Colorado athletics is projecting it will run a huge deficit this year after increasing pay for coach Deion Sanders and adding payments to players.
Miami athletic director says ACC should re-evaluate tiebreakers after 7-5 Duke makes conference title game
New York Jets invest $1 million to start college flag football league
Panthers welcome Maple Leafs to Sunrise in matchup of teams at bottom of Eastern Conference standings
The Florida Panthers will look to end a surprising three-game losing streak on home ice when they welcome the Toronto Maple Leafs to Sunrise.
After starting the season with a strong 8-2-1 mark at Amerant Bank Arena, Florida has dropped each of their past three.
What’s frustrating about the losing streak is that you could argue Florida could and should have won each of the losses.
Between less-than-average goaltending against Edmonton to a pair of blown two-goal leads against Philadelphia and Calgary, there are several things the Panthers will be looking to tighten up when they host Toronto on Tuesday.
To be fair, the first couple months of the season haven’t been particularly kind to the Panthers or the Maple Leafs.
Entering play on Tuesday, Florida and Toronto each hold 25 points in the standings, good for last in the Eastern Conference.
They sit six points behind Pittsburgh, who hold the final Wild Card spot.
Tuesday’s matchup will be the first of four meetings this season between the Cats and Leafs.
The Panthers have won four straight on home ice against the Maple Leafs, dating back to October of 2023.
Florida won three of four during the regular season against Toronto last year before knocking them out of the second round of the Stanley Cup Playoffs in seven games.
Similarly to the other night when Calgary brought several former Florida players to town, the Maple Leafs’ roster features several ex-Panthers, all of whom won the Stanley Cup here.
Steven Lorentz and Oliver Ekman-Larsson should both be in Toronto’s lineup against Florida, while goaltender Antony Stolarz remains on IR with an upper-body injury.
As for Florida, they brought up forward Jack Studnicka from the AHL’s Charlotte Checkers on Monday, so it’s possible he cracks the Cats’ lineup against Toronto.
Sam Reinhart did not participate in Florida’s practice on Monday in Fort Lauderdale, so perhaps he’s hurt or under the weather.
Answers will likely come following the Panthers’ optional morning skate.
Here are the Panthers projected lines and pairings for Tuesday’s tilt with Toronto:
Mackie Samoskevich – Anton Lundell – Brad Marchand
Jesper Boqvist – Evan Rodrigues – Sam Reinhart
Carter Verhaeghe – Sam Bennett – A.J. Greer
Noah Gregor – Luke Kunin – Jack Devine
Gus Forsling – Aaron Ekblad
Niko Mikkola – Seth Jones
Uvis Balinskis – Jeff Petry
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Photo caption: May 18, 2025; Toronto, Ontario, CAN; Florida Panthers forward Anton Lundell (15) punches Toronto Maple Leafs defenceman Oliver Ekman-Larsson (95) during the first period of game seven of the second round of the 2025 Stanley Cup Playoffs at Scotiabank Arena. (John E. Sokolowski-Imagn Images)
Vancouver Canucks Gameday Preview #27: A Daunting Opponent In The League-Leading Colorado Avalanche
The Vancouver Canucks (10–13–3) will face one of their most daunting tasks tomorrow as they prepare to take on the league-leading Colorado Avalanche (18–1–6). Vancouver recently wrapped up their three-game stint in California with a record of 1–1–1, picking up a single point in their 2–1 loss to the Los Angeles Kings on Saturday. The Avalanche are coming off a 7–2 win against the Montréal Canadiens on Saturday.
Tonight will not be Vancouver’s first game against the Avalanche this season, as they actually took Colorado to overtime back on November 9 and lost by a score of 5–4. This was Vancouver’s first overtime loss of the season as well as Colorado’s first win past regulation. Handing the Avalanche a loss will be an extremely difficult task, as Colorado has yet to lose in regulation on home-ice this season.
One of the biggest talking points in Vancouver and Colorado’s last match was both teams’ power plays. Colorado scored twice on theirs, while Vancouver’s scored once to send the game to overtime. The Canucks’ power play has struggled greatly as of late, failing to convert on any of their 11 opportunities throughout the past two games. The Avalanche have gone 1/5 in their past two games but currently hold an overall power play percentage of 16.3% on the season — nearly 5% less than Vancouver’s 20.9%. With Colorado’s PK clicking at a success rate of 86.8%, Vancouver will have a tough task ahead of them if they want to get their power play back on the board.
Players To Watch:
Kiefer Sherwood
Since joining the Canucks in 2024, Sherwood has five goals and one assist when playing against the Avalanche. As well, he scored his 10th goal of the season in their last matchup. Sherwood has been slightly snakebitten throughout the past few games, as his last point came against the Dallas Stars on November 20. With Conor Garland absent from the lineup on Saturday due to injury, Sherwood ended up taking his place on the second line alongside Brock Boeser and David Kämpf. Garland will not be available for tonight’s game, so Sherwood may reprise his role alongside them.
Nathan MacKinnon
The last time these two teams met, MacKinnon was a huge part in the wrecking crew that ultimately took the Canucks down. He factored into every goal that the Avalanche scored while potting two of his own to give Colorado an early 2–0 lead. As it stands, he’s operating at a ridiculous pace of 1.76 points per game while riding a three-game point streak that has seen him score three goals and four assists. It’ll be extremely hard for the Canucks to keep MacKinnon pointless when they face him tonight, but it’s not an impossible task — the Chicago Blackhawks, New York Islanders, Utah Mammoth, and Columbus Blue Jackets have all done-so this season.
Vancouver Canucks (10–13–3):
Points:
Elias Pettersson: 8–14–22
Quinn Hughes: 2–20–22
Kiefer Sherwood: 12–4–16
Brock Boeser: 9–7–16
Filip Hronek: 2–14–16
Goaltenders:
Thatcher Demko: 5–4–0
Kevin Lankinen: 4–7–3
Nikita Tolopilo: 1–1–0
Jiří Patera: 0–1–0
Colorado Avalanche (18–1–6):
Points:
Nathan MacKinnon: 20–24–44
Martin Nečas: 13–20–33
Cale Makar: 9–23–32
Artturi Lehkonen: 9–15–24
Brock Nelson: 8–8–16
Goaltenders:
Scott Wedgewood: 13–1–3
Mackenzie Blackwood: 5–0–1
Trent Miner: 0–0–2
Game Information:
Start time: 6:00 pm PT
Venue: Ball Arena
Television: Sportsnet
Radio: Sportsnet 650
Make sure you bookmark THN's Vancouver Canucks site and add us to your favourites on Google News for the latest news, exclusive interviews, breakdowns, and so much more. Also, don't forget to leave a comment at the bottom of the page and engage with other passionate fans through our forum. This article originally appeared on The Hockey News.
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Luka Doncic and Austin Reaves lament their turnover-plagued play in Lakers' loss
Jaxson Hayes grabbed a rebound late in the second quarter and passed the ball to Luka Doncic, who promptly threw a bad pass for a turnover. A few seconds later, Doncic got a rebound and lost the ball for another turnover. Then he threw away another pass. A minute later, he did it again.
Over a roughly two-minute stretch in the second quarter, Doncic turned the ball over four times.
It was that kind of night for Doncic and the Lakers. Their inability to take care of the basketball doomed them in a 125-108 loss to the Phoenix Suns on Monday night at Crypto.com Arena.
The Lakers had 22 turnovers and Doncic had nine.
Read more:Lakers' seven-game winning streak shattered in blowout loss to Phoenix Suns
“Yeah, that was my fault. No way I can have nine turnovers in the game,” said Doncic, who also had 38 points and 11 rebounds. “So in that second quarter... they're giving the shots, (so) instead of shooting the ball, I feel like I was trying to get (everyone) involved. But there's no way I should have nine turnovers.”
Austin Reaves was nearly as bad, turning it over five times.
“I dribbled the ball literally out of bounds one time,” said Reaves, who had 16 points. “I've done it before. I did it tonight and at some point I'll probably do it again. ... I was bad in that aspect, so I gotta be better.”
LeBron James, who extended his double-figure scoring streak in the regular season to 1,297 games, had three turnovers as the Lakers' Big Three combined for 17.
Entering the game, the Suns averaged an NBA-high 10.6 steals per game, and the Lakers were aware of that.
“Turnovers, turnovers (and) transition points,” said James about what went wrong for the Lakers. “And obviously on our home floor and against a disruptive defense like that, you can’t turn the ball over that much. And they were pretty much all pick-sixes. They not only turned us over, they were able to convert.”
Lakers hit the road
Now the Lakers must take their show on the road, playing three games in four nights on the East Coast against opponents all above .500.
They start Thursday night against the 14-7 Toronto Raptors, then face the 11-9 Boston Celtics on Friday before finishing the trip Sunday against the 10-9 Philadelphia 76ers.
"Well, the road trip should always refocus you, no matter how you’re playing,” James said. “So, I don’t think it took for us to have this game tonight to refocus us.”
The Raptors have lost two straight, but they are 8-2 in their last 10 games.
"I don't watch too much NBA, sorry,” said Doncic when asked to share his thoughts on the Raptors. “I know they have a good record. I love the coach [Darko Rajakovic]. ... I know he has (them) playing physical, so we're gonna see."
Read more:Former Lakers star Anthony Davis makes long-awaited return to L.A. after trade
The Lakers will also see if James will play in back-to-back games.
He didn’t play against the Pelicans on Sunday night in the first game of a back-to-back.
Since the Lakers listed James out with left foot injury management, he was asked if that was something new for this season after he missed the first 14 games with sciatica.
“Yeah, it’s called old,” said James, who turns 41 this month.
Poor defense
The Lakers had a defensive plan in place, but it didn’t work.
They allowed the Suns to shoot 57% from the field and 44% from three-point range.
Collin Gillespie, a known three-point shooter, went eight for 14 from three-point range on his way to 28 points. Royce O’Neale made two three-pointers.
“I don't remember ever talking about going under (screens) versus lasers (three-point shooters), and Gillespie's making threes and Royce O'Neale was making threes, going under,” Lakers coach JJ Redick said. “I don't know, I don't know. It's a weird sort of thing.”
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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.
Robin Smith, former England cricketer, dies aged 62
Batter made more than 4,000 runs for England
Smith spent more than 20 years at Hampshire
The former England cricketer Robin Smith has died at the age of 62, with his family and former county Hampshire saying they were devastated by his loss.
Smith played 62 Tests and 71 one-day internationals for England between 1988 and 1996 and was a resolute middle-order bulwark for the side during often difficult times for the team. He particularly excelled against pace, making his highest Test score of 175 against the fearsome West Indies attack at Antigua in 1994.
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‘We make a great living’: Emma Raducanu on why she won’t moan about the tennis calendar
British No 1 on home comforts of Bromley, joys of commuting and being ‘creeped out’ by paparazzi
Emma Raducanu has garnered many endorsement deals in her nascent career, but there is perhaps one elusive sponsorship that would be most pleasing to the British No 1 women’s tennis player: ambassador of the London Borough of Bromley.
During a roundtable discussion with tennis journalists at the end of a gruelling yet satisfying season, Raducanu is merely attempting to describe a quiet off-season spent in her family home when she finds herself delivering a sales pitch about the benefits of living in Bromley. “I’m just so settled,” she says. “I’ve barely been in the UK this year because I’ve been competing so much, but I think just spending really good quality time with my parents has been so nice. I have loved just being in Bromley. It just reminds me of when I was a younger kid and it’s the same bedroom, same everything.
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More feasting: Marquee college hoops games continue the week after Thanksgiving holiday tournaments
Thanksgiving is a great time to be a college basketball fan with all the holiday tournaments and marquee matchups. This week will feature another trove of must-see games, including 10 between AP Top 25 opponents. No. 4 Duke, No. 6 Louisville and No. 18 Kentucky double up on tough games, each playing two ranked opponents within days of each other.
Usman Khawaja ruled out of second Ashes Test due to back injury
Australia opener will not be replaced in the squad in Brisbane
38-year-old’s absence paves way for Travis Head to open at the Gabba
Usman Khawaja’s back injury has ruled the veteran opener out of the second Ashes Test and thrown his future in the Australian team further into doubt.
The 38-year-old’s place in the XI had been under intense scrutiny since back spasms forced him from the field in the victorious first Test and prevented him from opening the batting.
Continue reading...Are Steph Curry, Klay Thompson best NBA backcourt ever? Warriors star sees case
Are Steph Curry, Klay Thompson best NBA backcourt ever? Warriors star sees case originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area
Aside from the Boston Celtics building the most remarkable dynasty ever, the history of the NBA is light on absolutes. From greatest player to greatest at each position to greatest coach, opinions tend to vary. And forever will.
One claim, however, that can stake a reasonable case for being above debate is that Stephen Curry and Klay Thompson, during their 666 games as teammates on the Warriors, represented the best, and most enduring, guard duo ever.
“You let everybody have their opinions on that,” Curry said in an appearance on the NBC Sports Bay Area’s Dubs Talk podcast, which debuted Monday. “It is kind of crazy to think that it’s not inconceivable, or you won’t be yelled at, if you’re standing on that hill.”
It’s a sturdy hill that began forming in 2012-13, their first full season as starters with Golden State. After becoming the first teammates to make more than 200 3-pointers in the regular season, they made 67, on 40.6-percent shooting, as the No. 6 seed Warriors upset the third-seeded Denver Nuggets in six games before pushing the second-seeded San Antonio Spurs to six games.
One year later, the Warriors gave birth to a dynasty.
Curry and Thompson are the only backcourt duo to reach five consecutive NBA Finals. The Celtics of three generations ago went to 10 consecutive Finals but had a rotating cast of starters in the backcourt, with Bob Cousy, Bill Sharman, Sam Jones, K.C. Jones, Tom “Satch” Sanders and Larry Siegfried, among others.
Michael Jordan and Kobe Bryant never reached the NBA Finals in four consecutive seasons, and their backcourt partners are, to be frank, relegated to trivia. Magic Johnson made it to four in a row, two with Norm Nixon and two with Byron Scott – neither of whom will join Magic in the Hall of Fame.
The above players made an impact on the game – Magic, Michael and Kobe in particular – but none altered the basketball landscape to the degree the “Splash Brothers” did. Curry is the all-time leader in 3-pointers and, by consensus, the king of the 3-pointer. Yet Thompson holds the record for most in a game, draining 14 in 27 searing minutes in 2018. All five of Curry’s assists went to Klay, including the one that tied Steph’s single-game record of 13.
“My coach at Davidson, Bob McKillop, used to say if you help somebody, you help yourself,” Curry said. “And that’s not like a selfish ambition. That’s an approach to the game. And that night was exactly what it’s supposed to be.
“I did make it harder myself if I want to come back and try to now make 15 3s in a game to have that record. But I’m glad that it’s his right now.”
With Curry being the family man and Thompson a confirmed bachelor, they led very different lives off the court. It was their competitive zeal and shared desire for excellence that was perhaps the strongest bond between them. There were times when it seemed they competed to see who would be the last to leave the practice court.
It paid off for the Warriors, who, behind the Curry-Thompson backcourt, appeared in six Finals, winning four.
It also paid off for Curry and Thompson individually, with them going to five consecutive All-Star games – a feat no modern-era backcourt has achieved. (Cousy and Sharman went to eight in straight from 1953-60).
“Two guys that played hard, were irrationally confident with our jumpers and we kind of thrived off each other in terms of when one got going, it wasn’t like, ‘Oh, when is my turn?’” Curry said. “It was like we’d start to feel the heat and the energy of the arena, the ball and whatever the flow of the game is.
“Klay was such an asset for me on the court, because he usually guarded the best perimeter guy on the other team. He took that responsibility and loved it. He was selfless about it. You know he wanted to score, but he knew he could help us on that end of the floor.
“And then for me, like using gravity, trying to get him easy shots on the other side. You’ve got to kind of pick your poison. Who you’re going to leave open? That’s why it worked.”
Curry’s acknowledgment of Thompson’s defense is one of the persuasive elements in the duo receiving GOAT status. Klay, standing 6-foot-6, with a 6-foot-9 wingspan, was the primary defender not only on smallish point guards like Kyrie Irving, Damian Lillard and Chris Paul but also bigger guards, such as DeMar DeRozan and James Harden.
Yet it is the 3-point deep shooting of Curry and Thompson that stands as the first of several arguments on their behalf. Curry ranks No. 1 on the career list with 4,133, while Thompson, who missed two full seasons, is fifth at 2,754. Former Warriors coach Mark Jackson, in 2013, was the first to anoint them as the “best shooting backcourt in the history of the game.
Twelve years later, there is no debate.
“I’m pretty sure we got that one,” Curry said. “But in terms of backcourt in general, there’s obviously a lot of competition there. Who knows how these debates get solved and settled?
“But it’s the idea that because of our accomplishments as a team and what me and Klay did for such a long time at the 1 and the 2 spots, and how we did it, and the way people remember those moments in that run. You walk into any barber shop, any gym, any men’s league or whatever, and they start bringing that conversation up, you won’t be the only one in the room (with that opinion).”