Penguins' New Projected Defense Has Intriguing Look

The NHL's official Facebook account recently shared their projected defense pairings for each Metropolitan Division club. Here is how they see the Pittsburgh Penguins' defense looking once the 2025-26 season is here.

First Pairing: Owen Pickering & Kris Letang

For the Penguins' top pairing, the NHL's account sees prospect defenseman Owen Pickering playing alongside Kris Letang. This would be a major role for a young defenseman on the rise like Pickering, but he could very well benefit from playing on a pairing with a veteran blueliner like Letang. 

Second Pairing: Ryan Graves & Erik Karlsson 

The NHL's account sees Ryan Graves and Erik Karlsson being the Penguins' second pairing. If Graves ends up being in a top-four role next season, they will be hoping that he can bounce back. As for Karlsson, he could work playing alongside a defensive defenseman like Graves in 2025-26.

Third Pairing: Parker Wotherspoon & Matt Dumba

For the Penguins' third pairing, the NHL's account sees newcomers Parker Wotherspoon and Matt Dumba playing together. This pairing would certainly be interesting to watch, as both players are hard-hitting defensemen who do not shy away from the physical side of the game. Playing bottom-pairing minutes, there could be a match here. 

Penguins' Sidney Crosby Lands High Rating In NHL 26Penguins' Sidney Crosby Lands High Rating In NHL 26Pittsburgh Penguins superstar Sidney Crosby simply won't slow down. During his 20th career NHL season in 2024-25, he was once again one of the league's most dominant players. In 80 games on the year, the 2005 first-overall pick recorded 33 goals, 58 assists, and 91 points. With this, he set an NHL record by having his 20th NHL season producing at over a point-per-game pace.

Ceddanne Rafaela makes up for rare defensive gaffes with game-winning home run

Ceddanne Rafaela makes up for rare defensive gaffes with game-winning home run originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

Ask anybody involved with the Red Sox in any way whom they believe to be the best center fielder in baseball, and they won’t hesitate. It’s Ceddanne Rafaela.

It was downright shocking, then, to see Rafaela make not one but two defensive gaffes on Wednesday night in Baltimore. Both were costly, too, as Rafaela dropped a ball while diving to allow a run to score in the bottom of the second and later didn’t take charge as a fly ball fell directly between him and left fielder Jarren Duran in the seventh, allowing another run to score.

Both plays should have resulted in third outs, but they instead accounted for the entirety of Baltimore’s offense on a night when Brayan Bello was dealing.

It was uncharacteristic, to say the least, and it put the Red Sox in position to lose a game they should have won.

Yet baseball has a funny way of creating opportunities for those who need them. And in the top of the ninth, Rafaela got his.

With Duran — who did bear some responsibility for the fallen fly ball — reaching base on a leadoff single, Rafaela stepped to the plate as the go-ahead run in the final frame. After taking the first two pitches from Keegan Akin, Rafaela got an off-speed pitch over the heart of the plate and unleashed on the offering.

The re-modified dimensions of Camden Yards helped out, and by the time the ball came down, Rafaela was casually jogging around first base, having known right off the bat that he had given his team a 3-2 lead.

The home run was Rafaela’s 15th of the season but his first since July 13, and only his second after hitting a walk-off home run against the Rays on July 11.

From there, Aroldis Chapman — in the midst of the best season of his life — shut down the Orioles in a 1-2-3 inning with three strikeouts to secure the victory.

For the Red Sox, the victory secured a second consecutive four-game series win, after they took the first three in the Bronx over the weekend. They’ll have the chance to make this one a four-game sweep on Thursday afternoon.

For Rafaela, it might have meant a little more. He had cost his team a shutout, but he managed to make sure the unexpected miscues didn’t hurt in the standings.

Grimsby beat Manchester United, Club Brugge thrash Rangers, and more: Champions League and Carabao Cup – as it happened

Fresh humiliation for Manchester United as Grimsby knock them out of the Carabao Cup after an epic shootout, while Rangers are thrashed in Bruges

And that is surely curtains for Rangers! It’s a splendid cross from the left, and Nicolo Tresoldi stoops at the near post to power in the header!

Rangers will have to learn how to deal a bit better with the pace of Carlos Forbs on the right of the Brugge attack, because scything him down in full flight is not a long-term solution. They give away a free-kick, which is curled out of play.

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MLB's newest trophy is a guitar. Obviously, Eddie Vedder had to give it a test drive

Pearl Jam's Eddier Vedder waves at fans during a Seattle Mariners game.
The Vedder Cup — which goes to the winner of the Seattle Mariners-San Diego Padres MLB season series — is a custom Fender Telecaster designed with rocker Eddie Vedder, who appeared at T-Mobile Park before the game Monday. (Lindsey Wasson / Associated Press)

Before MLB’s newest trophy was offered up as the prize in a competition between the Seattle Mariners and San Diego Padres, it had to pass through the hands of Pearl Jam frontman Eddie Vedder.

The custom Fender Telecaster guitar, named the Vedder Cup, is said to have been played by its namesake for “about an hour” before it was shipped off to T-Mobile Park in Seattle.

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“He gave it a good run through,” George Webb, Pearl Jam's equipment manager, told the Seattle Times on Monday. “He always likes to feel like he puts a little energy, you know, spiritual energy, into an instrument. Not just hand off something that’s brand-new, never-touched kind of thing. So yeah, jammed on it for about an hour. Had a good time.”

The trophy features many nods from the 60-year-old musician, including a hand-drawn “cresting wave” illustration and an arrow and mod symbol — an allusion to Vedder’s tribute to the Who on his personal guitar. On the back, the Padres and Mariners logos appear alongside text hand-written by the singer and guitarist: “The Vedder Cup Established 2025 by Major League Baseball.”

A Seattle Mariners baseball player lifts a white guitar with black accents up in the air in a stadium
The Vedder Cup, a guitar shown off Monday by Cal Raleigh of the Seattle Mariners, will go each year to the winner of the full-season series between the Mariners and the San Diego Padres. (Lindsey Wasson / Associated Press)

It also contains a logo from EB Research Partnership, a nonprofit co-founded by Vedder and his wife, Jill, after a childhood friend's son was born with the painful skin condition epidermolysis bullosa. The nonprofit funds research on the disease.

Read more:Seattle's Cal Raleigh becomes first catcher to win MLB All-Star Home Run Derby

The cup is intended to bring “meaningful awareness” to the rare disorder, Mariners Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer Trevor Gooby said in a statement in March, when the longtime rivalry became official.

“We can't wait to see this rivalry series grow and look forward to battling the Mariners for the Vedder Cup,” Padres Chief Executive Erik Greupner added.

The rivalry, such as it is, arose from forces both real and manufactured, apparently. Vedder has strong ties to both cities, having grown up in San Diego, then moved to Seattle to start Pearl Jam with Stone Gossard and Jeff Ament — hence, the "Vedder" Cup.

Also, upon the introduction of interleague play in the late ’90s, MLB looked for "natural" rivalries between teams like the Padres and Mariners. This year, the league canonized the rivalry, which is said to have begun as geographic, given both teams' West Coast homes, Reuters reports.

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The two teams have met almost annually since 1997. In the informal all-time series, Seattle currently leads 68-63. Additionally, they share a training complex in Peoria, Ariz.

Some fans are still left with questions as to why the competition has turned official, with one claiming on Reddit that "padres and mariners fans literally give no s— about each other."

Still, they conceded it is "likely the most meaningless and yet kinda fun thing in MLB."

The trophy was in the spotlight Monday when the teams met for the fourth time this season. The Mariners notched a 9-6 victory over the Padres, taking the season series after three previous wins in San Diego. The Padres beat the Mariners Tuesday, 7-6, and the final game is Wednesday, but the contest has already been decided. Cal Raleigh, the Mariners’ switch-hitting, homer-hammering catcher, known as "Big Dumper," hoisted and played the trophy in celebration Monday night.

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The name and logo for the cup were first shown off in March, but its final design wasn’t finished until the weeks leading up to the fixture.

“Typically on a custom build like this it will take us six months or so to source the wood, get everything mapped out ready to go and take our time to vet the process, apply the graphics, do some test runs,” Chase Paul, director of product development for Fender, told the Seattle Times. “On this we just kind of headed into it in parallel with testing and the production version at the same time, and kind of getting it ready to go.”

In all, it took Fender eight or nine weeks to get the work done, which Paul called a "really incredible effort by the team in the shop."

Naturally, Vedder doesn’t want the trophy guitar to sit on a shelf for the next year while it's in the Mariners’ possession. According to Webb, “He wants it to be played.”

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“That’s his attitude with everything. It’s a living, breathing instrument. It sounds great,” he added.

As an added bonus to fans, the league announced it would give away limited-edition Vedder Cup hats during the last 2025 game between the two on Wednesday.

To no surprise, the exclusive ticket package that included the hats has sold out.

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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Five NHL Sophomores Show Strong Signs Of Breaking Out

Not every NHL rookie breaks out instantly.

Calder Trophy winner Lane Hutson and runners-up Dustin Wolf, Macklin Celebrini and Matvei Michkov were the ones who did and excelled for most of their rookie season. Others needed more time to get going.

For the latter group, their strong finish to the season can provide the confidence needed to propel them to fully break out and potentially become an NHL star, rather than suffering the clichéd 'sophomore slump.'

Here are five players who finished 2024-25 on fire and why they could elevate their status even further in 2025-26.

Cutter Gauthier, LW, Anaheim Ducks

Cutter Gauthier entered the 2024-25 season with a level of pressure that no other player on this list had.

After being drafted fifth overall by the Philadelphia Flyers in 2022 and forcing a trade that sent him to the Anaheim Ducks, the 21-year-old was bound to be under the microscope throughout the year.

Gauthier lived up to the high expectations he set for himself, putting together a 20-goal campaign while finishing fifth in rookie scoring with 44 points in 82 games.

Even with that success, the underlying numbers suggest things could’ve gone even better.

Leading up to the draft, Gauthier had been an elite goal-scorer at every level he played at. He scored 19 in 22 games in his final season in the United States League, then led the NCAA in goals in 2023-24 with 38 in 41 games with Boston College. 

That made it puzzling for Ducks fans when he managed to put up just nine goals in the first 54 games of the season while playing top six minutes and getting time on the power play.

The truth is, luck played a huge role in Gauthier’s early struggles. Despite being a high-volume shooter, he converted on just 8 percent of his shots through that 54-game stretch.

For context, Brayden Point, Nico Hischier and Mark Scheifele took fewer shots than Gauthier's 190 this past season and all ended up scoring at least 35 goals.

Even as Gauthier's numbers improved in the second half of the season, at 11 goals and 22 points in 28 games, there’s clearly a ton of untapped potential in Gauthier’s game. Look for him to take a huge jump in production this season on a young Ducks team that could sneak into playoff contention.

Oilers' Isaac Howard Follows The Footsteps Of McGroarty And GauthierOilers' Isaac Howard Follows The Footsteps Of McGroarty And GauthierIsaac Howard bet on himself by forcing a trade to the Edmonton Oilers, but it comes with a catch.

Zack Bolduc, RW, Montreal Canadiens

The St. Louis Blues had a ton of players outperform expectations last season, especially Zack Bolduc. 

The 22-year-old finished the 2024-25 season with 19 goals and 36 points in 72 games despite averaging just under 13 minutes of ice time.

Bolduc did most of his damage after the 4 Nations break, with 13 goals and 18 points in the final 26 games.

The high 22.8 shooting percentage while playing bottom-six minutes may lead people to think the scoring would be unsustainable. That said, Bolduc’s history may indicate there’s another level he can reach after the Montreal Canadiens acquired him in exchange for defenseman Logan Mailloux.

Bolduc was a prolific goal-scorer during his junior hockey days, putting together back-to-back 50-goal seasons with the QMJHL's Quebec Remparts.

With Kirby Dach’s timeline to return and overall playing ability still unknown, Bolduc could even move from the wing to the second-line center role with the Canadiens.

It's unclear whether or not Bolduc is ready to be relied on as a top contributor or if his final push last season was a flash in the pan, but his situation presents one of the more intriguing storylines to follow throughout the season.

Canadiens: Bolduc Is Up To The ChallengeCanadiens: Bolduc Is Up To The ChallengeSince being traded by the St. Louis Blues to the Montreal Canadiens, Zachary Bolduc has been looking forward to playing for the team he cheered for as a kid. He’s been to Brossard to check out the CN Sports Complex and has spoken to his new coach a couple times. La Presse’s Simon Olivier Lorange caught up with Bolduc and new Habs signing Samuel Blais at the first edition of the QMJHL Foundation tournament in Terrebonne.

Marco Kasper, C, Detroit Red Wings

There are a lot of questions surrounding the ‘Yzerplan’ and what direction the Detroit Red Wings are headed in, but one player who has been a pleasant surprise is Marco Kasper.

Kasper started out the 2024-25 season in the AHL with the Grand Rapids Griffins before being called up in October. There was understandably a learning curve for the 21-year-old, but the real turning point for Kasper’s season was when Todd McLellan was hired to replace Derek Lalonde at the end of 2024.

In 29 games under Lalonde, Kasper averaged 14:40 of ice time and had seven points in that span. McLellan showed more trust in Kasper, playing him 15:55 per game since the coaching change. Kasper's 17 goals led all rookies in that timeframe, and he had 30 points in the final 48 games.

A full season alongside Alex DeBrincat and Patrick Kane should allow Kasper to solidify himself as a top-six center in the NHL. He could end up being a crucial piece to bringing the Red Wings back to playoff contention as soon as this year.

Will Smith, RW, San Jose Sharks

A fantastic rookie campaign from Macklin Celebrini made it easy to overlook just how effective Will Smith was for the San Jose Sharks last year. Still, the 20-year-old is poised for a huge sophomore season after a tremendous final stretch of games.

Smith struggled to find his footing throughout the first half of the season, failing to record a point in the opening eight games of his NHL career. Those inconsistencies managed to follow him all the way to January, putting up just 15 points in the first 40 games of the season.

Things began to turn around for Smith just before the 4 Nations Face-Off, where he visibly had adapted to the speed and physicality of the professional level. It reflected in his offensive production after the break, where he closed out the year with 22 points in the final 25 games. That’s just one less point than Celebrini had in that stretch.

His ice time had also drastically increased, averaging 18 minutes in the final 25 games compared to 14:42 through the first 49. 

There were real concerns that the Sharks had ushered in Smith to the NHL earlier than he should have been, but their instincts truly paid off. While the team doesn’t appear ready for playoff contention just yet, there’s no denying that Smith will end up playing an integral role in the team’s offensive game plan for years to come.

Mackie Samoskevich, RW, Florida Panthers

Mackie Samoskevich’s development is one part of a long list of successes for the Florida Panthers over the last two seasons.

The 2021 first-round pick led the AHL's Charlotte Checkers in scoring in 2023-24, recording 54 points in 66 games before making the full-time jump to the NHL in 2024-25. He recorded 31 points in 72 games in his rookie NHL campaign.

Samoskevich’s real opportunity to shine came as a result of Matthew Tkachuk’s injury at the 4 Nations Face-Off. While previously being deployed as a speedy bottom-six winger with offensive upside, he slotted into the Panthers’ second line alongside Sam Bennett and Evan Rodrigues, where he had 14 points in the final 24 games of the season.

While the Panthers are set to contend year over year, it’s no secret the prospect pool in South Florida runs pretty thin. After signing a one-year contract this summer, it’s unclear if GM Bill Zito has Samoskevich in his long-term plans for the franchise, but at 22, there aren’t any youngsters like him to inject into the lineup.

The Newtown, Conn., native is entering this season in a similar role, with Tkachuk continuing to recover. He could have a longer run of games in the top six.

Expect Samoskevich to expand his short-term role with the Panthers and potentially become a top trade candidate at the deadline. 

Get the latest news and trending stories by following The Hockey News on Google News and by subscribing to The Hockey News newsletter here. And share your thoughts by commenting below the article on THN.com.

Club Brugge pulverise 10-man Rangers to heap misery on Russell Martin

The Old Firm derby on Sunday will have Europa League teams. If Celtic have deep regrets over misfires in Kazakhstan, Rangers endured a night of near-historic shame in Belgium, utterly incapable of recovering from the first‑leg performance. By contrast to this horror show, that night of blunder was a creditable showing. Russell Martin’s team made it so simple for an admittedly high-class Brugge side.

On Martin the jury is out, his winless start to the domestic season followed by this nightmare. The former Southampton manager’s stewardship is in grave danger after 10 games in charge. The response of the club’s new 49ers ownership, for whom Martin was the first managerial appointment, is keenly awaited. The depths to which Rangers plunged, particularly in the first half, made a mockery of his continued self-belief, his proclamations that his is the only way forward.

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What we learned as Rafael Devers homers twice in Giants' blowout win vs. Cubs

What we learned as Rafael Devers homers twice in Giants' blowout win vs. Cubs originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

SAN FRANCISCO — With two outs in the bottom of the fifth and the Giants nursing a one-run lead, Dominic Smith hit a single to center. Rafael Devers eased into third, and then looked around in confusion as the ball rolled around near the bag. 

Had Chicago Cubs rookie Matt Shaw fielded the throw cleanly, Devers might have been out because he slowed down as he approached the bag. Instead, he scored a few seconds later on Matt Chapman’s bloop single, and then turned and watched as Smith scored, too, after a throw from right field hit Chapman’s helmet and bounced all the way to the backstop.

It was the type of sequence that would have fit right in with games of April or May. Right now, everything once again is going right for the Giants, who crushed the Cubs 12-3 to clinch a second straight series against an NL Central team headed for the MLB playoffs. 

The Giants’ own postseason odds haven’t improved much in recent days since the New York Mets picked up steam at the exact same time. They completed a sweep of the Philadelphia Phillies earlier Wednesday, leaving the Giants seven out with 29 to play.

Stranger things have happened, but right now they’re happy to just be back on the right track. Their fourth straight win got them to 65-68, and they’ll go for a sweep Thursday behind ace Logan Webb. 

Devers Demolishes

Here’s how Rafael Devers’ night went: 106 mph homer, 107 mph double, walk, 106 mph homer, single. 

The first blast went to dead center and got the Giants on the board in the first inning, and the second one was a three-run shot to left in the sixth that got them to double-digits. With the two-homer night, Devers reached 27 homers on the season. 

Devers won’t really break the long-running 30-homer drought since most of that damage happened with the Boston Red Sox, but he certainly looks capable of doing it next year. When he’s right, Devers is the kind of hitter who can make even Oracle Park feel small. 

W for Whis

Willy Adames’ athletic double play got Carson Whisenhunt through the fifth and allowed him to pick up his second big league win. It wasn’t easy, but Whisenhunt twice got double plays with the bases loaded. 

Whisenhunt gave up five hits, walked three and hit one, but allowed just three earned over those five innings. The Giants are watching everything he does right now, and that includes dealing with adversity. Wednesday wasn’t the cleanest night, but Whisenhunt found a way to limit the damage, which is a positive sign as he tries to lock up a long-term rotation spot

Double Trouble

Jung Hoo Lee caught a break in the fourth when left fielder Willi Castro misjudged his liner to left. It went for a double, his 30th of the year, and that put him in a small club.

Lee became the fifth San Francisco Giant to pick up 30 doubles and 10 triples in a single season, joining Willie Mays, Bobby Bonds, Garry Maddox and Angel Pagan. Lee is second in the National League in triples and now ranks eighth in doubles. 

While there have been some home runs, most notably in New York, peppering the gaps is what the Giants expected when Lee signed a long-term contract. He had just four doubles and no triples as a rookie, but he has found his stride in the second half of his sophomore season. Lee has now picked up a hit in 21 of 23 games this month. 

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Top 10 Blackhawks According To EA Sports NHL 26 Player Ratings

The EA Sports NHL franchise is a big part of hockey culture. Whether people still buy the annual edition of the game or not, it is synonymous with real-life NHL fans. People care about the teams, the game modes, and most importantly, their favorite players. 

Player ratings are based on what EA believes is going on in real life, so everyone argues over the results as if they are rankings. The better teams have more highly ranked players, and the lousy teams lack the depth, just like in the actual NHL. 

For the Chicago Blackhawks, it isn’t pretty in the upcoming installment, NHL 26. That is to be expected for a team that has been drafting in the top five for several years in a row now. 

Connor Bedard leads the way with an 88 rating. For reference, Connor McDavid of the Edmonton Oilers is the highest-rated player in the game with a 97. Leon Draisaitl (Edmonton Oilers), Nathan MacKinnon (Colorado Avalanche), and Nikita Kucherov (Tampa Bay Lightning) are tied for second with 96. 

Bedard will likely be in the low-mid 90s one day with the other superstars in the league, but he has a lot of work to do in his development to get there. Once you get into the 89s and 90s, you start to see the perennial all-stars around the league.  

Alex Vlasic, Ryan Donato, and Teuvo Teravainen are all tied for second with an 84 overall. Connor Murphy and Spencer Knight are tied for 5th with an 83. Then you have Frank Nazar, Jason Dickinson, Nick Foligno, and Tyler Bertuzzi rounding out the top ten with 82 overall. 

Like Bedard, all of Alex Vlasic, Frank Nazar, and Spencer Knight have plenty of runway to improve their stock as the years go along. Everyone else is likely to plateau or take a dip.

Once the prospects like Sam Rinzel, Artyom Levshunov, and Anton Frondell, amongst others, get in and start leveling up, the Blackhawks will look like a much better team again. 

You can preorder NHL 26 today before its September 5th release. 

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

Brandin Podziemski reveals how Warriors' locker room views Jonathan Kuminga saga

Brandin Podziemski reveals how Warriors' locker room views Jonathan Kuminga saga originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

The Jonathan Kuminga saga has dominated Warriors and NBA discourse throughout the offseason.

But how do Golden State’s players actually feel about the situation? Third-year guard Brandin Podziemski revealed how he and his Warriors teammates view the Kuminga noise in a conversation with 95.7 The Game’s “Willard and Dibs” on Wednesday.

“Obviously, everybody on our team knows it’s the media’s job to try to nitpick and find things to write and talk about and separate teammates so they have a story to write,” Podziemski told Mark Willard and Dan Dibley. “Like, we all know that’s how it works; especially the guys who have been around it for 10 to 15 years, they know how it works.

“Everybody in the locker room knows no matter how that situation’s resolved, it doesn’t change our viewpoint of JK as a person [and] as a player. Obviously, we all want him to be in Golden State; that’s the whole point. But it doesn’t change anything.”

To no one’s surprise, Podziemski has his teammate’s back.

It is no secret that Golden State, the lone franchise that has yet to make an offseason move, likely has transactions in wait because of the Kuminga situation. But it’s also well known that Kuminga and the Warriors are at an impasse in contract negotiations. 

At the end of the day, games will be played, and Podziemski will be obligated to lace up his shoes regardless of Kuminga’s status. The guard simply is focused on what he can control.

“The media is going to portray it one way to try and make people think differently of it,” Podziemski told Willard and Dibley. “But it doesn’t change my perspective. I know all I can control is being the best version of Brandin Podziemski that I can be going into my third year, and everything else is going to fall how it may.”

Podziemski said he and his Warriors teammates want Kuminga back for the 2025-26 NBA season. However, it’s uncertain how much Golden State’s front office agrees with that sentiment, if it does at all.

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Florida Panthers announce 2025 NHL Prospect Tournament roster

The new hockey season is just around the corner, and soon it will be time for the youngest Florida Panthers to kick things off.

In just a couple short weeks, the Panthers will join the Carolina Hurricanes, Tampa Bay Lightning and Nashville predators at the 2025 NHL Prospect Tournament.

This year, it will be held at AdventHealth Center Ice in Wesley Chapel, just north of Tampa.

The round-robin tournament will kick off on Friday, Sept. 12 and wrap up on Monday, Sept. 15.

On Wednesday, the Panthers released their official 24-man roster for the tournament, which features 15 forwards, six defensemen and three goalies.

Florida’s youngsters are expected to arrive in Fort Lauderdale earlier that week for a few days of training and practice time before heading north to Wesley Chapel.

All games at AdventHealth Center Ice will be open to the public and free to attend, and they will also be available via steam, according to the Panthers.

Florida’s three-game schedule is as follows:

Friday, Sept. 12 at 2:00 p.m. vs. Carolina

Saturday, Sept. 13 at 5:00 p.m. vs. Tampa Bay

Monday, Sept. 15 at 12:00 p.m. vs. Nashville

You can check out Florida’s full tournament roster below:

(Florida Panthers)

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Photo caption: Florida Panthers prospects skate against the Tampa Bay Lightning during a 2023 NHL Prospect Tournament game at Hertz Arena in Estero, Florida. (David Dwork)

Two Suns minority owners sue team, focused on owner Mat Ishbia, over transparency

When Mat Ishbia purchased a controlling interest in the Phoenix Suns, he offered to buy out any of the team's 16 minority owners (using the $4 billion valuation of the team to set the price). Fourteen of those owners took him up on the offer.

The two that did not — Kisco WC Sports and Kent Circle Investments – have taken the Suns to court in Delaware over frustrations about transparency and access to information, NBC Sports has confirmed.

"Our clients sued to obtain records to which they are entitled as minority owners of the Suns," said attorneys Michael Carlinsky and Michael Barlow of Quinn Emanuel, who are representing the minority owners. "They are concerned by the manager's [Ishbia's] approach towards minority owners, and want more information about certain spending and capital raises in which the manager has engaged. Transparency with minority owners is not optional, and our clients think it is critical to the success of the Suns."

In the court papers, Kisco and Kent Circle claim they have not had access to view basic information about the franchise, including how it has been run and some of the investments that Ishbia and the Suns have made, such as a new practice facility. With that, the minority owners don't believe they have an understanding of what their shares are worth. They are asking the court to allow them to investigate what they perceive as potential violations of the limited liability company agreement, as well as conflicts of interest.

There are somewhat conflicting reports that one or both of the minority owners are looking to sell their shares and get out (it is known that Kisco and Ishbia discussed a buyout at one point). If true, this suit could be in part an effort to gain leverage in those talks. Suns Capital Group LLC sent a letter to the minority owners stating that it does not have a problem with the two groups selling their shares to outside groups, but the owners cannot demand that Ishbia and the Suns LLC buy them out at a higher valuation than the team was purchased for, reports Gerald Bourguet of PHNX Sports.

For Suns fans, this will have no impact on the court or on how the fans experience their favorite team. For fans with questions about Ishbia's ownership, it's simply something to note for now.

The unique quirks, oddities and head-scratchers of Red Sox' 2026 schedule

The unique quirks, oddities and head-scratchers of Red Sox' 2026 schedule originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

The National Football League likes to make a spectacle out of its schedule release date, teasing the moment as must-see TV for months and generating enough hype to actually squeeze some ratings out of the ordeal.

Major League Baseball, meanwhile, just dumps the thing on a random weekday while the current season is still taking place.

It’s a decision. We can say that all right.

In any event, considering that schedule release came on the aforementioned random weekday, it’s possible you didn’t have time to lay out the calendar and analyze everything that made an eyebrow or two rise around Boston. Fortunately, we can fix that.

Opening Day in Cincinnati

In theory, having a historic franchise like the Red Sox open the season in Cincinnati, which marked the location of the first game of the MLB season for 100 years or so, is pretty cool. In actuality? It’s tough to get excited about a Red Sox-Reds game in March.

That season opener — on March 26! — kicks off a six-game road trip to start the season, with the Red Sox heading to Houston after Cincinnati.

(A bonus to this matchup is Terry Francona managing the Reds. Yet the novelty of the Red Sox facing Francona wore off some time during his 1 million games managing Cleveland.)

No Yankees in September

Do you love a good rivalry game in September, when a chill hits the air, the sun sets early, and everybody knows the game just mean a little bit more?

Well, too bad! No soup for you.

The Red Sox and Yankees will wrap up their season series the weekend of Aug. 28-30, leaving the final month without any potential playoff-implication matchups.

The final month of the season is devoid of most AL East competition, too, with only six of 24 games coming against divisional opponents (three in Baltimore, three in Tampa). The Red Sox’ final home series against an AL East opponent will take place July 24-26 against Toronto.

That’s all good for the sake of variety, but it could theoretically make it difficult for the Red Sox to gain ground if there’s a race for the division playing out over the final two months of the season.

Season finale vs. the Cubs

Interleague play has been around for almost 30 years. With pitchers no longer batting in the NL, and with interleague series taking place at all times, it’s become a very normal part of Major League Baseball.

Still. The Red Sox close out their regular season at home against the Cubs. Which means, by necessity, the Cubs are closing out their season on the road against the Red Sox.

It’s weird.

A Red Sox-Cubs series is always a big deal, with fans of both teams dishing out big bucks to make pilgrimages to both Wrigley Field and Fenway Park. They used to be very rare, but next year will mark the fifth straight season with a Cubs-Red Sox matchup.

The oversaturation and the fact that it could be a meaningless series for both teams drains quite a bit of juice out of this one.

Home opener against the Padres

Keeping it with the interleague-is-a-little-strange theme, the Red Sox will open Fenway Park on Friday, April 3, against the … San Diego Padres.

On the one hand, Red Sox fans will (most likely) get to finally say hello to Xander Bogaerts, who’s yet to return to Boston as a vistor.

On the other … there’s something discomforting about an interleague series opening the home slate for the Red Sox, even if it happens quite often. It happened this year, with St. Louis visiting Boston and getting swept by the Red Sox. It also happened in 2017, when the Red Sox swept the Pirates (one game got postponed, but the Red Sox later won that one, too), and in 2015, when the Red Sox took two out of three from the Nationals. But the Brewers swept the Red Sox in their first home series in 2014, so the results haven’t been perfect.

Either way, given the fact that it’s happened quite often, you’d think everybody would be used to an interleague series for the home opener by now. But … we’re not.

(By the way, after the Padres leave Boston, the Brewers will head to town, and then the Red Sox will visit St. Louis. The Red Sox may be honorary National League members in April.)

On the road for the Fourth of July

If you like catching a Red Sox game as the appetizer before your evening of Boston Pops and fireworks, you’ll have to readjust. The Red Sox are in Los Angeles to play the Angels on July 4, in the early part of a nine-game road trip ahead of the All-Star break.

After a series finale against the Nationals on July 1, Fenway won’t host a baseball game again until July 17. Sounds like Concert Season.

Raffy returns

The Rafael Devers trade was a bit messy. Its full impact won’t be judged for years. Yet the early indications are that somehow, the Red Sox have been better off without him, and the Giants are worse with him. That’s an odd early result for a three-time All-Star, two-time Silver Slugger in the prime of his career.

In any event, most fans stuck with Devers even as he refused to play first or third base after getting moved to DH this year. When he comes back as a visitor, will they cheer for the 2018 champion? Or will they boo him for the ugly and abrupt ending?

We’ll all find out together when the Giants visit Fenway Park from Aug. 21-23.

Unique visitors and potential road trips

For all of the complaining about interleague play, it’s still fun to occasionally see some jerseys inside Fenway Park that you don’t see too often. Likewise, when fans plan out potential road trips, variety is always a good thing.

Teams visiting Fenway that fit that bill:

  • San Diego (April 3-5)
  • Milwaukee (April 6-8)
  • Philadelphia (May 12-14)
  • Atlanta (May 26-28)
  • Washington (June 29-July 1)
  • Arizona (Aug. 17-19)
  • San Francisco (Aug. 21-23)
  • Chicago Cubs (Sept. 25-27)

And the potential NL road trips:

  • Cincinnati (March 26-29)
  • St. Louis (April 10-12)
  • Atlanta (May 15-17)
  • Colorado (June 22-24)
  • New York Mets (July 10-12)
  • Los Angeles Dodgers (July 31-Aug.2)
  • Pittsburgh (Aug. 14-16)
  • Miami (Aug. 24-26)

Scheduled double-header

You don’t see scheduled double-headers too often, but the Red Sox have one in Seattle on June 20.

There’s a hot dog-themed video about it all

The Red Sox announced some of their home series in a video starring hot dogs.

Some of the homages and references make more sense than others.