In some states and counties, initiative funding has not been enough to cover the needs of Latinos.
on the ice together. That was their top line of Hintz, Mikko Rantanen and Mikael Granlund, along with defensemen Heiskanen and Esa Lindell.It was the first time since the NHL began tracking starters in 1997-98, in either a regular-season or playoff game, that all five starting skaters were from Finland.
Lindell on his 31st birthday played in his 100th career playoff game, becoming the ninth player in Stars franchise history and the ninth Finnish player in NHL history to reach that mark. He was denied a goal when Skinner made aafter lunging across the crease to close off what had been an open net with 9 1/2 minutes left.“I did know that I stopped it,” Skinner said. “I didn’t know how close it exactly was.”
Connor McDavid and Leon Draisaitl, the 100-point teammates in the regular season, both had an assist in Game 2 to reach 20 points in these playoffs. That matched the most in the NHL with Rantanen, who has now gone five games without a goal and only two assists.McDavid’s four consecutive 20-point postseasons match the longest stretch in NHL history with Sergei Fedorov (1995-98), Bryan Trottier (1980-83) and Mike Bossy (1980-83). Draisaitl hit the 20-point mark for the second year in a row, and third time in his career.
Draisaitl is the Oilers’ top scorer with six, while McDavid has three goals and 17 assists. When defenseman Brett Kulak scored in Game 3, he was the 17th different Edmonton player with a goal this postseason.
DALLAS (AP) — Dallas Stars coach Pete DeBoer has jokingly referred to himself as being Finnish during these NHL playoffs. After all, he has five of the 13 players from Finland who are on the rosters of the four teams still chasing the Stanley Cup.for its past campaigns targeting the U.S. and its allies.
The hackers used a variety of tactics to gain access, including, which involves sending authentic-looking messages to a potential victim that contain links to harmful software or requests for sensitive information.
The Russian team also exploited security vulnerabilities in computer devices used at small and in-home offices, networks that often lack the security measures found in larger systems.The hackers didn’t use particularly innovative techniques, according to Grant Geyer, chief strategy officer at the cybersecurity company Claroty. Nevertheless, the sprawling yet carefully orchestrated effort gives the Russians a “granular understanding” of the aid sent to Ukraine, he said.