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Under Further Review – Douglas Smith with Editor Bill Morphy. Special thanks to our regular contributors including Jordan Moss, Ian MacPhee, Dave Kittle, Ted Tait, Frank Sullivan, Peter Hucul, Glen and Bill Myles, Howard Steiss and Rob Wagner.

Spanning the digital ether to bring you the constant variety of sport… the thrill of victory… and the agony of defeat… the human drama of athletic competition… This is Under Further Review.

4 Nations Face-Off Primer – It’s been a painfully long time since we had best-on-best in hockey. You have to go back to the World Cup of Hockey in 2016. It’s an absolute shame that players like Connor McDavid have never had a chance to showcase their enormous talent on the world stage, save for a bogus Young Stars competition.

Well, the wait is almost over. Get ready for the 4 Nations Face-Off which is set to take place February 12-20. It will feature four teams, Canada, Finland, Sweden and the United States, in a round-robin tournament split between the Bell Centre in Montreal and the TD Garden in Boston.

Each team will play three games. The top two teams will meet in a one-game final. Unlike other tournaments, there’s no semi-final. It will be over in a flash. To create separation, teams will receive three points for a win in regulation, two points for an overtime or shootout win and one point for an overtime or shootout loss. Overtime will run 10-minutes and feature 3-on-3 hockey. In the final, overtime will be contested at 5-on-5 with full periods until the winner is determined.

Looking ahead, expect a far more robust international schedule in the future. The NHL plans to attend the next three Winter Olympics including Milan, Italy in 2026 and Salt Lake City in 2034. In between Olympic years, the NHL is planning to stage World Cups in both 2028 and 2032. Finally, it looks like we will be witness to best-on-best hockey on a regular basis.

The Roster Debate – The roster unveiling for the 4 Nations Face-Off took place on Wednesday following much debate and conjecture. Team Canada and Team USA are the heavy favourites. Both teams are stacked. Canada has the winning edge. 15 players on the Canadian roster have won Stanley Cups. Only three U.S. players have raised the Cup.

The Team Canada management group did a great job assembling the roster with the pieces needed to form a complete team. The forward group is very balanced with plenty of speed and utility. They clearly favoured versatility and adaptability in a short series. They chose six centres. At least three of them, MacKinnon, Point and Bennett, can move to the wing if necessary. It’s why Mark Scheifele was not chosen. He’s not as comfortable on the wing and he doesn’t kill penalties.

The biggest surprise may have been the selection of defencemen Travis Sanheim and Colton Parayko. Both are big-bodied which will come in handy against the sizeable American forward group. Both are first-rate penalty-killers. Both Sanheim and Shea Theodore are comfortable playing either side which is a huge plus.

On paper, the U.S. has a big advantage in goal where any of the three goalies named to the team could be a starter for Canada. Concern about the Canadian goaltending is justified. Jordan Binnington has all been anointed the starter for Team Canada. Don’t be surprised if Adin Hill gets the nod. Nothing is a given.

The U.S. team seems to be the popular choice among many media but we’re skeptical. Unlike Canada, there aren’t a lot of connective parts. When you look closely at the American squad, you will find a bunch of forwards who can score but none stand out defensively. On defence, again no pairs that have played together like Toews and Makar and Theodore and Pietrangelo. This stuff matters. The U.S. defence is solid but I don’t think the right side matches up to Canada. They really missed the boat not selecting John Carlson of the Washington Capitals.

For Canada, the biggest snubs were Montreal’s Nick Suzuki and Edmonton teammates Zach Hyman and Evan Bouchard. And please, don’t even mention John Tavares. Bouchard was squeezed out by the presence of Cale Makar who will quarterback the power-play. The Canadian lineup lacks a right-shot centre so Suzuki may have been a nice fit. Frankly, it’s hard to believe why Adam Fantilli wasn’t included among the omissions. The kid can fly. We would have had no objection if Connor Bedard or Fantilli were included as the 13th forward. Why not start looking ahead to the next Olympics and give younger players a look? Can you imagine a line of Bedard, Fantilli and Macklin Celebrini in the next Winter Olympics?

For the U.S., the biggest snub was Buffalo’s Tage Thompson. He would have been our choice over Chris Kreider or Brock Nelson. Thompson is a horse at 6-foot-6 and 220 pounds. He has 14 goals in 22 games. What else does he need to prove? Whatever the case, none of the lineups named this week are likely to stay intact. There’s still ten weeks to go and there are sure to be injuries.

It’s unfortunate but some of the top players in the league to this point in the NHL season won’t even be playing in the 4 Nations Face-Off. Among the missing will be Leon Draisaitl, Nikita Kucherov, Kirill Kaprizov, Martin Necas, Artemi Panarin, David Pastrnak and Igor Shesterkin. Too bad the Czechs and Russians will not be part of the tournament.

PREDICTION: TEAM CANADA – Speed and versatility win out.

Canucks Notebook – The biggest positive in the month of November for the Canucks has been the improved play of Elias Pettersson. He’s back playing like a highly-paid, elite centre. He’s engaged and producing at a high rate. For the month, EP put up six goals and 19 points in 15 games. Good friend and avid Canuck follower Andrew Glass made a good point, saying some players can play bad and go unnoticed. Others, like Pettersson, seem to stand out when slumping. Andrew’s right. Few players can look as disengaged as Pettersson both physically and emotionally. His play without the puck has been much better. He’s getting to spots where he can be effective which wasn’t the case during his prolonged cold streak.

No one was hotter during the month than Jake Debrusk. The Canucks marquee free agent signing scored 11 times in November. He kept some heady company along with Mikko Rantanen, Kirill Kaprizov and Sam Reinhart. Debrusk is tracking to top his career high of 27 goals.

Was there a better under-the-radar free agent signing that the Canucks Kevin Lankinen? The Finnish goaltender has pretty much saved the Canucks season with stellar goaltending. He became the first goalie in NHL history to win his first ten road games to start a season, topping the record shared by Cam Talbot and Glenn Hall. After losing in overtime in Minnesota, Lankinen is now 10-0-1 on the road with a 2.06 GAA and a .927 save percentage. It helped Lankinen earn a spot on Team Finland for the 4 Nations Face-Off. He’ll finally get a breather with the imminent return of Thatcher Demko, who was back in uniform on Friday night as a back-up. He could be in net today when the Canucks face Tampa Bay in a Sunday matinee. It also looks like J.T. Miller’s mysterious absence is about to end.

Tough break for the Canucks losing top pairing defenceman Filip Hronek for up to eight weeks. According to the team, he had a non-surgical lower-body procedure (figure that one out) and will not require surgery on his right shoulder which was injured on the recent road trip. Hronek should be able to rehab the shoulder while sidelined but you wonder if surgery may not be necessary following the season.

NHL Notebook – It’s about time we gave a shout-out to Spencer Carbery for the job he’s doing in Washington. Carbery has the Capitals in first place in the tough Metropolitan Division. The Caps are 9-2 on the road and perhaps the NHL’s biggest surprise this season. The 43-year-old Victoria native is pushing all the right buttons. Carbery came over from the Leafs at the start of last season and it’s looking like an inspired choice.

Plenty of turmoil in New York where the Rangers finally started shuffling bodies with the trade of Jacob Trouba to Anaheim. Don’t expect him to stay there long. The Ducks will likely retain part of Trouba’s $8 million dollar ticket and flip him to a contender at the trade deadline.

Outside of Washington, is there a more improved team in the NHL than the New Jersey Devils? GM Tom Fitzgerald has done a stellar job repairing the goaltending nightmare with the tandem of Jacob Markstrom and Jake Allen. Dougie Hamilton is back from injury to bolster the blueline. Fitzgerald also added Brett Pesce, Brenden Dillon and Johnathan Kovacevic to the back end and suddenly the Devils are a whole lot tougher to play against. Looks like the Devils have taken a big step forward.

Mark Messier played 25 seasons in the NHL. He missed the playoffs in each of his final seven seasons. Didn’t play one playoff game after 1996-97. Is Sidney Crosby going to suffer a similar fate? Sid the Kid is signed for two more seasons after this one at $8.7 million and he had to know the Penguins were a borderline playoff team at best. Is he so committed to remaining in Pittsburgh that he will simply accept being a non-playoff participant for the rest of his career? Seems odd for a player who’s so competitive. Why not move on for one more chance at a Stanley Cup? The best possible destination has to be Colorado where he would be united with fellow Coal Harbour native Nathan MacKinnon.

If you were to conduct a re-draft of the 2018 NHL draft, is there any doubt who would be the first overall selection? Yes, it would be Canucks defenceman Quinn Hughes, who was taken seventh overall by Vancouver. Sabres defenceman Rasmus Dahlin was the top pick that year. He’s been solid but nothing as spectacular as Hughes. Dahlin was followed by Andrei Svechnikov, Jesperi Kotkaniemi, Brady Tkachuk, Barrett Hayton and Filip Zadina. Do you think Montreal, Arizona and Detroit would like a do-over?

You had to know there was a correction waiting to happen in Calgary. The Flames were a nice early-season story but the team is falling back to earth. The Flames are having trouble scoring goals and it’s highly unlikely they will hang around the playoff race. Calgary is assembling some nice young talent but there’s a long way to go just yet. Former Canuck Andrei Kuzmenko has been a healthy scratch. Toc had him figured right. One trick pony!

The Flames are one of many teams in the NHL in rebuild mode. Chicago, San Jose, Montreal, Anaheim, Buffalo, Detroit, Columbus, Calgary, Ottawa, Philadelphia and Pittsburgh are all at various stages of a rebuild. It’s basically half the league. Ask fans of the Red Wings, Sabres and Senators about the pain of a rebuild. Surely, they were hoping their team would be further along by now.

Patience is wearing think in many markets. How would you like to be in Buffalo where the Sabres will miss the playoffs for a 14th consecutive season? Many of the teams in the midst of a rebuild lack that one absolute foundational talent who can change the fortunes of the franchise all by themselves. Sidney Crosby did it in Pittsburgh. Connor McDavid has done it in Edmonton. Maybe Bedard is the answer in Chicago. Maybe Celebrini in San Jose. Without that franchise-maker, what happens is you end up like Utah in a perpetual rebuild. Seattle may suffer a similar fate. The Kraken are going nowhere until they land star-level talent.

Buffalo Sabres GM Kevyn Adams has come right out and said it: “Buffalo is not a destination city right now.” He can’t be serious? C’mon, Buffalo is the ‘Pothole City.’ How can you not like ten feet of snow in the winter? What player would not want to play in a vibrant metropolis like Buffalo? Just a shocking revelation.

The Flames are sitting with an abundance of cap space – $25.43 million, in fact. If ownership allows, they could take on salary at the trade deadline and accumulate more draft assets to augment their roster down the road.

The Minnesota Wild are going to look a whole lot different next season. That’s when the Wild can breathe a big sigh of cap relief as a large portion of the Zach Parise-Ryan Suter buyouts come off the books. The combined buyouts count $14,747,626 against the salary cap this season. That number drops to $1,666,666 for each of the following three seasons. Still a lot but manageable. Combine that with other deals coming off the ledger and the Wild will have plenty of space in which to manoeuvre.

Back in the glory days of the Montreal Canadiens in the 1970’s when the Habs were racking up Stanley Cups, Mayor Jean Drapeau was asked by a journalist what route the Stanley Cup would be taking. His response? “It will be the usual one.” That’s when you know you have a dynasty.

Canadian hockey fans always look forward to the World Junior Hockey tournament over the holidays. This year, we will get our first good look at three youngsters on the Canadian squad with bright futures, defenceman Matthew Schaefer of the Erie Otters, and forwards Porter Martone of the Brampton Steelheads and Gavin McKenna of the Medicine Hat Tigers. There were two surprising omissions from Team Canada – Michael Misa from the Saginaw Spirit and defenceman Carter Yakemchuk from the Calgary Hitmen, the Ottawa Senators top pick last summer.

Waiting for Columbus – Kudos to the Columbus Blue Jackets. In wake of the tragic death of Johnny Gaudreau, it would have been easy to have the season go off the rails. Instead, the Blue Jackets have been one of the early season surprises.

GM Don Waddell learned a thing or two in Carolina about working on a tight budget and doing the unconventional. If a player doesn’t want to be there, pick up the phone and send him on his way. Waddell had no reservations about dealing defenceman David Jiricek to Minnesota for a handful of draft picks despite his lofty draft status. Jiricek was the sixth overall pick in the draft just two years ago. What happens if concerns about Jiricek’s skating turn out to be true? It’s a risk Waddell figured was worth taking.

Sean Monahan may be the summer’s best free agent signing. Monahan is finally healthy and playing like a number one centre. Along with budding star Adam Fantilli, the pair give the Jackets an outstanding one-two punch down the middle. Monahan leads the team with 22 points in 23 games. Zach Werenski is back playing at an all-star level. Vancouver’s Kent Johnson is starting to play to his potential. Dean Evason has taken over behind the bench and has the team battling on a nightly basis. Waddell has $28.7 million in cap space to work with and a pair of first-round picks in next year’s draft.

It would have been easy to throw in the towel in Columbus. The Blue Jackets deserve a ton of credit for saving their season.

Seahawks Notebook – Don’t be surprised if a 9-8 record captures the NFC West Division crown. The Seahawks are atop the division at 7-5 with a one-game lead on the Arizona Cardinals with the two teams set to  clash on Sunday in Arizona. With a win, the Seahawks playoff odds will jump to 72%. A loss would drop the odds to only 22%. Shows you how important this game is! The stakes are even higher when you look at strength-of-schedule over the final month. Following Sunday’s matchup, the Cards final four games are against the Patriots (3-10), Panthers (3-9), Rams (6-6) and the beat-up 49ers (5-7). The Seahawks’ final four games are against the Packers (9-3), Vikings (10-2), Bears (4-8) and Rams (6-6). Clearly, the division is far from won.

The Seahawks defense is finally coming to life. Leonard Williams was named NFC Defensive Player of the Week. He’s been an absolute monster of late. Against the Jets, Williams had two sacks (for the second straight game), three tackles for loss (also for the second straight week), a blocked kick plus a 92-yard interception return for a touchdown. It turned out to be the longest pick-six by a player weighing at least 300 pounds in NFL history. During the return, Williams was tracked going 17 mph which is crazy for a guy that size. It’s the second week in a row that a Seahawk has won the award. Coby Bryant was named NFC Player of the Week last week.

NFL Notebook – Matt Eberflus can take his place beside Brandon Staley as one of the worst head coaches in NFL history. Eberflus was so bad in Chicago, he should have fired himself. Have you ever seen anything so inept as the stunning screw-up in the final seconds of the Thanksgiving Day loss in Detroit? Eberflus stood stone-faced as the clock ran down, failing to call a time out with the Bears in position to kick a tying field goal. He was mercifully fired the next day. Doubtful he’ll ever get another head coaching job. Bears management claim the vacant job will be the most valuable post available after the season. This coming from a team that stood by and let former Bears quarterback and coaching legend Jim Harbaugh sign with the L.A. Chargers last year. They should have fired Eberflus then and hired Harbaugh.

We can definitely be accused of pumping the tires of Chiefs quarterback Pat Mahomes. For good reason. We have often chronicled his incredible achievements. All Mahomes does is clutch up. Since 2001, there have been 125 drives in the NFL postseason where it was at least the fourth quarter, there was under a minute left to play, and the team with the ball trailed by seven points or fewer. These are your standard clutch moments when a football game is won or lost. Out of those 125 drives, only 40% of them ended with the team on offense scoring the winning points or tying the game and forcing overtime. Only a few quarterbacks have had decent success. Tom Brady was 5-for-11 in those situations. Drew Brees was 3-for-6. Pat Mahomes is a perfect 7-for-7. Think about that for a minute? No one comes close to his late game wizardry.

How can you not feel sorry for Joe Burrow? He’s the second-best quarterback in the NFL in our opinion, yet he’s stuck in Cincinnati behind a horse-bleep offensive line. Burrow’s had more surgeries than a Kardashian. Heroically, he leads the NFL in touchdowns (30), passing yards (3,337) and is second in the league in Total QBR (73.9). What else can you ask of the guy? In the season premiere of HBO’s ‘Hard Knocks: In Season with the AFC North,” Burrow revealed he was one of ten individuals who were granted permission to purchase a replica Batmobile vehicle. The cost was $2.99 million. Maybe he can now fight crime instead of fighting to avoid the pass rush.

Don’t look now but the Philadelphia Eagles are coming on strong. The Eagles have won eight straight and appear headed for a playoff showdown with the Detroit Lions. The Eagles have one of the best front offices in football. They had big issues in the defensive backfield last season and responded by drafting a pair of cornerbacks in the first two rounds of the NFL draft in Quinyon Mitchell and Cooper DeJean. Problem solved! They also stole the best running back in the NFL from the New York Giants. That’s worked out okay. Saquon Barkley leads the league in rushing and should be an MVP candidate.

Baltimore’s Justin Tucker is one of the most accurate kickers in NFL history. For years, he was money. This year, it’s a different story. Tucker has had multiple crucial misses on either field goals or extra point attempts in four of the Ravens’ five losses. Crazy how a kicker can go that cold so quickly.

The New York Jets own the longest active losing-season streak in the NFL. They will miss the post-season for the ninth consecutive year. All the talking heads who predicted they would have a winning season should have to make a public apology. 12 wins – my ass!

MLB Winter Meetings – The baseball winter meetings are about to begin in Dallas. It remains to be seen if action on the big prizes in free agency opens up. Don’t lose any sleep about the chance of Juan Soto ending up in Toronto. Mets owner Steve Cohen has reportedly said privately he will top the highest bid no matter what. Still think Soto will remain a Yankee.

The Cleveland Clowns, yes, – Mark Shapiro and Ross Atkins – could give a masterclass in how to make vacuous, empty promises. It seems their strategy this off-season is to under-promise and hold your breathe, over-deliver. We’ll wait and see about the over-deliver part. The two noodles seem to spend most of their time sucking up to Scott Boras, then hoping the super agent will deliver a free agent thank-you once the big names are off the board. Quite the strategy, eh? The Blue Jays front office twins are now saying they are making an effort to bring back Canadian-born reliever Jordan Romano. They should be looking at Phillies free agent reliever Jeff Hoffman, a pitcher the Jays drafted ten years ago and let go in the deal to acquire Troy Tulowitzki. Hoffman was lights out last year with the Phillies.

The fans are so tuned out it’s doubtful any signing short of Soto would cause a ripple. It sure appears as though the Jays are headed for a crash. The arbitration filing deadline on Vladdy Guerrero Jr. is January 10. If the team is unable to reach a long-term contract extension by that date, you may as well kiss Vladdy goodbye. He’s the anchor you want to build around yet he’s poised to slip away.

The Los Angeles Dodgers practice of deferring contracts is hurting baseball and it’s got to end. It’s a big loophole that probably won’t be closed until the next collective bargaining agreement is negotiated. In the meantime, the Dodgers have accumulated over $1 billion dollars in deferred payments to seven players between the years of 2028 and 2046.

According to reports, the Dodgers just added Blake Snell ($66 million in deferred money through 2046) and Tommy Edman ($25 million in deferred money through 2044) to the deferral list. The big doozy is the $680 million owed to Shohei Ohtani between 2034-43 as part of the megadeal he signed last winter. The other deferrals include Mookie Betts ($115 million); Freddie Freeman ($162 million); Will Smith ($50 million); and Teoscar Hernandez ($8.5 million).

How are smaller market teams supposed to compete with that? One reason the players like the deferrals is because they can avoid the higher California state taxes on their earnings if they are no longer living in the state during the years the deferred payments are being paid out.

Random Leftovers – Buck Pierce is the new head coach of the B.C. Lions. He’s been in Winnipeg for nine seasons. Pierce has been the Bombers offensive coordinator since 2020. The 43-year-old replaces Rick Campbell who was fired after the season. Pierce quarterbacked the Lions for five seasons, winning a Grey Cup in 2006.

There have been massive contract blunders in pro sports over the years but you would have to go a long way to top the deal signed in 2019 by John Wall with the Houston Rockets. Wall inked a four-year, $171 million dollar contract. Here’s how it worked out:

Year 1: 0 games played, $38.3 million

Year 2: 40 games played, $41.3 million

Year 3: 0 games played, $44.3 million

Year 4: 0 games played, $40.9 million

That’s 40 games played in four seasons. Yes, over $4 million per game. Thanks John! You go into the sports business Hall of Fame.

There are a few clear favourites through the first quarter of the NBA season. OK City looks head and shoulders above the rest in the Western Conference. Boston and Cleveland are in a tier to themselves in the East. No team has been more disappointing than the Philadelphia 76’ers. The Sixers are a tire fire, sitting dead last in the Atlantic. Paul George has had zero impact. Joel Embiid plays hard when the urge hits. Otherwise, he’s a dog. Embiid has reportedly been late for practice and meetings and the team is helpless to do much about it. Pity Nick Nurse. The former Raptors coach is sitting on a powder keg.

You could see this coming. The LPGA has announced a new gender policy that requires players to be assigned female at birth in order to compete on the ladies tour. The policy will take place beginning next year and follows much controversy. The updated policy will rule out eligibility for Hailey Davidson, who missed qualifying for this year’s U.S. Women’s Open by a single shot. Davidson, who’s now 32, began hormone treatments in her early 20’s and underwent gender-affirming surgery in 2021. Many players were outspoken about Davidson’s potential entry onto the LPGA circuit and called for the Tour to take action.

Regular contributor Glen Myles had a great comment about the state of golf. With the advent of LIV Golf and the dominance of Scottie Scheffler on the PGA Tour, why even bother watching golf? The game has never been so bland. Glen’s right! Gone are the great rivalries. Phil vs. Tiger. Jack vs. Arnold. They can come up with all the new wrinkles they want.  Something is definitely missing and it’s the personalities.

John Herdman sealed his own fate. He made himself unavailable during the drone scandal investigation and he’s now out as coach of Toronto FC. Forget about Herdman coaching soccer in Canada ever again.

It’s no secret that many of the greatest boxers in history came from hardscrabble backgrounds. Manny Pacquiao was born in the Philippines. He’s the only eight-division world champion in the history of boxing. In his incredible career, he won twelve world titles. Reflecting on his early childhood, Pacquiao said, “We were very, very poor. Sometimes we just had rice to eat. We mixed it with water so that we could have a little bit of a soup. We call it ‘ngaw’ here in the Philippines; it’s just like a broth.”

“Life was very difficult. That’s why I had to work when I was very young, to help support my family, to help my brothers and my sister go to school. It was a very difficult time. That’s how I grew up. I’ve worked in construction, in a factory sewing clothes. I also sold flowers and doughnuts – just odd jobs to try and make 10 pesos, which is equivalent to 20 cents.” Can you imagine working all day for 20 cents? Manny Pacquiao is now a politician in his home country. He has served as a Filipino Senator.

Sam the Sportscaster – ESPN has been producing the ESPY Awards for more than two decades now. In the early 2000’s, they got Samuel L. Jackson to reprise his Pulp Fiction character, Jules Winnfield, in a couple of skits for the show. Here he is playing a TV sportscaster. It’s classic.

https://youtu.be/I6YhoDZAzpA?si=kGPUqwXqOZ6YBKZ2

And here’s Jules Winnfield coaching minor hockey.

https://youtu.be/aGYWJVZyVqg?si=wAOo0p8h8mwFIRPf

Joni and Johnny – We were astonished to learn Joni Mitchell made several appearances on the Johnny Cash Show. Apparently, Johnny was a big fan of Joni and kept inviting her back. Joni appeared on the first episode of the Johnny Cash Show on June 17, 1969.  She and Johnny sang ‘The Long Black Veil.’

https://youtu.be/pALSKcWcVEk?si=dWg-u7U__GroaEEk

On another episode, here they are performing Dylan’s ‘Girl from the North Country.’

https://youtu.be/W1QO0jQ0PB0?si=B5LIOElu5c9Ck9jt

Johnny actually wrote a song called ‘The Girl from Saskatoon’ after performing there with Johnny Horton. A teenaged Joni was in the audience. Here they are performing ‘I Still Miss Someone.’

https://youtu.be/OCbJJAAVSZY?si=l_b1evMssQriIbc_

By the late 60’s, Joni’s career was beginning to soar. She appeared on the Dick Cavett Show and performed ‘Chelsea Morning.’ That’s Grace Slick from the Jefferson Airplane sitting beside Cavett.

https://youtu.be/8zEi7uJxP68?si=O8O9yTptoNk5LpG0

YouTube Music Videos – You’ve probably never heard of Quinn Sullivan. It’s good to know someone is carrying on the rock and roll tradition. Sullivan was something of a child guitar prodigy. Kind of reminds you of Jonny Lang. He started taking guitar lessons at the age of three and first gained national attention at age six when he appeared on The Ellen DeGeneres Show. Today, Sullivan is still only 25 and quickly gaining notoriety. Check him out performing ‘Let It Rain’ at Live at Daryl’s House in 2018.

https://youtu.be/eYBpqtA2ibo?si=dwEo41aqwFLtNj3x

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