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Former Bangladesh captain Tamim Iqbal becomes youngest BCB chief  Former Bangladesh captain Tamim Iqbal became the youngest ​head of the Bangladesh Cricket Board (BCB) ‌on Tuesday, after the National ​Sports Council (NSC) dissolved ⁠the BCB’s board of directors following an investigation into elections held in ‌October.A committee found irregularities in the BCB’s election process, ‌the NSC’s sports director ‌Mohammed ⁠Aminul Ahesan told reporters in ⁠Dhaka.“We have informed the International Cricket Council (ICC) that this board of directors ​was not formed ‌in a proper manner, and is not able to complete its work in a proper ‌manner,” Ahesan said.“We think that ​the ICC will definitely uphold this decision.” The ⁠previous board of directors was led by Aminul Islam, who was ‌behind Bangladesh’s refusal to visit India for this year’s T20 World Cup, citing safety concerns. Bangladesh was replaced by Scotland in the tournament.Tamim, who ‌played 391 matches for Bangladesh across all ​formats, will lead an 11-member ad-hoc committee that will ⁠run the BCB. Bangladesh will host New ⁠Zealand in a tour featuring three one-day internationals, ‌three T20Is and two Tests starting on April 17. Published on Apr 07, 2026  #Bangladesh #captain #Tamim #Iqbal #youngest #BCB #chief

Former Bangladesh captain Tamim Iqbal becomes youngest BCB chief

Former Bangladesh captain Tamim Iqbal became the youngest ​head of the Bangladesh Cricket Board (BCB) ‌on Tuesday, after the National ​Sports Council (NSC) dissolved ⁠the BCB’s board of directors following an investigation into elections held in ‌October.

A committee found irregularities in the BCB’s election process, ‌the NSC’s sports director ‌Mohammed ⁠Aminul Ahesan told reporters in ⁠Dhaka.

“We have informed the International Cricket Council (ICC) that this board of directors ​was not formed ‌in a proper manner, and is not able to complete its work in a proper ‌manner,” Ahesan said.

“We think that ​the ICC will definitely uphold this decision.” The ⁠previous board of directors was led by Aminul Islam, who was ‌behind Bangladesh’s refusal to visit India for this year’s T20 World Cup, citing safety concerns. Bangladesh was replaced by Scotland in the tournament.

Tamim, who ‌played 391 matches for Bangladesh across all ​formats, will lead an 11-member ad-hoc committee that will ⁠run the BCB. Bangladesh will host New ⁠Zealand in a tour featuring three one-day internationals, ‌three T20Is and two Tests starting on April 17. 

Published on Apr 07, 2026

#Bangladesh #captain #Tamim #Iqbal #youngest #BCB #chief

Former Bangladesh captain Tamim Iqbal became the youngest ​head of the Bangladesh Cricket Board (BCB) ‌on Tuesday, after the National ​Sports Council (NSC) dissolved ⁠the BCB’s board of directors following an investigation into elections held in ‌October.

A committee found irregularities in the BCB’s election process, ‌the NSC’s sports director ‌Mohammed ⁠Aminul Ahesan told reporters in ⁠Dhaka.

“We have informed the International Cricket Council (ICC) that this board of directors ​was not formed ‌in a proper manner, and is not able to complete its work in a proper ‌manner,” Ahesan said.

“We think that ​the ICC will definitely uphold this decision.” The ⁠previous board of directors was led by Aminul Islam, who was ‌behind Bangladesh’s refusal to visit India for this year’s T20 World Cup, citing safety concerns. Bangladesh was replaced by Scotland in the tournament.

Tamim, who ‌played 391 matches for Bangladesh across all ​formats, will lead an 11-member ad-hoc committee that will ⁠run the BCB. Bangladesh will host New ⁠Zealand in a tour featuring three one-day internationals, ‌three T20Is and two Tests starting on April 17. 

Published on Apr 07, 2026

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#Bangladesh #captain #Tamim #Iqbal #youngest #BCB #chief

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Deadspin | Mariners ask George Kirby, undefeated vs. Rangers, to help stop skid <div id=""><section id="0" class=" w-full"><div class="xl:container mx-0 !px-4 py-0 pb-4 !mx-0 !px-0"><img src="https://images.deadspin.com/tr:w-900/28601867.jpg" srcset="https://images.deadspin.com/tr:w-900/28601867.jpg" alt="MLB: Cleveland Guardians at Seattle Mariners" class="w-full" fetchpriority="high" loading="eager"/><span class="text-0.8 leading-tight">Mar 27, 2026; Seattle, Washington, USA; Seattle Mariners starter George Kirby (68) delivers a pitch during the first inning against the Cleveland Guardians at T-Mobile Park. Mandatory Credit: Stephen Brashear-Imagn Images<!-- --> <!-- --> </span></div></section><section id="section-1"> <p>The Seattle Mariners’ .188 team batting average — worst in the major leagues — has caught up with them.</p> </section><section id="section-2"> <p>Seattle lost its third straight one-run game Monday night — this time to the Texas Rangers — and will return to the second game of the three-game series in Arlington, Texas, on Tuesday night as losers of five of the past six games. </p> </section><section id="section-3"> <p>The Mariners wasted the first quality start of the season by right-hander Logan Gilbert, who gave up two runs on six hits in six innings, as they mustered only two hits off of Texas starter Jacob deGrom and five relievers.</p> </section><section id="section-4"> <p>One of those hits was Cal Raleigh’s first home run of 2026. At the same juncture last season, 11 games in, Raleigh had just two homers and the Mariners were 4-7, the same start as this season. </p> </section><section id="section-5"> <p>It all worked out fine. Raleigh hit 60 home runs, and the Mariners won the American League West and reached the AL Championship Series.</p> </section><section id="section-6"> <p>Still, the Mariners are ready for their most relied-upon hitters at the top of the batting order to break out of their early slumps.</p> </section><section id="section-7"> <p>Raleigh is batting .146 with 20 strikeouts in 41 at-bats. Josh Naylor is hitting .114 and Julio Rodriguez .143. Combined, they have one home run, nine RBIs and 39 strikeouts.</p> </section><section id="section-8"> <p>The Mariners have yet to win a series, splitting a four-game set with the Cleveland Guardians, then dropping two of three contests to both the New York Yankees and Los Angeles Angels.</p> </section><section id="section-9"> <p>“We’ve just got to take care of those little things … kind of a slow start there in the first two games in (Anaheim), same thing here today,” Raleigh told MLB.com Monday night. “We’ve just got to create some traffic. Even when you’re not hitting the ball like you want to, you’ve got to be able to do the little things right: steal bags, get runners over, grind out at-bats, find some free bases here and there. We’re just not doing that.”</p> </section><br/><section id="section-10"> <p>The Mariners hope their scheduled starter on Tuesday, right-hander George Kirby (1-1, 3.75 ERA), can continue his career dominance of the Rangers. He has an 8-0 record and a 1.04 ERA against them, yielding just seven earned runs in 10 starts.</p> </section> <section id="section-11"> <p>The win on Monday was the first at home this season for the Rangers, who were swept by the Cincinnati Reds and outscored 9-4 over the weekend. Texas has just just six total runs over their past four games and, same as the Mariners, have 38 runs through the first 11 games.</p> </section><section id="section-12"> <p>After the series finale on Wednesday, the Rangers will be back on the road for 10 games, visiting the world champion Los Angeles Dodgers for three, the Athletics for four and the Mariners for three.</p> </section><section id="section-13"> <p>Rangers manager Skip Schumaker was happy to return to the win column.</p> </section><section id="section-14"> <p>“We lost a couple in a row,” Schumaker told The Dallas Morning News after the game. “It’s nice to come back and get a win against … a tough team. So, you know, celebrate today and try to win tomorrow. I’m not looking ahead too far — I’m definitely not looking to L.A. yet — because we’ve got a really tough game tomorrow.”</p> </section><section id="section-15"> <p>Starting for the Rangers will be right-hander Nathan Eovaldi (0-2, 11.42), who will make his third start of the season and the 300th of his career. The start by deGrom on Monday was his 250th.</p> </section><section id="section-16"> <p>Eovaldi, the Rangers’ Opening Day starter, got roughed up in his first two starts, allowing five earned runs at Philadelphia and six at Baltimore in less than five innings in each game. Against Seattle, he is 2-4 with a 5.48 ERA in 13 career games (all starts).</p> </section><section id="section-17"> <p>–Field Level Media</p> </section><section id="section-18"> <p>—</p> </section><section id="section-19"> <p>–Field Level Media</p> </section></div> #Deadspin #Mariners #George #Kirby #undefeated #Rangers #stop #skid

Earlier this year, Apollo Tyres — the new lead sponsor for Indian cricket — signalled a clear shift in tone with its ‘Har Safar Mein Dum Hai’ campaign, moving away from light-hearted advertising to a more reflective, story-driven narrative. Anchored by Sachin Tendulkar and the journeys of India’s leading cricketers, the campaign draws a parallel between sporting perseverance and the company’s own evolution, striking a chord with audiences through its emphasis on resilience, family support, and long-term ambition. In this conversation, Vice Chairman and Managing Director Neeraj Kanwar unpacks the thinking behind the campaign, its timing, and how Apollo views its growing association with Indian sport.

[embed]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D_RJhCZNNT8[/embed]

Could you walk us through the thought process behind the advertisement? Was releasing it close to the World Cup a strategic decision?

Firstly, thank you. The idea was to release it before the World Cup, but as you can see, this is not a World Cup-specific ad. It’s something that will play out over the next two to three years. From my side, I can say that my wife actually wrote the entire story. She is the creative mind behind it.

The ad is about the struggle one goes through to become one of the most famous cricketers. It captures resilience, commitment, passion, and also the struggles of parents.

In that journey, you have to keep excelling. That’s where Apollo comes in. Apollo has had a similar journey. In 1976, the company was bankrupt, and today we are number one in India. That has come from resilience, excellence, continuous effort, discovering ourselves, and investing in technology to become leaders.

Sachin [Tendulkar] comes in as the god of cricket, a mentor figure guiding these kids. In the same way, my father, the chairman, has been a mentor to our 20,000 employees. Even today, as mobility evolves, he continues to guide us. That’s the correlation between Sachin and the chairman.

You mentioned Sachin. What also stood out was the choice of players — Virat Kohli, Rohit Sharma, and Shubman Gill. Given that Virat and Rohit have retired from T20s and Gill isn’t part of the current World Cup setup, what was the thinking behind this selection?

You said it yourself. They are currently the top players.

Apollo is also a top company. So why would I go for second-best when I have access to the best?

These players have strong journeys. A lot of research has gone into the casting. Virat’s younger version looks identical, but the same effort has gone into the others too, including parents and costumes.

Their journeys are all different but equally difficult. Take Rohit, for instance. He grew up in a chawl in Mumbai, and his journey from there to here is significant.

Is there a possibility of doing something similar with the women’s team, given their recent success?

We are looking into it. I’m very excited because, since Apollo tied up on the jersey, we’ve already had two World Cups — one with the women’s team and one at the Under-19 level.

We have now added a T20 title as well. So yes, the women’s team is very much on my mind. Right now, we are just on the jersey, but discussions are ongoing internally.

Cricket guarantees visibility in India. But as a brand, how do you ensure that this translates into actual value and not just visibility?

We have done this with ROI in mind. ₹580 crore is not a small investment. Since tying up on the jersey in September, we have seen sales increase, better distribution, new dealers, and higher throughput at dealer counters.

This is especially visible in car tyres, scooter tyres, and tractor tyres. The biggest advantage is rural reach. Cricket allows us to reach all of India instantly. People in villages are watching on phones and TVs. That awareness is driving growth in rural markets.

Apollo has also invested in football, both in India and Europe. Given the uncertainty around Indian football, do you still see it as a viable space?

Football is growing in India. India needs to become a sporting nation. Investment should go into multiple sports, not just cricket. The government needs to replicate cricket’s success across other sports.

We are seeing progress. With increased focus, India is winning more medals at the Asian Games and Olympics. A strong public-private partnership can help identify and nurture talent.

Football is becoming popular, especially with global influences like Lionel Messi. European clubs are also looking at India for academies and talent. There is recognition that India has potential.

Have your European partnerships offered insights into how similar models could work in India?

The key issue in India is infrastructure. In cricket, we have built world-class stadiums. Ahmedabad, for example, is phenomenal. Compared to Old Trafford, it stands out.

So we have the capability. The question is why we are not doing this across all sports. We were dominant in hockey once but have slipped.

If we invest in infrastructure and training across sports, India can succeed. We have proven ourselves in business, technology, and science. The issue is focus.

Right now, 90 per cent of attention goes to cricket. If leadership sets a clear target, like 100 Olympic medals, I’m confident it can happen.

Infrastructure and funding would follow. Without direction, efforts get fragmented.

This also discourages private investment. For example, we partnered with Mahesh Bhupathi to produce a Grand Slam singles champion.

But due to interference from governing bodies, we had to withdraw. If such issues are resolved, any sport can grow. Also, cricket is overcrowded. Talent needs to move into other sports.

Which sports vertical does Apollo see itself investing in over the next five years?

We were not in cricket earlier. My vision was to enter only when we became a brand leader. I didn’t want smaller branding opportunities.

When the right opportunity came, we committed — and this is a long-term commitment.

When I spoke to the BCCI, I made it clear this is not a short-term deal. I believe in long-term partnerships. We’ve been with Manchester United for 12 years.

Even during their downturn, we stayed committed. Similarly, we will continue investing in cricket in India. India accounts for 65 per cent of our business. Cricket is also growing globally, so focusing on it will help build the brand.

With cricket set to feature in the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics, will popularity drive future investment decisions? And would you consider other sports?

Yes, popularity will be a key factor. For Apollo, cricket will remain the focus. However, with our Vredestein brand in Europe, we invest in football, skiing, and marathons. In India, we are involved in golf as well.

Published on Apr 08, 2026

#Apollo #Tyres #Neeraj #Kanwar #Har #Safar #Mein #Dum #Hai #campaign #struggle #famous #cricketer">Apollo Tyres VC and MD Neeraj Kanwar on the ‘Har Safar Mein Dum Hai’ campaign: It’s about the struggle to become a famous cricketer  Earlier this year, Apollo Tyres — the new lead sponsor for Indian cricket — signalled a clear shift in tone with its        ‘Har Safar Mein Dum Hai’ campaign, moving away from light-hearted advertising to a more reflective, story-driven narrative. Anchored by Sachin Tendulkar and the journeys of India’s leading cricketers, the campaign draws a parallel between sporting perseverance and the company’s own evolution, striking a chord with audiences through its emphasis on resilience, family support, and long-term ambition. In this conversation, Vice Chairman and Managing Director Neeraj Kanwar unpacks the thinking behind the campaign, its timing, and how Apollo views its growing association with Indian sport.[embed]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D_RJhCZNNT8[/embed]Could you walk us through the thought process behind the advertisement? Was releasing it close to the World Cup a strategic decision?Firstly, thank you. The idea was to release it before the World Cup, but as you can see, this is not a World Cup-specific ad. It’s something that will play out over the next two to three years. From my side, I can say that my wife actually wrote the entire story. She is the creative mind behind it.The ad is about the struggle one goes through to become one of the most famous cricketers. It captures resilience, commitment, passion, and also the struggles of parents.In that journey, you have to keep excelling. That’s where Apollo comes in. Apollo has had a similar journey. In 1976, the company was bankrupt, and today we are number one in India. That has come from resilience, excellence, continuous effort, discovering ourselves, and investing in technology to become leaders.Sachin [Tendulkar] comes in as the god of cricket, a mentor figure guiding these kids. In the same way, my father, the chairman, has been a mentor to our 20,000 employees. Even today, as mobility evolves, he continues to guide us. That’s the correlation between Sachin and the chairman.You mentioned Sachin. What also stood out was the choice of players — Virat Kohli, Rohit Sharma, and Shubman Gill. Given that Virat and Rohit have retired from T20s and Gill isn’t part of the current World Cup setup, what was the thinking behind this selection?You said it yourself. They are currently the top players.Apollo is also a top company. So why would I go for second-best when I have access to the best?These players have strong journeys. A lot of research has gone into the casting. Virat’s younger version looks identical, but the same effort has gone into the others too, including parents and costumes.Their journeys are all different but equally difficult. Take Rohit, for instance. He grew up in a chawl in Mumbai, and his journey from there to here is significant.Is there a possibility of doing something similar with the women’s team, given their recent success?We are looking into it. I’m very excited because, since Apollo tied up on the jersey, we’ve already had two World Cups — one with the women’s team and one at the Under-19 level.We have now added a T20 title as well. So yes, the women’s team is very much on my mind. Right now, we are just on the jersey, but discussions are ongoing internally.Cricket guarantees visibility in India. But as a brand, how do you ensure that this translates into actual value and not just visibility?We have done this with ROI in mind. ₹580 crore is not a small investment. Since tying up on the jersey in September, we have seen sales increase, better distribution, new dealers, and higher throughput at dealer counters.This is especially visible in car tyres, scooter tyres, and tractor tyres. The biggest advantage is rural reach. Cricket allows us to reach all of India instantly. People in villages are watching on phones and TVs. That awareness is driving growth in rural markets.Apollo has also invested in football, both in India and Europe. Given the uncertainty around Indian football, do you still see it as a viable space?Football is growing in India. India needs to become a sporting nation. Investment should go into multiple sports, not just cricket. The government needs to replicate cricket’s success across other sports.We are seeing progress. With increased focus, India is winning more medals at the Asian Games and Olympics. A strong public-private partnership can help identify and nurture talent.Football is becoming popular, especially with global influences like Lionel Messi. European clubs are also looking at India for academies and talent. There is recognition that India has potential.Have your European partnerships offered insights into how similar models could work in India?The key issue in India is infrastructure. In cricket, we have built world-class stadiums. Ahmedabad, for example, is phenomenal. Compared to Old Trafford, it stands out.So we have the capability. The question is why we are not doing this across all sports. We were dominant in hockey once but have slipped.If we invest in infrastructure and training across sports, India can succeed. We have proven ourselves in business, technology, and science. The issue is focus.Right now, 90 per cent of attention goes to cricket. If leadership sets a clear target, like 100 Olympic medals, I’m confident it can happen.Infrastructure and funding would follow. Without direction, efforts get fragmented.This also discourages private investment. For example, we partnered with Mahesh Bhupathi to produce a Grand Slam singles champion.But due to interference from governing bodies, we had to withdraw. If such issues are resolved, any sport can grow. Also, cricket is overcrowded. Talent needs to move into other sports.Which sports vertical does Apollo see itself investing in over the next five years?We were not in cricket earlier. My vision was to enter only when we became a brand leader. I didn’t want smaller branding opportunities.When the right opportunity came, we committed — and this is a long-term commitment.When I spoke to the BCCI, I made it clear this is not a short-term deal. I believe in long-term partnerships. We’ve been with Manchester United for 12 years.Even during their downturn, we stayed committed. Similarly, we will continue investing in cricket in India. India accounts for 65 per cent of our business. Cricket is also growing globally, so focusing on it will help build the brand.With cricket set to feature in the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics, will popularity drive future investment decisions? And would you consider other sports?Yes, popularity will be a key factor. For Apollo, cricket will remain the focus. However, with our Vredestein brand in Europe, we invest in football, skiing, and marathons. In India, we are involved in golf as well.Published on Apr 08, 2026  #Apollo #Tyres #Neeraj #Kanwar #Har #Safar #Mein #Dum #Hai #campaign #struggle #famous #cricketer

Deadspin | Canadiens pull off comeback, shootout victory over Panthers  Apr 7, 2026; Montreal, Quebec, CAN; Montreal Canadiens defenseman Adam Engstrom (42) gets a penalty for holding a Florida Panthers player during the first period at the Bell Centre. Mandatory Credit: Eric Bolte-Imagn Images   Cole Caufield and Alexandre Texier scored in the shootout to complete the host Montreal Canadiens’ 4-3 comeback win over the Florida Panthers on Tuesday night.  Ivan Demidov, Phillip Danault and Nick Suzuki scored for the Canadiens (46-22-10, 102 points) in regulation. Montreal has won nine of its last 10. Juraj Slafkovsky had two assists and Jakub Dobes stopped 30 shots.  Carter Verhaeghe, Cole Reinhart and Eetu Luostarinen got the goals for the Panthers (37-37-4, 78 points), who have lost six of eight. Danill Tarasov made 29 saves.  Suzuki tied the game 3-3 with 21 seconds left in regulation. He put the puck into an empty net after taking a pass from defenseman Lane Hutson from behind the net.  Danault tied it 2-2, 6:22 into the third period with a snap shot from the slot. It came with a penalty being called against Florida and the Canadiens playing 6-on-5 on the ice with Dobes pulled.  But Luostarinen restored the lead just 1:27 later when he tipped in defenseman Gustav Forsling’s shot.   Reinhart gave the Panthers a 2-1 lead with 6:17 left in the second period. He won a foot race for the puck from the neutral zone to create a short semi-breakaway for himself and, from almost along the goal line, poked the puck just inside the left goal post.  Demidov’s power-play goal 54 seconds into the middle period had tied the game 1-1 for the Canadiens. It came on a one-time slap shot from the top of the right circle off a pass from Caufield. Florida defenseman Tobias Bjornfot slashed Demidov and had been penalized for it 22 seconds earlier.  Verhaeghe opened the scoring 9:23 into the first period when the rebound of a shot by defenseman Donovan Sebrango caromed out to Verhaeghe in the left circle. He then drilled it past Dobes for Verhaeghe’s 25th goal and his third in the last four games.  Montreal’s Kirby Dach and Texier returned from injuries. Dach missed 11 games with an upper-body injury and Texier seven games with a lower-body injury.  –Field Level Media   #Deadspin #Canadiens #pull #comeback #shootout #victory #PanthersApr 7, 2026; Montreal, Quebec, CAN; Montreal Canadiens defenseman Adam Engstrom (42) gets a penalty for holding a Florida Panthers player during the first period at the Bell Centre. Mandatory Credit: Eric Bolte-Imagn Images

Cole Caufield and Alexandre Texier scored in the shootout to complete the host Montreal Canadiens’ 4-3 comeback win over the Florida Panthers on Tuesday night.

Ivan Demidov, Phillip Danault and Nick Suzuki scored for the Canadiens (46-22-10, 102 points) in regulation. Montreal has won nine of its last 10. Juraj Slafkovsky had two assists and Jakub Dobes stopped 30 shots.

Carter Verhaeghe, Cole Reinhart and Eetu Luostarinen got the goals for the Panthers (37-37-4, 78 points), who have lost six of eight. Danill Tarasov made 29 saves.

Suzuki tied the game 3-3 with 21 seconds left in regulation. He put the puck into an empty net after taking a pass from defenseman Lane Hutson from behind the net.

Danault tied it 2-2, 6:22 into the third period with a snap shot from the slot. It came with a penalty being called against Florida and the Canadiens playing 6-on-5 on the ice with Dobes pulled.


But Luostarinen restored the lead just 1:27 later when he tipped in defenseman Gustav Forsling’s shot.

Reinhart gave the Panthers a 2-1 lead with 6:17 left in the second period. He won a foot race for the puck from the neutral zone to create a short semi-breakaway for himself and, from almost along the goal line, poked the puck just inside the left goal post.

Demidov’s power-play goal 54 seconds into the middle period had tied the game 1-1 for the Canadiens. It came on a one-time slap shot from the top of the right circle off a pass from Caufield. Florida defenseman Tobias Bjornfot slashed Demidov and had been penalized for it 22 seconds earlier.

Verhaeghe opened the scoring 9:23 into the first period when the rebound of a shot by defenseman Donovan Sebrango caromed out to Verhaeghe in the left circle. He then drilled it past Dobes for Verhaeghe’s 25th goal and his third in the last four games.

Montreal’s Kirby Dach and Texier returned from injuries. Dach missed 11 games with an upper-body injury and Texier seven games with a lower-body injury.

–Field Level Media

#Deadspin #Canadiens #pull #comeback #shootout #victory #Panthers">Deadspin | Canadiens pull off comeback, shootout victory over Panthers  Apr 7, 2026; Montreal, Quebec, CAN; Montreal Canadiens defenseman Adam Engstrom (42) gets a penalty for holding a Florida Panthers player during the first period at the Bell Centre. Mandatory Credit: Eric Bolte-Imagn Images   Cole Caufield and Alexandre Texier scored in the shootout to complete the host Montreal Canadiens’ 4-3 comeback win over the Florida Panthers on Tuesday night.  Ivan Demidov, Phillip Danault and Nick Suzuki scored for the Canadiens (46-22-10, 102 points) in regulation. Montreal has won nine of its last 10. Juraj Slafkovsky had two assists and Jakub Dobes stopped 30 shots.  Carter Verhaeghe, Cole Reinhart and Eetu Luostarinen got the goals for the Panthers (37-37-4, 78 points), who have lost six of eight. Danill Tarasov made 29 saves.  Suzuki tied the game 3-3 with 21 seconds left in regulation. He put the puck into an empty net after taking a pass from defenseman Lane Hutson from behind the net.  Danault tied it 2-2, 6:22 into the third period with a snap shot from the slot. It came with a penalty being called against Florida and the Canadiens playing 6-on-5 on the ice with Dobes pulled.  But Luostarinen restored the lead just 1:27 later when he tipped in defenseman Gustav Forsling’s shot.   Reinhart gave the Panthers a 2-1 lead with 6:17 left in the second period. He won a foot race for the puck from the neutral zone to create a short semi-breakaway for himself and, from almost along the goal line, poked the puck just inside the left goal post.  Demidov’s power-play goal 54 seconds into the middle period had tied the game 1-1 for the Canadiens. It came on a one-time slap shot from the top of the right circle off a pass from Caufield. Florida defenseman Tobias Bjornfot slashed Demidov and had been penalized for it 22 seconds earlier.  Verhaeghe opened the scoring 9:23 into the first period when the rebound of a shot by defenseman Donovan Sebrango caromed out to Verhaeghe in the left circle. He then drilled it past Dobes for Verhaeghe’s 25th goal and his third in the last four games.  Montreal’s Kirby Dach and Texier returned from injuries. Dach missed 11 games with an upper-body injury and Texier seven games with a lower-body injury.  –Field Level Media   #Deadspin #Canadiens #pull #comeback #shootout #victory #Panthers

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