Sunday, October 26, 2025

Articles by Globalnews Digital,The Canadian Press

5 articles found

Bichette available off the bench for Game 2
Technology

Bichette available off the bench for Game 2

TORONTO – Blue Jays manager John Schneider made several moves to his starting lineup for Saturday’s Game 2 of the World Series against the Los Angeles Dodgers. Infielder Bo Bichette, who made his first game appearance in seven weeks in Toronto’s 11-4 Game 1 win, was available off the bench. Isiah Kiner-Falefa got the start at second base with outfielders Nathan Lukes and Addison Barger drawing in for Davis Schneider and Myles Straw. Normally a shortstop, Bichette made his first big-league start at second base after being named to the 26-man roster before Game 1. He had missed time with a left knee sprain. “After the layoff, I didn’t want to like kill him, you know,” Schneider said in a pre-game media availability from his office. “So this is stuff we talked about even leading up to the decision to put him on the roster. “I thought he was good yesterday and just want to watch him physically. But he’ll be ready to hit and play whenever.” Right-handers Kevin Gausman of Toronto and Yoshinobu Yamamoto of Los Angeles were set to start in Game 2. Schneider also confirmed that Max Scherzer would start Game 3 at Dodger Stadium on Monday. Shane Bieber was tabbed for Game 4 on Tuesday. If necessary, the Dodgers would host Game 5 on Wednesday. If Game 6 and Game 7 are needed, they would be played in Toronto. Bichette had a single in the first inning of Game 1 and grounded into a double play in the third. He opened the Blue Jays’ decisive nine-run sixth inning with a walk before being replaced by Kiner-Falefa. Bichette had a .311 batting average this past season and led Toronto with 181 hits. This report by The Canadian Press was first published Oct. 25, 2025.

Interacting with Gaston a highlight for Schneider
Technology

Interacting with Gaston a highlight for Schneider

TORONTO – One of the highlights of Toronto skipper John Schneider’s first day at the World Series — aside from the 11-4 win over the Los Angeles Dodgers — was getting a chance to connect with former Blue Jays manager Cito Gaston. “He’s always been great to me,” Schneider said before Game 2 on Saturday. “He just said, ‘I love what you’re doing, I love the way your team plays and you should be very proud of what you’ve done.’ “And I said, ‘That means a lot coming from you.'” Gaston, who threw the ceremonial first pitch to Schneider before Game 1, guided the Blue Jays to World Series titles in 1992 and ’93. After throwing the pitch, the 81-year-old Gaston asked Schneider to autograph the ball for him since he planned to put it on his mantle. “I did and I made him a promise that I need to get one from him,” Schneider said with a smile. DOGGED APPROACH Blue Jays catcher Tyler Heineman said his team is well aware the defending-champion Dodgers entered the World Series as heavy favourites. Los Angeles dropped only one playoff game entering the Fall Classic and boasts a lineup that includes sluggers Shohei Ohtani, Mookie Betts, Freddie Freeman and others. At the start of the series, the Dodgers were listed as a -220 favourite on BetMGM to win the series while the Blue Jays were at +180. “We know we’re severe underdogs but that doesn’t matter to us,” Heineman said. “We were severe underdogs at the beginning of this season. We weren’t even supposed to be in the playoffs, yet alone the World Series. “To the group inside (the clubhouse), that doesn’t hold any weight to us. We know what a special group we have.” Before Game 2, the sportsbook had L.A. down to a -120 favourite to win the series while the Jays were at +100. BACK TO BACK The Dodgers are aiming to become the first team to win consecutive World Series crowns since the New York Yankees won three titles between 1998 and 2000. Major League Baseball’s current 24-year streak without a repeat champion is the longest of its kind in the history of the so-called Big Four sports (MLB, NBA, NHL, NFL). The Dodgers are the first defending champions to return to the Fall Classic since the Philadelphia Phillies in 2009. This report by The Canadian Press was first published Oct. 25, 2025.

Poilievre defends RCMP comments, denies saying Trudeau should be in jail
Technology

Poilievre defends RCMP comments, denies saying Trudeau should be in jail

Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre defended his comments about the RCMP Wednesday and denied saying former prime minister Justin Trudeau should be in jail. “That’s not what I said,” he said on Parliament Hill when asked about a recent interview on a YouTube channel. In that interview, which ran on the Northern Perspective channel last week, Poilievre called the RCMP’s leadership “despicable” and accused it of covering up for Trudeau. “Many of the scandals of the Trudeau era should have involved jail time,” he said. “Trudeau broke the Criminal Code when he took a free vacation from someone with whom he had government business.” “If the RCMP had been doing its job and not covering up for him, then he would have been criminally charged,” Poilievre added in the interview. Poilievre was referring to cases where Trudeau was found to have violated conflict of interest rules, including his acceptance of a family vacation on the Aga Khan’s private island in 2016, and the SNC-Lavalin saga in 2019. The RCMP investigated both the vacation and Trudeau’s handling of the SNC-Lavalin file but did not lay any charges. In the latter case, the ethics commissioner found Trudeau violated the Conflict of Interest Act by attempting to influence then-justice minister Jody Wilson-Raybould to grant a deferred prosecution agreement to a Quebec-based engineering firm. The RCMP investigated but ultimately determined there was not enough evidence to lay criminal charges in the SNC-Lavalin affair. In 2023, current RCMP Commissioner Mike Duheme said he agreed with that decision. On Wednesday, Poilievre said he thinks there were some scandals during Trudeau’s time in office that should have resulted in criminal charges. He cited allegations of corruption against a government-funded technology fund — without mentioning Trudeau. He also said his criticisms of the RCMP were directed solely at former RCMP commissioner Brenda Lucki. That statement echoed one issued by his office on Monday. During his scrum with reporters, Poilievre was asked whether he was confident all his MPs would remain in the Conservative caucus by the end of the day. “Yes,” he answered. Those MPs met Wednesday morning for the weekly caucus meeting. Walking in, some deflected reporters’ questions about Poilievre’s comments. “There’s a five-alarm fire going on in this country, with jobs, with inflation … so that’s what we’re going in to talk about,” House leader Andrew Scheer said. “Of course,” Conservative MP Todd Doherty said Wednesday when asked if he supports Poilievre. He also asked reporters why they weren’t asking questions about unemployment and the opioid crisis. Conservative MP Andrew Lawton said Poilievre has support from caucus and called his comments “little, out-of-context things from a podcast” that are not a big priority. Conservative MP Michael Barrett said the statement from Poilievre’s office made it clear that he supports RCMP officers. Conservative MP Garnett Genuis said Poilievre is a “strong leader defending men and women in uniform” and he would “take no lessons from the Liberals on standing up for front line officers.” Conservative MP Greg McLean said Prime Minister Mark Carney’s government should hold Trudeau’s government “to account over what happened.” The Liberals, Greens and NDP this week all called on the Conservative leader to apologize for his comments about the RCMP. On Wednesday, government whip Mark Gerretsen said the comments were “shameful” and showed that Poilievre is not qualified to lead the country. “I think that there’s no place in Canadian politics to be trying to emulate what we’re seeing in the south,” he said.

Alberta NDP urges public to step up as striking teachers may face back-to-work bill
Politics

Alberta NDP urges public to step up as striking teachers may face back-to-work bill

Alberta’s Opposition NDP says it will fight the government’s looming plan to introduce a bill to force striking teachers back to work. NDP Leader Naheed Nenshi says they can try procedural tactics to try to delay the bill’s passage, but says there is little they can do to stop it, given Premier Danielle Smith’s United Conservatives hold the house majority. Nenshi is urging the public to keep pressuring the government to get a deal in place. The spotlight on the teachers strike shifts to the legislature as the fall sitting begins Thursday with the speech from the throne. Teachers have been off the job for more than two weeks, and Smith says it is becoming an intolerable hardship for students and families and, absent a deal, may require her government to pass back-to-work legislation as early as next week. The strike, centred around a dispute over wages and working conditions, has affected 750,000 students across 2,500 public, separate and francophone schools.

Jays beat Mariners 4-3, advance to World Series
Technology

Jays beat Mariners 4-3, advance to World Series

TORONTO – George Springer hit a go-ahead three-run homer in the seventh inning to lead the Toronto Blue Jays to a 4-3 victory over the Seattle Mariners in Game 7 of the American League Championship Series on Monday. The victory gave the Blue Jays their first berth in the World Series since 1993. Toronto will host the Los Angeles Dodgers in Game 1 on Friday. With Addison Barger and Isiah Kiner-Falefa aboard, Springer turned on an Eduard Bazardo pitch for his fourth homer of the post-season. Jeff Hoffman struck out the side in the ninth inning for the save. Toronto players streamed out of the dugout to celebrate as the sellout crowd of 44,770 roared. Blue Jays starter Shane Bieber and Mariners right-hander George Kirby gave up a run apiece in the opening inning. Canadian Josh Naylor drove in Julio Rodriguez to open the scoring and Daulton Varsho singled home Springer in the bottom half. Rodriguez restored Seattle’s lead with a solo shot in the third and Cal Raleigh went deep off reliever Louis Varland in the fifth. Seranthony Dominguez, Kevin Gausman and Chris Bassitt worked in relief ahead of Toronto’s closer. Gausman (2-1) earned the win by throwing a scoreless seventh inning. The road team was victorious in the first four games of the series. The Mariners won at T-Mobile Park last Friday but the Blue Jays pulled even with a Game 6 win at home on Sunday. Blue Jays: Springer played the last two games despite taking a fastball off the knee in Game 5. It was his 23rd career post-season homer. Mariners: After getting shelled for eight runs in a 13-4 loss in Game 3, Kirby turned in a much better outing. The right-hander allowed one earned run, a walk and four hits while striking out three. Springer’s 381-foot blast will be a home run that Blue Jays fans talk about for years to come. Springer’s homer was Toronto’s first extra-base hit of the night. The Blue Jays have a few days to prepare for the World Series opener against the Dodgers. The Mariners’ season is over. This report by The Canadian Press was first published Oct. 20, 2025.