Uncategorized
Hockey stick signed by Leafs legend Bill Barilko sells for $70K at auction

An old wooden hockey stick sold for tens of thousands of dollars at an auction in New Hamburg, Ont., over the weekend.
Granted, it was not just any old hockey stick but one which was signed by a number of Toronto Maple Leafs legends, including Bill Barilko in the summer he died.
The winning bid was for $60,000, a number which inflates to over $70,000 once one adds in the buyers’ premium as well as GST to the initial figure.
The stick was sold by Miller & Miller Auctions, as part of a sports memorabilia sale which also saw two 1952 Mickey Mantle baseball cards sell for more than $50,000 apiece.
Barilko’s story was famously retold by the Tragically Hip in their song “50 Mission Cap,” as he died in a plane crash in northern Ontario the summer of 1951 after scoring the game- and series-winning goal of the Maple Leafs’ Stanley Cup win that year. They would not win another hockey crown until 1962, the year the wreckage was recovered.
Although this stick was not connected to that fishing trip, it was connected to another that the Leafs defenceman took with his teammates that same summer, according to Ben Pernfuss, who serves as the consignment director for sports cards and memorabilia with Miller & Miller.

Get breaking National news
For news impacting Canada and around the world, sign up for breaking news alerts delivered directly to you when they happen.
“After the Leafs won the Stanley Cup in the 1951 season, Bill Barilko and a number of his teammates went on a fishing trip up north and they stayed at a cottage as a bit of a halfway point before they got on a flight to go farther north,” he said.
“They gifted the cottage owner a couple of sticks autographed by Barilko and the people who joined Barilko on the fishing trip.
“And this was one of those sticks, and it just happened to be a number five-stamped, Bill Barilko stick.”
He said the stick has changed hands a couple of times over the years, but this is the first time it ever went to the open market.
“The one thing to note is that it’s signed by Barilko and a number of the other Toronto Maple Leafs players, which is exceedingly rare just because Barilko died so young and didn’t have the opportunity to sign much in his time with the Leafs,” Pernfuss said.
It is a Barilko model from Love & Bennett, a sporting goods store, which supplied sticks to many players at the time. It has the appearance of being game-worn but Miller & Miller could not confirm whether that was the case.
“The stick is taped for game use that matches Barilko’s style and puck marks and lower hand grip wear indicates the stick was likely game used but without photo matching, no guarantees can be made, thus, the stick is being represented as game issued,” the listing for the stick says.
It was also signed by a lengthy list of other Leafs legends, including Turk Broda, Ted Kennedy, Joe Klukay, Cal Gardner, Fleming Mackell, Ray Timgren, Howie Meeker, Harry Watson, Bill Juzda, Sid Smith, Max Bentley, Al Rollins and Tod Sloan.
The auction house placed an estimate of between $3,000 and $5,000 on the stick.
“There were bids from all over Canada and even some all over North America, really, and most of the bidding happened at the end,” Pernfuss explained.
The auction house would not say who was adding the special stick to their collection but did confirm it would remain somewhere in southern Ontario.
© 2025 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.
Uncategorized
Clement hits 3-run shot in Jays’ 5-1 win over Cubs

TORONTO – Ernie Clement hit a three-run homer and Jose Berrios threw 5 1/3 effective innings as the Toronto Blue Jays kicked off a six-game homestand Tuesday with a 5-1 victory over the Chicago Cubs.
With Daulton Varsho and Ty France aboard in the fourth inning, Clement turned on a first-pitch slider from Javier Assad for his ninth homer of the season.
Varsho added a solo shot in the eighth inning for his 12th homer of the year.
Vladimir Guerrero Jr. had three hits for the Blue Jays, who improved their American League-best record to 70-50. Toronto also owns the best home record in the AL at 39-19.
Related Videos
Berrios (9-4) struggled with control at times — he issued four walks — but still kept the Cubs (67-51) in check. He held them to two hits and did not give up a run.

Get breaking National news
For news impacting Canada and around the world, sign up for breaking news alerts delivered directly to you when they happen.
The right-hander escaped a bases-loaded jam in the third by fanning cleanup hitter Carson Kelly, one of three strikeouts on the night.
Assad (0-1), reinstated from the 60-day injured list before the game, allowed four earned runs and eight hits over four innings. He had two strikeouts and one walk.
The Cubs scored their lone run in the seventh inning when Michael Busch drove in Dansby Swanson with a single. Chicago loaded the bases before Brendon Little struck out Pete Crow-Armstrong to end the threat.
Mason Fluharty, Tommy Nance, Louis Varland and Jeff Hoffman also worked in relief for the Blue Jays in front of a sellout crowd of 43,003.
Toronto outhit Chicago 12-4. The game took two hours 43 minutes to play.
KEY MOMENT
Guerrero and Blue Jays shortstop Bo Bichette delivered a highlight-reel play in the fourth inning.
Bichette speared a Nico Hoerner grounder and made a rainbow throw to first base from the outfield grass. Guerrero nearly did the splits to get Hoerner by a quarter step for the out.
KEY STAT
The Blue Jays improved to 23-11 against National League opponents. It’s the best winning percentage (. 677) in interleague play in the major leagues.
UP NEXT
The three-game series continues Wednesday at Rogers Centre. Kevin Gausman (8-8, 3.85 earned-run average) was scheduled to start for Toronto against fellow right-hander Cade Horton (6-3, 3.18).
This report by The Canadian Press was first published Aug. 12, 2025.
© 2025 The Canadian Press
Uncategorized
Tenant advocates say Toronto’s new renoviction bylaw already making ‘positive impact’ – Toronto

A new bylaw aimed at reducing renovictions in Toronto is already having noticeable effects, according to tenant and anti-poverty advocates, though some say it’s too early to tell if it will be well-enforced.
The Rental Renovation Licence Bylaw was implemented on July 31 and is designed to protect tenants from “bad faith” evictions by their landlords under the guise of a renovation — an increasingly common tactic critics say is used by landlords to evade rent control and increase rent prices.
Toronto landlords must now obtain a licence from the city before carrying out repairs or renovations that force tenants to move out, and must apply for this licence within seven days of giving a notice of ending tenancy — known as an N13 notice — to the renter.
With the new bylaw in effect, some tenant advocates say they are already noticing a difference in landlords’ actions.
“We’re seeing far fewer calls regarding renovictions leading up to the implementation date of July 31, so it’s already had a positive impact in that sense,” said Douglas Kwan, director of advocacy and legal services at the Advocacy Centre for Tenants Ontario.
“We’re going to monitor how that goes for the rest of the year, but we anticipate that we’re going to see a gradual decline with the number of N13s or renoviction calls to our organization and others in Toronto,” Kwan said.
Renovictions have been on the rise in Toronto and the province for the past decade, and became a “massive” issue in the last five or so years, said Alejandra Ruiz Vargas, president of ACORN Canada.
Since 2017, there has been a nearly 50 per cent increase in the number of N13 notices filed in Toronto, according to a 2024 renoviction report by ACORN.

Get daily National news
Get the day’s top news, political, economic, and current affairs headlines, delivered to your inbox once a day.
“I know a couple that has been renovicted three times last year,” Ruiz Vargas said, adding that the bylaw’s implementation is a “huge win” for renters.
People in lower-cost rentals are commonly targeted by renovictions, and they face immense difficulties in finding places they can afford to move into after being evicted, anti-poverty advocates say.
“The huge increase in evictions has fuelled a massive increase in homelessness in Ontario,” said Jeff Schlemmer, executive director of Community Legal Clinic of York Region.
“Thank goodness municipalities are stepping up.”
New Westminster, B.C., was the first municipality to adopt a renoviction bylaw in 2019, with several other municipalities in Ontario, such as Hamilton and London, following in its footsteps.
These bylaws are beneficial not only for renters but the entire housing system in a city as they help preserve affordable housing stock and are a simpler and quicker solution than putting shovels into the ground to build more affordable housing, said Kwan.
“It doesn’t mean that legitimate landlords who have to renovate their units are prevented from doing so. It’s really to capture situations or people who aren’t even considering renovating their unit and it gives them pause,” he said.
There are several requirements under Toronto’s new bylaw that make it especially strong, such as the need for a landlord to have an architect or engineer confirm that the unit must be empty for the renovation work, and the requirement for the landlord to make rent gap payments if the tenant has to move elsewhere and pay higher rent, said Kwan.
“The rent gap payments ensure that a landlord mitigates the work. In other words, they don’t sit on their hands,” said Kwan.
Though the bylaw does not apply retroactively to tenants who have already received N13 notices, advocates say it strengthens their fight as it puts the burden on landlords to prove their renovations require vacant units.
The City of Toronto says on their website that they will use an “education-first approach” to encourage compliance, with enforcement action to follow when appropriate.
According to the bylaw, landlords could face fines of up to $100,000 if they force a tenant to leave and re-rent the unit to someone else for financial benefits, or if they fail to comply with other aspects of the new licensing requirements.
“The fines are quite high and I think they might be sufficient disincentive for these corporate landlords from acting,” Kwan said.
“I think if there is a concern, it would be uneducated, smaller landlords who perhaps unknowingly or knowingly are just trying to take the risk of renovicting their tenant. That’s probably the group of landlords that should be more of a concern than the larger corporate ones.”
Chiara Paravani, co-chair of York South-Weston Tenant Union, said she is aware of several landlords who are particularly “aggressive” in pursuing renovictions.
The particularly relentless actors may be willing to take a financial hit, Paravani said.
“Absorbing those fines is just part of the cost of doing business in terms of evicting people and replacing them with higher paying tenants, she said, adding that provincial fines were already in place and didn’t do much to change landlords’ actions.
The provincial government doubled maximum fine amounts for unlawful evictions in 2020, setting the fine rates at $50,000 for individuals and $250,000 for corporations.
But the Ministry of Housing was “vastly overwhelmed” with requests to enforce the violations, said Schlemmer, from the community legal clinic.
“You can make the penalty capital punishment, but if the person knows they’re not gonna get caught, they’re still gonna try it, which is what we have for renovictions,” Schlemmer said, stressing the importance of enforcement.
“I really hope that the City of Toronto does allocate meaningful resources to enforcement, because if they do, they could make a real dent in these unlawful evictions and significantly reduce the ongoing increase in homelessness.”
Uncategorized
Jays’ Shapiro says he wants to remain with team

TORONTO – Blue Jays president Mark Shapiro is declining comment on contract extension talks but says he wants to remain with the club and that team ownership has been “reciprocal in that desire.”
The 58-year-old Shapiro, who also serves as chief executive officer, is in the final year of his contract.
Related Videos
Shapiro held a media availability today at Rogers Centre before the Blue Jays opened a six-game homestand with a night game against the Chicago Cubs.

Get breaking National news
For news impacting Canada and around the world, sign up for breaking news alerts delivered directly to you when they happen.
Shapiro says he has a distinct appreciation for the city of Toronto and the opportunity to lead a team that represents the entire country.
He joined the club in 2015 and signed a five-year extension in January 2021.
The Blue Jays start the day with the best record in the American League at 69-50.
This report by The Canadian Press was first published Aug. 12, 2025.
© 2025 The Canadian Press
-
Uncategorized2 months ago
According to Dior Couture, this taboo fashion accessory is back
-
Uncategorized2 months ago
These ’90s fashion trends are making a comeback in 2017
-
Uncategorized2 months ago
The old and New Edition cast comes together to perform
-
Uncategorized2 months ago
Uber and Lyft are finally available in all of New York State
-
Uncategorized2 months ago
New Season 8 Walking Dead trailer flashes forward in time
-
Uncategorized2 months ago
Meet Superman’s grandfather in new trailer for Krypton
-
Uncategorized2 months ago
6 Stunning new co-working spaces around the globe
-
Uncategorized2 months ago
The final 6 ‘Game of Thrones’ episodes might feel like a full season