Severino shows he's worth every penny in dominant Athletics debut

Severino shows he's worth every penny in dominant Athletics debut originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

Up until the bottom of the sixth inning on Thursday night at T-Mobile Park, Luis Severino was cruising through his Athletics debut against the Seattle Mariners.

The team’s prized offseason acquisition had struck out five through five scoreless innings — but now, a walk and a single placed runners on first and second base with one out. Athletics manager Mark Kotsay made eye contact with Severino from the visiting dugout, but both knew the right-hander wasn’t going anywhere.

Kotsay’s confidence in Severino paid off, and he looked every bit worth his three-year, $67 million contract — an Athletics franchise record — as he hurled a sweeper past a frozen Rowdy Tellez to get out of the jam, showing plenty of emotion as he walked off the mound.

The Athletics ended up losing 4-2 on Opening Day of the 2025 MLB season, but Severino had to feel good about his performance. His night ended with the Athletics leading 1-0 after the sixth, having struck out six with four walks, three hits and no runs on 99 pitches.

It was a debut to remember with his new team despite the final result — and the last strikeout showed the Athletics just what he can do for them.

“I saw [Kotsay] was looking at me, and he [asked] me if I was good, and I told him, ‘I got this,’” Severino told reporters after the loss. “I knew I had enough in my pocket that I can reach [in] to throw a little harder, throw some nasty pitches. We looked at a lot of good pitches, and we threw a nasty sweeper at the end. …

“Just for me, [Tellez] was my last hitter in my head, so I was like, ‘I’m going to throw everything I got, my nastiest stuff.’ Like I said before, I had the opportunity to reach back and get more velocity, so I went into that at-bat to throw the nastiest stuff that I got.”

The Athletics gave Severino one run of support while he was on the mound, by way of first baseman Tyler Soderstrom’s booming home run to center field in the fifth inning.

When Tyler Ferguson replaced Severino on the hill in the bottom of the seventh, the Mariners were able to get on the board after a pair of walks set up Victor Robles’ sacrifice fly. But the 1-1 tie didn’t last long as Soderstrom hit another homer in the top of the eighth — this one an impressive line drive over the right field wall.

With the blast, Soderstrom became just the third player in Athletics franchise history with a multi-homer game on Opening Day, joining Khris Davis (2017) and Jason Giambi (2000), per Sarah Langs.

Severino appreciated Soderstrom’s efforts, calling the 23-year-old’s night at the plate “unbelievable.”

“So happy for him,” Severino said. “I mean, you don’t see guys like that. He seems so comfortable at the plate right now. Hopefully he can continue doing that.”

Both standout performances by the new Athletics teammates weren’t enough, however; José Leclerc relieved Ferguson in the bottom of the eighth and surrendered two home runs that put the Mariners on top for good. Seattle third baseman Jorge Polanco celebrated his go-ahead, two-run shot with a bat spike that showed the emotions of the moment.

The last time Severino pitched, it was in the New York Mets’ loss to the Los Angeles Dodgers during Game 3 of the 2024 NLCS. He felt just as much energy on the mound in Seattle on Thursday night, and he exuded plenty of spirit for the Athletics in return.

“The last game I threw was in the playoffs, and first game [of the season], it was like a playoff atmosphere,” Severino said. “I was excited to be out there, to compete for this team, and I went out there to do my best.”

It certainly wasn’t the Opening Day the Athletics had hoped for. But with one game of a marathon season officially under their belts, their new ace should be a bright spot moving forward.

As Dodgers look ahead in home opener, plenty of reminders of 2024 World Series title

LOS ANGELES, CA - MARCH 27: bLos Angeles Dodgers first base Freddie Freeman (5) is introduced efore the game against the Detroit Tigersat Dodger Stadium on Thursday, March 27, 2025 in Los Angeles, CA.(Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times)
Dodgers first baseman Freddie Freeman is introduced before the game against the Detroit Tigers at Dodger Stadium. (Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times)

The rings will come Friday.

But on Thursday, ahead of the first home game of the Dodgers’ 2025 season, reminders of the club’s 2024 World Series championship were everywhere — offering a sentimental (and not-so-subtle) indication of the stakes for this year’s title defense.

In the Dodgers' newly renovated home clubhouse, the team’s typical home white jerseys were replaced with ceremonial championship threads; with names, numbers and the iconic ‘Dodgers’ script across the chest all colored in gold. During batting practice, stadium organist Dieter Ruhle graced a hazy afternoon scene with a playing of Queen’s “We are the Champions.” And in right field, the team’s seven previous World Series banners had been updated during offseason renovations to the stadium, with an eighth for 2024 unveiled shortly before first pitch.

It all culminated with the day’s ceremonial first pitch. On the mound stood Kirk Gibson, the Dodgers’ walk-off hero in Game 1 of the 1988 World Series. Behind the plate squatted Freddie Freeman, the walk-off hero in Game 1 of last year’s Fall Classic.

The accompanying roar from the Dodger Stadium crowd wasn’t quite to the level of either man’s iconic home run. But for an opening day pregame ceremony, it was deafening.

Read more:How does Freddie Freeman process his place in World Series history? Ask Kirk Gibson

The Dodgers’ goal, of course, is to wind up right back here this time next year; hopeful to open next season celebrating what would represent Major League Baseball’s first repeat championship in 25 years.

It’s why, amid all the pomp and circumstance Thursday, shortstop Mookie Betts was trying to keep a bigger-picture perspective on the six months ahead.

“Obviously, every opening day is special,” he said. “But you just try to make it the same thing as always. You don’t want to add any pressure or add anything. It’s the beginning of a long grind.”

Still, the ceremonies honoring last year’s championship weren’t lost on Dodgers players and coaches, either.

“It’s special,” said reliever Evan Phillips, who opened the season on the injured list but expects to begin a rehab assignment with triple-A Oklahoma City soon. “I’ve always been a fan of the gold accessory for the champion. It’s a privilege to wear it.”

Added Tommy Edman, who was in center field for the home-opening lineup: “It’s awesome. After ending last year on such a high note, we’re excited to get the fans back out there and hopefully put on a show.”

The Dodgers, who entered the day 2-0 after sweeping their season-opening series in Japan against the Chicago Cubs last week, weren’t at full strength for the start of their three-game series at the Detroit Tigers.

Though Betts and Freddie Freeman were back in the lineup — they both missed the Tokyo series, with Betts battling a gnarly stomach virus and Freeman nursing rib discomfort — utilityman Kiké Hernández was out Thursday after waking up sick in the morning with symptoms similar to what Betts experienced over the last two weeks.

“He wasn't feeling well and didn't sleep well and couldn't keep stuff down,” manager Dave Roberts said. “Let's just hope that it's not what Mookie dealt with.”

Roberts said the team didn’t believe Betts and Hernández’s illnesses were directly related; noting that if there were, “we would have felt that it would have happened earlier, where Mookie has been on the backside of this.”

And while no other players have been as sick as Betts — who lost more than 15 pounds during his two-week battle with what was believed to be a case of norovirus — Roberts said there are others in the clubhouse who have had “sniffles and things like that.”

Those issues, however, didn’t distract from the overall celebratory atmosphere of Thursday’s pregame festivities.

Read more:Dodgers defeat Tigers in home opener to improve to 3-0 on young season

Roughly 30 minutes before first pitch, the Dodgers’ 2025 roster was welcomed down a blue carpet in center field, receiving a hero’s welcome from an early-arriving Chavez Ravine crowd. Once the team lined up down the third-base line, Ice Cube delivered the trophy with a literal victory lap, driving a blue Chevy Bel-Air around the warning track with the Commissioner’s Trophy sitting shotgun. In the center-field pavilion, members of the Dodgers’ ownership group raised a 2024 World Champions banner. In right field, the 2024 title plaque was unveiled by Southern California firefighters.

Pyrotechnics and smoke machines added to the scene, as did the roar of four fighter jets, two F-15s and two F-35s, that flew overhead during Josh Groban’s signing of the national anthem.

Then, another season officially commenced, one that will be marked by constant remembrances of last year’s triumphant conclusion — and, the Dodgers hope, ends with another World Series parade, and opening day celebration in 2026.

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

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Bulls' Josh Giddey sinks half-court buzzer to stun Lakers in frantic finish

Bulls' Josh Giddey sinks half-court buzzer to stun Lakers in frantic finish originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

Josh Giddey made a halfcourt heave at the buzzer to cap perhaps the wildest finish in the NBA this season, giving the Chicago Bulls a 119-117 victory over the Los Angeles Lakers on Thursday night.

Patrick Williams and Coby White hit back-to-back 3-pointers in the closing seconds for the Bulls, who trailed by five points with 12.6 seconds remaining.

Giddey finished with 25 points, 14 rebounds and 11 assists. White scored 26 points and Kevin Huerter added 21 as the Bulls won for the ninth time in 11 games. And this one was easily their wildest in recent memory.

The Lakers looked like they had the game at hand leading 115-100 after Austin Reaves made two free throws with 13 seconds remaining. The Bulls weren’t finished, though.

Williams nailed a 3 for Chicago with 10 seconds remaining. Giddey stole a pass from James and White hit a 3 with 6 seconds to go, putting the Bulls on top 116-115.

Austin Reaves then drove for a layup to give Los Angeles a 117-116 lead with 3 seconds to go. But the Bulls still found a way to pull this one out, mobbing Giddey after he buried the winner.

Reaves led Los Angeles with 30 points. Luka Doncic had 25 points, 10 rebounds and seven assists. Jaxson Hayes scored 19, and James finished with 17 points and 12 assists.

Takeaways

Lakers: A night after winning at the buzzer in Indiana on James’ tip-in, the Lakers lost for the eighth time in 12 games.

Bulls: For a team that appeared to be out of it not too long ago, the Bulls are showing some fight.

Key moment

The Lakers led by double digits midway through the fourth quarter before the wild finish.

Key stat

White made five 3-pointers and Giddey hit four.

Up next

The Lakers wrap up a four-game trip Saturday at Memphis. The Bulls host Dallas that night.

LaVine, Kings showcase valiant effort in needed win vs. Blazers

LaVine, Kings showcase valiant effort in needed win vs. Blazers originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

With 10 regular-season games remaining, on a four-game losing skid and an NBA playoff push beginning to fade, the Kings had to dig deep and respond. 

They did just that.

With every starter scoring in double digits, Sacramento propelled to a 128-107 win over the visiting Portland Trail Blazers on Thursday night at Golden 1 Center. 

Star guard Zach LaVine, who criticized the Kings’ locker room environment after Monday’s loss to the Boston Celtics, erupted for a game-high 29 points on 13-of-18 shooting from the floor. 

Unlike throughout the losing streak, Sacramento showcased a valiant effort on both ends of the floor and an urgency to win. As the most vital part of the regular season approaches, the expectation to fight is a non-negotiable for the Kings. 

“To that effort part, I think it’s a do-or-die situation,” LaVine told reporters. “If we’re not going to play with that effort, it might not fall our way.” 

As a team, the Kings shot nearly 65 percent from the floor while dominating points in the paint 60-32 over a young, versatile Blazers team. Center Domantas Sabonis recorded his 53rd double-double of the 2024-25 NBA season.

Defensively, Sacramento outrebounded Portland 46-32. Guard Keon Ellis recorded a career-high six steals in 31 minutes of play. 

When the Kings play with the tenacity like they showcased Thursday, naturally, the chances of losing are slimmer. 

“So, at least playing that hard we are giving ourselves our best shot to go out there and compete at the highest level and give us a chance to play our best,” LaVine added.

“I think you attribute that to just wanting it more. These last 10 or nine, we’re going to have to play the same way.” 

At 36-37, Sacramento stands No. 9 in the Western Conference, sitting half a game ahead of the Dallas Mavericks and one ahead of the No. 11 seed Phoenix Suns. 

Although nine games separate the Kings from a possible postseason appearance, the immediate task at hand will be a challenge in and of itself for coach Doug Christie and Co.: Keep the foot on the effort pedal throughout the upcoming six-game road trip. 

It’s Sacramento’s pathway to playoff basketball.

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Mets rally late, can’t come through with big hit in 3-1 Opening Day loss to Astros

The Mets opened the season with a 3-1 loss to the Houston Astros on Thursday at Daikin Park.

Here are some takeaways...

-The birthday boy, Clay Holmes, took the mound making his first regular season start since 2018. After working his way easily through the bottom of the first, he began to labor and fell into some trouble in the second, before Jake Myers drove in the first run of the game with a bases-loaded fielder's choice.

Houston struck again in the third, as Holmes issued a leadoff walk to Isaac Paredes, who came around to score a few batters later on a Yainer Diaz single. He appeared to dance around further damage, but Luisangel Acuña threw a routine double play ball into the Mets' dugout to bring in another run.

New York's defense made up for it an inning later when Mark Vientos,Acuña, and Pete Alonso went around the horn for a double play to help Holmes work through a two-on and one-out jam. He retired the first two batters in the fifth but was pulled after issuing a two-out walk -- his final line: 4.2 IP, 5 H, 3 R, 2 ER, 4 BB, 4 K.

- Huascar Brazoban was one of the last additions to the Mets' Opening Day roster, so fittingly, he was the first man out of the bullpen this year. The right-hander built off his strong spring showing, striking out two while allowing just one hit and a walk across 2.1 strong innings behind Holmes.

- Juan Soto reached base in each of his first two at-bats -- singling in the first and then drawing a five-pitch walk in the third. The slugger had his first opportunity with a runner in scoring position in the top of the fifth, but Luis Torrens was gunned down trying to advance to third on a wild pitch.

Soto flew out to left leading off the next inning and then drew a walk against Framber Valdez -- before his biggest at-bat of the game came later on. The rest of the Mets' offense was held in check by Valdez, who wasn't exactly sharp but still only allowed four hits and two walks across seven shutout innings of work.

- New York was finally able to get something going in the top of the eighth when Astros right-hander Bryan Abreu loaded the bases with three straight two-out walks, but Brandon Nimmo flew out to center on the first pitch he saw to end the threat. Nimmo had one of the team's four hits earlier in the day.

- The Mets then loaded the bases against Josh Hader in the top of the ninth as Starling Marte and Tyrone Taylor started the game with singles, then Acuña drew a 13-pitch walk. After Hayden Senger struck out in his first career at-bat, Francisco Lindor lined a sacrifice fly, and then Soto stepped to the plate representing the go-ahead run.

Soto got ahead of Hader 3-0 but struck out swinging on a wicked slider out of the zone to end the game. New York had plenty of chances to change the tide in this one, but they stranded 10 men on base and went an ugly 0-for-6 with runners in scoring position.

- The Mets still own the highest winning percentage in baseball on Opening Day, but they've now been defeated on back-to-back years for the first time since 1999 and 2000.

Game MVP: Framber Valdez

The left-hander wasn't at his best, but he kept the new Mets lineup at bay, working through seven shutout innings.

Highlights

Upcoming schedule

The Mets and Astros continue their season-opening three-game set on Friday at 8:10 p.m.

Tylor Megill takes the mound against Hunter Brown exclusively on Apple TV.

NHL Insider Would Be ‘Very Suprised’ If Peter Laviolette Does Not Get Fired

Danny Wild-Imagn Images

If the New York Rangers don’t make the playoffs, Chris Drury will have to make some difficult decisions including what to do with Peter Laviolette. 

Laviolette is entering the final year of his contract next season, but there are rumblings about whether he’ll even make it to that point. 

One year removed from winning the Presidents’ Trophy, the Rangers are on the brink of not even cracking the postseason.  

NHL insider Frank Seravalli  is under the impression that this lackluster season from the Blueshirts will cost Laviolette his job. 

“I'll be very surprised if Peter Laviolette is the coach of the Rangers on May 1st,” Seravalli said.

It’s hard to place all of the blame on Laviolette's shoulders given how much change the Rangers went through this season, but oftentimes it’s the coaches who get the short end of the stick.

The Rangers were a team with not only high expectations, but Stanley Cup aspirations, so New York missing the playoffs could very well lead to some major changes. 

Whether that is the coach getting fired, who knows. However, you should expect a lot of turnover though.

Wing Night: Ottawa Senators Hope To Bolster Their Playoff Push At The Expense of the Red Wings

After a tough 3-2 loss to the Buffalo Sabres on Tuesday night, the Ottawa Senators have now lost three of their last four games. So, as they try to straighten things out on Thursday night against the Detroit Red Wings, head coach Travis Green has thrown his line combinations back into the lettuce spinner.

David Perron (57) battles with Vladimir Tarasenko (11) (Marc DesRosiers-Imagn Images)

According to the team, Claude Giroux will play on the left wing with Tim Stützle and Fabian Zetterlund in Detroit, while Brady Tkachuk will be on the left side with Shane Pinto and Ridley Greig.

The one change on defence is one that many Senators fans on social media have been clamoring for – moving veteran Travis Hamonic to the press box. Nicolas Matinpalo slides into the number six position alongside Tyler Kleven. With Nick Jensen healthy for a second straight game, the top four D remain intact, which has been crucial to the team's success this season.

Anton Forsberg gave Linus Ullmark a night off in Tuesday’s game, so Ullmark will get the start in goal in Detroit on Thursday night.

The Senators lead the season series with a 2-1 record, thanks to a pair of 2-1 victories. In their last meeting, just over two weeks ago, Ullmark played out of his mind in a game the Red Wings probably deserved to win. Ullmark made a season-high 48 saves, including 27 in the second period.

The big Swede hopes to not be quite so busy on Thursday night.

Like the Senators, the Detroit Red Wings have lost three of their last four games. However, the Wings are running out of time. With 11 games left in their season, they’re just three points behind the Montreal Canadiens for the final Eastern wild card spot.

Complicating things is the fact that Montreal is one of four teams ahead of them. So, Detroit will not only need to get hot down the stretch but also hope that the teams ahead of them falter. Detroit is 3-7-0 in their last 10, so they aren’t exactly showing signs of a late charge.

The Wings have no shortage of former Senators content in their lineup. Vladimir Tarasenko is expected to move up onto the top line with Dylan Larkin and Lucas Raymond on Thursday. Alex DeBrincat skates on the second line and top power play unit with Patrick Kane, a deadly duo since their Chicago days. Cam Talbot is back after missing one game and will back up starter Alex Lyon. Austin Watson and Tyler Motte have both been drawing positive reviews lately as fourth-line teammates.

The faceoff is at 7:00 PM at Detroit’s Little Caesars Arena.

As Wild Goalie Marc-Andre Fleury Finishes Up His Final NHL Season, Here's A Look At What Makes Him So Special

(OCT 7, 2024 -- VOL. 78, ISSUE 03)

Minnesota Wild goaltender Marc-Andre Fleury is finishing up his final, Hockey-Hall-of-Fame NHL career this year. And in this cover story from THN's 2024 Goalie Issue, writer Ken Campbell penned a deep-dive feature on the way he's authoring his exit from the game's best league:

FINAL FLEURY

By Ken Campbell

It's the not knowing that’s the worst part. Yeah, it’s definitely the not knowing. Welcome to the hellscape that is Marc-Andre Fleury’s final season in the NHL. His teammates, both present and past, are operating on the assumption that they’ll have to spend the 2024-25 season on constant high alert. I mean, look what Fleury did to Brandon Duhaime last year, and all the poor guy did was toilet-paper Fleury’s car and joke during a television interview that Fleury was doing impressive things at the age of 50. Next thing you know, Duhaime’s tires are removed and chained together in the parking garage, his car is on cinder blocks, and there’s a small garden on his hood.

‘The Kid’ has to be crapping his pants right about now. All Sidney Crosby did was fill Fleury’s gear with gum one time, and then he shows up at the NHL Media Tour two years ago and all his equipment is hanging in his stall taped together. You see, they know Fleury could strike at any time, but they don’t know when or how. If they’ve wronged him in any way, they can be pretty sure he’s going to use an XL18 flamethrower to wipe out an ant hill. And after everything Fleury has done in the 21 years he’s been in the NHL, he has to have one epic, all-time, go-out-in-a-blaze-of-glory, Lloyd-Christmas-level prank in him, right?

“To be honest, I haven’t thought much about it,” Fleury said, “but now that you mention it…”

See what we mean? How can anyone trust that? For his part, Fleury maintains that, “I’m pretty sure all the scores have been settled,” brilliantly capped by the demented chef’s kiss that was the Duhaime prank last April in Colorado, with Fleury waiting in the background and giggling.

As Fleury embarks on the final season of an NHL career that will undoubtedly result in a call to the Hockey Hall of Fame in 2028, it will be about what it has always been about – competing against the best players in the world and trying to beat them in every outing. But as he makes his way through the league one last time, he’ll allow himself to take it all in, to soak up the memories he has created over the years.

And beneath it all will be a deep sense of gratitude for everything the game has given him the past two decades. During the season, everything happens so quickly, and you might spend a day or two in St. Louis and move on to the next place, all on autopilot. Fleury doesn’t want that in his last go-round. He wants it to also be a time of reflection. About what he has done, what he has and how incredibly fortunate he has been to make a living out of playing hockey. “Maybe take a few more minutes in every building, to take the time to appreciate that I’m still doing this,” Fleury said. “There will be memories. All those memories in all those buildings.”

They go all the way back to 2003, considered one of the strongest draft crops ever, when the Pittsburgh Penguins traded up to take Fleury first overall. If he appears in 20 games this season, he’ll eclipse Roberto Luongo for second place on the all-time games-played list behind Martin Brodeur. His fifth game will move him past Patrick Roy, who he eclipsed for second on the all-time wins list, also behind Brodeur, last season.

Brodeur, Fleury, Roy and Luongo account for the top four spots. (Remember when Quebec used to be a goalie factory?) The fifth time Fleury starts a game for the Wild this season, he will register his 1,000th career start. With the retirements of Joe Pavelski and Jeff Carter in the summer, that leaves only Fleury, Brent Burns, Corey Perry and Ryan Suter still playing from that 2003 draft. (Fun fact: Fleury’s 22 career assists have him tied for 69th in NHL scoring – with Paul Bissonnette and others – among the 292 players drafted that year.)

Three Stanley Cups, with the first one coming on one of the most clutch saves in NHL history, an unlikely Vezina Trophy late in his career, a trip to the Cup final with ‘The Golden Misfits’ and an unblemished off- and on-ice reputation have Fleury breathing the rarefied air among some of the most respected players in the game.

He has had bad days, to be sure, but it’s difficult to tell since Fleury spends most of the time showing off the whitest and straightest teeth in NHL history. He brings joy to every crease and every dressing room he steps into, and it will continue to be that way as he tries to get in the path of as many pucks as he can in his last season.

Of course, he has some of the big games circled on his calendar, or at least digitally bookmarked. Oct. 29 in Pittsburgh, man, that’s going to be a tear-jerker. Jan. 12 in Vegas, too. The games in Montreal are always special, and the Wild will be there Jan. 30. Even Chicago, where Fleury played part of one season, will give him the feels when he visits there Nov. 10 and Jan. 26. And in late November, Fleury will celebrate his 40th birthday, making him one of only 25 goalies – 23 if you throw out one-game wonders Lester Patrick and David Ayres – to play an NHL game after their 40th birthday. Of that group, 12 are in the Hall of Fame, and Fleury will join them there.

But before all that can happen, there is a rather crowded Wild crease situation to be sorted out. To be fair, goaltending was a bit of a black hole for Minnesota in 2023-24, with Fleury posting just 17 wins and the worst save percentage of his career (.895). Filip Gustavsson followed up a brilliant 2022-23 with an equally disastrous ’23-24. The wild card is Jesper Wallstedt, a first-round pick of the Wild in 2021 and the franchise’s goalie of the future. After two solid but unspectacular seasons in the AHL, the feeling is Wallstedt, who turns 22 two weeks before Fleury hits 40, could be ready for NHL work. The consensus is Gustavsson is probably on the least stable ground, but there’s no sense trying to untangle this thing too early, because who knows with goalies from one year to the next, anyway?

One thing both the Wild and Fleury are adamant about is that this will not be The Marc-Andre Fleury Farewell Tour, where they keep trotting out a 40-year-old just for the sake of having him wave to the crowd after the game. If you had to describe the Wild in one word – and this goes for almost every season they’ve been in the league – it would probably be “meh.” Not terrible. Not great. Kind of in the mushy middle, and not likely to be able to really build themselves into a contender until they shed the $14.7 million in salary retention on the Zach Parise and Ryan Suter buyouts after this season. If one of the Wild goalies grabs the crease and pulls a Devan Dubnyk circa 2015, he’ll be the one who plays. The Wild missed the playoffs last year and haven’t advanced past the first round in a decade. They were in the bottom half of the league in goals against and lost nine overtime games last season. Improved goaltending will have to be part of the equation if the Wild hope to return to the post-season, with or without Fleury in goal.

“It will be business as usual because that’s what ‘Flower’ wants,” said Wild GM Bill Guerin. “He doesn’t want any of that stuff. He’s never wanted it. We want to have a good year. We want to make the playoffs. This is not a farewell tour. This is about him still being a good player in the league and being competitive as hell.”

That’s what it is all about for Fleury, too. Behind the effulgent smile, calm exterior and pleasant demeanor is a guy who hates losing almost as much as he loves winning. Anyone who has played with or dealt with Fleury will attest to the fact that from the time he first appeared wearing braces in THN’s 2003 Draft Preview issue, the competitive fires have burned hot and bright. You don’t last in the NHL for as long as Fleury has without an unyielding desire to win. “It’s probably stronger than ever,” said Fleury of his will to win. “That feeling you get when you play against the best players in the world and win against them, there’s nothing like it. And then you want to win again, and then you want to win again.”

Nine years ago, the Penguins were playing a pre-season game at the Cambria County War Memorial Arena to commemorate Johnstown, Pa., winning the Kraft Hockeyville contest. The fictional home of the Charlestown Chiefs of Slap Shot fame, the city leans big-time into its cinematic lore. A marketing genius with the Penguins came up with the idea for Fleury and local broadcaster Dan Potash to play Denis Lemieux and Jim Carr and recreate the opening scene of the movie. Fleury nails Lemieux’s words and mannerisms almost as well as Yvon Barrette did in the movie, not even cracking a smile when he talks about how, “you go to the box, two minutes by yourself and you feel shame. And then you get free.”

You can probably count on one hand, with a finger or two left over, the number of players who would agree to do something like that, particularly in this day and age. But it was classic Fleury, a guy who isn’t afraid to put himself out there and doesn’t take himself too seriously. It’s all part of the sheer joy he has playing the game, and it’s why nobody in the hockey world seems to have a disparaging word to say about him. Former Penguins GM Jim Rutherford, who has been around the game for more than a half-century, once referred to Fleury as, “the best team player in sports,” for good reason.

And that is why teams will almost certainly line up to hire Fleury if he decides he wants a future in the game. The plan for now is to spend the winters and school years in Vegas, where he has built a home, and the summers in suburban Montreal. If he can find a way to make hockey work while he puts his family first, there might be a fit. He’d like to play a little beer-league hockey, but not as a goalie, because every goalie who ever lived has this notion that he’s also a great position player. “I like the idea of trying to make plays and score and dangle the stick, skate around, get a good sweat,” Fleury said. “And just to sit on the bench and have somebody to talk to. That would be fun.”

But Fleury is adamant that, at least for the first couple of years after his retirement, his family will be the top priority. He’s missed too many Christmas pageants, Halloweens and birthdays over the years, and he wants to be there for those. He wants to watch his daughters, 11-year-old Estelle and nine-year-old Scarlett, play soccer. Five-year-old James is just beginning his hockey journey, and Fleury is looking forward to where that will take him. “He just learned to skate last year, but for the games, he always wants to go back into the net,” Fleury said. “I’m like, ‘Go score some goals.’ ”

Fleury hasn’t thought much about his post-playing life, but if he were to stay involved in the game, it would probably be at the management level. And that makes sense for a guy who has made a career building relationships. If he needs a roadmap, he need look no further than his former teammate and boss, who took a year off after he retired, then joined Pittsburgh’s front office, first as a development coach, then assistant GM. When Guerin went to see then-GM Ray Shero about a job, Shero told him his biggest nightmare was having to give jobs to former players who wanted the title, the office and the paycheque but weren’t willing to travel to Grand Rapids to watch the farm team.

“Let’s see how hard he wants to work,” said Guerin of Fleury’s post-playing prospects. “Being in hockey operations is not easy, and it’s not the glamorous life people think it is. But, that being said, he has everything it would take to be successful. ‘Flower’ is smart, he’s charismatic, and he’s got great relationships around the league. There’s no reason he couldn’t have success on the other side. He’s got all the intangibles and the ingredients of a guy who could do it.”

Until then, Fleury will make sure to enjoy the last leg of his playing journey. On the exterior, it doesn’t look as though Fleury has aged all that much over the years. Sure, he no longer tints his hair, but really, who does that anymore? He’s still in outstanding physical shape. And even he marvels at the fact that time has gone by so quickly.

Like every other player who retires, he’ll miss the games and his teammates in the dressing room, but not so much the grind it requires in the summer to prepare for the next season. Nor will he miss waking up with at least one part of his body hurting, which has been the case for the past couple of seasons. He won’t hike his pants up to his chest and complain that he seems to be busier in retirement than when he was working, because he doesn’t plan on replacing the chaos of playing in the NHL with doing something else at a chaotic pace. He acknowledges he doesn’t know much of anything about the hockey-ops side of the game, and the ability to play at the highest level doesn’t translate into an ability to build a team as much as people think.

Once the puck drops, for Fleury, it will be all about winning games and capturing all the great things about playing and hanging on to them. He still can’t believe playing hockey is a job that will have paid him almost $100 million by the time his career ends. All he wanted to do as a teenager was play one game in the NHL, and he’s played more than a thousand. Regardless of how this season ends, he’ll leave the game with no regrets. “I know I’m on my last miles here,” Fleury said. “I love the feeling, and I want to enjoy it as long as I can as much as I can while I can.”

Yankees' pitching stellar in 4-2 Opening Day win over Brewers

The Yankees got home runs from Austin Wells and Anthony Volpe early and then survived a shaky outing by new closer Devin Williams in the ninth inning to hold on for a 4-2 Opening Day win over the Milwaukee Brewers at Yankee Stadium on Thursday.

The Yankees are 7-1 in their last eight Opening Days.

Here are the takeaways...

-After excellent pitching got the Yankees into the ninth inning, Williams, facing the team that traded him to the Yankees during the offseason, got into a major jam as the Brewers loaded the bases with no outs on a single, a double, and a walk, while trailing 4-1.

Williams got one out on a deep sacrifice fly by Brice Turang. He then struck out Jackson Chourio swinging at his signature changeup.

Finally, he went to 3-2 to Christian Yelich before striking him out swinging with a 95-mph fastball to end the game.

-Carlos Rodon delivered a strong start, allowing only one run over 5.1 innings on a third-inning home run by right-handed hitting Vinny Capra.

Rodon looked sharp, mixing his mostly 95-mph fastball with a slider and a changeup, as he recorded seven strikeouts and got 13 swings-and-misses. The left-hander allowed two walks, both in the sixth, the second on a 10-pitch at-bat by Rhys Hoskins that knocked Rodon out of the game with his pitch count at 89.

Lefty Tim Hill came on to get out of the inning in what proved to be a crucial moment in the game. After an infield single loaded the bases with two outs, Hill got pinch-hitter Isaac Collins to ground out to short for a force-out, ending the inning with the Yankees leading 2-1 at the time.

-With a little bit of luck off the bat of Aaron Judge, the Yankees added to their lead with two runs in the seventh inning.

With runners at first and second and one out, Judge hit a hard ground ball down the third-base line. Capra was in position to field the ball for at least a force-out at third but the ball bounced off the base and high over Capra’s head, into shallow left field for an RBI double to give the Yankees a 3-1 lead.

Cody Bellinger followed with a sacrifice fly to right to make it 4-1.

The fortunate bounce got Judge off the hook on what was looming as a bad day. He’d already gone 0-for-3 with two strikeouts and would have been looking at an 0-for-4 start to the season.

-The Yankee bullpen dominated until the ninth. Hill, Mark Leiter Jr., and Luke Weaver combined to get eight outs while allowing only two baserunners, on an infield single and a walk.

-Wells was already making history in the first inning by becoming the first catcher ever to hit leadoff for the Yankees, but then he quickly took it a step further when he lined a home run just over the right field wall off starter Freddy Peralta.

In doing so Wells also became the first catcher in major league history to hit a leadoff home run on Opening Day and also the first Yankee player with a leadoff home run on Opening Day.

-Peralta gave up two Yankee Stadium home runs to the short porch in right field but otherwise threw a dominant five innings for the Brewers, racking up eight strikeouts and 14 swings-and-misses in his 92 pitches.

He finished in impressive style, striking out Judge swinging at a 96-mph high fastball, leaving runners at first and second.

-Chourio, the Brewers’ young star outfielder, had a spectacular spring training, hitting .469 in 17 games, but he earned the dreaded platinum sombrero in the season opener, striking out in all five of his at-bats.

GAME MVP: CARLOS RODON

Pitching in what would have been Gerrit Cole’s spot on Opening Day, Rodon gave the Yankees reason to believe they can survive without their ace.

The left-hander pitched a mostly dominant 5.1 innings, holding the Brewers to one run on a home run by Capra.

Highlights

What's next

After an off day, the Yankees and Brewers meet again for the second of their three-game series in The Bronx. First pitch is set for 1:35 p.m.

Max Fried makes his Yankees debut against former Yankee Nestor Cortes.

Report: John Tavares And Steven Lorentz Will Have To Wait Until Off-Season For Contract Offers From Maple Leafs

Tavares and Lorentz, each unrestricted free agents at the end of this season, may have to wait to receive contract offers from Toronto.

Mar 25, 2025; Toronto, Ontario, CAN; Toronto Maple Leafs forward John Tavares (91) celebrates with teammates at the bench after scoring against the Philadelphia Flyers in the second period at Scotiabank Arena. Mandatory Credit: Dan Hamilton-Imagn Images

John Tavares and Steven Lorentz reportedly won't receive contract offers from the Toronto Maple Leafs until the off-season.

According to the Toronto Star's Nick Kypreos, both players, who grew up in the Greater Toronto Area, will have to wait to ink new deals with the team given the uncertainty around Mitch Marner.

"Sounds like pending unrestricted free agents John Tavares and Steven Lorentz will have to wait until the off-season for new contract offers from the Leafs if they are to stay," Kypreos reported on Thursday. "Toronto’s top priority remains to leave enough space to either pay Mitch Marner or lure one or two players to adequately replace him."

Tavares is having another strong season with the Maple Leafs, scoring 65 points (32 goals and 33 assists) in 64 games. Lorentz, too, has been productive, with six goals and 10 assists in 69 games — three points off his career-high of 19 points.

Both players are living their childhood dream of playing with the Maple Leafs. Tavares has admitted several times this season that he wants to remain in Toronto beyond this year, and if you asked Lorentz, he'd likely say the same.

Lorentz signed a one-year, $775,000 contract with the Maple Leafs after winning the Stanley Cup with the Florida Panthers last June. Tavares has been with Toronto since July 2018 when he inked a seven-year, $77 million contract. 

The news came 20 days after the NHL trade deadline, when it was reported that Marner was asked to waive his no-move clause in a trade to the Carolina Hurricanes for Mikko Rantanen.

'I Had A Feeling Maybe Something Might Happen': Mitch Marner Addresses Reports Of Maple Leafs Asking Him To Waive No-Move Clause To Hurricanes'I Had A Feeling Maybe Something Might Happen': Mitch Marner Addresses Reports Of Maple Leafs Asking Him To Waive No-Move Clause To HurricanesAfter scoring two goals in a loss to the Avalanche, Marner spoke about recent reports of being asked to waive his no-move clause.

Marner, also in the final year of his contract with the Maple Leafs, reportedly declined to waive his no-move clause, keeping him in Toronto. The 27-year-old is on pace for a career season, already scoring 86 points (22 goals and 64 assists) in 70 games.

At the beginning of this season, Marner said he wouldn't discuss his contract status throughout the year. However, following what happened during the trade deadline, he was asked if he'd be willing to negotiate with the Maple Leafs in-season.

"Like I talked to you guys at the start (of the season), I'm not going to get into this," Marner said. "I'm here to play hockey. Let that happen with my agent and the team. I'm here to play hockey and do my thing."

One day later, Toronto GM Brad Treliving spoke with the media about Marner not waiving his no-move clause, saying the organization supports Marner 1000 percent. 

'It's Not A Distraction': Maple Leafs GM Brad Treliving Responds To Reports Of Asking Mitch Marner To Waive No-Move Clause For Mikko Rantanen'It's Not A Distraction': Maple Leafs GM Brad Treliving Responds To Reports Of Asking Mitch Marner To Waive No-Move Clause For Mikko RantanenSALT LAKE — One day after the NHL Trade Deadline came and went, multiple reports surfaced, revealing that Toronto Maple Leafs forward Mitch Marner was asked to waive his no-movement clause in an effort to land now-Dallas Stars forward Mikko Rantanen. 

"We talked about it the other day with regards to contracts and the business side of it, we're not going to get into it, other than we're aligned with Mitch," Treliving said. "We're worried about this season. We're worried about the games we have coming up. We want Mitch here for a long time. But it's not a distraction."

With 11 games remaining in the regular season, plus the playoffs, there's plenty of opportunity for Marner, Tavares, and Lorentz to prove their worth with Toronto. Matthew Knies, an unsigned restricted free agent, can do the same.

How Toronto handles games down the stretch and into the playoffs will be fascinating. But so will the off-season when each of these four players' contracts expire.


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Jazz guard Jordan Clarkson out for season after undergoing procedure to address plantar fasciitis

Veteran guard Jordan Clarkson, who has been in and out of the Utah lineup and played in just 37 games, is now out for the remainder of the season after undergoing "a medical procedure to address plantar fasciitis in his left foot," the team announced Thursday.

When he did play, the 32-year-old showed he can still get a bucket averaging 16.2 points a game, shooting 36.2% from 3, plus adding 3.7 assists and 3.2 rebounds a night. However, the combination of some nagging injuries and the Jazz looking toward the lottery saw Crawford getting limited run.

Utah was already leaning into young guards Isaiah Collier, Keyonte George and Johnny Juzang, trying to get them run and the chance to develop. Crawford's injury will just increase that.

Crawford has one more season on his contract at $14.3 million. Expect his name to come up in trade talk this offseason (as it did at the trade deadline), as a number of teams could use both the scoring punch and the expiring contract the former Sixth Man of the Year can bring.