WINNIPEG, Manitoba (AP) — Max Domi scored at 3:08 of overtime on a 2-on-1 with Auston Matthews to lift the Toronto Maple Leafs past the Winnipeg Jets, 4-3 on Saturday night.
Domi also had an assist, Matthews scored his 24th goal of the season and Oliver Ekman-Larsson had a goal and two assists. Bobby McMann tied it in the third, and Morgan Rielly added two assists.
Dennis Hildeby stopped 27 shots as Toronto closed a four-game trip 2-1-1.
Alex Iafallo, Kyle Connor and Nino Niederreiter scored Winnipeg, and Connor Hellebuyck made 33 saves. The Jets had won four in a row.
The Jets led 3-1early in the third period. Ekman-Larsson scored at 5:58, and McMann’ tied it with 4:27 remaining.
Without two of their starters, the Knicks just could not muster enough offense in their 106-99 loss to the Suns at MSG on Saturday evening.
Jalen Brunson (ankle) and Josh Hart (ankle) did not dress for this game, leaving the Knicks looking for answers offensively. Miles McBride, who made the start, did his part, scoring 23 points on 9 of 18 shooting (5-for-11 from three) with five assists, two rebounds and two steals. He was a team-high plus-six on the court.
Phoenix star Devin Booker, who missed their last game due to an ankle injury and was questionable heading into Saturday's tip, suited up and provided more than enough for the Suns. He had a game-high 27 points and was a menace getting to the hoop, going 12 of 14 from the charity stripe.
New York has lost three in a row and eight of their last 10 games.
Here are the takeaways....
-The Knicks got off to a hot shooting start, hitting three of their first four three-point attempts. That allowed New York to keep a lead through most of the opening quarter as they led 27-19 after the first.
New York shot 50 percent in the quarter to the Suns' 36 percent.
-The second quarter saw the Suns make a 12-0 run in the middle part of the frame to take a lead, but the Knicks' defense finally hunkered down to retake the lead, backed by steals from McBride on back-to-back Phoenix possessions, which led to eight straight points. It was a back-and-forth game from there, as the teams went into halftime 56-55 in favor of the Knicks.
OG Anunoby went into the break with a team-high 13 points while McBride (10) and Karl-Anthony Towns (12) were the only Knicks scoring in double figures at this point. Towns, who scored 10 points in the opening frame, had just two points in the second.
-Phoenix got out to a 10-3 run to start the third quarter, forcing head coach Mike Brown to call a timeout. Whatever the first-year Knicks coach said worked as New York went out to a 16-0 run to regain the lead and take a 10-point cushion at one point, but the Suns persisted and tied it at 77-77 with 1:30 left in the quarter. On the final possession of the quarter, Booker drove and tossed up a prayer as he was fouled, and the ball banked in for an and-one to go into the fourth up by three.
-The physicality of this game ramped up a notch as players fought for loose balls, and hard fouls on players taking it to the hoop were plentiful. Two of the Suns' guards (Grayson Allen and Oso Ighodaro) had to miss time with busted noses.
An 8-0 run, mostly because of the Knicks' inability to knock down shots, pushed the Suns to have a 95-87 lead with six minutes remaining. The Knicks started to chip away at the Suns' lead, and got Dillon Brooks to miss a three, but Mark Williams picked up the offensive rebound and kicked out to Royce O'Neal, who hit a three to put Phoenix up by nine, forcing another Knicks timeout.
The Knicks tried to make a comeback, but their shots weren't falling, even when they cut the lead to five points. The Suns made their free throws and bled the clock away for the seven-point victory. The Knicks scored just 22 points in the fourth quarter.
-The Knicks shot 40 percent from the field but just 33 percent from three. Towns tied McBride with 23 points but he was just 7 of 16 from the field and just 3-for-8 from three. He airballed a three-pointer in the waning minutes, which would have cut the Phoenix lead to four points. The MSG crowd rained boos on Towns as the last gasp comeback attempt was extinguished.
Anunoby (21) and Mikal Bridges (15) were the only other Knicks to score in double figures.
ATLANTA (AP) — The Atlanta Falcons have hired Kevin Stefanski to be their next head coach.
Stefanski joins the Falcons after a six-year stint with the Cleveland Browns, where he was a two-time Associated Press Coach of the Year and led the group to a 45-56 overall record. He was fired on Jan. 5 after a 5-12 finish to the 2025 season.
“We’re thrilled to land a lead-by-example leader in Kevin Stefanski, who brings a clear vision for his staff, our team and a closely aligned focus on building this team on fundamentals, toughness and active collaboration with every area of the football operation,” Ryan said in a statement.
Falcons owner Arthur M. Blank brought Ryan on as his second-in-command and a key decision-maker for the franchise.
“Coach Stefanski is a team-first leader who puts a premium on accountability for everyone and a player-driven culture," Ryan added. "His experience in Cleveland and Minnesota has given him a great understanding of the importance of working in sync with scouting, personnel and the rest of the football staff to maximize talent across the roster and in doing everything possible to put our players in the best position to succeed."
Stefanski was named AP Coach of the Year in 2020 after leading the Browns to the playoffs for the first time since 2002 and their first playoff win since 1994 with an 11-5 record. He won it again in 2023 when the Browns made the playoffs and finished 11-6.
The coach climbed the ranks in Minnesota for 14 years with the Vikings before being hired by Cleveland in 2020. He overlapped with Falcons quarterback Kirk Cousins in 2018 and 2019.
“I’m beyond thrilled to be charged with leading this iconic franchise,” Stefanski said. “I am grateful to Mr. Blank and Matt Ryan for trusting me to coach this football team and there are many talented players on our roster that I cannot wait to coach. We share a vision for this football team that I believe will make Falcons fans everywhere proud."
Stefanski inherits a roster that includes four players who were named AP All-Pros in 2025. Bijan Robinson was named a first-team running back and second-team all-purpose player. Tight end Kyle Pitts Sr., right guard Chris Lindstrom and safety Jessie Bates III each earned second-team honors.
But he also finds some uncertainty at quarterback. Shortly after signing Cousins to a four-year, $180 million deal in 2024, the Falcons drafted Michael Penix Jr. in the first round of the NFL draft. Cousins lost the starting job after underperforming midway through the 2024 season. Penix finished his rookie season and started the 2025 campaign as the starter before going down with a season-ending knee injury.
Cousins stepped in for the last nine games, leading the Falcons to a 5-4 record and four straight wins to close out the season. Penix's recovery is expected to linger into training camp.
Stefanski has experience with quarterback uncertainty. The Browns had rotating quarterbacks throughout most of his tenure after trading former first-overall pick Baker Mayfield and acquiring Deshaun Watson. Joe Flacco, Dillon Gabriel and Shedeur Sanders each quarterbacked the offense in 2025.
The Falcons also have several other staffing decisions ahead of them, including general manager.
“We will get to work immediately putting together a first-class coaching staff and working hard to get to know all the great people that are so important to getting us all where we want to go,” Stefanski said.
For a third game this season, Samuel Montembeault and the Montreal Canadiens were taking on the Ottawa Senators in the nation’s capital on Saturday night. It’s no secret that these two teams hate each other, and you expect high intensity all around. While the Habs had a 10-point lead over the Sens in the standings going in, Martin St-Louis’ men knew this divisional duel was highly significant, with both the Buffalo Sabres and the Boston Bruins coming up in their rearview mirror.
While the game started well for Montreal, when Ottawa took two penalties in the first frame and was unable to stop the Habs’ power play, the Canadiens’ domination on the scoreboard would be short-lived in what turned out to be a roller coaster of a game.
Montreal has struggled in the second frame all year long. Before the start of this game, they had a minus-10 differential in that period. That abysmal record got even worse on Saturday night, as the Senators scored four goals on Montembeault in those 20 minutes.
St-Louis has repeated time and time that the fact his team would allow early goals bugged him, and that was once again the case in that duel. Brady Takchuk scored just 42 seconds into the second, but of course, you’re setting yourself up for a fall when you go down two men at the end of the first frame.
Less than three minutes later, Tim Stutzle was allowed to walk in on Montembeault from the goal line, and no one bothered him as he got near and had time to put his stick between his legs for a filthy goal near-side. He had shaken off Alexandre Carrier’s coverage near the face-off dot, and Kapanen failed to close him down, leading to a highlight-reel goal for the German.
Josh Anderson, who was forming a new line with Phillip Danault and Brendan Gallagher, gave the Canadiens some hope back when he put them back in the lead. Still, the Senators turned up the heat a notch and dictated the rest of the period, scoring two more goals to get their first lead of the game. Montreal now has a minus-13 differential in the second frame.
About The Man Advantage
It looked like the Canadiens would have a good time on the power play when they put up two goals in the first frame. One came from a quick shot by Juraj Slafkovsky from the bumper position, while the other came off a reasonable Cole Caufield individual effort. After these two goals, though, the Habs completely lost confidence.
On their next man advantage, Claude Giroux, who has played on the penalty kill for most of his 19-season NHL career, decided not to let the Canadiens set up their usual “slapshot” play where one player skates up before dropping the puck to Nick Suzuki, who comes in with speed. When he pressured Lane Hutson, who was in the process of taking the puck up the ice, it was like the wheels came off the wagon. For the rest of the game, Montreal struggled to generate much of anything on the man-advantage.
Waking Up Just In Time
After an atrocious second frame and having generated just two shots on goal in the first 15 minutes of the third, the Habs somehow managed to get back in the game when St-Louis pulled his goaltender. Danault won the faceoff, Hutson took a shot, which Slafkovsky deflected to put the Canadiens back within one. Just over a minute later, Carrier tied it up with a slapshot off an Ivan Demidov feed.
Five goals on only 16 shots for the Canadiens, clearly not a great save percentage for the Senators’ goaltender, but a great shooting percentage for the Habs. Meanwhile, at the other end of the ice, even though Montembeault didn’t have a great game, he was solid in the third frame as Ottawa kept peppering his net with shots. Shane Pinto had an opportunity to deal the final blow to the Habs on a breakaway, but Montembeault kept them in.
The overtime period didn’t last long. Hutson looked intent on wrapping things up right away, but he was stopped, and Stutzle and Giroux went the other way on a two-on-one, but the German fanned on the puck. Hutson got it back and launched a long pass to Caufield, who opted to shoot on the two-on-one with Suzuki, scoring his second of the night and 24th of the season.
For much of the game, the Canadiens were far from the better team on the ice, but in the end, they found a way to win in an exciting fashion. Of course, a win in regulation would have been better, but given how dominant the Senators were for long stretches, the Canadiens can count their blessings for those two points. After the game, St-Louis said his team didn't really deserve that win, something he's not said often this season, even when he could have.
NEW YORK — The Phoenix Suns defeated the New York Knicks 106-99 on Saturday for their first win of their six-game road trip.
A back-and-forth battle for the majority of the game, both teams had to whether each other’s large runs but BLANK came away victorious, pulling away late. Devin Booker returned from his ankle injury to lead the team in scoring but the victory was a team effort, with six players scoring in double figures. Dillon Brooks had one of his worst shooting nights of the year but it did not matter.
New York’s first game back from a four-game road trip, Knicks fans were loud but the Suns played loud when it mattered most, a contrast from their performances late against the Miami Heat and Detroit Pistons earlier this week.
Now 25-17 on the year, the Suns snap their losing streak at two with the second of their Eastern Conference road trip pending.
Game Flow
First Half
The Knicks struck first, going ahead 13-6 and forcing Jordan Ott to take a timeout less than four minutes into the game. Karl-Anthony Towns had it going early for New York. Over the next six minutes, scoring was limited with both teams scoring just a combined 17 points. Only four different Suns scored as the score at the end of 12 minutes was 27-19 New York.
In the first quarter, Devin Booker passed a Phoenix Suns legend in the NBA all-time scorer list.
The Suns went on a 17-4 run to start the second and take their first lead since early in the first, and the team played more balanced on offense. The Knicks responded with a run of their own to retake the lead, thanks in large part to their hot three-point shooting; they hit 63% of their first 13 triples.
After a flurry of runs from both teams, the squads exchanged baskets to end the second half. New York led 56-55 at the break. The two teams’ splits at the half were similar. Phoenix shot 43.9% from the field and 39.1% from three, while New York shot 42.9% from the field and 42.1% from three.
Second Half
The third quarter was 12 minutes of runs by both teams. Phoenix went on a 10-3 run to go up six which was followed by a 16-0 run by New York to give them a 10-point lead. Madison Square Garden was loud and the Knicks fans were roaring.
When the Suns stopped the Knicks’ run, they finished the quarter on a 13-0 run to end the third, capped off by Devin Booker’s And-one with 0.3 seconds left in the frame. Jordan Goodwin’s effort and quick five-point scoring burst were pivotal.
A slow start to the final quarter, the game started to slow down in its final moment. Collin Gillespie took control of the first half of the fourth, hitting shots and organizing the offense. Phoenix was playing better late than they did against the Pistons and Heat in their previous two games.
Relying mostly on the starters and Grayson Allen, Phoenix pulled away late, avoiding a small scare at the end when New York cut it to five.
Up Next
The Suns will stay in New York City and face the Brooklyn Nets on Monday in the first half of a back-to-back.
Columbus gets the first goal of the game, a shot from Zach Werenski hits Noel Acciari and drops right to Zach Aston-Reese. Aston-Reese is quicker than Silovs as his quick shot slides on in. 1-0 CBJ to open things up 2:42 into the proceedings.
The Pens answer back in short order, matching the unlikely goal-scorer of Aston-Reese with a player scoring his first of the season for himself in Connor Clifton. Nice job by Clifton to stay activated deep in the offensive zone and finish off the goal to tie the game.
A Columbus turnover in their own end happened at the wrong place at the wrong time, and to the wrong guy. Sidney Crosby is there to grab a misplayed puck, he quickly centers the puck for Rickard Rakell to direct on net just as fast. 2-1 lead for the Penguins.
Good reaction from Pittsburgh, Columbus only had two shots after their goal in the last 17+ minutes of the period.
Second period
The Blue Jackets make a strong response early, the Pens get a power play but do little with it and the Columbus momentum keeps building up. They strike when Kirill Marchenko fires up out of no where in the neutral zone to grab a puck on the rush and shoot it in. 2-2 game.
Things don’t get much better for the Pens, most of their opportunities are few and far between. It looks like both teams might get to intermission tied but Danton Heinen redirects an Erik Gudbranson point shot late in the period and Columbus is back in front, 3-2.
Bad period for the Pens, can’t say it was undeserved. Columbus outshot Pittsburgh 13-8 in the period, most of the Pens’ chances were one-offs and not much in the way of consistent pressure.
Third period
Pittsburgh starts the period well by killing an overlap of a second period penalty, Clifton and Crosby flash to get chances that narrowly miss out on hitting the back of the net.
The aggressive play leads to some CBJ chances, Silovs does well to stop Adam Fantilli on a breakaway and fight off a 2-on-1 rush.
The Pens get a glorious opportunity with a late power play with 7:49 to go, still looks bad and doesn’t help.
It takes until about the 1:35 mark to get Silovs out of the net for the extra attacker, it doesn’t take long for the Pens to make it count with another 6v5 goal against Columbus late. Kris Letang shoots for a deflection, Crosby obliges with a typically outstanding redirect into the net past Elvis Merzlikins. 3-3 with 1:01 to go.
Crosby-Malkin-Letang start it out for the Pens. Ben Kindel sneaks on the ice and gets a shot, Merlikins stops him.
Merzlikins keeps the game going with two point-blank stops on Evgeni Malkin. Silovs does his part with a stop on Charlie Coye from righti n front.
Crosby and Novak get really good looks at the net too before time expires but no one scores.
Shootout
The Pens go first, it’s Rakell. Merzlikins stays with the dekes and pokechecks the puck away when Rakell gets too close.
Kent Johnson takes the first turn for Columbus, dekes to the backhand and scores.
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Crosby is picked to shoot second, he goes with his move to shoot for the glove, but only hits the glove and can’t score.
Fantilli gets the chance to win the game, Silovs makes the stop on the low shot.
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Egor Chinakhov has to score against his former to keep the game going, his shot to the blocker side hits the net.
Marchenko could win it for CBJ, he was 5/5 on the season but Silovs comes up huge with a stop.
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Bryan Rust leads off Round 4 with the teams even. He bobbles the puck near the net and doesn’t get much of a shot off.
Coyle goes for the Blue Jackets with yet another chance to win, and this time they do after a strong forehand deke outmaneuvers Silovs.
Some thoughts
A cool little aspect of Malkin playing the wing these days is that sometimes his shift can bleed into when Crosby comes on the ice. That can’t happen when both are centers and change onto the ice for one another. Malkin extended a shift in the first period while the puck was in the offensive zone and got to generate a bonus chance out of it. Fun wrinkle about his move to the wing.
Dan Muse and the Pens look loyal to their goalie rotation, which you can’t knock too much given how well things are going across the board and how condensed the schedule is in this Olympic year. That said, if the concept of rotating goalies is going to stay, the question might shift to how long the team will stay loyal to Silovs being a part of that rotation? That’s a bigger picture question for a different day but one that might be worth asking when Silovs has won eight out of 22 decisions with a GAA over 3 and save percentage under .890% when Joel Blomqvist (.925 save%) and Sergei Murashov (.923%) are performing well and a phone call away for an alternative that could be performing better.
To that end, Moneypuck had Columbus with a 1.4 expected goal total at the point Silovs had surrendered a third goal.
One area Muse has remained too stubbornly loyal to is the shootout order and picking veterans who aren’t performing (Crosby) to go ahead of players who are (Chinakov). Once again, Chinakhov very nearly never even got an opportunity to shoot, the game could have been decided before Round 3 since neither Crosby or Rakell were able to score. This is a very correctable area, maddening to see it continue tonight, and know it’s probably not going to change next time either. It’s tough enough to win shootouts (where the Pens are 1-7 this season) since the goalies aren’t very good at stopping shots, failing to put the shooters in the proper alignment is makes the odds of success even slimer.
This was a sneaky tough position for Pittsburgh to be in, seeing Columbus days after a coaching change (and 2-0-0 coming into the night under Rick Bowness). The former coach seemed to be somewhat unpopular among the players, there’s always that period of revitalization, extra energy and a boost from a new voice coming in. That doesn’t make for an easy opponent, even if it’s not exactly a stacked lineup to deal with. The Pens probably don’t have room to complain too much in the sequence of the schedule since they’ve seen so many opponents in b-2-b situations lately (plus the good fortune of facing Philadelphia last way in full-on collapse mode) but that uncontrollable element worked against them tonight.
Cool to see Clifton get a goal, he played with confidence the rest of the night after that. As mentioned before, the Karlsson departure from the lineup makes for a great opportunity for Clifton to play regularly for the first time in a while. He hasn’t been poor so much as just lacked for the chance. Now it’s here. Clifton was probably one of the more noticeable better players on the ice for the Pens. And yes, I do mean that as a sort of backhanded compliment towards most of the rest of the team that should not have that be the case.
The Pens’ power play (0/3 on the night) might not be the singular reason they didn’t win, but it’s high on the list. Looking back, that early second period power play where they did nothing and Columbus only took off from there was a huge turning point in the game from the dreaded ‘what could have been’ type of thoughts. Then getting a chance to tie the game in the third period and get back in it disappeared without much coming of it. Big turnaround from Thursday night when the power play was incredibly effective (albeit, against a majorly struggling Philadelphia PK played a part in that discrepancy as well).
I don’t have the statistical backup at the moment but boy it sure feels like the 6v5 goals at the end of regulation where a goalie is pulled is way up this season. If not for the whole league, then certainly for the games Pittsburgh has been involved in. Luckily for the Pens, Columbus has been as allergic as they have this season when it comes to preserving third period leads.
Things you don’t see every day is eight total OT shots (and no goals). It usually doesn’t take that many looks at the net to end a game in a 3v3 format.
This game is tough to reconcile the question on if Pittsburgh got a fair shake or not at the end of the day. In some respects, maybe not: the expected goal count was 5.25 – 2.6 in the Pens’ on Moneypuck. On the other hand, the Pens were bad on the power play and had large stretches of unimpressive play. They certainly deserved getting something out of this one, all things considered it would have been pretty nice if someone could have scored in OT. Certainly enough players (Kindel, Malkin, Crosby, Novak) took great shots and had the chance. They couldn’t do that so taking the old school equivalent of a tie (one point) is ultimately fitting.
The next game is about 44 hours from when this one ended, which isn’t too bad. The part about it being, what about 2,500 miles away in Seattle might be the more daunting aspect.
The Dallas Mavericks have seen a lot of the Utah Jazz over the past month, with their most recent faceoff just two days ago. Dallas repeated their success from Thursday night with a 138-120 win Saturday.
Let’s get to the grades!
Brandon Williams: A
22 PTS / 4 REB / 5 AST / 2 STL / 0 BLK – 28 MIN
Williams had a very nice game on both sides of the ball. He scored on efficient shooting (8-for-13), played solid defense and made some nice passes. His assist-to-turnover ratio (5:2) wasn’t mind blowing, but there isn’t much to complain about in respect of his overall performance.
Max Christie: A
22 PTS / 2 REB / 4 AST / 2 STL / 0 BLK – 26 MIN
Christie returned to action looking as though he didn’t miss a beat. He had himself a sound night in all respects, shooting well in his return (7-for-13). He took care of the ball and played sound defense without racking up fouls. Highlight play: cutting off a passing lane for a steal he took the other way for a layup in the second quarter.
Caleb Martin: C+
3 PTS / 6 REB / 5 AST / 0 STL / 0 BLK – 21 MIN
Martin’s near-flawless shooting was absent Saturday night, though he grabbed a few boards and dished some dimes. He didn’t hurt the Mavs, but also didn’t do a whole lot to favorably impact the game. Highlight play: on the opening tip Martin moved as though clairvoyant, getting to a spot before the jump ball was even touched, perfectly positioning himself to gain possession. It was a small thing, but pretty cool to see.
Naji Marshall: B+
16 PTS / 5 REB / 6 AST / 1 STL / 0 BLK – 29 MIN
Marshall had a hot hand and did a bit of everything, but his grade takes a hit for the high turnover (3) and high foul (4) totals.
Dwight Powell: A-
10 PTS / 8 REB / 3 AST / 3 STL / 0 BLK – 27 MIN
Powell was quietly Powell, grabbing boards, hitting his limited shot opportunities, and setting solid screens — one of which got him free throws when Keyonte George committed a flagrant foul by running him over and pushing him to the ground. His steal total gives his grade a boost beyond his other contributions.
Jaden Hardy: C+
12 PTS / 1 REB / 3 AST / 0 STL / 0 BLK – 17 MIN
Hardy can be streaky for sure, and on Saturday his shot could have been better (5-for-13). He did little else and his plus/minus was in the negative for most of the night. Still, he did what you’d want him to do — drop double-figure points in limited minutes.
Moussa Cisse: B-
9 PTS / 10 REB / 0 AST / 0 STL / 0 BLK – 21 MIN
Cisse was solid, though some of his stats came in garbage time. He also had the worst plus/minus on the team (-minus-17).
Klay Thompson: A
23 PTS / 0 REB / 3 AST / 0 STL / 2 BLK – 20 MIN
Thompson’s first half alone had him in the “A” range: 7-for-10 from the floor, 6-for-9 from deep, 3-for-3 from the free throw line, 23 points. He even dished two assists around his prolific shooting. He came back down to earth in the second half, but very few minutes played was a factor in that.
Final thoughts
If you’re on board with Team Tank, you might be a bit chapped to see Utah doing it better than Dallas by sitting players somewhat arbitrarily in both this, and the game Thursday night. Utah is just behind Dallas in the Western Conference standings, so the losses for them are wins from a certain perspective.
I’m not a big fan of intentionally losing, but I would be lying to say a better pick this summer isn’t highly appealing. With the win, Dallas and Utah now have two wins apiece in the season series, but there is a long way to go before game 82 decides the final standings. For now, Dallas continues to look engaged with two-way players and others that don’t get a lot of burn showing up with maximum effort.
I invite you to follow me @_80MPH on X, and check back often at Mavs Moneyball for all the latest on the Dallas Mavericks.
On a night where Jaylen Brown scored 41 points, it was Sam Hauser who stole the show. He scored 30 points making 10 three pointers, including 8 of his first 9 looks. The Celtics smoked the Hawks 132-106 as the Celtics advance to 26-15 at the midway point of the season.
The Celtics were without Jayson Tatum, Payton Pritchard, Josh Minott and Chris Boucher. They started Derrick White, Baylor Scheierman, Sam Hauser, Jaylen Brown and Neemias Queta. The Hawks were without Dyson Daniels, Zaccharie Risacher, Kristaps Porzingis and N’Faly Dante. They started C.J. McCollum, Nickeil Alexander-Walker, Vit Krecji, Jalen Johnson and Onyeka Onongwu.
This was the Hawks first game back home after a 4 game west coast swing. Those are always tough, if you remember the Celtics were 0-5 in the first game back coming off of long road trips last season.
It was 14-11 at the second timeout. Jaylen Brown took 8 of the first 14 Celtics shots, making 3 of them for 6 points. Joe Mazzulla came out of that timeout with 4 new players surrounding Brown, Anferenee Simons, Jordan Walsh, Hugo Gonzalez and Luka Garza.
The Celtics led the Hawks, 30-23 at the end of the first quarter. Jaylen Brown carried the Celtics, scoring 18 points while no else scored more than 3. Brown also had 2 rebounds and 2 assists. He took 13 shots.
It was in the 2nd quarter that the Celtics turned up the heat and it happened from three point range. They outscored the Hawks 37-20 in the first 9:23 of the quarter and were 9/12 from threes.
They did not slow down to end the quarter either, scoring 52 points in the period and 82 in the first half, a new season high. They finished the 2nd quarter 19/25 from the field and 11/15 from three.
Boston led Atlanta by 31 points at halftime, 82-51. Jaylen Brown had 29 points while Sam Hauser had 21 points going 7/8 from three point range.
The Celtics contained the, as NBC Sports Boston’s Drew Carter said, “vintage Mazzulla Ball barrage” in the third quarter, taking a 40 point lead at the 9:20 mark in the 3rd quarter. They hit the 100 point mark with just over 8 minutes to go in the period.
Jaylen Brown hit the 40 point mark in the first three quarters of the game. He had 41 points, 6 rebounds and 2 assists through three quarters (he did not play in the 4th). He was 14/30 from the field and 2/9 from three in 29 minutes.
The Celtics led the Hawks 117-74 at the end of three quarters. Hauser had 24 points while Neemias Queta and Anfernee Simons had 14 points each.
The 4th quarter intrigue was whether or not Sam Hauser would break the single game three point record for the Celtics, which is 11 from Marcus Smart in 2020. He did not, he made 10 threes in the game, only making 2 of his last 12 three point attempts.
The Celtics shot 50% from the field and 42% from three while the Hawks shot 37% from the field and 32% from three. Boston’s next game is Monday night in Detroit against the Pistons at 8 EST.
The Utah Jazz were extremely successful in their tank lost to the Dallas Mavericks for the second time in a row 120-138.
In the Mavericks’ meaningless win, they showed that their depth is overall stronger than that of the Utah Jazz. Their reward? They jump two spots in the lottery standings and are closer to the play-in than they are to a top draft pick. Dallas now finds itself in a three-way tie with Milwaukee and Memphis, and is close to falling to 11th.
For Utah, they are now just two games up on the Brooklyn Nets and Sacramento Kings. The Kings, who have won four games in a row, are on their way to passing up Utah with Domantas Sabonis coming back soon. Brooklyn is winning more than they want behind the play of Michael Porter Jr., and we’re also seeing Indiana win some more games. Finally, the New Orleans Pelicans have no reason to tank because they don’t own their pick and are definitely going to win some games this season, they don’t want to. Utah would be exceptionally successful if it lost all three of its upcoming games against the Pelicans.
But how about the game that they played today?
Utah lost for a few reasons. One, they have one of the youngest rosters in history playing, and they’re also in the midst of a brutal road trip. It’s not surprising they struggled, and that’s perfectly fine. Games like this show who is worth investing in and who may not have what it takes, for now.
Keyonte George continues to show that he’s a future star for the Jazz. In the third quarter, he was 6/6 and exploded to finish with 29 points and 6 assists. George is proving to be a core part of the future and a player you can depend on to finish games. What’s exciting is that he will likely continue to improve. And what happens when the Jazz add even more talent? Does that open up even more room for him? He has a chance to be really special next year as the Jazz will be going for the playoffs.
We’re also seeing some exciting stuff from Cody Williams, who is turning into a legitimate rotation player and potential starter for Utah. Williams had 11 points (5/8 FG, 1/2 3PT), 4 rebounds, 2 assists, and 1 steal in 27 minutes. The difference in Cody Williams is night and day from last season and even from a month or two ago. He plays with force on the offensive end and provides great length and athleticism on the defensive end. He’s also shooting the ball well from three recently, which is a great sign, even if it is on a small sample size. It’s something to watch as the season goes along, but Utah is looking like they drafted a good one in Cody Williams.
Brice Sensabaugh continued his latest scoring flurry with 25. He only shot 1/7 from three, but was 10/20 from the field. It’s nice that Sensabaugh can get this type of scoring when the Jazz need it, but it’s not translating to wins. Somehow, Sensabaugh has to figure out how to involve his teammates more and not just end up shooting it, no matter what is happening in the possession. That said, this scoring is a nice sign for the future, even if that future is a potential bucket getter off the bench.
Jazz fans have to be excited about the incremental steps that Ace Bailey is making. He had 18 points in this one with 8 rebounds and 1 assist. He is playing within the flow of the game and getting these points regularly. At some point in his career, he’s going to figure out his driving gam,e and it’s going to take him to another level. For now, we can be excited about all the small things he does, including the defense and the ball movement. Ace Bailey was a great pick.
It continues to be a little bit of a problem with what we’re seeing from Taylor Hendricks and Kyle Filipowski but for different reasons. Filipowski continues to be a pretty terrible defender and is allowing an insane rate of scoring at the rim. He does put up numbers, but it’s fair to ask if what he does on the offensive end outweighs what’s given up on defense. Taylor Hendricks is looking extremely slow. It’s probably related to the injury, and he needs grace, but it doesn’t look good right now. He doesn’t have the same quickness he had before and you can only hope it comes back. Right now, each minute is good because it must help his recovery, but it doesn’t help with winning games. It makes things tough for Will Hardy, who likely wants to allow some development, but things aren’t going very well while he’s on the floor. Let’s hope we start seeing him make steps towards becoming a rotation player. The benefit of what the Jazz are doing now is that it allows him to do that.
The Brooklyn Nets’ youth movement has been well documented this year. How could it not? In any conversation involving the team, you can’t get more than a minute or two without someone mentioning it. After all, Brooklyn made history seven months ago when it picked five players in the NBA draft, which we’ve since dubbed the Flatbush Five.
Indeed, the kids at the corner of Atlantic and Flatbush have received more attention than anyone this year. But while Brooklyn’s youth may start with the 2025 Draft class, it certainly doesn’t end there. Like the Flatbush Five, Noah Clowney is also on his rookie deal and that means this coming Summer, he’ll be eligible for an extensive and say sources, he’s likely get multiple offers and not insignificant ones. That of course is evident to Nets fans and the organization after games like Friday night when he had a double-double, 23 points and 11 rebounds, and some clutch moments..
Clowney, drafted by the Nets now two summers ago, entered this season at just 21 years of age. His birthday is in July. Danny Wolf, who the Nets drafted with their last pick this past summer, is also 21, though 70 days older that Clowney with a birthday in May.
But while Wolf may have extra months of life, Clowney has two NBA seasons on him, and it’s shown so far during Brooklyn’s 2025-26 campaign. Through 39 games, Clowney is averaging 13.3 points, 1.9 assists, and 4.1 rebounds per game. All clock in as career-highs, as do his 4.0 free throw attempts per game. Teams are also scoring less with him on the court for the first time in his career. Brooklyn is +9.3 point per 100 possessions better with him on the floor vs without.
But the “eye test” signals progress as well. For two seasons, he seemed to be nothing more than super-sized sharpshooter at the offensive end, but the Alabama product’s made an extra effort this year to put the ball on the floor, attacking closeouts and set defenders alike.
Noah Clowney REALLY making the leap (literally and figuratively) here.
He also appears to have put on more muscle. By all accounts, the improvement for Clowney has been no joke.
But for all that, there’s been little, if any attention to Clowney’s being eligible for an extension this coming summer. The basics are these: Brooklyn has him under contract until the summer of 2027. He’s eligible to sign a multi-year extension this July, which would kick in during the 2027-28 season. Clowney will be a restricted free agent meaning the Nets can match any offer.
Given his rise, a number of teams are likely to have interest in Clowney. A league source who’s familiar with their thinking has told NetsDaily that the San Antonio Spurs could be a part of that group, with an extension around $50 million over four years, an average of $12.5 million a year, a significant number in the Nets rebuild.
While Clowney has dramatically improved his offensive, some in the league think that his defense could hurt him when talks begin whether with the Nets or another team. That might be less of a concern for San Antonio who have Victor Wembenyama behind him.
While expected to compete in the Western Conference this year, the Spurs could be attractive. They represent one of the NBA’s surprise teams this year. They’re currently tied with the Denver Nuggets for the league’s third best record at 28-13 and are moving quicker toward title contention perhaps sooner than they intended.
If they have a gap anywhere in their rotation, its at the position Clowney plays as well. Harrison Barnes has started every game for San Antonio at the four this year, but is averaging his fewest points per game in over a decade. ESPN’s Kevin Pelton also recently named Jeremy Sochan as a trade deadline “player to watch.”
Historically, the Nets have not waited till to the last minute to negotiate. They signed Nic Claxton and Cam Johnson to extensions well before things got hairy. In both cases, the contract was front-loaded. In the case of Day’ron Sharpe last summer, they were able to use the lack of cap space in the NBA to negotiate a surprisingly team-friendly deal.
Of course, if Michael Porter Jr. stays with Brooklyn after the trade deadline and draft, he too will be eligible for an extension that will also kick in in 2027-28. Maximum: four years, $243 million. Would that complicate the Clowney negotiations? Unlikely … at the moment.
LAS VEGAS -- Former Golden Knight Jonathan Marchessault is expected to return to the ice Saturday night when the Nashville Predators visit Vegas at T-Mobile Arena.
Marchessault was removed from injured reserve earlier in the day, after missing the last 14 games. The 2023 Conn Smythe winner hasn't played since Dec. 17.
Marchessault missed the Predators' first trip to Vegas, a 4-2 New Year's Eve matinee win.
The Predators bring a three-game win streak to Vegas, while the Golden Knights ride a six-game win streak into Saturday night's game at T-Mobile, where Marchessault hoisted the Stanley Cup and Conn Smythe trophies three summers ago.
Since joining the Predators, the 35-year-old forward has one goal and one assist against his former employer.
In 28 games this season, Marchessault has 10 points (7 goals, 3 assists).
PHOTO CAPTION: Nashville Predators center Jonathan Marchessault (81) skates with the puck against the St. Louis Blues during the third period at Bridgestone Arena.
The Pittsburgh Pirates landed two of the top international prospects in all of baseball this week.
On Thursday, the Pirates announced that they signed 25 players to begin the 2026 International Signing Period.
Included in the class were two athletes from the Dominican Republic who ranked in MLB Pipeline’s Top 50 Prospects list.
Pittsburgh acquired No. 7 prospect Jeancer Custodio and No. 7 Wilton Guerrero Jr. on the first day of international deals.
Today marks the beginning of the 2026 International Signing Period and we have announced signing of 25 international players. pic.twitter.com/Ad5oQnXbtV
A 17-year-old outfielder, Custodio is a 5-foot-10 right-handed hitter who prospects with a 65 overall hit tool.
He is from Baní, the same city as Jose Ramirez and former MLB stars Miguel Tejada and Jose Bautista. Custodio has a 55-grade power tool and hit .333 with a .429 on-base percentage on the 18U World Cup qualifying team.
Guerrero Jr. has a familiar last name for baseball fans around the world. Wilton Guerrero Jr. is the nephew of Vladimir Guerrero Sr. and cousin of Blue Jays star Vladimir Guerrero Jr.
His dad, Wilton Guerrero Sr., played eight years in Major League Baseball and retired to become a member of MLB’s Trainer Partnership Program in Nizao, Dominican Republic, per MLB Pipeline.
Only 16 years old, Wilton Guerrero Jr. is a 5-foot-10 shortstop with a 50-grade hit tool and a 70-rated speed.
The deals signal two impactful additions for Vice President of International Scouting Max Kwan, who was hired prior to the 2025 season.
The Pirates signed 12 additional players from the Dominican Republic, seven from Venezuela, and one from Brazil, Cuba, Nicaragua, and Panama. Pittsburgh can still sign international players to deals, but the start of the International Signing Period is a key indicator of the top players who will sign with the 30 different organizations.
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) — Nate Calmese scored 18 points, which included the winning jumper with 6.8 seconds left, and Wake Forest rallied for a 69-68 victory over Florida State on Saturday night for the Demon Deacons' first Atlantic Coast Conference road win this season.
The Demon Deacons used an 11-4 run to pull to 68-67 with 24 seconds left. Florida State called timeout after Calmese's floater ended the scoring, and the Seminoles' Robert McCray V missed a potential winning shot that hit the front of the rim to end it.
Calmese finished 8-of-19 shooting. Juke Harris and Myles Colvin added 15 points apiece for Wake Forest (11-7, 2-3 Atlantic Coast Conference), which trailed 65-54 with 4:26 remaining.
Chauncey Wiggins scored 15 points to lead Florida State (7-11, 0-5). McCray finished with 12 points and five assists but committed 11 turnovers. Thomas Bassong chipped in with 11 points for the Seminoles.
Florida State scored the last four points of the first half to go up 34-31 at the break. Martin Somerville scored seven of his nine points in the first half for the Seminoles. Calmese scored 10 first half-points to pace Wake Forest.
AUBURN, Ala. (AP) — Filip Jovic scored a career-high 23 points and Auburn held off a last-minute rally by South Carolina, defeating the Gamecocks 71-67 on Saturday night.
Auburn led by six at halftime and held the lead throughout the second half. Back-to-back dunks by Sebastian Williams-Adams and Jovic gave the Tigers their first double-digit lead of the game, 60-49 with about 5 minutes remaining.
Two free throws by Mike Sharavjamts and a driving layup by Kobe Knox had the Gamecocks within 62-57 with 1:20 remaining before Kevin Overton's 3-pointer put Auburn up 65-57 with 53 seconds left. USC got within three points twice, the second time on a layup by Sharavjamts with 17 seconds remaining.
After a pair of free throws from Keyshawn Hall, USC's Meechie Johnson buried a 3-pointer to make it 69-67 with four seconds remaining. Overton then made two free throws to seal the win.
Jovic, a freshman from Bosnia & Herzegovina, made 9 of 12 shots and 5 of 8 free throws in his fourth double-digit scoring game of the season. KeShawn Murphy and Williams-Adams scored 11 points each for the Tigers (11-7, 2-3 SEC), who beat South Carolina for the 10th straight time.
Johnson scored 17 points, Sharavjamts 13, Knox 12 and Elijah Strong 10 for South Carolina (10-8, 1-4).
Although the Tigers missed seven of their first eight shots they still led 12-8 eight minutes into the game. A 3-pointer by Johnson had South Carolina within 21-19 but Tahaad Pettiford and Jovic converted three-point plays to push the margin to eight points. Auburn led 30-24 at halftime.
Unfortunately for most hockey fans, but perhaps fortunately for the Anaheim Ducks and their supporters, Los Angeles Kings captain Anze Kopitar (38) has probably played his last career game against the Ducks. Kopitar announced his retirement from the NHL on the first day of Kings’ training camp before the 2025-26 season.
The Kings drafted Kopitar with the 11th overall pick in the 2005 NHL Draft, out of Södertälje SK of the then-Swedish Elite League. He made his NHL debut at Honda Center on Oct. 6, 2006, against the Ducks, to open the 2006-07 season, a 4-3 Ducks win that will be remembered as Kopitar’s introduction of himself to the NHL and the Ducks as a problem they were going to have to deal with for the duration of his career despite the Ducks going on to win the Stanley Cup in that very season.
Kopitar scored two goals in that game, the first of which was a highlight reel goal where he burned Hall of Fame defenseman Chris Pronger wide, pulled the puck around Conn Smythe-winning goaltender Jean-Sebastian Giguere, and buried from a tough angle. He went on to score a second goal in that game and finished with 22:16 TOI.
That’s how Kopitar’s career started against Anaheim, and he didn’t let up through his entire 20-year career. At the end, he rides off as the player to score the most points against the Anaheim Ducks/Mighty Ducks of Anaheim franchise, with 93 points (32-61=93) in 95 games. He went on to win two Stanley Cups with LA. He was the best player in the only playoff series between the Ducks and Kings franchises, a seven-game Western Conference semi-final matchup in 2014, where he scored nine points (1-8=9), playing his typical brand of detailed, two-way hockey and limiting the impact of the Ducks' top offensive producers.
To accompany his two cups (2012 and 2014), Kopitar’s trophy case includes three Lady Bing trophies, a Mark Messier Leadership Award, and two Selke trophies, an award he’d have won more had it not been for him playing in the same era as Patrice Bergeron and in a later time zone than most awards voters.
Kopitar has played the most games (1491) in a Kings uniform in franchise history and needs just nine more points to become their all-time leading scorer, when he’ll surpass Marcel Dionne (1307). He represented a quiet, lead-by-example brand of leadership that earned him the captaincy in 2016.
Despite the headaches he gave the Ducks franchise, Kopitar played with class, carried it off the ice, and was the catalyst to the “Freeway Faceoff” rivalry from the moment he stepped onto NHL ice that 2006 night in Anaheim and carried that into what was likely his last game against the Ducks, a three-point (all assists) performance that led his club to a 6-1 victory over Anaheim on Dec. 27, 2025.
The Kings and Ducks will face each other for a weekend home-and-home series on Friday and Saturday in Los Angeles and Anaheim, respectively. Kopitar was placed on IR on Jan. 10 and will likely be unavailable for this set of games against the Ducks.
Both teams currently sit on the outside, looking in at the 2026 Western Conference playoff picture, leaving the odds of the two meeting in the playoffs at almost zero. If Kopitar has played his last game against the Ducks, his competitive drive will always be respected, and those headaches he gave his rival franchise, the Anaheim Ducks, will linger long after he’s hung ‘em up.
Before Friday’s game in Los Angeles, the Ducks organization presented Kopitar with a VIP tour of Disneyland for ten people. In his 20 years in LA, Kopitar did more for hockey and the growth of the sport in Southern California than all but a few, and it can be argued more than any.