Championship roundup: Bamford strike helps Sheffield United out of bottom three

  • Blades beat Portsmouth after owners’ merger statement

  • Wednesday rock bottom following defeat at Millwall

Sheffield United lifted themselves out of the Championship’s relegation zone on the day their owners reiterated their desire to take the club to the Premier League with a 3-0 win against 10-man Portsmouth.

Patrick Bamford scored on his full United debut, turning home a scrappy rebound early in the second half for his first goal in 19 months, after Sydie Peck’s penalty had given the Blades a 1-0 interval lead. Peck converted his first senior goal for the club after the Pompey defender Terry Devlin had been shown a straight red card for handling on the goalline shortly before half-time.

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A Perfect Storm: Hurricanes Rookie Defenseman Joel Nystrom Making Most Of Opportunity

Out of the 29 players selected 219th overall in NHL history, only five have made it to the NHL and out of the 29 seventh-round picks the Carolina Hurricanes have made over the years, again, only five have made it to the league in some capacity.

Rookie defenseman Joel Nystrom, who was drafted 219th overall in the 2021 draft — Carolina's final of 13 picks that year — is one of those five in each category.

And on top of it being a rarity for a seventh-round pick to make it to the NHL, Nystrom's case is one that's even stranger, as the 23-year-old blueliner only had seven games of North American experience under his belt before he got the callup to the NHL.

Obviously a plethora of injuries opened up a spot, but what made Nystrom not only capable of such a jump, but more deserving than some of the other guys of getting a shot?


Developing In Sweden

The first thing that jumps off the page for Nystrom is his hockey sense.

The rookie blueliner has a really good feel for the game and he's seemingly picked up the Hurricanes' system almost immediately.

His positioning, his reads and his ability to make "the right" play in all three zones is what the Hurricanes were betting on when they took the late flier on him and it's a big reason he's in the NHL today.

"We talk about trying to find and identify areas that are going to be the reason that a player can make it and with Joel, he slipped in the draft, but he was playing against men and you were able to see the hockey sense," said Hurricanes associate general manager Darren Yorke. "Maybe there were questions about the size or the skating, but at that point in the draft, there are always going to be areas that players need more development on. But we saw somebody that had really high-end hockey sense and that was something that we wanted to bet on. Fast forward almost four years now and we’re seeing that hockey sense shine in the NHL and he’s been a big part of the team’s success lately when other guys have been hurt. He’s been able to step up.”

Seeing that potential is one thing, but it's another to develop that alongside all of the other skills a player needs such as skating, puck handling, etc., and you could really see the progression from Nystrom in how he was playing in Sweden and how he was handling big minutes in key roles.

“Going back the last couple of years, he was used in priority minutes in high-stress situations playing in the SHL in a top-four role," Yorke said. "How he was defending in Sweden, we thought that it was best for him to get over to North America and get closer to the NHL. The way he was able to kill plays in all three zones is exactly how we want to play and it would only be enhanced playing in a system where everyone else is doing the exact same thing that he does and it comes natural to him.”

Both Yorke and Hurricanes coach Rod Brind'Amour also really credited development coach Kevin McCarthy for his work with Nystrom.

“I didn’t see him play, but I heard a lot about him," Brind'Amour said. "Our scouts and particularly Kevin McCarthy really watched him and was raving about this kid."

"When Kevin stepped away from coaching, we were lucky enough to bring him back into the organization and get him to work with our players and he spent a lot of time watching Joel and meeting with him and sort of going through his game on the defensive side and enhancing his reads to how it could be in North America," Yorke said. 

Nystrom said he would talk with the the organization weekly, going over his games and working on both things to improve as well things he was doing well, and it's clear that that work paid off.

“The hockey sense was always there," Yorke said. "That was really the concurrent thing. But the skating has gotten better as it does with most players when you get a little bit stronger, the body control and body positioning on retrievals has improved to allow him to handle the bigger, faster players in the NHL and that's all really only enhanced his game now that he can go back for the puck, make those reads with his vision and transition the puck into the offensive zone.”

Nystrom's case is one where it's clear that no matter where you are drafted or what your path may be, if you can play, you can play.

“I just tried to keep working," Nystrom said. "Tried to do my best back in Sweden and I feel like my game has developed pretty good."


The Big Leagues

Nystrom's NHL debut wasn't necessarily one for the memory book.

After K'Andre Miller was ruled out last minute with the team on the road, the Swedish blueliner had to scramble to make it to Denver.

He ended up arriving just 15 minutes before puck drop, missing the entirety of warmups, but Nystrom did manage to still get his rookie laps in right before team took the ice for the start of the game.

Things moved pretty quickly afterwards, as the rookie was thrown right into the fire, staring down a team with players like Nathan MacKinnon and Cale Makar.

“It was stressful, but I was very happy to get the call," Nystrom said. "Just tried to do my best out there. It was a tough game to play, but it was real fun."

Nystrom finished that game having been outchanced 5-21 and seeing three goals against, but with the amount of injuries that the Hurricanes were dealing with at that time, he wasn't really put in a position to succeed.

"He hung in there," Hurricanes coach Rod Brind'Amour recalled on the debut. "Again, you're asking a lot. We had three rookies in there and against that team, any team in the NHL, but when you're playing against the top players in the league and the world, it makes it look the way it did the other night. But I thought he hung in there."

It might not have been a game to write home about, but his foot was now in the door.

However, not even he could escape the Hurricanes' cursed blueline as just two games later, he himself was seated right in the trainer's room getting stitched up after a shot from the blueline wound up catching him right in his face.

But the defenseman wasted no time in getting back out onto the ice to help his shorthanded team, something that stuck with his teammates and coach.

“Especially with it being how bad it was — filleted the whole chin, lip — that would have been a east one to say, ‘I’m good,’ especially with the way things had been going," Brind'Amour said. "But he knew we were down all these guys and he was like, ‘No, I need to get out there.’ I think that says a lot about the kid. And you talk about endearing yourself to the group, that's one thing, for sure.”

“Tough kid, obviously," said captain Jordan Staal. "Those aren't pretty, but he was good. Playing great for us and battling through a lot. We appreciate what he's done."

Nystrom was lucky to escape that injury scare with only a scar to show for it, and after that torrid start, he hasn't missed a second of action and his performances have significantly improved game after game.

“It’s a bit different, of course, from Sweden," Nystrom said. "Here it’s a smaller rink, so you have to adjust your game a little, but I feel the guys have helped me very well and I’m thankful for that.”

Watching him every game, you could tell that he was rapidly picking up the system and that really led to the coaching staff rewarding him in kind.

The Swede currently has some of the best possession numbers on the team, controlling 57% of both 5v5 scoring chances and high-danger chances, and he's been on the ice for 11 goals for and just seven against in nearly 250 minutes of even-strength ice time.

“Nysy’s really been a cornerstone," said defenseman Sean Walker. "He’s playing tons of minutes against top guys every night and he’s doing a great job with it.”

It isn't like Nystrom has been getting sheltered deployments either. The state of the blueline, with all the injuries, meant the rookie was forced into a top-four and a significant penalty-killing role most nights throughout the early parts of the season and he was dominating those minutes.

"He's been one of our best players some nights," said Hurricanes general manager Eric Tulsky.

Nystrom has played north of 18 minutes a night seven times this year and north of 20 minutes twice. 

The rookie has been calm and cool in those deployments and he's even started to find a bit of offense too.

The defenseman has three points so far on the season and he hasn't been afraid to shoot the puck, with 65 shot attempts already.

"He's taken advantage of the opportunity," Brind'Amour said. "With all the injuries we've had on the backend, he's gotten an opportunity to play and he's done really well. He's a smart player. Picking up the system, being in the right places. He knows how to play. We always talk about defense and how it's hard when you first come to a new team with all the systems, but some guys pick it up right away and he's one of those guys. He always seems to be in the right place. Obviously he's not a big guy and he's still got a lot of room to grow as a player, both physically and mentally to better understand the game, but he's really done all we can ask."

Nystrom's game has perfectly fit the way the team wants to play, and that's also a testament to the team's draft strategy in finding players that can fit the team's style.

Carolina is a team that emphasizes killing plays at the blueline, holding strong gaps and being able to transition pucks through all three zones and Nystrom has shown a strong grasp of all the above.

It's been a perfect storm so far for the young blueliner and he's making the most of the golden opportunity.

“These young guys who’ve come up have really picked up the slack," said defenseman Shayne Gostisbehere. "The transition for them has really been seamless. They’ve been playing like they’ve been around a while. It’s good to see. They’re playing in bigger roles than maybe they’d normally have, but it’s all about opportunity in this league."

“As he develops, we’re just going to get to see what he’s doing well more consistently," Yorke said. "We’re 16 games into his NHL career, 23 games into his North American professional career and obviously there’s been a lot of success in a very short period of time and Joel deserves all the credit in the world for playing as well as he is. We’re just looking forward to continuing to watch him grow and have more success as a Carolina Hurricane.”


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No. 3 Houston beats Notre Dame 66-56 in consolation game of the Players Era Championship

Emanuel Sharp scored 17 points to lead No. 3 Houston to a 66-56 victory over Notre Dame on Wednesday in the consolation game of the Players Era Championship. Houston (7-1), which had its season-opening six-game win streak halted in the tournament's second round against No. 17 Tennessee 76-73, opened with a 26-4 run against Notre Dame (5-3) and withstood a late comeback try by the Irish. Milos Uzon scored 15 points and Joseph Tugler added 10 before fouling out for Houston.

Steph Curry sustains quad injury in Warriors' loss to Rockets, will undergo MRI

Steph Curry sustains quad injury in Warriors' loss to Rockets, will undergo MRI  originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

SAN FRANCISCO – A banged-up Steph Curry limped down to the locker room alongside director of sports medicine and performance Rick Celebrini with 35 seconds left in the Warriors’ 104-100 loss to the Houston Rockets on Wednesday night at Chase Center. 

Curry has a right quad contusion and will receive an MRI, per the Warriors. The time and date of the MRI were not announced after the loss.

As Rockets center Alperen Şengün set a screen on Curry late in the fourth quarter, his left knee hit the Warriors superstar directly on his right quad. Curry had a noticeable limp that only worsened as the game went on. 

Curry at the 2:47 mark took a charge with Amen Thompson lowering his shoulder and barreling straight into him. But Rockets head coach Ime Udoka challenged the call, and upon review it was overturned as a blocking foul on Curry. 

Exactly one minute later, Curry again found himself on the ground diving for a loose ball. His lower legs were taken out, and it was deemed an out-of-bounds turnover on Curry. 

After Rockets guard Reed Sheppard made one of his two free throws with 35 seconds remaining to push the Warriors’ deficit to five points, coach Steve Kerr called timeout and Curry had an extended conversation with Celebrini. In the end, Celebrini pointed to the bench as a gesture that Curry could no longer play. 

Angrily staring straight ahead while limping, Curry didn’t say a word down the tunnel and back to the Warriors’ locker room. 

Curry came into the game having scored at least 30 points in three consecutive games. But the Rockets’ physical defense held him to 14 points on 4-of-13 shooting and 2 of 9 from 3-point range. Curry also committed a season-high seven turnovers, and his 14 points were his third fewest this season.

“It obviously changes everything,” Kerr said in response to what happens if Curry has to miss any time. “Our rotation, how we’re playing, who we’re playing through – so, we’ll see.” 

Curry missed three consecutive games because of an illness earlier this season, and one because of an ankle issue.

“When I heard it was a quad I was actually kind of relieved,” Kerr said. “Better than an ankle or knee. Hopefully he can recover quickly and be OK, but we got to hold down the fort.” 

The Warriors are 1-4 without Curry this season, and have a 92-155 record all time when he doesn’t play.

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PSG 5-3 Tottenham, Liverpool 1-4 PSV, and more: Champions League – as it happened

Vitinha was the star of an eight-goal thriller in Paris, while Liverpool’s abysmal run of form continued as PSV routed them at Anfield

All across the continent, teams line up to hear Zadok the Priest get his usual Uefa-sanctioned kicking. Poor Zadok’s a-cold! All of which is a roundabout way to say that we’ll be off in a minute. Big night coming up.

TNT have a quick word with Thomas Frank before kick-off. “There is one game in front of us, that’s PSG … if you look too much in the past you forget to look forward and do everything you can to perform now … that is all about performing tonight … make sure we compete … are brave … we are playing against a very mobile team … we have to match that … be aggressive … we need mobile, front-footed midfielders … a big night for us … we need to put a fight in.”

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Flyers show ‘mental toughness' with comeback in busy road stretch

Flyers show ‘mental toughness' with comeback in busy road stretch originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

Five days ago, Rick Tocchet talked about the Flyers needing to “build a mental toughness” for the grueling parts of the NHL schedule.

It sure looks like the Flyers found some of that mental toughness Wednesday night amid a stretch of four games in six days, all on the road.

They rallied from another deficit to knock off the Panthers, 4-2, at Amerant Bank Arena in Sunrise, Florida.

With under a minute left, Tyson Foerster blasted home the Flyers’ go-ahead goal before Sean Couturier iced the game on a deflection in front.

Emil Andrae and Matvei Michkov also provided goals to tie the game in the second period. Andrae (one goal, one assist) and Jamie Drysdale (two assists) finished with multi-point performances.

The Flyers (12-7-3) bounced back from being shut out for the first time this season in a 3-0 decision Monday night to the Lightning. They’ve dropped consecutive games in regulation just once this season (Nov. 1-2).

Tocchet’s club was playing its first of three games in four days, sandwiched around Thanksgiving.

“You might not have your good stuff, you might have your B game, but can you play with your B game?” the Flyers’ head coach said last Friday. “Good angles, shorter shifts, doing things consistently.”

The Flyers took the regular-season series from the Panthers (12-10-1), going 2-1-0 against the two-time defending champs. Florida was without injured forwards Aleksander Barkov (knee) and Matthew Tkachuk (groin) in all three of the meetings.

• The Flyers already have 10 comeback wins, with four of them coming from two goals down.

They need to figure out their starts, but they’ve been competitive and resilient. Those are not bad qualities for a team trying to take the next step.

• Dan Vladar was very good again, converting 25 saves on 27 shots.

The 28-year-old has given up two or fewer goals in 10 of his 14 starts.

Fourteen of his saves Wednesday night came in the first period. For the 16th time this season, the Flyers fell behind 1-0. And for the fifth time in the last eight games, they fell behind 2-0.

Brad Marchand struck just 5:21 minutes into the game on a transition opportunity. Nick Seeler had to defend it without a stick as his snapped on a shot at the blue line.

Right before the goal, Andrae committed a turnover that led to five straight Panthers shots and a big momentum swing against the Flyers.

Florida grabbed the two-goal lead 5:16 minutes into the middle stanza, but then the Flyers made their push.

Panthers netminder Sergei Bobrovsky stopped 14 of the Flyers’ 18 shots on the night.

• The Flyers had to like the way Andrae responded to a not-so-sharp first period.

The 23-year-old really made things happen in the second period. He sent a shot through traffic for his first goal of the season and then fired another puck for a game-tying redirection by Michkov.

Andrae has been known for not giving in or backing down. The Flyers saw that competitiveness against Florida.

• Nikita Grebenkin returned to the lineup following a run of healthy scratches. The 22-year-old winger sat out five of the previous six games. He saw 10:59 minutes Wednesday night on the fourth line.

Noah Juulsen was also back in the lineup for Egor Zamula. The 28-year-old defenseman played alongside Seeler on the third pair.

• After Thanksgiving, the Flyers have a back-to-back road set as they visit the Islanders on Friday (4 p.m. ET/NBCSP) and Devils on Saturday (7 p.m. ET/NBCSP).

What we learned as Steph Curry exits late in Warriors' NBA Cup loss to Rockets

What we learned as Steph Curry exits late in Warriors' NBA Cup loss to Rockets originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

BOX SCORE

SAN FRANCISCO – The Warriors were pushing toward a wire-to-wire victory Wednesday night, but the wire began fraying late in the third quarter and snapped in the fourth.

As the Warriors began fading, the Houston Rockets came back to own the second half and slap a 104-100 loss on the Warriors, sending their record back to .500 at 10-10. 

To make matters worse, Stephen Curry, attempting to take a charge in the fourth quarter, fell to the floor and came up limping. He tried to play through it but was subbed out with 35.2 seconds remaining.

Six Warriors scored in double figures, led by 21 points from Jimmy Butler III. Rookie Will Richard scored 18 points, Curry and Brandin Podziemski each finished with 14, while Draymond Green and Quinten Post each had 12.

The loss is the fourth in five games for Golden State, which is 1-2 on the homestand it hoped would be a source of recovery.

Second-year pro Reed Sheppard scored a game-high 31 points to lead the Rockets (12-4).

Here are three observations from a game that the Warriors are hoping won’t force their best player to the sidelines:

Warriors punished by Sheppard

With leading scorer Kevin Durant, averaging 24.3 points per game, unavailable while attending to a family matter, it figured Houston’s offense would be somewhat crippled.

It was, as No. 2 scorer Alperen Sengun was held to 16 points, six below his average, on 7-18 shooting from the field, including 0-of-4 from distance. No. 3 scorer Amen Thompson, averaging 17.9 points, was limited to 10.

The Rockets were saved by Sheppard, who averages 13.1 points but poured in a career-high 31 on 12-of-25 shooting, including 4-of-12 from deep. He added nine assists and five rebounds.

Sheppard got a few open looks, but also torched several defenders, including Brandin Podziemski and Moses Moody. Sheppard was the best player on the floor when it mattered most.

And Golden State’s point-of-attack defense continues to be a weak component.

About that third quarter

After a mostly impressive first half in which they led throughout, the Warriors’ offense sputtered to only 17 points, recording only five assists, in the third quarter.

The Warriors shot 7-of-19 from the field, including 0-of-8 from beyond the arc, in the quarter. They went from shooting very respectably to chucking up rocks.

Meanwhile, the Rockets rang up 27 points, trimming Golden State’s 12-point halftime advantage to two (76-74) and sending a wave of restlessness through the sellout crowd. 

It was as if the Rockets remembered they are the league’s best rebounding team in the NBA and went to work on the glass while also turning Warriors’ turnovers into fast-break buckets. Moreover, the Warriors got the worst of the whistles, sending the Rockets to the line for 10 free throws, which gave them time to set up their fourth-ranked defense.

Warriors make early statement but can’t finish 

The Warriors wasted no time in making it clear this would be a battle despite Houston being three games ahead of them in the Western Conference. They made their first five shots and went up 20-11 on a Curry layup with 6:16 left in the first quarter.

Playing solid defense and holding their own on the glass (25-25) against the league’s premier rebounding team, Golden State never trailed and went into the locker room holding a 59-47 lead.

Green not only frustrated Sengun but also outscored Houston’s talented young center 10-8 before intermission. While Sengun was minus-21 over 17 minutes in the first half, Green posted a plus-16 over 16 minutes. The biggest blemish in the first half was Golden State’s seven turnovers, which gifted the Rockets with 12 points – nearly one quarter of their total.

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What we learned as Steph Curry exits late in Warriors' NBA Cup loss to Rockets

What we learned as Steph Curry exits late in Warriors' NBA Cup loss to Rockets originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

BOX SCORE

SAN FRANCISCO – The Warriors were pushing toward a wire-to-wire victory Wednesday night, but the wire began fraying late in the third quarter and snapped in the fourth.

As the Warriors began fading, the Houston Rockets came back to own the second half and slap a 104-100 loss on the Warriors, sending their record back to .500 at 10-10. 

To make matters worse, Stephen Curry, attempting to take a charge in the fourth quarter, fell to the floor and came up limping. He tried to play through it but was subbed out with 35.2 seconds remaining.

Six Warriors scored in double figures, led by 21 points from Jimmy Butler III. Rookie Will Richard scored 18 points, Curry and Brandin Podziemski each finished with 14, while Draymond Green and Quinten Post each had 12.

The loss is the fourth in five games for Golden State, which is 1-2 on the homestand it hoped would be a source of recovery.

Second-year pro Reed Sheppard scored a game-high 31 points to lead the Rockets (12-4).

Here are three observations from a game that the Warriors are hoping won’t force their best player to the sidelines:

Warriors punished by Sheppard

With leading scorer Kevin Durant, averaging 24.3 points per game, unavailable while attending to a family matter, it figured Houston’s offense would be somewhat crippled.

It was, as No. 2 scorer Alperen Sengun was held to 16 points, six below his average, on 7-18 shooting from the field, including 0-of-4 from distance. No. 3 scorer Amen Thompson, averaging 17.9 points, was limited to 10.

The Rockets were saved by Sheppard, who averages 13.1 points but poured in a career-high 31 on 12-of-25 shooting, including 4-of-12 from deep. He added nine assists and five rebounds.

Sheppard got a few open looks, but also torched several defenders, including Brandin Podziemski and Moses Moody. Sheppard was the best player on the floor when it mattered most.

And Golden State’s point-of-attack defense continues to be a weak component.

About that third quarter

After a mostly impressive first half in which they led throughout, the Warriors’ offense sputtered to only 17 points, recording only five assists, in the third quarter.

The Warriors shot 7-of-19 from the field, including 0-of-8 from beyond the arc, in the quarter. They went from shooting very respectably to chucking up rocks.

Meanwhile, the Rockets rang up 27 points, trimming Golden State’s 12-point halftime advantage to two (76-74) and sending a wave of restlessness through the sellout crowd. 

It was as if the Rockets remembered they are the league’s best rebounding team in the NBA and went to work on the glass while also turning Warriors’ turnovers into fast-break buckets. Moreover, the Warriors got the worst of the whistles, sending the Rockets to the line for 10 free throws, which gave them time to set up their fourth-ranked defense.

Warriors make early statement but can’t finish 

The Warriors wasted no time in making it clear this would be a battle despite Houston being three games ahead of them in the Western Conference. They made their first five shots and went up 20-11 on a Curry layup with 6:16 left in the first quarter.

Playing solid defense and holding their own on the glass (25-25) against the league’s premier rebounding team, Golden State never trailed and went into the locker room holding a 59-47 lead.

Green not only frustrated Sengun but also outscored Houston’s talented young center 10-8 before intermission. While Sengun was minus-21 over 17 minutes in the first half, Green posted a plus-16 over 16 minutes. The biggest blemish in the first half was Golden State’s seven turnovers, which gifted the Rockets with 12 points – nearly one quarter of their total.

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What we learned as Kings' bad habits return in streak-snapping loss to Suns

What we learned as Kings' bad habits return in streak-snapping loss to Suns originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

SACRAMENTO – Two days after maybe their most inspiring victory of the season, the Kings got into the wrong holiday spirit against the Phoenix Suns and laid an egg at Golden 1 Center, losing 112-100 on Wednesday night.

The game started out brutal, got a little bit better for a few brief moments in the second half until the Suns ultimately prevailed and ended the Kings’ first winning streak of the season, albeit it was only two.

Playing again without do-it-all center Domantas Sabonis and Dennis Schroder, Sacramento struggled to gets much going consistently on offense and allowed Phoenix to have its way in the paint almost all evening.

Keegan Murray provided a few of the highlights with 19 points and eight rebounds, including back-to-back 3-pointers that helped the Kings get within single digits in the third quarter.

Russell Westbrook had 19 points and eight rebounds, Malik Monk scored 15, Precious Achiuwa had 14 and Zach LaVine added 13.

The Kings remained winless (0-3) in NBA Cup play while the Suns improved to 3-0.

Sacramento trailed the entire game but made it close late.

Westbrook connected on his third 3-pointer of the night that pulled the Kings within 93-84 with 8:34 remaining.

That in itself is encouraging.

The Suns led by 25 at the end of the first quarter and were on pace to win 164-64. The Kings showed a lot more fight in the second half, and although they fell short, it was infinitely better than the way the night began.

The Kings fell to 5-14. They were 9-10 after 19 games last season, about a month before the decision to fire then-coach Mike Brown.

Here are the takeaways from Wednesday:

Pre-Tryptophan Effects

The game started about 17 hours before most folks were to gather for the holiday feast, but it sure appeared that the Kings’ players might have gotten to the turkey a little early because they came out as if they were in a tryptophan coma.

Phoenix built an 18-point lead in the first quarter when a soft chorus of boos rained down from the Golden 1 Center crowd. The gap extended to 25 points at the half, then 2 1/2 minutes into the third quarter, the Suns had the Kings doubled up with a 46-23 lead.

That went on all night, as Sacramento seemed a step or two behind. As a result Phoenix was able to get its fastbreak initiated quicker and got to the rack for easy tip-ins.

Missing The Big Fella

The Kings haven’t been a very good rebounding team all season, and things have continued in the wrong direction since Sabonis got hurt. The Suns, who have been marginally better than Sacramento on the boards, continued that trend the night before Thanksgiving when they feasted all night in the paint.

At one point late in the first half, Devin Booker missed a deep 3-pointer that bounced off the front of the rim. Three Kings players were positioned for the rebound only to see Phoenix’s Jordan Goodwin sneak through to get the putback.

Backup center Drew Eubanks started and was decent — 10 rebounds and four points in 14 minutes — but his impact was minimal and he finished minus-12.

With Sabonis expected to miss at least two more weeks, the Kings need to more from the interior on both ends.

Back That (Point Guard) Thing Up

With Schroder unavailable because of a sore hip, the Kings turned to Keon Ellis to handle the majority of minutes at backup point guard, and he had mixed results with six points and one assist.

Monk also took a crack at it and was much more effective. The former Sixth Man of The Year runner-up was more in flow with the rest of the offense and made several clutch buckets in the second half, including a 3-pointer that pulled the Kings within 83-73 heading into the fourth quarter.

The result was predictable.

Sacramento had only five assists on 18 buckets in the first half and finished with 20. Nine different players had at least one assist but no one had more than three.

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Blue Jays, ex-Padre Dylan Cease agree to $210M, 7-year deal: AP source

Blue Jays, ex-Padre Dylan Cease agree to $210M, 7-year deal: AP source originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

Free-agent pitcher Dylan Cease and the Toronto Blue Jays have agreed to a $210 million, seven-year contract, a person familiar with the negotiations told The Associated Press on Wednesday night.

The person spoke to the AP on condition of anonymity because the deal was pending a physical and had not been announced.

Cease would join a terrific rotation with the reigning American League champions. The right-hander, who turns 30 next month, went 8-12 with a 4.55 ERA in 32 starts last season for the San Diego Padres. He struck out 215 batters and walked 71 in 168 innings.

Cease spent his first five years with the Chicago White Sox, including a 2022 season in which he went 14-8 with a 2.20 ERA despite leading the majors in walks. He finished second in AL Cy Young Award balloting.

After one more year in Chicago, he was traded to San Diego in March 2024 and went 14-11 with a 3.47 ERA that season, finishing fourth in NL Cy Young Award voting.

His numbers on the mound slipped this year but he still reached 32 starts for a fifth straight season.

Cease has also had five consecutive years with at least 214 strikeouts, which helps offset his penchant for walks.

Cease was one of the top free-agent pitchers on the market this offseason. He’s set to join the Blue Jays, who won the AL East this year and advanced all the way to Game 7 of a thrilling World Series before losing to the Los Angeles Dodgers 5-4 in 11 innings.

Toronto’s rotation already features Kevin Gausman, Trey Yesavage, Shane Bieber and José Berríos. Chris Bassitt and 41-year-old Max Scherzer, the three-time Cy Young Award winner who started Game 7 of the World Series, became free agents this month.

AP Baseball Writers Noah Trister and Mike Fitzpatrick contributed to this report.

Why Sonny Gray is capable of being Red Sox' No. 2 starter in 2026

Why Sonny Gray is capable of being Red Sox' No. 2 starter in 2026 originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

The Boston Red Sox made their first major move of the offseason on Tuesday, acquiring three-time All-Star right-hander Sonny Gray in a trade with the St. Louis Cardinals. Gray will add much-needed depth to Boston’s starting rotation, but what kind of upside does the 36-year-old offer at this stage of his career?

Red Sox chief baseball officer Craig Breslow clearly still thinks highly of the 13-year veteran as he parted ways with right-hander Richard Fitts and promising left-handed pitching prospect Brandon Clarke. Gray is owed $41 million in 2026, but the Cardinals will pay $20 million of that hefty salary. So with a price tag of about $21 million, the Red Sox will owe Gray roughly what they would have paid Lucas Giolito had they extended the fellow righty a qualifying offer.

Gray makes perfect sense as a Giolito replacement, and contrary to popular belief, he’s still capable of taking on the No. 2 starter role behind Cy Young runner-up Garrett Crochet next season if Boston doesn’t add another big arm. Here’s a deeper dive into Gray’s recent numbers, which should make Sox fans optimistic about Breslow’s latest move.

Stats show Gray was unlucky in 2025

A quick glance at Sonny Gray’s Baseball Reference page may leave some Sox fans scratching their heads. His 2025 ERA (4.28) marked his worst since 2021, and his 1.23 WHIP was his highest since 2018. However, a closer look shows he may still have some of his All-Star stuff.

Gray’s FIP last season was a respectable 3.39, so a good chunk of those runs that contributed to his 4.28 ERA were out of his control. That was the fourth-largest FIP/ERA gap among qualified right-handed starters in 2025.

Sticking to the idea of Gray as a Giolito replacement, Giolito was the antithesis of Gray in 2025. He finished the campaign with a rock-solid 3.41 ERA but a 4.17 FIP, indicating he had some luck on his side.

Tarik Skubal, Garrett Crochet… Sonny Gray?

In 2025, Gray struck out 201 hitters while walking only 38 over 32 starts. Those impressive totals gave him the best strikeout-to-walk ratio in the National League and the fourth-best in MLB, trailing only Tarik Skubal, Garrett Crochet, and Bryan Woo.

That was no fluke. In 2024, Gray notched 203 strikeouts and 39 walks over 28 starts. He and Crochet are among the five MLB pitchers to record at least 200 strikeouts in each of the last two seasons, per ESPN.

A stabilizing presence

Unlike some of the veteran hurlers Boston has brought in over the last few years, Gray has been remarkably durable. Age hasn’t changed that as the 36-year-old made 32 starts in 2023, 28 in 2024, and 32 again in 2025. He has pitched 166 or more innings in each of the past three seasons.

Even if he’s no longer an All-Star-caliber arm, Gray should provide value as an innings eater who can post every fifth day.

Projections love Gray for 2026

Steamer projections, which are widely used to predict future performance in baseball, are high on Gray for next season. The model has Gray finishing 2026 with a 3.68 ERA, a 3.44 FIP, and a 3.9 fWAR that ranks 10th among MLB starters and fifth in the AL. If these projections are even remotely accurate, Gray profiles as a legitimate No. 2 for the Red Sox.

That said, Breslow and Co. shouldn’t shy away from adding another impact arm (Joe Ryan, anyone?) to the mix.

Knicks' Landry Shammet to miss at least a month with sprained shoulder

Landry Shamet has been one of the success stories for the Knicks this season, returning to the team on a veteran minimum contract and carving out a key rotation role, averaging 9.3 points a game and shooting 42.3% from 3-point range.

Now he will be out at least a month with a right shoulder sprain, a story broken by Shams Charania of ESPN and since confirmed by other reporters. Shamet will be re-evaluated in four weeks.

While a month is a long time, this qualifies as good news. Shamet separated that shoulder a year ago and if he separated it again it likely would have meant surgery that might have cost him the rest of the season. While the Knicks have yet to confirm the injury (in classic Knicks fashion), the return timeline suggests a sublexation — a temporary, partial dislocation where the shoulder head partially slides out of the socket and is quickly put back in — rather than another full dislocation. The hope is that rebab, which has already begun, is all Shamet will need.

The injury occurred Saturday in Orlando, when Shamet was pressuring Jalen Suggs as he brought the ball up the court and ran full speed into a screen by Wendel Carter Jr. at midcourt. Shamet went to the ground, got up grabbing his shoulder and ran straight to the Knicks locker room, not to return in that game.

Shamet, 28, returned to the Knicks this season on a one-year, veteran's minimum contract and will be a free agent next summer.

With Shamet out, expect to see a lot more Miles McBride, Jordan Clarkson and Tyler Kolek.

Top 100 Hockey Players 21-And-Under: 41 To 60

The online countdown of the top 100 hockey players aged 21-and-under continues.

The Hockey News' Prospects Unlimited issue's annual ranking of hockey's youngest talent is compiled by Ryan Kennedy, and while he uses our Future Watch rankings as a resource, this is a completely independent compilation.

Future Watch is based on a survey of NHL scouts, while the PU Top 100 is cobbled together by Kennedy based on his projections of what the players will be once they hit their primes.

Since different positions have different prime years, take that to mean we are projecting how good these forwards will be when they are 23 or 24 years old, the defensemen when they are 24 or 25 and the goalies when they are 25 or 26.

The birth year cutoff for this year’s list is 2004. Ages noted are as of Oct. 1.

As we share the top 100 list on TheHockeyNews.com, you can see the full list with player bios and draft information for each of them right now by being a subscriber to The Hockey News and accessing the Archive or by opening the magazine if you've already received it in your mailbox.

Catch up on the players ranked 61st to 80th and 81st to 100th. Here's the next batch.  

60. Jackson Smith, D, 18 years old, Columbus Blue Jackets
Penn State (Big Ten)

59. Trey Augustine, G, 20, Detroit Red Wings
Michigan State (Big Ten)

58. Dmitri Simashev, D, 20, Utah Mammoth
Utah (NHL)

57. Kevin Korchinski, D, 21, Chicago Blackhawks
Rockford (AHL)

56. Tynan Lawrence, C, 17, Muskegon Lumberjacks (USHL)
NHL Draft: 2026

55. Denton Mateychuk, D, 21, Columbus Blue Jackets
Columbus (NHL)

In his second season with the Columbus Blue Jackets, Denton Mateychuk has already made an impact on and off the ice. If he continues along that path, a hometown billboard will be next.  Go to the full feature on Mateychuk by clicking here

54. Mikhail Yegorov, G, 19, New Jersey Devils
Boston Univ. (HE)

53. Max Penkin, C, 16, Adler Mannheim (Ger.)
NHL Draft: 2027

52. Ivar Stenberg, LW, 18, Frolunda HC (Swe.)
NHL Draft: 2026

51. Mason West, C, 18, Chicago Blackhawks
Fargo (USHL)

Jiri Kulich (Timothy T. Ludwig-Imagn Images)

50. Jiri Kulich, C, 21, Buffalo Sabres
Buffalo (NHL)

49. Gabe Perreault, RW, 20, New York Rangers
Hartford (AHL)

48. Isaac Howard, LW, 21, Edmonton Oilers
Bakersfield (AHL)

47. Alexis Joseph, C, 16, Saint John Sea Dogs
NHL Draft: 2027

Thanks to his size and skill, Sea Dogs center Alexis Joseph has pushed his way into the debate over who'll be the No. 1 pick in 2027. Go to the full feature on Joseph by clicking here.  

46. Marco Kasper, C, 21, Detroit Red Wings
Detroit (NHL)

A quick study after making his NHL debut last season, Marco Kasper has already established himself as a big part of the Detroit Red Wings' core. With the trust of his coaches and teammates already on his side, the future looks bright. Go to the full feature on Kasper by clicking here.  

45. JP Hurlbert, RW, 17, Kamloops Blazers (WHL)
NHL Draft: 2026

44. Berkly Catton, C, 19, Seattle Kraken
Seattle (NHL)

43. Jacob Fowler, G, 20, Montreal Canadiens
Laval (AHL)

Logan Cooley (Rob Gray-Imagn Images)

42. Logan Cooley, C, 21, Utah Mammoth
Utah (NHL)

41. James Hagens, C, 18, Boston Bruins
Boston College (HE)


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