Juan Soto homers, Tylor Megill tosses five solid innings in Mets' 3-1 win over Astros

Juan Soto hit his first home run with his new team and Tylor Megill allowed just one run in five frames as the Mets grabbed their first win of the 2025 season, 3-1, over the Houston Astros on Friday night.

Edwin Diaz got the ninth and looked like his old self, pumping in 98 mph fastballs and snapping off great sliders with ease. The closer needed 15 pitches for a 1-2-3 inning with a strikeout to earn the save.

Here are some takeaways...

- Astros' starter Hunter Brown had some juice in the first, with seven of his 11 pitches at 97 mph or faster. He got Francisco Lindor swinging on a 99 mph fastball and Soto looking at a sinker. Pete Alonso should have been called out on strikes, but home plate umpire Rob Drake was fooled by a 100 mph fastball on the outside corner – that was a theme for the rest of the night. On the next pitch, Alonso powered a 95 mph cutter to deep center (415 feet, 108.6 mph off the bat), but Jake Meyers made a leaping catch before the wall.

- Soto’s second at-bat went much better for the slugger as he smacked a 96 mph 1-2 cutter at the top of the zone for his first homer with his new team. Standing at the plate to admire his work, the sluggers saw the lined shot (107.3 mph off the bat) travel 390 feet and smack off the facade of the second deck in right.

Soto had a big chance in the eighth after Luis Torrens doubled (just missing a home run off the top of the wall in right) and Lindor got plunked. But Tayler Scott’s slider just eluded the sweet spot of the bat, and it was a fly out to right.

- Megill got Jose Altuve with a wild swing on a slider off the outside corner to start the home half of the first. Megill needed just 13 pitches for a clean first, and he was bringing the heat as well, throwing nine pitches at 96 mph or faster. The right-hander kept Houston off the bases through nine batters, adding two more strikeouts.

On his 45th pitch of the night, Altuve singled up the middle for the Astros’ first hit. Isaac Paredes pulled one down the third base line to put runners at the corners with nobody out in the fourth. Megill limited the damage with Jordan Alvarez grabbing a sacrifice fly and Christian Walker and Meyers swinging through pitches out of the zone.

A dropped third strike allowed Meyers to reach to start the sixth as Luis Torrens tried to backhand a slider and it skipped away from him. Altuve snuck a single past a diving Lindor and Carlos Mendoza called for Reed Garrett, who retired the side, despite issuing a one-out walk, getting two strikeouts: freezing Parades with a slider and getting Walker to wave at slider low and away.

- Out of the bullpen: A.J. Minter worked a clean seventh inning in his Mets debut, with a strikeout and a one-out walk on a 3-2 pitch that looked an awful lot like a strike. Ryne Stanek walked Altuve to start the eighth but kept the Astros quiet 

- In the second, Brandon Nimmo smacked a base hit to left. He didn’t stay at first for long, taking off with a walking lead while Brown was still in the stretch. Second baseman Brendan Rodgers failed to field the throw to give the Mets a runner in scoring position.

Mark Vientos, with a short compact swing, connected on a 2-2 sinker on the inside corner for an RBI double to left and Jesse Winker followed by taking a cutter over the plate up the middle to put the Mets up 2-0.

- The Mets had a chase to add to a 3-1 lead after Soto and Alonso worked walks with nobody down in the sixth. But Brown got Nimmo to bounce into a 4-3 double play and Vientos to fly out to center.

Nimmo got another chance with two down and runners on the corners in the eighth, but lefty Bryan King got him to loop a fly to center to end the threat.

- Brett Baty got his first start at second base and helped turn a 5-4-3 double play in the fifth, but had little action otherwise. He went 0-for-2 with a strikeout. 

Baty was lifted for pinch hitter Luisangel Acuña in the seventh with Houston left-hander Steven Okert on the mound. 

Acuña, who went down swinging in that at-bat, made a fine play diving to his left to steal a base hit in the eighth.

Game MVP: Megill (and the pitchers)

Yes, Soto had the big dinger and went 1-for-3 with a walk, but the starter delivered 5.0 innings (plus two batters), three hits, one run, one walk, six strikeouts on 77 pitches (49 strikes). The four relievers combined four scoreless innings with no hits (three walks) and four strikeouts on 69 pitches (44 strikes).

Highlights

Upcoming schedule

The Mets look to take the series against the Astros on Saturday night, first pitch is set for 7:15 p.m.

Right-hander Griffin Canning makes his debut for the club against righty Spencer Arrighetti.

Nets have no answers for Clippers in 132-100 loss

NEW YORK (AP) — Kawhi Leonard scored 31 points and the Los Angeles Clippers overwhelmed the Brooklyn Nets 132-100 on Friday night for their second straight victory and 10th in 12 games as they fight to hold on to sixth place in the Western Conference.

Leonard was 5 of 6 from 3-point range, 10 of 14 overall from the field and made all six of his free throws. He also had six rebounds, four steals and two blocks in just under 27 minutes.

Ivica Zubac scored 21 points on 9-for-9 shooting and had 12 rebounds for Los Angeles. James Harden added 17 points.

Keon Johnson had 13 points for Brooklyn. The Nets have lost six straight and are 1-9 in last 10 and 2-16 in last 18.

Takeaways

Clippers: Los Angeles rebounded from a home loss to Oklahoma City to sweep the New York teams. The Clippers beat the Knicks on Wednesday night at Madison Square Garden.

Nets: Drew Timme had 11 points and 10 rebounds in 25 minutes after signing a multiyear contract Friday. The former Gonzaga player is averaging 23.0 points in 29 games this season for Long Island in the NBA G League.

Key moment

Down 27-26 after one quarter, the Clippers outscored the Nets 42-21 in the second and 37-21 in the third to take a 105-69 lead.

Key stat

Zubac passed Swen Nater for sixth place on the Clippers’ career rebounds list.

Up next

The Clippers are in Cleveland on Sunday.

The Nets are in Washington on Saturday night.

OG Anunoby takes over in fourth quarter as Knicks defeat Bucks, 116-107

Without their top three point guards, some unlikely names, and OG Anunoby's 31 points, lifted the Knicks to a 116-107 win over the Bucks in Milwaukee.

The Knicks have swept the season series from the Bucks, a potential first-round opponent.

Here are the takeaways...

-With Miles McBride (groin) and Cam Payne (ankle) out, coach Tom Thibodeau went with veteran Delon Wright as the starting point guard. Wright, the 10-year vet, was in the lineup mostly for his defensive prowess, and he showed it early on. The Bucks were running on the fast break with Wright stuck defending Kyle Kuzma and Giannis Antetokounmpo. Wright made the savvy move to anticipate the pass from Kuzma and deflected it to himself.

Wright scored 10 of the Knicks' 25 first-quarter points. In 30 minutes, Wright scored 12 points on 5-for-9 shooting (2 of 5 from three) while dishing four assists, coming down with three rebounds and coming away with a steal.

-Tyler Kolek saw extended minutes in Wednesday's loss after Payne left with his ankle sprain, and he would tell you he needs to be more confident and aggressive when he's the point guard on the court, and he did Friday. Playing in the same arena he played in while with Marquette, Kolek made the right reads on breaks, and held his own defensively.

The rookie scored five points on 2-for-4 shooting (1 of 2 from three) while dishing five assists and not turning the ball over in 17 minutes. He was a game-high plus-18 on the floor.

-Turnovers were a bit part of this one. The Knicks scored 16 points off of 10 Bucks turnovers in the first half. Milwaukee took care of it better in the second, and that helped them cut the Knicks' 14-point halftime lead to three midway through the third, as the Knicks could not buy a bucket. But then Josh Hart took over, being the aggressor and pushing the pace, getting to the line three times in New York's 12-1 run to get their lead back into double digits.

Milwaukee had 16 total turnovers and New York scored 26 points off of them. The Knicks had eight, three in the second half. The Knicks also outrebounded the Bucks, 44-32, including on the offensive glass, 14-3.

-With the game in single digits in the fourth, the Knicks got a lift from an unexpected source. Landry Shamet made two huge threes to push the Knicks' lead to 16. Anunoby made two threes of his own in the fourth. Entering the final frame, the Knicks were 0-for-9 from three.

Shamet scored 13 points on 5-for-8 shooting (3 of 5 from three) off the bench.

-Karl-Anthony Towns picked up two quick fouls in the first quarter, and his third midway through the second. That limited the All-Star to just eight first-half points. It wasn't the best shooting night for Towns, who scored just 14 points on 6 of 16 shooting.

With Towns on the bench, Mitchell Robinson saw more playing time in the first half, scoring two points and coming down with 10 boards in his 14 minutes of play. The big man finished with two points, 10 rebounds, an assist and a steal in his 18 minutes.

-Damian Lillard (blood clot) is undergoing treatment, which took out a lot of firepower from the Bucks' offense, but Kuzma took on that responsibility. He scored Milwaukee's first six points, getting to the basket at will. But after his outburst to start, the Knicks held Kuzma to 20 points on 8-for-16 shooting. Antetokounmpo, however, would get into spurts where he was unstoppable, muscling his way to the basket. Whenever the Bucks saw the Knicks' lead get big, Giannis was there to get the buckets they needed.

Antetokounmpo finished with a team-high 30 points on 11 of 17 shooting. Ryan Rollins had a career-high 20 points on 8-for-12 shooting, including 3 of 4 from three.

-Anunoby scored 20-plus points in 10 of his last 13 games entering Friday but didn't get going in this one until the fourth quarter when he scored 20 of his 31 points. Overall, Anunoby was not efficient, he shot 9 of 21 (3 of 10 from three), but he did when it mattered most.

-Mikal Bridges was the aggressor on offense in the first half. He attempted 15 shots, the second most in a half for him this season, but Bridges took a backseat in the second half to Hart, Towns and Anunoby. He finished with 26 points on 12 of 24 shooting with five assists and two steals.

You could tell some of the Knicks players were unfamiliar playing with each other. Injuries and new floor combinations led to some early Knicks turnovers that allowed the Bucks to get back into the game in the first quarter, but they overcame the mishaps thanks to strong play

-Hart was on triple-double watch. He finished with 13 points, 14 rebounds and eight assists. He also added two steals and a block.

Game MVP: OG Anunoby

This was a team win, but Anunoby took over in the fourth quarter to help the Knicks pull away.

Highlights

What's next

The Knicks return home to host the Portland Trail Blazers on Sunday evening. Tip is set for 6 p.m. at The Garden.

Canucks Drop Crucial Point, Fall 7-6 In A Shootout To The Blue Jackets

Mar 28, 2025; Columbus, Ohio, USA; Vancouver Canucks goalie Kevin Lankinen (32) makes a save as Columbus Blue Jackets center Boone Jenner (38) looks for a rebound during the first period at Nationwide Arena. Mandatory Credit: Russell LaBounty-Imagn Images

Despite holding a 3-0 lead after the first period, the Vancouver Canucks fell 7-6 in a shootout to the Columbus Blue Jackets. Vancouver received goals from Linus Karlsson, Brock Boeser, Jake DeBrusk, Tyler Myers and Aatu Räty (2x), while Kevin Lankinen stopped 32 of the 28 shots he faced. Despite the loss, the Canucks push their point streak to three games and are now 2-1-2 on their current six-game road trip. 

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Comparing The Final 10 Games Of The Canucks’ Past Five Seasons

This game was chaotic from start to finish. As mentioned, the Canucks built a 3-0 lead in the first, but saw their advantage disappear by the mid-way point of the second. In the end, despite holding a lead with under five minutes left in the third, Vancouver needed to find a way to tie the game in order to collect a single point. 

While it is a positive that the Canucks scored six goals, giving up six in regulation is concerning. Not only was it a difficult game for Lankinen, but the entire team's defensive structure was poor, as the Blue Jackets had no problem crashing the crease. Ultimately, this was a game Vancouver should have won in regulation, which would have greatly increased their chances of qualifying for a playoff spot.

As for standouts, it was another strong night for Kiefer Sherwood. The Columbus-born winger recorded three assists and once again made it to double digits in hits, finishing with 10. With Elias Pettersson, Nils Höglander and Filip Chytil out of the lineup, Sherwood has stepped up his game and now has six points in his last two games. 

Räty also had a game to remember as he scored twice, including the game-tying goal. He also went eight for 15 in the faceoff dot and played the opening shift of overtime. Now, with three goals in his last two games, Räty is showing that he is ready for a full-time role at the NHL level. 

The Canucks power play was also dynamic, as they went two for two on the night. Vancouver had struggled with the man advantage through the first four games of the road trip, but we were able to cash in for two important goals. With nine games remaining, the Canucks need to continue this momentum on the power play if they want to find consistent success down the stretch. 

Overall, this was a costly and frustrating loss for Vancouver. They gave up multiple leads and struggled to put away a Blue Jackets team that was 1-5-1 in their previous seven. While the Canucks did manage to collect a point, losing the extra one very well could hurt them at the end of the season.

Stats and Facts:

- The Canucks have not allowed a first period goal in five straight games
- Recording his 93rd multi-point game, Brock Boeser ties Patrik Sundström for 14th on Vancouver's all-time list for 2+ point games
- Tyler Myers ties Mattias Öhlund for the second most shorthanded goals by a defenseman in franchise history with five
- Kiefer Sherwood records his second straight three-point game

Scoring Summary:

1st Period

8:51- VAN: Linus Karlsson (2) from Kiefer Sherwood and Conor Garland (PPG)
10:35- VAN: Brock Boeser (24) from Quinn Hughes and Pius Suter
13:26- VAN: Jake DeBrusk (24) from Brock Boeser and Pius Suter (PPG)

2nd Period:

00:34- CBJ: Boone Jenner (3) from Denton Mateychuk and Erik Gudbranson
4:45- CBJ: Kirill Marchenko (27) from Sean Monahan and Dante Fabbro
8:44- CBJ: Dante Fabbro (6) from Cole Sillinger and Mathieu Olivier
11:23- VAN: Tyler Myers (6) from Kiefer Sherwood and Pius Suter (SHG)

3rd Period:

6:42- VAN: Aatu Räty (4) from Dakota Joshua and Quinn Hughes
7:03- CBJ: Denton Mateychuk (4) from Boone Jenner and Adam Fantilli
16:46- CBJ: Boone Jenner (4) from Kirill Marchenko and Zach Werenski
17:08- CBJ: Mathieu Olivier (17) from Dante Fabbro and Justin Danforth 
17:31- VAN: Aatu Räty (5) from Dakota Joshua and Kiefer Sherwood

Overtime:

No Scoring

Shootout:

CBJ: Kent Johnson 

Up Next:

The Canucks will wrap up their six-game road trip with a Sunday matinee against the Winnipeg Jets. This will be the third of four meetings between these two Canadian rivals, with each team picking up a win at home. Puck drop is scheduled for noon PT from Canada Life Centre. 

  Make sure you bookmark THN's Vancouver Canucks site and add us to your favourites on Google News for the latest news, exclusive interviews, breakdowns, and so much more. Also, be sure to leave a comment at the bottom of the page and engage with other passionate fans through our forum. 

The Hockey News

The Dodgers received their World Series rings. Here's what they look like

Los Angeles, CA - March 28: The World Championship Dodgers team poses for a photo.
Dodgers players and team personnel pose for a team photo with their World Series rings during a pregame ceremony at Dodger Stadium on Friday night. (Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times)

No detail, or diamond, was spared.

Modern-day championship rings, Dodgers chief marketing officer Lon Rosen joked, essentially have “turned into wearable sculpture pieces.” And after a month of intricate design planning this offseason, the Dodgers’ 2024 World Series rings are no exception.

Presented to players and coaches on the field before Friday night’s game against the Detroit Tigers at Dodger Stadium, the latest championship rings in Dodgers history are easily the most grandiose yet, each made of 14-karat gold, more than 300 diamonds and 120 sapphires.

At the top, the LA logo is spelled out in blue gems, with a bed of oval diamonds as the backdrop. Around the edge lies a circle of 34 sapphires honoring late Dodgers pitcher Fernando Valenzuela, who died during the World Series run. On either side eight more diamonds were included to recognize the organization’s eight championships. On the top and bottom, “World Champions” is spelled out in more bling.

Read more:Mookie Betts' walk-off homer in 10th keeps Dodgers undefeated: 'We just don't quit'

Down the side of the ring, there are personalized touches, with each team member’s last name and number displayed around a hexagon shape inspired by Dodger Stadium’s unique scoreboards. Inscribed on the inner half are each recipient’s signature and logos of the three teams the Dodgers defeated on their way to the crown. 

Beneath the lift-off top of the ring, more Easter eggs abound — most notably, cut-up pieces of the bases from the team’s title-clinching Game 5 win at Yankee Stadium, as well as a bedazzled recreation of Dodger Stadium with the Commissioner’s Trophy in the middle.

One final touch resides on the bottom of the ring: five diamonds to signify the five-run deficit the Dodgers overcame in the clincher.

“We had input from our ownership, from Stan [Kasten, team president], from me,” Rosen said. “Looked at it, worked with designers, and our owner made the final decision, which we all actually agreed on.”

“It’s very cool,” Rosen added shortly before Friday’s ceremony. “The guys are gonna be really excited.”

Even before the rings were presented, anticipation was high in the clubhouse.

“This is the final piece,” manager Dave Roberts said. “Just to have the fans here to enjoy this with us, the players, to kind of close the book on 2024, and still staying focused on the baseball game tonight, there's just a lot of excitement. Probably more than I can ever recall, with the Dodger fan base. Our players feel that."

In a fitting twist, the rings were presented on the same night a key piece of that team, L.A. native Jack Flaherty, pitched against the club as a member of the Tigers — who re-signed him in the offseason after trading him to the Dodgers at last year’s deadline.

“He was somewhat of a savior, to be honest with you,” Roberts said of Flaherty, who will get his ring Saturday. “He was the right person at the right time for our club. And I'm happy that he got family and friends who got to see him in a Dodger uniform, get a championship ring.”

“Now,” Roberts added with a laugh, “we can go beat him up today, and give him his ring tomorrow.”

Like most of his players, Roberts isn’t one to wear World Series hardware often. The rings from his previous two championships — as Dodgers manager in 2020 and as a player with the Boston Red Sox in 2004 — reside inside a safe in his garage.

But, the manager conceded, he was excited to get to try on this piece during Friday’s ceremony.

“I hope it fits,” he joked. “If you see me fiddling with it, and it ends up on my pinky, we’ll have big problems.”

Then again, championship rings now are less for wearing anyway. As Rosen noted, they have transformed more into pieces of art. And after the franchise’s first full-season title in more than three decades, the Dodgers didn’t waste an inch of this diamond-studded design, infusing as much symbolism from their triumphant season as they could.

Hernández on the mend

Friday’s ceremony was a can't-miss occasion for Kiké Hernández.

Though the veteran utility man played a key role in the Dodgers’ 2020 title, he missed out on all the season-opening ceremonies the next year after signing with the Boston Red Sox that winter.

Then, on Thursday, Hernández was absent again during the World Series banner raising, unable to make it to the ballpark for the home opener while battling a stomach illness.

On Friday, however, Hernández was feeling strong enough to return to the ballpark. He wasn't in the starting lineup, and it remains unclear when he will be back on the field. But Roberts said Hernández was “feeling much better” and seemed hopeful his illness would cause only a short-term absence.

“He is not going to be here at the ballpark early on, doing work, just make sure that he kind of stays strong and builds up,” Roberts said.

“But,” he added, “he wasn't going to miss this one.”

Pitching injury updates

Hours before Friday’s game, injured pitchers Tony Gonsolin (back) and Evan Phillips (shoulder) faced hitters in live batting practice. Reliever Michael Kopech (shoulder) threw a flat-ground session in the outfield. And Clayton Kershaw (offseason toe and knee surgeries) told reporters he would face hitters for the first time this year Saturday.

Read more:Shohei Ohtani hits one of Dodgers' three homers to beat Tigers in their home opener

Gonsolin, who tweaked his back while doing squats in the gym near the end of spring training, and Phillips, who had a platelet-rich plasma injection this offseason to address a partially torn rotator cuff he suffered during the playoffs, are the closest of the group to returning to the active roster.

Phillips likely will throw another live BP before beginning a rehab assignment, keeping him on track to rejoin the team in the next couple of weeks. Gonsolin’s next step will be to throw three innings in either another simulated setting or a minor-league rehab assignment as he works toward a long-awaited return from his 2023 Tommy John surgery.

“To have something like that, non-baseball-related, really sucked, honestly,” said Gonsolin, whose last appearance in the majors came in August 2023. “I don't really have any other words for it. But again, it's a minor setback, and I'll try to take this time to build back up and get into an even better position."

The timeline for Kopech’s and Kershaw’s returns are less clear, but Kershaw said he remains hopeful of being ready right around the time his 60-day injured list stint is up near the end of May.

Sign up for more Dodgers news with Dodgers Dugout. Delivered at the start of each series.

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Rays’ Kameron Misner becomes first player to hit first big league homer as walk-off on opening day

TAMPA, Fla. (AP) — Kameron Misner gave the Tampa Bay Rays the perfect housewarming gift: a game-ending home run.

Forced from Tropicana Field by Hurricane Milton, the Rays are playing home games across the bay this season at Steinbrenner Field, the New York Yankees’ spring training headquarters. Leading off the ninth inning in Friday’s opener against Colorado, Misner hit a drive to right through swirling wind that lifted Tampa Bay to a 3-2 victory.

The 27-year-old rookie became the first player in major league history to hit his first big league home run for a walk-off on opening day, according to the Elias Sports Bureau.

“I was hoping it was going out, but you never know,” Misner said.

Misner was supposed to be at Triple-A, optioned to Durham on March 19, but he was recalled Wednesday after Richie Palacios was diagnosed with a broken finger.

Before a sellout crowd of 10,046 that included Yankees owner Hal Steinbrenner and MLB deputy commissioner Dan Halem, Misner entered in the eighth as a defensive replacement after the Rays used a pinch hitter. He homered on a 97.4 mph fastball from Victor Vodnik that leaked over the inside of the plate, a 351-foot drive into the right-field seats of a short porch with the same dimensions as Yankee Stadium.

Christopher Morel and Junior Caminero doused Misner with Powerade tubs after he crossed the plate.

“It’s like a Hollywood movie script right there,” said Ryan Pepiot, the Rays’ starting pitcher. “Your first home run is a walk-off home run. You can’t get any more electric than that.”

Dad Terry, mom Stephanie and sister Brylee were in the stands. While Misner spoke with reporters after the game, clubhouse assistant Jerry Culkin tossed him the ball that had been retrieved.

Misner said he didn’t hit any home runs at all until his junior season at Poplar Bluff High School.

Selected 35th by Miami in the 2019 amateur draft, he signed for a $2,115,000 bonus. He was traded to Tampa Bay in December 2021 for infielder Joey Wendle and made his big league debut Aug. 2 at Houston, when he pinch-ran and hit a game-ending flyout against All-Star closer Josh Hader.

Misner got his first hit in his final at-bat before he was sent back down, on a 100.8 mph pitch from Oakland All-Star closer Mason Miller on Aug. 22.

“Our dugout erupted because we love the guy so much,” Rays manager Kevin Cash said. “You hear the coaches rave about him from Triple-A. ... Pretty easygoing guy. He can dish it and he can take it and it’s good for the clubhouse.”

Misner grew up on a farm in Missouri with cows and horses and went to high school in Poplar Bluff, about 150 miles from St. Louis. He wore his lucky ostrich skin boots to the ballpark.

“He’s a country boy — very country boy who’s going to wear his cowboy boots every day, showing up with a cowboy hat on,” Pepiot said.

As a kid, Misner was into rodeo, riding steers until fourth or fifth grade.

“My mom kind of put a stop to that. She said: `You got to start playing sports,’” he explained. “My mom saw the first bull and she said: `No.‴

Here's Why Blackhawks Phenom Connor Bedard Is Foundational Piece Of Chicago's Future

(SEP 18, 2023 -- VOL. 77, ISSUE 03)

Chicago Blackhawks star center Connor Bedard is finishing up his sophmore NHL season. And in this cover story from THN's Sept. 18, 2023 edition, editor-in-chief Ryan Kennedy covered Bedard's development in the Windy City:,

CHICAGO HOPE

By Ryan Kennedy

Connor Bedqrd is one of the most talented offensive prospects we’ve seen since Connor McDavid came on the radar one generation prior, but in the lead-up to the 2023 NHL draft in Nashville, Bedard was also playing some stifling defense. Everybody knew the Chicago Blackhawks were going to select the Regina Pats superstar first overall, and everyone had known it since the Hawks won the lottery back on May 8. This was not a Taylor Hall/Tyler Seguin or Nico Hischier/Nolan Patrick situation. This was a stone-cold lock. But Bedard was having none of it. Even the day before the draft, when Bedard held court with the media, he made it clear he would not be assuming himself as the No. 1 pick until it happened. So questions about whether he likes his Italian beef sandwiches dipped, Cubs versus White Sox, or whether or not it’s blasphemous to put ketchup on a hot dog would have to wait.

And while the Hawks themselves remained cagey in the lead-up, the jig was up as soon as they handed Bedard his first Chicago jersey on stage, emblazoned with his usual No. 98 on the arms and back instead of the No. 23 that other top picks such as Anaheim’s Leo Carlsson and Columbus’ Adam Fantilli were given that night. But Bedard had to at least have googled a couple of things about the Windy City in preparation, right?

“No, I didn’t want to jinx myself or anything,” said Bedard about 15 minutes after officially becoming a member of the Hawks organization. “So I kind of played it cool, I guess, just doing normal day-to-day stuff. Obviously, now I think that you can start looking into stuff and all that, but a lot of people have talked to me about it, and seeing the reaction from fans after everything is unbelievable.”

At the least, Bedard officially becoming a member of the Original Six franchise meant he could finally fully embrace the rabid fan base. “Yeah, it’s great, I don’t have to say no to signing anything ‘Chicago’ now,” he said. “To see the passion and just how that city gets behind all their teams, they have a lot of sports teams, and, of course, the Blackhawks are a big one. Just seeing the support so far, yeah, it’s hard to kind of describe or put into words, but it’s a great feeling.”

Indeed, the hundreds of Hawks fans who made the pilgrimage to Nashville were not disappointed when Chicago announced its first selection, and they had reason to celebrate: as the Patrick Kane and Jonathan Toews era closed in Chicago, the Bedard era has officially begun.

The players who turned the Hawks into a modern-day dynasty from 2010 to 2015 are now all gone from the roster. Kane was traded to the New York Rangers at the deadline; Toews wasn’t re-signed this summer, and whether health issues will force him into retirement is very much in question. As it is, Toews has announced he will not be playing in 2023-24. Marian Hossa just had his ‘Goodbye Game’ for charity in Slovakia, while Duncan Keith retired in 2022 after finishing his career in Edmonton. Brent Seabrook technically belongs to the Tampa Bay Lightning, but in reality, the big rearguard’s career is over, not having played a game since December 2019 due to injury.

Under new GM Kyle Davidson, the Hawks headed into a full-scale rebuild, and with some lottery luck, they got their new cornerstone in Bedard. Outside expectations could not be higher for the teenager, but the fact Bedard is more than just a silky set of hands is what sets him apart from your run-of-the-mill junior star. “You realize how humble and how hungry he is,” Davidson said. “To listen to him and how hard he wants to work, and he’s already working so hard. He’s so excited to get in the weight room and get back on the ice and more, more, more. It gets you fired up. When someone wants to be great and wants to work, it’s pretty exciting.”

Though his hockey career is still in its infancy, Bedard has already proven how driven he is. One only needs to look back to the 2023 World Junior Championship in Halifax, when Canada was in tough against a determined Slovakia squad in the quarterfinal. With the score tied 3-3 late, Bedard had a golden opportunity for a goal thwarted by the stick of a Slovakian defenseman, and his anger was visible when he got back to the bench as he slammed his stick hard against the ice. But Bedard channelled that competitive rage in the best possible way, dancing through all three Slovakian skaters in overtime before putting the winner past goaltender – and future fellow Chicago pick – Adam Gajan. Even up in the press box, it was obvious that Bedard was dead-set on ending that game, and, sure enough, he did.

By all accounts, that commitment to excellence extends off the ice as well. “Good player, better person,” said Chicago’s director of amateur scouting Mike Doneghey. “He’s going to be able to drive our team once he’s acclimated and gets a little older. He’s a player you build around, not only on the ice but with the way he carries himself and the way his teammates respect him. He brings a lot of guys into the action and will make everyone around him better.”

Which is exactly the type of player Chicago needs right now. Last year’s Hawks were downright terrible by pretty much every metric: dead-last in offense, bottom five in defense and on the power play, 22nd on the penalty kill. Their leading scorer was Max Domi, with 49 points – and that was in the 60 games before he was traded to Dallas. Their second-leading scorer was Kane, before he was dealt to the Rangers. So the highest-scoring Hawks player who actually finished the season with the team was Andreas Athanasiou, who tallied 20 goals and 40 points. Nearly 200 NHLers had more points than Athanasiou.

Bedard, who has already signed an exclusive partnership with Sherwood, will undoubtedly help with Chicago’s scoring punch, but it would be folly to imagine him doing it all by himself. Which is why Davidson’s summer work was so intriguing. Among his pick-ups were much-travelled forwards Taylor Hall, Nick Foligno and Corey Perry.

In Foligno and Perry, the Hawks get two pros who have seen it all. And in Perry specifically, they get a Stanley Cup champion (with Anaheim in 2007) who has also been to the Stanley Cup final three times in the past four seasons. Both Foligno and Perry are physical players who would be obvious deterrents for any opponent who would deign to rough up Bedard on the ice. It also wouldn’t be surprising if one of them becomes Bedard’s landlord/billet dad/carpool buddy for Season 1, as Bedard will have enough on his hands as a vaunted phenom entering his rookie campaign.

In Hall, the Hawks get someone with a unique perspective and NHL history. Hall was drafted first overall himself, to the Edmonton Oilers in 2010, where a vacuum of leadership held the team back from any kind of success during his tenure there. But, in 2018, Hall won the Hart Trophy as a member of the New Jersey Devils. His linemate? Rookie and straight-from-the-draft-podium No. 1 pick Nico Hischier, who Hall credited with helping him nab those MVP honors. So, Bedard has some guys to back him up.

“It’s really special,” Bedard said. “Those guys have been through everything in the NHL. For me to get to learn from them, and obviously they’re unbelievable players, just having those guys to ask questions to, it’s awesome.”

As for the veterans, they’ve liked what they’ve seen of Bedard already. “You can tell just from watching him talk to the media, he’s pretty well-mannered,” Hall said. “He knows what to expect. He has high expectations for himself, and for guys like ‘Fliggy’ (Foligno) and I, it’s about letting him play and bringing the best out of him. Try to eliminate distractions, give him advice and mentor him as best as possible. It’s exciting.”

Even with Bedard and the influx of old pros up front, the Hawks will surely struggle again this season, but again: at least the moves Davidson has been making line up. A rebuild takes a long time, and even going back to the last Chicago demolition, it really began three years before the Hawks landed Toews and Kane in consecutive drafts (Toews going third overall in 2006, Kane first overall one year later).

Right now, Chicago has 2020 first-rounder Lukas Reichel, who looks ready to become a full-time contributor, plus a bunch of intriguing blueliners in the pipeline, led by Kevin Korchinski, Ethan Del Mastro and Sam Rinzel. There’s a lot of work to do, but at least there’s a base now. “There’s an excitement to joining a team at the ground level,” Hall said. “Being there every step of the way at the very beginning, there’s something to that that’s exciting for us.”

It’s also exciting to do so in Chicago, a town that loves its Hawks. Even with the team cratering in the standings, Chicago drew more than 17,000 fans per game, and it’s hard not to see a Bedard bump coming to the United Center. For a kid who knows the recent history of the team and how Toews and Kane brought glory to a previously lovelorn franchise, getting to represent that franchise means something. “Yeah, it’s incredible,” Bedard said. “I can’t put it into words. Growing up, obviously that was when they were going on their runs and winning the Cups. You see a lot of them, with the United Center going crazy and all of Chicago getting behind them, the Original Six and so much history here. I’m so happy to be part of the Blackhawks organization.”

So now the moment approaches. Bedard in the NHL, something we’ve been thinking about for years already. How will he stack up against all the great players who came before him? Luckily, the NHL schedule-makers know a good storyline when they see one, and Chicago opens the season in Pittsburgh, home of Sidney Crosby.

“I was trying not to look at the schedule,” Bedard said. “Some people were telling me, I didn’t want to look too hard into it. But man, like I said, if I’m able to make the squad come October, (Crosby was my) childhood idol, ever since I can remember. That would be unbelievable. It’s a little bit of time away. I think I’ll kind of dream about it now, but hopefully that comes.”

Hopefully? Geez, kid, help us out a bit here. But there’s that humility once again, and it’s hard to knock when it’s obviously helped keep Bedard on the right path so far. But clearly the NHL assumes Bedard will be an instant sensation out of camp, because Chicago also plays Auston Matthews and Toronto plus Nathan MacKinnon and Colorado in Games 4 and 5 on the schedule. Also in October? Two games against the defending Cup champions from Vegas.

Soon, the “ifs” and “hopefullys” will be gone and we’ll be watching Bedard on the ice, driving defenses crazy and using that wicked shot of his that has been NHL-caliber since he was 14. In the meantime, we’ll accept Bedard is a young man who takes nothing for granted, even if expectations for him are sky-high.

As for his own rookie expectations? “It’s hard to say,” he said. “I’ve never played a game there or anything. For me, it’s having a good rest of the summer and trying to prepare myself as best I can to try to make the team. It’s really hard to say what I have to do to play well there because it’s different and I’ve never experienced that. Obviously, as the best league in the world, it won’t be easy, but I’m going to do whatever I can this summer and moving forward to try to have an impact in the league.”

We’re sure Bedard is going to make the Blackhawks, but his attitude isn’t weird; McDavid was the same at that age, as was Wayne Gretzky. And it all worked out pretty well for those guys.

Bennett scores twice, Marchand picks up OT assist as Panthers defeat Utah 2-1

Mar 28, 2025; Sunrise, Florida, USA; Florida Panthers center Sam Bennett (9) celebrates with right wing Mackie Samoskevich (25) and center Aleksander Barkov (16) after scoring against the Utah Hockey Club during the second period at Amerant Bank Arena. (Sam Navarro-Imagn Images)

Fans were treated to a fun Friday night at the hockey barn in Sunrise.

Hosting the Utah Hockey Club for the first time, the Florida Panthers welcomed Brad Marchand to their lineup and pulled out a gutty 2-1 win in overtime.

It took some time for the game to get going, with the two teams combining for only 11 shots on goal during the opening 20 minutes.

An early second period power play for Florida would change that.

Controlling the puck right off the face off in Utah’s zone, Florida worked the puck around before Sasha Barkov found Sam Bennett with a perfect back door feed.

Bennett deposited the puck behind Karel Vejmelka to give the Cats a 1-0 lead just 2:28 into the second period.

Florida’s lead held until the early stages of the third period, when Sean Durzi finished off a 2-on-1 while the teams were playing at 4-on-4.

Some strong penalty killing by the Panthers would help push the affair past regulation for the second straight home game.

The extra session was all Florida, but it took nearly the entire five minutes for the Cats to cash in.

Brad Marchand had the puck on his stick behind Utah’s net, finding Bennett at the side of the goal crease.

His second of the game would give Florida their seventh straight win on home ice.

On to Montreal.

QUICK THOUGHTS

Bennett’s goal was his sixth over his past nine games.

Barkov has five points over his past five games after picking up the primary assist on Bennett’s goal.

Marchand’s primary assist on Bennett’s OT winner was his first as a member of the Panthers.

Florida held Utah to only 14 shots on goal.

The Cats went a perfect 4-for-4 on the penalty kill, including one late in the third period where they held Utah to zero shots on goal. 

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From Russia with love: Daria Kasatkina switches tennis allegiance to Australia

  • 27-year-old has not been to Russia since coming out as gay in 2022
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Russian-born tennis player Daria Kasatkina is switching allegiances to Australia after her application for permanent residency was accepted by the government.

The world No 12 has been playing on the tour as a neutral athlete after Russian and Belarusian players were banned from competing under their own flags following Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022.

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