Arizona
Linus Ullmark injured in Bruins’ 4-3 OT loss in Arizona
The Bruins lost another hockey game in Arizona on Tuesday, but they may have lost a whole lot more than that.
At 2:40 of overtime, Linus Ullmark extended his glove arm high and immediately dropped to his belly in pain. He would need help to get off the ice and in came a cold Jeremy Swayman.
The B’s had their chances to win it, but with 56 seconds left in OT, Nick Schmaltz beat Swayman to the far post to lift the Arizona Coyotes to a 4-3 OT win at Mullett Arena.
Coach Jim Montgomery told reporters in Arizona that it’s a lower body injury it’s a lower body injury but didn’t have anything else. With the way Ullmark went off the ice, it’s good bet he’ll miss at least some time. The B’s just hope it’s not too long. They’re are still leadng the Atlantic Division primarily because of the Ullmark-Swayman tandem. Brandon Bussi presumably would be the first goalie up from Providence.
“He’s a fighter so hopefully we’ll have him back here shortly,” said Hampus Lindholm told reporters in Arizona.
The bodies are dropping on this road trip. Brandon Carlo got injured in Colorado on Monday (day-to-day wiht an upper body injury, according to Montgomery) and early in the third period, rookie Matt Poitras appeared to hurt his shoulder/arm while delivering a check. Montgomery didn’t have any update on him either.
It was not a good night at the rink for the B’s in which Ullmark wasn’t the only player lost to injury.
The B’s lost two one-goal leads to go into the third period tied 2-2 and then saw the Coyotes take their first lead of the game 52 seconds into the third on an unforced error. With Lawson Crouse bearing down on him at the left point of the Arizona zone, Mason Lohrei tried to make a difficult move to his right and tripped himself. That gave Crouse a clean breakaway that Ullmark stopped, but Matias Maccelli followed it up for the go-ahead goal.
The B’s then lost rookie Matt Poitras to an apparent shoulder injury when he got hurt checking a Coyote on a forecheck and he went very slowly to the bench and eventually the room.
But the B’s tied it up at 5:04 on a power play after Crouse was caught playing the puck with a broken stick. From the right circle, Jake DeBrusk snapped it past goalie Connor Ingram’s glove, DeBrusk’s ninth of the year.
Charlie Coyle thought he had the go-ahead goal with about 2:30 left in regulation, but Ingram somehow got his pad on Coyle’s second chance try. The puck traveled along the goal line, off the post and out.
“That’s a heck of a save,” said Coyle.
Ingram then stoned David Pastrnak on a clean breakaway seconds into overtime and Pastrnak later hit the post with on another breakaway before Schmaltz won it.
“I’m definitely feeling a little guilty there with two breakaways to end the game for our team. Definitely that will haunt me tonight when I sleep,” said Pastrnak. “And obviously it’s hard for a goaltender to sit on the bench for three hours and then come in with an unfortunate injury.”
This seemed like a very winnable game at the outset.
Without Carlo, the B’s didn’t waste much time in testing their penalty kill without their best PK defenseman. Trent Frederic absorbed an elbow from Travis Dermott that the refs missed, but caught Frederic reaching out to grab Dermott.
They were able to kill that and were quickly given their first power play when Matt Dumba hooked Lohrei.
The B’s made them pay. Pastrnak was taking some heat back home for his cheeky shootout attempt, an attempt at a surprise shot that looked to some like a low effort. But Pastrnak didn’t miss his spot at 4:41. After Morgan Geekie’s backdoor shot was blocked, the puck came out to Pastrnak in the left circle and he beat Ingram with a pure short side snipe, his 25th goal of the year. That put him into a tie for 10th place on the club’s all-time scoring list with 674 points.
From there, the B’s went on cruise control and were lucky to preserve that slim lead going into the first break. They continually coughed up the puck in their own zone and were outshot 12-6 by the Coyotes in the first, but Ullmark kept Arizona off the board.
The Frederic-Dermott contretempts continued early in the second period. But when Frederic was locked up with Dermott, Liam O’Brien jumped in and handed Frederic a handful of rights before flipping him down. O’Brien got the extra two for roughing – he escaped the extra 10 that would have come with an insitgator penalty — but the B’s did nothing with the power play.
The Coyotes, however, got on the board after Matt Grzelcyk was called for tripping. Clayton Keller simply made a hard rush to the net and eventually scored on his own rebound at 8:12.
But just 50 seconds later, Jesper Boqvist scored his first goal as a Bruin – and he made it a beauty. He collected a loose puck in his own zone, turned on the burners up the right wing, cut to the middle of the ice and finally beat Ingram with a wrist shot frorm the high slot.
The B’s, however, could not create any space between themselves and their hosts.
“Arizona’s a good team, they’re well coached, they play with great pace and they’re really good at home…It’s a tough environment,” said Montgomery. “That being said, we didn’t start on time. That’s what we needed to do. We needed better focus. Be sharper, move puck norths, we didn’t have the puck support we needed and we didn’t move pucks quickly enough.”
The Coyotes tied it again with 3:30 left in the second. Frederic tried to clear it deep into the Arizona for a change, but it was stopped by the defenseman back at the top of the circle. With the B’s changing out, the Coyotes went on the attack and gained the offensive zone with ease and numbers before Dylan Guenther beat Ullmark with a wrister from the high slot.
That set up an eventful thiird period and overtime. I bit too eventful for the Bruins’ liking.
Arizona
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Arizona
Founding Fathers-themed ice cream parlor makes Arizona debut
Don’t miss these 5 metro Phoenix hidden gem restaurants
From Ethiopian cuisine to mesquite-grilled chicken, check out these five restaurants in metro Phoenix that have flown under the radar for too long.
A former candidate for Gilbert mayor has opened the first Arizona location of a Founding Fathers-themed ice cream shop in Chandler.
Brooker’s Founding Flavors Ice Cream is a Utah-based ice cream shop centered around the early history of the United States. Female employees scoop cones in bonnets and dresses; male employees wear tricorn hats and coats. The ice cream flavors have names like Martha Washington’s Colonial Cotton Candy and Alexander Hamilton’s Not Throwing Away My Scoop.
On a trip to Utah in 2019, Arizonan Shane Krauser went to a Brooker’s and was blown away.
“I walked out of that, called my wife Janelle and I said, ‘We will own one of these,’” Krauser said.
The couple had no previous restaurant experience, but decided to open up the chain’s first location outside of Utah, choosing a storefront near the intersection of Chandler Boulevard and Dobson Road. The store opened on June 6.
Krauser loves how the shop creates conversation among customers about American history.
“I love history. I love the Founding Fathers. I love the ideals of America,” Krauser said. “It’s an amazing concept.”
Opening Founding Flavors isn’t political, it’s a ‘labor of love’
Krauser is a retired lawyer turned motivational speaker who addresses topics including “freedom, the proper role of government and the parameters of the U.S. and state constitutions,” according to his website.
In 2024, Krauser ran for Gilbert mayor, but withdrew his candidacy amid scrutiny over involvement with a past investment fraud scheme and his son’s appearance in a video with the Gilbert Goons, The Arizona Republic reported.
Although the shop plans to host events celebrating the 250th anniversary of the U.S., such as one for Constitution Day in September, Krauser said he does not see the ice cream store as related to his political career.
“The mayoral run was something to be involved in politically. This is more of a labor of love,” Krauser said. “This is not political in nature at all. It’s an ice cream shop with an American theme.”
Details: 2560 W. Chandler Blvd. #3, Chandler. brookersicecream.com, 480-881-6100.
Reach the reporter at reia.li@gannett.com. Follow @reia_reports on Instagram.
Arizona
Wife turns in Arizona startup CEO husband over fraud allegations
Arizona CEO accused of stealing millions
Jeffrey Gottfurcht, the now-former CEO of Mesa startupo Cyber Dive, is accused of stealing at least $1.5 million from the company to buy gifts for his girlfriend. FOX 10’s Brian Webb has more.
PHOENIX – An Arizona chief executive officer is facing major legal trouble after being accused of embezzling money from his company.
What we know:
Cyber Dive is an Arizona startup that sells child-safety smartphones, designed so parents can monitor their children’s online activity. The company is run out of a business complex in Mesa, but the startup is barely hanging on after the CEO allegedly took off with the money to spend on his girlfriend.
Jeffrey Gottfurcht is facing federal embezzlement charges. He stands accused of lying and doctoring documents to trick investors before running off with at least $1.5 million.
On the company Facebook page, Gottfurcht claimed to be the first rheumatoid arthritis sufferer to scale Mount Everest.
Local perspective:
Red flags first popped up at the company on Feb. 13, with strange occurrences coming into the office.
Derek Jackson, who co-founded Cyber Dive, recalled the moment the discrepancies came to light.
“They mentioned to me something about getting routing documentation for funds from an acquisition deal,” Jackson recounted. “They said ‘where are those documents?’ He said he was gonna send him at 3 p.m. today, and my response was what deal are you talking about?”
Dig deeper:
Court documents show Gottfurcht used the money to buy his escort girlfriend a Lamborghini, a four-bedroom house in Miami, and a diamond ring. The girlfriend has posted videos on TikTok, but her identity is hidden because she has not been charged with a crime.
When asked to confirm if Gottfurcht purchased the car, the diamond ring, and the house, Jackson responded, “Yes. So it gets deep. Yes, it gets very deep.”
“It’s a huge gut punch,” Jackson said regarding the impact on the startup. “I think it’s been challenging to stay motivated to keep the company going because when this happened, Jeff drained the account to zero.”
At the Cyber Dive headquarters, half the workforce was let go. Jackson is now serving as the interim chief executive officer, looking for new investors to keep the lights on while coming to grips with the loss of a partner and friend.
Jackson stated that the total amount of money taken is closer to $4 million.
“I was in the army. I was an intelligence officer. I was targeting people in ISIS. I don’t even hate terrorists as much as I hate Jeff right now,” Jackson said.
The other side:
No one answered the door at the Paradise Valley home Gottfurcht shares with his wife and three children. Court paperwork shows that his wife is seeking a divorce, and helped turn her husband in to the authorities.
What’s next:
Gottfurcht was previously arrested in Scottsdale in May over allegations of domestic violence. He remains behind bars on a $250,000 bond.
The Source: Information in this report was gathered from Derek Jackson, and from court documents.
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