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 Subject :ll, well get him out ther.. 25.09.2014 - 11:40:21 
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ARLINGTON, Texas -- Athletics right-hander A. Buccaneers #87 Jersey .J. Griffin is scheduled to have elbow surgery Wednesday, and will miss the entire season with fellow third-year starter Jarrod Parker. "We were hoping that wasnt going to be the case," Oakland manager Bob Melvin said before Tuesdays game in Texas. "Losing two guys like that for the entire season is a difficult blow. Ones a blow, two is tough. You move on, but you certainly have a lot of sympathy for the two guys that are having to go through that, because theyve meant so much to this team over the last couple of years." Parker, who had been expected to be Oaklands opening day starter, had Tommy John surgery on his right elbow during spring training. Griffin will have the surgery after getting a second opinion Tuesday from Dr. Thomas Mehlhoff in Houston. Melvin said he didnt know the specifics of the surgery Griffin will have or how extensive it would be. He had spoken only briefly to Griffin. "Hes always pretty happy-go-lucky, in good spirits," Melvin said. "I think the fact that hes having it done this early gives him a light at the end of the tunnel to pitch next season. The longer that goes on, the more difficult it is to come back and get semi-close to a full season. Hes looking at it very positively." Parker and Griffin combined for 26 victories last season. Griffin was 14-10 with a 3.83 ERA last season after making his major league debut in 2012 going 7-1 with a 3.06 ERA in 15 starts for the As. Parker went 13-8 in 2012, and was 12-8 last season. Lavonte David Buccaneers Jersey . -- Look at London Fletchers career stats, particularly the column of numbers under the letter "G. Akeem Spence Buccaneers Jersey . Headlining the 27 players were first-round NHL draftees Rasmus Ristolainen and Teuvo Teravainen. Both players are returnees from the 2013 Finnish World Junior team.Bobby Ryan cant help but worry sometimes. In just his second game with the Ottawa Senators, he made a mistake on the power play and envisioned the consequence as he skated back to the bench. "OK, thats your last opportunity and good luck on another unit," he told himself. Its a mentality that comes from playing parts of five seasons under coach Randy Carlyle. Since then, Ryan has run the gamut on coaching personalities through his time with Bruce Boudreau and now Paul MacLean. Going from one extreme to the other, Ryan adjusted on the fly as he came into his own as an NHL scorer. "With Randy you had a hard-pressed, aggressive coach and then you went to Bruce, who was fairly lackadaisical in, I wouldnt want to say his approach to the game, but his systematic plays," Ryan said. "He was different like that, but he gave you opportunities to really create offensively. And then I think Macs kind of that hybrid in between both of them. He gives you space to make plays and do things, but hes also demanding. You have to stick to the structure, and if you stick to those Xs and Os thats where he lets the skill come through." Skill has never been a question for Ryan, a four-time 30-goal scorer whos off to the best start of his NHL career and should be a lock for the U.S. Olympic team in Sochi. It has been more a question of how three coaches approached managing his talent. Ryan scored 112 goals in the 274 games Carlyle spent behind the bench. Before the Ducks fired Carlyle in late November 2011, a strained relationship with Ryan had the winger on the trade block. "Everybody knows my history with Randy," Ryan said this week while making it clear that Carlyle was always fair to him. Before the Senators faced the Toronto Maple Leafs during the pre-season, Carlyle was effusive in his praise. "I think Bobby was a young kid that had a different body make-up from what he is now. He put (in) a lot of time and effort, and its a tribute to him to get himself in the type of condition that he is now versus where he came out of junior," he said. "Bobbys growing into a pretty mature hockey player both on and off the ice." Carlyles heavy-handed style played a role in that growth, but Ryan got more freedom under Boudreau, who learned a little about handling star scorers from coaching Alex Ovechkin with the Washington Capitals. "Really great players — Ovi, Bobby Ryan, the Jason Spezzas, the (Ryan) Getzlafs — if you try to tell them how to be creative, its not a smart move because they see things that you cant see," Boudreau said. "Its like they got another sense about them when people are around or where people are or stuff like that. You just have to give them a lot of offensive-free latitude." But thats not to say Boudreau gave Ryan a free pass. He asked him to try playing centre when the Ducks were weak there and came away impressed with how the young star handled that and other suggestions. "Bobby was really easy, and he was also very acceptable in anything I asked him to do," Boudreau said. "Id have him in my office just because I talk to the players a lot, but Id have him in and hed be very receptive to any ideas I had. I listened to him on any ideas he had and I thought I was receptive to themm. Warren Sapp Buccaneers Jersey. I thought the relationship was pretty good." That relationship ended July 5 when the Ducks traded Ryan to the Senators following an 11-goal, 48-game season. His days of playing Boudreaus fire-wagon style of up-tempo hockey were over, but MacLean continued the trend of instilling more confidence and trust in Ryan. The 26-year-old already faced his former team this season and will see Boudreau and the Ducks again Friday in Ottawa. Ryan saw similarities in Boudreau and MacLeans interactions with players, but not their approaches to hockey. Boudreau won the Jack Adams Award in 2007-08 based on offence and an incredible Capitals turnaround, while MacLean won it last season for leading the Senators to the playoffs amid injuries to Spezza, defenceman Erik Karlsson, goaltender Craig Anderson and others. "Obviously you dont win the Jack Adams Award by not being able to speak to your players and get through to your players," Ryan said. "Im looking forward to having a relationship like that and being able to build on that throughout time." It has started well as Ryan has six goals and three assists in nine games. That mistake Ryan made on the power play earlier this season didnt cost him another chance, and as a result hes not playing scared. "You dont have to tighten up or whatnot and you can let it go and play," he said. "Theres been situations on the ice where Id like to have things back, but weve had a lot of good talks between us about that kind of stuff. Hes given me the confidence to let me know that theyre going to put me right back out and get me right back into the situation again." Ryan is still adjusting to differences in Eastern Conference play compared to the West, like how much extra space he has to gain the offensive zone when hes carrying the puck. But across the spectrum of his play, the transition to Ottawa has been "fairly seamless." Since seeing Ryan in camp, MacLean never worried about that adjustment and praised his consistency along the way. MacLean wants Ryan to play with a sense of freedom, but hes not giving him special treatment. "I think its our job to not just coach Bobby Ryan. We have 23 guys that we have to coach, and thats the same with all of them," MacLean said. "We really believe in the young players, when they get the opportunity to play you have to play them and when theyre playing well you have to get them out there and let them play. Bobbys no different than the rest of them as when hes playing well, well get him out there, and when hes not, we wont." Ryan has learned that lesson under each coach and is thankful for the extra chances that have followed when he faltered. He doesnt like the comparisons to Daniel Alfredsson — who signed with Detroit the same day Ryan was dealt to Ottawa — which will undoubtedly linger, but filling that role as a scoring winger suits him well. "Theyre giving me an opportunity to, I guess, be one of the top players, one of the go-to guys and putting me in situations where they feel like I can have success," Ryan said. "Thats all I really wanted and thats the opportunity that I think I knew I was going to be given." ——— Follow Stephen Whyno on Twitter at @SWhyno wholesale nfl jerseys ' ' '

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