Penticton Herald

Vegas, Dallas players both kneel for anthems

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EDMONTON — Minnesota Wild defenceman Matt Dumba says he will continue to publicly protest racial injustice as the NHL returns to action in the hub cities of Edmonton and Toronto.

On Monday, he was not alone.

Vegas winger Ryan Reaves, Golden Knights goaltender Robin Lehner and Dallas Stars forwards Jason Dickinson and Tyler Seguin, at the blue line together, knelt for the U.S. and Canadian anthems before their seeding game at Rogers Place.

“I talked to Reaves in warmups. He said him and Lehner were going to kneel, and asked if I’d like to join them. I said, ‘absolutely,”’ said Seguin. “Before the game, went in the dressing room and told every one what I was doing. Told them there was no pressure to do anything. Dickinson grabbed me and said he’d like to be a part of it, and support his beliefs and my beliefs.

“An easy decision for me.”

Dickinson added: “I have some people of colour in my family, my dad’s from the Islands, one of my uncle’s is Black. I was nervous to think about doing it on my own. When (Seguin) said it, it was a no brainer.”

Dumba was the first NHL player to kneel during the restart when he took a knee for the U.S. anthem before Edmonton took on Chicago on Saturday in the first restart game at Rogers Place. He also made a speech at centre ice before the game stressing the need for social and racial justice.

On Sunday, he raised his fist on the Wild’s bench during both the Canadian and American national anthems before Minnesota’s 3-0 win over Vancouver in the opener of their best-of-five playoff series.

“It’s time to start doing something, not just let this be a news cycle and forget about it and do it all over again,” Lehner said. “Everyone should have the same chance in society, everyone should be treated the same.”

Lehner is white and teammate Reaves is Black. Both the Stars players who knelt are white.

“I can’t say honestly that I was going to go out there on my own and take a knee,” said Seguin. “But with them having a Black player on their team and his beliefs and how I’ve said from day one I’m going to back it up in ways that I can, that’s why I chose to support that.”

Dumba, a Regina native who is halfFilipi­no, said he intends to do that for the rest of the NHL’s restart from the COVID-19 pandemic in homage to former Wild forward J.T. Brown.

Brown did the same during the American national anthem in 2017 as a member of the Tampa Bay Lightning to protest racism.

Wild players have said they support Dumba’s protest and are proud he is taking a stand. Forward Marcus Foligno led off his latest diary from inside the Edmonton bubble for The Athletic with an account of the team gathering to watch Dumba’s speech before the Oilers-Blackhawks game.

Whether they join him on the ice remains to be seen, however. Wild coach Dean Evason said Monday that there has been no talk of having other Minnesota players raise a fist with their teammate before games.

“Nope, there’s been no discussion­s, and the only thing that we’ve discussed as a staff, as I’ve mentioned before, is that we want to eliminate racism for good,” Evason said.

STRAIGHT JACKETS

Early in the series between Toronto and Columbus, the suffocatin­g Blue Jackets defence has been more than a match for the Maple Leafs’ offensivel­y gifted lineup.

Overcoming a defensive system designed to frustrate will be key for Toronto as the Leafs look to even their best-of-five playoff qualifying series on Tuesday.

The Blue Jackets outshot Toronto 35-28 on Sunday en route to a 2-0 victory at Scotiabank Arena. Columbus blocked 18 shots to help goaltender Joonas Korpisalo pick up the shutout in his post-season debut.

“That’s what their system is designed to do, to frustrate you,” Maple Leafs head coach Sheldon Keefe said Monday. “The good news is just talking to our guys, and the type of practice that we had, our guys are not frustrated. They’re hungry to get back at it, to recognize where we can get better and that we have more to give.”

Columbus had success keeping Toronto’s dangerous power play off the ice Sunday, taking just one minor penalty.

Columbus spent the least amount of time short-handed of any NHL team during the regular season.

“It’s another thing we expected, that power plays were going to be really tough to come by,” Keefe said. “We have to take advantage of the ones we do get, look to keep our feet moving, look to find ways to draw as many (penalties) as we can.”

Toronto forward Mitch Marner said the Leafs didn’t do enough to pressure the Blue jackets defence on Sunday.

“Definitely not enough shots on net, didn’t produce enough offensivel­y,” he said. “The goal for tomorrow is just have more confidence with the puck.”

PETEY PUCK

The Vancouver Canucks are shorter on playoff experience than some other teams in the Western Conference hub, so they will need big contributi­ons from some of their young core to make a run.

One player that impressed Canucks head coach Travis Green is star winger Elias Pettersson, who made his post-season debut in Sunday’s loss to Minnesota. The 21-yearold Swede led all Canucks forwards with 19 minutes 38 seconds of ice time.

“I thought Petey was fantastic,” Green said. “You might say ‘How could Petey be fantastic when he didn’t get a point?’ But his compete level was very high. Obviously he’s a guy that other teams are going to key on in the playoffs, and he embraced it.”

BAD BOY OF THE BUBBLE

Vancouver forward Micheal Ferland was issued a US$5,000 fine, the maximum allowed, for spearing Minnesota winger Ryan Hartman during Sunday’s game.

Wild forward Luke Kunin, who grabbed Ferland’s stick from the Minnesota bench before the spear, was fined $1,000 for unsportsma­nlike conduct.

 ?? The Canadian Press ?? Dallas Stars’ Jason Dickinson, Tyler Seguin and Vegas Golden Knights’ Ryan Reaves and goalie Robin Lehner take a knee for Black Lives Matter during the national anthem at the NHL qualifying round game action in Edmonton on Monday.
The Canadian Press Dallas Stars’ Jason Dickinson, Tyler Seguin and Vegas Golden Knights’ Ryan Reaves and goalie Robin Lehner take a knee for Black Lives Matter during the national anthem at the NHL qualifying round game action in Edmonton on Monday.

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