Louis Lynagh inspires dramatic Italy win to ramp up Australia misery

  • Italy 26-19 Australia

  • Wallaby legend Michael Lynagh’s son inspires famous win

Italy upset Australia with a come-from-behind 26-19 victory on Saturday with the son of a Wallaby great, Louis Lynagh, scoring one try and Australian-born winger Monty Ioane the other to snatch a famous win for the hosts.

Lynagh, born in Italy when his father, Michael, played for Treviso, and Melbourne-born Ioane proved Italy’s heroes as they won for only the second time in 20 tests against the Wallabies.

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Norris soars to F1 São Paulo GP pole as Piastri stumbles and Verstappen flops

  • Oscar Piastri fourth as teammate Lando Norris excels

  • Verstappen’s title hopes hit as he is 16th and out in Q1

Lando Norris claimed pole position for the São Paulo Grand Prix, his championship ambitions backed with a real statement of intent having already secured victory in the sprint race earlier on Saturday.

His success was given added impetus as both his title rivals, Oscar Piastri and Max Verstappen, suffered disappointment in Brazil. Piastri’s championship hopes took yet another blow as he crashed out of the sprint and qualified only in fourth, while Verstappen could manage only 16th on the grid.

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Championship roundup: Norwich sack Manning after defeat to Leicester

  • Leicester condemn Norwich to eighth straight home loss

  • Club: ‘We have no choice other than to make a change’

Liam Manning has been sacked by Norwich in the wake of a 2-1 home defeat by Leicester, which left them 23rd in the Championship, with nine points from 15 games and without a win at Carrow Road since May.

The Canaries have lost all seven of their home matches in the Championship this season, with another defeat coming in the Carabao Cup, and are now four points adrift of safety. After going ahead on 62 minutes through Mathias Kvistgaarden’s second goal in successive games, Norwich were pegged back by substitute Bobby Cordova-Reid 10 minutes later and then suffered a nightmare ending when Jordan James headed a dramatic second for the visitors.

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Sunderland v Arsenal: Premier League – live

⚽ Premier League updates from the 5.30pm GMT kick-off
Live scores | Edwards in talks with Wolves | Mail Scott

Sunderland boss Regis Le Bris speaks to Sky Sports … “We will see if we can find an opportunity to win … or to score, because it’s really tough to score against them … keep improving … we need play against the best to improve … [Granit Xhaka] is really important for us … a really good player … a strong leader … an ability to lead by example … on the pitch in real time … to help others and create new leaders … so it fits really well with our journey and I hope he will be at his best today.”

… then his Arsenal counterpart Mikel Arteta takes his turn. “There is excitement to come here and do what we have been doing … earn the right to win the game … every game in the Premier League is a really tough place to come and we are really aware of that … when you move a player from a deep position to a front position, normally the other way around is easier, that way is more complicated and Mikel [Merino] has done a brilliant job every time … we are going to need him today again.”

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Preview: Avs square off against Oilers in primetime showdown

Saturday night, primetime hockey against a Canadian team—truly, it doesn’t get much better than that. 

Tonight, the Colorado Avalanche will go toe-to-toe with Connor McDavid, Leon Draisaitl, and the rest of the Edmonton Oilers as they square off at Rogers Place. 

Patrik Czepiec (@CzepiecPatrik) on XPatrik Czepiec (@CzepiecPatrik) on XSoudě dle oslavy, Martin Nečas 🇨🇿 se s Nathanem MacKinnonem už docela kamarádí 👐 Vítězný gól Čecha na 5:4 proti Oilers 🚨 Zvíře Nathan 1+3 👀

Colorado Avalanche 

MacKenzie Blackwood, who made his season debut last Saturday against the San Jose Sharks, is the presumed starter for the game. Earlier in the week, Jared Bednar acknowledged that the netminder was still working through some rust but noted that a full week of practice should help him regain his timing and sharpness.

“He missed most of training camp; he’s been working kind of on his own and lacking team practice time at this point, so that’s why I think this week will be very good for him, practice yesterday; he got some work in today, we’re practicing again tomorrow and Friday, so it’s the most practices we’ve had all year, so I think that will help him get sort of used to game situations and he’ll be ready to go for the weekend," Bednar stated on Tuesday. 

The Avs held an optional skate Wednesday and a full practice Friday before heading north, giving Blackwood ample opportunity to settle in. If he showed enough progress, he should get the start; if questions remain, Bednar may opt for a split with Scott Wedgewood as Colorado navigates a back-to-back that concludes Sunday against the Vancouver Canucks. They've already played one back-to-back this season, dropping both in overtime to the Boston Bruins and New Jersey Devils, respectively, leaving them 0-0-2 on the season. 

As reported Friday, Samuel Girard did not travel with the team as he continues to manage an upper-body injury. However, according to the Family Sports Center schedule, an Avs injured skate is set from 3:05 to 4:05 p.m. Participants could include Girard, Joel Kiviranta—who has just resumed skating following a lower-body injury—and Logan O’Connor. 

The Avalanche met the Oilers three times last season, dropping two of those contests, though each loss came under very different circumstances. In the first matchup, on November 30, Alexandar Georgiev was still in goal, while the second, on January 16, featured Mikko Rantanen on the roster. Their lone victory came in the third meeting, following the Rantanen trade that brought Martin Necas and Jack Drury over from the Carolina Hurricanes. While the Avs now have Blackwood and Wedgewood, the Oilers, in the meanwhile, haven’t made any changes in net with Stuart Skinner and Calvin Pickard manning the pipes, and some of their more solid defensive pieces from last season are no longer with the club.  

Nathan MacKinnon leads the team in goals (10) and points (20), while his 10 assists rank second to Cale Makar’s 14 for the team high. 

On a positive note regarding injuries, Gavin Brindley informed The Hockey News—in the elevator just before puck drop for the Lightning–Avalanche matchup—that he had cleared concussion protocol and is expected to play this weekend. Brindley had missed time following a collision with Ivan Barbashev during the October 31 game against the Vegas Golden Knights. The 21-year-old Brindley suffered a concussion, but his symptoms were relatively minor.  

Edmonton Oilers 

Edmonton enters this contest with a 6-5-3 record, a mark that falls short of the dominance the franchise has historically exhibited. The team remains heavily top-loaded, with Connor McDavid and Leon Draisaitl accounting for a combined 14 goals and 21 assists—38 points in total—so far this season. Yet, the potency of these two superstars cannot be understated; they remain capable of striking at a moment’s notice. Meanwhile, the Avalanche, despite boasting the NHL’s best record, have shown a vulnerability to conceding quick goals, whether due to defensive lapses or loose pucks. In a matchup of this caliber, anything can happen.  

Who’s Deeper? 

There is little doubt that the Avalanche boast greater depth. Edmonton has only three players with at least 12 points this season. We already know about McDavid and Draisaitl, but the third is Ryan Nugent-Hopkins. In contrast, Colorado can count five players in that category: Nathan MacKinnon, Martin Necas, Cale Makar, Victor Olofsson, and Artturi Lehkonen. 

Ultimately, the outcome may hinge less on star power than on execution and the ability to minimize mistakes. 

Showtime 

Avalanche vs. Oilers goes down at 8 p.m. local time and will be televised on ESPN. Don’t miss the action. 

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With Dallas' 2-7 start, is general manager Nico Harrison in trouble?

Nico Harrison traded the franchise’s star player, someone beloved by fans, and what he got back made Dallas older, shortened whatever championship window they had and placed that hope on the bodies of a couple of players with long injury histories. This season, his team is off to a 2-7 start, which has them dead last in the West — they went from a Finals team in 2024 to one that does not threaten anyone in the conference. While they landed the No. 1 pick, Cooper Flagg, he is being played out of position, and it shows.

All of which begs the question: Is Harrison's job in danger in Dallas? It's a valid question, reports Tim MacMahon of ESPN on his Howdy Partners podcast.

"A legitimate question right now is: Is Nico Harrison's job in serious jeopardy? That is an absolutely legitimate question. It's the question obviously Mavericks fans have been hoping would be answered with an affirmative since early February, I don't have a firm answer for you right now that you know that that's as much as I can tell you, but it is absolutely legitimate question. When you talk to people about the Mavericks around the league, it is the first question that people are asking."

Luka Doncic, averaging 40 points a game this season, being an offense unto himself and lifting the Lakers to a 7-2 record with a top-10 offense in the league, is salt in the wound for Mavericks fans watching their team have the worst offense in the league through nine games.

However, the Doncic trade never happens if team owner/governor Patrick Dumont doesn't sign off on it (it may not have been hard to talk him into not giving Doncic what would have been the largest contract extension in league history). Harrison can also point to the ACL injury to Kyrie Irving that has him out until mid-season at some point — plus shorter-term injuries to Anthony Davis and Dereck Lively II — as mitigating factors. However, as MacMahon notes in the podcast, Irving's injury was known and the team had all summer to find a solution (D'Angelo Russell is not a solution), and they traded for Davis knowing his injury history.

All of which makes one wonder if Dumont has the stones to fire Harrison, in a move that would be seen as a tacit admission that the Doncic trade failed, a trade he approved? Does he give Harrison more rope, hope the Mavericks start to turn things around, or does he go the route we saw from GMs in Memphis and Denver last season, where once the decision to move on from a coach (and GM in Denver) was made, it happened rapidly without concern for timing?

Cooper Flagg is going to prove to be a star in this league, but he's a rookie with a steep learning curve asked to play out of position as a point forward and initiate the offense (watch any point guard who comes into the league and, just like quarterback in the NFL, you see it takes time to adjust and comes with bumps and bruises along the way). The 1.8% luck that landed Dallas that pick only buys management so much of a grace period.

Is that grace period about to be up in Dallas?

Wild's Tyler Pitlick Will Not Receive Discipline From NHL For Hit On Hurricanes' Jalen Chatfield

In the first period of the Minnesota Wild's game against the Carolina Hurricanes, Tyler Pitlick was ejected for a hit to the head on defenseman Jalen Chatfield.

Wild's Tyler Pitlick Ejected From Carolina Game For Hit To The Head On Hurricanes' Jalen ChatfieldWild's Tyler Pitlick Ejected From Carolina Game For Hit To The Head On Hurricanes' Jalen ChatfieldA dangerous head contact from Tyler Pitlick sidelines Jalen Chatfield, igniting a fight and potentially a league suspension.

On Friday, the NHL ruled that there would be no further discipline for Pitlick. They ruled that the hit was direct head contract and more that it was not avoidable.

Chatfield is still injured and Hurricanes head coach Rod Brind'amour will provide an update on the defenseman's status soon.

As for Pitlick, he did not play on Friday and was a healthy scratch against the New York Islanders.

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Game No. 15 Preview: Flyers vs. Senators

After a productive two-game swing through Montreal and Nashville, the Philadelphia Flyers return to Xfinity Mobile Arena with four points and a little bit of tension released from their shoulders.

They didn’t just collect a road sweep; they rediscovered some rhythm. A shootout win in Montreal showed their persistence, and a 3–1 victory in Nashville demonstrated a more grounded, mature team effort. Now, as they prepare to face the Ottawa Senators, the Flyers will look to translate that steadiness into a consistent home-ice identity.


A Team Settling Into Its Adjustments

What’s been most notable about the Flyers over the past week isn’t any individual performance but how well they’ve adapted to change. Tyson Foerster’s lower-body injury forced head coach Rick Tocchet to shuffle his forward lines, and what began as a necessity has evolved into something that’s genuinely working.

Siobhan Nolan (@SGNolan) on XSiobhan Nolan (@SGNolan) on XTocchet had an interesting response about switching up the Flyers’ lines b/c of Tyson Foerster’s injury. Left things up in the air in terms of returning back to the lines they started the year with, even leaving things open on whether the Foerster-Cates-Brink line would return.

Bobby Brink has meshed surprisingly well alongside Matvei Michkov, adding energy and pace that complements Michkov’s creativity. Christian Dvorak’s line with Trevor Zegras and Owen Tippett "has been good for us," in the words of head coach Rick Tocchet — a mix of puck possession and defensive responsibility that’s given Tocchet dependable middle-six minutes.

It’s an encouraging sign for a coach who values structure but isn’t afraid to let his players breathe within it. The Flyers aren’t playing “safe” hockey right now — they’re playing informed hockey, where their system dictates their decisions rather than their nerves.


Ersson’s Return Eases the Workload

Between the pipes, there’s more good news. Sam Ersson, who missed a brief stretch with a lower-body injury, is once again available for selection, and will get the start against Ottawa.

Dan Vladar has held his own — and then some — in Ersson’s absence. His performance in Nashville, particularly during a second period where the Predators swarmed the crease with heavy traffic, was calm and composed. He read plays cleanly, held his positioning, and managed rebounds effectively.

Sam Ersson (33). (Megan DeRuchie-The Hockey News)

Still, asking any goaltender to carry consecutive games on short rest can wear thin over time. Ersson’s availability doesn’t just offer rest; it restores flexibility. Tocchet now has the freedom to manage both goalies based on matchup and rhythm rather than necessity.


Ottawa’s Offensive Push and What the Flyers Must Counter

Ottawa arrives in Philadelphia as a team that can still score in bunches, even if consistency remains an issue. 

Cam York’s recent form, in particular, has been a bright spot. Against Nashville, he looked confident and efficient, breaking up rushes early and managing the puck with poise. If the Flyers can maintain that kind of control in their exits, they can neutralize Ottawa’s quick-strike tendencies.

Discipline will also be key. The Flyers have had their share of testy games, but they can’t afford to give them extended opportunities to find rhythm. Tocchet’s group has leaned on its penalty kill as a foundation all season, but the goal will be to spend less time relying on it.


Continuity, Not Complacency

One of Tocchet’s subtler victories in recent weeks has been instilling patience in how this team approaches progress. The back-to-back wins weren’t always flashy, but they were composed — the kind of hockey that holds up over time.

The Flyers are still a team learning to manage momentum instead of chasing it. Their depth scoring is coming alive again, and their defensive structure looks tighter, but Tocchet has made it clear that the standard doesn’t change based on results.

That’s what will make the Ottawa game a useful barometer. Can the Flyers take the maturity they’ve shown on the road and bring it home? Can they avoid the lulls that sometimes creep in when the adrenaline of travel fades?

Those questions will define whether this recent stretch is a temporary upswing or the start of something more stable.


Projected Lines

Philadelphia Flyers:

Forwards:

Owen Tippett - Christian Dvorak - Trevor Zegras

Matvei Michkov - Sean Couturier - Bobby Brink

Nikita Grebenkin - Noah Cates - Travis Konecny

Carl Grundstrom - Rodrigo Abols - Garnet Hathaway

Defense:

Cam York - Travis Sanheim

Nick Seeler - Jamie Drysdale

Emil Andrae - Noah Juulsen

Goalies:

Sam Ersson

Dan Vladar

Ottawa Senators

Forwards:

Nick Cousins - Tim Stutzle - Drake Batherson

Ridly Greig - Dylan Cozens - David Perron

Michael Amadio - Shane Pinto - Claude Giroux

Kurtis MacDermid - Lars Eller - Fabian Zetterlund 

Defense:

Jake Sanderson - Artem Zub

Thomas Chabot - Nick Jensen

Tyler Kleven - Nikolas Matinpalo

Goalies:

Linus Ullmark

Leevi Merilainen

Nets' Jordi Fernandez: Noah Clowney continues taking 'positive steps,' but must improve defensively

With Cam Thomas sidelined due to a hamstring strain for the next three to four weeks, the Nets will need other young players to step up and fill the scoring void.

Insert third-year forward Noah Clowney, who came through with 19 points in Friday's 125-107 loss to the Detroit Pistons. It was Clowney's third straight 15-plus point game, as the 21-year-old has started the past three contests for head coach Jordi Fernandez.

After the game, Fernandez spoke highly of Clowney's recent stretch, while acknowledging there is still room for improvement, especially on the defensive end of the floor.

"Noah always takes positive steps. I need him to be better defensively and he knows it," Fernandez said. "His voice needs to grow, embracing the contact, they're playing with the two bigs. Whether you're the low man, whether your communication is on or off the ball, all those things. 

"He's really smart, he's about the right things, he knows it. Like everybody else, need to grow into that fast. I know he will. I like his aggressiveness, how he shot the ball. Got to keep taking, like I said, positive steps."

Clowney went 5 of 13 shooting on Friday night, including 4 of 8 from three-point range with all four makes coming in the first quarter. Across his three recent starts (31 minutes per game), the Alabama product is averaging 17.0 points, 3.7 rebounds, 1.3 assists, and 1.0 steals per game on 44.4 percent shooting from the field, 40 percent from three, and 75 percent from the foul line.

The scoring is a big jump from what he was doing off the bench across the Nets' first six games. Clowney had scored just a total of 26 points (4.3 points per game) over 20 minutes per night prior to starting the past three games.

His hot stretch has also been helpful for rookie guard Egor Demin, who assisted on three of Clowney's four triples. The No. 8 pick in the 2025 NBA Draft believes Clowney can continue being a reliable option with his strong shooting.

"I love him. I think it's really important for me, personally, and for the team, to make sure that he has this confidence to keep shooting, and everybody knows that he can shoot the ball extremely well, as he did today," Demin said.

The Nets will need Clowney to continue scoring at the rate he has as they search for their second win of the season. Brooklyn will take on the crosstown rival Knicks on Sunday evening at MSG in the first of four matchups between the Atlantic Division two teams.

Scotland v New Zealand: Autumn Nations Series rugby union – live

2 mins. A very solid receive, recycle and boot drill from Scotland, featuring 0% nonsense, despatches the ball to touch. NZ warm some of their carriers’ hands with the possession won from the lineout, but it comes to nothing before the ball is spilled forward.

Barrett puts his foot through the ball to get the test match underway

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Pittsburgh Penguins At New Jersey Devils: Lineup Changes, Where To Watch

The Pittsburgh Penguins will face one of the best teams in the NHL to start the season on Saturday.

They'll be in Newark to take on the New Jersey Devils, who have won 10 of their first 14 games and are tied with them for first in the Metropolitan Division. Devils forward Jack Hughes has been lighting the league on fire, compiling 10 goals and 18 points in 14 games. He's a strong contender for the Hart Trophy after the first month of the season.

Jesper Bratt has also been great, racking up five goals and 15 points in 14 games. Dawson Mercer is second on the team in goals with eight and third on the team in points with 14. 

The Devils are coming off a 4-3 overtime win over the Montreal Canadiens on Thursday. Bratt scored the overtime winner for the Devils. 

The Penguins are coming off a 5-3 win over the Washington Capitals on Thursday and are now 9-4-2 to start the season. They blew a three-goal lead for a second-straight game, but were able to rally in the third period thanks to a game-winning goal from Bryan Rust. 

Arturs Silovs will start in goal for a second-straight game after he was steady on Thursday. The Penguins are taking it easy with prospect Sergei Murashov and potentially saving his NHL debut for Sunday's home game against the Los Angeles Kings

Kevin Hayes, who has missed the first 15 games of the season due to an injury he suffered at the beginning of training camp, will make his season debut for the Penguins. He will slot in for Philip Tomasino, who continues to struggle.

Here were the lines at practice on Friday:

Forwards

Rust-Crosby-Kindel

Novak-Malkin-Mantha

Koppanen-Hayes-Koivunen

Dewar-Lizotte-Heinen

Defense

Wotherspoon-Karlsson

Shea-Letang

Graves-Clifton

Dumba-Brunicke


Puck drop for this contest will be at 12:30 p.m. ET on SportsNet Pittsburgh. You can also listen to the game on 105.9 'The X.'


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Game Day: Everything You Need To Know Ahead Of Predators' Saturday Matchup Against Dallas Stars

Nov 6, 2025; Nashville, Tennessee, USA; Philadelphia Flyers defenseman Noah Juulsen (47) and Nashville Predators center Ryan O'Reilly (90) battle for the puck during the third period at Bridgestone Arena. Steve Roberts-Imagn Images

Game Day

Who: Dallas Stars (7-4-3) at Nashville Predators (5-7-4)

Where: Bridgestone Arena, Nashville, Tenn.

When: 2:30 Pm CST

TV: FanDuel Sports Network South

Radio: 102.5 The Game

Betting line (via BetMGM):

Stars

-1.5 (+150)

O 6 (+100)

-160

Predators

+1.5 (-185)

U 6 (-120)

+135

Injury Report

Cole Smith (upper-body injury) is currently on injured reserve and is expected to miss 3-6 weeks.

Adam Wilsby (lower-body injury) is listed as week-to-week.

Captain Roman Josi (upper-body) is on injured reserve.

Preds Fall To Flyers, O’Reilly Expresses Frustration

The Nashville Predators carry a three-game losing streak into Saturday afternoon’s matchup against the Dallas Stars at Bridgestone Arena.

It’s been a particularly tough week for the Preds, losing two consecutive overtime games and managing only one goal in their last outing, a 3-1 home loss to the Philadelphia Flyers.

Preds forward Ryan O’Reilly expressed frustration after the Flyers’ game, not only for his team’s difficult stretch but his own play.

"I know for myself, (I'm) the No. 1 center and I'm turning over the puck," O'Reilly said following the game. "I can't make a 60-foot pass to save my life. You're not going to have much success if I'm playing pathetic like that.”

Forsberg Bobblehead Day

Nov 6, 2025; Nashville, Tennessee, USA; Nashville Predators center Ryan O'Reilly (90) deflects the shot of left wing Filip Forsberg (9) and scores past Philadelphia Flyers goaltender Dan Vladar (80) during the first period at Bridgestone Arena. Steve Roberts-Imagn Images

As the Preds play their final home game before heading to Stockholm, Sweden for the 2025 NHL Global Series presented by Fastenal, Saturday’s game is a Swedish send-off of sorts for Filip Forsberg.

The first 10,000 fans inside Bridgestone Arena will receive a Filip Forsberg bobblehead to commemorate the Preds forward and the trip to his home country that starts on Nov. 14.

The Preds will face off against the Pittsburgh Penguins in a two-game series in Stockholm. Forsberg was born in Leksand, so this series will be a dream come true for him.

Team Leaders

Speaking of Forsberg, he currently leads the team in scoring with six goals and 12 points. O’Reilly has tallied six goals and 10 points. Michael Bunting is right behind (4g-5a) with nine points, while Erik Haula (3g-5a) and Luke Evangelista (1g-7a) are tied with eight points apiece.

Juuse Saros, who was on the receiving end of the tough loss against Philadelphia on Thursday, comes into Saturday with a 5-5-3 record, 2.88 goals-against average and .902 save percentage. Justus Annunen is 0-2-1, 3.70, .872.

The Preds’ power play comes into Saturday’s matchup 7-of-49 (14.3%), 28th in the NHL. On the penalty kill, the Preds rank 14th at 82.0% (9-for-50).

Milestone Watch

Oct 28, 2025; Nashville, Tennessee, USA; Tampa Bay Lightning defenseman Erik Cernak (81) and Nashville Predators left wing Michael Bunting (58) battle for the puck during the third period at Bridgestone Arena. Steve Roberts-Imagn Images

The next goal Michael Bunting scores will be the 100th of his NHL career.

Scouting The Stars

The Preds have already faced Dallas once this season, falling 3-2 in an Oct. 26 meeting at Bridgestone Arena.

Jonathan Marchessault and Spencer Stastney tallied goals for the Preds, who were playing the second night of a back-to-back.

After falling behind 2-0, the Stars clawed back to score three unanswered goals for the comeback win. Saturday will be the second of three matchups between the two clubs this season.

Dallas is in a bit of a slump themselves. They’ve dropped three of their last four outings, the latest being a 7-5 loss to the Anaheim Ducks Thursday night.

Mikko Rantanen paces the team with 20 points (8g-12a), followed by Wyatt Johnston (9g-8a) with 17 points and Jason Robertson (3g-10a) with 13 points.

Jake Oettinger is 5-3-2 in goal for the Stars with a 2.89 goals-against average and .899 save percentage. Casey DeSmith is 2-1-1 with a 3.15 GAA and .876 SP.

The Stars’ power play is third in the NHL (17-of-50, 34.0%). The penalty kill is 28th at 70.5% (13-of-44).

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FREE GIFT ISSUE + 12 ISSUES + FREE DIGITAL ARCHIVE + FREE SHIPPINGFREE GIFT ISSUE + 12 ISSUES + FREE DIGITAL ARCHIVE + FREE SHIPPING*** Canada Post Strike update - as of October 15, 2025 -  Please be aware that Canada Post is now in a rolling strike.  While they are accepting mail, delivery times could be longer than expected.  US orders are not impacted. WHAT'S INCLUDED IN YOUR PRINT & DIGITAL ARCHIVE SUBSCRIPTION > FREE GIFT ISSUE* of your