Flyers' Travis Sanheim Poised for New Leadership Role in 2025-26

(Photo: Kyle Ross, Imagn Images)

The Philadelphia Flyers have had a leadership opening since the NHL trade deadline, and Travis Sanheim is a prime candidate to step in and step up.

Captain Sean Couturier and Travis Konecny, who wears the 'A' for the Flyers, remain from last season's leadership group, but Scott Laughton and his 'A' were traded to the Toronto Maple Leafs ahead of the NHL trade deadline last year.

That leaves new Flyers head coach Rick Tocchet with a decision to make ahead of opening night, though it's a fairly obvious choice at this juncture.

Sanheim, 29, is the best choice to join the Flyers' leaders going forward, cementing his rise from trade candidate to acting No. 1 defenseman for the team that drafted him in 2014.

Sanheim, along with Couturier, was on hand for the Flyers for the official unveiling of Xfinity Mobile Arena on Tuesday, which says a lot about him and how the Flyers see him.

Drafted 17th overall by the Flyers just over a decade ago, Sanheim has seen the playoffs and missed the playoffs, had great seasons and had bad seasons, but still managed to continue to work every day, every season, and improve to where he is today.

Flyers Late-Round Draft Pick Already Looking PromisingFlyers Late-Round Draft Pick Already Looking PromisingIt's still early, but the Philadelphia Flyers are certainly looking to have a potential draft steal on their hands with Max Westergard.

Regardless of how good you think Sanheim truly is, he's represented Canada, and he's the backbone of the Flyers.

He, Couturier, and Konecny all have this in common: they were all first-round picks of the Flyers, became NHL regulars early in their careers, and have been through the highs and lows of the NHL to become the leaders they are today.

This is exactly the kind of message the Flyers want to convey to their rising young players, like Tyson Foerster, Cam York, and Matvei Michkov.

The Flyers have other candidates for assistant captaincy, too, like Nick Seeler and Noah Cates, but Sanheim has been in Philadelphia the longest and has undergone the ascent reflective of a long-term leader.

Expect the smooth-skating defender to tack on even more responsibility under Tocchet with the Flyers in the 2025-26 season.

Maple Leafs Reportedly Begin Contract Negotiations With Anthony Stolarz

One after another is how the Toronto Maple Leafs appear to be negotiating new extensions with their goaltenders.

Hours after signing Dennis Hildeby to a three-year, $2.53 million deal on Tuesday, the Maple Leafs reportedly began contract discussions with Anthony Stolarz’s camp, according to The Fourth Period’s David Pagnotta.

“In Toronto, after going the summer without negotiating, sources tell me the Maple Leafs have now started contract extension discussions with goaltender Anthony Stolarz.”

After signing a two-year, $5 million contract with Toronto following a Stanley Cup Championship with the Florida Panthers last summer, there were question marks about how he’d fare with a larger workload.

The 31-year-old, however, had the best season of his career in his first go-around with Toronto and is looking to do the same in his second year with the club

Stolarz played 34 games—the most he’s ever played in a season—and recorded a 21-8-3 record, plus a .926 save percentage in that span (the most among NHL goaltenders who played 30+ games).

Despite suffering a knee injury mid-season, which forced him to have surgery and miss nearly two months, Stolarz played well in his return and earned himself the number-one goaltender job entering the playoffs, ahead of Joseph Woll.

Stolarz had a .901 save percentage after eliminating the Ottawa Senators in six games during the first round of the playoffs. However, his health took a turn for the worse in Game 1 of the second round against the Panthers, after taking a forearm to the head from former teammate Sam Bennett.

The netminder remained in the game for a few moments after taking the bump, but left a short while later after throwing up on the bench. Woll came in and strung together three wins and an .886 save percentage before Toronto went out in Game 7 to Florida.

Stolarz revealed after the season was over that he went to the hospital and was diagnosed with a concussion following Bennett’s hit.

“I missed that little part in the middle of the season, but I was extremely happy with the way I was able to bounce back, come back, and find my game. I owe a lot to [Maple Leafs goaltending coach Curtis Sanford] and Woller,” Stolarz said during his end-of-season media availability in May.

“Curtis was working hard with us ever since training camp and really put in the extra effort for me to get back during that injury, and just kind of the techniques and just the way he prepared us really helped me. I think myself and Woller, just being able to push each other all year, I mean, we had a great relationship, and I got along with him extremely well. Looking forward to the opportunity to come back with him next year.”

It’s expected that the Maple Leafs will follow the same plan in net from last season: Rely on both Stolarz and Woll until the playoffs, where they’ll then go with the goaltender who had the better season.

That is, unless one of the two netminders puts together a strong string of games during the early portion of the season. Even then, Toronto would likely give Woll and Stolarz equal opportunity so that they can limit any potential injuries.

But it’s a positive that both the Maple Leafs and Stolarz’s side are already reportedly beginning contract negotiations. We’ll see where it goes as we enter training camp and beyond.

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Ramp to Camp: What's one more move Celtics should make before season?

Ramp to Camp: What's one more move Celtics should make before season? originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

OK, here’s the situation: Brad Stevens went away on a week’s vacation and he left you the keys to the Celtics’ brand-new roster. Would he mind a deal? Well, of course not.

Back in July, after an initial batch of roster tinkering saw the Celtics trade away Kristaps Porzingis and Jrue Holiday in a quest to dip below the second apron, Stevens suggested he’d be content if the roster in that moment was the roster that Boston carried into the offseason.

The Celtics have made six roster transactions since that declaration — albeit mostly tinkering on the back end of the roster and finalizing their two-way deals — but that maneuvering also included trading away the only player received in the Porzingis swap (Georges Niang).

Which is to say, even as the 2025-26 season approaches, this Celtics’ roster hardly feels set in stone. The team might have additional motivation to tinker depending on how the season plays out.

For Day 3 of our Ramp to Camp series, we asked our panel to channel their inner Stevens and consider if there’s one more move they’d make for the Celtics before the season starts. Are our Armchair Brads comfortable with the team’s frontcourt depth chart? Do our Virtual Brads see Anfernee Simons as a long-term fit for this roster?

While the next big transaction feels more likely to come closer to the February trade deadline, this is the time of year when teams need to take a long look at their roster and decide if this is the group they’re content to roll with. Given the absence of Jayson Tatum to start the season and some of the talent drain that occurred this summer, the Celtics can take a bit of a wait-and-see approach, but they also have to be opportunistic with eyes towards building the next iteration of a championship-caliber roster.

My goal: The Celtics sit about $12 million away from clearing the luxury tax. Even if it’s sometimes difficult to see a path toward resetting the repeater penalties by getting under (and staying under) the tax in one of the next two seasons, at least you put yourself in position to ponder that option by getting there this season. 

So, while we’re content to carry Simons into the season, we’re examining deals that send out Simons while trying to 1) Bring back at least one player who could be a high-level role player on a championship team and 2) Cut salary with the goal of eventually getting below the tax after all deadline maneuvering is complete.

Since no one ever knows what exactly the Bulls are doing, we’re calling them to see if they think Simons can help in their annual quest to land a play-in berth. Even after the Bulls sign Josh Giddey to a long-term deal, Chicago has ample room to take on salary. Would they take on Simons’ money for a package that includes something like Ayo Dosunmu, Jalen Smith, and Dalen Terry?

The Celtics shed nearly $6 million off the books with this deal and would have pathways to eventually get below the tax (particularly if they could move a player like Terry to a third team without taking back salary). Boston gets a look at Dosunmu, someone who better fits the mold of a long-term piece, and can decide if it want to pay his next deal. 

Speaking of Bulls moves… That’s where our panel starts as well:

Josh Canu, Media Editor

Trade Anfernee Simons for Nikola Vucevic.

Both players are on expiring contracts, the Bulls get a younger player, and the Celtics get a starting center and some cap relief as well. Not the sexiest move, but a move that works and is attainable. 

Max Lederman, Content Producer

I’d pay Isaiah Thomas to be a part of the organization, either as a player or on the coaching staff.

I never felt right about how things turned out for IT, and bringing him back to Boston would be good karma.

Darren Hartwell, Managing Editor

The easy answer is trading Anfernee Simons and his $27.6 million expiring contract to shed salary. The hard part is finding a deal that makes sense.

After tinkering with NBA trade machines, we’ll go with a three-team proposal from Bleacher Report’s Andy Bailey that sends Simons to Toronto and Terance Mann and Ochai Agbaji to Boston.

Michael Hurley, Web Producer

I’m inviting all of my friends to the Garden for some pickup basketball, first and foremost. After that, I don’t think I’m going too crazy.

The chances of going on a title run without Tatum are minuscule, if we’re being honest. So, why push the envelope when I could reset some financials and build for the following season?

If I’m doing anything, though, I’m challenging Joe Mazzulla to just try for one game to tell his team to take a normal number of 3s, just to see what happens. It’s possible I’d be engaged in some hand-to-hand combat as a result.

Sean McGuire, Web Producer

Brad Stevens said it was unlikely Al Horford would return. That was months ago. It feels like it’s a done deal and Horford is headed to Golden State. But since it hasn’t happened yet, I’m going with Big Al.

If I was running the front office, I’m making it work with Horford, an all-time Celtic and impactful contributor who would improve the front court in 2025-26. (I hope this doesn’t age as poorly as it very well could.)

Kevin Miller, VP, Content

I’m not sure there’s anything Stevens can really do. Adding another big would make sense, but I don’t see any realistic options.

I’m keeping Simons to see how he works in this offense for first half of season.

Adam Hart, EP, Content Strategy

Make some room for Malik Beasley and add him on a discount prove-it deal.

Why Draymond Green, Jimmy Butler's joint offseason workout matters for Warriors

Why Draymond Green, Jimmy Butler's joint offseason workout matters for Warriors originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

Summer, in technical terms, still has almost three more weeks until the lights go out and fall rears its head from the shadows. Draymond Green doesn’t ascribe to that calendar. 

It ended with the passing of Labor Day, he announced Tuesday on Threads, his apparent preferred social media website. 

The offseason still very much is ongoing for the Warriors as a team that hasn’t made a move more than two months since free agency began. The roster only consists of nine players. But players are beginning to trickle in through Chase Center to work out and scrimmage with training camp starting at the end of the month. 

Before veteran stars Green and Jimmy Butler make their way to the Warriors’ home arena, the two shared the floor in Los Angeles for a workout at the end of August. Butler shared photos and videos of the workout Sunday with a 20-slide post to his Instagram, using the caption “whatever @money23green said on the last slide.” And on that slide, Green made the same prediction he proclaimed during NBA All-Star Weekend less than two weeks after the Warriors acquired Butler from the Miami Heat at the trade deadline. 

“We gettin’ that b—h this year,” Green said, referring to the Warriors winning the championship. 

Green guaranteed the Warriors would win the championship on Feb. 16 as part of his TNT broadcasting duties. They, of course, did not. The Warriors went on a tear after Butler’s arrival, but then lost in the second round of the playoffs against the Minnesota Timberwolves without an injured Steph Curry. 

About a month after his bold words on national TV, Green made an admission to NBC Sports Bay Area’s Monte Poole and Kerith Burke on the “Dubs Talk” podcast, saying he likes the Warriors’ chances at a championship even more the next season in 2025-26. 

“I think coming back next year, I think we’ll be even in a better position than we were this year,” he reiterated at his exit interview press conference after the season. “Number one, because you can manage the season better, which helps when you’re trying to compete for a championship, especially at the ages we’re at. It helps a lot.” 

The ages of the Warriors’ top players – Curry, Butler and Green – are a talking point that isn’t going away. The facts are, a team leaning on this old of a trio has never won a championship. Butler and Green working out together isn’t going to guarantee a parade down Market Street. 

The workout and increased chemistry is what Butler promised, though.

“Now you’ve got a whole offseason,” Butler said the same day as Green at his exit interview press conference. “I get to be around my guys in the offseason. We’re going to get to vacay together. We’re going to get our kids together. We’re going to get to train together, build even more chemistry and then take this thing into training camp and into this next year, this next season, and do what we set out to do.” 

The worry in bringing Butler into the Warriors’ locker room was if the big personalities of him and Green would clash. The opposite happened, at least in the first chapter. The next chapter appears to have begun with an even greater sense of commitment and understanding of each other. 

Which will be critical for the Warriors both at the start of the season, as well as a playoff push later on. Led by Curry, Butler and Green, Golden State badly needs to get off to a strong start this season. The Warriors begin their campaign against LeBron James, Luka Dončić and the Los Angeles Lakers on the road and then welcome Nikola Jokić and the new-look Denver Nuggets to San Francisco. 

They have five sets of back-to-backs in their first 17 games, making the Jonathan Kuminga situation that much more interesting with the need for a young scorer helping an older team on nights that look like scheduled losses. 

Green played every game after the Butler trade. The Warriors went 23-7 to end the regular season in games Butler and Green played together, and they had the best defensive rating (109.0) in the NBA. 

“Great,” Green said at the end of Butler’s Instagram post when asked how he’s feeling. “We ‘bout six weeks out. Right where I need to be, baby.”

Replicating those same results, a 76.7 win percentage, isn’t going to happen for an entire season. These Warriors aren’t going to reel off 63 wins. Even if a workout can’t predict a large number in the win column, the Warriors need Butler and Green to be the tone-setters while Curry runs the show.

Whether they’ll have enough gas in the tank to last is a whole other question.

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The Bundesliga’s deal with Mark Goldbridge is odd, and exactly what MLS is missing with Apple

An unusual streaming deal sees the German league going where its fans are, instead of asking the fans to come to them

In a change to his regularly scheduled programming, Mark Goldbridge took a break from blowing steam out his ears at another Andre Onana howler and venting his shouty exasperation at Manchester United’s latest calamity to talk – and watch – all things Gegenpressing and Ballbesitzfußball with his audience of over one million YouTube subscribers.

This was after the Deutsche Fussball Liga (DFL) struck an agreement with Goldbridge to broadcast 20 live Bundesliga matches on his That’s Football YouTube channel this season. Bayern Munich’s opening weekend win over RB Leipzig raised the curtain on the new deal, with nearly 500,000 viewers watching along with Goldbridge.

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Umpire explains Matt Chapman, Willy Adames ejections after Giants-Rockies brawl

Umpire explains Matt Chapman, Willy Adames ejections after Giants-Rockies brawl originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

The Giants’ 7-4 win over the Colorado Rockies on Tuesday night at Coors Field produced lots of highlights and just as many questions.

Before most fans could get comfortable in their seats, Rafael Devers crushed a moonshot two-run homer. But Rockies starter Kyle Freeland took exception to the Giants star admiring his work, leading to a benches-clearing brawl.

In the aftermath, Freeland was ejected, along with Giants third baseman Matt Chapman and shortstop Willy Adames, for their actions in the kerfuffle.

Devers wasn’t ejected and after a lengthy delay as the umpires discussed the situation, he was allowed to complete his home run trot.

After the game, The Athletic’s Andrew Baggarly served as the pool reporter and spoke to umpire Dan Bellino about the incident.

Editor’s note: The following transcript has been edited for brevity and clarity:

Baggarly: “Can you just run through the reasons for each player’s being ejected?”

Bellino: “Well, the pitcher was removed after his actions in the bench-clearing. Obviously, his reaction was, you know, he was an instigator, same with Chapman. He was an instigator, and Adames, while initially he was not one of the instigators, he prolonged the bench-clearing situation by instigating a second melee.”

Baggarly: “And with Chapman specifically, was it the shove counted as the instigation?

Bellino: “I would say just his actions in general, it was overly aggressive.”

Baggarly: “Just out of curiosity, are you working in concert with the video replay room?”

Bellino: “No.”

Baggarly: “It’s what you guys see on the field?”

Bellino: “Yes. That is something we are actually not allowed to go to replay review to assist in bench-clearing situations. I think that’s through the players’ association. That’s something that the players’ association, they do not want us to have the replay review make those decisions. It has to be the [on-field] umpires.”

Baggarly: “And we’re warnings issued?”

Bellino: “Yes.”

Baggarly: “Devers, did he leave the base path or was there any reasoning or any way that there was a thought that maybe he could have been called out for leaving the base paths?”

Bellino: “It’s an interesting rule. It’s one of those that you don’t see hardly ever. We discussed it, but ultimately, because it was a dead-ball situation, we did not deem it to be an abandoning or anything like that.”

Baggarly: “And then, if [Devers] had been ejected, or if his actions had warranted an ejection at that point, would a pinch-runner have had to enter for him to complete his home run trot or what would have happened?”

Bellino: “No. Yeah, we wouldn’t do that.”

Baggarly: “Would he have been credited with a home run still?”

Bellino: “I believe, yes.”

The Giants now will await word from MLB if Chapman or Adames face further discipline for their actions.

Manager Bob Melvin would prefer the league take a lenient approach to the situation, considering the Giants are fighting for an NL wild-card spot.

“I hope MLB understands,” Melvin told reporters after the game. “Hopefully this isn’t significant for these two guys.”

Devers has homered in the first two games of the series in Denver and three consecutive contests overall, and after Tuesday’s incident, it’s a safe bet that if he goes deep in Wednesday’s series finale, he won’t be shy about taking his time rounding the bases.

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Disallowing Fulham goal at Chelsea was wrong, admits referees’ chief Howard Webb

  • Guidance not followed after Josh King scored, Webb says

  • Goal chalked off after Muniz stepped on Chalobah’s foot

Howard Webb, England’s chief refereeing officer, has described the decision to disallow Josh King’s goal against Chelsea as a “misjudgment” by the match officials.

King appeared to have scored a first league goal for Fulham in Saturday’s derby at Stamford Bridge but his effort was ruled out after the referee, Robert Jones, was asked to go to the pitchside monitor after a check by the video assistant referee.

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Toronto Maple Leafs Sign Goaltender Dennis Hildeby To Three-Year Contract

The Toronto Maple Leafs announced they have signed goaltender Dennis Hildeby to a three-year contract.

The deal has an $841,000 AAV and will pay him $350,000 while in the AHL in 2025-26. The contract is a two-way deal for the first two seasons and becomes a one-way in 2027-28.

Hildeby had a record of 16-9-7 with a .908 SP and 2.55 GAA with the Toronto Marlies and a 3-3 record with a .878 SP and 3.33 GAA with the Maple Leafs last season, the first NHL starts of his career. 

The 24-year-old has a 37-21-14 record with a .908 SP in 73 career AHL appearances and represented the North Division at the 2023-24 All-Star Game. 

A fourth round selection of the Maple Leafs in 2022, Hildeby has now completed two full seasons in North America and appears to be a significant part of Toronto's plans in the future. 

Hildeby will likely start the majority of games for the Marlies and seems to be first in line for a recall to the Maple Leafs. 

Check out our AHL to KHL signing tracker and AHL Free Agency signing tracker.

From the Pocket: Charlie Curnow and Carlton give insight into how deals are made. It’s not pretty

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Earlier this year, Charlie Curnow marked on the lead, feigned to his right, cut to his left, left his Bulldogs opponent tottering and lashed a goal from outside 50. The ball didn’t spin normally but thudded through the air, a bit like a hammer throw. It was soundtracked by an ascending, guttural “CHAAAAAAARLIEEEE”. Michael Voss turned to the crowd, pumped his fist and screamed “You beauty!”

It was moments like that where it was easy to be seduced by Curnow. It was moments like that, under the Docklands roof, where the Carlton crowd would crackle with optimism. By the end of that night, as with so many others in 2025, the adrenaline wore off and the Blues were overhauled. In the warm-up, Curnow would be gambolling about and he’d almost always start the game well. But as his team stalled, he’d be a frustrated, peripheral figure.

This is an extract from Guardian Australia’s free weekly AFL email, From the Pocket. To get the full version, just visit this page and follow the instructions

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Mets considering options for Kodai Senga, including a minor league stint: report

The Mets have a decision to make when it comes to Kodai Senga. 

Do you have Senga make his next start -- slated for Sunday against the Reds in Cincinnati -- or skip him or do something more drastic? It seems all options are on the table as a new report from The Athletic's Will Sammon states the Mets are considering a few possibilities, "including potentially asking him to accept an optional minor league assignment" -- according to people familiar with the Mets' thinking. 

Per Senga's contract, he would have to consent to an option.

But is a minor league option out of the realm of possibility? It was once when Senga was regarded as the team's best pitcher after pitching to an All-Star selection and becoming the runner-up for the NL Rookie of the Year award in 2023. Even this year, the right-hander pitched to a 1.47 ERA before his injury put him on the shelf for a month. But since returning in mid-July, Senga has struggled. He's posted a 6.56 ERA across 35.2 innings since the return, which includes his last outing in which he allowed five runs in 4.2 innings against the Marlins on Sunday.

That performance prompted manager Carlos Mendozato hint at changing the rotation to help Senga. Another possibility for Senga is pushing his turn in the order altogether.

The Post's Mike Puma reported Tuesday that the Mets are "leaning" on having Nolan McLean pitch the series finale Sunday on normal rest after David Peterson and Jonah Tong pitch Friday and Saturday.

McLean has taken the Mets by storm, winning his first four starts with a 1.37 ERA, including Tuesday against the AL-best Detroit Tigers. Clay Holmes is slotted to pitch Wednesday's series finale, and the off day on Thursday allows the Mets to give McLean that start on Sunday. 

But simply skipping Senga's turn is a temporary solution. The Mets need Senga and Sean Manaea -- another struggling starter -- back to form to make a playoff run, but time could be running out to do so.

“They are until they’re not," Mendoza said of Senga and Manaea's place in the rotation ahead of Tuesday's game. "We haven't made any decisions yet, we’re still having discussions. We’re going to be flexible and we gonna take advantage of off days and continue to have discussions. But as of right now, we haven’t made any decisions yet.”

Top-20 Penguins' Prospects 2025: New Penguins' Goaltender On Verge Of Breakout

Heading into the 2025-26 season, the Pittsburgh Penguins have shifted the focus to youth and development.

With more talent in the system than Pittsburgh has had in years - and 13 picks in the 2025 NHL Draft - top prospects lists are becoming more competitive and more difficult to discern. Since the prospect pool is deepening, The Hockey News - Pittsburgh Penguins takes a look at the top-20 prospects in the organization. 

We go back-to-back with goaltenders for No. 8, as prospect Joel Blomqvist came in at No. 9. This next young netminder may be new to the Penguins' organization, but Arturs Silovs certainly has some upside.


#8: G Arturs Silovs

Feb 23, 2025; Salt Lake City, Utah, USA; Vancouver Canucks goaltender Arturs Silovs (31) blocks a shot against the Utah Hockey Club during the second period at Delta Center. Mandatory Credit: Rob Gray-Imagn Images

It's definitely fair to question whether or not Silovs - acquired in July from the Vancouver Canucks - should still be considered a prospect by certain standards. Technically, he has not met the 25-game NHL rookie requirement, as he has appeared in only 19 regular season games and has been up and down between the NHL and AHL for the past three seasons.

But Silovs is still young and unproven enough at 24 to be held to the same standards as Blomqvist, who has appeared in 15 NHL games and is just one year his junior. And he definitely has upside.

Silovs's defining NHL moment was a 10-game playoff run in 2023-24 that helped lead the Canucks past the Nashville Predators in the first round and brought them to seven games in the second round against the Edmonton Oilers, who eventually went on to the Stanley Cup Final and lost to the Florida Panthers. In those playoffs, Silovs went 5-5 with an .898 save percentage.

Penguins Facing Uncertain Goalie Split Entering 2025-26 SeasonPenguins Facing Uncertain Goalie Split Entering 2025-26 SeasonOnce again, the Pittsburgh Penguins face goaltending questions heading into a season. 

Even though those numbers don't jump out by any means, he did put together some solid performances, including a shutout. He was also only 23 years old with only nine regular season games under his belt at the time, which made it all the more impressive that he was able to step in and give the Canucks a chance.

The 6-foot-4, 203-pound Latvian netminder has a lot of untapped potential. And that really showed itself during the Abbotsford Canucks' Calder Cup run last season - which was, certainly, the best run of Silovs's professional career to date.

En route to an AHL championship last season, Silovs was remarkable. He posted a 16-7 record to go along with an astounding .931 save percentage and five playoff shutouts, and those five shutouts put him just one shy of the AHL record for a singular playoff run by a goaltender.

BREAKING: Abbotsford Canucks Win 2025 Calder Cup BREAKING: Abbotsford Canucks Win 2025 Calder Cup After a magical playoff run filled with standout performances, the Abbotsford Canucks have officially won the 2025 Calder Cup. This is Abbotsford’s first Calder Cup win in franchise history and their first time making it out of the second round since their inaugural season in 2021. They clinched the Calder Cup after a 3–2 Game 6 win against the Charlotte Checkers in the Calder Cup Finals. The last time the Vancouver Canucks’ AHL affiliate made it to the Calder Cup Finals was when the Utica Comets did so in 2015. 

He showed off his athleticism, quickness, range, and potential in that run, and it almost solidified his standing as Latvia's top goaltender for the 2026 Winter Olympic Games in Milan Cortina.

To put it plainly, the Penguins may have landed on a gold mine here. Silovs very much has the chance to supplant Tristan Jarry as the go-to guy in Pittsburgh this season, so - given the Penguins' goaltending depth behind him in Blomqvist and Sergei Murashov - this season will be critical in terms of his future in Pittsburgh and in the NHL.


The list so far:

- No. 9: G Joel Blomqvist
No. 10: F Tristan Broz
No. 11: F Will Horcoff
No. 12: F Mikhail Ilyin
No. 13 F Filip Hallander
No. 14: F Bill Zonnon
No. 15: F Melvin Fernstrom
No. 16: D Emil Pieniniemi
No. 17: F Avery Hayes
No. 18: F Cruz Lucius
No. 19: D Finn Harding
No. 20: D Peyton Kettles

Top-20 Penguins' Prospects 2025: Goaltender Entering 'Make-It-Or-Break-It' SeasonTop-20 Penguins' Prospects 2025: Goaltender Entering 'Make-It-Or-Break-It' SeasonHeading into the 2025-26 season, the Pittsburgh Penguins have shifted the focus to youth and development.

Join the THN - Pittsburgh Penguins Community to follow and chime in on the latest Penguins news, roster moves, player features, and more!    

Shohei Ohtani hits 100th home run with Dodgers as Los Angeles stumbles late in 9-7 loss to Pirates

PITTSBURGH — Tommy Pham and Jared Triolo each drove in two runs, and the Pirates spoiled a big night by Shohei Ohtani to beat the Los Angeles Dodgers 9-7 on Tuesday night.

Ohtani hit his 100th home run with the Los Angeles Dodgers and had a pair of doubles.

Ohtani hit a solo shot off top prospect Bubba Chandler (2-0) for his 46th homer this season. Playing his 294th game with the Dodgers, he became the fastest to reach 100 home runs in team history ahead of Gary Sheffield (399).

Teoscar Hernández then hit a two-out RBI single and Andy Pages led off the next inning with his 24th homer, tying it 4-all.

Henry Davis put the Pirates back ahead on an RBI single off Edgardo Henriquez (0-1) in the sixth. Triolo added a two-out, two-run double.

Chandler gave up three runs on six hits in four innings of relief. The 22-year-old has two wins and a save in his first three major-league appearances.

Dennis Santana walked Miguel Rojas and allowed Ohtani's second double to start the ninth before retiring the next three batters for his 12th save.

Clayton Kershaw yielded four runs, four hits and a pair of walks in the first inning. He recovered to last five innings, denying the Pirates of another hit while allowing two walks over the final four.

Triolo walked with two outs in the eighth and stole second. Nick Gonzales then sent a soft, looping ball into center where Pages came just short of making a sliding catch. Triolo scored an insurance run, putting the Pirates up three with the top of the Dodgers order coming in the ninth.

Ohtani took 444 games to hit 100 home runs with the Los Angeles Angels.

Ohtani (1-1, 4.18 ERA) will take the mound Wednesday opposite Pirates rookie Braxton Ashcraft (4-2, 2.58).

Mariners catcher Cal Raleigh hits his 51st homer and closes in on more records

TAMPA, Fla. — Cal Raleigh hit his 51st homer Tuesday night, extending his major league record for home runs by a catcher and drawing closer to Mickey Mantle for the most by a switch-hitter.

The Seattle Mariners star went deep in the fourth inning against the Tampa Bay Rays at Steinbrenner Field.

It was Raleigh's 41st homer while playing behind the plate, tying Todd Hundley (1996) for the second most in a season. That record is 42 by Javy López in 2003.

Raleigh had already bested Salvador Perez for the most homers by a player whose primary position is catcher. Perez hit 48 in 2021.

Mantle set the mark for homers by a switch-hitter with 54 in 1961. Raleigh is also within five of Ken Griffey Jr.'s Mariners record of 56 homers in a season, set in 1997 and '98.

The 371-foot shot to right field was his first home run in a week. Raleigh leads the majors in homers by two over Philadelphia's Kyle Schwarber.

Confident Mets bats stay hot by 'doing damage when we have to'

After a tremendous August saw the Mets post one of their best offensive months in franchise history, they arrived in Detroit and stung the AL Central-leading Tigers for 22 runs on 25 hits and nine walks in the first 18 innings of September.

“It’s just a lot of guys playing with confidence now, trusting each other,” manager Carlos Mendoza said about his team after they pounded out 12 runs on 17 hits, including four long balls in Tuesday’s convincing win.

The skipper has often spoken about being a tough lineup one through nine, and he got it all with a pair of solo home runs from Pete Alonso, one from Juan Soto, and three hits from Brandon Nimmo at the top of the order while also getting three hits from Brett Baty out of the nine-hole and two from Luis Torrens in the eight spot, including a three-run shot the blew the game wide open in the fourth.

“Torrens getting the huge three-run homer with two outs, Baty having a really good night again, guys getting on base, Jeff [McNeil] another good night,” he said, noting McNeil added three hits and three batted in. “It’s a pretty good lineup. Guys controlling the strike zone and then doing damage when we have to.”

In the last 30 days, the Mets lead MLB in every slash line category, .292/.366/.525 with an .891 OPS, while socking 55 home runs and 179 RBI. They've also done the little things, including stealing 35 bags, with four of them coming on Tuesday, including a first career steal by Torrens.

“I’m glad they’re on my team,” Mets starter Nolan McLean said after delivering six innings of two-run ball. “It’s a lot of fun to watch. It’s nine really tough outs for the opposing pitcher every time we go out there.”

Soto, who walked and singled in addition to his seventh-inning 408-foot blast, has homered five times in the last five games and has 37 on the year with 91 RBI to go along with his .923 OPS. (So much for concerns about a down year.) And Alonso, with his two homers, now has 33 on the season with 112 RBI, and raised his OPS to .867 for the season.

“I think we’re doing a really good job of capitalizing on pitches in the zone,” Alonso said. “I think we’re recognizing hanging breaking balls really well, I think we’re doing damage on heaters really well, I think we’re doing a really good job of letting those borderline pitches go and making pitchers pay when they come over the heart of the dish.”

Alonso did just that when he whalloped a 3-0 fastball from Tigers starter Sawyer Gipson-Long for a majestic, 435-foot blast to centerfield with two down in the top of the first inning.

“Just saw a 3-0 heater right over the middle of the plate,” he said. “Saw it in my area and let it fly.”

Mets' Nolan McLean impresses with maturity, adjustments showing 'flair of a superstar'

Nolan McLean had a lead before he threw a pitch in the fourth start of his big league career on Tuesday night in Detroit. But the Mets’ young right-hander gave that lead right back before he escaped the bottom of the first, allowing two runs on two hits and two walks. 

In a worrying sign, it was quite noticeable that McLean didn’t appear to have any feel on two of his three most-used pitches, the sweeper and curveball. In the 24-pitch frame, he threw 11 sweepers with only two going for strikes and spun four curves, resulting in two balls and an RBI single.

That’s when the youngster made the adjustment that ended up powering him to a fourth win in as many big league starts.

“So we started to attack with some harder velo pitches,” Mclean said. After the first, he threw just five sweepers over the next three innings, compared to 10 fastballs, seven changeups, and two cutters. The result? McLean surrendered a walk and a single in the second but closed the day by retiring the last 14 straight Tigers he faced, including six strikeouts. 

Manager Carlos Mendoza said that the battle from the 24-year-old “shows a lot of maturity.” 

“That’s what you call pitching, understanding that you have to make adjustments and find a way to get through five, six innings,” the skipper said. “I thought he attacked, and then once we got the lead, he continued to stay on the attack. He went to the sinker when he needed to, the changeup when he needed to, and then continued to mix in some of those sweepers and the curveball.”

Luis Torrens, who caught McLean for the first time in the game and added a three-run home run to give the starter a four-run cushion in the fourth, called the pitcher’s performance “excellent.”

“He still surprises me to see what he’s been able to do,” Torrens said, speaking through an interpreter. “The adjustments that he’s been able to make, he’s just been excellent since he’s been up here.”

For Pete Alonso, the rookie’s performances have come as no surprise because of the work he is doing off the field between starts, adding that McLean’s “commitment to his process” has been the most impressive aspect.

“What he’s doing on the field is great and awesome and is helping us win, but I am really thoroughly impressed with his day-to-day process, like the stuff that no one really sees on day one, two, three, and four between starts,” Alonso, who socked two homers in the win, said. “I know everyone is gonna be talking about all the great stuff that he’s doing on the field, which is for sure warranted, but how he’s going about his business, the day-to-day, is super impressive. And that’s the reason why he’s able to do what he’s been able to do on the field.

“Huge huge kudos [for] that. He’s been a pro since he’s come up, and, for me, seeing him go about his business, there’s no shock at all about why he’s finding success.”

After allowing just four runs through his first 26.1 innings of his MLB career, his teammates are excited about the future.

“When he throws the rock, he’s got poise, he’s got grit, obviously the stuff to match that. Really impressed so far with his first few starts,” Alonso said.

“It’s the attitude that he has when he’s on that mound,” Torrens added. “He’s always out there trying to compete. He has that attitude and that flair of a superstar.”

On a night when he didn’t have his best stuff at first, McLean being able to dip into his full arsenal – Statcast had him throw six different pitches – it showed Mendoza that the youngster appears to have “a pretty good feel and idea of what he’s trying to do on the mound.”

“Before you know it, you look up and it’s six innings and he’s giving you a chance to win a baseball game,” the manager said. “Another really good sign for a kid that is making his fourth start at the big league level.”

McLean admitted that he started to “lose confidence” in his sweeper and curve because he wasn’t throwing it for strikes. But, once he “got in a groove” with the higher velo pitches went back and found the feel for his offspeed pitches and had them later in the game, getting a called third strike on both pitches in the fifth and sixth.

“Lotta times throwing fastballs gets me right back on track,” he said. “Once I am able to start locating my heater, I am able to kinda find that feel in my hand again to start manipulating other pitches.”

On the night, he threw just 56 of 90 pitches for strikes, but got 15 outs with eight whiffs on 34 swings (24 percent) and 22 called strikes for a 33 percent called strike-whiff rate.

“I was proud of the way I competed,” McLean said. “Obviously first inning didn’t go the way I wanted, but I had trust in my stuff. And I knew if I could find some pitches later in the game, I knew I was gonna be tough to hit.”