Max Fried dominates Tigers as Yankees snap three-game losing streak

The Yankees snapped a three-game losing streak, defeating the Tigers in Detroit on Wednesday afternoon by a score of 4-3.

Here are the takeaways...

-The pitching duel of Max Fried vs. Jack Flaherty lived up to the hype, as both starters looked strong out of the gates. As was the case on Tuesday with Tarik Skubal, the Yankees had a chance to get to Flaherty early, but couldn't capitalize, as the right-hander escaped a bases-loaded, two-out jam by getting Oswaldo Cabrera to fly out harmlessly.

Both starting pitchers held the opposition scoreless through the first five innings.

-The Yankees finally got something cooking in the top of the sixth, as Paul Goldschmidt doubled down the left field line to put runners at second and third with one out, chasing Flaherty from the game. Tyler Holton came in, and with the infield in, he induced a ground ball right back to the mound, and Aaron Judge made a poor base-running play, getting caught in no man’s land for the second out. Anthony Volpe then went down swinging as the Yanks squandered yet another opportunity.

Flaherty went 5.1 scoreless innings, allowing just three hits while striking out nine and walking three.

-At long last, New York broke through for two runs in the top of the seventh, courtesy of Ben Rice, who hammered a two-run home run to right-center. Rice now has three home runs and four RBI on the season.

-Fried finished the game in dominant fashion, striking out two to end the seventh inning. The lefty ended his day with 7.0 shutout innings, allowing just five hits while striking out 11 Tigers without a walk. His ERA is now a sterling 1.56.

-Following Fried's stellar start, Luke Weaver pitched a scoreless eighth, and after the Yankees added two insurance runs thanks to a bases-loaded single by Judge, Devin Williams came in to try to close things out in the ninth. But Williams struggled mightily, allowing three earned runs before getting pulled. Fortunately for New York, Mark Leiter Jr. came in and closed the door with the tying run stranded at second base.

Game MVP

Fried, who has been every bit the ace the Yankees hoped they were getting.

Highlights

Upcoming schedule

The Yankees are off on Thursday before welcoming the San Francisco Giants to the Bronx for a weekend series, starting on Friday at 7:05 p.m.

Lefty Robbie Ray will face Marcus Stroman.

Braves add to bullpen depth by acquiring right-hander Rafael Montero from Astros

ATLANTA — The Braves added to their bullpen depth on Tuesday night by acquiring right-hander Rafael Montero from the Houston Astros along with $7.7 million that will cover just over 70% of his remaining salary.

Atlanta will send the Astros a player to be named.

Montero, 34, has a 4.71 ERA in 11 seasons. Of his 324 career games, only 30 came as a starter, including none since 2017. He allowed two runs and three hits over in four innings this season.

“They said he’s been throwing the ball really well,” Braves manager Brian Snitker said of his team’s scouts.

“He’s a veteran. You kind of get a little excited when you get a guy like that.”

Montero made his major league debut in 2014 with the New York Mets and has pitched the last five seasons for Houston.

Montero is owed $10,696,237 from his $11.5 million salary in the final season of a $34.5 million, three-year contract. Houston will pay Atlanta $3.85 million each on May 1 and July 1.

He signed the big contract ahead of the 2023 season and Montero’s ERA more than doubled that year to 5.08. He was designated for assignment with a 4.70 ERA last July 31, then was assigned outright to Sugar Land and made 17 appearances for the Triple-A farm team. Restored to the major league roster last month, he had a 4.50 ERA in three appearances for Houston this season.

Montero has a 3.81 ERA in 187 games with the Astros. He has 30 career saves, including 14 for Houston in 2022, when he contributed to a World Series championship.

Montero had a 2.51 ERA in 15 postseason games with Houston.

Houston will recall left-hander Bennett Sousa from Sugar Land to replace Montero on the active roster.

The Braves did not immediately announce a roster move for Montero, who is expected to join the team on Wednesday.

Mark Vientos and Brett Baty work to overcome slow starts to the 2025 season

The Mets made their lineup instantly more dangerous this off-season when they signed Juan Soto to a historic $756 million deal and then further solidified it by bringing back first baseman Pete Alonso on a two-year deal. However, the lineup being as deep and consistent as the team needed it to be to win a title depended on the development of young homegrown prospects like Mark Vientos and Brett Baty.

Just 11 games into the season, those two have not hit the ground running the way many hoped they would. After a white hot spring training that led him to win the vacant second base job, Baty came into Wednesday's game against the Marlins, slashing just .125/.125/.167 in 24 plate appearances with one extra base hit, no walks, and nine strikeouts. Meanwhile, Vientos, who has started every game, came into Wednesday hitting .125/.239/.175 with two doubles, two runs scored, and one RBI.

The Mets are off to a strong start as a team, so the sluggishness can be excused. However, as the boo's rained down from the crowd during Wednesday's loss to the Marlins, it became clear that a few more losses and the team may have to answer questions about not seeing results on the field from their young hitters.

"You know, that's baseball," said Mets manager Carlos Mendoza. "At times, it's not going to go your way, even when you're doing a lot of things right. But understanding that you've got a long way to go, we've got a lot of baseball games left here, and you just can't get caught up reacting to not having results."

That's especially true when the process is exactly what the player and the team want, which seems to be the case for Vientos in the early going.

Despite the surface-level results not being there, Vientos is chasing fewer pitches outside of the zone, making more contact overall, and sporting a zone contact rate that is 8% better than his career average and right in line with the MLB average zone contact rate.

"Swing rate is down, contact is up. I think that's a good thing, sounds like," smiled Vientos before Wednesday's game. "I'm putting balls in play, and I'm just not getting lucky right now. It's just sticking to that process and having good at-bats, and eventually it's gonna come my way."

One issue could be that Vientos may be out in front too much early on. His pull rate is up near 52%, which is well above his 39.6% career mark, and his overall hard contact numbers are a bit under where we normally see them. That could be connected to seeing more breaking balls this year, with pitches attacking him with breakers 47.4% of the time, up from 40% last year. Although Vientos doesn't seem to think that's playing into it much.

"I feel like I've always been pitched off speed and not really getting that many fastballs to hit in the game," he said. It just comes down to doing damage on the fastballs he does get. So far, the 25-year-old hasn't been doing that, hitting just .095 against fastballs and doing significantly less damage on pitches in the heart of the strike zone than he has historically.

However, that can be forgiven for a while because Vientos is continuing to get himself into counts where he gets opportunities to see pitches he can drive. "I feel like I've been swinging at what I want to swing at," he explained." Which is, in part, due to laying off pitches he doesn't feel like he can drive and getting himself into hitter's counts. That type of patience can be a fine line for hitters to walk, as it can frequently become passivity and letting too many good pitches go by. The Mets and Vientos don't believe that's the case in the early going.

"I think being too passive is probably taking too many pitches that I know I could square up," said Vientos. "I don't think I've had too many of those." It's a sentiment that his manager shares. "I know you want to see results," Mendoza commiserated, "but controlling the strike zone, hitting the ball hard, getting good pitches, not chasing. What else can you ask?"

In truth, the Mets can't ask for much more in terms of approach than Vientos is giving them. They simply need him to make meaningful contact on pitches in locations and counts where he has historically had plenty of success. You'd have to figure the big hits are going to come.

"You're doing the things that you should be doing, controlling the things you can control," explained Mendoza. "That's part of the adjustment in becoming an established big league player, where, 'Hey man, I'm doing everything right but I'm not getting results.' Stay the course."

While the answer for Vientos' struggles may simply be time and patience, the response for Baty is not so simple.

"He needs to dictate at bats," said Mendoza. "[Pitchers are] getting ahead of him. They are attacking him. He's not driving the ball early in counts. They're making him chase."

In his first nine starts of the season, Baty has a first pitch strike rate of 79%. That means that 79% of the time, he either takes a called strike on an 0-0 count or swings and misses/fouls one off to get into an 0-1 count. The MLB average so far in 2025 is 62%, so Baty is dangerous below-average there.

"He's 0-2, 0-1, a lot," confirmed Mendoza. "It's not easy to hit [like that] at this level."

In some sense, this has always been the version of Brett Baty we've seen at the MLB level. He has a 17.3% called strike rate this year, but has a 17.2% mark for his career - both are higher than the league average. He has been in a two-strike count 36.5% of the time this year and was in one 32.5% of the time last year, but the MLB average is 29.6%. When he has gotten into those two-strike counts, it has allowed pitchers to force him to chase their pitch. Baty has a PutAway rate of 23.7% this year, which means 23.7% of two-strike pitches to Baty have resulted in strikeouts. The MLB average is 20.2%.

"You've got to be ready for your pitches and do damage," said Mendoza. "He's got that ability to do it. You just got to go out there and do it."

Unfortunately for Baty, the time he has to go out there and do that may be coming to an end with starting second baseman Jeff McNeil likely to start a rehab assignment this week.

McNeil has been sidelined since spring training with an oblique injury but has been taking batting practice on the field and will now look to get his timing down in live at-bats. That may take about two weeks, but then McNeil will return to the active roster, and one of Brett Baty or Luisangel Acuna will need to be sent to Triple-A Syracuse. Considering Acuna is the better defender and would also be valuable for the Mets as a pinch runner, it seems that he would have the upper hand in a battle for the final roster spot.

Unless Brett Baty starts hitting.

That means the 25-year-old only has a couple more weeks to stop letting pitchers dictate the at-bat and start making them pay earlier in counts. If he can do that, and Vientos' results start to match his process, this Mets lineup could be even more dangerous than we've already seen.

Nuggets vs. Kings Predictions: Odds, recent stats, trends and, best bets for April 9

Denver Nuggets vs. Sacramento Kings Preview 

The Denver Nuggets (47-32) and Sacramento Kings (39-40) are all set to square off from Golden 1 Center in Sacramento.

Since firing Mike Malone a few days ago, the Nuggets are still trying to find the winning column. They are dangerously close to falling into a play-in position.

The Kings have secured a spot in the Play-in. They will finish the season as the No. 9 or No. 10 seed.
The Nuggets are currently 22-17 on the road with a point differential of 4, while the Kings have a 5-5 record in their last ten games at home. 

We’ve got all the info and analysis you need to know ahead of the game, including the latest info on the how to catch tipoff, odds, recent team performance, player stats, and of course, our predictions, picks & best bets for the game from our modeling tools and staff of experts.

Listen to the Rotoworld Basketball Show for the latest fantasy player news, waiver claims, roster advice and more from our experts all season long. Click here or download it wherever you get your podcasts.

Game details & how to watch Nuggets vs. Kings live today

  • Date: Wednesday, April 9, 2025
  • Time: 10:00PM EST
  • Site: Golden 1 Center
  • City: Sacramento, CA
  • Network/Streaming:

Never miss a second of the action and stay up to date with all the latest team stats and player news. Check out our day-by-day NBA schedule page, along with detailed matchup pages that update live in-game.

Game odds for Nuggets vs. Kings

The latest odds as of Wednesday:

  • Odds: Nuggets (-123), Kings (+103)
  • Spread:  Nuggets -1.5
  • Over/Under: 234 points

That gives the Nuggets an implied team point total of 117.41, and the Kings 116.63.
 
Want to know which sportsbook is offering the best lines for every game on the NBA calendar? Check out the NBC Sports’ Live Odds tool to get all the latest updated info from DraftKings, FanDuel, BetMGM & more!

Expert picks & predictions for Wednesday's Nuggets vs. Kings game

NBC Sports Bet Best Bet

Please bet responsibly. If you or someone you know has a gambling problem, call the National Gambling Helpline at 1-800-522-4700.

 Brad Thomas (@MrBradThomas) is leaning toward Denver Nuggets -4…

Thomas: “Denver nearly has a full squad tonight in a must-win game. The Kings are in the Play-in regardless of how their season finishes. The Nuggets are on a four game losing streak and have only won three of their last 10 games.

The sense of urgency has to come from the Nuggets tonight. They are too talented to to fall into the Play-in spot”

Our model calculates projections around each moneyline, spread and over/under bet for every game on the NBA calendar based on data points like recent performance, head-to-head player matchups, trends information and projected game totals.

Once the model is finished running, we put its projections next to the latest betting lines for the game to arrive at a relative confidence level for each wager.

Here are the best bets our model is projecting for today’s Nuggets & Kings game:

  • Moneyline: NBC Sports Bet is staying away from a play on the Moneyline.
  • Spread: NBC Sports Bet is leaning towards a play ATS on the Sacramento Kings at +1.5.
  • Total: NBC Sports Bet is staying away from a play on the Game Total of 234.

Want even more NBA best bets and predictions from our expert staff & tools? Check out the Expert NBA Predictions page from NBC Sports for money line, spread and over/under picks for every game on today’s calendar!

Important stats, trends & insights to know ahead of Nuggets vs. Kings on Wednesday

  • The Nuggets have won four straight games against the Kings
  • The Nuggets' last four games at the Kings have gone over the total
  • The Kings have covered the spread in their last three games against teams with winning records
  • The Kings have lost 7 of their last 10 games

 
If you’re looking for more key trends and stats around the spread, moneyline and total for every single game on the schedule today, check out our NBA Top Trends tool on NBC Sports!
 
Bet the Edge is your source for all things sports betting. Get all of Jay Croucher and Drew Dinsick’s insight weekdays at 6AM ET right here or wherever you get your favorite podcasts. 
 
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- Jay Croucher (@croucherJD)
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Silent offense and Brett Baty's costly error doom Mets in 5-0 loss to Marlins

The Mets lost to the Marlins, 5-0, on Wednesday at Citi Field as they were unable to secure a three-game sweep.


Here are the takeaways...

- Marlins right-hander Max Meyer stymied the Mets while holding them hitless until there was one out in the sixth inning, when Francisco Lindorripped a single through the hole between first base and second base. But any chance of a New York rally was extinguished when Juan Soto grounded into a 5-6-3 double play.

Soto finished 0-for-4, failing to reach base in a game for the first time this season.

The Mets got a leadoff hit from Pete Alonso in the seventh, as he smashed a single over the third base bag, but he was stranded as Brandon Nimmo, Starling Marte, and Mark Vientos went down in order after him.

There were no other threats from that point on as New York was shut out for the first time this season.

- Things got off to a rocky start for Tylor Megill, who walked the first two batters on eight pitches. But he settled in after that, getting three strikeouts while working around an infield single to escape trouble.

Megill had seven strikeouts through three hard-working, but scoreless innings. Entering the fourth with his pitch count at 70, a quick inning had him at 81 pitches through four.

With a runner on first base and no one out in the top of the fifth inning, Brett Baty fielded a grounder while ranging to his right and airmailed the throw to second base into the outfield. Right after Baty's error, Matt Mervis ripped an RBI single to give the Marlins a 1-0 lead -- and end Megill's day.

Max Kranick relieved Megill and got a strikeout for the first out and fly out for the second out, but an excuse-me bloop single to left field off the bat of Nick Fortes -- who dropped his head and started jogging to first base thinking it was the third out -- increased Miami's lead to 2-0.

Both of the runs the Marlins scored in the fifth were unearned due to Baty's error.

Kranick was tremendous again, working 2.0 scoreless innings while allowing one hit, walking none, and striking out two. He has yet to give up a run through 8.2 innings this season.

- Edwin Diaz, needing some work after not having pitched since Sunday and with the Mets having a day off on Thursday, pitched the ninth inning. It didn't go well, as he allowed three runs -- punctuated by a two-run homer to right field by Mervis.

Diaz, who seemed to have no adrenaline during his appearance, featured a fastball that ranged between 92 and 96 mph. He threw 30 pitches -- allowing two hits and walking two -- before being removed with two outs.

Speaking after the game, manager Carlos Mendoza said Diaz is fine physically, suggesting his reduced velocity was due to him dealing with the cold, dry weather.

- Ryne Stanek fired a perfect inning in the seventh, striking out a pair, while Huascar Brazoban worked around a one-out single to toss a scoreless eighth.

- Baty's struggles at the plate continued. He fell into an 0-2 hole his first time up before chasing a pitch in the dirt for strike three. He ran a full count his second time up before striking out looking at a fastball on the outer half. Baty grounded out to third base in the eighth inning as his OPS for the season dropped to .259.

Game MVP: Max Meyer

The Mets mustered just two hits and two walks against the righty in 6.1 innings.

Highlights

What's next

The Mets are off on Thursday.

They head to Sacramento to open a three-game series against the Athletics on Friday at 10:05 p.m. on SNY.

Griffin Canning gets the start for New York, opposed by JP Sears for the A's.

(4-9-25) Blues-Oilers Gameday Lineup

Pavel Buchnevich (89) and the St. Louis Blues will look to get back to their winning ways against Vasily Podkolzin (left) and the Edmonton Oilers on Thursday. (Perry Nelson-Imagn Images)

It’ll be another chance for the St. Louis Blues to clinch a playoff spot on Wednesday.

The Blues (43-29-7), who had their franchise-record 12-game winning streak end on Monday in a 3-1 loss against the Winnipeg Jets, will get a second chance at clinching in the second of a season-ending three-game road trip against the depleted Edmonton Oilers (44-28-5) at 9 p.m. (TNT, TruTV, MAX, ESPN 101.1-FM).

Just like the scenario on Monday, the Blues can clinch Wednesday with a regulation win against the Oilers and the Calgary Flames lose to the Anaheim Ducks in regulation.

In the process, the Blues are also trying to stay ahead of the Minnesota Wild for the first wild card in the Western Conference.

The Blues lead the Wild by two points, and the Wild, who host the San Jose Sharks on Wednesday, have a game in hand.

- - -

The Blues appear to be making a couple tweaks to the lineup for Wednesday.

Jordan Kyrou and Jimmy Snuggerud look like will be swapping spots on right wing, while Dalibor Dvorsky, the No. 10 pick in the 2023 NHL Draft, will play in his second NHL game.

Jordan Binnington, who has won seven straight starts, will get the nod in goal on Wednesday.

The Oilers, on the other hand, have been decimated with injuries and will be playing without stars Connor McDavid and Leon Draisaitl along with Ryan Nugent-Hopkins, Mattias Ekholm, starting goalie Stuart Skinner and St. Louis native Trent Frederic, among others.

- - -

Blues Projected Lineup:

Pavel Buchnevich-Robert Thomas-Jordan Kyrou

Jake Neighbours-Brayden Schenn-Jimmy Snuggerud

Dalibor Dvorsky-Oskar Sundqvist-Zack Bolduc

Alexey Toropchenko-Radek Faksa-Nathan Walker

Cam Fowler-Nick Leddy

Philip Broberg-Justin Faulk

Ryan Suter-Tyler Tucker

Jordan Binnington will start in goal; Joel Hofer will be the backup.

Healthy scratches include Matthew Kessel and Mathieu Joseph. Colton Parayko (knee), Dylan Holloway (lower body) and Alexandre Texier (upper body) are out. Torey Krug (ankle) is out for the season.

- - -

Oilers Projected Lineup:

Vasily Podkolzin-Adam Philp-Viktor Arvidsson

Zach Hyman-Adam Henrique-Corey Perry

Jeff Skinner-Mattias Janmark-Connor Brown

Max Jones-Kasperi Kapanen

Jake Walman-Evan Bouchard

Darnell Nurse-Troy Stecher 

Brett Kulak-Ty Emberson

Calvin Pickard will start in goal; Olivier Rodrigue will be the backup.

The Oilers have no healthy scratches. Leon Draisaitl (lower body), Mattias Ekholm (undisclosed), Evander Kane (hip, knee), John Klingberg (undisclosed), Connor McDavid (lower body), Alec Regula (knee), Stuart Skinner (concussion), Trent Frederic (ankle) and Ryan Nugent-Hopkins (illness) are out.

Golden Knights Jack Eichel Day-To-Day; Pair Of Defensemen Battling Illness

Vegas Golden Knights defenseman Nicolas Hague (14) celebrates with Vegas Golden Knights center Jack Eichel (9) after scoring a goal against the Edmonton Oilers during the second period of game five of the second round of the 2023 Stanley Cup Playoffs at T-Mobile Arena. Mandatory Credit: Stephen R. Sylvanie-Imagn Images

Vegas Golden Knights forward Jack Eichel was held out of the lineup against the Colorado Avalanche with an upper-body injury and joining him on the sidelines were Alex Pietrangelo and Nicolas Hague, both battling an illness. 

Prior to the puck drop, the Golden Knights announced on X, formerly known as Twitter, that Eichel would be out with an upper-body injury, and is considered day-to-day.

The 28-year-old had missed just one game before last night. In 76 games, Eichel has scored 27 goals and 93 points, setting a new career-high and the Golden Knights franchise record for points. If Eichel misses no further games, he'll need seven points in four games to record his first 100-point season. 

Pietrangelo recently returned from a lower-body injury after missing four games. He returned to play in three consecutive games before suffering an illness. 

The 2024-25 campaign has been a peculiar one for the 35-year-old. It started strongly, recording great offensive numbers and setting himself on pace to set career highs. The offence faltered, and his consistency has too. He's become prone to major turnovers and defensive blunders but remains a solid overall player. 

Hague dealt an injury earlier in the season, forcing him to miss 22 games. In the 66 games he's played, he's recorded five goals and 11 points, throwing 77 hits and blocking 73 shots. The 26-year-old is a pending RFA, averaging the fewest minutes among the Golden Knights' top six defenders. 

The Golden Knights are back in action on Thursday when they host the Seattle Kraken and will be hoping to add all three players back into their lineup. 

Stay updated with the most interesting Golden Knights stories, analysis, breaking news and more! Tap the star to add us to your favourites on Google News to never miss a story.

Golden Knights Forward Tomas Hertl Nominated By Vegas PHWA Chapter For 2025 Bill Masterton Memorial TrophyGolden Knights Forward Tomas Hertl Nominated By Vegas PHWA Chapter For 2025 Bill Masterton Memorial TrophyLAS VEGAS -- The Vegas Chapter of the Professional Hockey Writers Association has nominated Golden Knights forward Tomáš Hertl as their nominee for the 2025 Bill Masterton Memorial Trophy. The award is given annually to the player who best exemplifies the qualities of perseverance, sportsmanship, and dedication to ice hockey.

Blackhawks Rumors: Ivan Demidov Was Key Target in 2024 Draft

Ivan Demidov (Stephen R. Sylvanie-Imagn Images)

The Chicago Blackhawks had three first-round picks in the 2024 NHL Entry Draft and used them all to add even more great pieces to an already deep prospect pool.

Chicago drafted Artyom Levshunov at No. 2, Sacha Boisvert at No. 18, and Marek Vanacker at No. 27. Those weren't the only players the Blackhawks were looking to draft in the first round last year though. There were rumors that Ivan Demidov was a key target, but the team wasn't able to swing a deal.

According to Pierre LeBrun, the Blackhawks tried to draft Demidov at No. 4, but they couldn't acquire the pick from the Columbus Blue Jackets. The Blackhawks reportedly offered Columbus their unprotected 2026 first-round pick (that will likely be a lottery pick again) for the Blue Jackets' fourth overall pick in 2024.

This would've seen the Blackhawks grab two elite prospects and two other good ones in the first round, speeding up the rebuild just a little and setting them up very nicely for the future.

The Blue Jackets ended up taking their chances and instead of drafting Demidov themselves, selected Cayden Lindstrom. This allowed Demidov to fall to the Montreal Canadiens at fifth overall, and thus see him excel in the KHL this season and make his way over to the NHL and the Canadiens as they are slated to clinch the playoffs for the first time since the COVID season (2020-21).

We can't yet tell how this will play out long term for the Blackhawks as there should be some future stars at the top of the 2026 draft, but Demidov has proven himself outside of the NHL already and is going to be very good. Unfortunately, the Blackhawks just couldn't swing a deal.

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

Canucks Tyler Myers Remains The Only Active NHLer To Play A Playoff Game For The Buffalo Sabres

Mar 19, 2024; Vancouver, British Columbia, CAN; Vancouver Canucks defenseman Tyler Myers (57) checks Buffalo Sabres forward Tyson Jost (17) in the second period at Rogers Arena. Mandatory Credit: Bob Frid-Imagn Images

On Tuesday, the Buffalo Sabres were officially eliminated from post-season contention. Buffalo has not made the playoffs since 2011, which was the same season the Vancouver Canucks went to Game 7 of the Stanley Cup Final. Fourteen years later, only one player from that roster remains active in the NHL, with that being Vancouver Canucks defenceman Tyler Myers.

Latest From THN’s Vancouver Canucks Site:

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The 2010-11 season was Myers' second in the NHL. A year after winning the Calder Trophy, Myers recorded 37 points in 80 games, helping the Sabres to a third-place finish in the Northeast division. Buffalo would eventually be eliminated in seven games by the Philadelphia Flyers, with Myers also being the last player to record a multi-point effort for the Sabres in the playoffs.

Buffalo's lineup from April 26, 2011, also features other players who have suited up for Vancouver. The list includes Ryan Miller, Derek Roy, Thomas Vanek, Mark Mancari, and Marc-André Gragnani. Of note, Jhonas Enroth, who played in that game, is still active but is currently playing the SHL with Örebro HK.

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

Jase Richardson enters NBA draft, leaving Michigan State sooner than father expected

Jase Richardson is entering the NBA draft, a year or two sooner than his father expected.

The Michigan State freshman announced his decision on social media Tuesday.

“I’m forever grateful to the Spartan community for all their support throughout the season and honored to be a Spartan Dawg,” Richardson wrote in a post.

His father, Jason Richardson, a former Spartans star and NBA standout, helped his son gather feedback from the league to assist in the decision-making process.

“I have a lot of ties in the NBA — know a lot of GMs and scouts — and heard he would probably be a late, lottery pick,” Jason Richardson told The Associated Press. “He’s pursuing the dream he’s had since he was a kid.

“I’m surprised it happened this fast. I knew he was a really good basketball player, but I didn’t think he would be one and done. I thought he would take two years, maybe three, but he did some amazing things and helped his team accomplish some great things.”

The 6-foot-3 guard averaged 12.5 points, making 48.5% of his shots overall and 41.1% of 3-pointers. He helped Michigan State win the Big Ten title by three games and advance to the Elite Eight of the NCAA Tournament.

For Michigan State’s national championship team in 2000, Jason Richardson averaged five points in 15 minutes as a freshman for coach Tom Izzo. He stayed for his sophomore season and nearly tripled his scoring production.

“Coach Izzo was the first to say Jase should test the waters, and it was the same thing he told me when I had an opportunity to go to the NBA,” Richardson told the AP. “He was supportive and positive about Jase’s decision.”

During the season, Izzo told reporters that Richardson should enter the draft and praised the process that led to his decision.

“Not only did I say it publicly, I encouraged him and his family,” Izzo told the AP. “I have no issues the way this was handed by Jase, his family or the agent. We’re all on the same page. This is absolutely the right decision.

“I’m pulling for him and I hope Michigan State fans are, too.”

Izzo is working on filling some big sneakers this offseason.

Richardson is the fourth player to leave the program early, joining Tre Holloman, Xavier Booker and Gehrig Normand after they entered the transfer portal last week. Booker is transferring to UCLA.

The Spartans also will lose a trio of key players who have no more eligibility: Jaden Akins, Szymon Zapala and Frankie Fidler.

Izzo will hope to retain two starters, point guard Jeremy Fears and center Jaxon Kohler, along with high-flying wing Coen Carr and 6-11 center Carson Cooper for next season’s team, which also will have four-star recruits Cam Ward and Jordan Scott.

“I like my team coming back next year,” Izzo said.

The 6-3, 185-pound Richardson was perhaps the most consistent player for the surprising Spartans, who were unranked for the first month of the season in the AP Top 25 and surged as Richardson took on a larger role.

Richardson started for the first time midway through the season when Fears was out with an illness, and after scoring a career-high 29 points in a win over Oregon, he didn’t come off the bench again.

“There can’t be many guys that I’ve coached that are as efficient and as confident — not cocky, not arrogant,” Izzo said.

Richardson averaged nearly two assists and fewer than one turnover per game.

“He impacts the game in so many ways,” Michigan coach Dusty May said. “His poise is extremely impressive, especially factored in that he’s a freshman.”

Entering the Big Ten Tournament, Richardson was named the Big Ten Freshman of the Week for the third straight week and earned a spot on the All-Big Ten third team.

“He’s efficient in every facet and his demeanor is really like an upperclassman,” TV analyst Robbie Hummel said. “I just love his calmness.”

2025 NFL Draft: This knock on Tetairoa McMillan's game isn't as big a deal as people think

Arizona's Tetairoa McMillan is projected to be one of the top wide receivers selected in the 2025 NFL Draft later this month.

The 6-foot-4, 219-pound McMillan ran 40-yard dashes at his pro day that hovered around the 4.5s, and there aren't many receivers at that size that can move like that. McMillan is the No. 7 overall pick in Yahoo Sports' latest NFL mock draft by experts Nate Tice and Charles McDonald, and both have him highly ranked on their big boards.

There is one issue, however, with McMillan's game that's seemed to pop up during the evaluation process: his lack of separation.

Tice and Yahoo Sports Fantasy Analyst Matt Harmon weren't buying it, as they discussed on the latest episode of Football 301.

"This guy is not some lack-of-separation, stiff player," Harmon said. "... If a guy can't separate on tape, nobody's talking about him as a Round 1 player, or a top half of Round 1 player."

Harmon pointed out recent big-bodied receivers who supposedly couldn't separate, including Drake London and Rome Odunze, and it didn't hinder them in their transition to the NFL.

Speaking of Odunze, not only does Tice agree that McMillan's separation is fine, he thinks it's part of a package that has him grade out close to 2024's dominant wide receiver prospect class that included Odunze, Marvin Harrison Jr. and Malik Nabers.

"I consider him closer to those top three guys from last year than maybe what we're talking about this year," Tice said, "because I see him as an X, I see him as a ball winner, but I see him as fluid. And how he gets in and out of routes is really just really cool to watch. And you don't really see that from a guy that's legitimately 6-4."

Harmon said McMillan's long speed isn't the strength of his game, and it's true he won't threaten separation on go routes straight downfield.

McMillan particularly shines on comeback routes, where Harmon charted him as having an 88.9% success rate in terms of getting open.

"He can and has created chunk plays in the intermediate area, and in deep in-breakers, things like that," Harmon said.

Tice doesn't have concerns over McMillan's speed, either, due to his body control and agility allowing him to get yards after catch. He also thinks McMillan's 40 time isn't a worry, pointing out Bengals wide receiver Tee Higgins — who just signed a huge contract extension and ran a 4.59 at his pro day five years ago — has a similar profile.

"So running a middle-ish 40 does not damn you," Tice said.

Tice is bullish on McMillan's potential, and thinks he should be a top-10 pick. Harmon didn't go quite that high, but is still a big fan of McMillan's game and thinks he projects as similar potential-wise to the Broncos' Courtland Sutton and the Colts' Michael Pittman.

"You can get away with having them as your No. 1," Harmon said. "You probably want them as, like, a really, really great No. 2. But to me, I think that's still like a top 20 draft pick."

Former Penguins GM Shero Passes Away At 62

Ray Shero - Credit: Charles LeClaire-Imagn Images

Just days after the Pittsburgh Penguins mourned the loss of former netminder and sports reporter Greg Millen, news broke on Wednesday morning that former Stanley Cup-winning General Manager Ray Shero had passed away at 62. 

Shero joined the Penguins in 2006 and helped guide them to the Stanley Cup Final in 2008 and 2009, earning his only championship in 2009. His father, Fred Shero, was a two-time winner with the Philadelphia Flyers in 1974 and 1975. 

Before coming to Pittsburgh, Shero worked for the Ottawa Senators (1993-1998)and Nashville Predators (1998-2006). He was relieved of his duties in the spring of 2014 after the Penguins' second-round playoff loss; however, he wasn't unemployed for long as the New Jersey Devils hired him on May 4, 2015. 

Shero was the Devils' general manager for five years before Lou Lamoriello replaced him on Jan. 12, 2020. Most recently, Shero was an advisor with the Minnesota Wild. 

Initially drafted by the Los Angeles Kings in the 11th round (216th overall), Shero played at St. Lawerence University from 1980 to 1985, serving as captain in his final season, but never played in the NHL.

Pittsburgh Penguins Schedule: Remaining Games & Statistical NotesPittsburgh Penguins Schedule: Remaining Games & Statistical NotesThe Pittsburgh Penguins are winding down their 2024-25 season and will miss the Stanley Cup playoffs for the third consecutive season, a first in Sidney Crosby's 20-year career. However, there is plenty to play for in the final weeks.

Artyom Levshunov & Ivan Demidov May Have A Chance To Face Off In 2024-25

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If you asked a hockey fan a week ago who the best player outside of the NHL is, you’d get a bunch of respectable answers. One name that may come up is Ivan Demidov, who Chicago Blackhawks fans may know well. 

Demidov was in the mix to be selected second overall by the Blackhawks in the 2024 NHL Draft. Instead, however, Chicago ended up taking defenseman Artyom Levshunov out of Michigan State University. Demidov ended up falling to the Montreal Canadiens at five. 

In 2024-25, playing for SKA St. Petersburg of the KHL, Demidov had 19 goals and 30 assists for 49 points in 65 games played. That is a great total for a KHL forward who isn’t even 20 years old yet. 

Whether Demidov is a center or wing in the NHL remains to be seen, but he is a shifty/highly skilled offensive powerhouse. His ceiling is an elite-level producer. 

On Tuesday, it became official that the Canadiens would be signing Demidov to his entry level deal. There was some uncertainty there as he was signed to a KHL contract. Ultimately, Demidov and St. Petersburg decided to part ways so he can pursue his dream of playing in the NHL. 

It is unclear when Demidov is expected to arrive in Montreal, but they are likely going to be playing in the playoffs, so he will help them there. He should also get some time in the regular season before the postseason begins. 

Next Monday (April 14th), the Blackhawks will be in Montreal to take on the Canadiens. This means that Levshunov and Demidov could face off in the NHL for the first time. After all of the dialogue comparing these two ahead of their draft, there will be some excitement surrounding their first matchup. 

Demidov has everything he needs entering his first stretch of NHL hockey. Montreal is winning a ton of games, they are likely going to the playoffs, and their building is incredible this time of year when the team is good. 

Young players like Lane Hutson, Nick Suzuki, Cole Caufield, and Juraj Slafkovsky, among others, will be perfect to surround a player like Ivan Demidov. They will create hockey magic together for a long time. 

How will they compare with the Blackhawks' young core? It is hard to tell right now because Chicago is a year or two behind in terms of the rebuild process, but they should play a good game against each other. If Demidov does live up to the hype,  the Habs are getting a consequential player at the most important time. 

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