Can the Hurricanes pull the upset after sneaking into the field, or will Texas A&M move on to the Cotton Bowl?
Arizona State, Kenny Dillingham agree to extension amidst Michigan rumors
Aaron Boone: Yankees have really good roster right now, but it’s ‘probably not finished’
It’s been a quiet offseason so far for the Yankees.
With a number of openings still left to fill, it’s not a surprise to hear manager Aaron Boone tell reporters that the team is “probably not finished” at this point.
“I know we have a really good team right now,” the skipper said. “We have a lot of really good players on our roster -- it’s probably not finished, there will be some tweaks up until spring training.
“It takes more than just us to tango. It takes other clubs, obviously free agents and the opportunities they have in front of them -- however it lands, my expectation is we're going to be really good and that's how we'll prepare.”
New York certainly has a solid roster coming off a 94-win season, but the other AL East teams have already gotten stronger, with the Orioles and Blue Jays making big-time additions in free agency.
The Yanks, meanwhile, have only added Rule 5 pick Cade Winquest to their big-league roster.
They have been able to retain some pieces from last year, though -- bringing back Amed Rosario and Ryan Yarbrough on one-year deals, Trent Grisham on the qualifying offer, and having picked up Tim Hill's club option.
But they’ve also lost some key arms at the backend of their bullpen, with Devin Williams and Luke Weaver being the latest to leave for the Mets, and Ian Hamilton signing with Atlanta on Friday.
New York does, however, remain in the mix for a potential reunion with Cody Bellinger.
The sweet-swinging outfielder has been one of their top priorities all offseason long after a terrific first year in the Bronx that saw him pop 29 homers and drive in 98 runs.
Boone said he doesn’t know how things are playing out behind the scenes between the two sides, but he plans on reaching out to Bellinger around the holidays.
With or without him, New York will certainly need to bring in some bullpen help, and they are also looking to potentially make an addition to the rotation with numerous arms missing time to begin the season.
Merrill Kelly, Arizona Diamondbacks finalize two-year, a $40 million deal
PHOENIX — Merrill Kelly’s return to the desert is official after the Arizona Diamondbacks announced on Friday that a two-year, $40 million deal has been finalized.
The sides reached a tentative agreement on Sunday, but the deal was pending a physical. The right-hander will receive a $2 million signing bonus, a $17 million salary in 2026 and $21 million in 2027.
There is also a vesting option for 2028 that would become guaranteed as $12 million if he pitches 170 innings in 2027 and $14 million if he pitches 185 innings in 2027.
If traded, he would receive a $500,000 assignment bonus payable by the acquiring team.
Kelly also get a hotel suite on road trips.
The 37-year-old spent the first 6 1/2 years of his career with the Diamondbacks before the pending free agent was dealt to the Texas Rangers at this year’s trade deadline in July.
He was good for both teams, finishing with a combined 12-9 record and 3.52 ERA.
Kelly could open next spring as the D-backs No. 1 starter in a rotation that is expected to include Ryne Nelson, Brandon Pfaadt and Eduardo Rodriguez. Ace Corbin Burnes is still recovering from Tommy John surgery while 2023 All-Star Zac Gallen is a free agent and appears unlikely to re-sign.
Kelly’s return to the desert isn’t a huge surprise considering he’s a Scottsdale native and played at Arizona State.
The fan favorite was a key piece of the team that went to the World Series in 2023. He had a 12-8 record and a 3.29 ERA that season, adding a masterful performance in Game 2 of the World Series against the Rangers, which is the only game the D-backs win in the Fall Classic.
Kelly doesn’t have overpowering stuff but thrives with a six-pitch mix that keeps hitters off balance. He has carved out a solid MLB career despite not making his debut until he was 30 in 2019.
He played four seasons in South Korea from 2015 to 2018, going 48-32 with a 3.86 ERA.
Padres re-sign Michael King to three-year, $75 million deal; he can opt out after 2026, 2027
SAN DIEGO — Michael King is staying with the San Diego Padres.
The right-hander signed a three-year, $75 million contract that allows him to opt out after the 2026 and 2027 seasons.
As part of the agreement announced Friday, King gets a $12 million signing bonus in three $4 million installments, within 30 days of the deal’s approval by Major League Baseball, and on Jan. 15 in both 2027 and 2028.
He receives a $5 million salary next season and has a $28 million player option for 2027 with a $5 million buyout. If that is exercised, he could exercise a $30 million player option for 2028 with no buyout.
King also gets a hotel suite on road trips.
King, who turns 31 in May, went 5-3 with a 3.44 ERA in 15 starts for the Padres last season. He missed time on the injured list with a pinched nerve in his right shoulder and then later with left knee inflammation.
San Diego lost frontline starter Dylan Cease to Toronto in free agency this month, and Yu Darvish is likely to miss the entire 2026 season following elbow surgery. King, however, rejoins a rotation that also features Nick Pivetta and Joe Musgrove, who is expected back from Tommy John surgery.
King rejected a $22,025,000 qualifying offer from the Padres last month. They acquired him from the Yankees in the December 2023 trade that sent Juan Soto and Trent Grisham to New York.
In two seasons as a member of San Diego’s rotation, King is 18-12 with a 3.10 ERA. He made 30 starts and one relief appearance in 2024, going 13-9 with a 2.95 ERA.
King was primarily a reliever with the Yankees. He is 31-29 with a 3.24 ERA and seven saves in 161 games (64 starts) over seven major league seasons with New York and San Diego.
Lane Kiffin attempts to extend olive branch between Ole Miss, LSU after Jeff Landry chirp
Barkey impresses in NHL debut, but Flyers blow lead and suffer shootout loss
Barkey impresses in NHL debut, but Flyers blow lead and suffer shootout loss originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia
NEW YORK — Denver Barkey didn’t look out of place Saturday afternoon at Madison Square Garden.
Not at all.
Playing his first career NHL game, Barkey made a major impact, but it was spoiled by a blown lead as the Flyers stumbled to the Rangers, 5-4, in a shootout.
The Flyers were on the power play for 2:51 minutes in overtime and failed to convert.
“You’ve got to come up with a goal for the team there,” Trevor Zegras said. “Just not good enough.”
Artemi Panarin and Vincent Trocheck scored in the skills competition for New York. Zegras and Travis Konecny came up empty for the Flyers.
Rick Tocchet’s club scored two power play goals, an even strength goal and a shorthanded goal, all in the second period.
But the Flyers couldn’t nail down a 4-2 third-period lead. Mika Zibanejad tied the game for the Rangers with just 2:34 minutes left. It was a power play goal after Rasmus Ristolainen was penalized for hitting the puck over the glass.
“We’ve just got to learn how to handle pressure,” Tocchet said. “We knew at the beginning of the year it was something we were going to have to do. But we’ll take the point when we thought we should have had two.”
Zegras, Travis Sanheim, Owen Tippett and Rodrigo Abols provided the Flyers’ markers. Abols’ tally came on the penalty kill as the Flyers were nursing a one-goal lead. Sanheim made a great play to find him.
In the third period, Sanheim was left bloodied after taking a puck to the face. The 29-year-old defenseman had to exit before eventually returning.
The Flyers (17-10-7) finished their road trip 1-1-2. They couldn’t rebound from a bad 5-3 loss Thursday night to the Sabres. But they avoided dropping consecutive games in regulation, something they’ve done just once this season (Nov. 1-2).
“We’re only just past a third of the way in, so there’s still lots of hockey to be played,” general manager Danny Briere said an hour before puck drop. “We saw last game, a little bit of a bump in the road in Buffalo, didn’t have our best game, it’s going to happen, there are going to be ups and downs. We’re trying to stay even-keeled as much as possible.”
The Rangers (18-15-4) improved to just 5-10-3 at home.
“Metro Division matchup, you obviously want to get as many points as you can and not give any up,” Tippett said. “It’s one point. We’d like to have two, but there are things to work on.”
• Barkey made his NHL debut after being called up Friday from AHL affiliate Lehigh Valley.
“He won a lot of battles,” Tocchet said. “He’s a good player. I like him a lot.”
The 20-year-old’s parents and brother were in attendance after they arrived around 3 a.m. ET.
“I think there was a bunch of Toronto snow and their flight got delayed,” Barkey said, “but thankfully they’re here.”
In just a 23-second span of the second period, the winger picked up two assists as the Flyers flipped a 1-0 deficit into a 2-1 lead. Barkey had a primary helper on Sanheim’s game-tying power play goal before recording another one on Tippett’s go-ahead goal.
“A super skilled player,” Tippett said. “Brings a lot of energy.”
A little over three minutes later, Barkey drew a penalty and Zegras then padded the Flyers’ lead to 3-1 on the ensuing power play.
“I thought he was great,” Zegras said. “Obviously the offense was good, but he’s a really smart player, made a lot of plays, so I was very impressed.”
Not even three and a half minutes into the game, Barkey nearly scored his first goal. He had back-to-back looks right in front, but was denied by New York netminder Igor Shesterkin.
Barkey played on a line with Tippett and Sean Couturier. The 2023 third-rounder is just 5-foot-9 and around 170 to 175 pounds, but his hockey IQ and motor are excellent. He has opened eyes in Year 1 with the Phantoms.
“He came in, he played extremely well,” Briere said. “I think the biggest thing from the reports was his consistency. He was good night after night and has earned a look.”
• Samuel Ersson was in net for the Flyers as Dan Vladar missed the game with an upper-body injury.
The Flyers don’t believe the injury is serious. Briere even jokingly called it a “boo-boo.”
“He should be back, we hope, by Monday,” the Flyers’ GM said. “We don’t know for sure, but that’s what we’re hoping for.”
Ersson had 23 saves on 27 shots against the Rangers and wasn’t sharp in the third period.
Trocheck trickled one past him to make it 4-3. It was a shot that the 26-year-old goaltender knew he should have denied.
Panarin beat Ersson twice in regulation. He had the game-opening goal with 36 seconds left in the first period and then drew New York to within 3-2 during the second period before Abols scored at shorthanded.
Shesterkin stopped 28 of the Flyers’ 32 shots.
• The Flyers were also without key center Christian Dvorak. The 29-year-old is considered day to day with a lower-body injury.
“Just needs a few days,” Briere said. “He won’t be able to dress today, but we don’t expect him to miss, hopefully, no more than today.”
Garnet Hathaway was a healthy scratch for the first time this season.
It couldn’t have been an easy decision for Tocchet, even with the veteran winger’s drought offensively. Hathaway hasn’t recorded a point in 33 games.
“I think he’s had some tough moments, he’s trying to find his game,” Tocchet said. “But it’s not just him. He’s good when he plays with speed guys, so we’ve also got to help him, too.”
• The Flyers return home for a matchup Monday with the Canucks (7:30 p.m. ET/NBCSP).
Tocchet came to the Flyers from Vancouver, where he spent parts of the last three seasons.
Orioles acquire RHP Shane Baz in trade from Tampa Bay for 4 minor leaguers and a draft pick
The Baltimore Orioles acquired right-hander Shane Baz from the Tampa Bay Rays on Friday for four minor leaguers and a draft pick.
The 26-year-old Baz went 10-12 with a 4.87 ERA last season in 31 starts. It was his first full season after Tommy John surgery. He also went 4-3 with a 3.06 ERA in 14 starts in 2024.
Baltimore, which landed free agent slugger Pete Alonso with a $155 million contract, is also trying to remake its pitching staff after a poor 2025 and a trade that sent right-hander Grayson Rodriguez to the Los Angeles Angels.
Baz was a first-round draft pick by Pittsburgh back in 2017, and he was traded to Tampa Bay in 2018 in a deal that sent Chris Archer to the Pirates. He was part of the U.S. Olympic team in 2021 before making his big league debut later that year.
He dealt with elbow problems in 2022 and eventually needed Tommy John surgery.
Baz had a $1.45 million salary last season and is likely to double that for 2026.
In the trade, the Rays acquired catcher Caden Bodine, outfielder Slater de Brun, right-hander Michael Forret, outfielder Austin Overn and a competitive balance pick (No. 33) in next year’s draft.
The Orioles designated left-hander Josh Walker for assignment to make room on the 40-man roster.
Baltimore can keep Baz for at least three seasons before he would become a free agent. To get him, the Orioles gave up Bodine and de Brun, the 30th and 37th picks in this year’s draft. Bodine hit .326 in 11 games for Class A Delmarva.
The 21-year-old Forret went 2-2 with a 1.58 ERA in 74 innings across Class A and Double-A in 2025.
Also Friday, the Orioles announced their 2026 big league coaching staff under new manager Craig Albernaz: Pitching coach Drew French, assistant pitching coach Mitch Plassmeyer, pitching strategy coach Ryan Klimek and third base coach Buck Britton remain on the staff. The team has added bench coach Donnie Ecker, hitting coach Dustin Lind, assistant hitting coach Brady North, first base coach Jason Bourgeois, bullpen coach Hank Conger, infield coach Miguel Cairo and field coordinator and catching coach Joe Singley.
Championship roundup: Lampard ‘out of order’ as gestures spark melee
Coventry manager reacted to Southampton fans’ taunts
‘Their fans gave me a bit … I gave them a bit back’
Frank Lampard admitted he was “out of order” after he sparked a post-match melee following Coventry’s 1-1 draw at Southampton. The home supporters had targeted the visitors’ manager with abuse in the latter stages of the match and, after the full-time whistle, Lampard went on to the pitch and repeatedly gestured to them, which led to players reacting.
“I was probably emotional,” said Lampard of his reaction to being called “a shit Steven Gerrard”. “The fans had given me a bit in the last 10 minutes and I went on the pitch to give them a bit back. It was really out of order but I wouldn’t have had as long in this game if I wasn’t sometimes emotional on the pitch, and not a bad bloke off it.
Continue reading...Yankees’ Aaron Boone happy to see Luke Weaver land good deal in free agency: ‘He earned it’
Luke Weaver was a good Yankee.
In just about two years, the right-hander went from being a journeyman starter picked up off waivers to one of the more reliable late-inning setup men in baseball.
After a strong finish in 2022, he was spectacular during his first full season in the Bronx, pitching to a 2.82 ERA and 0.92 WHIP with 103 strikeouts over 84.0 innings of work.
He was able to build off that success to start last year, but ended up being forced to the sideline and missed an extended period due to a lingering hamstring issue.
The 32-year-old would return to the mound ahead of his initially scheduled timeline, but was never quite able to get back to that dominant groove, struggling mightily down the stretch.
He was unusable during the playoffs, allowing five runs in three ugly appearances.
With his contract expiring this winter, the Yanks showed some interest in potentially bringing him back, but they ultimately decided not to make him an offer in free agency.
After testing the open market, Weaver quickly found himself a new home on the other side of town, agreeing to a two-year pact with the crosstown rival Mets earlier this week.
While it’s a tough blow to the Bombers’ bullpen, Aaron Boone told reporters on Friday that he’s happy to see him receive a nice little increase from his previous deal.
“He got a really good deal that he earned,” the skipper said. “When we got him, it seemed like not a big move at the time, late in the ’23 season -- to turn into the reliever and the role he ended up having for us.
“He threw a lot of really big games and productive games over the last couple of years -- credit to him for going out there and making a little alter to his career and it truly paying dividends for him.”
Weaver finished with a 3.22 ERA, 0.99 WHIP, 12 saves, and 191 strikeouts over 129 appearances in pinstripes.
He’ll look to do the same, this time setting up for Devin Williams in orange and blue.
João Pedro rescues Chelsea draw as Newcastle squander two-goal lead
Eddie Howe is synonymous with tidiness, efficiency, time management and, above all, control. Given that there is nothing remotely slapdash, careless or wasteful about Newcastle’s manager, his team’s increasing penchant for losing often hard-won authority is proving the most puzzling of paradoxes.
Newcastle have developed a habit of throwing leads away this season and, 2-0 up thanks to a Nick Woltemade double, they were at it again.
Continue reading...Ohio University fires coach Brian Smith over ‘serious professional misconduct’
Mariners prepared new Met Jorge Polanco to see time at first base last season
The Mets brought in Jorge Polanco to give them a nice piece they could potentially bounce around the infield.
The veteran is expected to see a ton of time at first and DH this season, though.
Polanco has appeared in just one big league game at the position, but he does have some recent experience there.
According to Will Sammon of The Athletic, he worked with Mariners infield coach Perry Hill and others on the staff for over two months in mid-June for a potential transition this past season.
Hill told Sammon that those lessons included how to hold a runner on, how to get to the base without being stepped on, how to throw to second, and how to get back to the bag on a snap throw from the catcher.
Those skills were never brought into game action, though, as Seattle ended up with a bigger need at second, so Polanco spent the majority of his time there down the stretch.
Once he gets down to Port St. Lucie, he figures to be able to put them to the test.
Hill expects that there are still some things to work on and old habits the middle infielder will need to break, but he did tell Sammon that Polanco is an “A-plus person” and always showed up ready to work.
The 32-year-old will try to help fill the huge void left behind with Pete Alonso’s departure to the Orioles.
Former Blackhawks First-Rounder Traded To Canadiens
A former Chicago Blackhawks forward is on the move.
The Montreal Canadiens have announced that they have acquired former Chicago Blackhawks forward Phillip Danault from the Los Angeles Kings in exchange for a 2026 second-round pick.
Danault had been one of the NHL's top trade candidates, and the Canadiens were one of the clubs that he was heavily linked to. Now, with this move, the former Blackhawks forward is set to begin his second tenure as a member of the Canadiens.
Danault will be looking to bounce back with the Canadiens, as he has had a tough start to the 2025-26 season. In 30 games so far this campaign, he has recorded zero goals and five assists. This is after he had eight goals and 43 points in 80 games this past season with the Kings.
Danault kicked off his NHL career with the Blackhawks, as the Central Division club selected him in the first round of the 2011 NHL Entry Draft with the 26th overall pick. From there, Danault played two seasons with the Blackhawks from 2014-15 to 2015-16, where he recorded one goal and five points in 32 games.
Danault's time with the Blackhawks ended during the 2015-16 season when he was traded to the Canadiens with a 2018 second-round pick in exchange for Dale Weise and Tomas Fleischmann. He would break out and become a solid top-six two-way center with the Canadiens following the move.