The Premier League XI that deserves more credit, from Pickford to Trossard

England’s keeper and a 19-year-old French forward are part of our selection of players who are essential to their clubs

Unless his arms suddenly enjoy a miraculous growth spurt the T rex jibes will never fully be banished, but Jordan Pickford has been one of the Premier League’s most reliable goalkeepers for some time. His long passing and shot-stopping have always been of decent standard, but, over time, he’s developed his short game, able to keep the ball moving and begin attacks by picking out teammates at closer range. His handling is tidier, meaning mistakes are fewer, and he is no longer as affected by his emotions as he was in his youth.

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Canadiens: Dobes Speaks To The Media

Nearly a week after breaking down in front of the media following a 4-3 overtime loss to the New Jersey Devils, Montreal Canadiens’ netminder Jakub Dobes spoke to the media after practice on Wednesday.

The 24-year-old netminder was all smiles as he explained his reaction to the loss. Turns out that the youngster had lost to them last season and had promised himself that it wouldn’t happen again. The fact that it did, but that it also was in the same fashion in overtime, was the final drop in the bucket, and it pushed him over the edge.

For those who thought there might have been some lasting damage to the goaltender’s mood or confidence, rest assured that it’s already in the past. In fact, he said he was just fine when the team got on the plane back from New Jersey that night and confessed that his teammates had some fun with it at his expense. While he says he has no intention of changing his personality, he does concede that he may get better at handling results as he matures.

After watching Samuel Montembeault play the last two games, Dobes will be back in action on Thursday as the Canadiens will host the Dallas Stars. He took them on once last season and was named the second star of the game in a 3-1 win, posting a .970 save percentage.

The rookie netminder still hasn’t lost in regulation this season and has a 6-0-1 record with a 2.25 goals-against average (second in the league amongst goaltenders who have played at least seven games) and a .920 SV (fourth in the league amongst players who have played in at least seven games). His stats also make him the best rookie goaltender this season, edging Arturs Silovs from the Pittsburgh Penguins, who has a 2.45 GAA and a .916 SV with a 4-2-3 record.


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Flyers Player Development Taking Sour Turn, Sluggish Performances Piling Up

Almost a quarter of the way through the 2025-26 season, it's becoming clearer that the Philadelphia Flyers are still a far cry from the Stanley Cup-contending team they aspire to be.

Yes, the Flyers are in a playoff spot at the time of this writing, but they're also two points away from being the second-worst team in the Eastern Conference.

Teams like the Toronto Maple Leafs, Columbus Blue Jackets, Tampa Bay Lightning, and Florida Panthers have too much talent to lay dormant forever, though injuries are certainly taking their tolls on those teams.

And, when it comes to tiebreakers, the Flyers are tied with Buffalo for the fewest regulation wins (4) and have the second-fewest regulation and overtime wins (5).

If the team isn't currently thinking about the postseason, they'd be in the right frame of mind.

The Flyers aren't a bad team, necessarily, but they are painstakingly boring and still haven't found a way to consistently generate offense.

In the Rick Tocchet era thus far, the Flyers are dead last in the NHL in shots per game (24.6), tied for the third-fewest goals per game (2.56), and more generally have seen very little improvement from many of their core players.

Franchise player Matvei Michkov is at the heart of those issues, and it's not all his fault.

Porter Martone Doing Everything Flyers Needed to See in NCAAPorter Martone Doing Everything Flyers Needed to See in NCAAThe Philadelphia Flyers have to be thrilled with how Porter Martone has been developing on the ice and in the gym.

At 5-on-5, Michkov, 20, leads the Flyers in on-ice goals for per 60 minutes (3.15) and on-ice shooting percentage (12.05%) and ranks second in on-ice goals percentage (58.82%) and expected on-ice goals for per 60 (2.63), according to Natural Stat Trick.

The problem, however, is that Michkov is averaging just 11:55 a night at 5-on-5, which ranks ninth on the Flyers behind Travis Konecny, Sean Couturier, Owen Tippett, Noah Cates, Tyson Foerster, Christian Dvorak, Trevor Zegras, and Bobby Brink.

To put all of that information into layman's terms, the Flyers are generating and scoring the most with their Russian talisman on the ice, but he's barely playing third-line minutes.

And to wrap it up, Michkov is sixth in scoring amongst his 2023 draft classmates, while players like Leo Carlsson, Connor Bedard, and Will Smith have all taken off this season with 17 or more points. Michkov, on the other hand, is stuck at nine points and pacing for 47 on the year.

After hot starts, Foerster and Tippett have all but faded into obscurity, too.

The former, returning from an 11-day layoff due to injury, has managed just one goal and one point in his last five contests.

Foerster is on pace for 46 points, narrowly besting his career-high of 43 from last year, despite playing nearly two minutes more on average going from 16:52 a night to 18:24.

If the 23-year-old continues to feature exclusively as a checking-line forward, then he'll only ever be a checking-line forward who doesn't reach his full potential offensively. It's a self-fulfilling prophecy.

As for Tippett, his game has completely stalled out after scoring five times in the first six games of the season. Since then, he has one assist in his last 10 games.

Tocchet admitted recently that Tippett needs to "stay a little bit more focused in the game," but Tippett immediately went offside on what would've been a game-winning Konecny goal with 26 seconds left in a 1-1 game against the Edmonton Oilers on Wednesday night.

Flyers: Are We Headed Towards a Goalie Controversy?Flyers: Are We Headed Towards a Goalie Controversy?The push and pull between Sam Ersson and Aleksei Kolosov may force the Philadelphia Flyers into having an uncomfortable conversation about goaltending.

That goal, of course, didn't stand, and the Flyers lost 2-1 in overtime on an unfortunate and uncharacteristic error from Cam York.

Zegras's point-per-game pace and Konecny's resurgence are things to be happy with, as is Dan Vladar's .919 save percentage.

As for the young players, and the ones who didn't just arrive in Philadelphia this summer? It hasn't been perfect.

York and Jamie Drysdale look improved, but, as mentioned above, York did just lose them a game with a turnover, and Drysdale's game still lacks end product with seven points in 16 games.

Rookie forward Nikita Grebenkin, who has flashed promise and his playmaking chops at various times throughout the nascent season, didn't even play against the Oilers on Wednesday night.

That came at the cost of 6:59 of ice time for Nick Deslauriers, 7:50 of ice time for Garnet Hathaway, and 6:21 of ice time for Rodrigo Abols, who also went 0-for-5 on faceoffs.

Overall, the way the Flyers are developing their current players and the direction of the rebuild overall has clearly taken a downward turn.

Whether that is temporary or not remains to be seen, and the sky isn't falling.

As far as reinvigorating interest and excitement in the Flyers? The progress amongst the fans, at least those with voices on social media, has been inscrutable.

Panthers kick off extended home stretch with battle against Alex Ovechkin, Capitals

The Florida Panthers are ready to kick off an extended stretch of home games after a very road-heavy opening schedule.

Only seven of Florida’s first 16 games have come at Amerant Bank Arena, but those numbers are going to be skewed in the opposite direction in the not-too-distant future.

That’s because in the coming weeks, the Panthers will play 11 of their next 12 games on home ice.

The fun will start on Thursday night when they welcome the Washington Capitals to Sunrise for the first of their two visits to South Florida.

So far this season, the Capitals, much like the Panthers, are making their way through a so-so start to their campaign.

Both teams hold identical 8-7-1 records through 16 games.

Florida has been great at home but didn’t start playing consistency well on the road until the past week.

After starting the season with three straight home wins, the Cats have meandered around the .500 mark since.

Similarly, the Capitals got off to a great start as well, winning four of their first five and six of eight to jump out to a 6-2-0 mark.

Since then, however, Washington has struggled.

They went through a stretch where they lost six of seven before picking up a big road win on Tuesday in Carolina.

One constant bright spot for the Caps throughout the young season has been the play of goaltender Logan Thompson.

He holds a respectable 7-4-0 record, but his statistics – a 1.56 goals against average and .935 save percentage – are Vezina-worthy.

It wasn’t until his tenth start of the season, last Saturday in Tampa, that Thompson allowed more than two goals in a game.

He’s expected to patrol the crease for the Caps on Thursday, and his likely opponent will be Sergei Bobrovsky.

Here are the Panthers projected lines and pairings for Thursday’s matchup with Washington:

Carter Verhaeghe – Evan Rodrigues – Sam Reinhart

Eetu Luostarinen – Anton Lundell – Brad Marchand

Jesper Boqvist – Sam Bennett – Mackie Samoskevich

A.J. Greer – Cole Schwindt – Luke Kunin

Gus Forsling – Aaron Ekblad

Niko Mikkola – Seth Jones

Dominic Sebrango – Jeff Petry

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Photo caption: May 5, 2022; Sunrise, Florida, USA; Washington Capitals left wing Alex Ovechkin (8) covers Florida Panthers defenseman Aaron Ekblad (5) during the third period in game two of the first round of the 2022 Stanley Cup Playoffs at FLA Live Arena. (Sam Navarro-Imagn Images)

Giants' Tony Vitello has mature response to Joe Maddon's ‘insulting' comments

Giants' Tony Vitello has mature response to Joe Maddon's ‘insulting' comments originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

Tony Vitello is taking any criticism regarding his historic MLB hire in stride.

The new Giants manager spoke with The San Francisco Standard’s John Shea at the General Managers Meetings in Las Vegas, and was asked about the viral comments former manager Joe Maddon made on KNBR 680 earlier this week, where he stated he was “insulted” by Vitello, with no major-league coaching experience, landing San Francisco’s managerial position.

“I get it. I just wonder if he’ll still take my call, because he was on my list of people that I wanted to call and seek out advice,” Vitello said of Maddon’s remarks. “There’s a couple of very specific reasons for that with his history. So I wonder if he’ll still take that call. I’ve used him as an example often in recruiting. One thing we did at Tennessee was really try to allow guys to be who they are. That kind of became our brand name, and that’s something that he did with the Cubs in particular.”

Vitello then was asked if he was offended by Maddon’s comments.

“Not at the moment,” Vitello said. “Everyone’s entitled to their own opinion. For me as I sit here, if it truly is an insult, then that is a segue to saying it’s not going to work. So if it doesn’t work, the Giants will be just fine. I’ll be the one that suffers in that situation.

“You start with, “What is going on in college baseball that can help in pro baseball?” And then you go back to college with, “Hey, this is what I learned in pro baseball.” Regardless, it’s a beneficial situation for some people in baseball, and you’re talking about a guy who’s done an enormous amount in baseball in Joe.”

Maddon, in explaining why he was “insulted” by the Giants hiring Vitello, also wished the first-time MLB manager well and admitted he understood what made Vitello such an intriguing candidate.

Giants broadcaster Duane Kuiper also weighed in on Maddon’s remarks, slyly stating that he was insulted by Maddon being insulted.

While others are insulted, it doesn’t appear Vitello is one bit. And perhaps that’s all that matters.

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‘The butt of every joke’: when Wolves were relegated three seasons in a row

Wolves are yet to win a game in the Premier League this season but their older fans know it could be far worse

By That 1980s Sports Blog

You fear for Wolves. Eleven matches into the season they are without a win, have sacked manager Vítor Pereira and look likely to be relegated after nearly a decade in the Premier League. It turns out that selling your best players and failing to replace them adequately is not a recipe for success. But surely things cannot be as bad as they were during the 1980s, when they went from the First Division to the Fourth Division in three years.

Wolves experienced the perfect start to the decade when they won the League Cup in 1980, beating the reigning European champions Nottingham Forest at Wembley. But all was not well at the club. The decline can be traced back to their decision in the late 1970s to spend £3m on the John Ireland Stand (now the Steve Bull Stand) at Molineux, which left the club financially drained during a time of declining attendances. They were relegated from the top flight at the end of the 1981-82 season and, with debts totalling £2.5m, were minutes away from going out of business that summer.

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Buster Posey, Giants focused on pitching in offseason, but spending limits exist

Buster Posey, Giants focused on pitching in offseason, but spending limits exist originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

LAS VEGAS — For much of Buster Posey’s first season as the Giants’ president of baseball operations, the focus was on simply watching and listening. 

Posey was a regular in the Giants’ dugout during batting practice, often sitting on a folding chair in the back corner and observing workouts as he chatted with any coach or team leader who would stop by. Despite having four young children, he was a presence on road trips. The entire front office gathered in the same city multiple times, giving Posey a chance to listen to not just those who work at Oracle Park, but also the player development staffers from Arizona, international scouts based in Latin America, and members of the amateur scouting group.

Posey learned that there’s value in pushing a rival exec to complete a surprise trade in June, and also that there’s danger in extending a contract before you’re 100 percent certain. He saw how deadline plans can go up in smoke over the course of a bad homestand. He watched the lineup complete thrilling comebacks, but also go into slumps that were hard to watch. 

But mostly, Posey discovered the same lesson as everyone else who has ever led a baseball operations department. 

“It was definitely a learning experience for me to learn that that old adage — you never can have enough pitching — is definitely true,” Posey said last month.

Giants officials felt their rotation depth went nearly into double-digits last spring, but by September, they were scraping the bottom of the 40-man roster and turning to bullpen games. Their relievers were as good as anybody in the first half, but by the end of the year, the pen was made up mostly of inconsistent young pitchers and veterans who had been added over the course of the season.

During every media appearance this offseason, Posey has said pitching is the priority. He reiterated that on Tuesday during his time with reporters at the annual General Managers Meetings, and the exact same conversation is happening every day in internal meetings and Zoom calls. 

One Giants official recently put it this way to some others: Every time there’s a conversation about spending on another position or using trade capital to upgrade at second base or right field or backup catcher, everyone needs to take a step back and ask whether those resources would be better spent on more pitching.

The Giants enter the offseason with three locked-in starters in Logan Webb, Robbie Ray and Landen Roupp. You could make the argument that they need to add at least three more, given the lack of experienced depth behind those three, Roupp’s elbow scare in 2025, and the fact that Ray has just one year left on his deal. You could also argue that they need just one starter, leaving the fifth spot to a competition between guys like Carson Whisenhunt, Blade Tidwell, Trevor McDonald and Hayden Birdsong. 

Realistically, it seems Posey needs to sign or trade for two, but during an appearance on Thursday’s Giants Talk podcast, he said it’s hard to pinpoint an exact number right now. 

“It would depend on what’s available on the open market for us to say whether it’s one or two (additions),” Posey said. “The hope is that one or two or three of these (young) guys are really going to grab the bull by the horns and take hold of some of those spots at the back end of the rotation. Hopefully their (mindset) is like, no, I don’t want to be considered a back-end guy. I want to be a frontline guy.”

While this is not considered a particularly strong free agent class overall, there are plenty of pitching options. Dylan Cease, Framber Valdez and Ranger Suarez are expected to get nine-figure deals and Michael King, Zac Gallen and Brandon Woodruff lead a large group of veterans in line for healthy multi-year contracts. 

There will be future Hall-of-Famers (Justin Verlander and Max Scherzer, one of Tony Vitello’s closest friends) likely looking for one-year deals, and interesting flyers like former Dodgers right-handers Walker Buehler and Dustin May. 

The trade market is expected to be active, and Tarik Skubal and Freddy Peralta will likely see their names on MLB Trade Rumors often. There are also quite a few international options, led by Japanese star Tatsuya Imai, who could go well over $100 million after he’s posted. The Giants want to be more active in that market, and Posey and general manager Zack Minasian saw Imai pitch when they made a trip to Japan early in the season.

Posey will have choices, although a few might not be discussed too much. Giants chairman Greg Johnson recently told The San Francisco Standard that the Giants would be “very cautious” about pursuing pitchers looking for $100 million deals. Asked by NBC Sports Bay Area about those comments and how he views long-term deals as opposed to shorter multi-year deals and one-year contracts like Verlander’s, Posey said he wasn’t sure how much he could say publicly about the market. 

“I’ll plead the fifth a little bit on that and just say that we all have our thoughts and opinions and there’s examples of good and bad in all of those scenarios,” he said. “So I think you just have to keep an open mind.”

You can say the same about closer contracts, and that’s another glaring roster hole as the Giants enter the offseason. Camilo Doval was traded, Randy Rodriguez had Tommy John surgery and Ryan Walker had a difficult season, so the Giants could be looking for two or three new late-inning arms ahead of next spring. 

On that front, the front office is currently more focused on minor league free agents and adding depth. Posey noted that relievers are “volatile” and hinted the Giants will stay away from the higher end of the closer market. 

“It’s probably more likely to come down to a competition is the way that it’ll play out,” he said of the closer role. “But again, we’ll look and see what’s available, either something via trade or another route.”

Posey was behind the plate when Mark Melancon’s implosion started, but even if he stays away from closers looking for three- or four-year deals, the Giants still could add intriguing arms for the ninth. This market has plenty of former closers who might be available on lesser deals, like Pete Fairbanks and Ryan Helsley. 

The bullpen is where Posey will see the biggest difference from his first offseason to this one. He inherited a good and experienced group, but trades and injuries have changed that in a hurry.

Posey signed Verlander to a one-year deal last winter but otherwise pretty much left the pitching staff alone. He talked often in the spring about how much young depth there was, but that evaporated pretty quickly, with Kyle Harrison getting traded and others struggling. 

The Giants were surprised that they ran out of pitching, and the goal is to make sure that doesn’t happen to Vitello in his first year in charge. This might be more of a quantity-over-quality effort, though. It’s a good offseason to be looking for a high-end starter, but the Giants have massive future commitments to a position player core led by Rafael Devers, Willy Adames, Matt Chapman and Jung Hoo Lee. Webb and Ray are due a combined $48 million next year, too, and after that, there’s labor uncertainty for the entire industry. 

Posey said there’s “no question” that those payroll commitments impact how the Giants will view this offseason. The young pitching dried up last season, but given that lack of long-term payroll flexibility, it’ll be crucial that the Giants find some new contributors from their farm system. There’s nothing more valuable than cost-controlled young pitching, and Posey still sees plenty of young Giants who can help solve the organization’s pitching shortage. 

“We want to put the best product on the field and we’re going to consider every angle to do that, but you also have to look to the future … we’re going to have to have players from our minor league system be impact players,” he said on Giants Talk. “I got to see it when I was playing and I feel like we’re kind of creeping our way there to having some guys that can do that. 

“I always think, too, whether it’s right or wrong, obviously talent is going to win out but sometimes when you have that player in your system that comes up and makes a drastic impact, it profoundly affects the rest of your system. They’re looking and saying, ‘This guy was just my teammate and I played alongside him and he’s not that much different than me’ and confidence grows. It’s a long-winded way of saying we’re going to do everything we can to put the best and most entertaining team on the field.”

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Gary Payton II's invaluable impact returns in Warriors' win over Spurs

Gary Payton II's invaluable impact returns in Warriors' win over Spurs originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

SAN ANTONIO – The invaluable impact Gary Payton II has provided the Warriors for years returned Wednesday night in their best win of the 2025-26 NBA season, beating the San Antonio Spurs 125-120 at Paycom Center on the second night of a back-to-back. 

Payton’s role at the start of the season has been as small as it ever has with the Warriors. A second-draft pick, Will Richard, quickly leapt him in the pecking order, keeping Payton’s view of games mostly from the bench. The defensive ace had looked a step slow and was prone to fouls, two things that can’t happen for someone who isn’t much of a threat offensively. 

He played 15 minutes of garbage time Tuesday night when the Warriors were blown out in Oklahoma City against the Thunder, and it looked like his services weren’t going to be needed much the next night in San Antonio. Payton replaced Steph Curry for the final 23 seconds of the first half, his only run of the game up to that point. 

The second half was a completely different story, for Payton and the Warriors collectively as a team. 

Payton played 14-plus minutes in the second half and was a plus-9 as the Warriors outscored the Spurs by 12. Darting for the ball and being a nuisance defensively, Payton in that span had four points, six rebounds – four offensive – two assists and one steal. The stars were the show, and Payton was the special sauce behind the scenes that helped them thrive. 

“I thought Gary was fantastic in the second half. And what a pro,” Warriors coach Steve Kerr said. “The guy hasn’t been in the rotation for two weeks, and you never hear anything from him. He stays upbeat, positive. Everybody loves him, and then he always stays ready.”

His game-changing ways began with seven and a half minutes left in the third quarter and the Warriors down by five. Payton’s first offensive rebound led to a Victor Wembanyama foul and two free throws for Curry. The next time down the floor, Payton grabbed a miss from Wemby, gave the ball up to Draymond Green, ran alongside Curry and set a good enough screen on his man that Devin Vassell fouled Steph for three more free throws. Payton on the Warriors’ next offensive possession assisted Moses Moody for a three. 

Later in the third, he snuck behind the Spurs defense for a spinning layup, and his fourth and final rebound of the quarter became a foul on San Antonio and two free throws for Jimmy Butler. 

Those who have been around Payton since he stuck with the Warriors in the 2021-22 championship season are used to this. Al Horford was on the other side of that as a member of the Boston Celtics in the 2022 NBA Finals and poured praise on Payton while answering a question about Curry. 

“Gary Payton just completely changed the game for us in the second half,” Horford said. “His offensive rebounding, defensively – just his impact. I was just very impressed with him, because you know, to be able to be called out like that and he just kept making winning play after winning play. 

“There was a sequence there in the third quarter where he right away instinctively went to Steph on a screen to get him open, and Steph gets fouled for three shots. It’s one of those things that the guy, he just understands how to play. He knows how to play. He’s a winner. I was just impressed with Gary tonight.” 

Payton played the final six and a half minutes of the fourth quarter and came down with two more offensive rebounds in one sequence. First, he found the angle from a missed three from Green and sprinted past Luke Kornet for his third offensive rebound of the game. In the same possession, Payton went from the right corner to the free-throw line to secure a short 3-point attempt by Curry, took one dribble and gave the ball back to a relocated Curry in the corner. 

This time, Curry’s three went down and the Warriors’ lead increased from seven points to 10 with four and a half minutes left in the game. 

The Warriors entered the day ranked 26th in offensive rebounds, a number that highlighted larger issues. All 6-foot-2 of Payton (on a good day) reminded everybody the importance of crashing the offensive glass and keeping possessions alive. 

“Just crash,” he said. “The league’s been changing a lot, so everybody’s crashing. Look at the ball and see where it might end up. Might be short, might be long. Run through the nail and just be in the right area where the ball usually comes from on threes. So, just crash.” 

If you know how to play with Curry, finding him for open shots or freeing him with timely screens, you’re going to get minutes. Payton understands how to get the best out of the Warriors’ superstar as well as anybody. 

He isn’t seen as a star. He isn’t part of the Warriors’ Big Three. But Curry appreciates Payton as much as any of his teammates. 

“It’s huge. He’s a professional. He’s been through this where you got to stay ready,” Curry said. “Whether it’s been him being injured, coming in and out of the lineup or coach’s decision on who he’s putting out there. The way that he impacts the game defensively, we all know that, but he just seems to find himself in the right place at the right time offensively. He knows how to set screens, keep the ball moving and if he’s open shoot it. 

“It’s simple, boring basketball, but it’s winning basketball. And he does a great job of being ready whenever he’s called to go out there and hoop.”

At the end of last season, it looked like Payton’s days with the Warriors could be numbered. Payton wanted otherwise, as did Curry. Payton had to wait and wait and wait like everybody else for Jonathan Kuminga’s restricted free agency, eventually agreeing to terms before Kuminga did. 

There was only one team Payton wanted to keep playing with, and his value that outnumbers stats turned to major impact once again in the biggest win thus far for the Warriors that they had to have.

“It’s the story of my career,” Payton said. “Don’t play, I play. Might not play, then I get thrown back into the fire. It’s another day at work. Staying ready, being ready, that’s it. 

“Whatever I can do to help out the team. Just go in and make plays. Try to get the ball to certain guys, and just do the little things.”  

Patience and perseverance paid off for Payton. Respect the game, and it rewards you in return.

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