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Home Blog Page 8628

NHL News: Panthers pull out 4-OT win over Hurricanes in Game 1


RALEIGH, N.C. — The memories of how the Florida Panthers won their first Eastern Conference finals game in 27 years should last even longer than the Thursday contest.

Matthew Tkachuk scored with 12.7 seconds left in the fourth overtime as the Panthers pulled out a 3-2 victory against the Carolina Hurricanes in Game 1 of the best-of-seven series.

“Guys cracking Red Bulls before the fourth overtime,” Tkachuk said. “There was pizza flowing. It was actually pretty funny seeing it.”

It was the longest game in franchise history for both teams and the sixth-longest contest in NHL history.

“The worst way to lose a game,” Hurricanes coach Rod Brind’Amour said.

After an incredible goaltending display from Florida’s Sergei Bobrovsky and Carolina’s Frederik Andersen, Tkachuk batted in a bouncing puck for his sixth goal of the playoffs.

Aleksander Barkov and Carter Verhaeghe scored in the second period for the Panthers, who improved to 5-0 in overtime games this postseason. Anthony Duclair assisted on both regulation goals, while Barkov and Verhaeghe each assisted on the other’s goal.

Bobrovsky made 63 saves.

“He was good, but so was Freddie,” Hurricanes forward Martin Necas said. “Both goalies played great. They got a nice goal at the end there.”

Seth Jarvis and Stefan Noesen scored power-play goals in regulation for the Hurricanes. Andersen stopped 57 shots for Carolina, which had been 3-0 this postseason in OT contests.

This was the first game to extend beyond one overtime for both teams this spring. It was the longest Stanley Cup playoff game since the Tampa Bay Lightning beat the Columbus Blue Jackets 3-2 in five OTs on Aug. 11, 2020.

Players tried to ignore the grueling nature of the game.

“It got harder and harder and we embraced it,” Panthers defenseman Radko Gudas said.

The game ended at 1:54 a.m. ET on Friday. The Hurricanes will host Game 2 on Saturday.

The Panthers, playing in a conference finals game for the first time since 1996, won for the seventh time in eight road games in this postseason.

Florida’s Ryan Lomberg appeared to have scored the winning goal 2:35 into the first overtime, but the play was wiped out after a video review, with Colin White ruled to have committed goalie interference.

“We knew we were going to get it,” said Lomberg, who was back after an eight-game absence caused by an upper-body injury. “We just didn’t know it was going to take that long.”

Both teams logged 10 shots on goal in the second overtime. Andersen thwarted Florida’s Brandon Montour, who was left alone in front of the net, early in the third overtime.

The Hurricanes continued to test Bobrovsky.

“It was a good goalie battle,” Brind’Amour said. “It was unfortunate we didn’t find that one.”

The Panthers held an 11-8 edge in third-OT shots.

“It was a battle,” Carolina captain Jordan Staal said. “It was playoff hockey, for sure.”

Montour, a defenseman, had a game-high 57 minutes, 17 seconds, of ice time.

Noesen’s tying goal came 3:47 into the third period, giving him four goals in the postseason. That was part of Carolina’s 9-1 edge in shots across the first nine minutes of the third.

The Hurricanes outshot Florida 14-2 in the third period after the Panthers pulled ahead late in the second.

Barkov tied the game 1-1 with 4:32 remaining in the second period with his third goal of the postseason.

Verhaeghe’s goal came with 2:17 left in the second period. His sixth of the playoffs lifted him into a tie for the team lead.

Jarvis, who was alone in the slot, posted his fifth goal of the playoffs with 11.1 seconds to play in the opening period on a power play. Sebastian Aho’s pass connected with Jarvis.

The Hurricanes had forward Teuvo Teravainen in action for the first time since Game 2 of the first round when he sustained a broken hand against the New York Islanders.

–Bob Sutton, Field Level Media

NHL News: Peter DeBoer guides Stars against former Vegas team


Three days after the one-year anniversary of his firing by the Vegas Golden Knights, Peter DeBoer will find himself back behind the bench at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas on Friday night coaching the Dallas Stars in the first game of the best-of-seven Western Conference finals.

DeBoer was fired on May 16, 2022, after compiling a 98-50-12 record over parts of three seasons plus a 22-17 mark in the playoffs. But the injury-ravaged Golden Knights finished fourth in the Pacific Division last season and three points out of a wild-card spot to miss making the playoffs for the first time in the team’s history.

It took DeBoer and longtime assistant Steve Spott just five weeks to find work, taking over for Rick Bowness in Dallas. The Stars are the fourth different team DeBoer has coached to reach a conference final, joining New Jersey (2012), San Jose (2016 and 2019) and Vegas (2020 and 2021).

“Obviously, there’s no hiding from the fact that it means a little more,” DeBoer said. “That would be for anybody in this situation. This happens all the time in the world, right? You move on from a job and go on to the next job, except now we’re playing with each other in the conference final immediately after.”

Dallas went 3-0-0 against Vegas during the regular season, with the last two contests decided in shootouts. After the first meeting, a 4-0 victory on Jan. 16 in his return to Las Vegas, DeBoer celebrated by chugging a victory beer in the locker room.

“It’s a great story for you guys,” Dallas captain Jamie Benn said. “Obviously, it’s the playoffs. We all want to win for each other, and the coaching staff is included in that. Probably without all the injuries they had (last season), he could still be there. Fortunately for us, he’s here now.”

The Stars got this far by defeating the Minnesota Wild in six games and then the Seattle Kraken in seven games, capped by a 2-1 Game 7 win on Monday. Center Joe Pavelski, no stranger to the Golden Knights from his days at San Jose, has eight goals this postseason , including three game-winners.

Vegas led the Western Conference with 111 points and defeated the Winnipeg Jets in five games in the first round and then knocked off the Edmonton Oilers in six games in the second round.

Jack Eichel, the No. 2 overall pick of the 2015 NHL Draft making his playoff debut in his eighth season in the league, leads Vegas with 14 points and is also tied with center Chandler Stephenson for the team lead with six goals. Adin Hill, who took over goaltending duties in Game 3 against the Oilers when Laurent Brossoit suffered a lower-body injury, is 3-1 with a 2.19 goals-against average and .934 save percentage in five playoff games.

Hill is one of five goaltenders to play this season for the Golden Knights.

“I think we’ve been a team that used everybody all year,” Vegas coach Bruce Cassidy said. “We rely on that formula. We’re going to rely on it again, hopefully for another two rounds.”

Cassidy said the Golden Knights, who lost to the Washington Capitals in five games in their inaugural season in the 2018 Stanley Cup Final, have plenty of motivation heading into Friday’s opener.

“Now you’re in the final four,” Cassidy said. “It’s about the big prize. Winning the Stanley Cup should be enough for everybody, I would think.”

–Field Level Media

PGA News: Jon Rahm done in by short putts, opens PGA with shocking 76

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PITTSFORD, N.Y. — World No. 1 Jon Rahm has been riding high for several months, with a Masters green jacket the highlight of his terrific 2023 season thus far.

None of that mattered Thursday for the Spaniard on a difficult first day of the PGA Championship at Oak Hill Country Club.

Rahm piled up six bogeys, a double bogey and just two birdies in his opening-round 76, putting him at 6 over and in danger of missing the 36-hole cut Friday.

Rahm’s putter played a major role in his undoing down the stretch.

“The only thing I can look back on myself is the three short putts I missed on the back nine,” Rahm said. “I’m between 3 to 5 feet. If I make those putts, I shoot 3 over which is not the worst-case scenario.”

Rahm, who started his round on the back nine, was 3 over through 11 holes when he reached the par-3 third. He landed in a greenside bunker, blasted out and left himself just 5 feet for par, but the putt didn’t drop.

The next hole was his only remaining par-5, a scoring opportunity. His third shot nestled to within 4 feet of the cup, but he grazed the right edge of the cup on his birdie try.

Then Rahm struggled at the par-4 seventh, reaching the green in four shots. He could have saved bogey from 4 feet and change. No dice.

With the first round still in progress, Rahm ranked in the bottom 10 in the field in Strokes Gained: Putting. He also made a mere five out of 14 fairways in regulation.

“The main thing on this course is hitting the fairway,” Rahm said. “If you put the ball in the fairway you can actually give yourself a lot of good chances. Even 18 today was playing downwind, so if you put it on the fairway, you can have a good look at maybe hitting it close and that’s what I didn’t do.”

Per ESPN, the round was the worst score by a world No. 1 in the opening round of a major since Dustin Johnson shot 76 to open the 2021 PGA Championship.

Rahm must be in the top 70 and ties after Friday’s round to make the cut and see the weekend. He came into this championship looking to be the first player to win back-to-back majors since Jordan Spieth in 2015.

“If I can somehow manage to put a low one tomorrow and find myself close to even par … going into Sunday, I think I’ll have a decent chance,” he said.

Rahm was far from the only elite player who struggled Thursday. Former major winners Matt Fitzpatrick of England and Jason Day of Australia also carded 76. Defending champion Justin Thomas and four-time major winner Brooks Koepka shot 2-over 72, and Jordan Spieth and Ireland’s Shane Lowry shot 73.

–By Adam Zielonka, Field Level Media

PGA News: Rookie Eric Cole ekes in front of stars at PGA Championship

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PITTSFORD, N.Y. — Former major champions dotted the top of the leaderboard, but PGA Tour rookie Eric Cole stole past them all at twilight.

Cole held the lead at 5 under par through 14 holes, one stroke over Bryson DeChambeau, when the horn sounded in the first round of the PGA Championship on Thursday night at Oak Hill Country Club.

Thursday’s tee times were pushed back by one hour and 50 minutes due to an early morning frost delay, and 11 groups were still on the course when play was suspended due to darkness. Now the first round will be completed starting Friday at 7 a.m. before the second round can begin.

DeChambeau was the leader in the clubhouse at 4-under 66. Dustin Johnson, Scottie Scheffler and Corey Conners were tied two behind at 3-under 67, while Keegan Bradley, New Zealand’s Ryan Fox, Australia’s Adam Scott and Norway’s Viktor Hovland were at 2-under 68.

Cole, 34, earned his PGA Tour card last fall after years of grinding on developmental tours. It was just his second major start, and after starting on the back nine, a string of three birdies at Nos. 2-4 shot him past DeChambeau and company.

After sinking a 13-foot birdie putt at the par-3 third to reach 4 under, he became the only player to touch 5 under when he tapped in for birdie at the par-4 fourth.

Cole was pleased to see where he stood after one day.

“Whenever you play, you want to compete to win,” he said. “That’s the spot I like to see my name at and, hopefully, it is there more often.”

DeChambeau started his round on the back nine and was 1 under when he reached the par-4 17th hole. His drive took a right turn and reached the 18th tee box, bouncing off Kenny Pigman, one of 20 PGA teaching professionals in the field. DeChambeau headed over to check on Pigman and apologize.

“If you’re driving it well and hitting your irons well, you can play out here, but it can get pretty nasty pretty quick if you’re not hitting it straight,” DeChambeau said.

The 2020 U.S. Open champion made bogey but responded with birdies at Nos. 18, 1 and 4. He and Bradley, playing in the same group, moved to 4 under when they each birdied the par-4 sixth, but Bradley bogeyed two of his last three holes to drop back.

DeChambeau — now with LIV Golf and slimmed down after a muscle-building phase — didn’t lose club speed. He did what he does best, ranking among the leaders in driving distance at an average of 347 yards.

“I lost 18 pounds in 24 days. It was crazy,” DeChambeau said. “It wasn’t fat. It was all water weight. You know how I looked before. I was not skinny. So a lot of changes in that regard.”

Johnson opted to finish the 18th hole after the horn sounded and wound up making his only bogey of the day in the dark. Scott had it worse than that just before him, failing to get out of a greenside bunker on his first try and carding a double bogey at No. 18.

Scheffler, the 2022 Masters champion and World No. 2, notched the first bogey-free round at a major of his young but bright career. He sank 15-footers for birdie at the par-4 14th and the par-3 fifth holes. Then he stuck his approach shot at his penultimate hole 3 feet from the cup and tapped in for his third birdie of the day.

“This place is pretty tough,” Scheffler said. “I came into (Thursday’s) round just trying to play solid golf. I kept the course in front of me for the most part and hit some really good tee shots on the important holes. Then I had some nice saves as well.”

Conners poured in six birdies, three on the front nine and three on the back. His 30-foot putt at the par-3 15th briefly gave him sole possession of the lead at 4 under before he bogeyed his next hole.

Fox has not competed since the Masters more than a month ago, but he had some good reasons. After withdrawing from the RBC Heritage the week after the Masters, the 36-year-old was diagnosed with pneumonia.

“Took me two weeks at home to get over that, and just after that happened our second daughter was born, little Margot,” Fox said on the ESPN broadcast. “… I spent most of my time being Dad and not a whole lot of time on the golf course. So I worked pretty hard the first three days (of practice rounds) to try to find something, and pretty happy to find something today.”

Kazuki Higa, a 28-year-old from Japan, began his day on the back nine and birdied Nos. 11-14 to separate from the pack early. His morning lead was short-lived, as he carded a double bogey followed by three bogeys to finish at 2-over 72.

Oak Hill stymied some of best golfers in the world. Rory McIlroy of Northern Ireland was 3 over through nine holes before rallying to card a 1-over 71. Collin Morikawa also shot 71, defending champion Justin Thomas signed for a 72 and Cameron Smith of Australia shot 72.

World No. 1 Jon Rahm of Spain posted a surprising 6-over 76. After opening with a birdie at No. 10, he overshot some greens and bogeyed five times in a six-hole stretch from No. 16 to No. 3. Rahm missed three putts from 5 feet or shorter during his second nine, one leading to a double bogey.

–By Adam Zielonka, Field Level Media

NCAAF News: Labor board issues complaint against USC, Pac-12, NCAA


The National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) filed a complaint against the University of Southern California, the Pac-12 and the NCAA on Thursday, alleging that those organizations violated a provision of the U.S. Labor Relations Act.

The crux of the complaint comes over the distinction between the terms “student-athletes” and “employees.” The outcome of the case could portend a shift toward student-athletes being treated as employees.

The complaint reads, in part, “At all material times Respondents, both jointly and severally, have misclassified the Players as non-employee student athletes, including in the USC Athletics Student-Athlete Handbook.”

A hearing is scheduled for Nov. 7 in Los Angeles that could result in an order requiring all parties to cease referring to players as “student-athletes” and instead classify them as employees in all official documents.

If a judge were to rule against the university, league and NCAA, those entities would have avenues for appeal, setting the stage for a potentially lengthy legal process.

Depending on outcome, the case could usher in an era of unionization, per multiple observers in the legal profession. That would follow an attempt at unionization by Northwestern University football players in 2014-15 that ultimately ended with the NLRB deciding not to accept jurisdiction.

The current case stems from a complaint filed by the National College Players Association (NCPA) with the NLRB in February.

“Coaches, athletic directors, and conference commissioners are making millions of dollars while NCAA sports denies athletes fair compensation, breaks minimum wage and overtime laws, and avoids workers compensation while hazardous workplace conditions remain unchecked,” NCPA executive director Ramogi Huma said in a statement. “We are working to make sure college athletes are treated fairly in both the education and business aspects of college sports.”

–Field Level Media

NFL News: Report: Super Bowl coming to Bay Area in 2026


NFL owners are expected to award Super Bowl LX in 2026 to Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, Calif., according to a Sports Business Journal report on Thursday.

The owners’ spring meeting is slated for May 22-24 in Minneapolis, where they will vote on the site of the 60th Super Bowl game for February 2026 and televised on NBC.

Levi’s Stadium, which opened in 2014 as a replacement for Candlestick Park as the San Francisco 49ers’ home stadium, hosted Super Bowl 50 on Feb. 7, 2016, when the Denver Broncos defeated the Carolina Panthers 24-10.

The 49ers have been seeking funds from the league for upgrades to the stadium to host the Super Bowl. Levi’s Stadium also is one of 11 NFL venues hosting 2026 World Cup soccer games in the summer of 2026, when the United States, Canada and Mexico will serve as co-host countries.

The Los Angeles Rams said in April that they would like to host Super Bowl LXI in early 2027 at SoFi Stadium.

The Las Vegas Raiders will host next season’s game at Allegiant Stadium, and New Orleans will welcome back the Super Bowl in 2025 after not hosting since 2013 at the Superdome.

–Field Level Media

NFL News: Patriots release veteran OL Yodny Cajuste


The New England Patriots waived offensive lineman Yodny Cajuste on Thursday.

The move clears $2.743 million in cap space for 2023, according to Spotrac.

His release also means that none of New England’s 10 draft picks from 2019 remain on the roster.

A third-round selection in that class, Cajuste started three of his 10 games during the 2022 season.

Cajuste, 27, missed 2019 and 2020 due to injuries and has played in only 17 games (five starts).

–Field Level Media

NFL News: Reports: Jets rework DE Carl Lawson’s deal to clear $12.7M


The New York Jets reworked the contract of defensive end Carl Lawson and carved out $12.7 million against their salary cap for 2023, multiple outlets reported Thursday.

Lawson, who signed a three-year, $45 million contract with the club in March 2021, essentially took a $6 million paycut, per the reports. However, he can claw back $3 million of that in incentives built around sacks and playing time, per the reports.

He’s now due a base of $9 million, with $8 million guaranteed, per the reports.

Prior to the move, the Jets had $6.4 million in cap space, 24th in the NFL, per Over The Cap.

Lawson, 27, recorded seven sacks and 24 QB hits in 17 starts in 2022. He missed the entire 2021 season with a torn Achilles sustained during training camp in August of that year.

Lawson tallied 20 sacks in his first four NFL seasons with the Cincinnati Bengals (2017-20), who selected him in the fourth round of the 2017 draft out of Auburn.

–Field Level Media

NFL News: Panthers release QB Jacob Eason, WR Preston Williams


The Carolina Panthers released quarterback Jacob Eason and wide receiver Preston Williams on Thursday.

The departure of Eason, who was with the club in 2022, leaves the Panthers with three QBs on the roster — Bryce Young, Andy Dalton and Matt Corral.

Eason, 25, has appeared in two NFL games since being selected in the fourth round of the 2020 NFL Draft by Indianapolis.

Williams, 26, had 56 catches and 787 yards and seven touchdowns in 25 career games (17 starts) with the Miami Dolphins. He appeared in one game last season for Carolina and didn’t record a stat.

–Field Level Media

CSGO News: Heroic, Vitality reach BLAST.tv Paris Major semifinals


Heroic and Team Vitality advanced to the semifinals of the Champions Stage with victories on Thursday at the Blast.tv Paris Major 2023 in France.

Heroic beat FaZe Clan 2-1 and Vitality swept Into The Breach in quarterfinal action at the $1.25 million Counter-Strike: Global Offensive tournament.

Heroic sandwiched a 16-14 win on Nuke and a 16-6 decision on Mirage around a 16-12 setback on Overpass. Martin “stavn” Lund and Casper “cadiaN” Moller each tallied 61 kills for the all-Norwegian lineup, while cadiaN led the way with a plus-10 kills-to-deaths differential.

Vitality eliminated ITB with a 16-11 win on Vertigo and a 16-12 victory on Anubis. France’s Mathieu “ZywOo” Herbaut recorded a team-high 46 kills and a plus-20 K-D differential to lead Vitality.

FaZe Clan and ITB each took home $45,000 and 1,050 BLAST Premier points for finishing in fifth-eighth place.

The BLAST.tv Paris Major began on May 8 with 24 teams playing offline in Paris. The champion will earn not only a $500,000 payday and 3,500 BLAST Premier points, but also automatic qualification into both IEM Cologne 2023 and the BLAST Premier World Final.

The Challengers and Legends Stages used the Swiss System format, in which teams are divided after opening-match results into “high” and “low” matches. Elimination and advancement matches were best-of-three, and all other matches were best-of-one. The top eight teams in the Legends Stage advanced; the bottom eight were eliminated.

The Champions Stage is a single-elimination bracket with all matches best-of-three. The final is set for Sunday.

The Champions Stage quarterfinals continue on Friday:
–GamerLegion vs. Monte
–Team Liquid vs. Apeks

BLAST.tv Paris Major 2023 standings, prize pool, BLAST Premier points
1. $500,000, 3,500 points, IEM Cologne and BLAST Premier World Final
2. $170,000, 2,750 points
3-4. $80,000, 1,775 points
5-8. $45,000, 1,050 points — FaZe Clan, Into The Breach
9-11. $20,000, no points — Natus Vincere, Fnatic, Ninjas in Pyjamas
12-14. $20,000, no points — ENCE, Bad News Eagles, G2 Esports
15-16. $20,000, no points — 9INE, FURIA Esports
17-19. $10,000, no points — FORZE Esports, Grayhound Gaming, paiN Gaming
20-22. $10,000, no points — Complexity Gaming, The MongolZ, OG
23-24. $10,000, no points — MOUZ, Fluxo

–Field Level Media