2025-26 Gamethread #69: New Jersey Devils at Washington Capitals

WASHINGTON, DC - NOVEMBER 15: New Jersey Devils defenseman Simon Nemec (17) scores game winning shootout goal on Washington Capitals goaltender Logan Thompson (48) during the NHL game between the Washington Capitals and the New Jersey Devils on November 15, 2025, at Capital One Arena in Washington, DC. (Photo by Bella Sagarese / Icon Sportswire) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

The Matchup: New Jersey Devils (35-31-2) at the Washington Capitals (34-27-8).

The Time: 7:00 pm EST

The Broadcast: TV — MSGSN; Radio — Devils Hockey Network

The Game Preview: Matt had it here.

The Rules: If you have been a reader here, you already know the rules. But for the rest, a reminder: please do not swear in the comment section, and keep comments relevant to the hockey game going on. Beyond that, do not attack any other commenters, and do not ask for or pass along illegal streams on this board.

LGD!

After Santa Clara and Kentucky trade 3s in thrilling finish, 'a tough one to swallow' for Broncos

ST. LOUIS (AP) — Santa Clara thought it had knocked Kentucky out of the NCAA Tournament when freshman Allen Graves answered a tying basket by Wildcats star Otega Oweh with a 3-pointer in front of his own bench with 2.4 seconds left in regulation.

The problem for the Broncos: There were still 2.4 seconds left in regulation.

As coach Herb Sendek tried to call timeout, Kentucky quickly got the ball into the hands of Oweh, who raced across the midcourt line and heaved up a 3-pointer, which banked through the bucket to tie the game at 73-all. The buzzer sounded when the ball was in midair.

The kind of shot that puts the madness into March Madness didn’t exactly end Santa Clara’s postseason hopes — that didn’t come until Kentucky scored eight consecutive points in OT to pull away. But the sequence of shots in those wild last few seconds of regulation will be remembered much longer than the 89-84 final score Friday, which sent the No. 7 seed Wildcats into a matchup with No. 2 seed Iowa State or No. 15 seed Tennessee State in the Midwest Region.

“You know,” Sendek said afterward, “it was a really euphoric high followed by a tough one to swallow.”

The No. 10 seed Broncos certainly gave everything they had — everything built up over the 30 years since Steve Nash last led them to the NCAA Tournament — in trying to knock off one of college basketball’s bluebloods inside the packed Enterprise Center.

The game was tied 12 times. The lead changed hands 20 times. Santa Clara led by two at halftime as the West Coast Tournament runner-up went toe-to-toe with Kentucky, which was making its record-extending 63rd NCAA Tournament appearance.

Yet the first 59 minutes merely set the stage for the dramatic conclusion.

MIDWEST

NO. 2 IOWA ST. 108, NO. 15 TENNESSEE ST. 74

ST. LOUIS (AP) — Iowa State star Joshua Jefferson left in the first half of the Cyclones’ romp past Tennessee State with a left ankle injury Friday, leaving the All-American’s status for the remainder of the NCAA Tournament in doubt.

Jefferson landed awkwardly after a layup just 2 1/2 minutes into the first-round matchup in the Midwest Region. The 6-foot-9 senior had to be helped by trainers to the X-ray room, emerged about 10 minutes later using crutches, and watched the second half from the end of the Iowa State bench with his ankle in a bulky gray boot.

Nate Heise had eight of his season-high 23 points during a 23-0 run for the Cyclones (28-7), which began shortly after Jefferson was hurt and sent them breezing past the Tigers (23-10) and into a second-round matchup with seventh-seeded Kentucky on Sunday.

The Wildcats beat No. 10 seed Santa Clara 89-84 in an overtime thriller to begin the session at the Enterprise Center.

The Cyclones already were dealing with a groin injury that limited point guard Tamin Lipsey in the Big 12 Tournament. Now, their depth will be tested even more without Jefferson, who was second on the team in scoring and their leading rebounder.

NO. 3 VIRGINIA 82, NO. 14 WRIGHT ST. 73

PHILADELPHIA (AP) — Jacari White hit six 3-pointers and scored 26 points, and Virginia avoided yet another early NCAA Tournament exit, beating a resolute Wright State in the first round.

The Cavaliers (30-5) will face sixth-seeded Tennessee or No. 11 seed Miami (Ohio) in the second round in the Midwest Region on Sunday.

Virginia won its first NCAA Tournament game since it won the 2019 national title.

The Cavaliers lost in the first round or the First Four in 2021, 2023 and 2024, and title-winning coach Tony Bennett abruptly retired before last season. Ryan Odom took over this season and quickly turned the program around.

Odom knows all about Virginia upsets in the tournament. He coached UMBC in 2018 when it was the first No. 16 seed to knock off a No. 1 — yes, Virginia.

Wright State (24-11), a No. 14 seed, was an 18 1/2-point underdog according to BetMGM Sportsbook but never looked out of step as it tried to pull off the shocker.

Michael Imariagbe scored 19 points and kept hope alive for that rare 14 seed win — there have been none in the tournament since 2024 — with a late 3 that pulled the Raiders within 78-73. White responded with a bucket that finally put to rest any thought of an early ride back home for the Cavaliers.

NO. 4 ALABAMA 90, NO. 13 HOFSTRA 70

TAMPA, Fla. (AP) — Labaron Philon Jr. scored 29 points and Alabama rallied from an early double-digit deficit to beat Hofstra in a first-round game in the Midwest Region of the NCAA Tournament.

The Crimson Tide (24-9) advanced to a second-round matchup against fifth-seeded Texas Tech (23-10), a 20-point winner over 12th-seeded Akron in the earlier first-round game at Benchmark International Arena.

Alabama ended the opening half on a 19-7 run to wipe out a 10-point deficit, then built its own lead to 13 before Hofstra (24-11) mounted one last push for a possible upset.

Freshman Preston Edmead had 24 points for the Pride, and his basket pulled the Pride within 67-62 with just over seven minutes remaining. Victory Onuetu’s dunk trimmed Alabama’s lead to 69-64 and ignited much of a crowd of 17,769 that threw its support behind the underdogs.

Philon was simply too much down the stretch, though, delivering a layup and a long 3-pointer during a surge that enabled Alabama to rebuild the lead to double digits. Taylor Bol Bowen put an exclamation point on the Crimson Tide response with two dunks and a 3-pointer as the lead ballooned to 20.

NO. 5 TEXAS TECH 91, NO. 12 AKRON 71

TAMPA, Fla. (AP) — Jaylen Petty scored 24 points, Christian Anderson added 18 and Texas Tech beat Akron in the first round of the NCAA Tournament.

The Red Raiders (23-10) will face fourth-seeded Alabama in the second round in the Midwest Region on Sunday.

Playing without All-America guard JT Toppin, who tore the ACL in his right knee last month, Texas Tech got double-figure scoring from five players.

Josiah Moseley had 16 points, Donovan Atwell scored 15 and LeJuan Watts added 14.

Amani Lyles led Akron with 26 points and Shammah Scott had 20.

Akron (29-6) became first team to win the Mid-American Conference Tournament three straight years. But the Zips again failed to reach the second round in their eighth March Madness appearance.

Petty and Atwell opened the second half with consecutive 3-pointers to give Texas Tech an 11-point lead.

Akron got within 64-60 midway through second after Eric Mahaffey scored on a layup and made a free throw to complete a 3-point play. But the Zips couldn’t get any closer.

NO. 6 TENNESSEE 78, NO.11 MIAMI (OHIO) 56

PHILADELPHIA (AP) — Ja’Kobi Gillespie hit six 3-pointers and scored 29 points as Tennessee ended a fabulous season for Miami (Ohio) with a win.

The Vols (23-11) shook off a rough end to the season — losing four of six games — and advanced to play third-seeded Virginia on Sunday in the Midwest Region.

Gillespie hit five 3s in the first half to help the Vols push ahead by 20 and squash any chance the 11th-seeded RedHawks (31-2) could carry over the confidence gained from their First Four win and pull off a signature victory.

The Vols did just about everything right and showed again why — no matter the seed — they are a perennial threat to go deep in March. Led by Gillespie, the Vols made 12 of 19 shots to start the game, including long 3s and 20 quick points in the paint.

Just to add one more gut punch to Miami, Ethan Burg hit a 3 at the first-half buzzer for a 51-32 lead.

Gillespie passed up a chance to score 30 points — only two other Vols have ever reached that mark in the NCAA Tournament — when he drove the lane with 1:13 left but skipped the open look and threw a lob to Felix Okpara for the bucket.

J.P. Estrella had 14 points and 10 rebounds for the Vols.

Peter Suder was the lone Miami player in double digits with 27 points.

WEST REGION

No. 1 ARIZONA 92, NO. 16 LIU POST 58

SAN DIEGO (AP) — Brayden Burries hit four 3-pointers while scoring 18 points, Koa Peat added 15 points and top-seeded Arizona opened its NCAA Tournament run with a over Long Island on Friday.

Ivan Kharchenkov had 14 points and 10 rebounds for the Big 12 regular-season and tournament champion Wildcats (33-2), who quickly showed why they’re the tournament’s second overall seed behind Duke.

Pushing the pace on offense and stifling the Sharks with defense, Arizona went up by double digits in the opening minutes and led the Sharks by 27 in the first half while delighting the thousands of fans who filled Viejas Arena with red.

Arizona will return Sunday to face the winner of Villanova’s meeting with Utah State in the West Region bracket.

NO. 9 UTAH STATE 86, NO.8 VILLANOVA 76

SAN DIEGO (AP) — MJ Collins’ steal and emphatic one-handed slam dunk with 1:13 left gave him 20 points and Utah State opened its fourth straight NCAA Tournament by beating Villanova.

Mason Falslev, the Mountain West Conference Player of the Year, scored 22 and helped bring the Aggies back from a 10-point deficit early in the second half.

Utah State (29-6), the No. 9 seed in the West Region, will play No. 1 seed Arizona in the second round on Sunday. The Wildcats beat No. 16 Long Island 92-58 on Friday.

Collins converted a three-point play with 2:53 left to give the Aggies a 78-73 lead. After No. 8 seed Villanova (24-9) committed a five-second inbound violation, Falslev fed Collins for a layup and an 80-73 lead. Collins intercepted a pass by Bryce Lindsay and went in for his slam for an 84-74 lead.

Lindsay made six 3-pointers and scored 25 points for Villanova. Duke Brennan and Tyler Perkins added 15 points apiece.

_____

AP March Madness bracket: https://apnews.com/hub/ncaa-mens-bracket and coverage: https://apnews.com/hub/march-madness

Why Nick Sirianni is sitting courtside for Tennessee vs Miami (Ohio) March Madness game

Rick Barnes and Travis Steele weren’t the only coaches on the court for Tennessee’s matchup against Miami (Ohio) in the first round of the NCAA men’s basketball tournament.

Philadelphia Eagles coach Nick Sirianni was sitting courtside for the meeting between the Volunteers and RedHawks on Friday, March 20.

Xfinity Mobile Arena, the site of the game and the home venue of the NBA’s Philadelphia 76ers and NHL’s Philadelphia Flyers, is a short walk across 11th Street in South Philadelphia from Lincoln Financial Field, where Sirianni’s team plays its home games.

Sirianni has no connection to either school, though he did play college football at Mount Union, a Division III powerhouse in Alliance, Ohio, about 260 miles across the state from Miami’s campus in Oxford, Ohio.

Sirianni is entering his sixth season as the Eagles’ coach. He led the franchise to a pair of Super Bowl appearances, including the franchise’s second-ever Super Bowl victory, though his teams have been wildly erratic from year to year. Philadelphia finished 11-6 last season and lost at home to the San Francisco 49ers in the wild-card round of the NFL playoffs.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Why is Nick Sirianni at Tennessee vs Miami Ohio basketball in March Madness?

Otega Oweh saved Kentucky's season Friday. He might have done more than that

ST. LOUIS – No one in America got a better view of March’s maddest moment so far than Mark Pope, who stood mere feet away from his leading scorer as Otega Oweh saved Kentucky’s season.

He might have done even more than that.

Hands on his hips as Oweh rose and fired, Pope stood almost precisely on the spot where an invisible line could be drawn through him, Oweh and the first S in the March Madness logo at midcourt of the Enterprise Center. As an arena held its breath, Pope heard his star bark out, “That’s a bucket.”

And it was.

In what has at times been a trying, stressful season in Lexington, the player who more than any other defines the first two years of Pope’s tenure leading his alma mater delivered a moment to erase all kinds of frustration and pain. Oweh’s banked-in 3 extended into overtime No. 7 Kentucky’s 89-84 first-round NCAA Tournament win against Santa Clara on Friday.

The Wildcats (22-13) looked destined to become another high-profile victim, joining North Carolina and Wisconsin among the ranks of the upset in the opening round of this year’s tournament. Fittingly, it was the player who has now scored more points over two years than any other Wildcat — who at times might have led his coach to pull it out if, as Pope said Friday, “I had longer hair” — that delivered the defining memory of their shared season.

In one shining moment, Oweh erased so much of a winter’s frustration, and rewrote Kentucky’s story in style.

Otega Oweh a 'unique, unique player'

St. Louis got the competitive game we all expected.

KenPom made the Wildcats just two-point favorites, and No. 10 Santa Clara (26-9) answered that projection accordingly. Despite early foul trouble that limited versatile freshman Allen Graves, the Broncos hung onto a rough-and-tumble game and a slim halftime lead (31-29), meeting Kentucky’s athletic advantage with the toughness that delivered Santa Clara’s first NCAA Tournament berth in 30 years to begin with.

This packed arena muddled along with both teams through a first half that sometimes bordered on turgid. Waiting patiently for something more inspiring, they clapped everyone off following a competitive first 20 minutes.

They got their reward soon enough. First-half grind was about to turn into second-half excellence. And no one would light the game up quite like Kentucky’s double zero.

“We’re three-quarters of the way through the first half, and (Oweh’s) got five or six or seven points,” Pope said. “And he finished the game the way he does. He’s a unique, unique player.”

'Sometimes Otega sneaks up on you'

Pope still marvels at Oweh’s ability to ambush a game.

He was not necessarily alone — after the two teams combined to shoot just 23 of 60 in the opening 20 minutes, they made 9 of 12 field goals collectively to start the second.

But Oweh’s impact spread beyond scoring.

He finished with 35 points, 28 of them after halftime. He earned 12 free-throw attempts, one fewer than Santa Clara’s team total and three more than the rest of the Wildcats combined.

If Oweh got carried away in the current of that rugged, physical first half, no one else broke the game open in the second quite like he did.

The New Jersey native, a two-time All-SEC performer, grabbed eight rebounds and handed out seven assists, his fingerprints all over the final score.

“Sometimes Otega sneaks up on you,” Pope said, smiling. “This guy, man, he just shows up every single game in only a unique Otega Oweh way. It’s just brilliant.”

To its credit, Santa Clara answered time and again. A game featuring 20 lead changes needs equal partners, and Herb Sendek’s team duly obliged.

Elijah Mahi scored 20 points on 16 field goal attempts. Sash Gavalyugov nearly doubled his scoring average, with 16 points that backfilled what Graves’ foul trouble left behind. Graves himself scored 15 after halftime, none more important in the moment than the three he drained with just more than two seconds left in the second half.

Here, Sendek might have legitimate grievance.

After Graves’ 3 left everyone on the floor briefly stunned, Denzel Aberdeen rushed the ball into an already moving Oweh. The clock appeared to start a half-beat late, allowing Oweh an extra dribble as Sendek shouted from the Santa Clara bench for a timeout.

Had he been granted time, Sendek might have been able to design a better defense, or instruct his team to foul up three points. Instead, he watched as Gavalyugov’s late contest could not quite reach Oweh’s leaning heave.

“I was just trying to get the ball out quick, and get as close as I can to the goal,” Oweh said. “I was looking at the clock the whole time.”

Just seconds earlier, Oweh looked like the hero when his spinning layup tied the score briefly with 9.9 seconds left. That, it turned out, was just an opening act.

Brandon Garrison played key role, too

Pope spared a thought for the Broncos on Friday, though Sendek probably captured the emotional swings of the afternoon best when he described it as “a really euphoric high, followed by a tough one to swallow.”

He also confirmed he was trying — demonstrably, upon video review — to call timeout before Oweh’s banker.

“I unequivocally called timeout, but they didn’t grant it,” Sendek said afterward. “(Calling timeout) is a likely response after Allen hits the 3. Any coach would be calling timeout to set the defense, which I tried to do.”

Context fades with time. March-made legends don’t.

Oweh parried his glory postgame, taking every opportunity to praise teammates who earned it themselves.

Like Brandon Garrison, who twice got fingertips to Gavalyugov 3s in overtime as part of his six-block performance.

Crucial as those moments were, they did not happen by accident. It was Garrison who, in one of Kentucky’s late-game, gut-check huddles, suggested the Wildcats start switching Santa Clara’s pick-and-pop actions. Let Garrison guard Gavalyugov, big man to point guard.

“BG just stepped up and made a call, and we all backed him,” Oweh said. “He’s a game changer.”

Oweh kept the door open. Teammates forced Kentucky’s way through. Then their star man finished it at free-throw line, his final pair stretching the lead to two possessions with 17 seconds left. After 45 stressful minutes, a big blue party broke out in the Enterprise Center.

“These guys just keep getting up,” Pope said. “We get knocked down. They keep getting up and they keep getting up and they keep getting up.”

St. Louis first hosted the NCAA Tournament in 1973. This was the 57th game played in the Gateway City.

Phi Slama Jama played here. North Carolina beat Illinois in the 2005 final here. Kentucky won its 1978 national championship here.

In pure weight, Oweh’s buzzer-beating bank won’t be remembered the same way. But it carries the same magic, that particular kind of moment that manifests the beauty of this month.

When his team had no options remaining, other than defeat, Oweh stepped forward and reset the Wildcats’ season. Depending upon what Kentucky does with this second chance, he might have redefined it entirely.

“We’re not,” Oweh said, “done playing yet.”

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: How Otega Oweh saved Kentucky basketball's season vs Santa Clara

Raptors vs Nuggets Boosted Same Game Parlay for March 20

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The Toronto Raptors will try to pad their three-game winning streak tonight when they take on the Denver Nuggets in the Mile High City. 

I'm taking advantage of this evening's showdown with a three-leg same-game parlay centered on the shiftiness of Immanuel Quickley. The lightning-fast guard is poised to have his way with Denver's defenders, leading to plenty of dimes and a W for the visitors. 

This parlay has been BOOSTED from +2300 to +2800 by our friends at bet365.

Raptors vs Nuggets same game parlay for March 20

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Raptors Toronto Raptors vs Nuggets Denver Nuggets

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Tonight's matchup against Denver sets up extremely well for Immanuel Quickley and his assists prop, which is why I’m targeting a massive alternate Over on this line. This is far and away my favorite assists props on the board for Friday.

Jamal Murray is expected to be Quickley’s primary defender, and he tends to struggle against quick, shifty guards—exactly Quickley’s profile. On top of that, Murray carries a significant offensive load, which likely limits his defensive impact.

There’s also a schematic edge working in Quickley’s favor. With Nikola Jokić playing higher in coverage to take away pull-up threes, it opens the door for Quickley to attack downhill. That allows him to use his snake dribble, get into the lane, draw help from defenders like Aaron Gordon, and create easy dump-off opportunities.

I’m also pairing Quickley with RJ Barrett, as no teammate has converted more of his assists over the last five games. Barrett has finished 10 of Quickley’s assists during that stretch. If Quickley is piling up assists, it means his teammates are knocking down shots, which puts the Raptors in a strong position to compete on the road.

Read our full Raptors vs. Nuggets prediction for even more analysis ahead of tip-off tonight.

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MLB Scores: Cardinals 4, Mets 3

Feb 28, 2026; Port St. Lucie, Florida, USA; New York Mets pitcher Tobias Myers (32) pitches in the second inning against the Washington Nationals at Clover Park. Mandatory Credit: Jim Rassol-Imagn Images | Jim Rassol-Imagn Images

The Mets mounted a late rally but fell short, dropping their game to the Cardinals by a 4-3 score on Friday afternoon at Clover Park. The Mets were blanked through seven, managing just two hits, before scoring three in the eighth. However, it wasn’t enough to overcome an early four-run deficit.

  • Tobias Myers got the nod and pitched two innings of one-run ball. He allowed a solo home run to Ramón Urías in the first inning but did not allow any other hits. He struck out two and walked one.
  • Luke Weaver pitched a scoreless third inning, working around a two-out single while striking out one to keep his spring ERA at 0.00.
  • Speaking of spotless ERAs, Brooks Raley pitched a scoreless fourth to keep his ERA at zero on the spring. He navigated two hits while striking out one.
  • Earlier today, the Mets optioned Austin Warren to the minors which, as Anthony DiComo pointed out, “further strengthening left-hander Bryan Hudson’s position for that final bullpen spot”. Hudson did himself no favors today, allowing three earned runs on one hit and two walks in the fifth inning. The big blow was a Iván Herrera two-run home run, which led to Carlos Mendoza removing Hudson from the game (he would then go back to Hudson to start the inning, removing him after he recorded the first out of that inning).
  • On offense, the Mets managed just two hits in the first seven innings—a Vidal Bruján fifth-inning single and a Carson Benge sixth-inning single. The Mets finally broke through in the eighth against Gerson Moreno. Cristian Pache walked to lead off, followed by an Antonio Jimenez walk. Tyrone Taylor was hit by a pitch to load the bases with one out, and Ben Rortvedt drove home the team’s first run on a sac fly. After a Corey Collins walk, St. Louis substituted Austin Love into the game to pitch, and he allowed a two-run double to D’Andre Smith. That would be New York’s final hit of the game.
  • Benge continued his strong spring with a hit and a walk as he started in right field for the Mets. His average now stands at .412 and his OPS at .987 for the spring. Joel Sherman, for what it’s worth, says that Benge has made the club, but the Mets have not officially announced it yet.
  • Mark Vientos took another 0-fer as he went hitless in three at-bats while serving as the DH.

Browns offseason, free agency improvement ranked in Top 10, 3 moves among best

HOUSTON, TEXAS - DECEMBER 21: Tytus Howard #71 of the Houston Texans takes the field prior to a game against the Las Vegas Raiders at NRG Stadium on December 21, 2025 in Houston, Texas. (Photo by Alex Slitz/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The sheer volume of moves made by the Cleveland Browns this offseason has been less than in previous seasons, but it is still a lot. That doesn’t include a final decision by OL Joel Bitonio at this point. Bitonio’s contract voided on March 11th, but no other decision or announcement has been made.

The Browns also spent much of their resources in replacing much of their offensive line, along with other moves:

Cleveland has only lost four players so far in free agency:

Kevin Cole ranked the additions of Howard, Johnson, and Jenkins among the top 10 improvements with players changing teams this offseason:

It is important to note that Cole’s process is all about improvement. With Howard replacing what Jack Conklin, KT Leveston, Cornelius Lucas, and others provided last year for the Browns, the uptick was going to be pretty big. Cole’s projections also do not give any credit for players who are retained, because that is not considered improvement.

With that in mind, Cleveland has improved among the most in all of the NFL this offseason:

It is unsurprising to see some of the worst teams in the NFL near the top of the list. On the other hand, the Minnesota Vikings (Kyler Murray in for Carson Wentz/JJ McCarthy) and the Los Angeles Rams (acquiring CB Trent McDuffie in a trade) jump out of the group at the top, given their recent history of success.


Do you really think the Browns have improved signficantly or is it just a testament to how bad the team’s offensive line was last year?

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Panthers' Mike Benning Shines Against Oilers; Adds Appreciated Offense From Blueline

The Florida Panthers dismantled the Edmonton Oilers on Thursday, securing a 4-0 victory on the road. 

Sergei Bobrovsky led the way with a 21-save shutout, while Evan Rodrigues and Sam Bennett recorded multi-point games. But the player who stole some headlines is 24-year-old defenseman Mike Benning.

In just his fourth career NHL game, Benning notched his first multi-point performance, recording two assists and giving him three total points this season.

For Benning, it was already a special night. His father, Brian Benning, a former NHL defenseman who was also born in Edmonton, Alta., was in the stands to watch his son. Benning was an original Panther, playing 97 games with Florida. 

Mike recorded two assists in the first period, picking up primary helpers on the Panthers’ first two goals of the game. Benning would finish the night with one hit and a plus-2 rating in 15:43 of ice time.

The analytical side favored Benning as well, as the Panthers held a CorsiFor percentage of 62.07 percent with Benning on the ice at 5-on-5, according to naturalstattrick.com. Additionally, the Panthers had more scoring chances and high-danger chances with Benning. 

Panthers Pick Up Another Victory In Edmonton, Taking Down Oilers 4-0Panthers Pick Up Another Victory In Edmonton, Taking Down Oilers 4-0Reinhardt, Greer, Lundell, and Verhaeghe sparked Florida's offense while Bobrovsky was a rock in goal, notching a big shutout win in Edmonton.

Prior to his call-up, Benning was in the midst of another solid AHL campaign, scoring eight goals and 31 points in 56 games. Despite being listed at just 5-foot-9, 185 pounds, Benning has found a way to be impactful, using his skating and puckhandling to help the Panthers break out of their own end and create offense in their opponents’ zone. 

With Uvis Balinskis’ timeline remaining undetermined, Benning will have an extended stretch to prove his worth at the NHL level. So far, he’s done everything asked of him. 


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NBA tank watch: Teams eye high draft picks, early vacations

NBA scouts and executives are keeping an eagle eye on the start of the Men's NCAA Tournament this week, hoping that one of the stars eligible for the NBA draft falls in their lap and changes their fortunes overnight.

One thing is for sure: Those same scouts and executives are happy because they don't have to look at their own teams for the next two weeks and can really concentrate on finding the next superstar, so they won't routinely find their teams on lists like this.

There are more than enough intriguing college players to consider with the No. 1 pick, including Darryn Peterson of Kansas, BYU's AJ Dybantsa (the nation's leading scorer), Duke's Cameron Boozer and Caleb Wilson of North Carolina.

Without further ado, this week's edition of Tank Watch, featuring the best of the worst the NBA has to offer.

NBA teams already booked for Cancun

All records and winning percentages are through games on Thursday, March 19.

Indiana Pacers (15-55; .214)

The Pacers have long since given up and haven't won since the All-Star break, a skid of 15 consecutive games. It's the second time this season they have set a franchise record for regular-season futility.

Washington Wizards (16-53; .232)

Any team that gives up 83 points to Bam Adebayo, as the Wizards did last week, not only needs a vacation, but the league needs to think about retraction as well. Washington has lost 10 games or more in a row three different times this season.

Brooklyn Nets (17-52; .246)

If you want to find the equivalent of a junior varsity team taking the court against real professionals, look no further than Brooklyn's 121-92 humiliating loss to the Oklahoma City Thunder on Wednesday, March 18.

Sacramento Kings (18-53; .254)

The Kings' M.A.S.H. unit is filled with All-Star-caliber players, and the situation is so bad that people have coined the term "ethical tanking" to excuse the putrid product put out nightly.

Utah Jazz (21-49; .300)

The NBA's version of the Washington Generals, otherwise known as the league's worst defensive team, couldn't be bothered with keeping a dribbling offensive player in front of them. NBA fans couldn't be bothered watching them either.

NBA teams waiting to spend hours in TSA line to board flight

It's just a matter of time before the teams listed below are mathematically eliminated from playoff contention and can start making trips to Cancun (or Galveston, according to Charles Barkley) for an early vacation – or to Turkey to explore hair transplants, whichever one applies to them.

(All records and winning percentages are through games on Thursday, March 19.)

Memphis Grizzlies (24-44; .353)

Memphis better be glad the league is expanding to 32 teams, or their franchise would be the first one to exit stage left out of town.

Dallas Mavericks (23-47; .329)

Dallas got rid of incompetent general manager Nico Harrison earlier this season. Next on the hit list, the American Airlines Center.

New Orleans Pelicans (25-46; .352)

At least the gumbo and jambalaya are good year-round.

Chicago Bulls (28-42; .400)

The only good news this week for Chicago: Former star Dennis Rodman is being inducted into the WWE Hall of Fame.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: NBA tank watch: Teams with best chance to land No. 1 draft pick

Time to see how serious UNC is about basketball. Go get Todd Golden

There’s only one way out of this thing, and in the shocker of all shockers, it involves throwing money at the problem. 

Not just $5 million in go-away money for North Carolina coach Hubert Davis, but huge, nasty cash to fix it once and for all. 

Because if you’re North Carolina and you’ve committed tens of millions of dollars to Bill Belichick and his plan to rescue your football program, what’s the price to resuscitate your suddenly stale yet still iconic basketball program?

Let me give you a hint: a hundred million or more commitment. 

This is big business, people. We’re talking about one of the three biggest college basketball brands struggling to not only reach the NCAA Tournament, but avoid disaster in the first round.

The program of Michael Jordan and Dean Smith and Roy Williams and all of those All-Americans and national championship moments, just blew a 19-point lead to VCU in the NCAA Tournament. 

This isn’t about the loss of injured star freshman Caleb Wilson and how it affected the last two weeks of the season. It’s about the totality of Davis’ tenure, and if North Carolina is ready for a Belichick-ian response.

That can only mean one thing: Start printing cash for Florida coach Todd Golden.

If you’ve given Davis everything he could possibly want and need — the roster was valued at $15 million this season — and you’re still getting beat by VCU in the NCAAs, there’s no half-measure response to this unfolding nightmare.

North Carolina can’t keep throwing bad money after good and expect different results. The football program is on the verge of that very scenario with Belichick, who produced all of four wins with his bag of cash — and it doesn’t look much better after he signed the 50th-ranked transfer portal class according to the 247Sports composite.

This is no time for the timid. Be bold and brave ― and eliminate any possibility of Kentucky swooping in and signing Golden first.

Take the rare step and pay Golden like a football coach — or better yet, more than a football coach. More than Kirby and Cigs and Sark. 

Offer $13-14 million a year over 10 years, and commit to $20 million annually in NIL funds (including private deals). Once the Belichick experiment fades — and it will — North Carolina will again realize what’s important, what fuels the Carolina brand. 

Who knows if Golden would leave Florida, but you’re not starting over with one of the top three programs in the history of the sport with a mid-major coach, or another learn-on-the-go Carolina Man. 

You’re not going to make a regional hire like UNC Wilmington’s Takayo Siddle, or High Point’s Flynn Clayman coming off an NCAA run.

You’re not hiring a former NBA coach, and you’re (probably) not getting John Calipari to leave Arkansas. OK, maybe Cal would go — but how much longer is he coaching?

It’s time to see just how serious North Carolina is about basketball.

Golden can be in Carolina Blue for three decades if he wins and wants to hang around. He can win big and recreate the pecking order of legendary UNC coaches. 

Dean, Roy and Todd. Or Dean, Todd and Roy.  

The only option is Golden, whose choice will be building a legacy at Florida or embracing the rebuild at arguably the most iconic brand in the sport.

He’s young, knows how to reach players in the NIL-driven world and has proven he can build and develop rosters and win a national title. He has made Florida a basketball school again.

Billy Donovan eventually walked away from what he built at Florida, and headed to the NBA. Golden could do the same — unless UNC pays him like an NBA coach.

This has nothing to do with the “football school” and “basketball school” nonsense. Florida has won it all with two different coaches at their first major job, and has the structure and financial wherewithal to win it all again with another.

This is a North Carolina question, not a Florida question. 

How badly does North Carolina want to win big again, and at what cost?

Big, nasty cash to fix it once and for all.

Matt Hayes is the senior national college football writer for USA TODAY Sports Network. Follow him on X at @MattHayesCFB.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: North Carolina basketball must replace Hubert Davis, hire Todd Golden

The Hockey Show: Panthers Still Own Edmonton, Major Injuries To NHL Stars, Dave Jackson Breaks Down Goalie Interference

An important question was tackled this week on The Hockey Show.

Like many hockey fans, THS co-hosts Roy Bellamy and David Dwork would like an explanation from an expert on what exactly goaltending interference is in the NHL.

To break down goalie interference, and also to discuss some of the controversial penalties that have occurred lately in the league, Roy and David welcomed former NHL referee and current ESPN Rules Analyst Dave Jackson to The Hockey Show.

Also on the latest episode was a chat about the Florida Panthers having an efficient tank, and how even amid all their struggles, the Panthers still found a way to go into Edmonton and crush an Oilers squad trying to rack up every point they can get in a very tightly contested Western Conference playoff race.

This week’s wins and fails included a very unlucky Montreal Canadiens fan attending a Maple Leafs-Islanders game in Toronto, a nice job of rage-baiting by Philadelphia’s Matvei Michkov, an amazing 30 seconds during an ECHL game that gave us a pretty goal, fun celly and line brawl, and a hockey-related fashion faux pas by Team USA at the World Baseball Classic.

You can check out the full episode and interview in the videos below:

LATEST STORIES FROM THE HOCKEY NEWS - FLORIDA

Panthers Pick Up Another Victory In Edmonton, Taking Down Oilers 4-0

Panthers Make Trio Of Lineup Changes Ahead Of Matchup Against Oilers

Panthers Road Trip Continues In Familiar Building As Florida Returns To Edmonton

Bill Zito Appointed To Fort Lauderdale's Museum Of Discovery And Science Board Of Trustees

Brad Marchand's Season Could Be Over As Panthers Place Him On LTIR

Spring Breakout Game Thread: Kansas City Royals at Texas Rangers

Jul 24, 2024; Arlington, Texas, USA; Texas Rangers first round draft pick Malcolm Moore throws out the first pitch before the game against the Chicago White Sox at Globe Life Field. Mandatory Credit: Kevin Jairaj-Imagn Images

A group of Texas Rangers prospects take on a group of Kansas City Royals prospects in this year’s Spring Breakout contest where the Rangers farmhands will be the home team at Surprise Stadium.

Here’s a look at which prospects Texas has available today, including their MLB Pipeline rankings:

PITCHERS (8)
Ismael Agreda, RHP, No. 28
Wilian Bormie, RHP, NR
Gavin Collyer, RHP, No. 30
Aidan Curry, RHP, NR
Joey Danielson, RHP, NR
Eric Loomis, RHP, NR
Dalton Pence, LHP, No. 12
Josh Trentadue, LHP, No. 23

TWO-WAY PLAYERS (2)
Seong-Jun Kim, SS/RHP, No. 15
Josh Owens, SS/RHP, No. 6

CATCHERS (3)
Julian Brock, C, NR
Malcolm Moore, C, No. 18
Josh Springer, C, NR

INFIELDERS (7)
Yolfran Castillo, SS/3B, No. 8
Antonis Macias, UTIL, NR
Gleider Figuereo, 3B, NR
Pablo Guerrero, 1B, NR
Curley Martha, INF, NR
Elorky Rodriguez, 2B/OF, No. 16
Jack Wheeler, 3B, No. 19

OUTFIELDERS (7)
Dylan Dreiling, OF, No. 10
Anthony Gutierrez, OF, No. 29
Paxton Kling, OF, No. 21
Maxton Martin, OF, No. 24
Braylin Morel, OF, NR
Paulino Santana, OF, No. 22
Marcos Torres, OF, NR

You can the game on the Rangers Sports Network or follow along on Gameday. First pitch from Surprise Stadium is scheduled for 3:05 pm CT.

Go young Rangers!

Arizona Diamondbacks Spring: Three up, three down

SCOTTSDALE, ARIZONA - MARCH 12: Jordan Lawlar #10 of the Arizona Diamondbacks signs autographs before a Spring Training game against the Colorado Rockies at Salt River Fields at Talking Stick on March 12, 2026 in Scottsdale, Arizona. (Photo by John E. Moore III/Getty Images) | Getty Images

We’re now less than a week from Opening Day, and things are certainly coming into focus. While spring training statistics are basically useless in terms of predictive value, when has that ever stopped anyone from looking at them and drawing conclusions? So, based on the Cactus League results so far, here are three players – a hitter, a starting pitcher and a reliever – whose stock seems to have risen as a result of their performance, and three others about whom there might be reason for concern.

Three up

Jordan Lawlar

There are a few candidates here: Alek Thomas, Jorge Barrosa and Jose Fernandez all have an OPS over 1.000. Lawlar is right there with them, his triple-slash being .293/.420/.610 for a 1.030 OPS. But he was also having to learn a whole new position, playing the outfield for almost the first time in his professional career. He has done well: he committed his first error the other day, but a couple of hitters later, made a highlight reel play. Lawlar has played so well, it leaves Torey Lovullo with a tricky decision: should he or Thomas play CF? “They’re running balls down out there. They’re going out there and playing solid defense. Who gets to start in center or left, I haven’t figured that out.”

Brandon Pfaadt

It feels like we should add “Pfaadt breakout prediction” to our spring training bingo card. Before 2024, we had Brandon Pfaadt could be MLB’s biggest breakout player next season. Then, early in the 2025 season, it was Brandon Pfaadt is Forging a Breakout Season Despite the Odds. This year, he’s making lists like Top 10 NL Breakout Players to Watch in 2026. Spring has done nothing to dampen this enthusiasm: over ten innings, he has allowed just three hits and one earned run, with eleven strikeouts. Hence: Brandon Pfaadt’s Adjustments are Already Paying Off, discussing the hopes tweaks to his mechanics could lead to his sweeper becoming a weapon. We’ll see, but fingers crossed.

Juan Morillo

Of the two dozen D-backs’ pitchers to have thrown at least five innings this spring, there is only one who has yet to allow an earned run: Morillo. Across 7.1 innings, he has eight strikeouts, compared to only two walks, and so far has held opposing hitters to a .167 average. It’s numbers which compare very well, in a similar sample size, to more established relievers like Ryan Thompson or Jonathan Loaisiga. It’s easy to forget Morillo appeared 42 times for Arizona last year, a number surpassed only by Thompson and Jalen Beeks, with an ERA+ of 104. He may end up squeezed out of the Opening Day roster for “veteran presence.” However, I predict it won’t be long before he’s on the bus up from Reno.

Three down

Corbin Carroll

Spring had barely started, when Carroll had to go on the back burner, after fracturing the hamate bone in his hand while swinging. This was initially expected to rule him out for Opening Day, but he set a near-record pace for recovery, returning to the line-up less than four weeks after surgery. The concern is whether the surgery might have a lingering impact, particularly on his power. Although the data doesn’t support that, he has got off to a slow start since his return. Carroll is 2-for-12 with no walks and four strikeouts. While he did hit his first home-run on Wednesday against the Cubs, his OPS to date is only .583. Hopefully, it’s just a case of lingering winter rust being knocked off.

Merrill Kelly

As with Carroll, the issue here is probably as much a health concern as anything. He is no longer feeling any problems with his back, the area which forced him into a late spring start and out of Opening Day. However, Merrill still thinks he will need to start the year on the Injured List. He has made two starts so far, and the results haven’t been good: 11 hits across 4.1 innings with just one strikeout. Though it is true Kelly will be behind opposing hitters in terms of workload, so that may be responsible. The bottom line is, a healthy and effective Merrill is almost essential for the Diamondbacks to have a chance this year. We haven’t enjoyed that so far this pre-season.

Kade Strowd

There are several candidates here. Kevin Ginkel and Brandyn Garcia also have spring ERAs in double digits, rocking chances for an Opening Day spot. But neither were traded this winter for a fan favorite. Strowd came from the Orioles for Blaze Alexander, and expectations were he would be able to contribute immediately to the beleaguered D-backs bullpen. Stroud has been missing some bats, with nine strikeouts over 7.2 innings. But he has also been missing the strikezone, issuing five walks. Add in eleven hits, including two home-runs, and you’re looking at an ugly 10.57 ERA. He has begun to fall off roster projections. Blaze, meanwhile, is expected to start for Baltimore on Opening Day.

Yankees Mailbag: Wrapping up the WBC

MIAMI, FL - MARCH 17: Aaron Judge #99 of Team USA looks on during the 2026 World Baseball Classic Championship game presented by Capital One between Team Venezuela and Team USA at loanDepot Park on Tuesday, March 17, 2026 in Miami, Florida. (Photo by Scott Audette/WBCI/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

Good afternoon everyone, it’s time to dive back into the mailbag and answer some of your questions. Remember to send in your questions for our weekly call by e-mail to pinstripealleyblog [at] gmail [dot] com.

LocalBlueWhaleRuinsEverything asks:Judge is getting pretty well-flamed online for his poor performance in the WBC. How seriously should we take those stats compared to, say, his post-season performances?

Even less serious than the postseason narrative, which is to say not that much. Judge’s overall performance in the WBC was more than adequate, posting an .845 OPS with two homers and five RBI in seven games played — and those are the numbers after he went 0-for in the finale. That’s the equivalent of a single drawn out round of postseason play in the Championship Series or World Series, and that performance wouldn’t be enough to draw the blame for anyone except for a player of Judge’s status (and for that matter, it’s a better line than Judge posted in the ALCS or World Series in 2024).

Judge’s overall postseason track record is certainly less than his regular season excellence, but even there it’s not as bad as it’s made out to be: a career .822 OPS with 17 homers and 41 RBI in 65 games. There have been highs — his most recent performance in 2025 was dominant, his first taste of October was more than fine in 2017, and the Yankees’ short stay in the 2018 playoffs could in no way be blamed on Judge and his 1.447 OPS in the ALDS. But there have certainly been lows, most notably that 2024 run up until the infamous Game 5 against the Dodgers and a rather dreadful 2022 performance that saw them get bounced by their nemesis in Houston.

All of this to say, that Judge’s overall numbers are far from the narrative that he’s a playoff choker. Did he have a good game in the championship against Venezuela? No, far from it — but the US superteam at large was getting shut down by Eduardo Rodriguez for 4.1 innings, and that man’s run an ERA north of five for the last two seasons. The US lineup in general never got going in this tournament outside of their initial blowouts against Brazil and Great Britain, and Judge was one of the few bats alive enough to beat Mexico and force that three-way tie atop their group. There hasn’t been an extended run where Judge has stayed on a heater like he has for some of these individual series or matches, and if he gets one then I think the narrative would be broken, but until then any singular big game flop will be enough to bring out the hecklers.

The idiot that said, “Harper is coming” asks:Who makes money off the WBC? I have to assume players and MLB make some money, I’m curious how it’s distributed.

The tournament drew a massive pot of cash this year, reportedly offering a $37 million prize pool to the participants when all was said and done thanks in large part to a $100 million broadcasting rights deal that Netflix struck to cover the games in Japan. That pool is then divided up to each competing team with a starting payout of $750,000 and scaling up for each round that teams advanced through. Once a team’s placement has been finalized, their payout is then evenly split between their team federation (which pays for the coaches and staff) and the players on the team, with Venezuela getting the biggest cut for winning it all at a $6.75 million payout.

As for the overall profit generated from the tournament, The Athletic reports that there’s a one-third split going to MLB, one third to the player’s union, and a third split to a trio of other organizations: the World Baseball Softball Organization, the KBO, and the NPB.

OLDY MOLDY asks:Will there be inning limits on Schlittler?

I doubt it, for a couple of reasons. First, Schlittler ended up throwing a combined 149.2 regular season innings last season split between the minors and the majors, a 29-inning increase in workload from his 2024 setting himself up nicely to push towards the 170-180 inning range for 2026. That’s probably about how much the Yankees would love for Schlittler to handle this year, so no real need to manage his innings on a day-to-day basis. On top of that, Schlitter’s slow start to spring while handling his sore back puts him in the position to potentially get skipped over a couple times while the team only needs four starters in the opening weeks of the season, further reducing the need to worry about his season-long workload.