Panthers fans cheer for former goalie Spencer Knight in season opener

SUNRISE, Fla. — Fans of the Florida Panthers cheered the Stanley Cup. Cheered the banner going to the rafters. Cheered the return of the back-to-back NHL champions.

And cheered the opposing goaltender.

Yes, some Panthers fans still shout “Knight” during the playing of “The Star-Spangled Banner” before each game, even though Spencer Knight — the former Florida goalie whose name is on the Stanley Cup as part of the 2023-24 championship squad — no longer plays for the team. Knight was traded to Chicago last season and started against the Panthers in the season opener for both teams.

Knight made 34 saves, but Florida won 3-2.

“Honestly, I didn’t know if they still did or not, but that’s cool,” Knight said in advance of the game. “And again, I think that goes through, top to bottom, the whole community around here, the people. Everyone was just very nice, kind and very appreciative. So, I’m really thankful that I was able to start here. And I hope that I gave some people good memories.”

The Panthers gave Knight a video tribute at the first TV timeout of the first period. Many of the Blackhawks looked up to watch, and when it was over Knight gave the fans a wave as many in the crowd rose for a standing ovation.

“I was playing the game,” Knight said. “I saluted the crowd, but I was there to play hockey.”

The Panthers took Knight, the onetime Boston College star, with the 13th overall pick in the 2019 draft. He went 44-25-7 in parts of four seasons with Florida, plus 1-1 in a pair of playoff starts he got in 2021.

He was the primary piece that the Panthers gave up in a trade last season that brought defenseman Seth Jones from Chicago to Florida. Knight went 5-8-2 in 15 games with the Blackhawks after the trade last season.

“It’s a special little connection there,” Panthers coach Paul Maurice said of seeing Knight again. “For me, as a player, it was always his explosiveness. He’s just an incredible athlete. And his ability to get from one side of the net to the other under control with strength ... I think he’s going to be a great goaltender for the Chicago Blackhawks for a lot of years.”

Sharks opt for five alternates over naming 2025-26 NHL season captain

Sharks opt for five alternates over naming 2025-26 NHL season captain originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

Editor’s note: Sheng Peng is a regular contributor to NBC Sports California’s Sharks coverage. You can read more of his coverage on San Jose Hockey Now, listen to him on the San Jose Hockey Now Podcast, and follow him on Twitter at @Sheng_Peng.

The Sharks will not have a captain.

San Jose announced On Wednesday that forward Tyler Toffoli, forward Barclay Goodrow, center Macklin Celebrini, defenseman Mario Ferraro and center Alex Wennberg will be their alternate captains for the 2025-26 NHL season.

Toffoli will wear an “A” in every game; Goodrow and Celebrini will be alternate captains for home games, while Ferraro and Wennberg will be alternates for road games. Toffoli is taking Ferraro’s role as regular alternate captain.

Celebrini will wear a letter for the first time in his young career. The 19-year-old was the San Jose Sharks’ No. 1 overall pick in the 2024 NHL Draft and is seen as the future face of the franchise.

Read the full story on San Jose Hockey Now

Download and follow the San Jose Hockey Now podcast

Sharks opt for five alternates over naming 2025-26 NHL season captain

Sharks opt for five alternates over naming 2025-26 NHL season captain originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

Editor’s note: Sheng Peng is a regular contributor to NBC Sports California’s Sharks coverage. You can read more of his coverage on San Jose Hockey Now, listen to him on the San Jose Hockey Now Podcast, and follow him on Twitter at @Sheng_Peng.

The Sharks will not have a captain.

San Jose announced On Wednesday that forward Tyler Toffoli, forward Barclay Goodrow, center Macklin Celebrini, defenseman Mario Ferraro and center Alex Wennberg will be their alternate captains for the 2025-26 NHL season.

Toffoli will wear an “A” in every game; Goodrow and Celebrini will be alternate captains for home games, while Ferraro and Wennberg will be alternates for road games. Toffoli is taking Ferraro’s role as regular alternate captain.

Celebrini will wear a letter for the first time in his young career. The 19-year-old was the San Jose Sharks’ No. 1 overall pick in the 2024 NHL Draft and is seen as the future face of the franchise.

Read the full story on San Jose Hockey Now

Download and follow the San Jose Hockey Now podcast

Fantasy Baseball 2025 First Base Breakdown: Nick Kurtz's emergence and 2026 rankings

With the 2025 MLB regular season behind us, it’s time to review what we learned from a fantasy perspective and how we can apply it to next year.

In the coming days throughout October, we’ll be breaking down the standout seasons, the breakout candidates, the prospects to know, and our early 2026 rankings. We started with catcher last week, and now we'll head over to first base.

MLB: Washington Nationals at Atlanta Braves
Aaron Judge or Shohei Ohtani at the top? Our early 2026 Top 300 rankings highlight key fantasy storylines heading into the MLB offseason.

2025 POSITION BREAKDOWN: FIRST BASE

STATE OF THE POSITION

There were 17 first basemen who earned at least $10 of value this season, according to Fangraph's Player Rater. That was the most for any infield position, which hints at the depth we have at the first base position. Some of that is the old stalwarts like Freddie Freeman, Matt Olson, Bryce Harper, Vladimir Guerrero, Pete Alonso, and Yandy Diaz. However, we also had young players like Nick Kurtz, Vinnie Pasquantino, Michael Busch, and Tyler Soderstrom emerge as consistent producers this season. Whenyou add to that, players like Rafael Devers and Willson Contreras gaining first base eligibility, this is probably the deepest the position has ever been, and we haven't yet talked about Christian Walker, who is coming off of a down year, Spencer Torkelson, who made the most of his second chance, and Ben Rice, who may actually get a chance to be the every day first baseman next year if the Yankees move on from Paul Goldschmidt.

As it stands, all is well with the first base landscape, and while it's tempting to try and lock in one of the elite bats at the position, this might be the best position to wait on in drafts and still find value with a middle-round starter.

2025’s Top Ten First Basemen

1. Pete Alonso (Free Agent)

.272/.347/.524, 38 HR, 87 R, 126 RBI, 1 SB

The Polar Bear had his best season yet after signing a two-year deal to return to the Mets, and played so well that he will almost certainly opt out of the final year of his contract and test the free agent waters again. Alonso set career highs in batting average, plate appearances, and barrel rate while posting his sixth straight full season with at least 34 home runs. In non-COVID seasons, Alonso averages 41.3 home runs per game, which is tremendous consistency and value from a power standpoint. The big reason why his fantasy value jumped this year, in addition to hitting behind Juan Soto and driving in 126 runs, was that Alonso went to a more all-fields approach and trusted his power to play regardless. He had the lowest pull rate of his career and the lowest fly ball rate of his career, instead focusing on hard line drives. He was also more aggressive in the zone than he had been since 2022, which allowed him to improve his quality of contact overall despite swinging and missing a bit more. Oh, and he also set the Mets franchise record for home runs. Not a bad season.

2. Josh Naylor (Free Agent)

.295.353/.462, 20 HR, 81 R, 92 RBI, 30 SB

What a wild season for Josh Naylor. We kinda knew his 31 home run season in 2024 was a bit of a fluke, but he found new ways to produce fantasy value by improving his batting average and shattering his career-high in stolen bases. Without making a drastic change in approach, Naylor saw a huge increase in his batting average, which sounded a few alarm bells. He was a bit more aggressive outside of the zone, but his contact rate was identical to last year. He did see more pitches in the zone, so perhaps being in a deeper lineup helped him, but his pull rates and fly ball rates were all pretty similar to 2024, while he also posted his lowest full-season barrel rate since his rookie year. It's hard to see Naylor keeping up this .290-plus batting average, and his previous career-high in steals was 10, so stealing 19 bases in just 54 games with the Mariners is doing a lot of heavy lifting with his fantasy value this year. He seems like a clear regression candidate, but we'll have to see where he signs.

3. Cody Bellinger (Yankees)

.272/.334/.480, 29 HR, 89 R, 98 RBI, 13 SB

Sadly, Bellinger will not be first base eligible in 2026 because he only played seven games there for the Yankees this season. However, the park was as good for him as everybody expected. Bellinger's barrel rate was only 7.5% and his 38% hard hit rate was the highest he's had since 2022, but still below most first basemen. Still, he increased his pull rate by 3% and his flyball rate by 2% and that helped lead to 29 home runs. He also made some adjustments to the pitches he was swinging at on the fringes of the strike zone, cutting his chase rate marginally but increasing his contact outside of the zone by a significant amount. That led to a solid batting average and the lowest strikeout rate of his career. All of this feels repeatable for Bellinger, but he'll just be doing it as an OF-only fantasy player.

4. Nick Kurtz (Athletics)

.290/.383/.61936 HR, 90 R, 86 RBI, 2 SB

Kurtz was the fourth overall pick in the 2024 MLB Draft and had played just 12 minor league games before the Athletics sent him to Triple-A to begin the 2025 season. It seemed like an incredibly aggressive promotion, but Kurtz responded by crushing Triple-A pitching for 20 games and forcing his way into a promotion. He didn't adjust to MLB pitching that quickly. Up until June 1st, he was hitting .245/.315/.447 with five home runs and a 33.3% strikeout rate in 28 games. It wasn't a terrible start, but it certainly didn't indicate that he would catch fire as quickly as he did. From June 1st on, Kurtz hit .304/.403/.669 with 31 home runs and 71 RBI in 89 games. Yes, he did still strike out 30% of the time, but that's always going to be a little bit a part of his game. He's still just 22 years old and will play another season in hitter-friendly Sacramento with a young and improving lineup around him. It's hard not to get excited about his future.

5. Rafael Devers (Giants)

.252/.372/.479 35 HR, 99 R, 109 RBI, 1 SB

Yes, after all that drama, Devers is now first base eligible. The veteran took issue with the way the Red Sox handled signing Alex Bregman this offseason and then had no desire to patch things up with the front office, so he was shipped out of town mid-season to San Francisco where he slowly worked himself into a role as the team's first baseman. That's a role he figures to occupy for much of the 2026 season, but the bigger question is what impact Oracle Park will have on him. Devers was somebody who went to the opposite field often in Boston, using the Green Monster to his advantage, so he struggled initially when he had to change his approach in San Francisco. Overall, Devers hit .236/.347/.460 with 20 home runs in 90 games with the Giants, striking out 29.4% of the time and pulling the ball 45% of the time, which is 8% higher than his career average. He did make tons of hard contact, but there are some questions about whether or not the 29-year-old can shift his approach so drastically and maintain his .276 career batting average while playing in San Francisco.

6.Vladimir Guerrero Jr. (Blue Jays):.292, 23 HR, 96 R, 84 RBI, 6 SB

7. Matt Olson (Braves): .272, 29 HR, 98 R, 95 RBI, 1 SB

8. Freddie Freeman (Dodgers): .295, 24 HR, 81 R, 90 RBI, 6 SB

9. Yandy Diaz (Rays): .300, 25 HR, 79 R, 83 RBI, 3 SB

10. Vinnie Pasquantino (Royals): .264, 32 HR, 72 R, 113 RBI, 1 SB

2026 Breakouts

Ben Rice (Yankees)

Matthew Pouliot covered Rice in his catcher's article, so check that out here. I will just add that, from June 1st on, Ben Rice had the third-best Process+ score in all of baseball, behind only Aaron Judge and Juan Soto. That's certainly the company you want, and the Yankees need to just give this kid at-bats.

Andrew Vaughn (Brewers)

I don't know if the Brewers are going to let Vaughn be their starting first baseman in 2026, but they should. In 64 games with Milwaukee, he hit .308/.375/.493 with nine home runs, 46 RBI, and a 14.6% strikeout rate. He had an 11.1% barrel rate and 91.7 mph average exit velocity over that span, but also put up a Process+ score of 126, when 100 is league average. From July 7th on, when Vaughn was called up by the Brewers, his Process+ score was in line with Roman Anthony, Vladimir Guerrero Jr., Kyle Stowers, and Julio Rodriguez. So we have the results and we have the metrics to suggest that his approach and process support the results. I'm excited to see what a full season can bring.

Kyle Manzardo (Guardians)

With Carlos Santana out of town, Kyle Manzardo should head into the 2026 season as the everyday first baseman in Cleveland. The 25-year-old dealt with some off-season hardship this season, with his mother undergoing major surgery in the middle of the year, which also led to him missing a few games. Baseball players are human too, so that undoubtedly weighed on his mind, but Manzardo seemed to turn a corner on the field in the second half of the season. He hit .256/.338/.473 with 12 home runs and 33 RBI in 60 games to end the season. That's in line with the player we think Manzardo can be. He's just 25 years old and has an MLB career barrel rate of 11.2%, so there is plenty of quality contact being made. In a full season, could he hit .260 with 25+ home runs while batting in the middle of Cleveland's lineup? That could bring lots of fantasy value.

Troy Johnston (Marlins)

Johnston is a 28-year-old who just made his MLB debut this season, so think of this as a late-career breakout. Still, he hit .277/.331/.420 in 28 games with the Marlins with four home runs, a 9.3% barrel rate, and a 21% strikeout rate. He also stole 31 bases in 84 games at Triple-A this season and has another 24-steal campaign on his resume from back in 2023. So we have a guy with solid 15 home run power who can also steal 20 bases and hit .281 in his career in the minor leagues. Johnston also posted a solid 114 Process+ score during his time in the big leagues, which was the same as Kerry Carpenter, Bo Bichette, Ian Happ, and Vinnie Pasquantino. That means the swing decisions and contact metrics also support the results we got. Johnston is going to be 1B/OF eligible next season, and getting late shares of him seems like a solid plan.

2026 Prospects To Know

Bryce Eldridge (Giants)

Bryce Eldridge was called up by the Giants at the end of the season and struggled in his 37 MLB plate appearances; however, he showed legit power in the minors with 25 home runs in 102 games. He did have a 14.6% swinging strike rate in the minors, so swing-and-miss will always be part of his game, but the quality of contact is elite, and he posted a 95.6 mph average exit velocity in his very brief MLB sample size, but also a 95.7 mph average exit velocity in his 66 games at Triple-A. I expect Eldridge and Rafael Devers to split 1B/DH reps in San Francisco next season, and Eldridge could prove to be a great source of power.

Charlie Condon (Rockies)

We say the Rockies hate to promote their prospects, but the Rockies are also finally going to hire a general manager from outside of their organization this offseason, so maybe that all changes. Condon is the 61st-ranked prospect in baseball, according to MLB Pipeline, but is 14th on Keith Law's list. He struggled a bit in 55 games at Double-A this season, but he has impressive tools that helped make him the 3rd overall pick in the 2024 MLB Draft. He showed great contact ability in college and flashed that same ability at High-A to start the season. I expect Condon to begin 2026 at Double-A, but a hot start to the season will move him to Triple-A, at least. The Rockies have nobody really blocking him at first base, so if Condon were to get hot, they could give him a shot at big league at-bats, where his power would be tantalizing in Coors Field.

Abimelec Ortiz (Rangers)

A little bit off the radar here, but Ortiz had a great season in 2025, hitting .257/.356/.479 with 25 home runs and 89 RBU in 130 games. Oddly enough, his batting average was actually much better in his 41 games at Triple-A, hitting .283/.388/.565. The 22-year-old is only 5'10" but 230 pounds and swings the hell out of the bat. He has elite bat speed and began to make more contact as he quieted his approach. He's an average defender at first base, so he's not a DH-only, but Texas was playing Rowdy Tellez at the end of the season because Jake Burger couldn't stay healthy. With a DH spot likely opening and Joc Pederson leaving, the Rangers could keep Burger as the primary DH and give Ortiz a chance to claim reps at 1B, or the two could switch off. The upper levels of the Rangers' farm system are not deep with first base options, so if they don't make a big splash in free agency, expect Ortiz to be in the mix.

2026 Top 12 First Baseman

1. Nick Kurtz: Given his home park and the growth we saw. He has the highest upside of this group.
2. Pete Alonso: A lot is going to depend on where he ends up, but I believe in the approach shift and the consistency.
3. Matt Olson: This Braves offense is going to be better in 2026, and Olson has continued to produce.
4. Vladimir Guerrero Jr.: An elite hitter, but I think we can expect him to hit around 25 home runs, which limits his ceiling a bit at a position where you need power.
5. Freddie Freeman: Will age ever catch up with him? The team context is great, and the results have been there.
6. Rafael Devers: He's been one of the best, but what will the new park do to his batting average and power upside?
7. Bryce Harper: Are we seeing a moderate decline? Will be 33, and his batting average has fallen each of the last three years.
8. Vinnie Pasquantino: We finally saw some power come with the batting average. I'm buying into it being repeatable.
9. Josh Naylor: Where he signs will be huge. So much of his value came from those late steals. Will they return?
10. Michael Busch: Put together a great season in Chicago, and has gotten his strikeout rate under control. Power is very real.
11. Tyler Soderstrom: A bit of a rollercoaster, but the results were there. Power is great, and the home ballpark is tremendous.
12. Willson Contreras: Aging but safe. He's probably a 20 HR bat with a .260 average on a decent team, but you know you're getting his consistency.

NHL’s Gary Bettman sees value in the Olympic break, especially coming off 4 Nations success last season

SUNRISE, Fla. — NHL Commissioner Gary Bettman isn’t the biggest fan of taking a nearly three-week break in the middle of the season so players can participate in the Milan-Cortina Olympics.

That said, he obviously sees the value.

Bettman spoke at the season-opening game between the Florida Panthers — who raised their second consecutive Stanley Cup championship banner — and the Chicago Blackhawks. He made clear again that he knows what having NHL players back on the Olympic stage can do for the game.

“I think it’s going to be great,” Bettman said between the first and second periods. “It’s important to our players. That’s why we’re doing it. Listen, there are lots of reasons that I’m never thrilled about taking a couple of week break in the season. Changes a lot of things. But on balance, I think it’ll be worth it, A) for the exposure, B) for the fan engagement, but C) and most importantly, this is and has always been very important to our players. And that’s why we’re doing this.”

The NHL got tons of exposure and engagement during last season’s 4 Nations Face-Off event, and the Olympics obviously are going to be bigger than that tournament.

“We came off of 4 Nations on a high,” Bettman said. “It shows you what our players can do representing hockey and what we think is the best best-on-best in international competition.”

In other matters covered by Bettman:

Panthers-Lightning penalties

The league wasn’t overjoyed by the way the Tampa Bay-Florida preseason game played out, with 65 penalties, 13 game misconducts and 312 penalty minutes.

“I think we made our position clear in terms of our response,” Bettman said. “That’s not what the game is all about.”

The NHL suspended Tampa Bay forward Scott Sabourin four games and defenseman J.J. Moser for two games for their actions in that game. Additionally, the Lightning organization was fined $100,000 and Lightning coach Jon Cooper was fined $25,000, the NHL said.

“We didn’t think what happened was appropriate for a variety of reasons,” Bettman said.

Outdoor games in Florida

Bettman said ticket sales are going “great” for outdoor games to be played later this season in Florida. The Panthers will play host to the New York Rangers at loanDepot Park in Miami — home of baseball’s Marlins — on Jan. 2 in the Winter Classic, and the Lightning will host the Boston Bruins at Tampa’s Raymond James Stadium on Feb. 1 in a Stadium Series game.

“I think we’re going to have a public sale at some point for tickets that are left, but so far ... the response has been overwhelmingly positive and we’re excited to come to Florida with two outdoor games,” Bettman said. “There are some people who question our sanity, but the combination of being able to prep the ice at loanDepot — where we can control the elements until we open the roof — and that we’re able to create a structure in Tampa, we think we’ll be fine.”

The Marlins’ loanDepot Park has a retractable roof and that will play a big role in getting that stadium ready for hockey. The air conditioning will be cranked up — way up — and the Panthers-Rangers game will be played at night with the roof open. For the Lightning-Bruins game inside the open-air stadium in Tampa, the NHL will build a temporary roof over the ice surface and remove it just a few hours before game time.

NHL Power Rankings: Each Team's Biggest Difference-Maker

Welcome back to The Hockey News' NHL power rankings, where we rank all 32 teams based on their weekly performance.

The 2025-26 season is now underway with a busy Thursday approaching with 14 games. The campaign kicked off with a successful title defense for the Panthers with a season-opening win against the Blackhawks in a game they dominated even without their captain.

With depth forward Jesper Boqvist scoring the winner, it does beg the question: who’s going to step up?

This week’s NHL power rankings features one player on each team that could make a very big difference this season.

1. Florida Panthers (1-0-0, +1 goal differential. Previous Rank: 1)

Anton Lundell and Sam Bennett split duties with both centers playing over 19 minutes, but it was Bennett’s line that played more minutes at 5-on-5. Bennett’s line with Brad Marchand – what a nightmare duo to play against – and Carter Verhaeghe generated 25 shot attempts and allowed only six. Bennett is in the first year of a lucrative eight-year deal and must provide full value for the Panthers to have a chance at a three-peat. 

2. Edmonton Oilers (0-0-0, even. PR: 2)

Connor McDavid’s short-term bargain deal means the clock is officially ticking because there’s no chance he does the same in 2028. I’m cheating on my own criteria here, but the biggest difference maker is GM Stan Bowman, and it’s up to him to figure out what to do with the extra cap space. It is absolutely Cup or bust for the Oilers.

3. Dallas Stars (0-0-0, even. PR: 3)

The easy pick is Mikko Rantanen, but I actually think it’s Thomas Harley because the Stars aren’t nearly as deep on the blueline as they are up front. It’s a contract year for Harley, and he’ll take a load of pressure off their top matchup pair with Miro Heiskanen and Esa Lindell. 

4. Vegas Golden Knights (0-0-0, even. PR: 5)

Mitch Marner has a chance to write the ultimate revenge story if he can help Vegas win another Cup. Marner and Jack Eichel might be the most dangerous center-right winger combo in the entire NHL.

5. Carolina Hurricanes (0-0-0, even. PR: 4)

The most important player is whoever can be the best No. 2 center behind Sebastian Aho, and right now, that’s Logan Stankoven. He’s already signed a big extension, and it’s a hole the Canes have been desperate to fill.

6. Winnipeg Jets (0-0-0, even. PR: 6)

Depth might be a problem for the Jets, and their best path to success still lies in the hands of Connor Hellebuyck. They need regular-season Hellebuyck to show up in the playoffs. 

7. Toronto Maple Leafs (0-0-0, even. PR: 7)

We know Auston Matthews has the potential to score at least 60 goals, but the question is if he can do it all himself. The Leafs captain has all the spotlights in Toronto on him now.

A Healthy Auston Matthews Is Prepared To Guide The Maple Leafs And Prove Last Year Was An OutlierA Healthy Auston Matthews Is Prepared To Guide The Maple Leafs And Prove Last Year Was An OutlierAs they move into the post-Mitch Marner era, the Toronto Maple Leafs need a big year out of star center and captain Auston Matthews.

8. Colorado Avalanche (1-0-0, +3. PR: 8)

Gabriel Landeskog suits up for a regular-season game for the first time since March 10, 2022, and the Avs had so much respect for him that they never named anyone to take his place in the interim. No matter how many games he plays this season, his comeback story has been remarkable. 

9. Washington Capitals (0-0-0, even. PR: 9)

The chase is not yet over. Alex Ovechkin is three goals away from 900 as he enters the final year of a five-year contract. Does he continue beyond 2025-26 in Washington?

10. Minnesota Wild (0-0-0, even. PR: 10)

Kirill Kaprizov has the league’s richest contract and now has one goal remaining: win the Cup. Let’s dial it back a little, however, as the Wild need to win one playoff series first. 

11. Tampa Bay Lightning (0-0-0, even. PR: 12)

I still think the biggest difference-maker is captain Victor Hedman, who’s showing no signs of slowing down. However, the Lightning's Cup-winning core is another year older, and they’re getting further and further away from Cup contender status.

12. Los Angeles Kings (0-1-0, -3. PR: 11)

In Anze Kopitar’s last season, this is the season where Quinton Byfield needs to show he can take over the No. 1 role full-time. The Kings looked uncharacteristically disorganized in their season-opening loss. 

13. St. Louis Blues (0-0-0, even. PR: 13)

In an Olympic year, this is Jordan Binnington’s chance to prove he can lead the Blues and Team Canada. He has two seasons remaining on his contract with the very capable Joel Hofer ready to take over at any time.

14. New Jersey Devils (0-0-0, even. PR: 14)

Jack Hughes really needs to stay healthy because he’s got MVP potential. On paper, the Devils look like they could contend, but there are a few question marks regarding their injury history and consistency, and also too many bodies on their blueline. 

15. Ottawa Senators (0-0-0, even. PR: 15)

Can the Sens count on Linus Ullmark for 50 games? He was very good for them last season and went 13-3-1 down the stretch to make the playoffs, but can he be a bona fide starter, or is he a 1A option in need of an experienced backup to support him?

16. Montreal Canadiens (0-0-0, even. PR: 16)

Centers are difficult to find, and the Habs are hoping Kirby Dach can be the answer. The third overall pick in 2019 has size and skill but has also missed 129 of 246 games (52 percent) over the last three seasons.

17. Utah Mammoth (0-0-0, even. PR: 17)

Karel Vejmelka is coming off a surprisingly good season where he won 26 games in 55 starts, and he now enters the first year of a five-year deal. The Mammoth can score, and they have promising young defenders, but can Vejmelka come up big in net again this season?

The NHL's Opening Week Is Packed Of Exciting StorylinesThe NHL's Opening Week Is Packed Of Exciting StorylinesThe new NHL regular season begins Tuesday, and there is no shortage of storylines for fans to keep their eye on.

18. Columbus Blue Jackets (0-0-0, even. PR: 18)

I think we’re past the point of believing Elvis Merzlikins can be a reliable No. 1, which means Jet Greaves and his 7-2-2/1.91 GAA/.938 SP performance last season offers a glimmer of hope. Columbus coach Dean Evason has remained mum on who his starter will be for Thursday’s season opener

19. Vancouver Canucks (0-0-0, even. PR: 20)

It’s all on Elias Pettersson now with J.T. Miller in New York. If he cannot regain his superstar form, and despite Quinn Hughes’ best efforts, the Canucks’ offense may collapse because of their lack of quality depth down the middle. Oh, by the way, have you heard that Quinn wants to play with his brothers? 

20. Calgary Flames (0-0-0, even. PR: 21)

It’s not necessarily about who can make a difference for the Flames but what GM Craig Conroy has up his sleeve. The Flames have to decide if they want to continue with this current core – 35-year-old Nazem Kadri has three more years on his deal – or fully hand the reins over to Matt Coronato, Samuel Honzek, Zayne Parekh and Dustin Wolf. 

21. Detroit Red Wings (0-0-0, even. PR: 22)

The Red Wings are again one of the most intriguing teams entering the 2025-26 season as we enter the next phase of the Yzerplan after acquiring John Gibson and bringing in rookies Emmitt Finnie, Nate Danielson, Michael Brandsegg-Nygard and Axel Sandin-Pellikka. Finnie, in particular, will be interesting to watch as a seventh-round pick who will start the season on the top line with Dylan Larkin and Lucas Raymond. Did they just find another Zetterberg?!

22. New York Rangers (0-1-0, -3. PR: 19)

That was ugly. The Rangers debuted a new coach, a new captain and even new jerseys in their centennial season but ironically lost to their new coach’s former team and their former assistant coach. It was another listless showing reminiscent of last year, and again, it was only close because of Igor Shesterkin.

23. Anaheim Ducks (0-0-0, even. PR: 24)

Joel Quenneville is supposed to bring forth a philosophical change and bring out the best of Anaheim's young core. It’s the first time he’s coached an NHL game in four years. 

24. New York Islanders (0-0-0, even. PR: 23)

The Isles nip around the edges of their roster looking for marginal improvements every season, this time bringing in Maxim Shabanov, Emil Heineman and Jonathan Drouin, but the player to watch is future franchise defenseman Matthew Schaefer, who definitely earned his spot during camp.

25. Buffalo Sabres (0-0-0, even. PR: 25)

Recent waiver claim Colten Ellis has me raising my eyebrows, especially after Alexandar Georgiev was signed following news of Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen’s injury, only to waive him in favor of Ellis. The former QMJHL star will get his first chance to prove himself in the NHL after winning 22 games with a .922 SP in the AHL last season. 

26. Seattle Kraken (0-0-0, even. PR: 26)

Here’s hoping a trio of young players – Ryan Winterton, Jani Nyman and 2024 eighth overall pick Berkly Catton – can create a little more excitement around the Kraken with full-time roles. The Kraken are desperately trying not to be mid anymore with their third coach in three seasons. 

27. Pittsburgh Penguins (1-0-0, +3. PR: 29)

Will Arturs Silovs singlehandedly ruin my prediction of the Pens landing Gavin McKenna at the next draft? The AHL playoff MVP was acquired for a song from the Canucks and made good with a 25-save shutout win in coach Dan Muse’s debut, who made a surprising decision – but ultimately the right one – to start him over incumbent Tristan Jarry. 

28. Philadelphia Flyers (0-0-0, even. PR: 27)

It’s not just about one player, but a pairing: Trevor Zegras and Matvei Michkov. The two puck wizards will play on separate lines but join forces like Goku and Vegeta on the power play, and we got a little taste of it in the pre-season. Even if the Flyers don’t win many games, can they at least make the highlight reels?

29. Boston Bruins (0-0-0, even. PR: 28)

Jeremy Swayman allowed the most goals in the league last season, and I doubt that repeats itself. He’s had a full camp in Boston, and the prospect of being named to the U.S. Olympic team should help him be one of the NHL’s top bounce-back players.

30. Nashville Predators (0-0-0, even. PR: 30)

Starting 18-year-old Brady Martin as your potential top center is certainly… a choice. I have no doubt this is a let’s-see-what-happens type of early-season move, but this is a fascinating decision by the Preds on a team with Ryan O’Reilly, Fedor Svechkov, Erik Haula and sometimes-center Steven Stamkos. 

31. San Jose Sharks (0-0-0, even. PR: 31)

The Sharks are doing through a rebuild on speed run, with Sam Dickinson and 2025 second overall pick Michael Misa making the team. They may not, however, suit up for the season opener, which makes keeping them around an interesting decision. Young players need to play, period, no matter the league. 

32. Chicago Blackhawks (0-1-0, -1. PR: 32)

Frank Nazar, Spencer Knight, Oliver Moore and, obviously, Connor Bedard… there’s no shortage of young players to watch on the Blackhawks, but I think the least heralded is Sam Rinzel. He looked excellent after leaving the University of Minnesota late last season and played 25:18 in the season opener, nearly seven more minutes than all other Hawks defenders.

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Islanders Rookie Matthew Schaefer Reveals Incredible Gesture Made By Blackhawks Captain Nick Foligno

The Chicago Blackhawks are a young team trying to find its footing in the National Hockey League. With that in mind, they are not short of veteran leadership always around to help them do the right thing. 

Speaking of leaders doing the right thing, you can always count on Captain Nick Foligno. On Wednesday, New York Islanders rookie Matthew Schaefer, who was the number one pick in the 2025 NHL Draft, told the press about a special message he received from Foligno. 

Ahead of the draft, Schaefer was open about his story. He lost his mom to cancer. It has been a difficult road to the NHL due to this tragedy, but his face lights up when speaking about his mother. 

The Islanders' rookie was asked if anyone reached out to him ahead of his NHL debut, which will take place on Thursday against the Pittsburgh Penguins, and his answer was Nick Foligno. 

"I became close with him," Schaefer said of Foligno. "He lost his mom due to cancer at a young age, too, so he reached out to me, and I was talking to him about stuff like that. He's been awesome, he's a character for sure. He's a great guy, too." 

Whenever you think of classy in the NHL, Nick Foligno is near the top of the list. He has been a captain or leader in the room at multiple NHL spots for a reason. The young players in the Blackhawks organization are fortunate to have him as a resource, as well as the young men around the league. 

Due to their personal circumstances, Schaefer and Foligno have a connection that bonds them. With Foligno having been through it longer, he is willing to share wisdom that can help with something so difficult. 

You know that Foligno is rooting for Schaefer to succeed from afar, just maybe not when they are matched up against each other. It is comforting to know that the elder NHL players, who have had similar experiences to the younger players, are still willing to help them. Sometimes, small gestures like this go a long way both on and off the ice. 

Visit The Hockey News Chicago Blackhawks team site to stay updated on the latest news, game-day coverage, player features, and more.

Jack Eichel dismisses Connor McDavid’s discount deal as irrelevant to his contract talks with Golden Knights

LAS VEGAS — Golden Knights center Jack Eichel said Connor McDavid’s below-market extension to stay with Edmonton has no bearing on his contract talks with Vegas.

McDavid gave the Oilers a hometown discount, signing a two-year, $25 million deal that keeps him in Edmonton through 2028. The three-time MVP could have tried to negotiate for a better deal than the eight-year, $136 million contract for Minnesota’s Kirill Kaprizov on Sept. 30 that made him the NHL’s highest-paid player ever.

Eichel enters the final season of an eight-year, $80 million deal, and he is expected to command a contract closer to Kaprizov than McDavid, perhaps even richer than what the Wild agreed to pay.

“I don’t have much to say other than we are having conversations and trying to find the right deal and hoping we can get something done,” Eichel’s agent, Pat Brisson, said in a text message.

Eichel said he’s in touch with Brisson every day, but also understands that if a deal gets done, it will be during the season.

“It’s something we’ll continue to work at,” Eichel said. “In my situation, just try to be as good of a player and teammate every night the best I can and help our hockey team win games.”

Golden Knights general manager Kelly McCrimmon said on the eve of training camp that other players’ contracts will not be taken into consideration when it comes to trying to reach a deal with Eichel.

“I will say what I said in July, Jack is a priority,” McCrimmon said. “We have tremendous regard for the player and what he’s meant to our organization. I think he feels the organization’s been very good for him as well, and we’ll continue to have dialogue.”

Eichel scored a career-high 94 points last season that included a personal-best 66 assists. He and newly acquired Mitch Marner will share the top line with Ivan Barbashev. Marner had 102 points with Toronto, and he agreed to an eight-year, $96 million sign-and-trade deal with Vegas.

“I’m hoping they’re dangerous every time they’re on the ice because they have it in them offensively,” Golden Knights coach Bruce Cassidy said of the first line. “I know what they can do defensively. There’s never a worry for me who’s the matchup on the other side, and that’s no disrespect to those players. They’ve handled those matchups for years in the league, and now you’ve got two of them on the same line.”

Cassidy heaps praise on forwards

Cassidy coached some of the NHL’s top forwards in Boston before guiding Vegas to the Stanley Cup in 2023.

“This could be the best group in terms of player one to 12 that I could ever coach just because of the depth and how it’s lining up for the Vegas Golden Knights,” Cassidy said. “Other teams have ways they access and that’s not disrespect. ... Now we’ve got to get it off the paper and onto the rink looking like it’s supposed to.”

Holtz signs 2-year deal

The Golden Knights signed forward Alexander Holtz to a two-year, $1.675 million contract. He was on a professional tryout agreement.

The 23-year-old played in 53 games last season for the Golden Knights, recording four goals and eight assists.

Why Easton Cowan Won't Be In The Maple Leafs' Home-Opening Lineup Vs. Canadiens

Despite Easton Cowan being on the ice for the Toronto Maple Leafs' optional morning skate on Wednesday morning, he will not be in the lineup for the home opener against the Montreal Canadiens.

Cowan stayed out late with Toronto's other projected healthy scratches, Sammy Blais and Philippe Myers. Maple Leafs head coach Craig Berube confirmed that Cowan won't play following Toronto's skate inside Scotiabank Arena.

"He won't be playing tonight. But he's up here with us. We're happy about that. He's here. Like I talked before about Easton, we don't want him sitting out. We want him playing. But we chose tonight that he will not play."

For three-quarters of Maple Leafs training camp, it looked like Cowan had an opening night lineup spot locked up. Cowan impressed Berube so much that he spent a good chunk of camp alongside Steven Lorentz and Scott Laughton on the fourth line.

However, after Laughton suffered a lower-body injury in the second-last pre-season game, Toronto's lineup shifted, with Cowan becoming an extra forward. Max Domi shifted to the third-line center spot, with Nick Robertson on his wing, and Nicolas Roy was moved to the middle of the fourth line alongside Lorentz and Calle Jarnkrok.

"I think if you look at him during training camp, the effort and the ability to score a goal when we need it," Berube mentioned of why Robertson made the team out of camp. "He scored goals throughout camp. There's his work ethic, tenacity. He's just a noticeable player. You know, he came in and worked extremely hard and played well. Deserved to be on the team."

‘You Always Try To Find A Happy Medium’: Maple Leafs’ Auston Matthews Shares Contract Philosophy Following Connor McDavid's Extension With Oilers‘You Always Try To Find A Happy Medium’: Maple Leafs’ Auston Matthews Shares Contract Philosophy Following Connor McDavid's Extension With OilersConnor McDavid shocked the NHL by signing a two-year extension with the Edmonton Oilers for what is universally perceived to be a massive discount in pay. The star forward signed for an average of $12.5 million per year, the same average annual value as the eight-year contract he is finishing at the end of the 2025-26 season.

The projected bottom six forward group appears to be as follows:

Joshua - Domi - Robertson
Lorentz - Roy - Jarnkrok

"I’m just going to keep taking it day by day. I mean, just keep attacking it. Keep working hard. Have a good mindset, be positive," Cowan said on Monday after practice.

"My game felt really good (at) 200 feet. I’ve never felt that good as an all-around player, so it definitely feels good that way. But just going to keep attacking each and every day, and keep getting better at little parts of the game."

Both Berube and Maple Leafs GM Brad Treliving agree that Cowan needs to play. If he's going to remain with the NHL roster, at some point he's going to make his NHL debut with the club. It's really a matter of when, and not if.

"Easton has had a really good camp. I think he's right there ready to play for us. We want to manage it appropriately," Treliving said. "If he's going to be playing with us here, great. But if he's not, I want him playing, right? So we'll manage it here the next little bit."

Latest stories:

Maple Leafs Set For Regular Season Opener Against Canadiens, Lineups, And Where To Watch

‘You Always Try To Find A Happy Medium’: Maple Leafs’ Auston Matthews Shares Contract Philosophy Following Connor McDavid's Extension With Oilers

'I Know What He Expects From Me': Why Maple Leafs' Sammy Blais Is Excited For Opportunity To Play Under Craig Berube Again

Aaron Judge does it all and rescues Yankees with ‘amazing swing’ against Blue Jays

NEW YORK — When the New York Yankees needed someone to save them, Aaron Judge practically put on a cape.

Captain clutch, indeed.

In a do-it-all effort for the ages, Judge hit a tying homer and drove in four runs as the Yankees staved off elimination by rallying past the Toronto Blue Jays 9-6 in Game 3 of their AL Division Series.

“Just an awesome, MVP-like performance,” New York manager Aaron Boone said. “A pretty incredible night for the captain.”

Judge went 3 for 4 with an intentional walk and scored three times, also making pivotal plays with his glove and legs as Yankee Stadium fans chanted “MVP! MVP!”

Down by five early, New York scored eight unanswered runs to prevent a three-game sweep and push the best-of-five playoff series to Game 4 in the Bronx.

“Hopefully he gets a bad night’s sleep and has some bad food tonight or something like that,” Blue Jays manager John Schneider said.

After struggling at the plate in previous postseasons, Judge is 7 for 11 in this series (.636) with five RBIs and three walks.

That makes him 11 for 22 (.500) with six RBIs, five runs and a 1.304 OPS in six playoff games this year as the two-time AL MVP and seven-time All-Star chases his first World Series ring at 33 years old.

Long way to go this October. But if not for Judge and 6 2/3 scoreless innings from the New York bullpen, the season already would be over.

“Tonight was special, but there’s still more work to be done,” he said. “Hopefully we have some more cool moments like this the rest of the postseason.”

Jazz Chisholm Jr. launched a go-ahead solo homer in the fifth, and New York improved to 3-0 in elimination games during these playoffs with the franchise’s largest comeback ever in those situations.

The only time the Yankees overcame a bigger deficit in the postseason was when they climbed out of a 6-0 hole in Game 4 of the 1996 World Series at Atlanta.

Toronto, which committed a couple of costly errors that led to a pair of unearned runs, hadn’t lost all season when leading by at least four.

With the Yankees trailing 6-1, consecutive doubles by Trent Grisham and Judge to start the third began the comeback. Later in the inning, Judge stayed in a rundown between third base and home plate long enough to allow Cody Bellinger to reach third. That became important when Bellinger scored on Giancarlo Stanton’s sacrifice fly.

New York was still down 6-3 in the fourth with two runners aboard when right-hander Louis Varland was brought in to face Judge, who sought out Stanton in the dugout for a scouting report.

Varland struck out Stanton in a key spot during Game 1.

“Big G saw him in Toronto. I asked him, I hadn’t seen Louis since he was with the Twins and was a starter. I wanted a brush up. I’ve seen all the videos, seen all the appearances, but it’s a difference when you step in the box and see him live. So I was talking to him about what certain pitches were like, what it felt like,” Judge said.

“Any info you can get like that kind of helps you sharpen your game plan a little bit and kind of gets you locked in a little bit better.”

Judge turned on an 0-2 fastball clocked at 100 mph off the inside corner and somehow kept it fair, launching a three-run drive that clanged high off the left-field foul pole for his 17th postseason homer.

“I guess a couple ghosts out there helped kind of keep that fair,” he said.

Schneider called it “a ridiculous swing.”

“He made a really good pitch look really bad,” Varland said.

Judge tossed his bat aside and gestured to teammates on the bench as the sellout crowd of 47,399 burst into a frenzy.

“It’s an amazing swing,” Boone said. “That’s shades of Edgar Martínez right there, taking that high-and-tight one and keeping it fair down the line. Manny Ramirez used to do that really well, too. But just a great swing on a pretty nasty pitch, obviously.”

At 99.7 mph, it was the fastest pitch Judge has ever homered on. And it was the first home run by any big leaguer on a pitch 99 mph or faster 1.2 feet inside from the center of the strike zone since pitch tracking started in 2008, according to MLB Statcast.

“I don’t know. I get yelled at for swinging at them out of the zone, but now I’m getting praised for it,” said Judge, who also went deep against Varland in the pitcher’s major league debut with Minnesota in September 2022. “I don’t care what the numbers say or where something was at, I’m just up there trying to put a good swing on a good pitch, and it looked good to me.

“After he blew my doors off on the pitch before, I said just get ready, see a good pitch, and drive it.”

The right fielder then made a diving catch with a runner at second in the fifth, drawing more “MVP” chants.

And in the sixth, Judge scored on Ben Rice’s sacrifice fly after being intentionally walked with one out and nobody on base.

Call it a sign of respect. Or perhaps, fear.

“He’s had a good postseason. He’s had a pretty good career,” Schneider said. “There’s times where you just don’t want him to swing.”

Up 5 runs, Blue Jays let AL Division Series sweep of Yankees slip out of their gloves

NEW YORK — Up five runs, the Toronto Blue Jays were headed to a three-game sweep of the New York Yankees and their first trip to the AL Championship Series in nine years.

And then it slipped out of their gloves.

A pair of errors by Isiah Kiner-Falefa and Addison Barger revived the Yankees, who then rode home runs by Aaron Judge and Jazz Chisholm Jr. off Louis Varland to a 9-6 victory.

“Sloppy brand of baseball,” Kiner-Falefa said.

Instead of preparing to host Seattle or Detroit at Rogers Centre this weekend, the Blue Jays’ lead in the best-of-five series was cut to 2-1 heading into Game 4 at Yankee Stadium.

“You’re talking about giving a really good team extra outs.” Blue Jays manager John Schneider said. “Walks and errors will kill you against this team.”

Varland gave up a homer to Judge while making his major league debut for Minnesota on Sept. 7, 2022. This one was a three-run drive that tied the score 6-6 in the fourth.

Judge’s homer was the first on a 99 mph or faster pitch 1.2 feet inside from the center of the strike zone since pitch tracking started in 2008, according to MLB Statcast.

“He made a really good pitch look really bad,” said Varland, who will start Game 4 as an opener.

Vladimir Guerrero Jr. hit a two-run, first-inning homer off Carlos Rodón and is batting .693 (8 for 13) with three homers and eight RBIs in the series. The Blue Jays lost after leading by five runs for the first time since Sept. 3, 2024, against Philadelphia, according to the Elias Sports Bureau.

“Flush it tonight. That’s all you can do, and bounce back tomorrow and come out and win a series,” said Toronto starter Shane Bieber, who lasted just 2 2/3 innings.

Kiner-Falefa, a 2020 Gold Glove winner at third, allowed Ben Rice’s two-out grounder in the bottom of the first to kick off the heel of his glove. The ball bounced off his chest and fell to the dirt, and Kiner-Falefa inadvertently kicked it as Rice reached. Giancarlo Stanton followed with an RBI single that cut the lead in half.

“Big error by me right there,” Kiner-Falefa said. “It just took a high hop. I was expecting a lower-hit ball. I felt like I did a good job knocking it down, just wasn’t able to stop the spin on the ground.”

With the Blue Jays ahead 6-3 in the fourth, one out and no one on, Austin Wells lofted a pop to left. Third baseman Barger, who had entered as a pinch hitter in the third, settled under the ball in short left only for the wind to blow the ball toward the seats. The ball hit off his glove and bounced into foul territory as Wells reached second.

“The wind was kind of weird all night. You could see early on that it was kind of swirling up top,” Barger said. “I thought I was camped under it.”

Trent Grisham walked, and Varland relieved and got ahead of Judge 0-2. The 27-year-old right-hander, acquired from the Twins at the trade deadline, threw a 99.7 mph fastball that the two-time AL MVP drove high down the left-field line.

Varland craned his neck, tried to wish the ball foul and watched it clang high off the foul pole. Judge made a rare bat flip.

“I guess a couple ghosts out there helped kind of keep that fair,” Judge said.

Then in the fifth, Varland left a 99.4 mph fastball low and inside for Chisholm, rarely a good pitch to a left-handed hitter in Yankee Stadium. Varland crouched and bowed his head even before Chisholm’s no-doubt drive bounced out of the second deck in right for a 7-6 lead.

Anthony Santander, in an image fitting of Toronto’s night, was prone in right, face in the grass, after he failed to come up with a backhand catch on Cody Bellinger’s liner in the sixth, which bounced to the warning track for a double.

In a quiet Blue Jays clubhouse after midnight, players looked ahead to Game 4 and another chance to close out the series and avoid a Game 5 in Toronto.

“Hopefully do what we did the first two games,” Kiner-Falefa said, “and if it doesn’t work out, we get to go home.”

What is considered a good season for Kings in 2025-26? Answering this and more

What is considered a good season for Kings in 2025-26? Answering this and more originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

You asked, and we answered.

Coming off an adverse 2024-25 NBA season full of change and instability, the Kings are excited to get the ball rolling with welcomed change under new general manager Scott Perry and coach Doug Christie.

But with newness comes a level of uncertainty, as questions and concerns likely will continue to be addressed throughout the preseason and over the course of the 2025-26 regular season.

In the latest edition of “Ask Tristi,” we address Kings fans’ biggest questions entering Wednesday night’s preseason opener against the Toronto Raptors at Golden 1 Center.

What’s your biggest concern for the season? (@BrookeUhlenhop)

The addition of Dennis Schroder took care of Sacramento’s biggest issue since trading De’Aaron Fox last season. He instantly fills the point guard void and will help facilitate the offense.

But it’s to be determined how Schroder — and the rest of the starting five — will mesh together as an offense.

The combination of Malik Monk, Zach LaVine, DeMar DeRozan, Keegan Murray and Domantas Sabonis simply didn’t work in the life-after-Fox experiment. Keon Ellis replaced Monk in the starting lineup toward the end of the regular season, and that didn’t work either.

While Schroder will do his job to fly the plane safely, there still is plenty of turbulence in the way of Sacramento’s offense. Aside from the point guard position, the other four presumed starters still don’t seem to make sense together, at least to seriously compete in the Western Conference.

On the other hand, a full offseason, training camp and preseason together could help with off- and on-court chemistry, rather than the position they were in last season of trying to figure it out on the fly.

Only time will tell.

Who is your pick for a breakout season? (@motiong0d)

Entering a pivotal Year 4 and contract season, all eyes will be on Murray — both in Sacramento and around the league.

After Sacramento selected the Iowa product No. 4 overall in the 2022 NBA Draft, Murray had a phenomenal, record-breaking rookie season, averaging 12.2 points on 45.3-percent shooting from the field and 41.4 percent from 3-point range.

Defensively, the 25-year-old has blossomed into the team’s best all-around defender, earning himself the tall task of defending the opposing team’s best player on most nights.

Offensively, however, he hasn’t been able to build upon his impressive rookie showing. At least not consistently. Part of that is due to who he shares the majority of the time on the court with, and part of it is him having to be more aggressive in creating his own shot.

Since LaVine entered Sacramento’s lineup on Feb. 5, Murray’s field-goal attempts went down by nearly five attempts per game. That’s not a knock on LaVine, who continued one of the best campaigns of his career with the Kings last season, but more so the reality of having multiple guys who need the ball in their hand on the floor at the same time.

All that to say Murray needs to have a breakout season, and the Kings need him to, too.

Even if that means fewer touches for themselves, the Kings’ offensive stars know how vital Murray is to their overall success.

“A key component to our success is Keegan — on both ends of the ball,” DeRozan told reporters after practice last week. “We won’t be able to go nowhere if we don’t get the best out of him every single night.”

Murray said his agent will take care of the business side of things throughout his contract year, while his focus will remain on playing the best basketball he can as he aims for two-way stardom in the league.

That time could come sooner than some might think.

** Honorable mention: Isaac Jones

What would you consider to be a “good season” for the Kings in your eyes? (@gullyblanchard)

No one likes moral victories. No one likes liars, either.

Sacramento likely won’t finish as a top-six seed in the stacked West, but the Kings are the only ones in the Kings’ way of finishing just below there.

The No. 7 to No. 10 seeds could be up for grabs for Sacramento.

The Kings finished 48-34 (third in the West) during their magical “Beam Team” 2022-23 season. They finished with two fewer wins (46-36) the following year and dropped all the way to ninth, which is the same place they finished last season with a 40-42 record.

The West is weird, we know that. But that’s why Sacramento must attack every game — whether it’s versus a No. 3 seed or No. 13 seed — with the same aggressive, disciplined approach.

So, if we want to talk wins, 40 seems doable and fair. In terms of standings and the bigger picture, a NBA play-in tournament spot — with a play-in win and then whatever happens thereafter — would feel like a good season given Sacramento’s circumstances of incorporating all the newness.

Some fans and media view this season as the beginning of a rebuild for Sacramento. While the Kings likely won’t be hoisting the Larry O’Brien in June, I think they also might surprise a lot of people.

Who is the X-factor for the Kings this season? (@deucemason on IG)

This could go a lot of different ways.

But the obvious answer feels like it should be the team’s big offseason addition.

Schroder won’t ever replace what Fox did in his eight years with the Kings. But he doesn’t have to.

LaVine helps close the gap on that offensive void, while Schroder does everything else that Fox did well, plus maybe a little bit more.

Schroder is a 12-year veteran with plenty of playoff experience. He’s fresh off leading Germany to EuroBasket gold and was named the EuroBasket MVP for his efforts. He was hand-selected by Christie and Perry this offseason, and the Kings are thrilled they got their guy.

The 32-year-old is exactly the kind of player Christie wants on his team, with certain traits and characteristics that are reminiscent of the coach during his playing career.

Schroder won’t have flashy stat lines every night, but his presence alone can help elevate this team after a down year last season.

What’s the vibe been like at media day and training camp? (@momoragan on IG)

When the media were let into the first practice on Day 1 of training camp, the sound of sneakers squeaking, aggressive clapping and loud cheering were echoed on the Kings’ practice facility walls.

But don’t take my word for it.

“Fun” and “energetic” were the words consistently repeated by several players throughout the first week of camp, who credited the atmosphere Christie and Perry have established heading into the new season.

The new pair, in a short time together, already have made major changes within the organization — both on and off the court.

Players seem to be well-receptive to those changes thus far.

More than anything, players appear to be committed to Christie and his coaching style, largely due to his relatability as a former player.

Few people love the city of Sacramento and Kings organization more than Christie. Winning is important to him, but so is remembering to have fun.

That mentality hopes not to get lost in the mix of the season.

After giving away Fox last season, I’ve lost a lot of interest in this team. Is there anything to truly be excited about this season? (@Steve_Tuck)

Short answer: YES.

I know, I know. If there’s anything worse than losing, it’s watching others do it, repeatedly.

But there is plenty to look forward to in Sacramento this season. Key players such as Murray and Ellis enter contract seasons, so it will be interesting to monitor how they handle that “pressure” and grow throughout the season.

Both players should be instrumental to Christie’s rotations.

Also, if you watched summer league, you would know that the Kings rookies Nique Clifford and Maxime Raynaud could make an impact with Sacramento sooner rather than later.

Clifford’s versatility should earn him a role, or at least an opportunity to play with the big boys in Year 1. Meanwhile, Raynaud’s 7-foot presence could be a welcome sight for Sacramento’s center depth.

Isaac Jones isn’t a rookie, but his dominant summer league showing could set him up for a big 2025-26 season.

Finally, if Doug Christie and his smelling salt rituals don’t excite you, I don’t know what will. Christie is entering his first full year as the official coach of the team he loves and adores. He won’t be perfect, no coach is, especially not in Year 1. But his passion and love for the game — and city — will at least be worth the watch.

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Tigers need to find offense before time runs out in the AL Division Series

DETROIT — The Detroit Tigers have less than 24 hours to find an offense that can save their season.

Unfortunately for their chances in the American League Division Series, the Tigers have been looking for the last month without any success.

Detroit only managed one run on five hits in the first eight innings of their 8-4 loss to the Seattle Mariners, leaving them down 2-1 in the series and facing elimination.

“Tonight wasn’t easy,” Tigers manager A.J. Hinch said. “Especially with what (Logan) Gilbert was throwing up there. Not many fastballs and a lot of sliders and splits. We were swinging more and more as the game went on, and we had trouble putting together back-to-back at-bats that were productive.”

Gilbert allowed one run on four hits in six innings, striking out seven without issuing a walk.

“That was vintage Logan,” Mariners manager Dan Wilson said. “He attacked the zone, he got into good counts and he let the split and the slider do his work for him.”

The Tigers scored three runs off Caleb Ferguson in the ninth to narrow the margin to four runs, but Wilson brought in closer Andrés Muñoz. He only needed to face two batters, getting a flyout and a game-ending double play.

“We’re facing really good arms and we haven’t strung together as many great at-bats as we would like,” Tigers leadoff hitter Kerry Carpenter said. “We have to tip our hat to some great pitching. We’ve got at least one more game to turn it around.”

That’s easier said than done for a team that is averaging fewer than three runs a game in the last four weeks.

The problems started with 16 games left in the regular season. On Sept. 11, having outscored the Yankees 23-3 in the previous two days, the Tigers lost 9-3.

They went 3-13 down the stretch, blowing what seemed like a safe AL Central lead to the Cleveland Guardians and only getting the final wild-card berth on a tiebreaker over the Houston Astros.

Things haven’t changed in October. The Tigers hit .218 in the AL Wild Card Series against the Guardians, scoring nine runs in three games but getting out of the series when Cleveland hit .178.

They only scored six runs in the first 28 innings against the Mariners before the meaningless late rally in Game 3.

“This is the hardest time of the year to hit,” Hinch said. “When you are facing high-end pitching in October, it is a grind. Obviously, their guys are talented and are exposing a little bit of the zone control we talk about all the time.”

The Tigers have struck out 68 times in six postseason games, and eight of their nine everyday hitters are averaging at least one strikeout a game.

That’s been a problem all year, though.

Riley Greene and Spencer Torkelson, Detroit’s most dangerous hitters, have struck out 385 times between the regular season and playoffs. In the regular season, they combined for 67 homers and 189 RBIs, but they haven’t homered in the postseason and Torkelson has six of their seven RBIs.

The Tigers are starting to look timid at the plate. In the eighth inning, desperately needing a rally, Javier Báez and Carpenter took five straight strikes from Eduard Bazardo before Carpenter weakly waved at a third strike.

Bryce Miller, who went 4-6 with a 5.68 ERA in 18 starts, will be on the mound for Seattle. If the Tigers can’t take advantage of him, a once-promising season might be over.