Bryce Hopkins and Joson Sanon scored 15 points apiece, and No. 13 St. John’s pulled away early in the second half for a 93-60 victory over William & Mary on Saturday night.
No. 13 St. John’s dominates 2nd half in 93-60 win over William & Mary
Bryce Hopkins and Joson Sanon scored 15 points apiece, and No. 13 St. John’s pulled away early in the second half for a 93-60 victory over William & Mary on Saturday night. Hopkins and Sanon combined to make 11 of 23 shots for the Red Storm (2-1), who dropped eight spots in this week’s AP Top 25 poll after last weekend’s loss to Alabama at Madison Square Garden. Dylan Darling returned from a minor calf injury that kept him out against Alabama and contributed 13 points on 5-of-10 shooting.
The Wallabies were meant to prove they’re back. But instead they have gone backwards
The 46-19 shellacking against Ireland is a stark reminder of how far behind the best teams Australia still sit
Three weeks ago, Australia arrived in Europe self-assured and quietly confident of taking a few prized scalps. And why not? They had come within a single refereeing call at the breakdown of claiming a British & Irish Lions series win. They had hammered the world champion Springboks in Johannesburg. They had shown great chutzpah to beat Argentina after the hooter and they still carried the glow of last November’s win over England.
This was a side developing shape and steel, a side capable of the sublime, a side beginning to coax long-dormant fans back to the code while tempting home several stars who had crossed to rugby league. This tour was supposed to confirm, unequivocally, that the Wallabies were back. Instead, they’ve gone backwards after a sorry performance against Ireland in Dublin where they received a 46–19 shellacking that still managed to flatter them on the scoreboard.
Continue reading...Syracuse goes on the road for first time this season to earn 80-50 win over Drexel
Coit paces Maryland but Terps lose Williams in 89-82 win over Marquet
Senators Defenseman Out To Prove His Worth To Two Clubs At Once On Saturday Night
When the Los Angeles Kings traded 24-year-old Jordan Spence to Ottawa four and a half months ago, he had just finished a season where he was an everyday player (79 games) on a blue line put together by GM Rob Blake. Blake is a Hall of Fame defenseman who knows a thing or two about great defense. The Kings allowed the second-fewest goals in the entire NHL, which should be a real feather in any young defenseman's cap.
But things can change quickly in the NHL.
The Kings lost in round one of the playoffs, and Blake left at the end of the season. Since winning their second Cup in three years in 2014, the Kings have either missed the playoffs or failed to get past the first round every season. So Blake was replaced by Ken Holland.
Despite the Kings' defensive success, Holland decided the blue line was too young and opted to go out and sign a free-agent veteran. That later turned out to be former Senator Cody Ceci, but to make room for the signing, that meant someone had to go. And that player was Spence.
Holland called Spence up on NHL draft day to break the news that he'd been traded, and the Kings recorded portions of Holland's side of the conversation for their website.
Jordan? Yeah, it's Ken Holland. How are you doing? I know that opportunity is number one to you, and with Brandt Clarke here, we're gonna try to sign another right-shot D. I don't think you would have the opportunity here that you've earned at this stage of your career. So this (trade to Ottawa) should give you a better opportunity than you're gonna get here. I want to wish you the best. You had a hell of a year last year. Again, I wanna wish you all the best and have a great career.-
– Portions of a phone call by Los Angeles Kings GM Ken Holland to Jordan Spence right after trading him to Ottawa on NHL Draft Day back in June.
On Saturday night, Spence will face his former team for the first time, and it's a day he had marked on his calendar.
"Yeah, I did actually," Spence said. "Right when I got traded (to Ottawa), I did look at the schedule during the summer to see when we're going to play against them. So I'm really excited for tonight. And I'm excited to hopefully get the win."
With the two clubs both off last night, Spence treated a number of his former teammates to dinner in Ottawa. But while he still has great friends in that room, it will be all business on Saturday. And a little weird.
"Yeah, I mean, it's really different. I got drafted there, and I was there for four or five years. So it is weird seeing the guys and just catching up. But at the same time, it's business. And we're friends off the ice, but not on the ice."
While the trade to the Senators was framed to him as a chance for Spence to play regularly, it certainly hasn't panned out that way, at least not in the first month. Spence didn't dress on opening night, and he's already been a healthy scratch more this season than he was all of last season. He's only played in half of the Senators' 18 games so far.
Even when he has played, Sens head coach Travis Green and defensive coach Nolan Baumgartner still appear unsure about him. When the Senators lost Thomas Chabot to injury on Tuesday night, they were going to need another defenseman, other than Jake Sanderson, to play in overtime against the Dallas Stars. While Spence has his flaws, his game seems tailor-made for overtime.
But the Sens went with big, stay-at-home defenseman Tyler Kleven, who doesn't have nearly the speed, puck skill or point production that Spence does. Kleven is also younger with less NHL experience. And yet Baumgartner still chose Kleven, who was on the ice for the Stars' winning goal.
Now, until Chabot returns, Ottawa's brain trust has no choice but to use Spence every night, and he hopes to make the most of the opportunity. And when the Senators and Kings face each other on Saturday night, Spence has a chance to try and prove some things to both clubs.
By Steve Warne
The Hockey News/Ottawa
More Sens headlines at The Hockey News Ottawa:
Senators Have Big UFA Contract Decisions Over The Next Few Years (Who Stays And Who Goes?)
Brady Tkachuk Tests Out Wrist Injury At Practice, Provides Potential Timeline For Return
Four More Years: Ottawa Senators Sign Shane Pinto To A Four-Year Extension
Senators Lose Defenseman Thomas Chabot To Injury
Former Ottawa Senator GM Passes Away At Age 70
Mackenzie Blackwood Addresses Bednar's Criticism: He's Not Wrong; It's the Truth
Mackenzie Blackwood acknowledged Jared Bednar’s postgame critique of his performance in Thursday’s 6–3 win over the Buffalo Sabres — and agreed with it.
The 28-year-old surrendered two goals on the first six shots he faced but steadied himself and delivered several key saves down the stretch. But Bednar was not too impressed with the way the game started.
Blackwood failed to cover the puck on the first goal, allowing former Avalanche defenseman Bowen Byram to jar it loose and finish from the doorstep. The second goal unfolded when Colorado’s defense was beaten to a lofted entry from Owen Power, enabling Jordan Greenway to bat the puck out of midair and past Blackwood to make it 3–2. It was an unusual sequence, but still a save Blackwood should have made.
"I hate to sound cruel, but that's a Blacky problem at this point," he stated. "It's not a problem for me; I have lots of confidence in Blacky and I know there's lots of minutes between here and the end of the season, but (Scott Wedgewood) is playing great, so I'm not gonna not play Wedge to play Blacky at this point, so those minutes come in practice and hard work he's been doing that and he'll get his games...Wedge is rested and ready to go for Sunday.
"I'm not gonna not play him because Blacky needs minutes. There's plenty of time to give him minutes. Right now, we're gonna play a rested goalie and play the goalie that gives us a really good chance."
Blackwood Agrees With Criticism
At Saturday’s practice at Family Sports Center, The Hockey News asked Blackwood whether Bednar’s comments added any extra motivation for him to start stronger.
“I’m getting closer; I just need reps,” Blackwood said. “It’s hard when you miss all of training camp. I don’t need that to motivate me. He’s not wrong; it’s the truth. It’s my problem to take the opportunities that I get and keep working on sharpness, and those aspects of my game that I need (to address).
“Everyone in here is a pro, they have to find a way to get their game in order. It’s not terrible, but it’s definitely not where I want it to be. I think the more practice we play, the better it’s gonna get.”
Blackwood, who was acquired via trade from the San Jose Sharks last season, said today was one of his better practice sessions and that he felt great.
“Each time I get on the ice it’s an opportunity to refine your smoothness and your timing. I agree with Bedsy; it’s up to me, but it’s not extra motivation. I already kinda knew that, so it’s more telling the truth.”
Blackwood appeared in 37 games for the Avalanche last season, posting a 22–12–3 record with a 2.33 goals-against average and a .913 save percentage. Through three starts this season, he is 2–0–1 with a 3.28 goals-against average and an .870 save percentage. Meanwhile, the Avalanche sit atop the NHL at 12–1–5.
Next Game
The Avalanche take on the New York Islanders on Sunday for their annual Hockey Fights Cancer night at Ball Arena. Scott Wedgewood will start in net. Coverage begins at 7 p.m local time.
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Say What?: Emotional Tributes And Brutal Honesty Headline The NHL's Quotes Of The Week
The NHL is filled with amazing quotes. Some are emotional, while others bring humor to the table. Whether it’s players, coaches, front office staff or even pundits, the NHL has no shortage of noteworthy soundbites.
This season alone, we’ve seen Ryan O’Reilly become his harshest critic, Jakub Dobes spill his emotions over a loss, and several others demonstrate anger or playfulness.
Here are some of the best quotes in the NHL of the past week.
John Tortorella Speaks About The Passing Of New York Post Columnist Larry Brooks
If there is one hockey personality who is famous for having the most outrageous quotes, it’s long-time NHL coach John Tortorella. “Torts” received his first NHL head coaching job in 2001 when he replaced Steve Ludzik on Jan. 7 on the Tampa Bay Lightning.
Tortorella won a Stanley Cup with the Lightning in 2003-04 and then went on to spend seasons as the New York Rangers, Vancouver Canucks, Columbus Blue Jackets and Philadelphia Flyers head coach.
In his time with New York, he had several discussions with the late Larry Brooks, who worked as a New York Post columnist. Brooks recently passed away due to cancer at the age of 75, and Tortorella had plenty of great things to say about him.
“He’s an icon,” Tortorella said on Thursday evening during ESPN’s The Point. “We had our disagreements along the way, but the thing I always respected about Larry is no matter what the day brought — we had a lot of disagreements, but we’d disagree and we’d go at it, but he’d be there the next day. Ready to ask another question, he’d be there face-to-face.
“I had so much respect for how hard he worked at his job. We’re both trying to do our business. I need to protect my hockey team sometimes, he has information — and he has information, that’s one thing, he worked at it, to get information.”
Jon Cooper Explains Use Of Timeout
In a battle between two of Tortorella’s two former teams, the Lightning were having an awful time against the Rangers. The result of the contest was very one-sided as the Rangers went on to defeat the Lightning 7-3.
ESPN’s Jackie Redmond conducted a bench interview with Lightning coach Jon Cooper and asked about his early use of a timeout. Cooper had a hilarious response, in short, calling his team immature.
“Reckless play, bad penalty, tough structure, bad turnover, in the net, in the net, and so, if we’re going to play like that, that’s not winning hockey. Next 57 minutes we need to change our act, or it’s going to get way worse than this. We got better in us. I think there's a little bit of thumb-sucking going on right now.”
The Lightning did up the pressure, finishing with 36 shots on net, but they continued to have issues keeping the Rangers from converting their high-danger chances.
Leon Draisaitl And The Oilers Needed A Slap In The Face
Just a week ago, in a highly anticipated Saturday night matchup between the Edmonton Oilers and the Colorado Avalanche, we witnessed the Avalanche lay a beating on what looked like a lifeless Oilers squad.
The game finished with an astonishing 9-1 scoreline, with plenty of blame to be dished around on the Oilers' end. Leon Draisaitl, who tends to be very open with his responses, not fearing what some may think of what he says, was once again blunt in his description of the game.
“Sometimes a slap in the face is just what you need.”
Draisaitl may have been right in his analysis. In the two games following the embarrassing loss, the Oilers defeated the Blue Jackets and the Flyers in overtime. There is still plenty to do for the Oilers to turn things around, but Draisaitl is correct in saying that they needed a wake-up call to get going once again.
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Former Blackhawks Center Signs With Canucks
Former Chicago Blackhawks forward David Kampf mutually agreed to have his contract with the Toronto Maple Leafs terminated this week. Now, he has already found his new home.
The Vancouver Canucks have announced that they have signed Kampf to a one-year, $1.1 million contract for the remainder of the 2025-26 season.
Seeing the Canucks sign Kampf is not necessarily surprising, as they need help at the center position and have been dealing with injury trouble. Now, they have brought in a solid veteran forward in Kampf who will provide them with more depth.
In four games this season with the Maple Leafs' AHL affiliate, the Toronto Marlies, Kampf recorded one assist and had a minus-1 rating. During the 2024-25 season with the Maple Leafs, he had five goals and 13 points in 59 games.
Kampf spent the first four seasons of his NHL career with the Blackhawks from 2017-18 to 2020-21, where he recorded 17 goals, 41 assists, and 58 points in 235 games.
Chris Eubank Jr v Conor Benn II: middleweight boxing rematch – live updates
Fathers’ feud echoes as sons meet for final chapter
Rehydration clause looms over high-stakes rematch
Reach out to Bryan via Bluesky or email
Buffer has just finished making the fighter announcements as 50 Cent remained in Eubank’s corner. A crackling atmosphere at Tottenham’s home ground. The waiting is over. The final instructions have been given by the referee, the seconds are out and we’ll pick it up with round-by-round coverage from here!
Eubank Jr is now trained by Brian “BoMac” McIntyre who is always in the corner of Terence Crawford, the best fighter in the world by some distance. And so there was a little zing of excitement among the Crawford connoisseurs when the mighty Bud appeared on the giant screen as he moved around Eubank’s dressing room. He shook hands warmly with a beaming Eubank Sr before stopping to share a few words with Junior. Those moments will matter far more to the Eubank camp than the fact that Benn received a bigger cheer than they did when he was seen on the same big screen having his hands wrapped. Personally, I think that’s 1-0 so far to Eubank Jr/Crawford over Benn/the crowd.
Continue reading...Fans And Media React To Oilers Losing Troy Stecher on Waivers
The Edmonton Oilers officially lost defenseman Troy Stecher on waivers to the Toronto Maple Leafs, and the reaction is mixed. Some wished the defenseman well. Others took aim at the Oilers for a lack of asset management. Some were fans of the Toronto Maple Leafs suggesting that a move needed to be made, and this wasn't a bad one.
From frustration to sadness to cautious Leafs optimism, hockey fans had plenty to say after Toronto scooped up the veteran blueliner.
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Oilers Fans and Media Weigh In
A chunk of Oilers fans were annoyed the team risked losing Stecher in the first place. One user @OADSBW, called the move “lazy,” adding: “VERY disrespectful by the Oilers… leaving it up to chance, a coin-flip. Hoping you can stash him in the minors? Brutal.”
Others, many of them from the Edmonton-based media, pointed out that Stecher was a good solider and deserved to land somewhere solid.
Oilers Now host Bob Stauffer noted, "Big fan of Troy Stecher. During his time as an @EdmontonOilers he was a consummate professional who punched above his weight class. Competed every shift! Best of luck to him in Toronto."
Kurt Leavins of the Edmonton Journal wrote, "Leafs claim Stecher off waivers. On one hand, tough to lose a warrior like him for nothing. But Stecher was clearly the #8 here."
Daniel Nugent-Bowman of The Athletic wrote, "The Oilers have lost their No. 8 defenceman. Good to see Stecher find a new NHL team."
Mark Spector of Sportsnet tweeted, "So long Troy Stecher, as competitive a battler as ever I've covered. He's small, gets less than 15 points a season, and somehow has carved out a 566-game NHL career. Seven teams later, someone still wants him. And the Leafs will be better for the pick-up."
Hall of Fame writer Jim Matheson noted, "Stecher joins his seventh NHL team and fourth in Canada. Oilers, Canucks, Flames and now Leafs. Also LA, Arizona and Detroit. He is ultimate battler who has made himself useful to one quarter of league."
Leafs Fans Welcome Their New Depth Defenseman
Leafs fans, on the other hand, wasted no time embracing their new addition.
Analyst Mike Kelly (@MikeKellyNHL) liked the pickup from a fit standpoint: “Stecher is a depth defenceman but can provide a needed skill for Leafs — puck moving out of the defensive zone… good at getting back on pucks and getting it out with possession.”
Even Leafs writer Nick Barden highlighted why the move made sense, pointing to Stecher’s mobility and reliability as reasons Toronto targeted him.
@APetrielli wrote, "I like the risk-free Stecher claim as it's a fully buriable, expiring contract. Myers has been awful and is their next right-D right now. At least Stecher can pass/play with pace. Leafs need all the puck movement they can get right now."
Ultimate Leafs' fan Steve 'Dangle" Glynn wrote, "Glad they're trying this. I don't expect him to save the day but he's a righty who can move the puck and he's probably better than at least one of their current guys, probably two. I'd rather try this than nothing, which wasn't an option anymore."
Oilers Lose a Battler
The numbers game played into why Stecher is no longer an Oiler and the defenseman will be missed. He wasn't having the best season and as he was aging, it was less and less likely he had a future with the Oilers. Still, you never want to lose someone who battles and plays hard every time he's on the ice.
The Oilers arguably haven't seen enough compete from many of the players on their roster and despite Stecher's size, he was never short of 'try".
**Author's Take:
I had nothing but positive interactions for Stecher each and every time I had the chance to talk to him. He seemed excited to play and a down-to-earth NHLer who was happy to help in any role asked of him. It will be great to see him get a shot with the Maple Leafs and the hope is that he becomes a regular in the lineup for them.
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Fernando Mendoza throws 4 TDs to lead No. 2 Indiana over Wisconsin 31-7
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Exciting Devils Prospect To Make NHL Debut Against Capitals
One of the New Jersey Devils' most exciting prospects will make his NHL debut on Saturday night against Alexander Ovechkin and the Washington Capitals at Capital One Arena.
After receiving his first NHL call-up, 22-year-old Shane Lachance will draw into New Jersey's lineup with injuries to forwards Jack Hughes (non-hockey hand injury) and Cody Glass (upper-body injury).
During his pregame media availability, Devils head coach Sheldon Keefe confirmed that Lachance would play via NJD.TV.
Lachance, who spent the beginning of the season in the American Hockey League (AHL) with the Utica Comets, will have familiarity with his teammates, as Nathan Légaré and Colton White are also with the Devils due to the influx of injuries to New Jersey's roster.
Before the team's road trip, White provided insight into Lachance and what he has brought to the ice and to the Comets' locker room.
"He is a phenomenal guy off the ice," White said. "He is really great to be around, and has a great work ethic. On the ice, he does all the little things really well. He works really hard. Good defensively. Good offensively. Good at possessing the puck down low and being a good net front presence.
"You can tell why he was the captain at BU at such a young age," White continued. "Being a young guy and asserting yourself that way, it takes a long time to do that usually, but he seems to do it right away. A special player, for sure."
Through 11 games with the Comets, Lachance has one assist and two penalty minutes. On April 16, 2025, he signed a two-year, entry-level contract that began with the 2025-26 season.
Puck drop between the Devils and Capitals is scheduled for 7:00 p.m. The game will be broadcast on MSGSN and can be streamed on Gotham Sports.
Make sure you bookmark THN's New Jersey Devils site for THN's latest news, exclusive interviews, breakdowns, and so much more.
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