QUEBEC -- Quebecs line of Mikhail Grigorenko, Fabrice Herzog and Nick Sorensen combined for five goals and 14 points as the Remparts crushed the visiting Shawingan Cataractes 7-2 on Friday in Quebec Major Junior Hockey League action. Herzog and Sorensen each had two goals and three assists for Quebec (37-16-11), which is 3-0-2 in its last five outings, and Grigorenko scored once and set up three others. Marc-Olivier Groleau and Adam Chapman also scored for the Remparts while Callum Booth made 22 saves for the win. Nicholas Welsh and Gabriel Slight scored for the Cataractes (18-38-8), who remain one point ahead of Saint John for the final playoff position, and Storm Phaneuf turned away 27 shots in defeat. --- WILDCATS 5 TITAN 2 BATHURST, N.B. -- Christophe Lalonde had two goals and an assist as Moncton toppled the Titan. Stephan Seegar, Mathieu Olivier and Garret Johnson also scored for the Wildcats (32-30-3) and Vladimir Tkachev tacked on three assists. Alexandros Soumakis and Anthony Gingras supplied the scoring for Acadie-Bathurst (20-39-6), which has dropped back-to-back contests. Alex Dubeau made 24 saves for Moncton while Jacob Brennan stopped 25-of-29 shots for the Titan. --- SCREAMING EAGLES 5 ISLANDERS 2 SYDNEY, N.S. -- Kyle Farrell and Charles-Eric Legare each had a pair of goals as Cape Breton downed Charlottetown. Jeremy Beaudry scored once and set up two more for the Screaming Eagles (34-26-4) while Cameron Darcy chipped in with two assists. Cape Bretons Alex Bureau made 26 saves for the victory. Daniel Sprong scored both goals for the Islanders (20-38-7) and goaltender Mason MacDonald turned aside 40-of-44 shots in a losing cause. --- VOLTIGEURS 2 PHOENIX 1 SHERBROOKE, Que. -- William Carrier scored twice in the third period as Drummondville edged the Phoenix. Carriers power-play goal at 13:08 stood up as the game winner for the Voltigeurs (40-21-4) while Louis-Phllip Guindon made 17 saves for the victory. Simon Desbiens put Sherbrooke (16-40-8) on the board at 17:30 of the third. Maxime Lagace turned away 33 shots for the Phoenix, who remain four points behind Shawinigan for the final playoff position. --- TIGRES 9 SAGUENEENS 4 VICTORIAVILLE, Que. -- Carl-Antoine Delisle, Jean-Francois Plante, Carl Marois and Philippe Hudon each had a pair of goals as the Tigres handed Chicoutimi its sixth loss in a row. Angelo Miceli had a goal and an assist for Victoriaville (32-24-9) while Plante tacked on two assists for a four-point night. Philippe Archambault, Simon Tremblay, Frederic Allard and Victor Provencher scored for the Sagueneens (26-37-1). Francois Tremblay made 14 saves for the Tigres. Julio Billia started in net for Chicoutimi and gave up six goals on 30 shots in two periods of play. Charles-Olivier Levesque stopped 11-of-14 shots in relief. --- OCEANIC 7 DRAKKAR 1 RIMOUSKI, Que. -- Michael Joly had a pair of goals and Philippe Desrosiers made 38 saves as the Oceanic beat Baie-Comeau for their 13th win in a row. Anthony DeLuca and Sebastien Sylvestre each had a goal and two assists for Rimouski (42-15-7) while Brent Turnbull, Peter Trainor and Frederik Gauthier had the others. Bokondji Imama scored the lone goal for the Drakkar (45-16-4), who had their five-game win streak halted. Baie-Comeaus Philippe Cadorette allowed four goals on 18 shots in 36 minutes of action before giving the net to Simon Lemieux, who stopped 4-of-7 shots in relief. --- OLYMPIQUES 4 HUSKIES 3 ROUYN-NORANDA, Que. -- Vincent Dunn scored twice, including the winner, and added an assist as Gatineau slipped past the Huskies. Emile Poirier and Franck Schumacher also scored for the Olympiques (39-21-4) and Simon Tardif-Richard added two assists. Jean-Sebastien Dea, Jason Fuchs and Francis Perron responded for for Rouyn-Noranda (34-25-5). Robert Steeves made 17 saves for Gatineau while Guillaume Decelles turned away 25-of-29 shots for the Huskies. --- FOREURS 4 ARMADA 3 VAL-DOR, Que. -- Anthony Mantha scored three times, including the winner at 12:57 of the third period, as the Foreurs edged Blainville-Boisbriand. Shawn Ouellette-St-Amant also scored for Val-dOr (42-20-4) and Samuel Henley and Randy Gazzola each had two assists. The Armada (39-16-9) got goals from Christopher Clapperton, Danick Martel and Marcus Hinds. Antoine Bibeau made 27 saves for the Foreurs as Etienne Marcoux kicked out 30-of-34 shots for Blainville-Boisbriand. Elgton Jenkins Jersey .C. -- Al Jefferson knows few people will be giving the Charlotte Bobcats a chance to upset the Miami Heat in the first round of the Eastern Conference playoffs. Cheap Green Bay Packers Jerseys . Ellis had a season-high 37 points and two key assists late, Dirk Nowitzki led a fourth-quarter rally with 14 of his 35 points, and the Mavericks spoiled Howards best offensive night in Houston with a 123-120 victory over the Rockets on Wednesday night. http://www.cheappackersjerseyselite.com/ . The victory strengthened Liverpools position in the top four after Tottenham lost 1-0 at Norwich in the days late kickoff, cutting the north London club six points adrift of fourth place and the final Champions League slot for next season. Dexter Williams Jersey .com) - Tonight will go a long way in determining the two wild card spots in the Eastern Conference. Darnell Savage Jr. Jersey . Wheeler said Kane was just making a joke that was misunderstood and misinterpreted by "Winnipeg folks" and the media once again. Wheeler repeated that he believes Kane is a player who has the ability to help the Jets get to the next level as they try once again to reach the playoffs in 2014. He made the comments initially in an interview, when asked how the Jets could compete in the Central Division with teams that have made some high-profile off-season signings.TORONTO -- Morgan Rielly probably wont read this. Already wise beyond his years at the age of 20, the Toronto Maple Leafs rookie defenceman learned during training camp that he cant check Twitter as often as he used to. That lesson has served him well during a season-ruining losing streak, but its still almost impossible to avoid the chatter in a hockey-mad city. "When youre out eating at Earls or something, its on a TV and theres people talking about (us), whether its the skid were on, trade rumours or how weve been playing," Rielly said Tuesday. "Playing here in Toronto there are people that arent afraid to have a chat with you if youre at the mall or something. Youve just got to learn to deal with that and cant worry about it too much." Roommate Jake Gardiner tries to take his mind off things by seeing movies, like "Noah" on the teams most recent off day. Coach Randy Carlyle doesnt try to put on sunglasses and a hood to hide from the attention because "thats not me." Even if the Leafs wanted to, theres no real way to escape the pressure -- something area natives and former players know all too well. "Its not fun for them right now, I know that," said Calgary Flames forward Joe Colborne, who spent the past three years in Toronto with the Leafs and minor-league Marlies. "Obviously theres a lot of attention, even out West, on the Leafs, so its well-documented, for sure. You definitely feel for those guys." Empathy was in short supply for Colborne with his Flames at Air Canada Centre seeking to extend Torontos season-worst skid. But even before his Detroit Red Wings sent the Leafs to an eighth loss in a row Saturday night, Mimicos Brendan Smith expressed some sadness at how friends Gardiner and Dave Bolland have to deal with the extra criticism that he called "nonsense." "I think for everybody its difficult," Smith said. "I feel bad for them with all that pressure. Its tough. Every professional athletes going to feel pressure in some kind of way, but its definitely tough here." Red Wings goaltender Jonas Gustavsson looked at the Leafs and recalled a "similar scenario" he went through in Toronto. That was the infamous run in the winter of 2012 that then-general manager Brian Burke compared to "an 18-wheeler going right off a cliff." Gustavsson went 0-3-11 during that 1-9-1 stretch that cost coach Ron Wilson his job.dddddddddddd. But as a Swede, he managed to avoid a lot of the negativity surrounding the team because he read coverage from back home, not in Canada or the United States. After experiencing that, hes quick not to make any blanket statements about how playing in such a big market affects players. "I think thats very individual," Gustavsson said. "I think some guys have no problem whatsoever with it because they dont really care about media and TV, things like that. Maybe some guys follow it more than others and maybe have tougher times with it." Flames forward Matt Stajan, who played five full seasons and parts of two more with the Leafs, brushed off the emphasis on the extra attention that comes with being in what some consider the centre of the hockey universe. "Its not easy. In Calgary if we lose eight in a row its not easy," Stajan said. "I think the pressure from the outsides one thing, but in the dressing room you have expectations as a team and you feel that pressure anyways. "People look too much at the pressure outside. I think youre in the NHL. As a team you have pressure on yourselves to win games and be at your best every night, and when it doesnt happen, youre feeling it." Theres no doubt the Leafs are feeling it, even if its not something players would like to admit. Assistant general manager Claude Loiselle said Tuesday on Toronto radio station Sportsnet 590 The Fan that players have been squeezing their sticks during this skid. In talking to reporters, players tend to shift the focus back to hockey and away from the white noise. "Its just a matter of keeping concentrated on just playing the game and not what everybodys saying," Rielly said. "You cant be too concerned about whats going on out there, you just got to worry about what youre able to control." No ones denying the talk is out there. Captain Dion Phaneuf conceded that in a results-oriented business, theres bound to be some heavy "scrutiny" on the Leafs. A losing streak like this in a place like this ratchets it up even more. "You look on Twitter or TV, its pretty much what everyones talking about right now," Gardiner said. "But were kind of used to that. ... You just got to have fun with it and try to ignore what people are saying." 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