The Telegram (St. John's)

Joshua ‘hungry and desperate’ to take back titles

- MICHAEL TRAIKOS

I don’t know how they do it. I really don’t.

Tampa Bay Lightning centre Anthony Cirelli, who takes faceoffs for a living, revealed that he had sprained the ligaments that hold the collar bone to the shoulder sometime in the Western final. He played through it. Then he dislocated his other shoulder in the next round. And had his arm stepped on.

He didn’t miss a game in the playoffs.

Valeri Nichushkin, who required a walking boot to get around, played with a broken foot. Nazem Kadri, who couldn’t tie his own skates, played with a broken thumb. Ryan Mcdonagh played with what was simply described as a “mangled finger.”

Colorado Avalanche goalie Darcy Kuemper, who was almost blinded by a stick that snuck through his mask in the first round, visited an optometris­t two to three times a day to “re-train his eye.” Ten days later, he was back stopping pucks.

It seemed like everyone either had a knee sprain or a shoulder sprains. Nick Paul unfortunat­ely had both.

Brayden Point suffered a “significan­t” tear to his quad muscle, which is kind of essential for skating — much less walking — at the end of the first round. The recovery time is usually four to six months. He was back playing in 32 days, before tearing it again after a couple of games.

As Lightning head Jon Cooper said in the aftermath of the Stanley Cup final, “what they put themselves

MATTHEW STOCKMAN • GETTY through, it’s mind-boggling.”

If it were the regular season, Cooper said “half of their AHL team” would have been called up. But because it was the playoffs, they iced it up, taped it up and for the most part sucked it up in an attempt to win the Stanley Cup.

“A hockey player’s mentality is you play,” said Dr. Mike Prebeg, a consulting chiropract­or for the NHLPA, who is based in Toronto. “You play through everything. Do whatever you have to do — tape me up, give me anti-inflammato­ries and pain killers — just get me out there.”

It’s a bit of mind over matter. A broken thumb hurts. A broken foot hurts like hell. I don’t know what a torn quad feels like, but I imagine it’s not pleasant. At the same time, you’re probably — hopefully? — not causing any more long-term damage by playing through it. You just have to be willing to deal with the pain.

“A quad tear is brutal. There is a chance you can tear it more,” said Prebeg. “A sprained AC joint is kind of the easier thing to play through, because that’s just pain. If you can tolerate the discomfort, you’re probably not making it worse. But you don’t heal. Once you get an injury at the start of the playoffs, you’re not getting better. Improving is next to impossible. You’re just slowly getting worse.”

And worse and worse as the playoffs go on.

Tampa Bay centre Pierreedou­ard Bellemare, who didn’t miss a single shift in the playoffs, also played the entire time with a meniscus injury, which likely caused a lot of swelling and soreness in his knee. He did that for 23 games over nearly three long, painful months.

“They’re probably getting medical advice, indicating you can’t do further damage if you play. Whether that’s true or not, I don’t know,” said sports psychology doctor Paul Dennis, who spent 20 years as the Toronto Maple Leafs’ player developmen­t and mental skills coach. “I think it just goes to the nature of the individual athlete. Some of them might have similar injuries and not play through it. But the gamers, the ones who have waited their entire life to win a Stanley Cup, some of them will sacrifice anything for it.”

Dennis, who is writing a book on the necessary psychologi­cal attributes required for athletes, coaches and parents, defines a gamer as “an athlete who combines physical and mental toughness together.” It’s the difference between someone who scores goals in the regular season but fades in the playoffs and the unlikely hero who comes out of nowhere and shines when the Stanley Cup is on the line.

Kadri is a gamer. So is Point. And Paul. In fact, the deeper you get in the playoffs, the more gamers you are likely going to find.

“It’s adrenaline,” said Dr. Prebeg. “Honestly, they’re so ramped up, they don’t even feel it half the time. If a tiger bites an antelope, it’s not stopping to lick its wound and see what’s wrong. No, it’s going to keep running.”

That might explain how Kadri, who couldn’t use his thumb to tie his own skates, was not only able to hold his stick, but use it in a way where he scored in overtime. Or how Nichushkin was able to get around the ice with a broken foot that was so bruised and swollen that getting it into a skate was even a challenge.

LONDON — Britain’s Anthony Joshua said he was hungry and desperate to take back his world heavyweigh­t titles from Ukrainian Oleksandr Usyk when they fight their rematch in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia on Aug. 20.

The pair stared each other face-to-face at a London news conference on Wednesday ahead of the “Rage on the Red Sea” clash.

Usyk beat Joshua in front of a sell-out crowd at London’s Tottenham Hotspur Stadium last September to take the WBA, WBO, IBF and IBO belts. The rematch will be broadcast on sports streaming service DAZN.

Joshua also lost the belts to Andy Ruiz Jr. in 2019 before regaining them later that year in Saudi Arabia.

 ?? IMAGES ?? Anthony Cirelli of the Tampa Bay Lightning and Cale Makar of the Colorado Avalanche battle for the puck during the second period in Game 5 of the 2022 Stanley Cup Final at Ball Arena on June 24 in Denver, Col.
IMAGES Anthony Cirelli of the Tampa Bay Lightning and Cale Makar of the Colorado Avalanche battle for the puck during the second period in Game 5 of the 2022 Stanley Cup Final at Ball Arena on June 24 in Denver, Col.

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