tuesday against the Lakers. Kerr, general manager Bob Myers and players have met to decide how to best proceed, including Green and Poole talking to each other. NFL – Raiders’ Adams could be suspended for shove Las Vegas Raiders receiver Davante Adams could face a possible suspension or fine for shoving a photographer to the ground as he ran off the field following a loss at Kansas City. A person familiar with the process tells The Associated Press that the NFL is reviewing Adams’ actions. The person spoke on condition of anonymity because the league hadn’t made the review public. Detectives from the Kansas City Police Department’s assault unit are investigating the incident. NFL Network was the first to report that Adams could face discipline. NFL – NFL to discuss roughing calls, no change imminent A person with directly knowledge of the matter told The Associated Press that the NFL did not give officials a directive to emphasize roughing-the-passer penalties following Dolphins quarterback Tua Tagovailoa’s concussion, but the topic will be discussed next week when NFL owners meet in New York. The person spoke on condition of anonymity because the conversations are internal. The person said the league isn’t planning to make any rule changes amid outrage over two disputed calls in Week 5. Roughing-the-passer penalties are down 45% from this point last year. Through Week 5 in 2021, 51 were called. Only 28 have been called this season, according to league stats. NCAAFB – Penn St QB Clifford healthy, content ahead of Michigan game Penn State quarterback Sean Clifford is feeling good ahead of tenth-ranked Penn State’s game against No. 4 Michigan this weekend. The Nittany Lions are coming off of a bye week, and Clifford was able to relax and prepared. The Wolverines currently have the country’s fifth-best scoring defense and are fueled by their pass rush. Penn State coach James Franklin says the sixth-year quarterback has been building up to moments and opportunities like Saturday’s Big Ten East showdown. Hockey – Hockey Canada CEO Smith out, board of directors resigns Hockey Canada has ousted CEO Scott Smith. Its board of directors has also resigned over a series of scandals that have rocked the sport’s national federation to its core. Smith spent nearly three decades climbing the ladder at Hockey Canada and lasted just three months at the top. The organization is dealing with fallout related to how it handled sexual assault allegations and how the organization paid out settlements. Former board chair Michael Brind’Amour resigned in August and interim chair Andrea Skinner stepped down Saturday. Golf – PGA – Nicklaus worried big purses will minimize other tournaments Jack Nicklaus is curious to see how the rich, new PGA Tour schedule goes next year. Nicklaus has The Memorial. That’s one of the elevated events that will offer a $20 million purse. He also is involved as a charitable beneficiary at the Honda Classic. That is not one of the big-money events. Worst yet, it’s squeezed between two $20 million events — Riviera the week before, Bay Hill the week after. Nicklaus says he’s worried it will create a two-tier PGA Tour. He says he’s met with the PGA Tour to try to find a solution for the Honda. NASCAR – NASCAR fines Stewart-Haas Racing $200K for race manipulation NASCAR hit Stewart-Haas Racing with an additional $200,000 in fines after ruling Cole Custer and the No. 41 team manipulated the final lap of the playoff elimination race at Charlotte Motor Speedway. That brings SHR’s monetary fines to $300,000 over the last week. Kevin Harvick was penalized along with his crew chief when his Ford failed a post-Talladega inspection. Custer appeared to deliberately hold up a line of traffic as teammate Chase Briscoe stormed past in a desperate effort to avoid playoff elimination. Briscoe bumped reigning NASCAR champion Kyle Larson from the playoffs as the field was trimmed to eight drivers. USA Soccer – Spain blanks US; Americans hadn’t lost 2 straight since ’17 Spain has beaten the U.S. women’s national team 2-0. It was the first time since March 2017 that the U.S. lost two games in a row. Laia Codina had the first goal for Spain in the 39th minute. Esther González added a goal in the 72nd. Both teams are preparing for next summer’s World Cup, and the United States has won the last two World Cups. Both teams also have been rocked by scandals, with Spain missing some of their best players because of it. MCCAA – Junior College Athletics Last Night Women’s Volleyball Lake Michigan College 3, Glen Oaks Community College 2 Tonight Women’s Soccer Lake Michigan College at Muskegon Community College, 4:00 p.m. at Orchard View HS Men’s Soccer Lake Michigan College at Muskegon Community College, 4:00 p.m. at Muskegon Catholic Central HS MHSAA – High School Sports Last Night Volleyball Watervliet 3, Coloma 0 – Watervliet wins SAC-Lakeshore division championship Centreville 3, Hartford 0 Paw Paw 3, Comstock 1 Allegan 3, Fennville 0 Today Boys Soccer – Districts – 1st Round Division 2 at St. Joseph (first round at local sites) Lakeshore at Edwardsburg, 4:30 p.m. Sturgis at Niles, 5:00 p.m. Division 3 at South Haven (first round at local sites) Hopkins at Fennville, 6:00 p.m. Parchment at Delton-Kellogg, 6:00 p.m. Division 3 at Paw Paw (first round at local sites) Three Rivers at Berrien Springs, 6:00 p.m. Constantine at Watervliet, 7:00 p.m. Dowagiac at Buchanan, 5:00 p.m. Division 4 at Hartford (first round at local sites) Coloma at Holland Black River, 5:00 p.m. Lawton at Bloomingdale, 6:00 p.m. Division 4 at Kalamazoo Christian (first round at local sites) Battle Creek Academy at Bellevue, 6:00 p.m. Kalamazoo Heritage at Schoolcraft, 7:00 p.m. Volleyball Our Lady of the Lake at Michigan Lutheran, 6:00 p.m. Benton Harbor at New Buffalo, 6:30 p.m. Kalamazoo Central at St. Joseph, 6:30 p.m. Kalamazoo Loy Norrix at Lakeshore, 6:30 p.m. Battle Creek Lakeview at Mattawan, 6:30 p.m. Gull Lake at Portage Central, 6:30 p.m. Battle Creek Central at Portage Northern, 6:30 p.m.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
MLB – Major League Baseball Playoffs – Divisional Series – Best of Five Yesterday Philadelphia Phillies 7, Atlanta Braves 6 (PHI Leads 1-0) Houston Astros 8, Seattle Mariners 7 (HOU Leads 1-0) New York Yankees 4, Cleveland Guardians 1 (NYY Leads 1-0) Los Angeles Dodgers 5, San Diego Padres 3 (LAD Leads 1-0) Phillies 7, Braves 6 – Castellanos’ bat, glove help Phillies top Braves 7-6 in NLDS Nick Castellanos drove in three runs and made a potentially game-saving catch in the ninth inning, lifting the Philadelphia Phillies over the reigning World Series champion Atlanta Braves 7-6 in the opener of their NL Division Series. The Phillies have won three straight games to begin these playoffs, hardly looking like a team making its first postseason appearance since 2011. They followed up their wild-card sweep of the St. Louis Cardinals with a victory over the team that finished 14 games ahead of them in the NL East. It wasn’t easy. Matt Olson hit a three-run homer in the ninth off Zach Eflin to bring the Braves within a run. Astros 8, Mariners 7 – Alvarez hits 3-run HR vs Ray in 9th, Astros jolt M’s in ALDS Yordan Alvarez smashed a game-ending, three-run homer with two outs in the ninth inning off Robbie Ray, wrecking Seattle’s strategy of using a Cy Young Award winner in a rare relief role and vaulting the Houston Astros over the Mariners 8-7 in their playoff opener. Trailing all game after a poor start by Justin Verlander, the AL West champion Astros overtook rookie star Julio Rodríguez and the wild-card Mariners at the end to begin their best-of-five Division Series. Houston was down 7-5 when rookie pinch-hitter David Hensley was hit by a pitch from Seattle closer Paul Sewald and Jeremy Peña singled with two outs. Mariners manager Scott Servais then made the bold move to bring in Ray. Alvarez homered on Ray’s second pitch. Yankees 4, Guardians 1 – Cole cruises, Bader, Rizzo bash, Yanks beat Guardians 4-1 Gerrit Cole cruised for most of the night, Harrison Bader and Anthony Rizzo homered and the New York Yankees beat the Cleveland Guardians 4-1 in their AL Division Series opener. Not even another Josh Donaldson baserunning blunder could slow the Yankees, who have won six straight postseason games against Cleveland dating to a comeback from a two games to none deficit in the 2017 Division Series Dodgers 5, Padres 3 – Turner, Dodgers start fast, hold off Padres in NLDS opener Trea Turner homered and doubled as the Los Angeles Dodgers started fast and held off the San Diego Padres 5-3 in their NL Division Series opener. The Dodgers raced to an early 5-0 lead and appeared to be on their way to another blowout of the Padres. Los Angeles dominated in the regular season, owning a 14-5 advantage and outscoring San Diego 109-47. The 111-win Dodgers claimed the NL West and the Padres finished second, 22 games back. With Sandy Koufax watching from the owners’ box, 17-game winner Julio Urías retired the first eight batters. Chris Martin, who had two saves this season, pitched a perfect ninth. Struggling closer Craig Kimbrel was left off the Dodgers’ roster for this best-of-five matchup. Game 2 is Wednesday night in Los Angeles. Today Philadelphia (Wheeler 12-7) at Atlanta (Wright 21-5), 4:37 p.m. (PHI Leads 1-0) San Diego (Darvish 16-8) at Los Angeles (Kershaw 12-3), 8:37 p.m. (LAD Leads 1-0) NHL – National Hockey League – Regular Season Start Last Night New York Rangers 3, Tampa Bay Lightning 1 Vegas Golden Knights 4, Los Angeles Kings 3 Tonight Chicago Blackhawks at Colorado Avalanche, 9:30 p.m. NBA – National Basketball Association – Preseason Last Night Oklahoma City Thunder 115, Detroit Pistons 99 Chicago Bulls 127, Milwaukee Bucks 104 Tonight New York Knicks at Indiana Pacers, 7:00 p.m. NBA – Draymond Green fined but not suspended, set to rejoin team Draymond Green has been fined but won’t be suspended by the Golden State Warriors for a violent punch to the face of teammate Jordan Poole last week. Coach Steve Kerr said after a preseason win against Portland that Green would return to practice Thursday then play for the defending NBA champions against the Nuggets on Friday night and again in the season opener Tuesday against the Lakers. Kerr, general manager Bob Myers and players have met to decide how to best proceed, including Green and Poole talking to each other. NFL – Raiders’ Adams could be suspended for shove Las Vegas Raiders receiver Davante Adams could face a possible suspension or fine for shoving a photographer to the ground as he ran off the field following a loss at Kansas City. A person familiar with the process tells The Associated Press that the NFL is reviewing Adams’ actions. The person spoke on condition of anonymity because the league hadn’t made the review public. Detectives from the Kansas City Police Department’s assault unit are investigating the incident. NFL Network was the first to report that Adams could face discipline. NFL – NFL to discuss roughing calls, no change imminent A person with directly knowledge of the matter told The Associated Press that the NFL did not give officials a directive to emphasize roughing-the-passer penalties following Dolphins quarterback Tua Tagovailoa’s concussion, but the topic will be discussed next week when NFL owners meet in New York. The person spoke on condition of anonymity because the conversations are internal. The person said the league isn’t planning to make any rule changes amid outrage over two disputed calls in Week 5. Roughing-the-passer penalties are down 45% from this point last year. Through Week 5 in 2021, 51 were called. Only 28 have been called this season, according to league stats. NCAAFB – Penn St QB Clifford healthy, content ahead of Michigan game Penn State quarterback Sean Clifford is feeling good ahead of tenth-ranked Penn State’s game against No. 4 Michigan this weekend. The Nittany Lions are coming off of a bye week, and Clifford was able to relax and prepared. The Wolverines currently have the country’s fifth-best scoring defense and are fueled by their pass rush. Penn State coach James Franklin says the sixth-year quarterback has been building up to moments and opportunities like Saturday’s Big Ten East showdown. Hockey – Hockey Canada CEO Smith out, board of directors resigns Hockey Canada has ousted CEO Scott Smith. Its board of directors has also resigned over a series of scandals that have rocked the sport’s national federation to its core. Smith spent nearly three decades climbing the ladder at Hockey Canada and lasted just three months at the top. The organization is dealing with fallout related to how it handled sexual assault allegations and how the organization paid out settlements. Former board chair Michael Brind’Amour resigned in August and interim chair Andrea Skinner stepped down Saturday. Golf – PGA – Nicklaus worried big purses will minimize other tournaments Jack Nicklaus is curious to see how the rich, new PGA Tour schedule goes next year. Nicklaus has The Memorial. That’s one of the elevated events that will offer a $20 million purse. He also is involved as a charitable beneficiary at the Honda Classic. That is not one of the big-money events. Worst yet, it’s squeezed between two $20 million events — Riviera the week before, Bay Hill the week after. Nicklaus says he’s worried it will create a two-tier PGA Tour. He says he’s met with the PGA Tour to try to find a solution for the Honda. NASCAR – NASCAR fines Stewart-Haas Racing $200K for race manipulation NASCAR hit Stewart-Haas Racing with an additional $200,000 in fines after ruling Cole Custer and the No. 41 team manipulated the final lap of the playoff elimination race at Charlotte Motor Speedway. That brings SHR’s monetary fines to $300,000 over the last week. Kevin Harvick was penalized along with his crew chief when his Ford failed a post-Talladega inspection. Custer appeared to deliberately hold up a line of traffic as teammate Chase Briscoe stormed past in a desperate effort to avoid playoff elimination. Briscoe bumped reigning NASCAR champion Kyle Larson from the playoffs as the field was trimmed to eight drivers. USA Soccer – Spain blanks US; Americans hadn’t lost 2 straight since ’17 Spain has beaten the U.S. women’s national team 2-0. It was the first time since March 2017 that the U.S. lost two games in a row. Laia Codina had the first goal for Spain in the 39th minute. Esther González added a goal in the 72nd. Both teams are preparing for next summer’s World Cup, and the United States has won the last two World Cups. Both teams also have been rocked by scandals, with Spain missing some of their best players because of it. MCCAA – Junior College Athletics Last Night Women’s Volleyball Lake Michigan College 3, Glen Oaks Community College 2 Tonight Women’s Soccer Lake Michigan College at Muskegon Community College, 4:00 p.m. at Orchard View HS Men’s Soccer Lake Michigan College at Muskegon Community College, 4:00 p.m. at Muskegon Catholic Central HS MHSAA – High School Sports Last Night Volleyball Watervliet 3, Coloma 0 – Watervliet wins SAC-Lakeshore division championship Centreville 3, Hartford 0 Paw Paw 3, Comstock 1 Allegan 3, Fennville 0 Today Boys Soccer – Districts – 1st Round Division 2 at St. Joseph (first round at local sites) Lakeshore at Edwardsburg, 4:30 p.m. Sturgis at Niles, 5:00 p.m. Division 3 at South Haven (first round at local sites) Hopkins at Fennville, 6:00 p.m. Parchment at Delton-Kellogg, 6:00 p.m. Division 3 at Paw Paw (first round at local sites) Three Rivers at Berrien Springs, 6:00 p.m. Constantine at Watervliet, 7:00 p.m. Dowagiac at Buchanan, 5:00 p.m. Division 4 at Hartford (first round at local sites) Coloma at Holland Black River, 5:00 p.m. Lawton at Bloomingdale, 6:00 p.m. Division 4 at Kalamazoo Christian (first round at local sites) Battle Creek Academy at Bellevue, 6:00 p.m. Kalamazoo Heritage at Schoolcraft, 7:00 p.m. Volleyball Our Lady of the Lake at Michigan Lutheran, 6:00 p.m. Benton Harbor at New Buffalo, 6:30 p.m. Kalamazoo Central at St. Joseph, 6:30 p.m. Kalamazoo Loy Norrix at Lakeshore, 6:30 p.m. Battle Creek Lakeview at Mattawan, 6:30 p.m. Gull Lake at Portage Central, 6:30 p.m. Battle Creek Central at Portage Northern, 6:30 p.m.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
MLB – Major League Baseball Playoffs – Divisional Series – Best of Five Yesterday Philadelphia Phillies 7, Atlanta Braves 6 (PHI Leads 1-0) Houston Astros 8, Seattle Mariners 7 (HOU Leads 1-0) New York Yankees 4, Cleveland Guardians 1 (NYY Leads 1-0) Los Angeles Dodgers 5, San Diego Padres 3 (LAD Leads 1-0) Phillies 7, Braves 6 – Castellanos’ bat, glove help Phillies top Braves 7-6 in NLDS Nick Castellanos drove in three runs and made a potentially game-saving catch in the ninth inning, lifting the Philadelphia Phillies over the reigning World Series champion Atlanta Braves 7-6 in the opener of their NL Division Series. The Phillies have won three straight games to begin these playoffs, hardly looking like a team making its first postseason appearance since 2011. They followed up their wild-card sweep of the St. Louis Cardinals with a victory over the team that finished 14 games ahead of them in the NL East. It wasn’t easy. Matt Olson hit a three-run homer in the ninth off Zach Eflin to bring the Braves within a run. Astros 8, Mariners 7 – Alvarez hits 3-run HR vs Ray in 9th, Astros jolt M’s in ALDS Yordan Alvarez smashed a game-ending, three-run homer with two outs in the ninth inning off Robbie Ray, wrecking Seattle’s strategy of using a Cy Young Award winner in a rare relief role and vaulting the Houston Astros over the Mariners 8-7 in their playoff opener. Trailing all game after a poor start by Justin Verlander, the AL West champion Astros overtook rookie star Julio Rodríguez and the wild-card Mariners at the end to begin their best-of-five Division Series. Houston was down 7-5 when rookie pinch-hitter David Hensley was hit by a pitch from Seattle closer Paul Sewald and Jeremy Peña singled with two outs. Mariners manager Scott Servais then made the bold move to bring in Ray. Alvarez homered on Ray’s second pitch. Yankees 4, Guardians 1 – Cole cruises, Bader, Rizzo bash, Yanks beat Guardians 4-1 Gerrit Cole cruised for most of the night, Harrison Bader and Anthony Rizzo homered and the New York Yankees beat the Cleveland Guardians 4-1 in their AL Division Series opener. Not even another Josh Donaldson baserunning blunder could slow the Yankees, who have won six straight postseason games against Cleveland dating to a comeback from a two games to none deficit in the 2017 Division Series Dodgers 5, Padres 3 – Turner, Dodgers start fast, hold off Padres in NLDS opener Trea Turner homered and doubled as the Los Angeles Dodgers started fast and held off the San Diego Padres 5-3 in their NL Division Series opener. The Dodgers raced to an early 5-0 lead and appeared to be on their way to another blowout of the Padres. Los Angeles dominated in the regular season, owning a 14-5 advantage and outscoring San Diego 109-47. The 111-win Dodgers claimed the NL West and the Padres finished second, 22 games back. With Sandy Koufax watching from the owners’ box, 17-game winner Julio Urías retired the first eight batters. Chris Martin, who had two saves this season, pitched a perfect ninth. Struggling closer Craig Kimbrel was left off the Dodgers’ roster for this best-of-five matchup. Game 2 is Wednesday night in Los Angeles. Today Philadelphia (Wheeler 12-7) at Atlanta (Wright 21-5), 4:37 p.m. (PHI Leads 1-0) San Diego (Darvish 16-8) at Los Angeles (Kershaw 12-3), 8:37 p.m. (LAD Leads 1-0) NHL – National Hockey League – Regular Season Start Last Night New York Rangers 3, Tampa Bay Lightning 1 Vegas Golden Knights 4, Los Angeles Kings 3 Tonight Chicago Blackhawks at Colorado Avalanche, 9:30 p.m. NBA – National Basketball Association – Preseason Last Night Oklahoma City Thunder 115, Detroit Pistons 99 Chicago Bulls 127, Milwaukee Bucks 104 Tonight New York Knicks at Indiana Pacers, 7:00 p.m. NBA – Draymond Green fined but not suspended, set to rejoin team Draymond Green has been fined but won’t be suspended by the Golden State Warriors for a violent punch to the face of teammate Jordan Poole last week. Coach Steve Kerr said after a preseason win against Portland that Green would return to practice Thursday then play for the defending NBA champions against the Nuggets on Friday night and again in the season opener Tuesday against the Lakers. Kerr, general manager Bob Myers and players have met to decide how to best proceed, including Green and Poole talking to each other. NFL – Raiders’ Adams could be suspended for shove Las Vegas Raiders receiver Davante Adams could face a possible suspension or fine for shoving a photographer to the ground as he ran off the field following a loss at Kansas City. A person familiar with the process tells The Associated Press that the NFL is reviewing Adams’ actions. The person spoke on condition of anonymity because the league hadn’t made the review public. Detectives from the Kansas City Police Department’s assault unit are investigating the incident. NFL Network was the first to report that Adams could face discipline. NFL – NFL to discuss roughing calls, no change imminent A person with directly knowledge of the matter told The Associated Press that the NFL did not give officials a directive to emphasize roughing-the-passer penalties following Dolphins quarterback Tua Tagovailoa’s concussion, but the topic will be discussed next week when NFL owners meet in New York. The person spoke on condition of anonymity because the conversations are internal. The person said the league isn’t planning to make any rule changes amid outrage over two disputed calls in Week 5. Roughing-the-passer penalties are down 45% from this point last year. Through Week 5 in 2021, 51 were called. Only 28 have been called this season, according to league stats. NCAAFB – Penn St QB Clifford healthy, content ahead of Michigan game Penn State quarterback Sean Clifford is feeling good ahead of tenth-ranked Penn State’s game against No. 4 Michigan this weekend. The Nittany Lions are coming off of a bye week, and Clifford was able to relax and prepared. The Wolverines currently have the country’s fifth-best scoring defense and are fueled by their pass rush. Penn State coach James Franklin says the sixth-year quarterback has been building up to moments and opportunities like Saturday’s Big Ten East showdown. Hockey – Hockey Canada CEO Smith out, board of directors resigns Hockey Canada has ousted CEO Scott Smith. Its board of directors has also resigned over a series of scandals that have rocked the sport’s national federation to its core. Smith spent nearly three decades climbing the ladder at Hockey Canada and lasted just three months at the top. The organization is dealing with fallout related to how it handled sexual assault allegations and how the organization paid out settlements. Former board chair Michael Brind’Amour resigned in August and interim chair Andrea Skinner stepped down Saturday. Golf – PGA – Nicklaus worried big purses will minimize other tournaments Jack Nicklaus is curious to see how the rich, new PGA Tour schedule goes next year. Nicklaus has The Memorial. That’s one of the elevated events that will offer a $20 million purse. He also is involved as a charitable beneficiary at the Honda Classic. That is not one of the big-money events. Worst yet, it’s squeezed between two $20 million events — Riviera the week before, Bay Hill the week after. Nicklaus says he’s worried it will create a two-tier PGA Tour. He says he’s met with the PGA Tour to try to find a solution for the Honda. NASCAR – NASCAR fines Stewart-Haas Racing $200K for race manipulation NASCAR hit Stewart-Haas Racing with an additional $200,000 in fines after ruling Cole Custer and the No. 41 team manipulated the final lap of the playoff elimination race at Charlotte Motor Speedway. That brings SHR’s monetary fines to $300,000 over the last week. Kevin Harvick was penalized along with his crew chief when his Ford failed a post-Talladega inspection. Custer appeared to deliberately hold up a line of traffic as teammate Chase Briscoe stormed past in a desperate effort to avoid playoff elimination. Briscoe bumped reigning NASCAR champion Kyle Larson from the playoffs as the field was trimmed to eight drivers. USA Soccer – Spain blanks US; Americans hadn’t lost 2 straight since ’17 Spain has beaten the U.S. women’s national team 2-0. It was the first time since March 2017 that the U.S. lost two games in a row. Laia Codina had the first goal for Spain in the 39th minute. Esther González added a goal in the 72nd. Both teams are preparing for next summer’s World Cup, and the United States has won the last two World Cups. Both teams also have been rocked by scandals, with Spain missing some of their best players because of it. MCCAA – Junior College Athletics Last Night Women’s Volleyball Lake Michigan College 3, Glen Oaks Community College 2 Tonight Women’s Soccer Lake Michigan College at Muskegon Community College, 4:00 p.m. at Orchard View HS Men’s Soccer Lake Michigan College at Muskegon Community College, 4:00 p.m. at Muskegon Catholic Central HS MHSAA – High School Sports Last Night Volleyball Watervliet 3, Coloma 0 – Watervliet wins SAC-Lakeshore division championship Centreville 3, Hartford 0 Paw Paw 3, Comstock 1 Allegan 3, Fennville 0 Today Boys Soccer – Districts – 1st Round Division 2 at St. Joseph (first round at local sites) Lakeshore at Edwardsburg, 4:30 p.m. Sturgis at Niles, 5:00 p.m. Division 3 at South Haven (first round at local sites) Hopkins at Fennville, 6:00 p.m. Parchment at Delton-Kellogg, 6:00 p.m. Division 3 at Paw Paw (first round at local sites) Three Rivers at Berrien Springs, 6:00 p.m. Constantine at Watervliet, 7:00 p.m. Dowagiac at Buchanan, 5:00 p.m. Division 4 at Hartford (first round at local sites) Coloma at Holland Black River, 5:00 p.m. Lawton at Bloomingdale, 6:00 p.m. Division 4 at Kalamazoo Christian (first round at local sites) Battle Creek Academy at Bellevue, 6:00 p.m. Kalamazoo Heritage at Schoolcraft, 7:00 p.m. Volleyball Our Lady of the Lake at Michigan Lutheran, 6:00 p.m. Benton Harbor at New Buffalo, 6:30 p.m. Kalamazoo Central at St. Joseph, 6:30 p.m. Kalamazoo Loy Norrix at Lakeshore, 6:30 p.m. Battle Creek Lakeview at Mattawan, 6:30 p.m. Gull Lake at Portage Central, 6:30 p.m. Battle Creek Central at Portage Northern, 6:30 p.m.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
MLB – Major League Baseball Playoffs – Divisional Series – Best of Five Yesterday Philadelphia Phillies 7, Atlanta Braves 6 (PHI Leads 1-0) Houston Astros 8, Seattle Mariners 7 (HOU Leads 1-0) New York Yankees 4, Cleveland Guardians 1 (NYY Leads 1-0) Los Angeles Dodgers 5, San Diego Padres 3 (LAD Leads 1-0) Phillies 7, Braves 6 – Castellanos’ bat, glove help Phillies top Braves 7-6 in NLDS Nick Castellanos drove in three runs and made a potentially game-saving catch in the ninth inning, lifting the Philadelphia Phillies over the reigning World Series champion Atlanta Braves 7-6 in the opener of their NL Division Series. The Phillies have won three straight games to begin these playoffs, hardly looking like a team making its first postseason appearance since 2011. They followed up their wild-card sweep of the St. Louis Cardinals with a victory over the team that finished 14 games ahead of them in the NL East. It wasn’t easy. Matt Olson hit a three-run homer in the ninth off Zach Eflin to bring the Braves within a run. Astros 8, Mariners 7 – Alvarez hits 3-run HR vs Ray in 9th, Astros jolt M’s in ALDS Yordan Alvarez smashed a game-ending, three-run homer with two outs in the ninth inning off Robbie Ray, wrecking Seattle’s strategy of using a Cy Young Award winner in a rare relief role and vaulting the Houston Astros over the Mariners 8-7 in their playoff opener. Trailing all game after a poor start by Justin Verlander, the AL West champion Astros overtook rookie star Julio Rodríguez and the wild-card Mariners at the end to begin their best-of-five Division Series. Houston was down 7-5 when rookie pinch-hitter David Hensley was hit by a pitch from Seattle closer Paul Sewald and Jeremy Peña singled with two outs. Mariners manager Scott Servais then made the bold move to bring in Ray. Alvarez homered on Ray’s second pitch. Yankees 4, Guardians 1 – Cole cruises, Bader, Rizzo bash, Yanks beat Guardians 4-1 Gerrit Cole cruised for most of the night, Harrison Bader and Anthony Rizzo homered and the New York Yankees beat the Cleveland Guardians 4-1 in their AL Division Series opener. Not even another Josh Donaldson baserunning blunder could slow the Yankees, who have won six straight postseason games against Cleveland dating to a comeback from a two games to none deficit in the 2017 Division Series Dodgers 5, Padres 3 – Turner, Dodgers start fast, hold off Padres in NLDS opener Trea Turner homered and doubled as the Los Angeles Dodgers started fast and held off the San Diego Padres 5-3 in their NL Division Series opener. The Dodgers raced to an early 5-0 lead and appeared to be on their way to another blowout of the Padres. Los Angeles dominated in the regular season, owning a 14-5 advantage and outscoring San Diego 109-47. The 111-win Dodgers claimed the NL West and the Padres finished second, 22 games back. With Sandy Koufax watching from the owners’ box, 17-game winner Julio Urías retired the first eight batters. Chris Martin, who had two saves this season, pitched a perfect ninth. Struggling closer Craig Kimbrel was left off the Dodgers’ roster for this best-of-five matchup. Game 2 is Wednesday night in Los Angeles. Today Philadelphia (Wheeler 12-7) at Atlanta (Wright 21-5), 4:37 p.m. (PHI Leads 1-0) San Diego (Darvish 16-8) at Los Angeles (Kershaw 12-3), 8:37 p.m. (LAD Leads 1-0) NHL – National Hockey League – Regular Season Start Last Night New York Rangers 3, Tampa Bay Lightning 1 Vegas Golden Knights 4, Los Angeles Kings 3 Tonight Chicago Blackhawks at Colorado Avalanche, 9:30 p.m. NBA – National Basketball Association – Preseason Last Night Oklahoma City Thunder 115, Detroit Pistons 99 Chicago Bulls 127, Milwaukee Bucks 104 Tonight New York Knicks at Indiana Pacers, 7:00 p.m. NBA – Draymond Green fined but not suspended, set to rejoin team Draymond Green has been fined but won’t be suspended by the Golden State Warriors for a violent punch to the face of teammate Jordan Poole last week. Coach Steve Kerr said after a preseason win against Portland that Green would return to practice Thursday then play for the defending NBA champions against the Nuggets on Friday night and again in the season opener Tuesday against the Lakers. Kerr, general manager Bob Myers and players have met to decide how to best proceed, including Green and Poole talking to each other. NFL – Raiders’ Adams could be suspended for shove Las Vegas Raiders receiver Davante Adams could face a possible suspension or fine for shoving a photographer to the ground as he ran off the field following a loss at Kansas City. A person familiar with the process tells The Associated Press that the NFL is reviewing Adams’ actions. The person spoke on condition of anonymity because the league hadn’t made the review public. Detectives from the Kansas City Police Department’s assault unit are investigating the incident. NFL Network was the first to report that Adams could face discipline. NFL – NFL to discuss roughing calls, no change imminent A person with directly knowledge of the matter told The Associated Press that the NFL did not give officials a directive to emphasize roughing-the-passer penalties following Dolphins quarterback Tua Tagovailoa’s concussion, but the topic will be discussed next week when NFL owners meet in New York. The person spoke on condition of anonymity because the conversations are internal. The person said the league isn’t planning to make any rule changes amid outrage over two disputed calls in Week 5. Roughing-the-passer penalties are down 45% from this point last year. Through Week 5 in 2021, 51 were called. Only 28 have been called this season, according to league stats. NCAAFB – Penn St QB Clifford healthy, content ahead of Michigan game Penn State quarterback Sean Clifford is feeling good ahead of tenth-ranked Penn State’s game against No. 4 Michigan this weekend. The Nittany Lions are coming off of a bye week, and Clifford was able to relax and prepared. The Wolverines currently have the country’s fifth-best scoring defense and are fueled by their pass rush. Penn State coach James Franklin says the sixth-year quarterback has been building up to moments and opportunities like Saturday’s Big Ten East showdown. Hockey – Hockey Canada CEO Smith out, board of directors resigns Hockey Canada has ousted CEO Scott Smith. Its board of directors has also resigned over a series of scandals that have rocked the sport’s national federation to its core. Smith spent nearly three decades climbing the ladder at Hockey Canada and lasted just three months at the top. The organization is dealing with fallout related to how it handled sexual assault allegations and how the organization paid out settlements. Former board chair Michael Brind’Amour resigned in August and interim chair Andrea Skinner stepped down Saturday. Golf – PGA – Nicklaus worried big purses will minimize other tournaments Jack Nicklaus is curious to see how the rich, new PGA Tour schedule goes next year. Nicklaus has The Memorial. That’s one of the elevated events that will offer a $20 million purse. He also is involved as a charitable beneficiary at the Honda Classic. That is not one of the big-money events. Worst yet, it’s squeezed between two $20 million events — Riviera the week before, Bay Hill the week after. Nicklaus says he’s worried it will create a two-tier PGA Tour. He says he’s met with the PGA Tour to try to find a solution for the Honda. NASCAR – NASCAR fines Stewart-Haas Racing $200K for race manipulation NASCAR hit Stewart-Haas Racing with an additional $200,000 in fines after ruling Cole Custer and the No. 41 team manipulated the final lap of the playoff elimination race at Charlotte Motor Speedway. That brings SHR’s monetary fines to $300,000 over the last week. Kevin Harvick was penalized along with his crew chief when his Ford failed a post-Talladega inspection. Custer appeared to deliberately hold up a line of traffic as teammate Chase Briscoe stormed past in a desperate effort to avoid playoff elimination. Briscoe bumped reigning NASCAR champion Kyle Larson from the playoffs as the field was trimmed to eight drivers. USA Soccer – Spain blanks US; Americans hadn’t lost 2 straight since ’17 Spain has beaten the U.S. women’s national team 2-0. It was the first time since March 2017 that the U.S. lost two games in a row. Laia Codina had the first goal for Spain in the 39th minute. Esther González added a goal in the 72nd. Both teams are preparing for next summer’s World Cup, and the United States has won the last two World Cups. Both teams also have been rocked by scandals, with Spain missing some of their best players because of it. MCCAA – Junior College Athletics Last Night Women’s Volleyball Lake Michigan College 3, Glen Oaks Community College 2 Tonight Women’s Soccer Lake Michigan College at Muskegon Community College, 4:00 p.m. at Orchard View HS Men’s Soccer Lake Michigan College at Muskegon Community College, 4:00 p.m. at Muskegon Catholic Central HS MHSAA – High School Sports Last Night Volleyball Watervliet 3, Coloma 0 – Watervliet wins SAC-Lakeshore division championship Centreville 3, Hartford 0 Paw Paw 3, Comstock 1 Allegan 3, Fennville 0 Today Boys Soccer – Districts – 1st Round Division 2 at St. Joseph (first round at local sites) Lakeshore at Edwardsburg, 4:30 p.m. Sturgis at Niles, 5:00 p.m. Division 3 at South Haven (first round at local sites) Hopkins at Fennville, 6:00 p.m. Parchment at Delton-Kellogg, 6:00 p.m. Division 3 at Paw Paw (first round at local sites) Three Rivers at Berrien Springs, 6:00 p.m. Constantine at Watervliet, 7:00 p.m. Dowagiac at Buchanan, 5:00 p.m. Division 4 at Hartford (first round at local sites) Coloma at Holland Black River, 5:00 p.m. Lawton at Bloomingdale, 6:00 p.m. Division 4 at Kalamazoo Christian (first round at local sites) Battle Creek Academy at Bellevue, 6:00 p.m. Kalamazoo Heritage at Schoolcraft, 7:00 p.m. Volleyball Our Lady of the Lake at Michigan Lutheran, 6:00 p.m. Benton Harbor at New Buffalo, 6:30 p.m. Kalamazoo Central at St. Joseph, 6:30 p.m. Kalamazoo Loy Norrix at Lakeshore, 6:30 p.m. Battle Creek Lakeview at Mattawan, 6:30 p.m. Gull Lake at Portage Central, 6:30 p.m. Battle Creek Central at Portage Northern, 6:30 p.m.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
On this episode of the Chris Johnston Show, it's the Gretzky episode (00:00), the NHL Global Series (4:00), the Blue Jays collapse (5:00), Andrea Skinner and Hockey Canada (9:00), Steve Simmons (14:00), NHL Season predictions (20:00), Connor McDavid and the Oilers (28:00) and your questions on AskCJ (34:00). Originally aired: October 11, 2022 Watch the full episode here: https://youtu.be/j-2cLRRpsoA Visit https://sdpn.ca for merch and more. Individuals must be 19 years of age or older to open a Sports Interaction account. Terms and Conditions apply. Any opinion expressed is not advice, a promise or suggestion that increases the chance of winning. Gambling can be addictive, please play responsibly. To learn more, visit: https://help.sportsinteraction.com/hc.... Or if you have concerns about a gambling problem, call ConnexOntario 1-866-531-2600. Sports Interaction is subject to successful AGCO registration and execution of an Operating Agreement with iGaming Ontario. The Eligible iGames conducted and managed by iGO are only available to those physically present in the Province of Ontario. Visit this episode's sponsors: Sports Interaction: https://sportsinteraction.com/sdpn Athletic Greens: https://athleticgreens.com/johnston We've joined The Athletic and you can too! Hit the link to subscribe: https://theathletic.com/hockeypod Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Volte-face à Hockey Canada : le président de Hockey Canada et tous les membres du conseil d’administration donnent leur démission. Scott Smith, qui s’accrochait à son poste de PDG depuis plusieurs semaines a finalement décidé de démissionner, sous la pression massive des commanditaires et partenaires de l’organisme. Après le départ de la présidente du conseil d’administration Andrea Skinner ce week-end, voilà que ce matin, tous les autres membres du conseil ont aussi décidé de quitter leurs fonctions. À l'occasion de ce nouvel épisode, on pose aussi un regard sur la formation des Canadiens de Montréal en lever de rideau de la saison et on se demande aussi quel sera l'avenir de Jonathan Drouin avec le Tricolore. On aborde le tout dans le septième épisode de la quatrième saison avec Jérémie Rainville, Alexandre Pratt, Richard Labbé et Stéphane Waite. Le sommaire : 0:50 | Enfin Hockey Canada a compris le message! 9:20 | Regard sur la formation 2022-23 du CH, quel sera l'ADN de l'équipe? 15:10 | Jonathan Drouin: Martin St-Louis veut aller chercher son plein potentiel. À 27 ans et 8 saisons plus tard, est-ce possible? 23:20 | Boule de cristal: est-ce que Slafkovsky passera la saison à Montréal? Et si oui, combien de points obtiendra-t-il? 27:45 | Boule de cristal: quel sera le sujet de conversation en février? La mauvaise tenue des gardiens et des défenseurs? Le manque d’attaque chez le CH? Ou la surprise de voir le CH à 4 points des séries? 37:48 | Qui remportera le derby Connor Bedard: Arizona, Chicago, Montréal ? 42:35 | Quel entraîneur aura le plus d’impact sur sa nouvelle équipe ?Voir https://www.cogecomedia.com/vie-privee/fr/ pour notre politique de vie privée
L'essentiel des nouvelles économiques, financières et technologiques aujourd'hui[texte complet ou presque, ni révisé ni corrigé à des fins de publication] Des pirates se sont attaqués aux sites web de plusieurs aéroports américains, dont ceux de New York, Chicago et Los Angeles. Leurs sites ont dû être mis brièvement hors service hier. Ils ont été victimes du groupe de pirates prorusses «Killnet», qui avait invité ses partisans à provoquer une attaque par déni de service – une attaque qui consiste à perturber un système informatique en le submergeant de messages ou de requêtes. La présidente par intérim du conseil d'administration de Hockey Canada, Andrea Skinner a démissionné samedi. Son départ survient après que plusieurs commanditaires majeurs ont interrompu ou suspendu leur collaboration avec Hockey Canada, dont le dernier en date, Nike, vendredi dernier. À compter du 15 novembre et jusqu'à la fin de l'an prochain, les étudiants postsecondaires étrangers seront autorisés à travailler plus longtemps hors de leur campus que la limite maximale de 20 h par semaine qui leur était imposée jusqu'à présent. Cette mesure pourrait contribuer un peu à réduire la pénurie de main-d'œuvre qui affecte l'économie canadienne.L'inflation du prix des aliments devrait bientôt commencer à ralentir parce que les récoltes ont été «raisonnablement bonnes» au Canada et dans plusieurs autres pays. C'est ce qu'a dit le gouverneur de la Banque du Canada Tiff Macklem dans une entrevue à CBC. Onoma. C'est le nouveau nom d'un studio de création de jeux vidéo connu jusqu'ici sous le nom de Square Enix Montréal. Fondé il y a 11 ans, ce studio s'était notamment fait connaître pour ses jeux Lara Croft Go et Hitman Sniper. Il a été acheté ce printemps par un groupe suédois, Embracer, qui a donc décidé de le rebaptiser “Onoma”.Binance, le plus important service en ligne d'échange de cryptomonnaies, s'est fait dérober l'équivalent de 100 millions $US par des pirates informatiques. Ils ont mis la main sur un total de 2 millions de jetons de BNB, une cryptomonnaie émise par Binance, soit l'équivalent de 570 millions $US. Le transfert de la majeure partie de cette somme a pu être bloqué par Binance, mais les pirates auraient quand même réussi à voler 100 millions $US. Comme chaque début de semaine, habituellement le lundi quand ce n'est pas un jour férié, InfoBref vous fait découvrir une jeune entreprise québécoise innovanteAujourd'hui, Truxweb, une startup de Montréal qui aide les expéditeurs de marchandises à trouver des transporteurs.Le service en ligne apparie les besoins des expéditeurs aux options qu'offrent les transporteurs, et permet ensuite aux expéditeurs d'acheter directement le service d'expédition du transporteur qui les intéresse.Pour en savoir plus sur Truxweb: https://infobref.com/jeqi-truxweb-2022-10/ ---Pour plus de détails sur ces nouvelles et pour d'autres nouvelles: https://infobref.comPour vous abonner aux infolettres gratuites d'InfoBref: https://infobref.com/infolettresPour voir en vidéo notre épisode hebdomadaire «à retenir cette semaine»: https://bit.ly/infobref-youtubePour des commentaires et suggestions, ou pour commanditer InfoBref Affaires: editeur@infobref.com Hébergé par Acast. Visitez acast.com/privacy pour plus d'informations.
Trigger Warning: Sexual Assault Background Resources: Hockey Canada Mission & Mandate https://www.hockeycanada.ca/en-ca/corporate/about/mandate-mission Wikipedia "Hockey Canada Sexual Assault Scandal": https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hockey_Canada_sexual_assault_scandal Globe & Mail "Hockey Canada used player fees to build a second fund for sexual assault claims": https://www.theglobeandmail.com/canada/article-hockey-canada-created-a-fund-for-sexual-assault-claims-documents/ Globe & Mail "Hockey Canada's interim chair Andrea Skinner resigns": https://www.theglobeandmail.com/canada/article-hockey-canada-andrea-skinner-resigns/ SCRIPT: OK so this episode isn't going to have vibe, the audio quality, or the polish that you're used to by now. It's Thanksgiving Sunday in 2022 here in Canada and I've got covid, feeling pretty sh**ty and am isolated from family and, y'know, not my usual accommodating open-minded self. Any of my fellow Canadians will be intimately familiar with what's going on with Hockey Canada right now. If you're listening and you don't know, go to the “Hockey Canada sexual assault scandal” Wikipedia page. It's even worse than it sounds. This is a podcast about corporate governance, so let's acknowledge the vile, unforgivable behaviour of the players involved, and the immeasurable harm and trauma they've caused for their victims, but then let's bring it back to the boardroom. And honestly, the only conceivable reaction is “what the f*ck???” Bad enough that your organization is sufficiently aware of the sexual assault perpetrated by your members that you secretly created at least one, and possibly two funds using public and membership money to settle sexual misconduct cases – 21 of them over the past 33 years. Let me read you Hockey Canada's mission statement: “To Lead, Develop and Promote Positive Hockey Experiences.” Seriously, go look at the mission and mandate page on their website filled with words like “fair,” and “respect,” and “hockey opportunities for all people regardless of age, gender, colour, race, ethnic origin, religion, sexual orientation, or socio-economic status.” Not one statement from the board or management has acknowledged that THEY, as leaders of this organization, deliberately created an environment that enables, covers up, and perpetuates sexual violence. If you don't agree… Well, take 2 minutes to write down other paths Hockey Canada could have taken than setting aside stakeholder money to pay to conceal these crimes. See what you just did in 2 minutes. Hockey Canada failed to do that in 33 years. They can f*ck right off.
Negzzia, ressortissante iranienne, parle de la crise sociale en Iran; Sébastien Lemire, député fédéral d'Abitibi-Témiscamingue, réagit au départ de la présidente par intérim du conseil d'administration de Hockey Canada, Andrea Skinner; et Romain Del Bello, journaliste indépendant à Los Angeles, s'intéresse au début du deuxième procès d'Harvey Weinstein.
Late yesterday Andrea Skinner, interim board chair of Hockey Canada resigned her position. Ms. Skinner has been widely criticized for statements she made to the parliamentary heritage committee in which she "100%" supported the HC management team which is hearing public demands to resign or be fired in the wake of the $8.9 million Hockey Canada says it approved in 21 out-of-court sexual assault allegation settlements since 1989. Guests: Anthony Housefather. Liberal member of parliament and member of the parliamentary ethics committee which had questioned Andrea Skinner earlier in the week. Allison Forsyth. Former Canadian Olympic skier, board member at AthletesCan (representing Canadian national teams athletes). Partner/COO at ITP Sport. Safe sport consulting and programming agency. Allison Forsyth was sexually assaulted by former national ski team coach Bertrand Charest, eventually sentenced to 12 years in prison for sexual assaults on numerous skiers, but had his sentece reduced because he was judged "low risk" by reoffend by the Parole Board of Canada. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Today's podcast: Alberta premier-designate Danielle Smith to be sworn in Tuesday and announced yesterday she will run in a byelection in Brooks-Medicine Hat. At the same time, the premier-designate will not support a byelection in the riding of Calgary-Elbow vacated by the resignation from the legislature of former cabinet minister Doug Schweitzer. - Also the priorities for Alberta which the new premier will introduce in the seven months prior to the next scheduled provincial election date of May 29, 2023. Guest: Danielle Smith. Premier-designate, Alberta. Late yesterday Andrea Skinner, interim board chair of Hockey Canada resigned her position. Ms. Skinner has been widely criticized for statements she made to the parliamentary heritage committee in which she "100%" supported the HC management team which is hearing public demands to resign or be fired in the wake of the $8.9 million Hockey Canada says it approved in 21 out-of-court sexual assault allegation settlements since 1989. Guests: Anthony Housefather. Liberal member of parliament and member of the parliamentary ethics committee which had questioned Andrea Skinner earlier in the week. Allison Forsyth. Former Canadian Olympic skier, board member at AthletesCan (representing Canadian national teams athletes). Partner/COO at ITP Sport. Safe sport consulting and programming agency. Allison Forsyth was sexually assaulted by former national ski team coach Bertrand Charest, eventually sentenced to 12 years in prison for sexual assaults on numerous skiers, but had his sentece reduced because he was judged "low risk" by reoffend by the Parole Board of Canada. As the world faces an energy cruch and Europe an energy crisis, we look at what ultimately happened to multi-billlion-dollar energy projects which were set to be built and put into operation in Canada, delivering significant revenue to our national treasury and providing our allies with the energy they and the world still require. What happened to projects like Teck's Frontier mine, Northern Gateway and the Energy East pipelines? There was the Pacific Northwest LNG pipeline and British Columbia export terminal, as well as the Prince Rupert LNG project. Is it possible in today's Canadian regulatory environment to satisfy the process to build an oil or natural gas project from the start and how many years will securing permits take? Is investment money for Canada dried up because investors don't believe Canada is willing to bring its vast resources to the international marketplace? Guest: Professor Ken Coates. Canada Research Chair in Regional Innovation. Johnson Shoyama School of Public Policy, University of Saskatchewan. Personal and professional interests, aboriginal rights, northern development, science, technology and society. Books include Arctic Front: Defending Canada in the Far North and What to Consider if You're Considering University. Last weekend and this weekend, as well as in the weeks to come WrongfulConvictionDay.com will be acknowledged and spoken about in Canada and in the United States. Canadians who had nothing to do with the vicious crimes, including murder, for which they were convicted and often spent many years imprisoned. It can happen to anyone. Guests: Ronald Dalton, President Innocence Canada. Ron Dalton was wrongfully convicted of killing his wife. He spent years in prison before his innocence was proven. James Lockyer. Assistant Professor of Law at McGill University and the University of Windsor. Criminal lawyer for 45 years and a founding director of Innocence Canada. James Lockyer has been involved in high profile cases in which he demonstrated the convicted person was in fact innocent of the crime. --------------------------------------------- Host/Content Producer – Roy Green Technical/Podcast Producer – Tom McKay Podcast Co-Producer – Matt Taylor If you enjoyed the podcast, tell a friend! For more of the Roy Green Show, subscribe to the podcast! https://globalnews.ca/roygreen/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Hockey Canada wobbles badly at parliamentary committee hearing. Testimony by board chair Andrea Skinner, defending HC management does not go over well. Tim Hortons, Bank of Nova Scotia and Telus have withdrawn their HC sponsorships, Hockey Quebec is withholding player registrations fees from Hockey Canada and the Ontario Hockey Federation is poised to do the same. Guest: Anthony Housefather. Liberal MP, Montreal. Member parliamentary committee investigating Hockey Canada. Described Skinner's support of Hockey Canada management team as "Trump like." Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Today's podcast: Hockey Canada wobbles badly at parliamentary committee hearing. Testimony by board chair Andrea Skinner, defending HC management does not go over well. Tim Hortons, Bank of Nova Scotia and Telus have withdrawn their HC sponsorships, Hockey Quebec is withholding player registrations fees from Hockey Canada and the Ontario Hockey Federation is poised to do the same. Guest: Anthony Housefather. Liberal MP, Montreal. Member parliamentary committee investigating Hockey Canada. Described Skinner's support of Hockey Canada management team as "Trump like." Remember what the Hockey Canada scandal began with? A secret fund to pay settlements to victims of sexual abuse by players on national teams. Some $8.9 million had been paid already and in recent days the news became more concerning. Guest: Allison Forsyth. Former Olympic skier (2002), Board member at AthletesCAN (Cdn national teams athletes). Partner/COO at ITP Sport. Safe sport consulting and programming agency. She was sexually assaulted by former national ski team coach Bertrand Charest, who was eventually sentenced to 12 years in prison for sexual assaults on numerous skiers, but had his sentence reduced because he was judge "low risk" to reoffend. Health Canada approves the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 booster vaccine that targets the BA.4 snd BA.5 strains of the Omicron Covid variant. This is for those 12 years of age and older. Guest: Dr. Isaac Bogoch. Infectious diseases specialist, Toronto General Hospital and associate professor of medicine, University of Toronto. Danielle Smith wins UCP leadership race and is Alberta premier-designate. Guest: Professor Duane Bratt. Political science, Mount Royal University, Calgary. Author Blue Storm: The Rise and Fall of Jason Kenney. --------------------------------------------- Host/Content Producer – Roy Green Technical/Podcast Producer – Tom McKay Podcast Co-Producer – Matt Taylor If you enjoyed the podcast, tell a friend! For more of the Roy Green Show, subscribe to the podcast! https://globalnews.ca/roygreen/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
We got ourselves a hum dinger today!! Pierre Poilievre was caught red handed using Hashtags in his videos directed at Alt-Right Anti-Female groups with #MGTOW. We'll explain it BUT basically it's a direct connection and hat tip to male supremacists and Incels around the world (Jordan Peterson's Crew). Remember, when we told you Pierre was using digital douchebaggery to dog whistle to a bunch of angry white men who hate women and pine for the protection of their white privilege. Yeah. So that;'s all true. Hockey Canada is FUCKED. Every major sponsor and every province has pulled their funding after one of the worst televised perfomances you'll ever see. Interim director Andrea Skinner at the direction of crisis PR firm Navigator BOOT FUCKED themselves. The board and management, who actively covered up rape and sex assaults by players and members for 40 years, said they wouldn't step down. Now they have lost the support of every sponsor and province across the country putting dozens of equitable hockey programs at risk. Why? They don't want to admit what everyone already knows: Hockey Canada secretly took kids registration fees to help foster a rape culture for players for decades. What amazes me about both of these stories? The intended victims are women, and no one seems to care. Dean bought a new light switch and wants to know if it's sacrilegious and we're making a play for more bathroom selfie VIDEOS - not pictures because farts will always be funny.
RockinThatIDLife.com - For 10% OFF, Email Dustin at rockinthatidlife@gmail.com & tell him "Lets Go Blues sent me!" CenterIceBrewery.com - St. Louis brewed hockey-themed beer! Join our Discord Server! www.LetsGoBlues.com/discord Follow us on the socials! @lgbradio Show topics: Perunovich to be out 6 months?! Damn. Ho Hum... Blues beat the Wild yet again. STL vs CHI game time change Hockey Canada is a disgrace N, S, E, W... Why isn't there a "mideast" in the US? AND MORE!
Greg looked at the "testimony" given by the chair of Hockey Canada's board of directors, Andrea Skinner and why it felt like a bit of a threat if the whole Board of Directors get removed.
Greg looked at the "testimony" given by the chair of Hockey Canada's board of directors, Andrea Skinner and why it felt like a bit of a threat if the whole Board of Directors get removed.
Bulletin de nouvelles avec Alexandre Moranville-Ouellet : l'actualité présentée par Alexandre Moranville-Ouellet.Pour de l'information concernant l'utilisation de vos données personnelles - https://omnystudio.com/policies/listener/fr
Chronique sportive avec Jean-François Baril : le tricolore à procédé à sept coupures. On parle de l'alignement de ce soir pour la partie. Un contrat pour Owen Beck! Victor Wanyama quittera le CF dès la prochaine saison. Andrea Skinner ne croit pas que dés démissions aideraient Hockey Canada. 8 ans avec les Islanders pour Barzal.Pour de l'information concernant l'utilisation de vos données personnelles - https://omnystudio.com/policies/listener/fr
Segment LCN : Isabelle Melançon concède la victoire à Québec solidaire. Manchettes, nouvelles du jour et commentaires entre Mario Dumont et Alexandre Moranville : l'actualité présentée par Alexandre Moranville. Entrevue avec Paul-René Roy, président provincial de l'Association québécoise des retraité(e)s des secteurs public et parapublic (AQRP) : hier, l'AQRP a publié un communiqué disant qu'ils sont inquiets de ne pas être une priorité pour Legault. Selon eux, peu de partis ont suscité un engagement pour les aînés durant la campagne électorale. Chronique économique avec l'économiste Francis Gosselin : le PDG de Loop Industries - une entreprise de Terrebonne - visé par une enquête de la SEC pour manipulation, conduite trompeuse et fausses déclarations. L'évitement fiscal des grandes entreprises fait perdre 30 milliards au gouvernement — en ce lendemain d'élections, un sujet à creuser pour M. Legault? Dans l'affaire Twitter-Musk, une entente au sommet exigée par la juge pourrait débloquer l'affaire dès aujourd'hui. La rencontre Maréchal-Dumont avec Isabelle Maréchal : réforme de scrutin et résultats électoraux. Entrevue avec Ian Lafrenière, député réélu de Vachon et ministre sortant des Affaires autochtones : Ian Lafrenière est réélu avec plus de 10 000 voix d'avance, loin devant son plus proche rival Yves Mbatang. Le candidat libéral a obtenu 16,12% des votes, au coude à coude avec le candidat solidaire Jean-Philippe Samson (15,02%). Tout savoir en 24 minutes avec Alexandre Moranville : la CAQ balaye les élections et forme un gouvernement majoritaire. Retour sur la victoire rapide et définitive de la CAQ. Questionnements sur la réforme du mode de scrutin. Le PLQ reconnaît sa défaite dans Verdun et Fabre. Seuls 38 libéraux obtiendront un remboursement. Nombre record de femmes élues. Un candidat de QS visé par des insultes racistes. Hockey Canada s'accroche et dément. L'école Magdeleine de Laprairie est de nouveau évacuée, une deuxième fois en deux semaines. Elon Musk va-t-il finalement acheter Twitter? Plus de 30 milliards d'impôts évités par des entreprises au Canada, en 2021. Un candidat pro-Trump dans la controverse. L'Arabie Saoudite désignée pour accueillir les Jeux asiatiques d'hiver!La rencontre Latraverse-Dumont avec Emmanuelle Latraverse : faut-il vraiment une réforme du mode de scrutin? Chronique sportive avec Jean-François Baril : le tricolore à procédé à sept coupures. On parle de l'alignement de ce soir pour la partie. Un contrat pour Owen Beck! Victor Wanyama quittera le CF dès la prochaine saison. Andrea Skinner ne croit pas que dés démissions aideraient Hockey Canada. 8 ans avec les Islanders pour Barzal. Segment LCN-TVA avec Sophie Thibault : on revient sur la soirée électorale. Une production QUB Radio Octobre 2022Pour de l'information concernant l'utilisation de vos données personnelles - https://omnystudio.com/policies/listener/fr
Why do we think we can hide behind something being systemic? We can't. Our systems are a reflection of us and we MUST not be complicit to the actions taken in the name of a system. In this episode I express myself openly on the recent drama exposed in Hockey Canada in the aftermath of the revelation of the 2018 gang rape of a young woman by 8 Canadian Junior Hockey Players. AND, I explore how leaders can not afford to be complicit and hide behind what is systemic injustice of any kind. Walk with me and we'll explore how to expand your agency by building efficacy, optimism and imagination. Be fiercely responsible and accountable in meaningful ways. Build the capacity to turn every challenge into growth for a career and life you love. What are you intentionally adding to your day/week to expand your well-being? CORRECTION: I spoke of the WJH championship in 2011 in Halifax when in fact it is the 2003 version of the team that is now under scrutiny. I lived in Halifax then and attended so don't know how I got it wrong! UPDATE: I just learned a woman, Andrea Skinner, was just named interim Chair of Hockey Canada. I am pleased but I know women are often asked to clean up the messes of this sort. Good Luck to her. Walk with me: Take the GRIT Scale and see where you land. Take the VIA strengths survey TODAY to evaluate where to focus. Try out The BIG SIX and learn about your personality tendencies. Book a complimentary Exploratory Conversation to get a taste of my services. Follow or Connect with Me on LINKEDIN
Today we discuss some parenting stuff; Serena Williams will retire shortly. Is she the best female athlete ever? Hockey Canada hires Andrea Skinner as interim board chair; the Rangers Give C to Jacob Trouba over Panarin, Zibanejad and Kreider. Into the TGOR Vault for our old Outkast parody song of "Leafs Suck."
Le conseil d'administration de Hockey Canada vient de nommer une présidente intérimaire. La sécurité publique de Terre-Neuve-et-Labrador demande aux résidents de Grand Falls-Windsor de se tenir prêts à évacuer. La banquise de l'Antarctique a atteint sa plus petite surface pour un mois de juillet. Serena Williams prendra sa retraite en septembre. | Bruno Larose (journaliste-présentateur)
Élections provinciales: la campagne sera déclenchée au plus tard à la fin d'août. Les partis multiplient les annonces des candidatures. Trois jours après le départ du président du conseil d'administration de Hockey Canada, Michael Brind'Amour, l'avocate torontoise, Andrea Skinner, assumera le poste de manière intérimaire. L'organisation est en crise, éclaboussée par les scandales sexuels. Le Québec serait loin d'être prêt à faire face aux changements climatiques, selon un rapport rédigé par un groupe de recherche scientifique. L'actualité racontée autrement également sur: Noovo Info : https://www.noovo.ca/noovoinfo Facebook : https://www.facebook.com/noovo.info Instagram : https://www.instagram.com/noovo.info Twitter : https://twitter.com/NoovoInfo TikTok : https://www.tiktok.com/@noovo.info
Episode #165: Laughter's Voice is a summer camp in Ontario, Canada, for children who stutter. It will open it's first year this July. On this episode, I chat with founders, Andrea Skinner and her son, Felix. Continue readingLaughter’s Voice The post Laughter’s Voice appeared first on Stuttering is Cool.