Novak Djokovic gets US Open campaign under way with battling first-round win
Serb manages physical issues to beat Learner Tien 6-1, 7-6 (3), 6-2
Djokovic is aiming for a record 25th grand slam title
In his first competitive outing after a six-week hiatus, there were times when an increasingly frustrated Novak Djokovic looked dead on his feet. However, in the most important moments of his turbulent first round match against American teenager Learner Tien, Djokovic worked through his physical discomfort and then held his nerve in the decisive moments to win 6-1, 7-6 (3), 6-2 and reach the second round of the US Open.
Even at 38 years old, Djokovic has been the third best player at the grand slam tournaments this year, reaching the semi-final of all three prior events. However, his ageing body has struggled to handle the physicality required to succeed in the best of five sets format. After his straight sets loss to Jannik Sinner at Wimbledon, Djokovic cast doubt on his ability to remain fresh and healthy deep in the grand slam tournaments at his age.
Continue reading...Trent Grisham, Jazz Chisholm Jr. combine for four home runs in Yankees' 7-2 win over Red Sox
The Yankees salvaged the final game of a four-game series against the Boston Red Sox on Sunday night by winning 7-2.
Here are the takeaways...
-Trent Grisham and Jazz Chisholm Jr. each had themselves a day, finishing a combined 4-for-6 with four home runs and six RBI. Chisholm got New York started with a two-run shot in the second inning before Grisham joined in with a solo bomb in the third.
Grisham added another homer to lead off the sixth inning to put the Yanks up 5-0 after Jose Caballero had a sacrifice fly in the fifth. Chisholm hit his second of the night in the bottom of the eighth to make it 7-2.
The home runs gave Grisham and Chisholm 25 and 24 home runs, respectively, on the season -- good for second and tied for third on the team, behind Aaron Judge (40).
-Carlos Rodon earned the victory, improving to 14-7 on the season with 5.2 innings pitched, allowing just one hit and two earned runs while striking out three and walking five. It was a crucial bounce-back performance for the Yankees' rotation.
Still, Rodon's 24 walks since the All-Star break are the most by any MLB pitcher during that span.
-Sunday's win marked the Yankees first against Boston this season, as the team had previously lost eight consecutive games to the Red Sox to begin the season, being outscored 48-22 over that stretch. The Yankees entered this series with a disappointing 1-8 record against Boston in 2025.
-In a notable lineup decision, Yankees shortstop Anthony Volpe was removed from the starting lineup, with manager Aaron Boone citing his 1-for-28 slump and league-leading 17 errors as factors in the decision. Caballero started at shortstop in Volpe's place.
-Boston managed only five hits in the loss, with their lone offensive highlight coming in the sixth inning when Nathaniel Lowe delivered a two-run single to center field, scoring Alex Bregman and Romy González. Dustin May took the loss for Boston, falling to 7-10 after allowing five earned runs on five hits over 4.1 innings.
Game MVP: Trent Grisham and Jazz Chisholm Jr.
They both get the honor after hitting two home runs each.
Highlights
Trent Grisham deep into the night! pic.twitter.com/SF8HyhEiyQ
— Yankees Videos (@snyyankees) August 24, 2025
Trent Grisham has liftoff again! pic.twitter.com/UgJdPojWa3
— Yankees Videos (@snyyankees) August 25, 2025
Jazz for the second time! pic.twitter.com/ghGnDqNHRG
— Yankees Videos (@snyyankees) August 25, 2025
What's next
The Yankees continue their homestand with a three-game series against the Washington Nationals starting on Monday night. First pitch is scheduled for 7:05 p.m.
RHP Cam Schlittler (1-2, 3.22 ERA) goes up against RHP Brad Lord (4-6, 3.46 ERA).
Red Wings Players To Watch In 2025-26: Marco Kasper
When Steve Yzerman returned to the Detroit Red Wings in April 2019 to take over the role of general manager, he didn’t have much to work with in terms of enticing prospects, but since then he has built one of the most highly regarded prospect pools in the NHL.
One of the prospects that has already begun making a considerable impact for the Red Wings is forward Marco Kasper, whom Yzerman made Detroit's Round 1 selection in 2022.
While Kasper began the 2024-25 NHL season in the American Hockey League with the Grand Rapids Griffins, he would eventually be called up to the team in late October 2025. Naturally, there was a learning curve for him stepping into the most talented League on the planet.
Soon, Kasper was showing that he belonged in the NHL, and his production began to especially take off once the Red Wings hired Todd McLellan in place of Derek Lalonde, who was relieved in late December.
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Starting on January 10 through the end of the season, Kasper's 17 goals led all first-year NHL players. What's more, he finished fifth overall in total rookie scoring during that time.
Tic-tac-GOAL!
— Detroit Red Wings (@DetroitRedWings) March 16, 2025
Marco Kasper's 13th of the season. #LGRWpic.twitter.com/RdEpZw4sJa
Thanks to his accomplishments in his rookie season, Kasper was named the club's Rookie of the Year by the Detroit Sports Media.
Kasper the Friendly ROTY. 👻
— Detroit Red Wings (@DetroitRedWings) July 10, 2025
More » https://t.co/nGdvj2ra8lpic.twitter.com/LUnlvylAKj
Kasper spent the majority of the season's second half centering Detroit's second line alongside future Hall of Fame forward Patrick Kane and Alex DeBrincat.
“I personally feel like I had a pretty good year, but it’s going to be really hard to come back and do just like that and even improve what I want,” Kasper said of his rookie season. “I always talk about how I’m trying to get better every day. It’s something I’m going to focus on this summer.”
Kasper also skated for his native Austria in the 2025 World Championship, ultimately tying for the team lead in goals with four during the tournament.
The 20-year-old sophomore forward will likely begin the upcoming 2025-26 NHL season once again flanked by Kane and DeBrincat on his wings.
“It’s a skill to be able to play with top players and go to the net and score around the net and he’s scored a lot of his goals in the blue paint, a huge way to create offense in this league,” Kane said in April of Kasper's play. “He pushes the pace up the middle. Great skater, good both ways. And when you get to the net like that, you’re going to get rewarded.”
The Red Wings are less than a month from gathering in Traverse City, Mich. for Training Camp, which will be followed by their annual Red & White Game. This time, the game will be played at Van Andel Arena, the home venue of the Griffins, on Sunday, Sept. 21.
From that point on, Kasper and the Red Wings will begin the exhibition portion of their schedule against the Chicago Blackhawks on Sept. 23 at Little Caesars Arena.
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Michigan reportedly names star freshman Bryce Underwood its starting QB ahead of season opener
Top-20 Penguins' Prospects 2025: Don't Sleep On This Russian Winger
Heading into the 2025-26 season, the Pittsburgh Penguins have shifted the focus to youth and development.
With more talent in the system than Pittsburgh has had in years - and 13 picks in the 2025 NHL Draft - top prospects lists are becoming more competitive and more difficult to discern. Since the prospect pool is deepening, The Hockey News - Pittsburgh Penguins takes a look at the top-20 prospects in the organization.
For No. 12, we put the spotlight on Mikhail Ilyin, a prospect who - if they're not already doing so - fans should certainly be keeping an eye on.
#12: F Mikhail Ilyin
It's easy to get mesmerized from time to time when watching Ilyin play hockey.
He can dance. He can dangle. He can outsmart and outthink his largely older competition in the KHL, and he uses those playmaking smarts to his advantage.
Selected in the fifth round (142nd overall) by the Penguins in 2023, Ilyin, 20, signed a three-year entry-level contract with the Penguins this summer. But he will return to the Severstal Cherepovets of the KHL next season, where he has shown some flashes of brilliance in his three seasons.
Last season, Ilyin registered seven goals and 30 points in 64 games, and he saw a lot of time on Severstal's top line with Daniil Aimurzin and Kirill Pilipenko. This followed a 12-goal, 29-point campaign in 2023-24. Even if that production doesn't jump out, the fact that Ilyin was a teenager playing on the top line - and on one of the KHL's best lines - says a lot about the kind of potential and maturity that's present in his game.
Ilyin has been working on his skating, and it's something that is still going to require notable improvement before he can hope to become a regular at the NHL level. But his ability to think the game at a high level makes up for a bit of that deficit.
Mikhail Ilyin with the sneaky goal off the goalie’s back. A play that represents his ability on the ice.
— Pens Prospects (@pensprospects_) August 22, 2025
1 goal and 1 assist for him in his 2nd preseason game! pic.twitter.com/kWs5Ti6Xt5
His passing is calculated and precise, and even if his footspeed isn't the greatest, he is able to use his frame to work his way around opponents and his poise to skate smoothly. There is not much panic in Ilyin's game, and hopefully - at another year older - his production begins to catch up to the level of his playmaking.
There is a lot of potential and intrigue to Ilyin's game, which makes him an exciting prospect. He already has a lot of the details in his game down to a tee, so if he can put it all together, he could very well make an impact in the Penguins' future middle-six.
The list so far:
- No. 13 Filip Hallander
- No. 14: F Bill Zonnon
- No. 15: F Melvin Fernstrom
- No. 16: D Emil Pieniniemi
- No. 17: F Avery Hayes
- No. 18: F Cruz Lucius
- No. 19: D Finn Harding
- No. 20: D Peyton Kettles
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Mets need to change conservative approach to promoting minor league pitchers during playoff push
The Mets were slow to promote Nolan McLean -- too slow it appears, judging by his two outstanding starts in the big leagues. They need to change that conservative approach as it applies to their two other top pitching prospects, Brandon Sproat and Jonah Tong, in their pursuit of a postseason spot.
And it appears they may be ready to do just that -- perhaps quickly, as the week ahead figures to be pivotal.
At least there are indications the Mets are thinking more aggressively, perhaps realizing their trio of electric young pitchers, Sproat, Tong, and McLean, could help provide a much-needed re-set for the major league staff.
On Sunday they had an opener start for Triple-A Syracuse rather than Sproat so the 24-year old right-hander would get a taste of coming out of the bullpen. It’s a way of preparing him for the possibility of the role as a bulk reliever for the Mets in the weeks ahead, something they will need if their starters continue to have problems going deep into games.
That it didn’t go well for Sproat on Sunday, as he gave up seven runs -- five earned -- in 3 2/3 innings, shouldn’t deter the Mets from continuing to let him get a feel for the new role. He’s pitched with enough dominance at Triple-A over the last two months to make the case he’s as ready as McLean for the big leagues.
Whether he has McLean’s poise and presence remains to be seen. But there is no doubt Sproat has the high-ceiling stuff to succeed anywhere.
“He’s not as naturally confident as McLean,” one Mets’ person said of Sproat Sunday. “It took him longer to make the transition to Triple-A because he lost his confidence and started shying away from contact. But he’s come a long way this season in the way he attacks hitters and commands all of his pitches. When he’s on, he’s very impressive.”
And then there’s Tong, whose eye-popping success since his recent promotion to Triple-A is apparently forcing the Mets’ brass to re-think the possibility of using him in the big leagues this season, as reported Saturday by the New York Post.
And why not? Tong on Saturday not only pitched six scoreless innings, while racking up eight strikeouts, but got a whopping 21 swings-and-misses while throwing 88 pitches, as his fastball topped out at 97.6 mph.
In two Triple-A starts he’s pitched 11 2/3 scoreless innings with 17 strikeouts and 39 swings-and-misses. The K’s are impressive enough but the crazy-high total of whiffs is what had baseball people I spoke to believing that Tong could have immediate success if promoted.
“If I see 21 swings-and-misses, and I have a need, I’m absolutely giving him a shot,” a former GM told me Sunday. “Otherwise you’re not doing right by your ballclub.
“He has a unique delivery, the way he comes over the top, and that may be creating deception to go with his plus stuff. It gives him a better chance of having immediate success in the big leagues against guys who haven’t seen him. He could be the type of lightning-in-a-bottle guy who can have a big impact for a team chasing a postseason spot.”
A scout who saw Tong multiple times in Double-A added: “I’ve seen him dominate hitters at the top of the strike zone with his fastball and at the bottom with his offspeed stuff. He has weapons and he has deception. I wouldn’t be afraid to throw him in there against big-league hitters.”
Suddenly, then, the Mets have a slew of possibilities to improve their pitching staff, including Tylor Megill, who has pitched nine scoreless innings in rehab outings and could be back soon as well.
So how would the Mets find places for the new faces?
They DFA’d Paul Blackburn to make room for McLean, and Frankie Montas’ season-ending elbow injury opened another spot, filled for now by the call-up of reliever Huascar Brazoban.
Because they’re six games into a stretch of 16 straight without an off-day, they’ve indicated they will add a sixth starter at some point soon to give their five-man rotation an extra day of rest. Senga, in particular, rarely starts on four days rest, but is scheduled to do so Monday against the Philadelphia Phillies.
It seems highly unlikely the Mets would have him make a second start on regular rest, which would be Saturday at home against the Miami Marlins. So that could well be the day they use the extra starter, either Megill, Sproat, or Tong.
Beyond that, however, much could depend on how both Senga and Sean Manaea pitch over the next two days. They have been the primary short-start culprits lately, which has created a sense the Mets would be better off with a couple of bulk relievers than all of the one-inning guys they have now.
In addition, if Manaea continues to lose velocity after a few innings, which could be the result of the loose bodies in his elbow, the Mets could also be served well to designate someone to piggyback and limit Manaea to 3-4 innings.
Clay Holmes seems to have gotten a second wind in that regard in his last two starts, but his innings-total remains enough of a concern that the Mets could need a similar set-up for him in the weeks ahead.
It’s why David Stearns is likely mulling multiple pitching scenarios for the days and weeks ahead.
If he wants to go bold and utilize both Sproat and Tong at some point, it could mean optioning Reed Garrett to the minors and DFA’ing Ryne Stanek.
That shouldn’t be a deterrent at this point. If anything, Stearns should be emboldened enough by McLean’s success to get creative and give his pitching staff a makeover. The sooner the better.
LSU’s Garrett Nussmeier earns No. 18 jersey, becomes first Tiger since 2003 with honor
Sabres 2025-26 Player Expectations: Young Goalie Levi Must Show He Can Take Next Step, Establish Himself At NHL Level
The NHL’s 2025-26 season is nearly upon us, and at THN.com’s Buffalo Sabres site, we’re examining each Buffalo player and the expectations on them next year. Each Sabres player has the pressure to get this Buffalo team into the playoffs for the first time in 15 years, but every player’s outlook is at least a little bit different.
We began the series with this look at Sabres presumptive starting goalie Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen; yesterday, we looked at newcomer goalie Alex Lyon, and today, we’re wrapping up the goalie area with a look at youngster Devon Levi. The 23-year-old has been solid in the minor leagues, but sustained NHL success has been elusive for him in a short sample size.
Let’s look at what Levi’s role is likely to be this coming season, and where he fits into the Sabres’ plans.
Player Name: Devon Levi
Position: Goaltender
Age: 23
2024-25 Key Statistics: Nine appearances, 2-7-0 record (NHL), 872 save percentage, 4.12 goals-against average; 25-13-4 record (AHL), .919 SP (AHL), 2.20 G.A.A. (AHL)
2025-26 Salary:$812,500
2025-26 Expectations: Levi has been the Sabres’ goalie-of-the-future for a while now, and like many young goalies, he’s struggled to be consistent at the NHL level. The truth is, between veterans Luukkonen and former Sabres journeyman James Reimer, the Sabres’ starting job has been there for the taking for Levi.
But he’s put up a sub-.900-level SP in both of his two relatively-brief NHL seasons, and one of the reasons the Sabres went out and signed veteran Lyon this summer was to get goalie insurance in case Luukkonen struggled yet again and Levi wasn’t ready for the physical and mental toll of the NHL.
That doesn’t necessarily mean that Levi isn’t going to get a look at the NHL level this year. To the contrary – if one of Luukkonen and Lyon are injured, Levi can be the American League recall and get into a handful of games. Same goes for underwhelming performances. If Lyon doesn’t get the job done, Sabres GM Kevyn Adams may waive and demote him in favor of Levi.
Levi’s strong AHL numbers last year suggest he hasn’t lost the ability to tend goal just because he hasn’t thrived at the NHL level. He’s going to need time to develop, and the Sabres don’t need to put the weight of the world on his shoulders as Buffalo makes a desperate push for the playoffs next season. That means more patience with him and more understanding of him.
If they play their cards right with Levi, the Sabres could have a No. 1 netminder for the next decade or more. But this is a delicate balance, weighing Levi’s interests on one side, and the Sabres’ immediate needs on the other side. And Buffalo can't afford to make a developmental mistake with a talent that could prove extremely valuable to them for a long time to come.
Levi showed at the AHL level he’s a beast. The challenge now for him is to make those dominant skills translate at the NHL level. He’s not anywhere close to losing ground in the Sabres’ goalie ranks, but Levi needs to show he’s ready, willing and able to stick with Buffalo at the next chance he gets.
Oilers Should Aim Higher Than Rumored Goalie Target
EDMONTON – Goalies haven’t had the best time playing for the Edmonton Oilers lately.
Stuart Skinner and Calvin Pickard have had their moments of struggle (with Skinner struggling more than Pickard). Goaltending and defensive play are the backbone of a Stanley Cup Champion team.
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It’s true, the Oilers came close to winning it twice. But, close is fine when it comes to horseshoes and hand grenades - not hockey.
The Boston Bruins, New Jersey Devils, and Detroit Red Wings all have a prospect goaltender (or two) who could boost the Oilers' depth at the goalie position. Michael DiPietro, Nico Daws, Sebastian Cossa, and Trey Augustine have all been connected to the Oilers at one point or another.
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Of those options, Daws has the most NHL experience. However, this hasn’t stopped other hockey pundits from suggesting otherwise.
Allan Mitchell of The Athletic has identified DiPietro as a trade target for the Oilers. In a piece penned earlier in August, Mitchell makes the statement that DiPietro is “the best inexpensive goaltender available.”
With only three games of experience, it takes gusto to make that claim. Daws has better results in a much bigger sample size, while Cossa’s draft pedigree has earned him a longer leash than DiPietro.
The lack of NHL experience gives this writer pause. Given the other options available in Cossa and Daws, DiPietro should only be considered an option for the Oilers if they strike out elsewhere.
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Dalton Rushing and Freddie Freeman help revive Dodgers' offense in win over Padres
Dave Roberts sought the best of both worlds from his slumping Dodgers offense Sunday.
More competitive at-bats, a more disciplined two-strike approach, and a renewed team-first mindset at the plate on the one hand.
But also, amid a two-month funk that dropped them to second place in the National League West, to not abandon the slugging prowess that makes them who they are.
“I want my cake, and [to] eat it as well,” the Dodgers manager quipped.
“I’d be shocked,” he added, “if we don’t see a different offensive output from here forward, starting today.”
Read more:News Analysis: The Dodgers have an outfield problem. But do they have the options to fix it?
Indeed, everything the Dodgers were missing in their first two games against the San Diego Padres this weekend — when they combined for just two runs and five hits to relinquish their place atop the division standings — came roaring suddenly back when the club needed it most.
In a sweep-evading 8-2 win over the Padres at Petco Park on Sunday, the Dodgers got back to working better at-bats, manufacturing consistent baserunners, then pouncing on mistakes with their lineup’s trademark pop.
The biggest swings came in a five-run seventh inning, when Dalton Rushing broke a 2-2 tie with a three-run home run to right and Freddie Freeman hit his second long ball of the day to put the score out of reach.
But all along, they displayed the progress Roberts had promised in his pregame address with reporters; following up two of their worst offensive displays of the season, with a nine-hit, four-walk, eight -run outburst that drew them back into a first-place tie with the Padres (74-57).
In their losses on Friday and Saturday, the Dodgers’ problems had been simple. They didn’t adjust to a Padres pitching staff that attacked them carefully. They didn’t grind with two strikes, or shorten up their swings, or do enough little things to unlock their long-scuffling offense (which led the majors in scoring through June, but had ranked 24th in the two months since).
“We haven’t really been in-sync,” Roberts said. “It’s been disjointed a lot, as far as the offense.”
When asked if that meant his team needed to adopt more of a small-ball mentality, however, Roberts pushed back.
“I think it’s a fair question,” he said. “But I couldn’t disagree more.”
After all, his team is still stocked full of All-Stars, MVPs and future Hall of Famers. At their core, they are a team built to bludgeon opponents — not slap singles and drop down sacrifice bunts.
“Slugging is still a part of it,” he said. “I definitely don’t want guys to hit like I did.”
Read more:Dodgers lose to Padres in two-hit flop and fall out of first place: 'We got to do more'
Around the margins, though, there were ways they could better position themselves to do that. Such as trying to work better counts, stay alive with two strikes when needed, and striking a better balance between patience and aggression.
“When you can kind of play, knowing you have people around you, where your goal is just to win — versus, my goal is just to be good myself individually, that’s pressure,” he said. “But when you feel like [you are doing] whatever little thing I can do to help a team, an offensive unit, that’s freeing. So that was some of the conversations that I’ve had with the guys, trying to relay that message.”
The change started in the first inning, with the Dodgers putting Padres starter Nick Pivetta under immediate stress.
Shohei Ohtani drew a five-pitch leadoff walk. Mookie Betts shortened up his swing on an 0-and-2 slider to line a single up the middle. Freddie Freeman loaded the bases by grinding out a full-count free pass.
It was a string of small victories that provided cleanup hitter Teoscar Hernández the perfect chance to slug.
Hernández tried to, getting a fastball over the plate in a 3-and-1 count and launching a deep flyball that seemed destined to be a grand slam. The drive, however, hung up just enough for Ramón Laureano to rob it at the wall.
The sacrifice fly brought in the Dodgers’ only run of the inning — giving them a 1-0 lead that would soon be erased on Elias Díaz’s two-run homer in the third off Yoshinobu Yamamoto (the only runs he gave up in a six-inning start).
But it set the tone for a flurry of offense that would follow later in the afternoon, when a weekend of non-existent offense finally started to turn.
In the sixth, Freeman hit his first home run, crushing another center-cut fastball from Pivetta to right-center for a tying blast.
Then, against Padres reliever Jeremiah Estrada in the seventh, the club put all the pieces together in a five-run rally.
Andy Pages rolled a single through the left side to lead off. Michael Conforto came up next, fouled off a full-count slider, then took a borderline fastball at the top of the zone for a stress-inducing walk.
Miguel Rojas couldn’t get a bunt down after that, eventually swinging away for a flyout to center.
But, in what was easily his best moment of a trying rookie season, Rushing delivered the decisive blow seven pitches later — fouling off his own two-strike slider before clobbering another to right for a go-ahead three-run shot.
Freeman tacked on two more insurance runs before the inning was through, landing his second long ball of the day into the Petco Porch down the right-field line. Ohtani got in on the action in the ninth, belting his 45th homer to right to put the game — and another weekend of offensive frustration — to bed.
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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.
Yankees Notes: Anthony Volpe’s benching, Fernando Cruz set to return
Yankees manager Aaron Boone provided some updates prior to Sunday's series finale against the Red Sox...
Volpe benched
Jose Caballero is in the Yankees’ lineup at shortstop over Anthony Volpe for Sunday’s meeting in the Bronx.
It’s been a rough season for the young shortstop on both sides of the ball.
Volpe has just eight hits over his last 18 games and has struck out 18 times over that span.
He’s also committed a league-high 16 errors is an ugly -7 Outs Above Average (fourth percentile in MLB).
Aaron Boone hinted it was a possible following Saturday’s loss, and now he makes it official.
“He’s just scuffling a little offensively over the past week,” the skipper said. “Having Caballero now he gives you that real utility presence where he can play anywhere including short, and the spark that he provides so we just felt today was a good day for that.”
Boone wouldn’t rule out Volpe sitting again for Monday’s series opener against the Nats.
“We’ll see, I haven’t made any definitive decision yet,” he said. “I just want to get through today and do everything we can to get a win tonight and we’ll see where we’re at heading into tomorrow.”
Cruz set to return
Fernando Cruz is officially set to be activated from the IL on Monday.
Cruz has been sidelined since late June with a left oblique strain.
He has appeared in three minor league rehab games, allowing four runs on five hits while striking out four.
Now that he’s back, the righty should be in the mix for high-average innings.
Prior to the injury, Cruz pitched to a 3.00 ERA across 32 appearances.
“He’s been super productive for us and a such an important part,” Boone said. “He’s just a great person and competitor -- he’s willing to take the ball in so many different areas, so I’m looking forward to getting him back.”
"I'm Proud": Darren McCarty Excited For Sergei Fedorov's Jersey Retirement
Former Detroit Red Wings forward Sergei Fedorov, one of the greatest and most dynamic players to ever wear the Winged Wheel, will be appropriately honored by having his iconic No. 91 jersey raised to the rafters at Little Caesars Arena in the upcoming season.
Fedorov, who defected to Detroit from the Soviet Union at great personal risk to himself, played a pivotal role in the Red Wings' Stanley Cup victories in 1997, 1998, and 2002. During his time in Detroit, he scored exactly 400 goals and won numerous awards, including the Hart Trophy in 1994 as the NHL's Most Valuable Player.
Fedorov's longtime teammate Darren McCarty, who was a part of all three of the aforementioned Stanley Cup wins as well as a fourth in 2008, couldn't be happier for him.
"This was just right," McCarty said during a recent Woodward Sports segment. "If you ask me straight up if I ever thought it would happen while certain things were in palce, no. But this is where we're at."
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Noting the struggles of the Red Wings to return to the Stanley Cup Playoffs, McCarty said that he felt this is one of the things that fans of the club can look to in terms of the culture that continues to be a work in progress.
"It's one of those things that it feels like the world has settled back into place, at least for the Red Wings," he said. "What are we looking for with the Winged Wheel culture right now? There's not a lot of things to really put your hat on, but this is one of them."
"I couldn't be happier for my friend and teammate, someone who is one of the best to ever do it, and I know it means a lot to him, too."
Fedorov's countless accomplishment during his time with the Red Wings was overshadowed by his controversial holdout following the 1997 Stanley Cup win, during which he infamously signed a front-loaded offer sheet from the Carolina Hurricanes in early 1998.
While the Red Wings matched the offer sheet, the relationship between the two sides appeared irreparable when Fedorov reportedly rejected a five-year, $50 million contract offer in 2003 and later signed for less money with the Mighty Ducks of Anaheim.
It was especially startling, considering the Mighty Ducks had just swept Detroit in the opening round of the Stanley Cup Playoffs months earlier.
Upon Fedorov's return to Detroit in December 2003 for the first time wearing opposition colors, he was heavily booed by the sellout crowd at Joe Louis Arena.
Thankfully, the relationship between Fedorov and the organization as well as the fans has been mended in recent years, and he'll rightfully take his place alongside other franchise legends like Steve Yzerman, Nicklas Lidstrom, Gordie Howe, Ted Lindsay, and others this January.
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Canadiens' Arber Xhekaj Should Hit New Level
The Montreal Canadiens have plenty of young players who fans should pay close attention to in 2025-26. Canadiens defenseman Arber Xhekaj is certainly one of them.
Xhekaj just completed his third NHL season with the Canadiens, and it was a bit of an up-and-down year for the 6-foot-4 blueliner. In a career-high 70 games, he recorded one goal, five assists, 118 penalty minutes, 180 hits, and a minus-13 rating. Overall, he had some growing pains like many young defensemen do, but he also showed signs of improvement at the same time.
With Xhekaj being just 24 years old, it would not be surprising in the slightest if we see the left-shot defenseman take a notable step forward with his development in 2024-25. It can take defensemen some time to truly break out, and this could very well end up being the case with Xhekaj.
The potential for Xhekaj to blossom into a steady stay-at-home defenseman who can play big minutes is certainly there, and it will be intriguing to see if he can become just that for the Canadiens next season. If the hard-nosed defenseman does hit another level with his play, it would be huge for a Canadiens club looking to continue to trend in the right direction.
European football: Mbappé and Vinícius fire Real Madrid past Oviedo
La Liga newcomers beaten 3-0 at home
David and Vlahovic give Juventus victory
Real Madrid claimed a 3-0 La Liga win at promoted Real Oviedo on Sunday, with Kylian Mbappé scoring in each half before Vinícius Júnior added a late third to seal the match.
Mbappé put Real ahead in the 37th minute after Aurélien Tchouaméni won the ball off Leander Dendoncker in midfield and quickly fed Arda Guler. He slipped a pass to the Frenchman who turned sharply on the edge of the box and drilled a low shot into the net.
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