Tag Archive | "MLSE"

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H1N1 prompts tough decisions from Toronto teams

Posted on 05 November 2009 by dk_wilson

With the H1N1 flu epidemic sweeping across the country and through dressing rooms, each Toronto sports franchise has had to make tough decisions on how to handle the situation.

The NHL’s Toronto Maple Leafs have reportedly followed in the footsteps of the Calgary Flames and jumped the queue to have some of their players and staff inoculated ahead of those who are high-risk patients.

The same goes for the NBA’s Toronto Raptors, also owned by Maple Leaf Sports and Entertainment.

“While all professional athletes are considered high risk to exposure and transmission of the flu due to excessive contact with other players, heavy travel requirements and public exposure, only certain players and staff have received the H1N1 vaccine,” MLSE said in a statement released to the media.

Currently in Ontario, the H1N1 vaccine is only available to priority groups, people who would be at risk of developing complications from the virus. This includes young children, pregnant women and people with past health issues.

MLSE claims that no one from the Leafs or the Raptors received the vaccine through jumping any queue.

“Similar to other physician offices, any vaccine supplies received were obtained through normal distribution and no preferential treatment was requested nor received,” MLSE said in their statement.

Ontario Health Minister Deb Matthews was angered by news that members of both organizations had received the H1N1 shot, despite the shortage of it.

“I want you to know that this is entirely, entirely unacceptable,” Matthews said Thursday. “We are relying on our professionals to respect the priority list.”

MLSE has yet to reveal which players were given the vaccine, saying that the information is “considered private and confidential.”

According to team officials, some players and staff received the shots following the Leafs game Tuesday night versus the Tampa Bay Lightning.

The MLSE move to inoculate their players and staff came on the heels of Toronto Marlies forward Tyler Bozak contracting the flu, suspected to be H1N1, and missing two games recently while in quarantine.

“From the severity of the flu, our doctors thought it was H1N1,” Bozak told reporters after practice Wednesday. “I never got tested. I just stayed at home. I didn’t want to get guys sick. I didn’t want to be around the guys.”

Marlies winger Andre Deveaux also came down with the flu recently and with Jiri Tlusty’s promotion to the Leafs, there was concern that the virus that had been discovered in the AHL team’s room, would come with him.

While MLSE-operated teams are under suspicion of being vaccinated, the CFL’s Toronto Argonauts, on the other hand, along with all other teams in the league, have not jumped the queue according a recent survey conducted by the CFL over the last week, the CBC reports.

According to Matt Maychak, the CFL’s vice-president of communications, no one from the league has jumped the line. That was confirmed by each team’s president during the weekly conference call Wednesday.

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New Leafs make a good first impression

Posted on 16 September 2009 by Malcolm Kelly

You never get a second chance to make a first impression.

That was the situation facing the many new faces in the Toronto Maple Leafs lineup Wednesday night as they played their first pre-season game against the Boston Bruins, a 3-2 loss to the visitors.

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Monster’s Heart Issue A Minor Deal Say Maple Leafs

Posted on 16 September 2009 by Luke Barry

New Toronto Maple Leafs goalie Jonas “The Monster” Gustavsson went under the knife Tuesday, a day before the team kicks off its pre-season action at home against the Boston Bruins.

Gustavsson was riding the stationary bike at training camp on Saturday when he became dizzy and was taken to hospital in an ambulance with what the Leafs initially thought was a case of dehydration.

Further examination showed the electrical flow into the 24-year-old’s heart was being blocked, creating a short circuit that bothered his normal heart rhythms.

While considered only a minor problem, team doctors opted to perform a cardiac ablation – a non-invasive procedure – by inserting a catheter into a blood vessel in Gustavsson’s groin, and then sent the tubing into his heart to help alleviate the problem.

“It’s a simple procedure that’s actually fairly common with athletes,” Leafs head coach Ron Wilson told reporters. “Our doctor said he’ll do 10 NHL players in a summer if they’re ever shown this [problem].”

Luckily for the team, the 6-foot-4 Swede will be cleared to play once the small incision has completely healed.

“We don’t expect him to miss more than 48 hours,” Wilson said. “You don’t want him to put his gear on until he’s comfortable and there’s no risk of infection [at the site of the incision].”

Gustavsson is currently battling for the backup position behind starter Vesa Toskala,

The Swede had a 1.96 goals-against average with Farjestads of the Swedish Elite League last season and was a highly touted signing by the Leafs earlier this summer.

Joey Macdonald of Pictou, N.S., who played 49 NHL games for the New York Islanders last season, is also in the hunt as Toskala’s backup.

“Joey MacDonald has looked really good in the scrimmages so he’ll take up a couple of the periods [in exhibitions] Jonas would have played,” Wilson said.

After facing the Bruins, the Leafs will play Thursday in London against Philadelphia, Friday in Pittsburgh and back home Saturday against the Flyers.

NOTE: On Tuesday, Maple Leafs Sports and Entertainment announced the new Atrium concession stand at the Air Canada Centre would be named “Burkie’s Dog House” after Brian Burke, the Maple Leafs fiery general manager.

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Centennial Journalism
Centennial Journalism