Report: Islanders Will Not Be Trading Jean-Gabriel Pageau

The New York Islanders have told teams that centerman Jean-Gabriel Pageau is not for sale, per Michael Russo of The Athletic:

Pageau, 32, has one season left on his deal at $5 million annually and had many suitors if the Islanders were looking to move him.

He'd made complete sense for the Minnesota Wild, especially if they move Marco Rossi. 

Other teams that had inquired over the last year was the Vegas Golden Knights, the Edmonton Oilers and the Boston Bruins. 

Pageau recorded 42 points (14 goals, 28 assists) in 79 games, while owning the highest face-off winning percentage in the NHL, at 59.6 percent. 

With Calum Ritchie expected to make the Islanders out of training camp, Pageau will be tasked wth serving as a mentor for the young player. And if the Islanders don't fill the No. 2 center position this summer after the loss of Brock Nelson to Colorado -- they could move Mathew Barzal off Bo Horvat's wing and back to his natural position -- there's a stronog chance Pageau centers the second line come the fall. 

Just because Pageau isn't on the move now doesn't mean that he won't be on the move at the 2026 NHL Trade Deadline. Especially if he can mimic last season's success, he could be worth a first-round pick or multiple second-round picks from a desperate hockey club as opposed to, maybe, just a second right now. 

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PHOTO: James Guillory-Imagn Images

Phillies don't make same mistake twice on trip, find run support for Suarez in win

Phillies don't make same mistake twice on trip, find run support for Suarez in win originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

If there’s one thing you can count on when tuning in to watch the 2025 Phillies — it’s that you never know what you’re going to get.

The club constantly keeps you on your toes and Sunday’s series finale in Atlanta was no different.

A narrow 2-1 win (and series win) against the Braves partially salvaged an otherwise brutal 2-4 road trip.

A road trip that saw the Phillies being shutout three times, a 13-run offensive explosion, dominant bullpen game and four of the strongest outings from the starting rotation all season (with not much to show for it). It’s a coin toss every day.

Luckily for the Phillies, they didn’t make one glaring mistake on the road twice — waste a gem of a performance from Ranger Suarez.

Outside of his first start of the season, Suarez has been nothing short of spectacular.

Sunday marked his 10th straight quality start and in that stretch he has a 1.19 ERA.

His one bad pitch came in the second inning when Sean Murphy smashed a sinker 451 ft. over Brandon Marsh’s head. Other than that? Lights out.

Suarez allowed the one run, four hits and a walk on his way to pitching seven solid innings with eight strikeouts.

His seven wins on the season ties him with Zack Wheeler for the most in the rotation.

“I’ve felt better after every start and the command has been improving after every start,” Suarez said postgame through interpreter Diego D’Aniello. “I think that this is as close to, if not the best, that I’ve felt pitching.”

The Phillies went 16 consecutive innings without scoring a run with Ranger Suarez on the mound. The run support finally came in the fifth inning courtesy of some ABC ball.

Bryson Stott opened the inning with a leadoff single and flew around the bases when the next man up, Otto Kemp, doubled on a sharp line drive to left field. Kemp has continued to make himself at home since being called up June 7, collecting his 10th RBI in the majors.

The small ball continued with Marsh laying down a perfect bunt to advance the runner and on the next pitch, a Trea Turner sacrifice fly gave the Phillies the lead.

It didn’t seem like it’d be another quiet day of offense — especially when the Phillies had the bases loaded in the first inning against Spencer Strider. They worked him for 21 pitches but couldn’t manage anything to get an early jump on the Braves.

When you’re able to scrape across a pair of runs when your pitcher is dealing the way Suarez has … sometimes it’s all you need to get the job done.

Harper on the horizon?

Bryce Harper hasn’t played since June 5, spending time on the IL due to inflammation in his right wrist. While there is no set date for his return, the upcoming targeted homestand seems well within reason.

“I’m very happy with where I am,” Harper said Friday. “I’m way farther ahead than I felt like I would be. Definitely healthier than I was a couple weeks ago. … I don’t want to solidify which day [to return] or anything like that but I’m happy with where I’m at.”

Rob Thomson noted Sunday was a scheduled rest and recovery day for Harper. The manager also didn’t rule out a return as early as Monday.

The Phillies have 12 more games before the All-Star break, seeing the Padres twice and a west coast swing that also pays a visit to the Giants. It’d be a big boost to have Harper in the lineup for as many of those as possible.

They’ve gone 12-10 in the stretch without him.

Sixers decide to decline club option for Lonnie Walker IV

Sixers decide to decline club option for Lonnie Walker IV  originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

The Sixers are declining Lonnie Walker IV’s club option, a source confirmed Sunday to NBC Sports Philadelphia.

ESPN’s Shams Charania first reported the news. 

Walker’s option was for approximately $2.9 million. He’ll now become an unrestricted free agent. 

Walker joined the Sixers in February from Lithuania and played for the team he’d watched as a kid from Reading, Pennsylvania.

“Very humbling,” he said at the time. “A step toward my goals, what I’m trying to accomplish. Still processing it all, to say the least. It still feels like a surreal moment to be so close to home, being in Philly of all places. So I’m taking it one day at a time, just staying present, doing what I’ve got to do for the team and playing to the best of my capabilities on the floor.”

He was sidelined by a concussion he suffered in mid-March but otherwise a regular for the injury-stricken Sixers. Walker averaged 12.4 points, 3.2 rebounds and 2.5 assists over 20 games. He shot 42 percent from the field, 35.4 percent from three-point range and 80 percent from the foul line.

The 26-year-old two-guard showed his shotmaking chops late in the season and matched his career high with a 31-point performance in the Sixers’ final game vs. the Bulls.

The Sixers have also declined Jared Butler and Justin Edwards’ team options. Edwards is set to ink a new three-year contract.

LeBron James picks up $52.6 million player option with Lakers for next season

As had been rumored for a few weeks now, LeBron James has picked up his $52.6 million player option to return to the Los Angeles Lakers next season. Sunday was the deadline for LeBron to pick up his option.

LeBron's agent Rich Paul made this statement to ESPN’s Shams Charania, who broke the news:

"LeBron wants to compete for a championship," Paul told ESPN. "He knows the Lakers are building for the future. He understands that, but he values a realistic chance of winning it all. We are very appreciative of the partnership that we've had for eight years with Jeanie [Buss] and Rob [Pelinka] and consider the Lakers as a critical part of his career.

"We understand the difficulty in winning now while preparing for the future. We do want to evaluate what's best for LeBron at this stage in his life and career. He wants to make every season he has left count, and the Lakers understand that, are supportive and want what's best for him."

In the last few years in Los Angeles, LeBron would opt out of that final year and then re-sign with the Lakers on a new two- or three-year deal with a player option at the end, which helped LeBron leverage in the organization. Choosing to opt into his player option and be a free agent next summer is a change in strategy, and the tone of Paul's statement was, essentially, "let's see what this looks like a year from now."

A year from now, LeBron James will be 41 and there is some speculation that this season, his 23rd (while wearing No. 23, and with the All-Star Game in Los Angeles) could be his last. LeBron has said nothing about this yet other than that he and his family need to discuss it. He is far more likely to make that announcement and embark on a farewell tour of sorts, rather than simply decide to walk away, as Tim Duncan did.

The Lakers are in a transition phase after the stunning trade for Luka Doncic — the 25-year-old is now the future of the franchise. The Lakers are making offseason moves to bring in players who will thrive next to Doncic (such as a rim-running center, the team's top offseason priority). The Lakers can offer Doncic an extension on Aug. 2 and will make a max offer to him then.

With Doncic, LeBron and Austin Reaves, the Lakers have a core that can make noise in the Western Conference next season if they have the right depth around them. Los Angeles won 50 games and finished as the No. 3 seed in the West last season (only to fall to Minnesota in the first round of the playoffs). A similar regular season finish, combined with a better playoff run, is the team's goal next season, they seen themselves as contenders.

LeBron has spent the start of his offseason recovering from a Grade 2 MCL sprain in his left knee, which he suffered in the Lakers' final playoff game against Minnesota.

Justin Verlander laments ‘frustrating' Giants stretch, wasted golden opportunity

Justin Verlander laments ‘frustrating' Giants stretch, wasted golden opportunity originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

Justin Verlander didn’t have much to say after the Giants’ loss to the Chicago White Sox on Sunday, and why would he.

The veteran pitcher was in line for his first win in the Orange and Black when he left the game with a 2-1 lead after six innings, only to watch Chicago rally for four runs in the seventh and walk away with a 5-2 win and series victory at Rate Field.

The loss put the Giants at 1-5 in their last six games after the White Sox took two of three and the Miami Marlins swept them at Oracle Park — not at all how San Francisco hoped things would go against a pair of very beatable teams.

“Yeah, it sure is,” a somber Verlander told reporters after the game when asked if the Giants’ poor start to their road trip has been frustrating. “You know, I think, uh … Yeah, that is frustrating. Yes.”

Verlander struck out three and walked two while allowing one earned run on five hits in his 12th start of the 2025 MLB season. He began this year with 262 career wins, and that’s where he remains after the Giants went 2-for-11 with runners in scoring position and left 11 on base in Sunday’s loss.

Patrick Bailey, who has bumped his average up nine points since June 7, got the Giants on the board in the second with an RBI double, then Willy Adames drew a bases-loaded walk in the fifth to put the Giants up 2-1. And that was it for San Francisco’s slumping bats.

“That’s just kind of what we’ve been doing here recently,” manager Bob Melvin told reporters after the game. “Whether the guys are trying too hard in certain spots, that’s probably the case … They’re working hard, doing the best they can with it.

“Obviously it’s not great right now. Just got to keep working and get through it.”

The Giants’ bullpen, typically elite and the best in MLB, couldn’t hold on to the lead in the seventh. Erik Miller allowed consecutive one-out singles before forcing Andrew Benintendi to ground out, then was replaced by Ryan Walker, who issued a walk then gave up a two-run double. Walker then surrendered another run on a balk before Lenyn Sosa made it 5-2 with an RBI single.

With the no-decision, Verlander became the seventh pitcher in the last 120 seasons to make 13-plus starts and earn zero wins before July 1 (h/t the Associated Press’ Josh Dubow).

“Just trying to keep putting myself in the position for wins,” Verlander told reporters. “That’s all you can do as a starter.”

The lifeless defeat came one day after Robbie Ray gave up one run across six innings and was stuck with the loss as San Francisco’s offense mustered just four hits in Chicago’s 1-0 win on Saturday. After missing out on their chance to win against two sub-.500 teams, the Giants now head to Arizona for a four-game series against the Diamondbacks and then to West Sacramento to face the Athletics.

“A lot of ‘how frustrating’ questions, and that’s kind of where we are,” Melvin told reporters. “We have to answer them. But I think when you’re not playing well, it’s tough to win regardless. So, we’ve beaten good teams. We’ve lost to teams that [their] records aren’t great, but every team in the big leagues has got a chance to beat you.

“So we just have to get on a winning track no matter who we play.”

All of the momentum that came with Rafael Devers’ arrival seems to have been sucked out of the Giants, and now they find themselves 7 1/2 games out of first place in the NL West. With the second half underway, San Francisco must figure out a fix — and fast.

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Adams Playing Waiting Game On Byram

​​The Buffalo Sabres pulled off a second trade in the last week on Day 2 of the NHL Draft, and it involved a defenseman, but not the blueliner that many expected. The deal on Saturday sending Connor Clifton to Pittsburgh in exchange for Conor Timmins was a reshuffle of the club’s bottom pairing, while a potential trade of restricted free agent blueliner Bowen Byram would be an impact hockey deal to bring significant NHL talent in return.  

Sabres GM Kevyn Adams met with the media after completion of the draft on Saturday afternoon and indicated that while he is still open to the possibility of trading the 23-year-old, there seems to be an openness to bringing him back either on a short- or long-term deal.

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"I had a great one-on-one conversation with Bo at the end of the season, just understanding where he's at. He's a great kid, he loves his teammates, and he loves being a Sabre, but he also understands that he has this window in his career, and what does that look like, and what are (the) opportunities?" Adams said. "We just talked about that, and I've had a lot of conversations with (agent) Darren Ferris, and I've just been very honest with him. I understand the position he's in, where he is in his career, and (that) he's two years away from UFA, and we'll just keep talking. I don't think it's great for me to publicly talk about any sort of contract negotiations, but what he knows is we like him, we believe in him. We think he makes our team better with him on it, but if there's a trade to make that makes sense, and we think it's the right thing to do, we'll do it."

Sportsnet’s Elliotte Friedman indicated before the draft that the Vegas Golden Knights have interest in Byram, but that the market for Byram had not been as brisk as the Sabres would have liked. The Sabres are again looking for players in return for him, and not a deal like the NY Islanders pulled off with Montreal for RFA defenseman Noah Dobson, who was one year away from unrestricted free agency. 

With the draft completed and free agency beginning on Tuesday, the Sabres may find it easier to pull off a trade after teams strike out on the open market, but Byram is not the only blueliner out there that teams covet. Calgary’s Rasmus Andersson is right-handed and older than Byram, but teams looking to add to their defense, the 28-year-old gives those teams options if they believe that Adams is looking for too much in return. 

 

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The Calgary Flames And The League Among The Winners And Losers From The 2025 NHL Draft

It almost feels impossible to designate winners and losers on the day that the NHL draft goes down. The whole point of the NHL draft is to build for the future, and with the inexact science that is the NHL draft, no one really knows who won and lost the day the picks are made. 

We all have our judgments, and we can look at the value that some teams got in the annual player selection proceedings. A team drafted a handful of players that you liked and they are deemed winners. Another drafted players too high for your liking, and you call them losers. It feels unfair, but life isn’t always fair and placing judgments is all part of our jobs as analysts and fans of the NHL. 

So let’s take a look at a few winners and losers from the 2025 NHL draft.

Winner: New York Islanders

It’s easy to call the team with the first-overall pick the winner of the draft, but everything the Islanders did after the first-overall pick was impressive as well. Trading Noah Dobson netted them two first-round picks at 16 and 17, and despite the desire to trade up, they ended up making the picks. They nabbed Victor Eklund at 16, a player many had in the top 10. The next pick, they selected Kashawn Aitcheson, a player known most for his open-ice hits and strong shot. 

In Round 2, they added some beef with Daniil Prokhorov, a big, skilled Russian forward who had been rising up draft boards. They followed that up with Luca Romano, a do-it-all, hard-working forward from the OHL. Tomas Poletin and Sam Laurila, selected in the fourth and fifth rounds, respectively, were excellent value picks as well. The 2025 NHL draft could be transformational for the Islanders. 

Loser: The NHL’s Decentralized Draft

From the presentation and technical issues to the vibes and the fan turnout, the decentralization of the NHL draft was an absolute disaster. The first round dragged on an outrageous amount of time with so much dead air and lackluster production value. There were audio issues when teams were trying to talk to players, and even if that wasn’t the case, they had these somewhat awkward interviews that felt like bad Tinder dates when the players were drafted. 

The decentralized draft was a half-decent idea, even though the NHL was taking away from what made their draft special. They could have looked at how the NBA or NFL do things and copied bits and pieces, but they tried to reinvent the wheel. The interviews fell flat, the timers that they had on teams were merely suggestions, and they really didn’t seem to have a plan despite boasting about state-of-the-art technology prior to the event. 

What made the draft feel the most underwhelming, though, was the fact that the players in attendance were limited, and the fans that showed up could have been counted by a kindergartener. 

The NHL should look at last year’s draft at The Sphere and try to replicate that. Bring the draft back to Vegas every year, make The Sphere your spectacle and enhance the fan experience the way that they did in Las Vegas. That’s how you make your draft the best in the world. Whatever they thought they were doing this year wasn’t it. 

Winner: Calgary Flames

The Flames have had a few good drafts in a row, and this year was no different. They nabbed a pair of high-end playmakers in the first round in Cole Reschny and Cullen Potter. Both were players who had doubters despite their immense skill and offensive prowess. The Flames knew that taking the upside was well worth it, knowing that they could be rewarded in a big way. 

Cullen Potter is selected as the 32nd-overall pick by the Calgary Flames in the first round of the 2025 NHL Draft. (Kirby Lee-Imagn Images)

The selection of Theo Stockselius is an underrated pick as the big Swede has a nice mix of skill and passing ability. He wasn’t on many lists to start the year, but he rose quite a bit in the second half. Even the Mace’o Phillips pick was an interesting swing at a player with the profile of a mean, physical defender. Aidan Lane in the sixth round and Ethan Leander in the seventh were also interesting darts thrown at the board. 

Loser: Colorado Avalanche

Colorado came into the draft with fewer darts than anyone, and although they added another via trade, the Avalanche weren’t really looking to swing for upside or skill. Their top pick was Francesco Dell'Elce, a 20-year-old defender who had a pretty solid freshman season at UMass, but at 77th overall, there were players on the board that presented more runway development and higher upside with a similar floor. The Avs very well could have seen something they loved in Dell’Elce, but it was a bit of an odd pick. 

Linus Funck in the fourth round was an interesting pick with a projectable frame and some good defensive habits. Nolan Roed, the Avs' rounder, had a point-per-game season in the USHL this year and had some flashes of nice playmaking, and as a seventh-round pick, he’s a perfectly solid selection. 

The Avs just didn’t have much in the tank when it came to this draft, and they did very little to make the limited picks worthwhile. It’s tough restocking your pipeline when you’re pushing for championships every year, but I don’t think Colorado would change that. 

Winner: Carolina Hurricanes

The kings of trading down, the Hurricanes moved out of the first round, but they made three second-round picks with excellent value. They first selected Semyon Frolov, a goaltender who had been skyrocketing up draft boards and was even rumored to be in contention for the first round. They followed that with the pick of top overage prospect Charlie Cerrato, who had a great season at Penn State, showing his growth as a player since his NTDP days. 

Toward the end of the round, they took the ultimate swing on Ivan Ryabkin. Coming into the year, Ryabkin was a player that some thought could be a top-10 talent. His season in the MHL as a D-1 center was fantastic. He was putting up numbers that were comparable to some of the best Russians drafted in recent years, like Ivan Demidov and Matvei Michkov. This season, everything fell apart. He looked slow, uninterested, and his game wasn’t working at any level in Russia, pro or junior. 

A move to Muskegon in the USHL saw him rekindle some of his playmaking touch but the he evolved into a violent, chippy player who was using his physicality as a means to impact the game. If the Canes can get him to find a middle ground and get back into shape, Ryabkin could be a steal, but it’s a swing for the fences. 

In Round 3, the Hurricanes snagged two Russian defenders in Kurban Limatov and Roman Bausov. They added two mobile, defensively oriented blueliners who bring some size and snarl. Limatov, in particular, is a player who looked like a first-round talent at times this year because of just how fluid his defensive game can be and some flashes of puck-moving ability. 

The bets on undersized Swedes late looked like absolute steals for the Canes. Sixth-round pick Viggo Nordlund was the most productive player in Swedish junior hockey this season, bringing dynamism and skill in bunches. With one of the final picks of the seventh round, Carolina took Filip Ekberg, a player who had so much promise coming into the season, but a slow start after moving to the OHL for his draft year soured his stock. 

His second half looked infinitely better, and he showed that he adapted his skilled, possession-based game to the OHL’s north-south style quite well, bringing elements of both to the table by season’s end. He then followed it up by leading the U18s in scoring. Picked 221 out of 224 players, that’s incredible value. 

Loser: Tampa Bay Lightning

Much like Colorado, they get added to the losers category simply because they were a team with very little ammo, picking just once inside the top 100. The players they did take were all guys with floors close to their ceilings, and none of their ceilings are particularly high. They added Ethan Czata in the second round, a player who will go as far as his motor will take him. He shows some flashes of skill, but he projects as a bottom-six project at this point. 

The Lightning followed that up with a skilled overager in Benjamin Rautiainen from Finland, who had an age-20 season in the Liiga. It was a nice swing on an offensive winger with some nice hands. Next up was Aiden Foster, who is a heavy hitter with a decent shot but a limited upside at best. 

My favorite pick of theirs came in the fifth round when they took Everett Baldwin. The prep defender has nice mobility, slick offensive skills and could be an exciting prospect. His development will take him to Providence College, so Tampa can let him develop slowly and then maybe they’ll have something on their hands. 

The one interesting thing about Tampa’s draft is that they had four seventh-round picks. Goaltender Caleb Heil is an interesting late swing in net. Roman Luttsev is a high motor center who didn’t look out of place in limited KHL action this year, and he tore it up in the junior league. Grant Spada is a defensive specialist who has a huge frame and needs to fill out. Marco Mignosa is a 20-year-old who works hard and had a breakout season in the OHL this past season. None of these players are ultra high-upside, but they are all fine swings to take late. 

Winners: New York Rangers

The Rangers had a sneaky good draft despite not having a first-round pick. They had Malcolm Spence fall into their laps in the second round after being a potential top-15 guy for most of the season. The hard-working winger has a nice touch of skill and pace to his game, showing both a physical edge and a finesse game with the puck. 

Sean Barnhill, their first of two second-round picks, is one of the more underrated defenders in the draft with excellent size and mobility. He understands his role as a defensive stopper, and he plays it quite well, and there are some flashes of potential offensive skill that pop up from time to time as well. 

Mikkel Eriksen is a player who showed some deceptive skill and a dual-threat offensive game in the Swedish junior ranks while taking on a lead role for Norway internationally at both the U18 and U20 levels. At pick 111, there was really solid value in an underrated project. 

At pick 139, the Rangers took one of my favorite later-round swings in defenseman Zeb Lindgren. With solid size, good mobility, and a knack for making plays at both ends of the ice, Lindgren flew under the radar for much of the season. There always felt like so much untapped potential for Lindgren that a swing this late made for a great value pick. 

Later picks like defenders Evan Passmore and Felix Farhammar were nice value late on guys that could develop into solid pros, even if not at the NHL level. The Rangers were undoubtedly good at the 2025 NHL draft, and they should be happy with the haul they got.

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Sources: Kings exercise Keon Ellis' team option for 2025-26 NBA season

Sources: Kings exercise Keon Ellis' team option for 2025-26 NBA season originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

The Kings will exercise their team option on guard Keon Ellis, sources confirmed to NBC Sports California’s Tristi Rodriguez on Sunday.

The undrafted 25-year-old has seen his role with Sacramento increase season after season since signing a two-way contract with the Kings after going undrafted in the 2022 NBA Draft. Sacramento converted Ellis’ two-way contract to a three-year deal towards the end of the 2023-24 NBA season.

The decision will cost the Kings $2.3 million for the upcoming 2025-26 season.

The University of Alabama product averaged 8.3 points, 2.7 rebounds and 1.5 assists per game this past season with the Kings while playing in 80 games – starting in 28 of them.

Ellis also has shown an ability to knock down the long ball for Sacramento, shooting better than 40 percent from 3-point range in all three of his seasons with the Kings – most recently shooting 43.3 percent from beyond the arc.

Ellis’ defensive tenacity has made him a fan-favorite in Sacramento and has helped keep him on the floor for the Kings while covering some of the opposing team’s top offensive weapons.

The 6-foot-5 guard also averaged 1.5 steals per game last season, and his 121 total steals were good for fifth-most in the league.

While the decision comes as a surprise to some fans due to the fact that Ellis now will become an unrestricted free agent at the end of the season, the Kings still could sign the guard to a contract extension to avoid him testing free agency in 2026.

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Tom Lynch has a role to play in Richmond’s rebuild but he failed against Adelaide

When you’re bottoming out like the Tigers you need leaders who can resist the inevitable frustration and protect the young players

Whenever his great Richmond sides were struggling, Damien Hardwick would get his runner on the line. “Get them to raise the fight!” he would scream. Tom Lynch’s meltdown against Adelaide wasn’t a case of following the coach’s instructions. It was the act of a frustrated man. His team was totally outclassed. He hadn’t touched the ball. He was being held. He was being double-teamed. He couldn’t buy a free kick. He’d lead to the right spot and the ball would go sailing over his head. He was trying to be a leader, trying to be a physical presence, trying to bring life to a dull game, and hope to a lost cause.

The Tigers’ spearhead ended up taking out his frustrations on the closest bloke in the vicinity, Jordan Butts. If his roundhouse had connected, Butts would have been on his way to the Epworth hospital and Lynch wouldn’t have played again this year. “I didn’t want to cause harm or anything like that,” he told Seven afterwards, not entirely convincingly. As it stands, Lynch is still looking at a hefty suspension.

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33 WHLers Selected In The 2025 NHL Entry Draft

The 2025 NHL Entry Draft was another success for the WHL. In the end, 33 WHLers heard their names called as they were drafted into the NHL. This includes nine in the first round, which accounts for 28.125% of the picks. 

Overall, the CHL had a great weekend, as 93 total players were drafted into the NHL. The 93 accounts for 41.5% of the entire draft, and was the most prospects selected in over a decade. Here is a look at where the 33 WHLers were drafted in this year's draft. 

First Round (9):

9th Overall: Radim Mrtka – Buffalo Sabres; Seattle Thunderbirds
10th Overall: Roger McQueen – Anaheim Ducks; Brandon Wheat Kings
11th Overall: Benjamin Kindel  – Pittsburgh Penguins; Calgary Hitmen
13th Overall: Carter Bear – Detroit Red Wings; Everett Silvertips
14th Overall: Jackson Smith – Columbus Blue Jackets; Tri-City Americans;
15th Overall: Braeden Cootes – Vancouver Canucks; Seattle Thunderbirds
18th Overall: Cole Reschny – Calgary Flames; Victoria Royals
27th Overall: Lynden Lakovic – Washington Capitals; Moose Jaw Warriors
30th Overall: Joshua Ravensbergen – San Jose Sharks; Prince George Cougars

Round Two (4):

36th Overall: Blake Fiddler – Seattle Kraken; Edmonton Oil Kings
39th Overall: Peyton Kettles – Pittsburgh Penguins; Swift Current Broncos
46th Overall: Max Pšenička – Utah Mammoth; Portland Winterhawks
57th Overall: Matthew Gard – Philadelphia Flyers; Red Deer Rebels

Round Three (6):

66th Overall: Nathan Behm – Chicago Blackhawks; Kamloops Blazers
69th Overall: Hayden Paupanekis – Montreal Canadiens; Kelowna Rockets
81st Overall: Bryce Pickford – Montreal Canadiens; Medicine Hat Tigers
83rd Overall: Tommy Lafreniere – Edmonton Oilers; Kamloops Blazers
92nd Overall: Owen Martin – Winnipeg Jets; Spokane Chiefs
94th Overall: Cameron Schmidt – Dallas Stars; Vancouver Giants

Round Four (5):

117th Overall: David Lewandowski – Edmonton Oilers; Saskatoon Blades
123rd Overall: Carter Klippenstein – Minnesota Wild; Brandon Wheat Kings
126th Overall: Brandon Gorzynski – Dallas Stars; Calgary Hitmen
127th Overall: Aiden Foster – Tampa Bay Lightning; Prince George Cougars
128th Overall: Shea Busch  – Florida Panthers; Everett Silvertips

Round Five (3):

130th Overall: Ryan Miller – Pittsburgh Penguins; Portland Winterhawks
141st Overall: Justin Kipkie – Minnesota Wild; Victoria Royals
157th Overall: Luke Vlooswyk – Philadelphia Flyers; Red Deer Rebels

Round Six (3):

162nd Overall: Ashton Cumby – Chicago Blackhawks; Seattle Thunderbirds
170th Overall: Burke Hood – New York Islanders; Vancouver Giants
186th Overall: Alexander Weiermair – Vegas Golden Knights; Portland Winterhawks

Round Seven (3):

197th Overall: Brendan Dunphy – Florida Panthers; Wenatchee Wild
200th Overall: Brady Turko – Anaheim Ducks; Brandon Wheat Kings
216th Overall: William Sharpe – Los Angeles Kings; Kelowna Rockets

Roger McQueen of the Brandon Wheat Kings (Photo Credit: Jeremy Champagne/Brandon Wheat Kings/WHL)

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Vancouver Giants Cameron Schmidt Drafted 94th Overall By The Dallas Stars

Spokane Chiefs Owen Martin Drafted 93rd Overall By The Winnipeg Jets

Kamloops Blazers Tommy Lafreniere Drafted 83rd Overall By The Edmonton Oilers

Medicine Hat Tigers Bryce Pickford Drafted 81th Overall By The Montréal Canadiens

Kelowna Rockets Hayden Paupanekis Drafted 69th Overall By The Montréal Canadiens

The Hockey News

He Had Some Help: Ottawa Senators Draft Thomas Vanek's Son

It was an exciting day for Minnesota’s Blake Vanek. First, he was selected in the third round (93rd overall) by the Ottawa Senators at the 2025 NHL Draft. It certainly wasn’t the usual draft process for Vanek, since only the top 50 prospects were invited to the draft in L.A. this year.

So Vanek wasn’t in L.A., but he also wasn’t home in Minnesota, or in his future home in Ottawa.

Instead, Vanek, who couldn’t wipe the smile off his face, chatted with the Ottawa media on a Zoom call from Madison, Wisconsin.

“I’m actually going to the Morgan Wallen concert (here) tonight,” Vanek laughed. “So there’s kind of a lot going on tonight.”

Seeing one of the biggest names in country music was merely the cherry on top of a perfect day for Vanek, who realized the first step in his NHL dream. And to get to this far, to quote the classic Morgan Wallen/Post Malone song of the same name, Blake “Had Some Help.”

Blake’s father is Thomas Vanek, who had an outstanding NHL career, appearing in 1,029 games and recording 789 points, most of them with the Buffalo Sabres. Vanek spent eight and a half seasons in Buffalo before finishing his career as something of a journeyman, playing for seven teams in his final six seasons: the New York Islanders, Montreal Canadiens, Minnesota Wild, Detroit Red Wings, Florida Panthers, Vancouver Canucks, Columbus Blue Jackets, and finally returning to Detroit to close out his career.

Now six years into retirement and settled in the State of Hockey, the 41-year-old is back to focusing on the NHL again, this time through the eyes of his son.

Like fellow Sens prospect Javon Moore (2024), Blake spent most of his draft year playing high school hockey in Minnesota, where he tallied 22 goals and 53 points in just 29 games. Blake fits Ottawa’s trend of drafting bigger players—he’s already almost 6-foot-3 and 205 pounds—and he doesn’t turn 18 until August.

“There’s a lot of hockey runway ahead with him,” Sens amateur scout Dan Boeser said. “He obviously comes from a hockey family with his dad, so there’s that piece we like. He knows the game well.”

Blake also saw limited action with the Chicago Steel in the USHL, posting 5 points in 9 games. Next season, he’s committed to a scholarship and development agreement with the Wenatchee Wild of the WHL. In addition, he represented the U.S. National Team Development Program’s U18 squad, where he picked up an assist in six games.

“He's a powerful kid,” Boeser said. “He's going to be a big man when he's all done. He competes, can shoot the puck, he scores in the dirty areas. So there's a lot to like about him. Like the path that he's going to take next year going to Wenatchee. So yeah, we're excited. We made that move for a reason to get him.”

Vanek says the excitement is mutual.

“I’m totally pumped to become an Ottawa Senator,” Vanek said in a Zoom call posted to the Sens website. “It's a dream come true to be drafted in the NHL Draft.”

Vanek is the latest in a long line of NHL players’ sons to join the Senators. While Blake admits he got a lot of his game from his dad, he says they’re not exactly the same. And then he couldn’t resist a little dig at his pops.

“I want to say my shot’s a little better than his was,” Vanek laughed. “That might be a little cocky.”

If/when Vanek makes it to Ottawa, Dad might feel a brief twinge of irony. Thomas’ best NHL season came in 2006–07, when he recorded 84 points for the Sabres, who won the Presidents' Trophy that year. However, they fell short in the Eastern Conference Final, losing to none other than his son’s new team, the Ottawa Senators.

The Sens advanced to their first and only Stanley Cup Final that year. But now that his son is on board, Thomas wouldn’t mind seeing that happen again.

Steve Warne
The Hockey News/Ottawa

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Knicks' Top 5 realistic free agency targets for 2025 NBA offseason

After falling short in their first Eastern Conference Finals in a quarter century, the Knicks are looking for any means of improvement to overcome that hurdle next year, including firing their head coach days into their offseason. With free agency just around the corner, New York has a chance to bolster their depth, albeit with limited options at their disposal.

Their biggest weapon? The $5.7 million taxpayer mid-level exception. They’ll have a shot at convincing a needle-moving role player to sign for that before having to resort to veteran minimum deals. 

Here are the Knicks top five realistic targets at the taxpayer MLE figure:

Chris Paul

This may be a stretch at the Knicks’ price point, but what a dream acquisition this would be for the perfect playoff run. Even if Paul is well past his prime, he still brings an ultra steady presence to the offense, jump shooting, defense, plus high-IQ craftiness and agitation to the court.

He’s coming off an 82-game season in which he shot 37.7 percent from three and averaged 7.4 assists to 1.6 turnovers. He’s been in the biggest of games and can both lead bench units and play alongside Jalen Brunson

Al Horford

A solution to their frontcourt depth, Horford may not be attainable by the Knicks for the taxpayer MLE, but would be a worthy target if so. He can play both center as a stretch five or give Karl-Anthony Towns some size at the four position.

Horford shot 40 percent from three in last year’s playoffs and is also a veteran of deep runs. Already having a relationship with KAT is a plus and in terms of sheer talent, there aren’t many better options on the table.

Luke Kennard

Giving the wings added depth and the Knicks a top-flight shooting option, Kennard would be a nice diversifying piece in a position of need. His career 44 percent clip from three is nearly unmatched across the league, and this rotation is missing some of that pure shooting ability.

It also got stuck overplaying the starting wings with mostly guards backing them up, so Kennard provides better optionality in the rotation. There’s a chance someone swoops in at a higher bid, but if not Kennard should be in New York’s sights. 

Dennis Schroder

Schroder is a highly dependable bench point guard that pestered the Knicks in the first round of last year’s playoffs. He’ll consistently bring you pesky defense and paint touches, and would be a clear upgrade over many of New York’s bench guards from last season.

He’s had many postseason battles and isn’t afraid to get into it with foes while averaging double-digit scoring at every stop along his career. The prevailing rumor has him ending up in Sacramento, but perhaps the Knicks being closer to contention give them an edge. 

Malcolm Brogdon

Another veteran guard that can bring the Knicks solid production off the bench, Brogdon toiled away through multiple injuries in Washington last year and is due for a bounce-back year with a higher-purpose team. He’s a career 39 percent shooter from deep and still only 32 years old, just two seasons removed from winning Sixth Man of the Year. 

Injuries have been his biggest hurdle, but if he can stay healthy in a limited role, he’d be a big boost at this contract level.

Mets at Pirates: How to watch on June 29, 2025

The Mets look to avoid a sweep when they take on the Pittsburgh Pirates on Sunday afternoon at 1:35 p.m. on PIX11.

Here's what to know about the game and how to watch...


Mets Notes

  • Montas allowed just three hits in 5.0 scoreless innings of work against the Atlanta Braves in his season debut on Tuesday
  • Juan Soto is slugging a ridiculous .818 over his last seven games, belting four home runs while driving in six and scoring seven runs
  • Brandon Nimmo has also been a force for the Mets of late, slashing .316/.371/.456 with two home runs, six RBI, and four runs scored over his last 15 games
  • Edwin Diaz, who is yet to pitch in this series, has a stingy 1.08 ERA in the month of June, striking out 12 hitters in 8.1 innings.

METS
PIRATES
Francisco Lindor, SSAdam Frazier, 2B
Brandon Nimmo, LFAndrew McCutchen, DH
Juan Soto, RFBryan Reynolds, RF
Pete Alonso, 1BSpencer Horwitz, 1B
Jeff McNeil, CFKe'Bryan Hayes, 3B
Mark Vientos, DHOneil Cruz, CF
Brett Baty, 3BTommy Pham, LF
Luis Torrens, CJared Triolo, SS
Ronny Mauricio, 2BHenry Davis, C

How can I watch Mets at Pirates online?

To watch Mets games online via PIX11, you will need a subscription to a TV service provider and live in the New York City metro area. This will allow fans to watch the Mets on their computer, tablet or mobile phone browser.

To get started on your computer, go to the PIX11 live stream website and follow the site's steps. For more FAQs, you can go here.

Mets sign LHP Richard Lovelady to major league deal, DFA LHP Colin Poche

Richard Lovelady's time away from the Mets didn't last long.

After being designated for assignment earlier this week and then electing free agency over an outright assignment on Saturday, Lovelady signed a one-year major league deal with the Mets and will be active for Sunday's series finale in Pittsburgh.

Lovelady, 29, originally signed with the Mets on Monday after he was released by Minnesota. He appeared in one game, allowing two eared runs on one hit and two walks in Tuesday's loss to the Atlanta Braves.

The Mets clearly have a need for left-handed help in their bullpen, as Jose Castillo was DFA'd the same day as Lovelady, and Colin Poche has now been DFA'd in a corresponding move to re-add Lovelady. Poche allowed two earned runs on two hits and two walks while recording just two outs in Saturday's loss to the Pirates.

Lovelady and Brandon Waddell are currently the only two lefties in the Mets' bullpen, though Brooks Raley is on a rehab assignment and could be a factor at some point this season.