Mets promoting top prospects Jonah Tong, Jett Williams, Carson Benge, Ryan Clifford to Triple-A Syracuse: report

The Mets are promoting four prospects in Joe DeMayo's midseason top 30 for SNY -- infielder/center fielder Jett Williams (No. 1), right-handed pitcher Jonah Tong (No. 2), outfielder Carson Benge (No. 3) and first baseman Ryan Clifford (No. 6) -- from Double-A Binghamton to Triple-A Syracuse, according to a report Sunday by The Athletic's Will Sammon.

Outfielder A.J. Ewing (No. 9) is also going to Binghamton from High-A Brooklyn, Sammon reported.

Tong, 22, allowed one run on three hits while striking out eight over five innings Sunday in Binghamton's 2-0 loss to the Yankees-affiliated Somerset Patriots. He is 8-5 with a 1.59 ERA and 0.92 WHIP in 20 starts for Binghamton this season.

The 21-year-old Williams was the Mets' No. 14 overall pick in the first round of the 2022 MLB Draft. Through 96 games this season for Binghamton, he is slashing .281/.390/.477 with 10 home runs and 37 RBI.

Benge, 22, was New York's first-round pick in 2024 at No. 19 overall. Promoted to Binghamton June 23, Benge has slashed .317/.407/.571 with eight home runs and 23 RBI through 32 Double-A games.

Also 22, Clifford is slashing .243/.355/.493 with 24 home runs and 75 RBI through 105 games this season for Binghamton.

Ewing, meanwhile, is 21 and enjoying a breakout year after getting promoted from Low-A St. Lucie to Brooklyn. Through 78 games for Brooklyn, he is slashing .288/.387/.388 with two home runs and 26 RBI.

Know Your Enemy, Sabres Central Edition: Are Boosted Blues Bound To Beat Buffalo?

Rasmus Dahlin (left); Jake Neighbours (right) -- (Jeff Curry, USA TODAY Images) 

The Buffalo Sabres are facing enormous pressure to end their 14-year Stanley Cup playoff drought next season, and it's not hyperbole to say that the Sabres can't afford so much as a single off-night if they're going to be a playoff team. Every game really counts, and Buffalo needs to beat many above-average squads if they're going to earn a playoff berth in the highly-competitive Atlantic Division.

As such, the Sabres will be worth watching every game, because every game matters. And so we're examining each of Buffalo's opponents next year -- who each team has added, when they'll square off this year, and other relevant info -- and we're now well into the Central Division, witht the St. Louis Blues. The Blues are a strong team that didn't play well against Buffalo last year, but with some notable changes, that could change in the Blues' favor this time around. So let's get down to business, and break down the Sabres/Blues rivalry.

BUFFALO SABRES VS. ST. LOUIS BLUES

NEW BLUES PLAYERS: Pius Suter, C, Nick Bjugstad, C; Logan Mailloux, D

2024-25 SERIES: Sabres 2-0-0, Blues 0-1-1

2025-26 GAMES AGAINST EACH OTHER:  November 6 at Buffalo; December 29 at St. Louis

CAN THE SABRES BEAT THIS TEAM?  There's a neat sense of deja vu when it comes to the Sabres and Blues playing each other this year and last year. On Dec. 29, 2024, Buffalo played St. Louis in St. Louis for their final game against each other. And on Dec. 29, 2025, the Sabres will be playing the host Blues. for their final game of next season. You don't see that every year.

In any case, the Blues came on strong late in the season last year to earn a Western Conference wild card playoff berth, but when they did get to the post-season, the Blues blew a late lead and lost Game 7 to the Winnipeg Jets, ending St. Louis' season in the first round. For as great a story as they were on that late-season run, the Blues showed their deficiencies in falling to the Jets.

So, armed with as much salary cap space as he could muster, Blues GM Doug Armstrong set out to bolster his lineup this summer. And he did just that, strengthening St. Louis down the middle, and giving an opportunity to a young defenseman he acquired at a fairly high price.

Know Your Enemy, Sabres Central Edition: Will Buffalo Sweep Series Vs. Sub-Par Nashville Predators Next Season?Know Your Enemy, Sabres Central Edition: Will Buffalo Sweep Series Vs. Sub-Par Nashville Predators Next Season?The NHL's 2025-26 schedule has been out for a while now, and THN.com's Buffalo Sabres site has been analyzing every team the Sabres will take on next season. We've worked our way through the Eastern Conference teams, and we're currently focusing on the Central Division teams. And in today's file, we're turning our attention to the Nashville Predators.

At center, Armstrong added two veterans -- first and foremost, former Vancouver Canuck Pius Suter, and then, journeyman Nick Bjugstad. Both players combined cost Armstrong $5.875-million -- not bad at all, especially given how this year's market for centers was a seller's market.

Elsewhere, Armstrong added 22-year-old defenseman Logan Mailloux in a trade with Montreal that sent 22-year-old winger Zac Bolduc to the Canadiens. Mailloux will start the season on the Blues' third defense pair, but he has the chance to work his way up the depth chart by quickly adapting to the NHL level.

So, the Blues team the Sabres will face this year is going to be much tougher than the one Buffalo faced in December of last year. Indeed, while the Sabres handled their business against St. Louis last year, the Blues were a tale of two teams -- one that was inconsistent early in the year, and the other was a legitimate powerhouse that bulldozed its way into the playoffs. The Sabres managed to avoid that powerhouse Blues team, and this time around, they won't be so fortunate.

Know Your Enemy, Sabres Central Edition: Will Superstar Kaprizov And Minnesota Wild Roll Over Sabres?Know Your Enemy, Sabres Central Edition: Will Superstar Kaprizov And Minnesota Wild Roll Over Sabres?The NHL's 2025-26 season is nearly here, and here at THN.com's Sabres site, we've been examining every one of the Buffalo Sabres' opponents next year. Earlier, we looked at the Atlantic Division's seven teams, followed by the Metropolitan Division's eight teams, and now, we're four teams deep in the highly-competitive Central Division. 

What we're ultimately saying here is that Buffalo will have a tall task trying to win both games against St. Louis next season. It's not out of the question that the Sabres can beat the Blues twice -- and to be sure, that's exactly what Buffalo should be aiming to do -- but if this St. Louis team is properly motivated, they're a handful for every NHL team, the Sabres included.

The Blues' many veterans won't forget that Buffalo beat them twice last year, and they'll want to avenge their losses to the Sabres. For that reason, St. Louis should expect to bounce back against Buffalo, and the Sabres need to prepare for a much tougher battle against the Blues next season.

Yankees' Aaron Boone: 'I wholeheartedly believe we are going to get rolling and turn this thing around'

The Yankees have lost three straight series and seven of their past nines games after they looked lifeless in Sunday's 7-1 finale against the Houston Astros, but manager Aaron Boone and his players maintain that a run is possible while New York clings to a postseason spot.

"Obviously, we're feeling it and we know we have to be better," Boone said after the Yankees (62-56) totaled three hits in the rubber match with Houston (66-52). "We know we have a much higher standard for ourselves and expectations. At the same time, we're in control of this.

"I wholeheartedly believe we are going to get rolling and turn this thing around. When it does, you start to really build that next layer of confidence where guys are kind of feeding off each other. It's all just talk right now, but that's how I feel about it. We've got to go do it."

The Yankees are 6.5 games behind the Toronto Blue Jays in the American League East Division. Even the second-place Boston Red Sox are 2.5 games ahead while New York holds a half-game lead over the Cleveland Guardians for the third wild card.

"The game is littered with dead and buried teams," Boone said. "We're in a playoff position right now, and we've been through a bad two months where we haven't performed at a level we need to. But look at last year, go back to the year before, year before. You can pick out a number of teams that are sitting in a worse position than we are right now that go on that run. We have the people to do that. No doubt in my mind. But just sitting here, it's talk right now and we haven't been good enough the last two months.

"But this is different than, say, even like '23 where I didn't think we were necessarily capable of that run that we needed to really get hot -- and we were out of position at that point. This is different. We're in a position right now where we're in control of things, we're in a playoff spot, technically, right now, and I believe we have the people to get it done. We've got to play consistent baseball, period."

Not helping the Yankees is the fact that left-hander Max Fried, New York's 2025 ace, has not won a start since July 29. Fried (12-4, 2.94 ERA) allowed four runs on eight hits in five innings of Sunday's 94-pitch, 64-strike start.

"That's just the way I've felt since I've come into the big leagues," Fried said of expecting to win. "I work hard and I only get to play once a week -- once every five, six games. So, when I take the ball, I want to go out there and I expect to win."

The Yankees are 1-4 in Fried's past four starts.

"Obviously, we're aware of it," Fried said. "We know that we're not performing to where we want to be or where we know that we can. We have a lot of really talented guys in here and we expect to win every day.

"So, when we come out and we lose, we're obviously frustrated and want to be able to be able to show that the talent and results can match up."

Aug 10, 2025; Bronx, New York, USA; New York Yankees designated hitter Aaron Judge (99) watches from the dugout in the fifth inning against the Houston Astros at Yankee Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Wendell Cruz-Imagn Images
Aug 10, 2025; Bronx, New York, USA; New York Yankees designated hitter Aaron Judge (99) watches from the dugout in the fifth inning against the Houston Astros at Yankee Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Wendell Cruz-Imagn Images / © Wendell Cruz-Imagn Images

A quick turnaround follows New York's 1-2 weekend with the Minnesota Twins coming to town for a three-game series that completes a six-game homestand.

"We've got a great team in this room," said Yankees captain Aaron Judge, who was 0-for-3 with a walk in Sunday's loss to the Astros. "Got a lot of great players, guys that have had their backs up against the wall before and in tough situations. So, every year you play here, you're going to have your back up against the wall.

"So, guys have been there and done that and just got to step up and do it on the field. We can sit here and talk about it. You can ask me how everything's going. But it's about what we do on the field."

New York is 20-31 since starting 42-25 through June 12.

"Yeah, it's tough, but there's no excuses," said Judge, who is slashing .337/.446/.691 with 37 home runs and 86 RBI through 108 games. "We've got to go out there and perform at our best, go out there and win baseball games. Fans are still packing out and showing support for us, and we've got to show out for them and just go out there and do our job. That's what it comes down to. It's we're not doing our job. We're not doing the little things to put ourselves in a good position to go out there and win baseball games.

"So, it's going to take all of us. It's going to take everybody in this room -- every reliever, every infield-outfield guy. So, we've just go to step up. That's what it comes down to. I wouldn't say the confidence has really changed. We have a lot of confident guys in this room, and we've just got to focus on what we can control and go out there and do it."

Dave Roberts criticizes Shohei Ohtani after Dodgers' frustrating loss to Blue Jays

Dodgers star Shohei Ohtani reacts after striking out with the bases loaded against Toronto at Dodger Stadium.
Dodgers star Shohei Ohtani reacts after striking out with the bases loaded in the ninth inning of a 5-4 loss to the Toronto Blue Jays at Dodger Stadium on Sunday. (Kevork Djansezian / Getty Images)

The Toronto Blue Jays did everything possible to hand the Dodgers a victory Sunday.

Their pitchers gave up 10 hits, including two home runs. They walked 13, a season-high for the Dodgers, twice loading the bases on free passes in the final two innings. At the plate, Toronto struck out 14 times.

The Dodgers, however, refused to accept the gift, giving up an eighth-inning lead in a 5-4 loss that dropped their lead over the San Diego Padres in the National League West to two games. The Padres trailed by six games less than three weeks ago.

“This is frustrating because I just felt there's no way we should lose this game today,” Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said. “We had them on the ropes numerous times. And for us not to win is so frustrating.”

Read more:Blake Snell turns in a performance befitting his 'Snellzilla' nickname in Dodgers' blowout win

How frustrating? The Dodgers were one for 10 with runners in scoring position. They left a season-high 16 men on base — six in the last two innings.

Every Dodgers starter reached base at least once. Yet they still lost.

Afterward, third baseman Max Muncy insisted the black cloud had a silver lining, even if no one else could see it.

“We were creating opportunities. So, you know, we were doing the first part of it,” he said. “We just weren't cashing in today. The positive you take out of it is we found a way to create a lot of opportunities.

“You just have to finish the job.”

That goes double for the Dodger relievers. Starter Tyler Glasnow was brilliant, striking out eight and allowing just two runs over 5⅔ innings, turning a 3-2 lead over to a bullpen that had to get 10 outs. Once again they couldn’t do it, with Blake Treinen and Alex Vesia giving up three solo home runs in the span of six batters.

Dodgers pitcher Tyler Glasnow delivers against the Blue Jays in the first inning Sunday.
Dodgers pitcher Tyler Glasnow delivers against the Blue Jays in the first inning Sunday. (Wally Skalij / Associated Press)

“You give good hitters pitches right down the middle, they’re going to do damage,” said Treinen, who came on in the eighth with a one-run lead and left five batters later trailing after back-to-back home runs by Vladimir Guerrero Jr. and Addison Barger.

“Sometimes we get away with making bad locations turn into outs. They made me pay for it and it cost us a game.”

He’s not the only one who had to pay. Because after Freddie Freeman walked with the bases loaded for the second time to tie the game in the eighth, Vesia came on to start the ninth with the score even again. Ernie Clement unevened it on Vesia’s first pitch, driving an 85-mph slider over the wall in left field to put Toronto ahead. It was the 65th homer Dodgers relievers have allowed this season; only two bullpens in the majors have given up more.

But the Blue Jays’ generosity knew no end, so Toronto tried to give the win back when reliever Jeff Hoffman loaded the bases with one out for Shohei Ohtani.

But after fouling off two tough full-count pitches from Mason Fluharty, a left-hander with a 5.15 earned-run average and Toronto’s eighth pitcher of the day, Ohtani waved at a sweeper outside the zone to strike out.

“The last thing I was thinking was he was going to strike out. ... We’ve got to come up with one right there," Roberts said. "Chasing the ball down below is something we can't have happen."

Mookie Betts followed by grounding into a force out to end the game.

Three innings earlier Ohtani, who had two hits, including his 41st homer of the season to run his hitting streak to a season-best nine games, was thrown out trying to steal third with two outs and Freeman at the plate, ending another Dodger threat.

“That was his decision,” Roberts said. “Not a good baseball play.”

Read more:In a battle of 3,000K stars, Clayton Kershaw outduels Max Scherzer in Dodgers' win

Now the Dodgers head to Anaheim for a three-game series with the Angels before returning home to face the Padres, likely with the division lead at stake.

The Dodgers have been faltering since July 1, going 15-18. San Diego has been on fire, going 21-13 over the same span. Among NL teams, only the Milwaukee Brewers have been better.

While San Diego has the most saves (39) and the best bullpen ERA in baseball (3.04), Dodgers relievers rank 21st (4.24).

And while the Padres got better at last month’s trade deadline, making five trades that netted them reliever Mason Miller and left-hander JP Sears from Oakland, first baseman/outfielder Ryan O’Hearn and left fielder Ramón Laureano from the Orioles and catcher Freddy Fermin from the Royals, the Dodgers barely tinkered around the edges. Their major acquisition, reliever Brock Stewart, has given up six hits and two runs in 3⅔ innings.

The Padres went all in. The Dodgers did not.

Talk about frustrating.

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

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Justin Rose wins nail-biting playoff against JJ Spaun to claim FedEx Cup title

  • Run of late birdies sets up Rose’s victory in Memphis

  • At 45 is oldest European to win on PGA Tour in modern era

Justin Rose produced a sensational finish at the FedEx St Jude Championship with six birdies in his last final eight holes to win a playoff against the US Open champion JJ Spaun.

The English golfer, who at 45 became the oldest European to win on the PGA Tour in the modern era, looked out of it after a bogey at the 12th dropped him to 12 under. That left Rose two off the pace with Tommy Fleetwood, the world No 1 Scottie Scheffler and Spaun ahead of him.

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Charges against Marcus Morris Sr. dismissed after markers to casinos paid off

The charges against former NBA player Marcus Morris Sr. for fraud involving outstanding debts to two Las Vegas casinos have been dropped after the markers were paid off, according to court documents reviewed by KLAS television 8 in Las Vegas.

Morris was arrested in Florida late last month on what were officially fraud charges related to insufficient funds to cover a total of $265,000 in lines of credit to gamble at the Wynn Las Vegas Hotel and Casino and the MGM Grand Hotel and Casino, with these issues dating back to 2024. The casinos simply wanted their money back, and once the lines of credit were repaid, the charges were dismissed.

From the start, Morris strongly denied that there was any malice or intent to defraud anyone involved, as he explained in a conversation with his twin brother Markieff Morris on their YouTube channel.

"Don't ever put my name with nothing but fraud. This is not fraud activity. I have never wrote a check to no casinos in exchange for money that I can put in my pocket. I wrote exchange for credit thinking that you know the source of the income and you know what I've done in the past years to pay it back plus put the money back that I chose to take from y'all to gamble with. So you know I want to just clear that up and then you could take it how you want."

This case is now in the past. Morris played 13 seasons in the NBA for the Rockets, Suns, Pistons, Celtics, Knicks, Clippers, 76ers and most recently, the Cavaliers. Morris did not play in the league last season and does not have a contract for the upcoming season.

Nationals beat Giants 8-0, spoil Justin Verlander’s 3,500th career strikeout

SAN FRANCISCO — CJ Abrams homered and the Nationals spoiled a milestone achievement by San Francisco’s Justin Verlander on Sunday as Washington beat the Giants 8-0.

Josh Bell and Paul DeJong had three hits apiece to highlight a 17-hit day for Washington. James Wood had a pair of two-run doubles as the Nationals won a series at Oracle Park for the fourth straight season.

Verlander (1-9), the three-time Cy Young Award winner who has struggled in his first season with the Giants, struck out the side in the first inning and became the 10th pitcher in MLB history with 3,500 strikeouts.

The milestone mark was the lone bright spot for the 42-year-old Verlander, who was unbeaten in five career starts against the Nationals before Sunday. He allowed 11 hits and five runs with six strikeouts and a walk.

MacKenzie Gore (5-12) had 10 strikeouts and pitched six scoreless innings for his first win since July 9. Cole Henry, PJ Poulin and Clayton Beeter each retired three batters to complete the three-hit shutout.

Abrams started Washington’s offensive onslaught in the second inning with a two-out home run off Verlander that hit the foul pole in right. That came three pitches after Wood doubled in a pair of runs.

Wood also connected for a two-run double off Spencer Bivens in the seventh.

Key moment

The Nationals seized the momentum with three consecutive hits with two outs that led to four runs in the second inning.

Key stat

Three of the hits allowed by Verlander had an exit velocity of 103.9 mph or faster.

Up Next

Giants ace RHP Logan Webb (10-8, 3.24 ERA) faces the Padres in San Diego on Monday.

Nationals RHP Cade Cavalli (0-0, 0.00) pitches against Royals LHP Bailey Falter (7-6, 4.14) on Monday in his second start since 2022.

Phillies going back to facing the National League after MLB record 21 interleague games in a row

ARLINGTON, Texas (AP) The Philadelphia Phillies are finally going back to facing their own league.

Philadelphia wrapped up an MLB record of 21 consecutive interleague games with a 4-2 win Sunday against the Texas Rangers to complete a three-game series sweep. The Phillies finished 13-8 in that span, and are 24-15 overall against American League opponents this season.

According to the Phillies, the previous MLB record was 15 in a row “done by hundreds of times by other clubs.”

Their game Monday night at Cincinnati will be the first for the Phillies against a fellow National League team since a 2-1 win at San Diego on July 13, the last game before the four-day All-Star break.

All seven of the Phillies' series since the All-Star break have been against AL opponents, accounting for nearly half of the 48 interleague games they will play all season. They have three more interleague series, all at home, against Seattle, Kansas City and then Minnesota to wrap up the regular season.

Why The Maple Leafs Can’t Afford To Trade Away Easton Cowan Or Other Top Prospects

As is normal, the Toronto Maple Leafs are a topic of discussion right now – specifically, when it comes to potential trades the Maple Leafs might be involved in. However, from this writer’s perspective, the Leafs can’t afford to throw in their remaining top young prospects in any trade. They’ve already mortgaged the future in recent years by parting ways with youngsters in their system, and they’re nearly completely bereft of high-end up-and-coming talent. And if that means they don’t go out and get a veteran like Calgary’s Nazem Kadri, so be it.

Indeed, the Leafs have said goodbye to many prospects of late: center Fraser Minten was dealt to the Boston Bruins for defenseman Brandon Carlo last season, and winger Nikita Grebenkin was shipped to Philadelphia for center Scott Laughton. While neither Minten nor Grebenkin will be all-stars anytime soon, they were valuable components of Toronto’s future.

And now, whether it’s OHL star winger Easton Cowan, defenseman Ben Danford or center Tyler Hopkins, the Leafs need to say “no” to including their top prospects in any deal. And that goes no matter what short-term fix we’re talking about for Toronto. Sure, you can probably get a few years out of 33-year-old Pittsburgh Penguins winger Bryan Rust or 32-year-old Penguins forward Rickard Rakell, but is that worth losing out on a decade-and-a-half of a crafty performer like Cowan? We don’t think so.

Similarly, the Flames are going to want an arm and a leg for Kadri, who we still see as a good fit for Toronto. But Leafs GM Brad Treliving has to keep in mind the long-term good of the franchise, and that means holding hard to at least a handful of talents their scouting department has hit home runs with.

That’s certainly the case with Cowan, who may not be the next coming of former Leaf Mitch Marner, but who nonetheless has more skill than most Leafs prospects, if not all Leafs prospects. Trading him should be a non-starter for Leafs management. Because before you know it, Toronto will be at the end of its competitive cycle, and at that point, Leafs fans will be crying out in agony if the Leafs’ cupboard is basically bare.

Tyler Kleven covers Easton Cowan. (Dan Hamilton-Imagn Images)

Thus, there has to be some restraint on Treliving’s behalf when it comes to trading away prospects. The Maple Leafs are indeed built to win now, but it doesn’t make sense to knowingly abandon Toronto’s chances of staying competitive regardless of where they are in any particular season. Treliving has to draw a line somewhere, and we’re at that point where the line has to be drawn.

The Leafs are almost assuredly going to be a playoff team next season. But giving away everything in their prospect drawer just isn’t good management. There needs to be at least a few solid young players in Toronto’s system – and that can’t happen just to acquire the veteran-of-the-moment.

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Vancouver Canucks 2025–26 Season Series Preview: Pittsburgh Penguins

Welcome back to another Vancouver Canucks 2025–26 season series preview. In this article series, The Hockey News - Canucks site previews Vancouver’s team series matchups for the season in chronological order. Last time, we looked at what the Canucks will face in the Washington Capitals. Today, let’s preview their season matchups against the Pittsburgh Penguins.  

2024–25 Season Stats 

Team Stats: 

Record: 34–36–12

Points: 80

Standings placement: 7th in Metropolitan Division

PP%: 25.8% (6th) 

PK%: 77.8% (18th) 

Goals: 

Rickard Rakell (35)

Sidney Crosby (33)

Bryan Rust (31)

Evgeni Malkin (16)

Kevin Hayes (13)

Assists: 

Sidney Crosby (58)

Erik Karlsson (42)

Rickard Rakell (35)

Evgeni Malkin / Bryan Rust (34)

Kris Letang (21)

Points: 

Sidney Crosby (91)

Rickard Rakell (70)

Bryan Rust (65)

Erik Karlsson (53)

Evgeni Malkin (50)

Goaltenders: 

Tristan Jarry

Record: 16–12–6

GAA: 3.12

SV%: .893

SO: 2

Points: 1A 

Joel Blomqvist

Record: 4–9–1

GAA: 3.81

SV%: .885

SO: N/A

Points: N/A

Artūrs Šilovs

Record: 2–6–1

GAA: 3.65

SV%: .861

SO: N/A

Points: N/A

2025 Free Agency Rundown 

The Penguins are in a curious position as a team, as they still have members of their Stanley Cup runs of the 2010s but don’t look to be contenders anytime soon. Canadian icon Crosby has expressed his desire to stay in Pittsburgh, and as a result, veteran players such as Letang and Malkin have been kept by the organization. Even so, the Penguins haven’t made the playoffs since 2022, and their free agency moves seem to indicate that this will continue to be the case. They signed forward Connor Dewar, Caleb Jones, and Anthony Mantha, as well as acquired Calder Cup Playoff MVP Šilovs in exchange for prospect Chase Stillman. 

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2025–26 Season Series Preview

As mentioned, the Penguins are one of those teams who are currently leaning towards the draft pick category rather than the playoffs. If not for the presences of Crosby, Malkin, Letang, and Rust, it wouldn’t be surprising if Pittsburgh was in the bottom pool of the league where the San Jose Sharks and Chicago Blackhawks are likely to be. One thing that makes Pittsburgh a bit less competitive is their question mark in the crease. Jarry will likely do the heavy lifting as a starter, which comes as a result of the team parting ways with Alex Nedeljkovic. While the Penguins do have options in Blomqvist and Šilovs, it’s undetermined whether either is ready for a full-time backup role in the NHL. 

Vancouver faces off against the Penguins for the first time this season on October 21, with the Canucks visiting Pittsburgh for a 4:00pm PT matchup. Pittsburgh is one of the potentially easier opponents they will face on this road trip, as Vancouver will also take on the Dallas Stars and the Capitals during this stretch. Their next matchup isn’t until January 25 back in Vancouver.  

2025–26 Games Against Vancouver

Game 1: October 21, 4:00pm PT @ PPG Paints Arena 

Game 2: January 25, 3:00pm PT @ Rogers Arena 

Nov 27, 2024; Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA; Pittsburgh Penguins center Blake Lizotte (46) moves the puck up ice as Vancouver Canucks right wing Conor Garland (8) chases during the third period at PPG Paints Arena. Mandatory Credit: Charles LeClaire-Imagn Images

Season Series Preview Articles  

Washington Capitals

Chicago Blackhawks

Dallas Stars

St. Louis Blues

Edmonton Oilers

Calgary Flames

Make sure you bookmark THN's Vancouver Canucks site and add us to your favourites on Google News for the latest news, exclusive interviews, breakdowns, and so much more. Also, don't forget to leave a comment at the bottom of the page and engage with other passionate fans through our forum. This article originally appeared on The Hockey News

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Carlos Mendoza: Mets 'can't be looking at the standings' after getting swept by Brewers, losing seventh straight

The Mets dropped Sunday's series finale at the Milwaukee Brewers, blowing a five-run lead on their way to a 7-6 walk-off defeat that leaves them with a season-high-tying seven-game losing streak.

"It's hard to describe -- off, frustrating, but we've got to turn the page," said New York manager Carlos Mendoza. "We've got to keep going. We've got to find a way to start getting a victory here. That wasn't a good showing there. They pretty much outplayed us."

Mendoza's Mets (63-55) have lost 11 of their past 12 games. They are 5.5 games behind the Philadelphia Phillies in the National League East Division and 1.5 games ahead of the Cincinnati Reds for the third wild card.

"We've got to go out and do it," Mendoza said. "We're going to keep saying it. The bottom line -- we've got to go out and do it. I'm going to keep saying we've got the talent, we've got the players. But until we start playing better and getting the job done, we continue to believe in the guys -- and we will. It's tough. I know it's tough right now. It's very frustrating. We are all very frustrated. But we've got to keep going. We've got to keep going. Nobody said it was going to be easy."

New York has Monday off before returning to Citi Field for a six-game homestand. The stretch begins with a three-game series against the Atlanta Braves, led by Tuesday's 7:10 p.m. opener on SNY.

"We haven't played well for quite a bit now, and that's what happens," Mendoza said. "We can't be looking at the standings. We've got to start getting the job done -- that simple. We can't sit here and start looking back. There's no looking back. Like I said, we've got to get the job done -- and we will. We'll turn it around."

The Mets turn to right-hander Clay Holmes (9-6, 3.46 ERA) Tuesday after southpaw Sean Manaea allowed four runs on six hits (one homer) while striking out five and walking two in four innings Sunday.

"It's a lot," Manaea (1-1, 4.33 ERA) said of the Mets losing seven in a row. "It's frustrating. No one wants to be here. But at the end of the day, we've just got to get through it. There's no way around it."

Closer Edwin Diaz, who got New York out of a two-out jam in the eighth inning before allowing Isaac Collins' game-winning home run to lead off the ninth, kept a positive outlook.

"It's tough," Diaz said. "We know we've got a really good team here. We've got a really good group. We've just got to stay together, stick together, keep playing baseball. We know we can turn it around. On Tuesday, we can come back and play really good baseball. So, just stay together and keep fighting."

Before the 11-of-12 slide, the Mets went on a season-high-tying seven-game winning streak from July 20-27. They have won six games or more four times this season, and Brandon Nimmo sees the potential for another one.

"We can go on a run," Nimmo said. "We've still got time. But it just takes putting it together, playing some good baseball. I don't think the division's slipping away. We're still within shot, and we've been known -- this team, specifically -- to go on runs. So, we can easily rattle off a winning streak, especially with the people that we've got in here. But, yeah, it's going to take, obviously, turning it around."

Flyers' Next Rebuild Step Hinges on Jamie Drysdale's Development

(Photo: Kyle Ross, Imagn Images)

How Jamie Drysdale plays in the 2025-26 season will, for better or worse, alter the path of this rebuilding Philadelphia Flyers team.

Drysdale, 23, was drafted sixth overall by the Anaheim Ducks in the 2020 NHL Draft with the expectation that the Erie Otters would eventually blossom into a franchise defenseman.

After all, Drysdale was blessed with elite skating ability, and his strong (relative) hockey IQ allowed him to use that skating to his advantage to dominate the junior ranks.

At the NHL level, though, there's been little to write home about so far.

Traded to the Flyers alongside a second-round pick (Jack Murtagh) for Cutter Gauthier in Jan. 2024, Drysdale has played more than 34 games in an NHL season just twice since 2020-21.

In his only two full seasons, the 23-year-old has finished the year with plus-minus ratings of -26 and -32, respectively. Excelling defensively has, unfortunately, proven to be as great a challenge as staying on the ice for the young Drysdale.

His -32 rating last season was the seventh-worst in the NHL, ahead of only Steven Stamkos, Connor Bedard, Barclay Goodrow, Rasmus Andersson, Tyler Bertuzzi, and Mason Lohrei.

For reference, the closest Flyers player was Matvei Michkov at -18, and the closest defenseman was Egor Zamula at -14.

One Flyers Prospect Nobody Is Talking About Ahead of 2025-26 SeasonOne Flyers Prospect Nobody Is Talking About Ahead of 2025-26 SeasonThe Philadelphia Flyers have quite a few roster spots ready to be filled by up-and-coming prospects next season, but there's one prospect who should be talked about much more.

And, for the sake of further comparison, a rookie defenseman like Emil Andrae finished with a -5 in 42 games, even with all the struggles he endured towards the end of his time in the NHL last season.

If Drysdale continues to struggle to this degree defensively, his career-high 32 points, as a watermark reference, won't be good enough to erase those crucial deficiencies.

There's hope, though, starting with an improved power play.

Drysdale played 152 minutes on the power play for the Flyers last season; Rasmus Ristolainen, Travis Sanheim, and Andrae each played between 54 and 65 minutes, comparatively.

In those 152 minutes, Drysdale was second to Ristolainen in on-ice shot attempts for per 60 minutes (84.87 for Drysdale, 93.71 for Ristolainen), and narrowly led all Flyers defensemen in expected goals for per 60 minutes  (6.57 expected goals to Sanheim's 6.47), per Natural Stat Trick.

The key is that Drysdale is far younger than both Ristolainen and Sanheim and a much more fluid skater.

It should be noted that, in all scenarios, Drysdale finished the 2024-25 season with just 63 shots on goal in 70 games, despite scoring 7 times (11.1% shooting percentage).

To become the most effective proprietor of offense he can be, the former No. 6 pick must become more aggressive and decisive and continue to work at getting pucks through traffic if he isn't using his legs to create for himself as he should be.

Drysdale, like Cam York and Andrae, tends to defer. A more aggressive approach and an improved shot would do wonders for his offensive production.

Away from the power play is where Drysdale must improve the most, however.

According to Natural Stat Trick, Drysdale allowed 2.52 expected goals per 60 minutes. For comparison, Luke Hughes (2.53), and Roman Josi (2.54) were in that same neighborhood.

The difference is that Drysdale was on the ice for 54.81 shot attempts per 60 minutes and 63.77 shot attempts against per 60 minutes.

For Hughes, it was 60.51 shots per 60 and 54.06 shots against per 60, and for Josi, it was 68.22 shots per 60 and 56.15 shots against per 60.

Hughes is no finished product, either, but for Drysdale to even reach that level, he must improve as a shot-suppressor and as a shot-creator.

Philadelphia Flyers Must Avoid This Trevor Zegras MistakePhiladelphia Flyers Must Avoid This Trevor Zegras MistakeIf the Philadelphia Flyers are hoping to get the absolute most out of important trade acquisition Trevor Zegras, they need to avoid the mistake the Anaheim Ducks made in each of the last two years before dealing him away.

Some responsibility falls on the Flyers' forwards, too, but the fact that Drysdale's plus-minus was so much worse than every other Flyers defender is enough to rule out coincidences and bad luck.

Looking ahead to the 2025-26 season, Drysdale will have, for better or worse, another fresh start under new head coach Rick Tocchet and his assistant, Todd Reirden.

Before their new Flyers venture, Tocchet and Reirden had names like Jakob Chychrun, John Carlson, Kris Letang, Brian Dumoulin, Marcus Pettersson, John Marino, and Jamie Oleksiak on their resumes.

And, while Tocchet has never directly been involved with coaching defensemen, he ran the power play in Pittsburgh for two Stanley Cup wins.

In Tocchet's two full seasons with the Vancouver Canucks, captain Quinn Hughes erupted for 92 points in 82 games and a Norris Trophy in 2023-24, then followed that up with 76 points in 68 games in an injury-marred 2024-25.

Before Tocchet arrived, Hughes's career-high in points was 68.

Now-departed associate coach Brad Shaw was regarded as a defensive savant during his time in Philadelphia, but I'd be remiss to not note that Sanheim, York, and Drysdale all stalled out or took backward steps last season.

We can't reasonably expect Drysdale to turn into a Hughes brother, Chychrun, or Letang overnight, but there's still hope for further development.

With one year remaining on his contract at a $2.3 million cap hit, the onus is on Drysdale to cement himself in the Flyers' future, or management will be right back to square one on defense.

Jen Pawol praised for work behind plate after breaking MLB umpire gender barrier

Umpire Jen Pawol calls a strike during a game between the Miami Marlins and Atlanta Braves at Truist Park.
Umpire Jen Pawol calls a strike during a game between the Miami Marlins and Atlanta Braves at Truist Park on Sunday. (Todd Kirkland / Getty Images)

Jen Pawol breezed through Sunday's Marlins-Braves game as if breaking a gender barrier was just another day on the job.

Considering Pawol became the first female umpire to work behind the plate in the majors, making unprecedented history appear to be routine was especially impressive.

“I think Jen did a really nice job,” Miami manager Clayton McCullough said after Atlanta's 7-1 win over the Marlins.

“I think she’s very composed back there. She handled and managed the game very well. And big day for her. Big day for Major League Baseball. I congratulated her again on that because it’s quite the accomplishment.”

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It was an impressive cap to a memorable weekend for Pawol. She made history in Saturday’s doubleheader as the first female umpire to work a regular-season game in the majors. She called the bases in the doubleheader before moving behind the plate on Sunday, placing her in the brightest spotlight for an umpire.

Pawol never showed any indication of being affected by the attention, even while knowing every call would be closely watched.

“Congrats to Jen, obviously,” said Braves left-hander Joey Wentz, who earned the win by allowing only one run in 5 1/3 innings.

Asked about Pawol's calls, Wentz said, “I try not to focus on the zone, to be honest with you. ... I thought it was good though.”

Umpire Jen Pawol stands at third base during a game between the Marlins and Braves on Saturday.
Umpire Jen Pawol stands at third base during a game between the Marlins and Braves on Saturday. (Brett Davis / Getty Images)

There were few opportunities for disputes as Wentz and Miami starting pitcher Cal Quantrill combined for only three strikeouts. The first called third strike came in the fifth inning, when Pawol used a fist pump when calling out Miami's Kyle Stowers on a pitch that was close to the edge of the plate.

McCullough was seen in the Marlins dugout with his palms held up as if asking about the pitch call. He said after the game it's not unusual to question a close called strike.

“Over the course of the game, there are a number of times that you just are going to be asking for clarity on one, if you aren’t sure,” McCullough said. “So it could have been that.”

The 48-year-old Pawol was called up as a rover umpire, so her next assignment in the majors has not been announced.

“I wish her the best moving forward as she continues to, I’m sure, hopefully one day be up full time, you know, a permanent big league umpire,” McCullough said.

Pawol also received positive reviews from Braves manager Brian Snitker, who on Saturday said, “You can tell she knows what she does.”

Pawol's work in the minor leagues began in 2016 when she was assigned to the Gulf Coast League. She worked in the Triple-A championship game in 2023 and in spring training games in 2024 and again this year.

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“We certainly didn’t call her up from A ball, right?” Quantrll said. “So yeah, I’m sure she was well prepared. And like I said I think, you know, part of the game moving forward is that if this is normal then we’re going to treat it normal, too. So, you know, I thought it was fine. I think she did she did a quality job. ... And yeah, I think she’d be very proud of herself. And, you know, it’s kind of a cool little thing to be part of.”

Pawol spoke to reporters on Saturday when she said, "The dream actually came true today. I’m still living in it. I’m so grateful to my family and Major League Baseball for creating such an incredible work environment. … I’m just so thankful.”

Pawol received cheers from fans on both days. On Sunday, some held up “Way to go Jen!” signs.

Odum writes for the Associated Press.

Get the best, most interesting and strangest stories of the day from the L.A. sports scene and beyond from our newsletter The Sports Report.

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Collins homers off Diaz in the 9th inning to give MLB-best Brewers a 7-6 walk-off win over Mets

MILWAUKEE (AP) — Isaac Collins hit a solo homer off Mets closer Edwin Diaz in the ninth inning and the MLB-best Milwaukee Brewers extended their winning streak to nine games with a 7-6, walk-off win over New York on Sunday.

The Brewers trailed 5-0 early and tied it a 6-all in the eighth on Joey Ortiz’s two-out RBI single off the glove of diving first baseman Pete Alonso.

After Nick Mears (3-3) tossed a scoreless top half of the ninth, Collins sent a 2-2 pitch from Diaz (5-2) 363 feet to right field for his eighth homer.

The Mets lost their seventh straight game and fell 5 1/2 games behind NL East-leading Philadelphia.

William Contreras had two homers for the Brewers, a solo shot to open a three-run fourth, and a two-run homer in the fifth, his 12th, to pull Milwaukee within 6-5.

The Mets scored in each of the first four innings for a five-run lead against Quinn Priester, who had won his previous 10 decisions.

New York scored two in the first on RBI singles by Juan Soto and Jeff McNeil. Brett Baty opened the second with his 12th home run and Ronny Mauricio’s RBI single made it 3-0 in the third.

Cedric Mullins led off the fourth with his 16th home run before the Brewers answered with three runs in the bottom half on Conteras’ homer and Ortiz’s two-run single with two out. Alonso’s RBI double put the Mets up 6-3 in the fifth.

Key moment

The Brewers had runners on first and third with one out in the seventh, but Tyler Rogers coaxed Andrew Vaughn into an inning-ending double-play grounder to short.

Key stat

Priester, who had not lost in 12 appearances, including nine starts, since May 13, was tagged for six runs and 10 hits in 4 1/3 innings.

Up next

RHP Freddy Peralta (13-5, 3.03) starts for the Brewers on Monday against Pirates LHP Andrew Heaney (5-9, 4.77).

The Mets are idle Monday before opening a three-game home series against Atlanta.