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TSN, the home of football in Canada, once again brings Canadians the countrys biggest party: the 102nd Grey Cup. [url=http://www
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TSN, the home of football in Canada, once again brings Canadians the countrys biggest party: the 102nd Grey Cup. [url=http://www
in Out of Line 16.04.2018 08:57von jokergreen0220 • | 619 Beiträge
TSN, the home of football in Canada, once again brings Canadians the countrys biggest party: the 102nd Grey Cup. Miles Killebrew Jersey . This years CFL championship features the Hamilton Tiger-Cats battling the Calgary Stampeders at BC Place on Sunday at 6pm et live on TSN, TSN GO, and TSN Radios Grey Cup Radio Network of 20 stations across the country. TSNs live coverage begins Sunday at 1pm et with the networks five-hour pre-game show, Grey Cup Sunday. TSNs coverage of the 102nd Grey Cup will also air live on ESPN2 in the United States and be available to Canadian Forces members deployed overseas via the Canadian Forces Radio & Television. French-language coverage of the 102nd Grey Cup airs live on RDS beginning at 5pm et. A complete rundown of how to tune in to TSNs multi-platform coverage the 102nd Grey Cup is available on TSN.ca. Broadcast Team TSNs roster of best-in-class broadcasters is on-site at BC Place in Vancouver for the 102nd Grey Cup: ? Hosts: James Duthie, Brian Williams, and Rod Smith ? Panel: Matt Dunigan, Chris Schultz, Jock Climie, Milt Stegall, and Paul LaPolice ? Commentators: Chris Cuthbert and Glen Suitor are in the broadcast booth at BC Place. Cuthbert, who is calling his 16th Grey Cup, will be inducted into Canadian Football Hall of Fames Media Wing on the morning of Grey Cup Sunday. Suitor – a Grey Cup champion with the Saskatchewan Roughriders – makes his seventh appearance in the booth for the big game. ? Reporters: Sara Orlesky and Farhan Lalji ? Grey Cup Saturday and Grey Cup Sunday Pre-Game Show Hosts: Darren Dutchyshen and Kate Beirness ? TSN The Reporters: Dave Naylor, Bruce Arthur, Steve Simmons, and Gary Lawless Below is an overview of 102nd Grey Cup programming on TSN platforms: Saturday, Nov. 29 – Grey Cup Saturday Grey Cup Saturday – Noon ET live on TSN and TSN GO TSNs three-hour Grey Cup Saturday coverage is hosted by SportsCentres Darren Dutchyshen and Kate Beirness, who are broadcasting live from the Vancouver Convention Centre. Throughout the day, the CFL om TSN panel checks in from BC Place with Grey Cup updates, news, and analysis. Additional highlights include: ? TOP 50 CFL Plays of 2014 at 12:30pm et on TSN1, counting down the 50 best plays of this season ? Gibsons Finest CFL Player Awards at 2:30pm et on TSN1, honouring the CFLs top players from the 2014 season Later that night, an encore presentation of the 101st Grey Cup airs at 8pm et on TSN2, a game that saw the Saskatchewan Roughriders take home the championship in front of their hometown crowd. Sunday, Nov. 30 – Grey Cup Sunday Grey Cup Sunday Pre-Game Show – 1pm et live on TSN and TSN GO TSNs five-hour pre-game coverage begins at 1pm et with SportsCentres Darren Dutchyshen and Kate Beirness broadcasting live from BC Place. The pre-game show also features 102nd Grey Cup hosts James Duthie, Rod Smith, and Brian Williams, alongside the CFL ON TSN panel of Chris Schultz, Matt Dunigan, Jock Climie, Milt Stegall, and Paul LaPolice, all broadcasting live from BC Place. During the Grey Cup Sunday Pre-Game Show, TSN debuts the following features: ? Calgary: Earlier this year just a few hours before a game against the RedBlacks, Stampeders wide receiver Joe West was informed by his teammate Nik Lewis that Wests brother had been murdered. Since then, the team has rallied around West, bringing West and Lewis closer together in the wake of this tragic event. ? Hamilton: In his second consecutive Grey Cup appearance, Ti-Cats wide receiver Luke Tasker has a chance to bring home a championship – a scenario his father knows all too well. Steve Tasker, a Buffalo Bills Hall of Famer, went 0-4 in consecutive Super Bowl appearances with the Bills and now looks to his son to finally bring home a championship. ? 1964 Grey Cup: A look back to 50 years ago when the BC Lions won their first ever Grey Cup – a game that established a bitter feud between then Lions quarterback Joe Kapp and then Ticats defensive lineman Angelo Mosca over a controversial hit, leading them to fight on stage at an alumni event three years ago in Vancouver. 102nd Grey Cup – 6pm et live on TSN, TSN GO, and the Grey Cup Radio Network TSN counts down to kickoff with coverage of the Grey Cup Kickoff Show, which features a performance by country singer and British Columbia native Dallas Smith and the national anthem by Canadian jazz-pop sensation Nikki Yanofsky. At halftime, TSN airs the Grey Cup Halftime Show featuring 2014 Grammy Award?-winning rock band Imagine Dragons. Grey Cup Post-Game Show – 10pm et live on TSN and TSN GO CFL Commissioner Mark Cohon presents the Grey Cup to the games winning team, as well as the awards for Most Valuable Player and Most Valuable Canadian. The CFL on TSN panel provides post-game analysis and conducts live interviews with players and coaches on the field leading up to SportsCentre after the game. TSN Digital TSN Digital platforms complement the 102nd Grey Cup television broadcast with the following highlights: ? Live and on demand coverage of the game via TSN GO ? The last instalment of Chris Schultzs popular weekly game pick ? The revealing of the TSN Play of the Year Showdown: Canadian Football Edition winner ? This Day In Grey Cup History videos premiering every day this week ? Exclusive daily digital video reports and blogs from TSNs CFL experts and Insiders ? Instant video features and in-game highlights, plus a full breakdown of the Calgary-Hamilton matchup complete with news and analysis TSN Radio New this year, TSN Radio presents its first-ever Grey Cup Radio Network, a collection of 20 radio stations across the country simulcasting TSN Radio-produced pre-game, in-game, and post-game coverage. TSN Radios national radio coverage of the 102nd GREY CUP is presented by Formula Four Oxygenated Water. Play-by-play commentator Rod Black and analyst Giulio Caravatta, a former CFL quarterback, call the game live across the Grey Cup Radio Network and on SiriusXM satellite radio. Live streaming radio coverage is also available on TSN.ca/Radio and TSN GO. Grey Cup Saturday – Grey Cup Radio Network coverage begins Saturday at 2pm et with a three-hour Grey Cup Saturday show live from radio row in Vancouver. TSN Radio 1050 in Torontos Dave Naylor hosts coverage, which features special guests, up-to-date news, expert analysis, and insight on Sundays big game. Grey Cup Sunday – Game day coverage begins Sunday at 4pm et with a two-hour pre-game show hosted by Dave Naylor and TSN Radio 1040 in Vancouvers Matt Sekeres. Chris Schultz and TSN 1040s Scott Rintoul and Bob the Moj Marjanovich contribute reports. Naylor and Sekeres wrap up the 102nd Grey Cup with a full 90-minute post-game show, including the presentation of the Grey Cup. TSN Radio will be broadcasting live from the heart of downtown Vancouver all week long: ? TSN Radio 1040 in Vancouvers full slate of shows broadcasting live all week ? TSN Radio 1290 in Winnipegs Andrew Hustler Paterson and Gary Lawless hosting Hustler and Lawless live from Vancouver beginning today ? TSN Radio 1050 in Torontos Dave Naylor hosting TSN Drive with Dave Naylor live from Vancouver beginning Wednesday Joining TSN Radio on radio row is 620 CKRM in Regina. Matthew Stafford Jersey .com) - The Columbus Blue Jackets rewarded starting goaltender and pending restricted free agent Sergei Bobrovsky with a four-year contract extension on Friday. Zach Zenner Jersey . Of course that doesnt mean hes ignoring it. Thats actually rather impossible given the behind-the-scenes access to the Toronto Maple Leafs the network is getting. http://www.officialllionsproshop.com/Youth-Kerry-Hyder-Lions-Jersey/ . - The RBC Canadian Open will return to Glen Abbey Golf Club next year, marking the 27th time that the national open championship will be played at the Oakville, Ont.Got a question on rule clarification, comments on rule enforcements or some memorable NHL stories? Kerry wants to answer your emails at cmonref@tsn.ca! Hi Kerry, My question to you is what is the going through a referees mind when a missed call or a wrong call results in a game winning goal? I refer back to last weeks game involving Edmonton and Toronto. There was a clear mistake made by the officials in overtime against Ryan Nugent-Hopkins that resulted a turnover and a 3-on-1 break and a game-winning goal for Toronto. I am sure that the referees knew that they had messed up and would certainly have known after the fact. I am sure that during your career that must have occurred at least once. My question is how do you feel after and do you apologize for the error? Chuck --- Hi Chuck: I messed up more than once during my career for sure; the most obvious being Wayne Gretzkys missed high-stick on Doug Gilmour in 1993. A referee never wants to affect the outcome of a game. That infamous missed call certainly affected the outcome of Game 6 of that Western Conference Final when Gretz scored the winning goal in OT immediately after play resumed. Instead, he should have been sitting in the penalty box with a double minor. The teams would have played 4-on-4 until Glenn Anderson served the balance of his boarding penalty. The Leafs would have then gone on the power play "if" neither team had scored to end the game at that point. We know one thing for certain; Wayne Gretzky would not have scored the winner for at least four minutes! Tremendous uncertainty surrounded the aftermath of the missed infraction. When I asked "Killer" what had happened he said that Waynes follow-through of his shot struck him on the chin. I responded, "If thats the case a normal follow-through of a shot does not constitute a penalty!" Gilmour was okay with that understanding. Something just didnt sit right with me so I sought assistance from my two colleagues. Neither of the linesmen (Kevin Collins and Ron Finn) was able to confirm the high-stick which left me with a totally helpless feeling of uncertainty. My desire as the sole Referee in a game was to see everything. In this situation I had failed my objective miserably. It wasnt until the next day however, when I saw a replay of the incident that I became aware of the missed call. As a result, the sick feeling an official gets in the pit of their gut when they mess up wasnt instantaneous but delayed for 24 hours. That sick feeling didnt subside any time soon as I watched Gretzky light it up back in Toronto to eliminate the Leafs in Game 7. While the memory of the incident could never really be erased (nor should it) I had to learn from it and move forward no differently than a player mistake costs his team a game, a series or even a Stanley Cup. Roookie Steve Smiths errant bank shot off the back of Grant Fuhrs leg comes to mind. Ziggy Ansah Jersey. To his credit and personal strength Smitty bounced back and had a tremendous NHL career. One play or one call should not define a career. There were other times that I knew in the moment that I had blown a call. If I overreacted by signaling a phantom/marginal penalty I wanted to chew my arm off during the delay. At times such as this I instantly knew it was a bad call as much as the player I was sending to the box. Whenever the team captain approached me in protest of the bad call I would admit my mistake immediately. Inevitably the Captains next response was, "You owe us one" or "Better make one up!" While I would respond that "Two wrongs dont make a right" the most difficult challenge was always to fight human nature when you know you erred. I did my very best not to do that very thing - make the dreaded makeup call. I will tell you there were many times that I silently rooted for the success of a teams PK unit. Two minutes can seem like an eternity when your mouth feels like its full of dry sawdust. If the team was scored upon that sick-gut feeling intensified but had to be pushed aside but remaining ever hopeful through the ebb and flow the game would be clearly decided by the players. When an error has been made it is really important to bear down and keep your head in the moment and not dwell on the past mistake. You have to push negative thoughts out and allow them to pass through as opposed to dwelling on them. Sometimes that takes self-talk; almost in a running play-by-play dialogue to maintain focus and avoid missing yet another call. What I am attempting to share with you here is not only the reality of human failure (mistakes made) which we all know happen but more importantly how we respond in dealing with that failure through our individual human nature. Every Official truly cares about the game and gives their very best. Their desire for perfection is an impossible task to achieve yet every Official chases that illusive "perfect game." The most respected and proficient Referees are the ones that minimize their mistakes, admit to them when they occur but most importantly learn from them and move forward. There are always calls throughout a game, a season or a career that every Official wishes he had the opportunity to do over again. Perhaps the Refs in the Leafs-Oilers game would like another shot at viewing and responding as Cody Franson punched Ryan Nugent-Hopkins to the ice from behind in overtime resulting in a three-on-one and Dave Bollands winning goal. Ill leave that call for them to wrestle with and perhaps learn from. Thanks for the thought-provoking question Chuck. Know that we cant alter history - just our response in the present. 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