TORONTO -- Canada was not the best team on the ice until it mattered.Down two goals with three minutes left, the high-powered Canadians kicked it up a notch and Team Europe simply couldnt stop them.Brad Marchand scored a short-handed goal with 43.1 seconds left after Patrice Bergeron tied it with 2:53 to go on a power play, lifting Canada to a 2-1 victory and the World Cup of Hockey title Thursday night.Sidney Crosbys line with the Boston Bruins pair of Marchand and Bergeron dominated in the final minutes as the trio did throughout the two-week tournament.Theyre addicted to winning, and they just make it happen, Canada coach Mike Babcock said.The Canadians won the best-of-three finals 2-0.Theyve won 16 straight games, including Olympic gold medals at the Sochi and Vancouver Games, since losing to the U.S. in the 2010 Olympics.Its pretty special, Crosby said. Its not easy to do, and for a good chunk of us, a lot of us were there in Russia.Europe seemed as if it had a chance to score a go-ahead goal late when Drew Doughty was called for high-sticking with just under two minutes left, but Canada was the team that took advantage when Marchand got the puck into open space and beat Jaroslav Halak with a shot from the slot to win the first World Cup since 2004.Its just crazy the way everything worked out, said Crosby, selected the MVP of the tournament after scoring three goals and finishing with a World Cup-high 10 points. When you get a penalty that late in the game, youre just trying to force overtime.After Crosby got his latest personal reward, he was presented with a silver World Cup of Hockey trophy and skated with it around the ice just months after hosting the Stanley Cup for the second time in his career.He set up the tying goal, passing the puck off the boards to Brent Burns, whose shot just inside the blue line was redirected by Bergerons raised stick.In the biggest moments, he turns it up, Babcock said.Carey Price made 32 saves for the Canadians, who started slow before ending the tournament with a furious rally that fired up a once-quiet crowd.Zdeno Chara scored early for Europe, and Halak made 32 saves for the eight-nation team .Its a tough loss because we were able to push them all the way to the limits, Chara said.In front of an unenthusiastic crowd and a lot of empty seats in the home of the Toronto Maple Leafs, the Canadians started flat and the Europeans made them pay for their apparent apathy.Unlike the previous two times Canada trailed briefly to the U.S. and Russia, it could not come back against Europe quickly.It looked as if it wasnt going to be Canadas night when John Tavares had a wide-open net to shoot into but hit the right post from the bottom of the right circle. Earlier in the same shift, the New York Islanders forward missed the net on a one-timer opportunity.Canada averaged 4.4 goals over the first five games of the tournament, giving Price plenty of support. It didnt score as much in the final game of the tournament, but two goals were enough to win thanks to Price.Europe outshot the Canadians 12-8 after the first period and 27-21 after the second before they closed well enough to finish with one more shot.Canada had a man advantage again early in the third period, but got only one shot on Halak, a Slovak and Islanders standout, on the power play.Crosby had a chance to score with seven-plus minutes left, but Halak kicked the shot away with his right skate.In the end, Halak could not keep the puck out of his net twice.The way it turned out at the end is very painful, Europe coach Ralph Krueger said. But you need to open eye to big picture and the journey. How we played was amazing. They played their hearts out. ... We beat the odds and we turned this into a hell of final, which nobody expected.Sam Howard Jersey .J. -- Marshawn Lynch said Thursday it will be good to get back to football after the Seattle quiet talking running back wrapped up his final mandatory media session of Super Bowl week. Blake Cederlind Jersey . Miller reached right to deflect Mikhail Grabovskis attempt with just over 2 minutes remaining in regulation, and then made two more saves in the shootout Sunday to give the Sabres a 2-1 win over the Washington Capitals. https://www.cheappiratesjerseys.us/882e-connie-mack-jersey-pirates.html . A lawyer for MLB, Matthew Menchel, confirmed Wednesday the league dropped its case against Biogenesis of America, its owner Anthony Bosch and several other individuals. The lawsuit had accused Biogenesis and Bosch of conspiring with players to violate their contracts by providing them with banned performance-enhancing substances. Elias Diaz Jersey . The Brazilian goalkeeper signed a loan deal with the Major League Soccer club on Friday as he looks to get playing time ahead of this summers World Cup in his home country. John Milner Jersey . Thats about all he can do right now, so hes trying not to think about when he might be able to play again for the Los Angeles Lakers.No issue has been more polarizing in college football recruiting over the past decade than satellite camps.Satellite camps have been a hot-button issue in the recruiting world for years. Big Ten, Big 12 and Pac-12 teams have conducted them all over the country, but they reached national awareness after Michigan coach Jim Harbaugh conducted an eight-day Summer Swarm tour in 2015 that took the Wolverines deep into SEC recruiting territory. In early April, the NCAA Division I Council outlawed satellite camps after numerous ACC and SEC coaches pushed to get the recruiting rules changed. However, the NCAA rescinded the ban just weeks later, and virtually every major program in the country held some sort of satellite camp in June and July.While the debate over satellite camps was raging this spring and summer, a separate NCAA subcommittee was well into its second year of a holistic review of the entire recruiting model. When the NCAA reversed course with the satellite camp ban, it asked this subcommittee to look at potential modifications to camps and clinics participation. The subcommittee was initially asked to have these recommendations by Sept. 1, but the NCAAs Board of Directors told the group recently that it has until Nov. 1 to present its findings. Either way, were not far from some preliminary guidance on what satellite camps will look like in the future.Over a two-month period, ESPN.com interviewed more than 50 people who were directly impacted by satellite camps. This included everyone from recruits to high school coaches to head coaches to assistants from each of the Power 5 conferences.What became clear is that prospects believe satellite camps are a vital part of todays recruiting process, high school coaches are concerned the camps allow outsiders to interject themselves into prospects lives,and college coaches are torn on whats best for both the prospective student-athletes and their programs. Yet almost everybody involved believes a positive solution can be found, and there are plenty of solid ideas to go around.You have to go to satellite camps to get noticedOn a 100-degree, late June afternoon in Kansas City, more than 400 players crowded onto a single turf field at Blue Springs South High School for the Midwest Elite Camp. They were there with hopes of impressing Harbaugh.By the end of the satellite camp, one player, defensive end Anthony Payne out of Raymore-Peculiar (Missouri) High School, had caught the attention of the Wolverines coaches, and he earned a scholarship days later. Payne is one of summers best examples of a satellite camp success story. Because of his one-day performance at the camp in Kansas City, Payne became one of the most heavily recruited players in Missouri before he committed to Kansas State in late July.Yet there are many others who attended satellite camps this summer to earn Power 5 offers. Those success stories reinforce recruits belief that attending satellite camps has become a vital part of the recruiting process.I dont know where I would have gone had it not been for satellite camps, Payne said. They were a very positive experience for me, and it helped me get the type of attention I knew I deserved. I really didnt think it was that big of a deal to go to all of the camps. You have to go to satellite camps to get noticed. Thats what I figured. Thats why I went to all of those camps, and it turned out to be true.Even elite recruits, prospects ranked in the ESPN 300, are fans of satellite camps because of the opportunities they create to work with the schools that are recruiting them. ESPN 300 cornerback Ambry Thomas, out of Martin Luther King High School in Detroit, wanted to interact more with the Florida coaches who were after him, so he attended one of the Gators satellite camps. Cam Akers, the nations second-ranked running back and the 26th-ranked player overall, attended a Michigan satellite camp because he knew he wouldnt be able to get from his home in Clinton, Mississippi, to the Wolverines campus anytime soon.With me being from down in South Mississippi, its not easy to get to places like Michigan, Akers said. Its not easy for recruits to get to far places like that. So for me, going to that Michigan satellite camp was a big deal.A number of recruits pointed out that attending local satellite camps in their region helps prospects save money instead of flying all over the country to visit college team camps held on campuses. Prospect Leonard Warner, from Brookwood High School in Snelville, Georgia, the second-ranked inside linebacker, was able to work out for Ohio State at a satellite camp less than 10 minutes from his house. Fifth-ranked receiver Donovan Peoples-Jones of Cass Tech in Detroit attended the Sound Mind Sound Body Academy in Detroit and showcased his skills in front of coaches from programs in each of the Power 5 conferences.Satellite camps are how recruiting is done today, Peoples-Jones said. Its all about offers, exposure and experience, and you can get that by going to great satellite camps.Third-party problemsYou wont find many high school coaches who disagree with recruits when it comes to the opportunities satellite camps create. For example, Midwest City (Oklahoma) High School assistant coach Jason Sexton said he takes a van load of kids all over Texas and Oklahoma each summer to hit satellite camps, and that allows his players to be seen by five or six schools at one time because their parents dont have the means to get out and see those schools.There are, however, a number of issues that concern the high school coaching community, namely the risk of injury a prospect faces in attending multiple events just weeks before he opens high school practice or the fact that many college coaches dont instruct at their own camps. The largest concern is the way satellite camps have allowed third parties to become involved with a prospects recruitment.Some third-party organizations -- personal coaches, private trainers or advisors -- latch on to players by running non-institutional camps for which they advertise that college coaches will be in attendance. However, many high school coaches call these events money grabs because they often fail to deliver on promises of exposure for the recruits, and they are poorly executed. Potomac (Maryland) Bullis School coach Pat Cilento estimates that a third-party organization that ran a satellite camp inn Baltimore earlier this summer made roughly $30,000 off the 600 players in attendance, and there were probably only a dozen legitimate FBS recruits there.ddddddddddddHigh school coaches, including Marcus High School (Flower Mound, Texas) coach Gerry Stanford, call these third parties street agents that make recruits and their families promises they can never keep, often bilk them for thousands of dollars and leave the local coach to pick up the pieces when major scholarships never materialize.These trainers give the implication, Well, youre not getting looked at, so lets take you to this Michigan satellite camp or this Oklahoma State or OU satellite camp, and Im going to get you recruited by all the big-time schools, Sexton said.This trainer is going to tell them Hey, youre good enough to play at Michigan or OU, so he can continue to put his hand in their pocket. Players are going to come up with that money any which way they can because this guy is telling them the things they want to hear. I had a trainer tell one of my kids, We need to go to this Michigan camp because its going to get you the looks you need. Ive already got his parents coming back to us asking, This guy got our foot in the door at this Michigan, so why didnt an offer materialize?College coaches know the system isnt perfectCollege coaches admit theyre in a tough situation with satellite camps. Even those coaches who are against satellite camps but held camps anyway are concerned theyve turned into something they were never intended to be.In some cases, coaches say theyve conducted satellite camps at certain locations to do a favor for a high school coach in hopes he returns the favor someday or to catch the attention of a high-value prospect theyre targeting. A Pac-12 assistant admitted to bending the rules by openly recruiting a player at one of these camps, but he wasnt the only one who admitted to that.A Big 12 assistant said, Weve come a long way from the days of trying to find under-recruited players, and now satellite camps are hardly an evaluation tool and are mostly about getting your brand out on Twitter. Georgia coach Kirby Smart said he went to four or five satellite camps and didnt get a whole lot out of them, but he wasnt the only one.By this stage, we usually know whether or not were recruiting them, Cal coach Sonny Dykes said. I dont think were going to learn that much about them by going out and doing a satellite camp. Recruiting is all about relationships, and its about trust, and I think thats a lot more important than testing some kid.Just like the high school coaches, college coaches are concerned about outsiders becoming involved with recruits because of satellite camps.What weve done now in college football is weve opened the door for third parties to be involved, like AAU basketball, South Carolina coach Will Muschamp said. Theres a lot of people making a bunch of money off these satellite camps and trying to influence recruits to go to a bunch of different schools. If thats what we want, lets have at it, but I dont know if thats really what we want. It needs some regulation.A lot of good ideas out thereRegulation is what many involved with college football recruiting are expecting once the football recruiting subcommittee sends its findings to the Board of Directors on Nov. 1. Although the committee is also expected to suggest changes to key elements of recruiting, such as an early signing period or modifications to the official visit schedule, no issue will be more closely monitored for adjustment than that of satellite camps.The good news is that there are a lot of really good ideas out there on ways they can be improved, Hutchinson (Kansas) High School coach Ryan Cornelsen said. If the folks at NCAA are willing to listen, then everybody would feel better about them.TCU head coach Gary Patterson suggested a return of the days when recruiters could travel to established regional camps, such as the Nike Opening Regionals, during the spring evaluation process to watch the events. The NCAA banned that in 2008, but Patterson said allowing coaches to be at these events would reduce the value of satellite camps and solve a lot of the problems theyve created.Ole Miss coach Hugh Freeze floated another interesting idea: banning team-sponsored satellite camps and having FBS conferences take over and conduct them in April and May, when recruiters are on the road.Have the SEC run the satellite camp [in its region], or have three of them, Freeze said. Or have the Big 12 satellite camp in Dallas. Youre already out on the road, so this Saturday is the Big 12 satellite camp in Dallas and Houston. A joint venture, the SEC and ACC in Florida or wherever it may be, Atlanta, and its run by the league offices.I think you could accomplish everything you need as coaches, and that way you know theres no third party running the camp. And if we need to extend the evaluation period to eight weeks, extend it. But leave that summertime for the kids to get to your campus, so they get to know you, and then they can make a quality decision based on the environment they see there.One of the most feasible ideas floating around emerged in mid-June, when the Virginian-Pilot obtained documents from the NCAA suggesting the organization was considering eliminating team-sponsored satellite camps and instead sponsoring camps hosted at NFL training facilities or high schools that any coach could attend.The idea of the NCAA taking over satellite camps is a definite hit with many high school and college coaches. Most interviewed agreed that a nationalized camp plan would alleviate their concerns about unregulated camps and still help kids get more opportunities to compete for scholarships. Prospects would be on board with the idea too.Recruits would love them, most definitely, ESPN 300 offensive guard and Auburn pledge Nick Brahms said. They could get a chance to play on bigger fields that they might not ever play on again. As long as the college coaches are still there, itd still be smooth. If theyre not, then they probably wouldnt be worth the time. But if the NCAA steps in and runs it and coaches are there, recruits will love them. I think that would eliminate all of the controversy weve seen with these camps this summer. ' ' '