Columbus Blue Jackets (57 pts) vs. Chicago Blackhawks (51 pts) Game Preview

The Columbus Blue Jackets are the road to take on the Chicago Blackhawks tonight at 8:30 PM.

Chicago Blackhawks - 21-24-9 - 51 Points - 3-5-2 in the last 10 - Lost 2 - 6th in the Central

Columbus Blue Jackets - 25-20-7 - 57 Points - 7-3-0 in the last 10 - Won 3 - 5th in the Metro.

Team Notes Per CBJ PR

  • Columbus has won seven of its past eight games overall and outscored opponents 30-21 since Jan. 11 (7-1-0) after its 5-3 victory over Philadelphia on Wednesday.
  • CBJ are tied for the NHL lead in points pct. (.875, Anaheim) and rank fourth in shots on goal (30.9), fifth-T in goals for/game (3.75), eighth in power play pct. (30.0), ninth in team save percentage (.908) and 11th in goals-against/game (2.63) over that stretch.
  • The club has scored the opening goal in three consecutive games and seven of the past eight. The team has scored the first goal in 31 games, tied for third-most in the NHL in 2025-26.
  • Columbus leads the NHL in goals by defensemen and ranks fourth in points with 39-93-132 in 52 contests.
  • CBJ play consecutive back-to-back sets before the Olympic break (Jan. 30 at CHI/Jan 31 at STL and Feb. 3 at NJD/Feb 4 vs. CHI). The team ranks fifth-T in the league in points pct. in back-to-back settings in 2025-26 (.639; 10-5-3).

Player Notes Per CBJ PR

  • Charlie Coyle, who skated in his 1,000th career game on Jan. 22 vs. Dallas and notched his 200th career goal on Jan. 24 vs. Tampa Bay, has registered goals, assists and multiple points in consecutive outings (2-3-5).
  • Jet Greaves (4-0-0, 2.35 GAA, .915 SV%) and G Elvis Merzlikins (3-1-0, 2.64 GAA, .908 SV%) have each won three games for the Blue Jackets since Jan. 11.
  • Kirill Marchenko notched a goal vs. Philadelphia and has points in back-to-back games (1-2-3) as well as 13 of the last 17 contests dating back to Dec. 22 (9-9-18).
  • Sean Monahan notched the game-winner on Wednesday and has posted goals in three of the past four contests.
  • Zach Werenski, who has notched two assists in consecutive contests, leads NHL blueliners in goals (19), points (57), multi-point efforts (19), points-per-game (1.19), and shots on goal (172) this season. He has points in 27 of his past 32 contests overall to lead league defensemen in goals, points, and points-per-game since Nov. 13 (15-31-46, 1.44).

Blue Jackets Stats

  • Power Play - 19.4% - 19th in the NHL
  • Penalty Kill - 76.2% - 28th in the NHL
  • Goals For - 158 - 19th in the NHL
  • Goals Against - 171 - 23rd in the NHL  

Blackhawks Stats

  • Power Play - 19.9% - 17th in the NHL
  • Penalty Kill - 85.5% - 1st in the NHL
  • Goals For - 141 - 27th in the NHL
  • Goals Against - 163 - 18th in the NHL

Series History vs. TheBlackhawks

  • Columbus is 42-46-2-13 all-time, and 20-25-1-5 on the road in Chicago.
  • The Blue Jackets are 6-0-1 in the last 7 games of the series and have won 5-straight overall.
  • The CBJ won both games against the Blackhawks last season.

Who To Watch For TheBlackhawks

  • Tyler Bertuzzi leads the Blackhawks with 25 goals.
  • Connor Bedard leads Chicago with 29 assists and 49 points.
  • Goalie Spencer Knight is 15-14-7 with a SV% of .910.

CBJ Player Notes vs.Blackhawks

  • Zach Werenski has 19 points in 18 career games vs. the Blackhawks.
  • Boone Jenner has 12 points in 22 games.
  • Charlie Coyle has 11 points in 38 games against Chicago.

Injured Reserve

  • Brendan Smith - Lower Body - Missed 14 Games IR - Out for the rest of the regular season.

TOTAL MAN GAMES LOST: 147

How to Watch & Listen: Tonight's game will be on FANDUEL SPORTS NETWORK. The radio broadcast will be on 97.1 The Fan, with Bob McElligott behind the mic doing the play-by-play.  

* Simulcasted on CW Columbus, WUAB in Cleveland, WXIX in Cincinnati, WZCD in Dayton, WQCW in Charleston/Huntington, WV, WKYT in Lexington, KY and WAVE in Louisville, KY

Stay updated with the most interesting Blue Jackets stories, analysis, breaking news, and more!

Tap the star to add us to your favorites on Google News and never miss a story. 

Let us know what you think below.

For action-packed issues, access to the entire magazine archive and a free issue, subscribe to The Hockey News at THN.com/free. Get the latest news and trending stories by subscribing to our newsletter here. And share your thoughts by commenting below the article on THN.com or creating your own post in our community forum.

Champions League playoffs: Benfica get Real Madrid rematch, Newcastle face Qarabag

  • Benfica goalkeeper Trubin scored in 4-2 win over Madrid

  • Eddie Howe’s men face 3,000-mile trip for first leg

Real Madrid have been dealt an instant rematch with José Mourinho’s Benfica in the Champions League playoffs. The Portuguese club will seek a repeat of Wednesday’s astonishing 4-2 victory against the Spanish giants, when their goalkeeper Anatoliy Trubin scored deep into injury time to send them through, and host the first leg in Lisbon.

It is the headline tie in a draw that also gives Newcastle a 3,000-mile journey to Azerbaijan for a first leg against Qarabag. Eddie Howe’s side will feel confident after an impressive display in holding Paris Saint-Germain, last season’s winners, to a 1-1 draw at Parc des Princes on Wednesday, although they will be aware that the Azeri champions, beaten 6-0 at Liverpool, held Chelsea to a 2-2 draw on home soil in November. They will face Barcelona or, in an all-Premier League clash, Chelsea if they go through.

Continue reading...

Cooper Flagg just played one of the best basketball games by an NBA rookie, ever

DALLAS, TEXAS - JANUARY 29: Cooper Flagg #32 of the Dallas Mavericks makes a move to the basket against Moussa Diabate #14 of the Charlotte Hornets during the fourth quarter at American Airlines Center on January 29, 2026 in Dallas, Texas. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Sam Hodde/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Only eight NBA rookies have ever scored more points in a game than Cooper Flagg did in the Dallas Mavericks’ (19-29) heartbreaking 123-121 loss to the Charlotte Hornets at American Airlines Center on Thursday.

Wilt Chamberlain scored 52 or more points five times in his rookie season of 1959-60 and owns the single-game rookie scoring record of 58 points, which came against the New York Knicks on Feb. 21, 1960. Five years later, Rick Barry scored 57 points as a rookie, also against the Knicks. Earl “The Pearl” Monroe scored 56 as a rookie in 1968 against the Los Angeles Lakers, and Milwaukee Bucks’ rookie Brandon Jennings went out of his mind for 55 against the Golden State Warriors in 2009. Jennings matched Elgin Baylor’s high-scoring game as a rookie 50 years after Baylor scored 55 for the Minneapolis Lakers against the Cincinnati Royals. Elvin Hayes scored 54 against the Detroit Pistons in 1968, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar scored 51 against the Seattle Supersonics in 1970 and Allen Iverson scored 50 against the Cleveland Cavaliers in 1997.

That is the rarified air that Flagg entered on Thursday with his 49 points on 20-of-29 shooting, to go along with 10 rebounds against his former Duke roommate Kon Knueppel and the Hornets. Flagg’s 49 points also matched the rookie-season-high scoring mark of some guy named Michael Jordan. His Airness poured in 49 in a 136-129 win over the Detroit Pistons on Feb. 12, 1985 in the most prolific scoring outburst of Jordan’s rookie campaign.

Rookies just don’t do the things that Flagg does — and that’s before you take into account the fact that Flagg started doing these things as an 18-year-old. Scoring 49 points in an NBA game at Age 19 is unheard of. Chamberlain was 23 years old when he rewrote the NBA record books as a rookie in 1959-60. Barry was 21 and nine months when he scored 57 points in a game during his rookie season. Jennings was a full year and change older than Flagg when he scored 55 points as a rookie for the Bucks. Iverson was two months shy of 22 when he scored 50 as a rook. Flagg became, with Thursday’s performance, the youngest player in NBA history (19 years, 35 days) to record a 45-point game.

Mavericks fans have seen some things, man. The 2011 NBA championship was a basketball fairy tale written by a team that zigged when the entire league was mid-zag, with the unlikeliest of protagonists at center stage. The rise of basketball savant Luka Dončić in our own backyard was the stuff of legend, made all the more quizzical by his untimely ouster. When it’s all said and done, though, the Legend of Flagg has the potential to move all that to one side if his career continues on the trajectory his rookie season has taken off on.

When people tell you who they are, it’s wise to believe them. When people show you who they are and what they’re about, you’re left with no choice in the matter. Flagg’s ability to take over a game is no mere flash in the pan. He shows us the fundamentals that gird his game-changing, high-flying explosiveness on a night-in, night-out basis. His game isn’t perfect, but he’s already shown a unique aptitude for learning on the fly and improving the weak spots in his game on the job as the youngest player in the league. Just wait until he’s had a full NBA offseason or two under his belt.

This kid is already a certified monster. He’s an omega-level mutant in a world of superheroes — there appears to be no upper limit to the development of the powers he possesses. Flagg defends better than any rookie we’ve seen take a swim through Dallas, both in passing lanes and on the ball. He can get to the rim against basically anyone. His mid-range game could fool a casual fan into believing they’re watching the savviest vet in the game. If Flagg ever becomes a true 3-point shooter and if he can cut his turnovers by a third, he’s going to be the best player in the NBA one day.

All that is to say nothing of Flagg’s most impressive skill — the ability to elevate his game in the final five minutes of a close game. He’s a killer. His game-tying 3-pointer on Thursday over the outstretched arm of 6’10” forward Moussa Diabate with 33 seconds showing on the clock is just the latest evidence of Flagg’s latent greatness, magnified when the lights are at their brightest.

The lumps he’s taking with a ragged roster around him in his rookie season will serve Flagg well, as long as the Mavericks’ front office can get its shit together behind whoever is inserted into the captain’s chair as the team’s next general manager. As exciting as Flagg’s rapid on-the-job development has been to watch in his rookie season, his demeanor is the glue that will eventually hold a winning team together.

DALLAS, TEXAS – JANUARY 29: Cooper Flagg #32 of the Dallas Mavericks dunks as Moussa Diabate #14 of the Charlotte Hornets defends during the second quarter at American Airlines Center on January 29, 2026 in Dallas, Texas. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Sam Hodde/Getty Images) | Getty Images

“It’s tough,” Flagg said in his postgame press conference on Thursday. “We fight the whole game, play really heard, stick together, give ourselves a chance to win. It’s tough, but there [are] a lot of positives we can take from this. … With the turnover, I’ve just got to be better. I haven’t seen a ton of double-teams closing out games, so I just have to be a lot better.”

This is not a young man getting in over his skis or drunk on his own power. This is a kid who knows only winning and has a thirst to get back to his regularly scheduled dominance as soon as the roster around him allows for it.

“Ten-plus years down the road, we’ll both be looking back on this as a pretty special thing,” Flagg said on Thursday. He was referring specifically to his in-game battle with his friend Knueppel, who piled up 34 points on eight made 3-pointers for the Hornets in the win, but Mavs fans are no doubt envisioning another “pretty special thing” when they peer 10 years into Flagg’s potential career arc.

It’s hard not to, even as we recover from a deep burn less than a year old, because we’re bearing witness to things already in Flagg’s rookie season that few fans are lucky enough to catch a glimpse of. Let’s not take this for granted. The history books suggest not to.

Canadiens: Dobes Shines In Big Win

After being humiliated 7-2 by the Colorado Avalanche at the end of November, Jakub Dobes and the Montreal Canadiens had a chance to make amends at the Bell Centre on Thursday night. With the NHL’s agreement, the visitors were wearing their alternate blue Quebec Nordiques jersey, which allowed the Habs to market the game as a new chapter of the Battle of Quebec. It might not have been the real deal, but the 21,000 fans that filled up the arena seemed to love it as they sang along to the Canadian anthem louder than ever.

After the November defeat, Martin St-Louis had taken the blame, saying his strategy wasn’t right on the night as he had instructed his men to let the Avs players come to them rather than being aggressive on the forecheck. Given how badly that strategy failed, it wasn’t surprising to see the Habs play a much more aggressive brand of hockey on Thursday.

Canadiens: Looking For Revenge Against the Nordiques
Canadiens’ Power Play Is Powerless Without Hutson
Canadiens: More On Eric Raymond’s Firing

Mission Accomplished

For a second game in a row, Dobes played a significant role in the Canadiens’ win. While he wasn’t tested much in the first frame when the Avalanche only took five shots on goal, thanks in part to seven blocked shots by the Habs, he took center stage in the middle frame.

As soon as the 2nd period started, Martin Necas got to the net from the wing, and the Habs goalie was ready, sticking the pad out. Seconds later, with Montreal on the penalty kill, Mike Matheson turned the puck over in front of the net to Nathan MacKinnon, and he was stoned cold by Dobes. Minutes later, it was Parker Kelly who was alone in front, and he was stopped as well. Samuel Girard suffered the same fate on a breakaway; Dobes was in the zone.

Yesterday, Martin St-Louis praised Dobes’ compete level, and that character trait was on full display again tonight. The netminder was aggressive, challenging the shooters, coming out of his net and making the big saves. On Colorado’s second goal, he sent a big rebound to the side, unaware that Joel Kiviranta was right there, but he still dove for the puck. He believes he can stop any shot, and it shows. He didn’t get it, but it doesn’t matter; he fought for it.

For a second game in a row, Dobes was named the second star of the night, and he can honestly say mission accomplished after his performance in this 7-3 win over the best team in the league.

On The Pairings

Instead of using his usual pairings, St-Louis used Mike Matheson with Kaiden Guhle and Lane Hutson with Noah Dobson. Asked what motivated the change, the coach explained that with Colorado’s top line, he wanted to have a real shut-down pairing:

When there’s a first time that’s so loaded, I think it helps to have skaters like Guhles and Matheson, who cover a lot of space. We did it last year as well; it’s not new. We knew we could do that. Sometimes, you get led in a direction. When you give Guhle that kind of challenge, his game rises. I liked what I saw.

Guhle played over 22 minutes tonight, by far his highest total since he came back from injury, and he had a great game. Of course, there was that scary moment when he collided with Josh Manson and left the ice, spiking his helmet on his way to the room while holding his other arm completely still, which made everyone fear the worst. When he got back on the ice, though, he completely obliterated Artturi Lehkonen with a bone-crushing hit. I believe that translates to “I’m fine” in Guhle talk.

It’s also worth mentioning that Arber Xhekaj had a good game as well tonight. He was on the ice for 13:38 and made several good, safe plays. At one stage, he was going to hit someone in the boards, but he had the discipline to stop himself when he saw how the player was positioned. Not so long ago, he would have finished the check and gotten himself a boarding call; his game has really matured.

On The Third Line

Things are starting to click between Zach Bolduc, Jake Evans, and Kirby Dach. The line produced two of the team’s seven goals and was often in complete control on the ice, not giving the Avalanche a chance to come up for air. In their own zone, they were also very efficient, accounting for five of the 21 shots the Canadiens blocked.

Dach and Bolduc already had some chemistry before the former’s injury, but they were playing with Brendan Gallagher then; it’s reassuring to see that adding Evans to the combination has only made it stronger.

Overall, the Canadiens played a really clean game tonight, and when they made mistakes, Dobes was there to bail them out. Granted, Colorado was playing a second game in as many nights, but that doesn’t diminish how good a performance the Canadiens had.


Follow Karine on X @KarineHains Bluesky @karinehains.bsky.social and Threads @karinehains.  

Bookmark The Hockey News Canadiens' page for all the news and happenings around the Canadiens.

Join the discussion by signing up to the Canadiens' roundtable on The Hockey News.

Subscribe to The Hockey News at THN.com/free. Get the latest news and trending stories by subscribing to our newsletter here

Three Takeaways: Panthers Giving Maximum Effort, Costly Errors Difficult To Overcome

A frustrating season for the Florida Panthers may have hit its peak on Thursday night.

Playing their tenth road game of the month, Florida rebounded from some rough moments in the first 20 minutes and appeared to give themselves a good chance at two points against the St. Louis Blues.

Alas, a questionable late penalty led to a last-second power play goal by the home team and sent the Panthers home to South Florida empty handed.

“That’s a tough one to swallow,” forward Sam Reinhart said afterwards.

Indeed, Sam.

Let’s get to the takeaways:

EXASPERATING WAY TO LOSE

It’s hard to put it better than Reinhart did.

Did Florida deserve to win? Eh, based off their first period (and we’ll get to that in a second), perhaps not.

But based off the effort they put forth in turning the game around, not getting down on themselves and playing the right way while clawing their way back, they absolutely deserved better than losing in the final seconds on a power play goal that came off a marginal call, though a tough one to make, to be fair.

“It’s heartbreaking because you fight back and get into it the way we did, and get so close to killing it off, with some great blocks and great battles,” said Panthers Head Coach Paul Maurice. “That's a tough one.”

UNCHARACTERISTIC ERRORS QUITE COSTLY

Despite taking an early lead in St. Louis, Florida quickly fell behind thanks to a couple of plays that had Maurice and his staff quite unhappy on the bench.

First it was Jake Neighbours getting behind Florida’s defense for a quick breakaway goal, and then a seemingly harmless zone entry by the Blues turned deadly when the Cats failed to pick up Jordan Kyrou in the middle of the ice.

Being the veteran, mature team that they are, Florida didn’t allow the game to spiral out of control, instead digging in and starting to put in the work on mounting a comeback.

But at the end of the day, the Panthers need to tighten the screws because these are mistake they generally do not make.

“We were a little simpler and we were a little more conscientious with what we did with the puck, and we didn’t get so far apart from each other,” Maurice said. “We had some egregious errors in the first (period) that ended up in our net.”

EVERYONE PULLING THE ROPE

There is a long list of valid reasons as to why the Panthers are where they are currently.

More than halfway through the season, Florida is fighting to maintain a spot in a crowded playoff race after an injury-plagued first half has cost them any kind of ability to manage players or playing time as the postseason nears.

It’s going to be balls to the walls from here on out, and there isn’t a person in that room who isn’t ready or up for the challenge.

“We may not have played the smartest first period we ever played, but nobody is not giving (it their all),” Maurice said. “We're paying the price for a tough schedule and a lot of guys out of lineup, and we've run some guys so hard that they’re doing it on will now.”

LATEST STORIES FROM THE HOCKEY NEWS - FLORIDA

Panthers Give Up Power Play Goal With 8.4 Seconds Left, Lose 5-4 In St. Louis

Anton Lundell Will Be Out As Panthers Face Blues; Daniil Tarasov To Start

Panthers look to continue recent road success during quick trip to Matthew Tkachuk's hometown of St. Louis

Panthers' Anton Lundell And Aaron Ekblad Avoid Injuries Despite Leaving Game Early Against Mammoth

Three takeaways: Panthers receive another injury scare, embellishment calls bury comeback attempt

Photo caption: Jan 29, 2026; St. Louis, Missouri, USA; St. Louis Blues right wing Jimmy Snuggerud (21) celebrates with right wing Jordan Kyrou (25) after scoring the game winning goal against the Florida Panthers during the third period at Enterprise Center. (Jeff Curry-Imagn Images)

DitD & Open Post – 1/30/26: Lower-Body Edition

NEWARK, NEW JERSEY - JANUARY 29: Roman Josi #59 of the Nashville Predators looks to play the puck while being defended by Jack Hughes #86 of the New Jersey Devils during the first period at Prudential Center on January 29, 2026 in Newark, New Jersey. (Photo by Ishika Samant/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Here are your links for today:

Devils Links

A tying third-period goal from Jesper Bratt, and a Nico Hischier goal in overtime pushed the Devils to a 3-2 win over the Predators on Thursday. [Devils NHL]

Well!

“The Devils did well in the Palát half of this trade, but Tsyplakov is not a bum. He only has one goal and one assist in 27 games this season, but he was a legit middle-six winger as a rookie last season. Tsyplakov was one of the Islanders’ more efficient five-on-five scorers a season ago, averaging 1.84 points per 60 minutes. That ranked fifth among the team’s skaters.” [Devils on the Rush]

“Things have changed leading up to the Palat trade with some Devils trade chips. With the expectation that New Jersey isn’t done dealing, what tier do each of their assets live in?” [New Jersey Hockey Now]

On Luke Hughes: “As well as he anticipates offensively, it just hasn’t connected when he doesn’t have the puck on his stick. And those mistakes can spiral and directly contribute to the Devils falling behind in games. The circumstances around him have put even more attention on that. If Hughes can start processing defensive situations quicker and more efficiently, he should be able to problem solve back to offensive situations — and that’s the area of his game that really lacks. Fixing that will keep him on the path to becoming a true top-pair caliber defenseman.” [The Athletic ($)]

Hockey Links

It’s still hard to believe this is happening in Tampa, but it is: “The crew building the ice rink for the 2026 Navy Federal Credit Union Stadium Series feels it has hit the lottery despite it being one of the trickiest projects in the NHL’s 23-year history of outdoor games.” [NHL.com]

Stadium Series announcement:

Artemi Panarin:

A look at the trade and contract extension market for Artemi Panarin: “It most likely involves teams that aren’t scared of signing a 34-year-old player to a four-year extension with, perhaps, a double-digit average annual salary. That’s what we think the extension would be if this gets done.” [TSN]

A look at how seven early NHL trades have worked out so far: [Sportsnet]

Assessing 12 rebuilding franchises and where they stand on their journeys: [Daily Faceoff]

Feel free to discuss these and any other hockey-related stories in the comments below.

Chicago Cubs history unpacked, January 30

On Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays, Bleed Cubbie Blue is pleased to present a Cubs-centric look at baseball’s colorful past. Here’s a handy Cubs timeline, to help you follow the various narrative paths.

“Maybe I called it wrong, but it’s official.” — Tom Connolly, HoF Umpire.

Happy birthday to Brailyn Marquez*, Grover Cleveland Alexander threatens to retire,and other stories.

Today in baseball history:

  • 1917 – Pitcher Grover Cleveland Alexander announces he is ready to retire from professional baseball and join a semipro team if his salary demands are not met. Alexander wants a three-year contract at $15,000 per year. (2)
  • 1926 – The Major League Rules Committee agrees that pitchers may have access to a rosin bag. On February 8, the American League will refuse to permit its use, but on April 28th, the league will give in and allow a rosin bag on the field, but discourage its use by players. The Committee also discusses the possible elimination of the intentional walk, a topic that has come up before, by making the pitcher throw to the batter. Calling a balk on the catcher if he steps out of his box has not eliminated the intentional walk as intended. No action is taken, however. (2)
  • 1952 – Peter J. McGovern becomes the Little League‘s first full-time president and the league’s office is moved to Williamsport, Pennsylvania. (2)
  • 1958 – Commissioner Ford Frick announces that players and coaches, rather than the fans, will vote on selections for the All-Star Game. The vote will not return to the fans until 1970, when Commissioner Bowie Kuhn reverses Frick’s action. The decision is a reaction to alleged ballot box stuffing by Cincinnati fans before last year’s All-Star Game. (2)
  • 1987 – The Oakland Athletics acquire veteran third baseman Ron Cey from the Chicago Cubs for infielder Luis Quiñones. Cey will hit .221 for Oakland this year – his final major league season. (2)
  • 2006 – The Cubs and Jerry Hairston Jr. (.261, 4, 30) avoid salary arbitration when the second baseman/outfielder agrees to a one-year, $2.3 million deal. The 29-year-old Illinois native was acquired from the Orioles last February for slugger Sammy Sosa. (2)
  • 2011 – The Cubs sign two Cuban defectors who once played for the junior national team, OF Rubi Silva and C Yaniel Cabeza, both 21 and already veterans of the Serie Nacional. (2)
  • 2017 – Commissioner Rob Manfred issues a ruling in the case of an employee of the St. Louis Cardinals caught for hacking into the scouting database of the Houston Astros. The Cards are fined $2 million, which they must pay to Houston, and also surrender two top picks in the upcoming amateur draft to the Astros. The guilty former employee, Chris Correa, incurs a lifetime ban. This is on the top of the 46-month prison sentence and $279,000 fine he received after pleading guilty to federal charges last July. (2)

Cubs Birthdays:Doc WatsonVin CampbellDavey JohnsonMatt AlexanderBrailyn Marquez*.

Today in History:

  • 1661 – Oliver Cromwell, Lord Protector of the Commonwealth of England is ritually executed after having been dead for two years.
  • 1835 – Richard Lawrence misfires at President Andrew Jackson in Washington, D.C. in first attempted assassination of a US President.

Common sources:

*pictured.

Some of these items spread from site to site without being fact-checked, and that is why we ask for verifiable sources, in order to help correct the record.

Phillies News: Zack Wheeler, Otto Kemp, the Outfield

WASHINGTON, DC - AUGUST 15: Zack Wheeler #45 of the Philadelphia Phillies pitches during a baseball game against the Washington Nationals at Nationals Park on August 15, 2025 in Washington, DC. (Photo by Mitchell Layton/Getty Images) | Getty Images

It’s cold. Very cold. You know where it’s not cold? Clearwater.

Now is a pretty good time to plan a Spring Training trip.

Phillies news

Zack Wheeler was set to play for Team USA in the World Baseball Classic before his injury derailed the plans.

MLB.com takes a look at the Phillies’ outfield for the upcoming season.

Lochlahn March of the Inquirer looks at what Otto Kemp can contribute to the team. ($)

MLB news

Farm system rankings! Get your farm system rankings here!

One player in each division you can’t take your eyes off of. Will Phillies fans like the choice for the NL East? No, but it’s hard to argue against it.

The Yankees and Angels made a trade, with the Halos getting a pitcher and the Pinstripes getting cash considerations.

Orioles news: The O’s farm system is on the upswing

Sep 12, 2025; Toronto, Ontario, CAN; Baltimore Orioles catcher Samuel Basallo (29) hits a double against the Toronto Blue Jays during the third inning at Rogers Centre. Mandatory Credit: Nick Turchiaro-Imagn Images | Nick Turchiaro-Imagn Images

Good morning, Camden Chatters.

This week has brought a renewed focus on the Orioles’ farm system — well, theirs and everyone else’s — as various publications have updated their prospect rankings for 2026, including The Athletic and ESPN. Several O’s prospects have gotten high marks, led by Samuel Basallo, who has been a consensus top-10 MLB prospect on every list so far.

Overall, the Orioles’ prospect depth seems stronger now than it was at this time last year, at least according to The Athletic’s Keith Law, who ranked the Birds as the #9 farm system in baseball. (A year ago, he had the Orioles ranked 20th.) The Birds’ improvement, Law writes, stems from a recent few months in which they have “had a banner draft, made several small trades for prospect depth, and seen several guys (Nate George, Dylan Beavers, Luis De León and Esteban Mejia) take big steps forward.”

“Depth” feels like the right word there. The Orioles’ farm isn’t quite at the level of 2021-23, when they regularly carried the most exciting prospects in baseball — Adley Rutschman, Gunnar Henderson, Grayson Rodriguez, Jackson Holliday. This time, they don’t boast a slew of blue-chip, high-end prospects beyond Basallo. But they’ve got a whole bunch of guys with intriguing tools who are progressing nicely through the system and should contribute at the MLB level. Not every prospect is going to be a future superstar — and so far nobody of the Orioles’ previous batch has come close, beyond Henderson — but if you’ve got depth of talent all throughout your organization, you increase your odds of building a quality major league team.

I should begrudgingly mention, of course, that the reason the Orioles were able to add so much prospect depth in 2025 is because their team utterly stunk. That set off a trade-deadline selling spree in which nine O’s veterans were dealt for 15 prospects (16, if you count the draft pick the O’s acquired for Bryan Baker, which later became Slater de Brun, although he has since been traded anyway). Not all of those prospects are highly regarded, but collectively they’ve strengthened the farm system. That’s one good thing that came out of a lousy season.

The Orioles’ talent pipeline continues to churn. With any luck, it’ll lead to an O’s bounceback in 2026 and plenty more winning teams in the future.

Links

Still waiting on Framber Valdez and Zac Gallen – Steve Melewski

It’s weird that neither of these two prominent pitchers has signed yet with spring training just two weeks away. Ask Jordan Montgomery how getting a late start to the season worked out for him a couple of years ago.

Tyler Wells ready for any role Orioles have in mind – BaltimoreBaseball.com

You could do worse as a fifth starter than Tyler Wells. … I mean, a team could do worse. You would obviously do much worse than him.

Why O’s are excited about Basallo’s potential in ’26 – MLB.com

They signed him for eight years. They’d better be excited!

Because You Asked – Revenge of the Fallen – School of Roch

Roch Kubatko suggests that Ryan Mountcastle and Coby Mayo could coexist on the O’s roster if they don’t have a utility infielder. I just don’t see how it’s possible, unless each of them is fine with getting, like, two starts per week.

With only the Orioles now, MASN remains ‘viable,’ team official says – The Baltimore Banner

The Orioles intend to live it up on MASN now that they no longer have to worry about Nationals coverage. But don’t worry, there will still be 21 hours per day of broadcasting World Chase Tag, Wingshooting USA, and random gambling shows.

Orioles birthdays and history

Is today your birthday? Happy birthday! Three former Orioles have birthdays today, including the late Davey Johnson (b. 1943, d. 2025), who was both an All-Star second baseman and one of the best managers in O’s history, though far too briefly. Also born on Jan. 30 were right-hander Joe Kerrigan (72) and the late first baseman Walt Dropo (b. 1923, d. 2010).

On this date in 1997, the Orioles signed utility infielder Jeff Reboulet as a free agent. Reboulet was a well below-average hitter, with just a 61 OPS+ in his three seasons with the Birds, but was legendary for his inexplicable success against Hall of Fame lefty Randy Johnson. Reboulet posted a .790 career OPS in 60 career PAs against the Big Unit, including a home run off of him in the Orioles’ 1997 Division Series win against the Mariners.

And on this day in 2003, the O’s elected Cal Ripken Jr. into the Orioles Hall of Fame. Phew! Thank goodness he got enough votes.

Inside the Suns: Injuries, Jordan Ott, Jamaree Bouyea, Isaiah Livers

NEW YORK, NEW YORK - JANUARY 17: Head Coach Jordan Ott of the Phoenix Suns instructs his team during the game against the New York Knicks at Madison Square Garden on January 17, 2026 in New York City. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Evan Bernstein/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Welcome to Inside the Suns, your weekly deep down analysis of the current Phoenix Suns team. Each week the Fantable — a round table of Bright Siders — give their takes on the Suns’ latest issues and news.

Fantable Questions of the Week

Q1: The Suns were slowly but steadily rising in the standings before Booker and Green went down with injuries, but have stumbled since then. Do you believe that the Suns currently have enough talent on their roster to successfully adapt to playing without them?

GuarGuar: I don’t think we have enough talent to beat good-to-great teams as long as Book and Jalen are out. Our offense just becomes way too bad, and we are unable to consistently generate good looks at all. Their gravity means so much to what we do, especially Book.

Ashton: I do not.

Look, I am getting sick of “re-evaluation” timelines that literally mean nothing. It means both players need recovery. Yes, this is probably a rant, but what the hell is going on with communication between the medical staff and trainers to the coach and the front office?

Trainer: Player X had reflexes when hit with a medical hammer in his right knee. He is good to go.

Front Office: Okay.

Fire those guys! No commercials saying that you are proud Suns supporters from the medical community unless you can properly diagnose that they need to rest. I want a true medical opinion from someone who is not a Suns fan.

Look, I love this win streak as much as the board does, but enough is enough. If it costs some wins, then it is what it is. But let’s really get to the heart of the matter. It is NBA scheduling to squeeze as much blood out of a turnip with the B2B’s and cross-country road games. It is basically killing the livelihood of the game and the established players who play it.

This may be the future of the NBA? Because the injury endemic is not just contained to the Suns, it is across the entire league.

Oh yeah, the question. I love the younger legs that are playing on the roster, but in the end, I expect the Suns to lose a couple.

OldAz: It depends on if they are playing at home or not. On the road, they are only competing with bottom dwellers without Book and Green. At home, however, it is a completely different story. The reason? Dillon Brooks. Most role players play better at home. The crowd, familiar surroundings, pregame rituals all contribute. But without Green and Booker, Brooks is their leader and best player. At home he averages 24.2 on 50/40/89 splits which is significantly better than his road averages of 17.9 on 39/34/84. Those splits are way too pedestrian from your best player when you competing on the road. Additionally, no one able to penetrate into the lane minimizes the impact Gillespie and the 3 point shooters can have.

Rod: This made me think of a time long ago when a friend and I went motocross racing, and he broke his bike’s chain during practice. All we needed to fix it was a new master link, but we didn’t have one. We tried several oddball fixes, but none worked, and he couldn’t race that day.

With Book and Green out, the Suns are kind of like that chain. All the remaining links are fine, but without that master link to tie them together, it will not be able to function. With the Suns, I don’t think talent is so much the issue as the right type of talent to make the rest of the team function well together.

Book and Green are the team’s two master links and, much like my friend and I at the races, they don’t have another master link in their toolbox to replace either of them with. Whatever the Suns can Rube Goldberg together while they’re out might work for a short time but I don’t believe we can hope for more than the Suns treading water in the standings and playing .500 ball until at least one of them returns…and even that may just be wishful thinking.

Q2: What adjustments do you think Jordan Ott should make to attempt to get the most out of the team while Book and Green are sidelined?

GuarGuar: The only other player who can generate offense and create opportunities for others is Gillespie. Our offense needs to run through him the most with Book and Jalen out. Brooks is a ball stopper, and we cannot be running the majority of our offense through him; we won’t get anywhere. Grayson is a great guard at attacking close outs and playing in space…not creating his own shot. I’d try to feature Mark post-ups a little bit more, but overall, if we are gonna win with this current group, it’s going to be because of defense.

Ashton: None. There are still plenty of guards to fill the role, even with Goodie in a face mask and CG out with a hand sprain.

If there was one adjustment I would make, it would probably be to put Brooks in a “Jason Vorhees” hockey mask with some type of AI-driven voice moderation. Maybe then the refs will not notice him because the Suns will be without his services for a game or three.

OldAz: I would do 2 things. First, focus on defense. The players that remain are mostly tenacious defenders (and O’Neale tries really hard). Like in the first half against the Pistons, their defense can carry them to compete against a lot of teams in the league when their top scoring option (or 2) is on the shelf.

Second, the have to develop more 2 man actions. Williams, Oso, Dunn can all be good screen partners allowing Gillespie, Allen or Bouyea to get into the lane. This has the added benefit of potentially getting the other 3 on the floor for some of those catch and shoot 3 opportunities that have dried up since Book’s exit.

Rod: I think the Suns need to simplify their offense and concentrate more on getting more points inside the paint instead of continuing to fire away from three. They especially need to get Williams more touches and tell Oso to drive to the basket more when he’s switched onto a smaller player. They just don’t work hard enough to get the ball into Williams’ hands, and Oso isn’t usually very aggressive on offense, preferring to pass rather than attempt to score on most nights. We saw a lot of that (minus the Oso being more aggressive) against Brooklyn…and it worked!

Once they get teams worried about them getting into the paint, they should begin seeing more open shots available from outside. But even when fully/mostly healthy again, going back to an offense that heavily relies upon three-point shots shouldn’t be the goal. They say that variety is the spice of life but I think that variety is also the key to a successful offense in the NBA.

Q3:Suns two-way contract players Jamaree Bouyea and Isaiah Livers are both running low on game eligibility. The Suns currently have one open roster spot, which they could use to convert one of their contracts to a standard NBA deal, which would make that player eligible to play in all of the team’s remaining games (including the playoffs).

Which of them do you currently believe is the better choice to convert?

GuarGuar: This is a really tough question because both have played really well when given minutes, and I’d want both on our roster going forward. That being said, assuming Jalen is gonna be ok health-wise, it makes more sense to sign Livers because we lack players at his position. We don’t have a ton of wings, and while Livers isn’t very big, he’s able to slide into some of those forward spots and be effective. I love what Bouyea has brought this year, though I wish we could sign both.

Ashton: The better question is why not convert two roster spots for both? Waive Nick Richards. I might take some flak for that statement but, bam, under the luxury tax and two roster spots open that keeps the Suns under the tax line. It is tax season after all. Major edit here, Rod basically told me that even waiving Richards and keeping both of the young talented players actually increases the tax penalty. Oh man, I knew I was going to get slapped upside the head on this question.

Still, I think the conversation needs to be about opening roster spots. And I want them both. If you can make it work, please comment in the section below.

I think both Bouyea and Livers (common all, these rank among some of the best last names in NBA history) just need some future development, and that is what has gotten the Suns this far. Yes, Livers has an injury issue, but I am all in on youth development at this point.

However, if I had to pick just one, it would be Jamaree with the most potential. Tough call.

OldAz: You just had to time this question for right after their really good showing against the Pistons (admittedly, I am writing this at halftime, so hopefully neither one poops the bed in the 2nd half). If this team is fully healthy, Livers fills a role which is a greater need. In reality, they have yet to be healthy so having an extra player who can shoot and handle the ball is very valuable.

Both really do deserve a full contract. In reality both have far more value than Nigel-Hayes Davis and even Nick Richards. Ideally, if they can Move Richards and it does not bring back a PF that earns minutes then hopefully the deadline deal both frees up another roster spot AND saves them enough money that converting both of them does not put them back over the tax level. That’s a lot to hope for, so I will just answer the question and say Livers. When Book and Green return, there really won’t be many minutes for Bouyea and Book and Green don’t do the things Livers can do.

Rod: Hopefully they’ll be able to convert both of them before the end of the season but, assuming that both Book and Green return soon (and can stay healthy), I’d pick Livers. He gets my vote because he fits the need for more big bodies up front (yeah, he’s only 6’6″ but he’s also 232 lbs of muscle) and he’s proven productive on the court.

At this point in time, we have no idea what might happen at the trade deadline which could change everything. We might have space to convert both of them or some sort of deal might come flying in from out of left field that leaves the Suns without a roster spot to convert either one…or a need to do so.

As always, many thanks to our Fantable members for all their extra effort this week!


Quotes of the Week

“We have to do more, keep him (Mark Williams) going.” – Jordan Ott

“I just want to continue to be out there, doing whatever I can in my power to be the best version of myself and try to get some wins.” – Mark Williams

“I feel good any game that we go into with our defenders. We love taking the challenge, make things tough for the opponent. That’s what we’re going to do, create havoc.” – Royce O’Neale

“We’re not backing down from that (physicality). That’s not the message that JO (Jordan Ott) has had to us this whole year. That’s not the message that BG (GM Brian Gregory) has had. That’s not the message (team owner) Mat Ishbia has had for this team. We’re not going to back down from physicality. Wherever that line is, we’re OK with it.” – Grayson Allen


Suns Trivia/History

Mark Williams’ 27 points (13-of-15 FG) vs Brooklyn was his most in a Suns uniform and is tied for the third best in his career. His career high is 38 points with the Hornets during a game vs the Grizzlies back on Jan. 22, 2025.

On February 1, 2016, after getting off to a 14-35 start, the Suns fired head coach Jeff Hornacek and appointed Earl Watson as interim head coach. The Suns would continue to struggle throughout the rest of the season to finish with a 23-59 record.

On February 4, 1969, the expansion Suns defeated the Philadelphia 76ers 125-116 to post their 13th win of the season. It was the third win in their first-ever 3-game win streak, and the last time they would have successive wins that season.

On February 6, 2008, the 34-14 Suns traded Marcus Banks and four-time All-Star Shawn Marion to the Miami Heat for Shaquille O’Neal. O’Neal, who had been sidelined with a hip injury before the trade, was inactive for his first 5 games as a Sun but would start for the Suns, averaging 12.9 points and 10.6 rebounds, in 28 of their final 29 games of the season, in which they were 17-11. The Suns would finish the season as the 6th seed in the West with a 55-27 record and bow out of the playoffs quickly, losing their 1st round series with the San Antonio Spurs 4-1.


This Week’s Game Schedule

Friday, Jan 30 – Suns @ Cleveland Cavaliers (7:00 pm)
Sunday, Feb 1 – Suns vs LA Clippers (6:00 pm)
Tuesday, Feb 3 – Suns @ Portland Trail Blazers (9:00 pm) NBC/Peacock
Thursday, Feb 5 – Suns vs Golden State Warriors (8:00 pm) Prime Video


This Week’s Valley Suns Game Schedule

Friday, Jan 30 – Valley Suns vs Delaware Blue Coats (7:00 pm)
Sunday, Feb 1 – Valley Suns vs Delaware Blue Coats (2:00 pm)
Wednesday, Feb 4 – Valley Suns @ Rio Grande Valley Vipers (10:00 am)


Important Future Dates

Feb. 5 – Trade deadline (3:00 pm ET)
Feb. 13-15 – 2026 NBA All-Star weekend in Los Angeles, CA
March 1 – Playoff eligibility waiver deadline
March 28 – NBA G League Regular Season ends
March 31 – 2026 NBA G League Playoffs begin
April 12 – Regular season ends (All 30 teams play)
April 13 – Rosters set for NBA Playoffs 2026 (3 p.m. ET)
April 14-17 – SoFi NBA Play-In Tournament
April 18 – NBA Playoffs begin

Open Thread: Carter Bryant to participate in NBA Slam Dunk Contest

First Victor Wembanyama is named the to the NBA All-Star starting five, the first French player in history to garner the honors.

Then the three young guards — Stephon Castle, Dylan Harper, and David Jones Garcia — were named to the NBA Rising Star competition.

And now Spurs rookie Carter Bryant has signed on to the Slam Dunk Contest.

Yes, that Carter Bryant. The same one who was relentlessly teased for botching a couple of dunks.

Recently, when Victor Wembanyama and Keldon Johnson shaved their heads, Bryant was offered $20,000 to join in. When he refused, De’Aaron Fox decided he’d get a haircut if he blew three more dunks.

All kidding aside, Bryant has hops and has gotten notice by someone associated with the Slam Dunk Contest.

So far only Bryant and Jaxson Hayes are the only players invited. Three-time winner and reigning Slam Dunk Champ Mac McClurg will not participate in next month’s event after he was waived by the Indiana Pacers last November.

Check back for updates as contestants are confirmed.

The Slam Dunk Contest takes place on Valentine’s Day as part of All-Star Weekend.


Welcome to the Thread. Join in the conversation, start your own discussion, and share your thoughts. This is the Spurs community, your Spurs community. Thanks for being here.

Our community guidelines apply which should remind everyone to be cool, avoid personal attacks, not to troll and to watch the language.

Rangers 'share anger' over Porto stadium issues

Rangers say they have received numerous reports from fans and staff regarding issues at Porto's stadium during the Europa League defeat and will be "pursuing them with the relevant parties".

Rangers will collect further information about the complaints, with reports suggesting visiting fans were held inside Estadio do Dragao for up to two hours on Thursday night after the 3-1 defeat.

Djeidi Gassama gave Danny Rohl's team the lead but the home side fought back to win and leave Rangers in 32nd place of the 36 teams in the Europa League phase.

A Rangers statement read: "Following the match in Porto, we've received multiple reports from supporters and staff about issues in and around the stadium.

"That's not what anyone who travelled to support Rangers should have had to deal with, and we share the concern, anger and frustration felt by those affected.

"We will be gathering complaints and feedback and will pursue this with the relevant parties."

March Madness Bracketology: Big Ten dominates NCAA Tournament projection as Purdue slides

With four teams on the top three lines, the Big Ten continues to show out in USA TODAY Sports’ latest installment of bracketology.

But one Big Ten heavyweight, Purdue, drops to a No. 4 seed after falling 72-67 to Indiana on Tuesday night for its third loss in a row. The Boilermakers are now 7-3 in conference play, two games behind co-leaders Michigan, Illinois Nebraska and Michigan State.

The updated bracket finds s place for the Hoosiers, who have rebounded from a four-game slide with two wins in a row to climb to 14-7 overall and 5-5 in league play.

The Wolverines remain on the No. 1 line, joined by Arizona, Duke and Connecticut. Nebraska is a No. 2, along with Illinois, while Michigan State is a No. 3.

Purdue is replaced on the No. 3 line by Texas Tech, which moved to 16-4 on the heels of a five-game winning streak that included marquee victories against Brigham Young and Houston.

There was one slight change in the SEC. Auburn and Kentucky swapped spots, with the Tigers moving up to a No. 7 after winning four in a row and the always confounding Wildcats down to a No. 8 after getting losing by 25 points to Vanderbilt on Tuesday night.

March Madness Last four in

UCLA, New Mexico, Miami (Fla.), Indiana.

March Madness First four out

TCU, Virginia Tech, Seton Hall, Missouri.

NCAA tournament bids conference breakdown

Multi-bid leagues: Big Ten (11), SEC (10), ACC (8) Big 12 (7), Big East (3), Mountain West (3), West Coast (2).

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: March Madness Bracketology: Big Ten leads NCAA Tournament projection

Marc-Andre Fleury appreciates interest, but he's staying retired

The goalie trade market is pretty scarce, so some NHL teams have reached into the recent past.

And while retired Marc-Andre Fleury is flattered by the attention, he says he plans to stay retired.

"I had some calls and I took the time to think about it," he recently told USA TODAY's Sports Seriously. "It's very nice of them to think of me in that way, very flattering, but then at the end of the day, I stopped playing for some reasons. I thought it was better to just stay on the sidelines."

Fleury hung up his skates after 21 seasons in 2025, finishing with three Stanley Cup titles, a Vezina Trophy and the second most regular-season wins in NHL history (575). Since the playoffs ended for the Minnesota Wild, he played for Canada in the world championships and for one period and a shootout of a preseason game with the Pittsburgh Penguins, but now his focus is on a post-playing life.

He's enjoying the freedom of having more time but says there are other times when he misses playing.

"I miss the guys, I miss the competition, I miss battling as a team trying to win a game and the feeling that you get when you win a game," he said.

But he's finding plenty to do. He's coaching his 6-year-old, he's playing tennis, has driven a race car, tried some boxing and he went skiing, which he wouldn't be able to do under an NHL contract. He has a partnership with Kraft Hockeyville, which brings a preseason NHL game to a small community and helps refurbish rinks. He occasionally puts on the goalie pads, as his agent, Allan Walsh, posted on Thursday.

He'll be watching as NHL players return to the Olympics for the first time since 2014. Being a Quebec province native, he's choosing Canada to win, though he also said the USA and Sweden have solid teams.

"I just think it will be great hockey," he said. "I think it will be fun to watch, so many good teams and players out there. You never know in a tournament. It's not a best of seven, it's one game, so crazy things can happen. It can go different ways."

Fleury was also paying attention when Florida's Sergei Bobrovsky and San Jose's Alex Nedeljkovic had the first goalie fight since 2020.

"I think it's awesome," he said. "Nobody got hurt and to see two goalies fight, it's always so awkward because we got all the equipment and we're not used to fighting. It's funny to watch."

Fleury nearly had his chance in 2023 but was kept away as he skated down the ice and challenged St. Louis' Jordan Binnington.

"I have nothing against Jordan, really," he said. "I always wanted one fight in the NHL since I came in. In 21 years, I wanted to score a goal and have a fight. I came close on both but couldn't get it done."

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Marc-Andre Fleury not interested in comeback despite interest