TSN and RDS on Thursday confirmed they are once again bringing Canadians live coverage of the CANADA GAMES, delivering 40 hours of the action from Prince George, B.C. - host city of the 2015 CANADA WINTER GAMES (#2015CanGames). Marking the ninth CANADA GAMES to air on TSN and RDS, the 2015 CANADA WINTER GAMES officially get underway with the Opening Ceremony on Friday, Feb. 13 at 10 p.m. ET on TSN2 and RDS2 and culminate with the Closing Ceremony on Sunday, March 1 at 7 p.m. ET on TSN2 and RDS (see below for broadcast schedules). Two-time Olympic gold medallist and past CANADA GAMES participant Catriona Le May Doan will be in the TSN Studio to anchor TSN’s live coverage of the 2015 CANADA WINTER GAMES. SPORTSCENTRE’s Paul Hollingsworth will provide play-by-play throughout the CANADA GAMES, including men’s hockey alongside analyst Dave Reid and women’s hockey alongside analyst Cheryl Pounder. TSN’s broadcast team also features: Speed Skating: Two-time Olympic silver medallist Susan Auch Curling: Olympic bronze medallist Melissa Soligo Badminton: London 2012 Team Canada badminton head coach Ram Nayyar “The CANADA GAMES is a wonderful opportunity to showcase the next generation of elite Canadian athletes,” said Stewart Johnston, President of TSN. “TSN is proud to be the official broadcaster of the 2015 CANADA WINTER GAMES and we are all looking forward to giving Canadians a front row seat to watch the action coming out of Prince George.” “We are very excited to be working with official broadcast partners TSN and RDS to bring Canadians national TV coverage of the 2015 CANADA WINTER GAMES,” said Tom Quinn, Canada Games Council Chairman. “TSN and RDS are Canada’s sports leaders and the trusted sources for sports broadcasting. We are proud to partner with them and allow all Canadians to enjoy a first-class production of the 2015 Canada Winter Games.” “We are proud to deliver comprehensive coverage of the 2015 Canada Winter Games,” said Stuart Ballantyne, CEO of the 2015 Canada Winter Games. “Through our broadcast and webcast partnerships, the spirit of the 2015 Games and the northern story will be shared across the nation. From the excitement of the Opening Ceremony to the joy of winning a gold medal, Canadians will be able to journey with us to the 2015 CANADA WINTER GAMES from the comfort of their homes.” The 2015 CANADA WINTER GAMES brings together more than 2,400 athletes, 1,000 coaches and officials, up to 4,500 volunteers, hundreds of media, and thousands of visitors in Prince George – the first city in British Columbia to host a winter edition of the games. The CANADA GAMES are held once every two years and alternate between winter and summer, representing the highest level of national competition for up-and-coming Canadian athletes. Broadcast Schedule TSN’s broadcast schedule* for the 2015 CANADA WINTER GAMES is as follows (visit RDS.ca for RDS’s broadcast schedule) : Friday, Feb. 13 10 p.m. ET – Opening Ceremony (TSN2) Saturday, Feb. 14 11 p.m. ET – Womens Hockey - Quebec vs. BC (TSN2) Sunday, Feb. 15 11 p.m. ET – Mens Curling - Alberta vs. BC (TSN2) Monday, Feb. 16 10:30 p.m. ET – Womens Hockey - Ontario vs. Quebec (TSN2) Tuesday, Feb. 17 12:30 p.m. ET – Long Track Speed Skating (TSN2) Wednesday, Feb. 18 6 p.m. ET – Short Track Speed Skating - 500m (TSN2) Thursday, Feb. 19 11 p.m. ET – Mens Curling Semifinal (TSN2) Friday, Feb. 20 10:30 p.m. ET – Womens Hockey: Gold Medal Game (TSN2) Monday, Feb. 23 10:30 p.m. ET - Mens Hockey - Manitoba vs. BC (TSN1) Tuesday, Feb. 24 1 p.m. ET - Womens Curling - Ontario vs. Saskatchewan (TSN Network) Wednesday, Feb. 25 12 noon ET - Badminton Finals (TSN Network) Thursday, Feb. 26 4 p.m. ET - Recap Show (TSN Network) Friday, Feb. 27 7 p.m. ET - Mens Hockey Quarterfinal #1 (TSN2) 10:30 p.m. ET - Mens Hockey Quarterfinal #2 (TSN2) Saturday, Feb. 28 11:30 p.m. ET - Womens Curling - Gold Medal Game (TSN2) Sunday, March 1 2:30 p.m. ET - Mens Hockey - Gold Medal Game (TSN5) 7 p.m. ET - Closing Ceremony (TSN2) Air Jordan Outlet . -- Craig Anderson has quite a record against his former team, the Florida Panthers. Discount Air Jordan . Not only that, when Julian de Guzman first stepped on the pitch for Deportivo de la Coruna he became the very first Canadian to play in Spains top tier. http://www.wholesaleairjordanchina.com/. They signed their first kicker. Ottawa inked Nick Setta, a 32-year-old native of Lockport, Illinois, to a contract. Wholesale Jordans Free Shipping .C. Lions. The clubs former starting quarterback, assistant and head coach returned Thursday as its receivers coach. Authentic Air Jordan From China . Andrew Luck couldnt believe his ears. Colts fans couldnt believe the scoreboard, and the Kansas City Chiefs couldnt believe their incredibly bad luck.GUELPH, Ont. -- Hamilton running back C.J. Gable came into Saturdays game with last weeks close loss in Vancouver fresh on his mind. For the 35-year-old rookie, the Tiger-Cats rematch against the B.C. Lions wasnt so much about revenge as it was a chance to make things right. Gable scored a 32-yard TD reception and had 108 yards receiving yards and 49 rushing yards as the Tiger-Cats defeated the Lions 37-29 in front of 13,101 at the University of Guelphs Alumni Stadium. "I felt real good," said Gable, who also had a fumble. "The line was blocking excellent today. The holes were there. The receivers were blocking perfect. Today it all worked." Hamilton improves to 5-5, while the Lions fall to 6-4. "I want to see what they say about us now," said Gable. Hamilton quarterback Henry Burris threw four touchdown passes and two interceptions as his team got off to a great start, pulling to a 34-8 lead. But the wheels began to fall off in the fourth quarter as Hamilton allowed a B.C. comeback that just fell short. "We cant have those lulls that we had," Burris said. "To have three turnovers like we had and give B.C. a chance to get back in the game, and leave our defence on the field, thats uncalled for from us. "They really didnt do anything different from what they did in the first half. Weve just got to be better in our execution part. Im a part of that. We did enough early on to get enough points ... but we cant have those lulls and put our defence in those situations." Burris completed 25 of 35 pass attempts for 375 yards to go with his four TDs and two picks. Greg Ellingson scored two touchdowns for the Ticats and had 111 passing yards while Andy Fantuz caught one TD and totalled 112 yards in the air. Shawn Gore, Nick Moore and Courtney Taylor scored for the Lions. Moore led all receivers with 159 yards. Hamilton kicker Luca Congi was good on all three field goal attempts, from 29 and two from 39 yards. His final 39-yarder with 4:03 left in the game quieted a late B.C. comeback. B.C. kicker Paul McCallum hit two of three attempts, making kicks from 10 and 18 yards and missing from 44. B.C. quarterback Travis Lulay completed 26 of 43 pass attempts for 334 yards, two touchdowns and zero interceptions, but his 21-point fourth quarter fell just short. The Lions were down 34-8 heading into the final quarter. "We have to find a way to be better in the first half," Lulay said. "We had a couple opportunities in the first half down tight. If we convert one or two of those and then if we dont give them a short field, coming right out at the third quarter ... its the first couplee minutes of that third quarter that put us in a real tough situation.dddddddddddd" The Ticats were up 17-8 at halftime and widened their lead on the opening drive of the second half, driving the ball 69 yards downfield on four plays and finishing with a 32-yard catch-and-run by Gable. B.C. took possession and on its first play from scrimmage. Lulay hit Nick Moore for 20 yards, but Moore fumbled and Hamilton defensive back Courtney Stephen recovered the ball and returned it 31 yards to the B.C. 23-yard line. On the next play, Burris hit Ellingson for the TD and a 31-8 lead less than four minutes into the second half. Congis 39-yarder made it 34-8. Then the Lions woke up. B.C. was driving at the end of the third, and, aided by a 19-yard pass interference call in the end zone, capped the 55-yard drive off with a one-yard score by Gore to start the fourth and pull to 34-15. The Lions pulled to 34-22 with a 43-yard drive and a five-yard pass to Moore with nine minutes left in the game. Ryan Phillips intercepted Burris at the B.C. 14-yard line to continue the Lions momentum, but the Hamilton defence held them deep with a sack. Ticat back-up quarterback Dan LeFevour took over for Burris to help eat up the clock with about five minutes left in the game, and Congi hit a 39-yard field goal for a 37-22 lead with 4:03 on the clock. B.C. converted a third-and-10 at midfield with a 17-yard completion to Moore. That continued the 75-yard scoring drive that ended with a 15-yard TD throw to Taylor and the Lions pulled to 37-29 with 1:57 on the clock. Hamilton had to convert a third-and-short at its own 31-yard line at 1:19 to keep the ball out of the hands of Lulay. But he eventually got it back at his own 37 with 10 seconds to go. The Hamilton defence went into a prevent formation and a rugby match broke out as the Lions kept tossing laterals until they were finally stopped. In the first half, Congi opened the scoring with a 29-yard field goal. Hamilton kicker Josh Bartel conceded a safety for B.C.s first points and the Lions later added a 10-yard field goal. Early in the second quarter, Fantuz finished a 75-yard Hamilton drive when he stole a ball from the hands of lunging B.C. defender Josh Bell and ran it in for a 37-yard TD. Less than six minutes later, Burris found Ellingson for a seven-yard TD strike that capped a 56-yard drive. The Ticats had trouble running out the clock late in the half and B.C. got the ball back on the Hamilton 45 with 41 seconds left. They got as close as first-and-goal at the Hamilton four-yard line. But the Ticats defence stood its ground to end the half, limiting the Lions to an 18-yard field goal. ' ' '