Hull KR are out of the darkness and ready to end 40-year wait in Challenge Cup final

Close calls in the past couple of years point to a team on the up and they are favourites to beat Warrington

For a while around the 80s, it must have felt like the good times were never going to end for Hull KR: Challenge Cup winners in 1980; winners of the Premiership in 1981 and 1984; champions of England in 1979 and again in 1984 and 1985.

Legends such as Roger Millward, Gavin Miller and George Fairbairn – revered on one side of Hull to this day – at the heartbeat of one of the finest sides in history.

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Marlins at Rays prediction: Odds, expert picks, starting pitchers, betting trends, and stats for June 6

Its Friday, June 6 and the Marlins (23-37) are in Tampa to open a series against their instate rival, the Rays (33-29).

Edward Cabrera is slated to take the mound for Miami against Zack Littell for Tampa Bay.

The Marlins limp into town. They had the day off yesterday after being swept by the lowly Colorado Rockies the previous three. It was Colorado's first three-game series sweep since May of 2024. The Rays, on the other hand, welcome Miami to George Steinbrenner Field following a sweep of the Texas Rangers. They closed out the series yesterday with a 4-3 win. Tampa scored three in the ninth for the come from behind win.

Lets dive into the series opener and find a sweat or two.

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.

Follow Rotoworld Player News for the latest fantasy and betting player news and analysis all season long.

Game details & how to watch Marlins at Rays

  • Date: Friday, June 6, 2025
  • Time: 1:10PM EST
  • Site: George M. Steinbrenner Field
  • City: Tampa, FL
  • Network/Streaming: FDSNFL, FDSNSUN

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 MLB schedule page, along with detailed matchup pages that update live in-game with every out.

Odds for the Marlins at the Rays

The latest odds as of Friday:

  • Moneyline: Marlins (+143), Rays (-170)
  • Spread:  Rays -1.5
  • Total: 9.0 runs

Probable starting pitchers for Marlins at Rays

  • Pitching matchup for June 6, 2025: Edward Cabrera vs. Zack Littell
    • Marlins: Edward Cabrera (2-1, 4.14 ERA)
      Last outing: 5/31 vs. San Francisco - 5.2IP, 0ER, 6H, 3BB, 5Ks
    • Rays: Zack Littell (5-5, 3.86 ERA)
      Last outing: 5/31 at Houston - 9IP, 3ER, 10H, 1BB, 6Ks

Rotoworld still has you covered with all the latest MLB player news for all 30 teams. Check out the feed page right here on NBC Sports for headlines, injuries and transactions where you can filter by league, team, positions and news type!

Top betting trends & insights to know ahead of Marlins at Rays

  • The Rays have won 12 of their last 15 home games, while the Marlins have lost 7 of their last 9 overall
  • 4 of the Rays' last 5 home games with the Marlins have gone over the Total
  • Eric Wagaman is 3-17 (.176) over his last 5 games
  • Junior Caminero is 7-19 (.368) over his last 5 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 MLB Top Trends tool on NBC Sports!

Expert picks & predictions for today’s game between the Marlins and the Rays

Rotoworld 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.

Our model calculates projections around each moneyline, spread and over/under bet for every game on the MLB calendar based on data points like past performance, player matchups, ballpark information and weather forecasts.

Once the model is finished running, we put its projection 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 Friday's game between the Marlins and the Rays:

  • Moneyline: NBC Sports Bet is recommending a play on the Tampa Bay Rays on the Moneyline.
  • Spread: NBC Sports Bet is leaning towards a play ATS on the Tampa Bay Rays at -1.5.
  • Total: NBC Sports Bet is recommending a play on the under on the Game Total of 9.0.

Want even more MLB best bets and predictions from our expert staff & tools? Check out the Expert MLB Predictions page from NBC

Follow our experts on socials to keep up with all the latest content from the staff:

  • Jay Croucher (@croucherJD)
  • Drew Dinsick (@whale_capper)
  • Vaughn Dalzell (@VmoneySports)
  • Brad Thomas (@MrBradThomas)

Another dramatic come-from-behind win. How do the Pacers keep doing this?

OKLAHOMA CITY — The statistics are mind-boggling:

• Indiana has five 15+-point comebacks in these playoffs.
• Indiana is 5-3 when trailing by 15 or more in these playoffs.
• Tyrese Haliburton has four game-winning or game-tying buckets in the final 5 seconds these playoffs (Game 5 vs. Milwaukee, Game 2 vs. Cleveland, Game 1 vs. New York, and now Game 1 vs. Oklahoma City).

How do the Pacers keep doing this?

Turning disrespect into fuel.

"That's been our thing the whole year, even at the beginning of the playoffs. Everybody got the other team winning every single game," Obi Toppin said. "We just go out there and always do what we do."

That fuel wasn't just everyone picking against Indiana in these playoffs, it dates back to last season and the Pacers' run to the Eastern Conference Finals, Haliburton said.

"After you have a run like last year, and you get swept in the Eastern Conference Finals, and all the conversation is about is how you don't belong there and how you lucked out to get there, and that it was a fluke. Guys are going to be pissed off," Haliburton said. "We're going to spend the summer pissed off. And then you come into the year with all the talk around how was a fluke, you have an unsuccessful first couple months, and now that's easy for everybody to clown you, talk about you in a negative way.

"I think as a group, we take everything personal, like as a group, it's not just me, it's everybody. I feel like that's the DNA of this group."

“Ultimate Confidence”

The other thing the Pacers discussed was their unshakable confidence in themselves.

When did Indiana start to believe it could win this game?

"When I got off the bus, I put on my shoes, there was never a disbelief as a group," Haliburton said.

Haliburton embodies that.

"Ultimate, ultimate confidence in himself..." Myles Turner said of his team's star. "When it comes to the moments, he wants the ball. He wants to be the one to hit that shot. He doesn't shy away from the moment and very important this time of the year to have a go-to guy. He just keeps finding a way and we keep putting the ball in the right positions and the rest is history."

That confidence means the Pacers don't panic when trailing, they just focus on small victories that add up to big ones.

"I thought we did a great job of just walking them down," Haliburton said. "When it gets to 15, you can panic, or you can talk about, 'How do we get it to 10? How do we get it to five from there?' So, you know, I think all [playoffs], that's what we preached as a group, is when we get down big, let's just find a way to incrementally get it down."

"We stay connected. We’re going to play until the whistle blows," said Andrew Nembhard, who was critical in the Game 1 comeback by scoring or assisting on 16 fourth-quarter points and playing strong defense on Shai Gilgeous-Alexander in the fourth.

That leads to dramatic endings, even if it isn't always pretty getting there. Not that the Pacers care.

"Come May and June, it doesn't matter how you get them, just get them," Haliburton said. "So we'll take it."
And they'll take a 1-0 lead in the NBA Finals.

‘I’ve got nothing to prove’: George Ford on inspiring Sale and why 99 England caps are not enough

The tactically brilliant fly-half will attempt to overcome his former club Leicester in Saturday’s Premiership semi-final

Should Leicester fail to reach this year’s Premiership final they will have been floored by a familiar foe. George Ford spent two spells totalling nine years at Welford Road and made his Tigers first-team debut as a 16-year-old. It says everything about his enduring desire and dedication that, aged 32 and clad in the blue of Sale Sharks, his tactical decision-making grows sharper by the year.

Whether he is kicking teams to death or slicing them apart with his deft short passing game, the GF menu of fly-half skills remains rich and varied. His fellow squad members all regard him as a coach in waiting, so good is he at steering them around the field and managing pressure situations. When Michael Cheika, Leicester’s head coach, expressed bafflement at Ford’s omission from this year’s British and Irish Lions squad, he was by no means alone.

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Maple Leafs Invite Knights Goaltender Austin Elliott To Training Camp After Memorial Cup Title

London Knights goaltender Austin Elliott has a ticket to an NHL training camp this fall.

Following his 31-save performance in the Memorial Cup Final to help the Knights win their third championship, the OHL announced that Elliott, who just finished his fifth season of junior hockey, earned a spot at Toronto Maple Leafs training camp in September.

"London Knights goaltender Austin Elliott has been a key difference maker this season," the OHL posted to X on Sunday night, "and he earned a free-agent invite to the Maple Leafs training camp this off-season!"

Maple Leafs Prospect Easton Cowan Dominates Memorial Cup, Validates Return To Junior DecisionMaple Leafs Prospect Easton Cowan Dominates Memorial Cup, Validates Return To Junior DecisionToronto Maple Leafs prospect Easton Cowan is a Memorial Cup champion with the OHL's London Knights.

Elliott finished his junior career with the best season to date after joining OHL London after four seasons with the WHL's Saskatoon Blades. The 21-year-old netminder has a record of 52-3-0 with the Knights.

His three losses came at different points this year: one in the regular season, one in the OHL playoffs, and one in the Memorial Cup.

Elliott was the top goaltender in the OHL this season, with a .924 save percentage in 33 games. Although he went 16-1 in the league's playoffs, his save percentage dipped to .906 through 17 games. However, the Strathmore, Alberta, native returned to form in the Memorial Cup, allowing eight goals in five games and finishing the tournament with a .943 save percentage.

'If I Can Win The Masters, Leafs Can Win The Stanley Cup': Rory McIlroy Gifted Toronto Jersey By MLSE CEO Keith Pelley'If I Can Win The Masters, Leafs Can Win The Stanley Cup': Rory McIlroy Gifted Toronto Jersey By MLSE CEO Keith PelleyProfessional golfer Rory McIlroy still believes the Toronto Maple Leafs can win the Stanley Cup.

The University of Massachusetts Lowell commit was named an all-star at the tournament and was awarded the top goaltender honor after stopping 31 of 32 shots in London's Memorial Cup win over the WHL's Medicine Hat Tigers.

Three players from London's championship-winning team are set to participate in Toronto's training camp. Joining Elliott is Toronto's 2023 first-round (28th overall) pick, Easton Cowan, who led all OHL players in playoff points, and forward Landon Sim, who signed a one-year AHL contract with the Toronto Marlies in May.

Elliott participated in Maple Leafs development camp in the summer of 2023.

Cowan will push for a spot on Toronto's NHL roster following a standout season. Sim, who scored 12 goals and three assists for 15 points in 17 OHL playoff games, will look to stand out and earn an AHL roster spot. Elliott will look to impress Toronto's management before beginning his college hockey career in Lowell, Massachusetts.

Tanev, Gourde Contracts And Deferred Money Provide A Blueprint For Maple Leafs To Re-Sign John TavaresTanev, Gourde Contracts And Deferred Money Provide A Blueprint For Maple Leafs To Re-Sign John TavaresJohn Tavares wants to stay in Toronto. The former Maple Leafs captain made that clear when speaking to reporters shortly after his team was eliminated in the second round at the hands of the three-time defending Eastern Conference champion Florida Panthers. This desire, coupled with the Maple Leafs' cap constraints, begs the question: How can both sides find common ground? Reportedly, the Maple Leafs would welcome him back, but not at the hefty $11 million per season salary cap hit that came with his first contract in Toronto. Recent contracts signed by other players offer a compelling glimpse into potential solutions.

Cowan can join the Marlies if he doesn't make the Maple Leafs out of camp. After losing former Toronto prospects Fraser Minten and Nikita Grebenkin at the NHL's trade deadline in March, the Marlies will be looking for scoring in the offseason.

You have to wonder if Cowan and Sim, teammates of nearly four seasons, can put together a strong debut season in pro hockey.

Photo credit: @LondonKnights / X


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NBA Finals Ad Inventory Sells Fast Despite Ratings Worries

Squish them together into one sprawling 12,338 square-mile mass, and the 77 counties that make up the blended Indianapolis and Oklahoma City markets would yield a grand total of 1.99 million TV homes, or 1.6% of the national base. Given the relatively undersized reach of this hypothetical conjoined entity—by way of comparison, the top-ranked New York City market crams 7.49 million TV households into an area that’s one-third the size of our Indy-OKC hybrid—it’s not unreasonable to suggest that the TV audience for the 2025 NBA Finals is likely to be one of the smallest on record.

Naturally, NBA commissioner Adam Silver has done what he can to downplay the Designated Market Area chatter, arguing that the participation of clubs repping smaller media markets is very much by design. “I’m happy whatever team ends up in the Finals,” Silver said Wednesday during an appearance on FS1’s Breakfast Ball. “It’s been intentional, from our standpoint, to create a system, a collective bargaining agreement, that allows more teams to compete.”

As far as the league’s media partners are concerned, Silver’s system seems to be working. Through the conference finals, Disney and TNT Sports have generated $344.8 million in sales revenue, per EDO Ad EnGage estimates, flat versus the analogous period in 2024. Overall in-game deliveries are up 3.3% year-over-year, with an average draw of 4.49 million viewers per window.

While Silver insisted that real hoops fans will tune in to the Pacers-Thunders series regardless of demography, he acknowledged there may be some slippage among more casual observers on either coast. “We’re going to have to go through a process … where people are accustomed to tuning into the Finals because the two teams deserve to be there, and [because] it’s the best basketball,” Silver said before noting that the Super Bowl matchup has almost no material impact on the Big Game’s deliveries.

(Fair point, although invoking the NFL in a conversation about audience size is sort of like comparing a Sumerian deity to the guy who sold you your life insurance policy.)

If the NBA’s Final Boss is justifiably vexed about how seemingly secondary concerns tend to dictate the size of the league’s audiences, ABC’s advertisers aren’t nearly as bothered by the DMA issue. According to Jim Minnich, who serves as senior VP, revenue and yield management at Disney’s ad sales team, only a “couple of avails” remain in Games 1-4 of the Finals, while “a handful” of Game 5 units are still up for grabs. Speaking on the eve of the Pacers-Thunder opener, Minnich said the Finals sell-through is at 80%, with scatter demand coming in hot on the heels of a 7% year-over-year ratings boost for the 27 playoff games on ESPN and ABC.

All told, 85 advertisers have staked out territory in the Finals, a roster that includes 17 first-time buyers. Of the returning clients, 62% have increased their spend compared to last year’s Mavericks-Celtics series.

“We’re very well sold coming into this,” Minnich said during a Wednesday afternoon video call. “We’re seeing double-digit scatter price increases over [the 2024-25] upfront, and we’re seeing double-digit scatter volume growth. There’s been high demand across the board.”

As marketers increasingly look to the NBA Finals as a vehicle for fresh creative, a host of in-game integrations will be deployed as a means to shake up the break structure. Among the brands that will be rolling out custom integrations include Google, Domino’s, Ford, Coors Light and Burger King, the latter of which is bowing a new musical highlight package during Sunday’s broadcast of Game 2.

Many of these integrations will riff on the myriad ways in which the NBA overlaps with American pop culture, a theme that served as a throughline during the paparazzi fever dream that was the Eastern Conference Finals on TNT Sports.

“Looking back at the Knicks-Pacers series, there was so much conversation swirling around Celebrity Row,” Minnich said. “Advertisers, especially those looking to reach younger, more affluent viewers, recognized this and wanted to get involved in the conversation.” While Timothée Chalamet reinvented himself as the Taylor Swift of Madison Square Garden, marketers that aren’t necessarily endemic to in-game NBA buys began scooping up units in a bid to insert themselves in the national chit chat around the actor and his equally fired-up celebrity pals.

As it happens, the Hell’s Kitchen native effectively has helped Minnich’s crew shift units ever since he popped up on ESPN’s College GameDay to flex his football cred and promote the Bob Dylan biopic A Complete Unknown. (Chalamet was an easy get, as Disney’s Searchlight Pictures produced the film.) “That GameDay appearance was a great example of how pop culture and sports intersect, while underscoring all the different entry points that exist across our platforms,” Minnich said. “Moments like that are why more advertisers seem to be coming around to the idea that sports is for everyone.”

Of course, outside of Pat McAfee and maybe Lon Chaney Jr.’s ghost, you’re probably not going to see a whole lot of famous Hoosiers/Sooners taking in the action from the pricey seats at Gainbridge Field House and Paycom Center. But the NBA’s core audience of upscale consumers will have plenty of star power to feast on nonetheless, as this year’s Finals features the youngest cast of players in nearly half a century.

“We are ecstatic to see two new teams in the Finals,” Minnich said. “I wouldn’t even call them up and comers, because Shai [Gilgeous-Alexander] is the MVP and Halliburton may have just made himself a household name after that show he put on against the Knicks.” As the NBA embraces the end of the superteam era and legends like LeBron James and Steph Curry near quitting time, this new crop of stars will be tasked with the not-inconsiderable task of growing the game from markets that lie far from the bright lights of New York, L.A. and Chicago.

“I don’t necessarily think it’s just about the big markets anymore,” Minnich said. “There’s a lot to be said for the sheer number of stars in the league and the new competitive environment.” (Second-apron parity promises to continue to keep things fresh at the top; no NBA team has won back-to-back titles since Golden State in 2017 and 2018.)

Ultimately, Minnich is projecting a longer series for the Finals (“this is not going to be, you know, four-none”), and while he isn’t making any predictions as to which team will walk away with Larry O’Brien’s gold-plated hardware, he’s not counting out the prospect of a Game 7.

“I think the Pacers have the depth to compete,” Minnich said. “All they have to do is pick one off in OKC and one at home and we have an even series.”

Should the Finals grind on for the full seven, the subsequent deliveries will largely offset any unspectacular early TV numbers. In this century, only four series have required a seventh frame, with the average audiences ranging from 19 million for the Spurs-Pistons decider in 2005 to 31 million for the second Cavaliers-Warriors series in 2016. ABC will have to get there without the built-in boost of the NYC DMA, but outside the megalopolis lift, nothing guarantees a crowd quite like duration.

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The unsinkable Pacers don’t need the lead. They just need the last word

Tyrese Haliburton of the Indiana Pacers is defended by Luguentz Dort of the Oklahoma City Thunder during the second quarter of Thursday’s Game 1 of the NBA finals.Photograph: William Purnell/Getty Images

This is why you play the games, as the old adage goes. In recent years, the later rounds of the NBA playoffs – and the finals in particular – have felt rote. They’ve gone chalk. The drama was minimal, even under the brightest lights of the league’s biggest stage. This year has been different: a playoffs filled with suspense, tension and plot twists galore. But at the start of the finals, the scene was set for a regression to the intrigue-less mean. Every roundtable pundit, basketball expert, and barbershop patron outside of Indiana state lines had Oklahoma City – basketball’s best team from wire to wire – winning the series easily.

But Tyrese Haliburton, the instigator of several of this postseason’s most jaw-dropping twists, knows a thing or two about drama. It oozes out of his pores. And he and his Indiana Pacers had other plans.

Schedule

Best-of-seven-games series. All times US eastern time (EDT). 

Thu 5 Jun Game 1: Pacers 111, Thunder 110

Sun 8 Jun Game 2: Pacers at Thunder, 8pm

Wed 11 Jun Game 3: Thunder at Pacers, 8.30pm

Fri 13 Jun Game 4: Thunder at Pacers, 8.30pm

Mon 16 Jun Game 5: Pacers at Thunder, 8.30pm*

Thu 19 Jun Game 6: Thunder at Pacers, 8.30pm*

Sun 22 Jun Game 7: Pacers at Thunder, 8pm*

*-if necessary

How to watch

In the US, all games will air on ABC. Streaming options include ABC.com or the ABC app (with a participating TV provider login), as well as Hulu + Live TV, YouTube TV, fuboTV, DIRECTV STREAM, and Sling TV (via ESPN3 for ABC games). NBA League Pass offers replays, but live finals games are subject to blackout restrictions in the US.

In the UK, the games will be available on TNT Sports and Discovery+. As for streaming, NBA League Pass will provide live and on-demand access to all Finals games without blackout restrictions.

In Australia, the games will broadcast live on ESPN Australia. Kayo Sports and Foxtel Now will stream the games live, while NBA League Pass will offer live and on-demand access without blackout restrictions.

The Pacers did not lead for 47 minutes and 59.7 seconds of Game 1 on Thursday in Oklahoma City. On a night when Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, the regular-season MVP, scored 38 points and no Indiana player topped 19, it should have been a wrap. The Thunder’s suffocating defense, among the league’s best, forced a famously ball-conscious Indiana team – one that averages just 12 turnovers a game – into coughing it up 19 times in the first half alone. That’s hardly a recipe for success. Yet somehow, the Pacers came out victorious, against the odds, against the physics, against conventional basketball logic. Because that’s what they do. You can’t beat the Pacers by playing 47 minutes and 59.7 seconds of winning basketball. They demand all 48.

Related: NBA finals: Indiana Pacers stun Oklahoma City Thunder in final second to win Game 1 thriller

This was the fifth comeback victory of 15 or more points for the Pacers this postseason alone, the most by any NBA team in the play-by-play era. Haliburton has hit a game-winning shot in all four rounds of these playoffs, each feeling more improbable than the last: his Pacers have been underdogs in each of those series and never more so than they were when they entered the Paycom Center on Thursday. For all the talk heading into the series about how Indiana had never seen a defense like the Oklahoma City’s, we seem to have forgotten, as a general basketball viewing populace, about another key factor: Oklahoma City have never seen a team like Indiana in the last two minutes of the fourth quarter.

“They have a lot of belief,” Oklahoma City head coach Mark Daignault said, after his team’s dispiriting loss, of his ballsy Indiana opponent. “They never think they’re out of it. So they play with great belief, even when their backs are against the wall.” That belief – unwavering, unshakable – is Indiana’s secret sauce. And with every impossible comeback, it compounds on itself. The more they pull off, the less impossible it all feels.

After Thursday’s win, Haliburton reflected on where that belief started: last year’s humiliating sweep in the Eastern Conference finals. “After you have a run like last year but end up getting swept – and all the conversation is about how you didn’t belong there, how you lucked out, how it was a fluke – guys are gonna spend the summer pissed off,” he said. “Then you come into this year, and after an unsuccessful first couple of months, it’s easy for everybody to clown you. I think, as a group, we take everything personal.”

On the character of his team, which has left opposing crowds stunned at every turn this postseason, he sums it up simply: “We don’t give up until it’s zero on the clock.”

Haliburton says being the underdog, proving people wrong, has become part of the team’s identity. “It’s fun,” he says, to win when you’re not supposed to. And this win, like all of Indiana’s wins have been , was a true team effort – even if Haliburton’s flair for the dramatic grabs most of the headlines. It was a true win by committee, whether it was Aaron Nesmith muscling his way to a critical rebound on a bad ankle, Andrew Nembhard coming up with late-game heroics on both ends (including a huge stop on Gilgeous-Alexander), or Obi Toppin scoring 11 of his 17 points in the second half off the bench. All five Pacers starters scored in double figures – so did Toppin – but none cracked 20.

It’s probably not the platonic ideal for a basketball team to rely on procuring its biggest wins in such white-knuckle fashion, but the Pacers sure are good at it, and it makes for a hell of an entertainment product. And in the highly competitive and intense NBA postseason, where wins become harder and harder to come by, teams will take them however they can, messy and chaotic as they may be. After Thursday’s instant classic, Haliburton summed up the Indiana ethos succinctly: “Come May and June, it doesn’t matter how you get ‘em. Just get ‘em.”

Stars part ways with former Sharks coach Pete DeBoer after conference final loss

Stars part ways with former Sharks coach Pete DeBoer after conference final loss originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

After three consecutive trips to the Western Conference Final, the Dallas Stars are parting ways with head coach Pete DeBoer.

General manager Jim Nill made the announcement Friday, saying DeBoer had been “relieved of his head coaching duties” and that the team would immediately begin its search for its next head coach.

“After careful consideration, we believe that a new voice is needed in our locker room to push us closer to our goal of winning the Stanley Cup,” Nill said. “We’d like to thank Pete for everything that he has helped our organization achieve over the past three seasons and wish him nothing but the best moving forward.”

DeBoer was questioned for days after he decided to bench goalie Jake Oettinger in Game 5 of the recently completed conference final against the Edmonton Oilers, which turned out to be DeBoer’s final game in charge.

“No one’s a bigger fan of Jake Oettinger than me, as a person or a goalie,” DeBoer said. “There’s one motive, and that’s how do we survive this and get it to a Game 6. And I have to live with those consequences. If it works, great, we’re in Edmonton tonight and you guys are telling me how awesome a move it was. And when it doesn’t, I’ve got to stand up here and do this, and I understand.”

DeBoer finishes his three-year tenure with the Stars with a 149-68-29 record in 246 regular-season games. DeBoer had a 29-27 record in 56 Stanley Cup Playoff games.

Though the Stars advanced to the conference final in three consecutive seasons, the team never advanced to the Stanley Cup Final.

DeBoer has been an NHL head coach since 2008 with previous stops including the Florida Panthers (2008-11), New Jersey Devils (2011-15), San Jose Sharks (2015-2019) and Vegas Golden Knights (2019-2022).

New Giant Andrew Knizner shares connections to Buster Posey, Patrick Bailey

New Giant Andrew Knizner shares connections to Buster Posey, Patrick Bailey originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

SAN FRANCISCO — Andrew Knizner has only been a Giant for two games, but he arrived with previous ties to their starting catcher and the former catcher who now runs the organization. Knizner admits, though, that Patrick Bailey and Buster Posey might not be fully aware of those prior experiences.

Knizner went into North Carolina State as a shortstop and played third base as a freshman because Trea Turner was locked in at short, but after that season, he transitioned to catching. He eventually was represented by CAA agents Andrew Nacario and Jeff Berry, the latter of whom also represented Posey and now serves as an advisor to the president of baseball operations. As a young Knizner tried to figure out how to move from infielder to catcher, he was given drills and advice from Berry, who picked Posey’s mind on the subject. 

Knizner now finds himself backing up Bailey, a fellow NC State alum. While they never played together, Knizner — who is four years older — was well aware of Bailey’s collegiate career. One of his former coaches once teased him by saying, “We finally have a great defensive catcher coming into the program. Patrick Bailey is the best defensive player in the country.”

“I laid all the groundwork for him,” a smiling Knizner said Thursday morning. “I showed him what not to do at NC State.”

Knizner was one of three newcomers during Wednesday’s roster shakeup and started behind the plate a day later. As he walked around the clubhouse in the morning and chatted with teammates, team employees and reporters, it was easy to see why he was added to the mix. In a lot of ways, he is reminiscent of former Giants backup catcher Nick Hundley, who still is close with Posey. 

Knizner considers communication one of his strengths, and it stood out to manager Bob Melvin that he caught bullpen sessions on his first day and then went out to warm up all of Wednesday night’s relievers so he could get an early look at how the ball came out of their hands. The job, though, requires more than that, and the Giants are hopeful Knizner can bring a spark at the plate, too. 

Knizner was released by the Washington Nationals earlier this season because he had an opt-out date approaching in his minor league contract. The Giants were one of the first teams to call, and he posted a .500 on-base percentage and six doubles in eight games with Triple-A Sacramento. The veteran also has a solid reputation as a defender and game-caller. 

“He’s very invested in what he’s doing behind the plate, and that’s important here,” Melvin said. “It’s important to Buster, it’s important to us, that the catcher, first and foremost, is engaged with the pitching staff and all about winning a game.”

Knizner came to the Giants with 290 games of big league experience, nearly all of them with the St. Louis Cardinals, where he learned from Yadi Molina. He has a .210 average and .596 OPS in the big leagues, but he’s just two years removed from hitting 10 homers in 70 appearances. On Thursday, he was 0-for-3 but looked comfortable with Robbie Ray, who threw seven strong innings. 

“I feel like we had a really good game plan going in today and I felt like he stuck with it really well,” Ray said. “We had some moments where he called a pitch and it was exactly what I wanted to throw. It was almost like he had been here the whole time. I felt, overall, it was a great performance by him behind the plate.”

Ray essentially had Sam Huff as his personal catcher the last two months, but the first day with the new guy was smooth, which was no surprise to Knizner. He said before the game that he doesn’t anticipate needing much time to learn a new staff. Since the start of 2024, he has played for Triple-A teams in four different organizations, along with big league time with the Texas Rangers and a stint in the Dominican Winter League. 

“I’ve gotten used to it over the last 12 months or so,” Knizner said.

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Warrington’s Paul Vaughan: ‘We didn’t deliver last year so have to take this opportunity’

Vaughan left the NRL in disgrace but he has been a guiding light on Warrington’s road to two Challenge Cup finals

By No Helmets Required

Paul Vaughan arrived in England two years ago as damaged goods, an NRL cartoon baddie after he had been sacked by the Dragons for breaking Covid rules and fallen out with Canterbury. If he wins the Challenge Cup at Wembley on Saturday, he will be a Warrington superhero.

The sight of the giant prop – who looks as if he squeezes into a jersey two sizes too small and shorts borrowed from Kylie Minogue – running in from the back fence to get Warrington out of trouble, or smashing his way through a defensive line before delicately offloading with delightful subtlety, is hard to forget.

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Last-second winner puts Pacers ahead in NBA Finals

Tyrese Haliburton
Indiana cut the deficit to one with 48.6 seconds before Haliburton scored the winner [Getty Images]

Tyrese Haliburton scored in the final second as the Indiana Pacers snatched victory over the Oklahoma City Thunder in game one of the NBA Finals.

His 21-foot shot put the Pacers in front for the first time in the match, with 0.3 seconds remaining as they secured a 111-110 win.

The Thunder, with home court advantage for the first two games, had led by 15 points during the fourth quarter, and in the closing seconds the ball was in the hands of NBA most valuable player Shai Gilgeous-Alexander.

However, he missed a two-point attempt with 12 seconds remaining and the Pacers grabbed the rebound, passed the ball to Haliburton and he drove down the court before hitting the winning points.

It's the fourth time in the 2025 play-offs that the 25-year-old has recorded a big-time score - three times to win a match and once to force overtime.

Indiana won despite turning the ball over 25 times, with 20 of those coming in the first half.

"It's not the recipe to win," Haliburton said.

"We can't turn the ball over that much. (But) come May and June, it doesn't matter how you get them, just get them."

Team-mate Myles Turner said of Haliburton: "Some players will say they have it, but there are other players that show it. He wants to be the one to hit that shot. He doesn't shy away from that moment."

Gilgeous-Alexander was the game's leading scorer with 38 points, while Pascal Siakam top scored for the Pacers with 19 points, followed by Obi Toppin with 17.

"We played like we were trying to keep the lead instead of trying to extend it or be aggressive," said the Thunder's Jalen Williams.

Game two of the best-of-seven series is also in Oklahoma and will start at 19:00 local time on Sunday, 8 June (01:00 BST on Monday).