Levi Locked Up By Sabres On Bridge Deal

The Buffalo Sabres took care of their final unresolved contract situation of the summer, signing goalie Devon Levi to a two-year, $1.625 million deal ($812,500 AAV). The 23-year-old  was 2-7-0, with a 4.12 GAA and .872 save % in nine NHL games last season, but posted a very strong 25-13-4 record, 2.20 GAA, and .919 save % with AHL Rochester. 

The Dollard-Des-Ormeaux, Quebec native was originally a seventh-round pick of the Florida Panthers in 2020, but was acquired along with a first-round pick (Jiri Kulich) for Sam Reinhart in 2021. After winning consecutive Mike Richter Awards as the NCAA’s top goaltender at Northeastern, Levi signed with the Sabres and was 5-2-0 at the end of the 2022-23 season, which convinced GM Kevyn Adams and former head coach Don Granato that at 21, he could be the club’s future between the pipes. 

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After a slow start, the Sabres switched to Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen as their primary starter, and the young netminder was demoted to the Amerks, where he went 16-6-4, with a 2.42 GAA, and .927 save percentage. Luukkonen’s strong second half and new five-year contract seemed to signal that Levi was more on a devlopmental track, and when veteran James Reimer was reclaimed off of waivers, the youngster was once again sent to the AHL. 

The deal is one-way and at the NHL minimum $775,000 in year one and $850,000 in the second year. With the signing of veteran Alex Lyon to a two-year deal, it appears that Levi will begin next season in the AHL, sharing the goaltending duties with 20-year-old prospect Scott Ratzlaff. Expectations for Levi are still extremely high but his waiver exempt status this upcoming season makes it almost certain that his year will start in Rochester. 

Follow Michael on X, Instagram, and Bluesky @MikeInBuffalo 

LeBron James, Nikola Jokić reportedly meet over $5bn upstart to rival NBA

LeBron James, right, and Nikola Jokić look on during the 2023 NBA All-Star Game in Salt Lake City, Utah.Photograph: Jesse D Garrabrant/NBAE/Getty Images

A high-profile meeting last week in France between LeBron James, his business partner Maverick Carter and Nikola Jokić’s agent Miško Ražnatović was about plans for a new $5bn international basketball league, according to a report by Front Office Sports, which cited multiple sources familiar with the matter.

The proposed league, spearheaded by Carter, would feature six men’s and six women’s teams that travel together to eight global cities in a touring format. Inspired by LIV Golf and Formula One, the league aims to offer players equity stakes, something NBA rules currently prohibit for active athletes.

Ražnatović, a powerful figure in European basketball, posted a photo of the meeting on Instagram over the weekend. The caption, tagged in Saint-Tropez, teased: “The summer of 2025 is the perfect time to make big plans for the fall of 2026.” That photo fueled speculation about a potential team-up between James and Jokić, but sources confirmed to Front Office Sports the meeting was unrelated to the NBA.

Carter began pitching the league earlier this year, with Bloomberg reporting in January that he is seeking to raise $5bn in funding. Backers already include the Singapore government, Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund, SC Holdings, UBS and investors such as Skype co-founder Geoff Prentice and former Facebook executive Grady Burnett.

Unlike the WNBA-adjacent Unrivaled league, which allows dual participation, Carter’s venture is expected to require full-time commitments, effectively ruling out NBA participation unless league rules change.

The NBA, meanwhile, is pursuing its own expansion into Europe. Commissioner Adam Silver and deputy commissioner Mark Tatum met with UK prime minister Keir Starmer in London last week to discuss plans for a Europe-based NBA league in partnership with Fiba. As part of that effort, the NBA announced that the Orlando Magic and Memphis Grizzlies will play regular-season games in Berlin and London in January 2026.

EuroLeague officials have pushed back against the NBA’s expansion talks. “We said to them, like we said publicly, we don’t believe that the new league is something that would help the market,” EuroLeague CEO Paulius Motiejūnas told the Athletic on Tuesday.

Mike Yastrzemski bids San Francisco, fans farewell in emotional Instagram post

Mike Yastrzemski bids San Francisco, fans farewell in emotional Instagram post originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

On Thursday the Giants said goodbye to the longest tenured player on San Francisco’s roster, Mike Yastrzemski.

The 34-year-old outfielder was sent to the Kansas City Royals just before the 2025 MLB trade deadline wrapped up. A few hours later, Yastrzemski, who has been with the team since 2019, bid the fans and city of San Francisco farewell with a touching Instagram post.

In a COVID-shortened 2020 MLB season, Yastrzemski finished eighth in MVP voting for the Giants as he boasted a .297 average, .968 on-base-plus-slugging, 10 home runs and four triples, which led the majors.

Yastrzemski amassed 114 home runs and a .238 batting average in 790 games during his seven seasons in San Francisco.

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Tigers bolster bullpen and perhaps pitching chaos with right-handers Finnegan, Sewald and Heuer

DETROIT (AP) — The Detroit Tigers seem to be setting themselves up to potentially go back to what manager A.J. Hinch calls pitching chaos.

Detroit bolstered its bullpen, and options in games without a traditional starting pitcher, with a series of moves to add a trio of right-handers in the hours before the trade deadline on Thursday.

The Tigers acquired Washington’s Kyle Finnegan, Cleveland’s Paul Sewald and Texas minor leaguer Codi Heuer for prospects and cash.

Detroit made the trades — and one earlier this week — hoping to increase its chances of winning a World Series for the first time in more than four decades.

The AL Central-leading Tigers won their fourth straight game with newly acquired starting pitcher Chris Paddack on Wednesday, two days after he was added in a trade with the Minnesota Twins. Later that day, they acquired right-handed reliever Rafael Montero from Atlanta for minor league infielder Jim Jarvis.

Detroit has nearly a double-digit game lead in a division suddenly filled with rebuilding teams, including the defending AL Central-champion Guardians, and is vying with Toronto and Houston for the best record in the league.

The Tigers, trying to take advantage of ace Tarik Skubal and a balanced lineup, are aiming for their first World Series title since 1984.

Detroit earned a spot in the playoffs last year for the first time in the decade after a late-season surge, using Hinch’s unconventional approach to using relievers to start and pitch in games for an inning or two.

The 33-year-old Finnegan was an All-Star in 2024, but his velocity has been down this season. He has 20 saves with a 4.38 ERA in 2025.

In the trade for Finnegan, the Tigers sent minor league pitchers Josh Randall and R.J. Sales, Detroit’s third and 10th round draft picks from 2024, respectively, to Washington.

The 35-year-old Sewald is eligible to return from the injured list on Sunday after being shut down with a strained right shoulder, but he isn’t expected to pitch until September. He is 1-1 with a 4.70 ERA in 18 games this season, averaging more than one strikeout each inning.

The 29-year-old Heuer, who will report to Triple-A Toledo, was 3-2 with a 3.43 ERA and four saves in 35 games at Triple-A Round Rock this year and pitched in one game for the Rangers.

Detroit opens a three-game series Friday night at Philadelphia.

Sens Rewind: The Year Jason Spezza Became Ottawa Senators Captain

When Jason Spezza was named captain of the Ottawa Senators for the 2013–14 season, not many people saw it coming, at least not yet. Spezza was coming off the shortened NHL season in which he played just five regular-season games and three playoff games due to back problems, and Daniel Alfredsson was still widely respected as the club’s captain and longtime leader.

But Spezza recovered nicely, and Alfredsson left the team in free agency that summer, signing with the Detroit Red Wings. So, Spezza became Ottawa’s new captain.

At the time, no one realized it would be such a short tenure, just one season, before Spezza asked for a trade. If the Senators had known then what they know now, they might have given the captaincy to veteran Chris Phillips, the club’s all-time leader in games played.

From The Hockey News Archive, Ryan Kennedy wrote about Spezza shortly after he made his debut as the Senators’ captain in October 2013. – SW


Oct 28, 2013
Vol. 67, issue 07

A TEAM ON HIS BACK

Jason Spezza is healthy, and his timing is impeccable. Ottawa is hungry for a deep playoff run and needs a leader in the wake of Daniel Alfredsson’s departure

BY RYAN KENNEDY

THE OTTAWA SENATORS were full of miracles last season, starting with the young squad making the playoffs during a campaign in which their best player in each zone lost most of the 48-game season to injury. Goaltender Craig Anderson missed 18 games with a sprained ankle. Defenseman Erik Karlsson missed 31 with a sliced Achilles tendon, a year after winning the Norris Trophy. And center Jason Spezza was done after five games due to surgery on a herniated disc.

Now, with franchise face Daniel Alfredsson gone, Spezza will test his back literally and metaphorically as he dons the ‘C’ for the up-and-coming Senators. Spezza has battled back issues before, having surgery in 2006, but the ordeal he went through this time pushed him to the brink.

“The first time it happened I got by with cortisone shots for a while, because it was the Torino Olympics year and I wanted to be ready,” Spezza says. “I tried cortisone again this time and got no relief whatsoever.”

The latest flare-up actually dated back to the 2012 playoffs, when the Senators lost a hard-fought seven-game series to the top-seeded New York Rangers. “It was very manageable,” he says. “I played in Switzerland during the lockout and felt good starting the season after that. But by the third game in Florida, I couldn’t sit at the dinner table. It took over my life. I almost lost full function in my right leg. It went numb.”

Unlike in 2006, there was no delaying the surgery. Spezza went under the knife and didn’t return to duty until the second round of the playoffs, when Ottawa fell to Pittsburgh in five games. From February until late May, he sat in the press box, often with Karlsson and defenseman Jared Cowen, who was also out long-term with a hip injury. “It’s nerve-wracking when you want your team to win and you can’t do anything about it,” Spezza says. “It’s not something I want to make a habit of doing. You try to keep your mind sharp. It’s good to have conversations and bounce ideas off each other. Rehabbing is tough and long and not very rewarding sometimes.”

You’d think two incredible players watching from a bird’s eye view would have been helpful for coach Paul MacLean, but he notes that since Spezza and Karlsson think and play the game at such a high level, it’s not often that useful to the average player incapable of pulling off such feats. One player who did benefit, however, was center Kyle Turris. He was playing his first full season with Ottawa after a mid-year trade with Phoenix in late 2011 and had a fit of bad luck once Spezza was on the shelf, but the veteran was there for him. “There was a stretch where I went like, 20 games without a goal,” Turris says. “He’d come down after I had hit the post that night and say, ‘Turs, don’t worry. It’s coming.’ He’d text me on the road and was always so encouraging.”

Former Ottawa Senator Mark Stone Jokes That It Wasn't Always Easy Playing On Brady Tkachuk's LineFormer Ottawa Senator Mark Stone Jokes That It Wasn't Always Easy Playing On Brady Tkachuk's LineVegas Golden Knights captain Mark Stone will always have a soft spot for Ottawa. Six years after he was traded away by the Senators, Stone still spends most of his summers in the city. He has a boatload of friends here, and he’s pleased to see that the Senators—his former team—are playing so well again.

Turris and Spezza have a funny history. They met in 2008, when a teenaged Turris was invited to Canada’s camp for the World Championship in Quebec City and Halifax, and Spezza was his roommate. “I was a wide-eyed 18-year-old kid,” Turris says. “And he was a superstar. It was a lot of fun. We joke about it now.”

Fast-forward to last season and Turris was once again a new face, this time in the pros after several tumultuous seasons in Phoenix. Spezza was there for him this time, too. “He was awesome,” Turris says. “He made me feel like a part of the team right from the start. He’s such a good professional and respects everyone. So down-to-earth.”

MACLEAN HAD A LOT OF conversations about the captaincy before bestowing the honor on Spezza, particularly with GM Bryan Murray. There were certainly other options available: Chris Phillips, for instance, has been a Senator his entire 15-year career and stayed with the franchise through its recent rebuild even when he had a chance to leave for more competitive pastures. There’s also Karlsson, who, though he’s just 23, has already become an elite defenseman in the NHL and would fit into the recent trend of young stars (Jamie Benn in Dallas being the latest) earning the ‘C.’ “We felt Jason was at the point where he was ready to take his career in a new direction,” MacLean says. “It’s not so much about the amount of goals or points he scores as an individual, but how much success the team has as a whole.”

He’s become so entrenched in the NHL that it’s easy to forget Spezza was a headline-grabbing phenom back in the day. As a 15-year-old, he was allowed to head to the Ontario League a year early, suiting up for Brampton and scoring more than a point per game. He was essentially John Tavares before John Tavares. Though his first pro season was split between Ottawa and AHL Binghamton, it wasn’t long before Spezza was one of the most dangerous players in the NHL. “He came into the league highly touted and now he’s in a space where his responsibilities to the younger players have grown,” MacLean says. “He can now pass on what he has learned from the veterans before him.”

One of those veterans, of course, was Daniel Alfredsson. A Senator for 17 seasons and captain for 13, he had become virtually fused into the identity of the team. But when negotiations went bad on a new contract in the summer, ‘Alfie’ pulled up stakes for Detroit, where he believed he would have a better shot at that elusive Stanley Cup ring. In an age where nothing is secret for long, Spezza was one of the few who got the inside scoop from the man himself. “That was very stand-up of him,” Spezza says. “He wanted me to hear it from him and I’ve always respected him for that.”

The exit of Alfie actually represents one of Spezza’s first official tests as captain. It’s a given he’ll be asked about the move many times this year, especially when Detroit and Ottawa clash as new rivals in the Atlantic Division. Spezza, for his part, is unflappable on the subject. “It was talked about so much,” he says. “Since we’ve been at camp it hasn’t been discussed and it hasn’t had to be discussed. We’ve been preparing for life without him for a couple years now, we just didn’t know he’d be going to a different team.”

Alex Formenton's Lawyer: 'The Crown Attorney Knowingly Forged Ahead With A Hopeless Prosecution'Alex Formenton's Lawyer: 'The Crown Attorney Knowingly Forged Ahead With A Hopeless Prosecution'Daniel Brown, the lawyer for former Ottawa Senator Alex Formenton, made a statement to the media this week after his client was found not guilty of sexual assault charges. Formenton and four other members of the 2018 Canadian World Junior Team were accused of sexual assault by a then 20-year-old woman in a London, Ontario hotel room.

The irony of Alfredsson’s defection is that if anything, the scrappy Senators will be tough outs in the post-season, especially with Spezza, Karlsson and Anderson at full strength. Bobby Ryan was acquired from Anaheim, bringing an upgrade at right wing from the aging Alfredsson, plus even the young kids got experience last season thanks to the team’s first-round upset of Montreal. Spezza watched that Habs series from the press box, but loved the way his mates shut down the middle of the ice on the speedy Canadiens and applied back pressure. The Sens got smacked by Pittsburgh in the second round, but Spezza sees that as the low tide mark, not the high. “We can be a hard team to play against,” he says. “But as we saw in the Pitts-burgh series, we need to take another step. Expectations have gone up.”

And once again the clock is ticking. Spezza has been to the Cup final once and it didn’t go the way he would have liked. That happened in 2007 when the Senators were destroyed by an Anaheim Ducks machine featuring three surefire Hall of Famers (Chris Pronger, Scott Niedermayer and Teemu Selanne) and a cluster of up-and-coming stars, including Ryan Getzlaf and Corey Perry. “Probably the best moment and the worst moment of my career,” Spezza says. “That was as good a team as I’ve ever played on and I still didn’t win.”

Though competitors always hold out hope, Spezza knew it was over midway through Game 5, an eventual 6-2 Ducks triumph to clinch the chalice. “The third period was a blur,” he says. “I’m sure everybody felt the same way.”

Of course, most of those players are gone from Ottawa now (Phillips and Chris Neil are the only other holdovers). The current edition of the squad has just a handful of players 30 or older and Spezza’s still just 30 himself. Which in another way makes him a strategic choice for captain – despite having more than 600 NHL games under his belt, he’s no greybeard. “I’m into house music and rap,” he says. “I’m still up on the music, I’m not stuck in the 90s or anything. I’m not crazy about the social media, but maybe I’m just stubborn.”

On the road, he’s not one to simply hole up in his room by himself, either. “He’s right in there and he’s one of the guys,” Turris says. “That’s why everyone respects him so much. He interacts with everybody from the rookies to the veterans.”

Even his coach has seen Spezza’s fun side, but the moustachioed bench boss also points to a studious part of the new captain’s personage that intrigued. “He is a relaxed guy and he likes to have fun, but he’s very serious about hockey,” MacLean says. “He’s a student of the game and a fan of the game. He knows all the trivia and he loves to do the research about the history.”

If Spezza wants to do some book learnin’ early on this season, maybe he can delve into the history of Canada’s Olympic hockey team and dark horses who made the final cut. It’s relevant since he was a surprise snub when the team’s orientation camp was held over the summer, meaning no ball hockey with Mike Babcock for the skilled Senator. Spezza was told by Canadian brass his missing nearly all of last season hurt his profile, but that doesn’t mean he’s going to book a Caribbean vacation during the Olympic break just yet. He’s going to work through the slight and try to prove his way onto the final roster.

“You have to use it as fuel,” he says. “I hoped they would look at my entire body of work instead of the fact that I missed most of last year. I’m definitely going to use it as motivation. I want to be in that upper echelon.”

And he can start by leading the Senators back up the standings. While MacLean may not be worried about individual numbers for his new on-ice general, Spezza did average more than a point per game in his last full campaign with Ottawa and now he’s got Ryan, one of the purest finishers in the league, running shotgun.

Turris has seen Spezza’s arsenal up close and personal and is still in awe. “A big thing is how strong he is and his ability to keep the puck under pressure,” he says. “He has smarts and he sees the game. The plays he makes are incredible.”

So it’s over the remparts once again for Spezza and now the team is his to lead into battle. There may have been some awshucks humility in him earlier in life, but now the veteran is focused. With the ‘C’ on his chest and passion to win in his heart, Spezza is embracing responsibility. “It’s something that can’t be taken lightly,” he says. “I’m looking forward to the challenge and honored to be given the opportunity.”

And given the pain he endured last season, it’s an opportunity he knows not to squander. 

By Ryan Kennedy
The Hockey News Archive
Image credit: Timothy T. Ludwig-Imagn Images

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Report: Yankees agree to acquire All-Star closer David Bednar from Pirates for 3 prospects

PITTSBURGH — Looking to fortify their bullpen for the stretch run, the New York Yankees agreed to acquire two-time All-Star closer David Bednar from the Pittsburgh Pirates a few hours ahead of baseball’s trade deadline Thursday.

New York was set to send catcher/first base prospect Rafael Flores, catcher Edgleen Perez and outfielder Brian Sanchez to the Pirates in exchange for Bednar, a person with knowledge of the deal told The Associated Press.

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

The Yankees had been seeking more late-inning options for their bullpen, which entered Thursday with a 4.24 ERA — including a 6.27 mark in July.

Knicks closing in on adding Brendan O’Connor to top position on Mike Brown’s staff

The Knicks are closing in on a deal to add Clippers assistant Brendan O’Connor to a top position on Mike Brown’s staff, league sources tell SNY.

O’Connor, a longtime assistant coach, has a strong defensive acumen. He’s worked for the Clippers under both Ty Lue and Doc Rivers. He will be Brown’s top assistant on defense. The Knicks have been looking to add two coaches to Brown’s staff, and their next hire will presumably be Brown’s associate head coach.

Brown will keep some coaches from Tom Thibodeau’s staff, including Darren Erman, Mark Bryant, Maurice Cheeks, Rick Brunson and Jordan Brink.

New York has been denied permission to speak to several assistant coaches the club had interest in. The Knicks were in touch with Pablo Prigioni for a top assistant spot, but Prigioni decided to stay in Minnesota.

Sirius XM’s Frank Isola first reported that the Knicks and O’Connor were close to a deal. The New York Post first reported that O’Connor will be the top defensive assistant in New York.

Yankees acquiring reliever Jake Bird in trade with Rockies

The Yankees continue to add to their bullpen, acquiring right-hander Jake Bird from the Colorado Rockies, per multiple reports.

According to ESPN's Jeff Passan, the Yankees are sending second base prospect Roc Riggio and left-handed pitching prospect Ben Shields to Colorado. MLB Pipeline ranked Riggio as the No. 10 overall prospect in the Yankees' system, with Shields coming in at No. 28.

Bird, 29, is in his fourth pro season with Colorado, pitching to a 4.73 ERA with 62 strikeouts in 53.1 innings pitched.

Bird isn't just a rental for the Yankees, as the righty is under club control and arbitration eligible through the 2028 season.

Earlier in the day, the Yankees acquired David Bednar from the Pittsburgh Pirates, and it's clear that improving the bullpen was a huge focal point for GM Brian Cashman and the rest of the front office.

Mets acquiring Cedric Mullins in trade with Orioles

The Mets are trading for Orioles center fielderCedric Mullins, reports SNY MLB Insider Andy Martino.

In exchange for Mullins, who is set for free agency after the season, the Mets are sending three right-handed pitching prospects to Baltimore: Raimon Gomez, Anthony Nunez, and Chandler Marsh.

Gomez, whose fastball has reached as high as 104 mph, was No. 28 on SNY's preseason Top 30 list. Nunez and Marsh were not on the list.

Before dealing for Mullins, the Mets spoke with the White Sox about a potential trade for Luis Robert Jr. But Chicago's asking price was likely prohibitive.

Mullins has picked it up offensively lately, slashing .321/.333/.547 in 57 plate appearances over his last 16 games.

Overall this season, he has hit .229/.305/.433 with 15 home runs, 19 doubles, and 14 stolen bases. His OPS+ is 103, which is a tick above average.

Defensively, Mullins is in the 83rd percentile this season while being worth 2 OAA, via Baseball Savant. On Wednesday afternoon against the Blue Jays in Baltimore, he made a highlight-reel catch while going high above the wall to rob a home run.

An All-Star in 2021, Mullins has hit .250/.318/.426 with 101 home runs and 140 doubles in 784 games over eight big league seasons -- all with the O's.

Adding Mullins to the mix will help provide some length to the bottom of the Mets' lineup, and signal an end to Tyrone Taylor and Jeff McNeil splitting time in center field.

Taylor -- an elite defender -- has been struggling badly at the plate this season, slashing .201/.258/.295 with a 60 OPS+. McNeil had been playing an admirable center field, but was out of position.

From The Archive: Rings For Wings: Part III

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Rings For Wings: Part III - Apr. 19 2002 - Vol. 55, Issue 32 - Mark Brender

On the morning of an April battle with Original Six rival Toronto, a surprise awaits Detroit backup goalie Manny Legace as he comes clomp-clomping down the hallway for the game-day skate. When he gets to the bench he stops, pulls up his mask and takes in the scene.

“Holy kids day!” he exclaims.

Chris Chelios and Brett Hull and a few other Wings are already out there, but so are a dozen shinny-playing squirts and peewees and five-footers in ‘Robitaille’ sweaters, some wearing hockey gloves, some wearing shin pads (no socks), none with any idea it might be time to get the heck off of Joe Louis Arena ice.

Legace shrugs, heads to his crease and assumes the position. 

The rest of the Wings don’t seem to mind much, either. Soon they’re all out there, skating, stretching, and the kids - one is Luc Robitaille’s son, another a Chelios boy - stand out like baby pines in a redwood forest. Some wiseacre points out the pint-sizers to associate coach Dave Lewis. “That’s your lineup tonight,” he offers. Hey, could be. Anything to keep things interesting. In the final weeks of the season other teams fight for a playoff spot or to firm up their position. 

These Wings fight apathy While they talked of getting prepared and doing the little things right – and they are in a grumpy mood following a 5-4 OT loss to the Leafs the truth is Detroit needed to accomplish : only three things before the post season:

One, get some downtime for key veterans such as Sergei Fedorov, Igor Larionov, Nicklas Lidstrom and Chelios. Competitive balance be damned, the Wings felt they earned the right to rest by clinching first place overall before anyone else clinched a playoff spot.

Two, get Steve Yzerman fully healthy from his knee injury. As strong and deep as the Wings are, last year provided the perfect example of how losing their captain can change everything. A fractured ankle kept him out of all but Game 1 of the opening round series versus Los Angeles The Wings fell in six.

Three, pray nobody else gets hurt.

Now, if all those are accomplished, can the Stanley Cup be far behind?

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Consider that over the regular season, the Wings have been the NHL’s best offensive team and second-best defensively. They have the second best power play and fourth-best penalty killing. With Yzerman, Fedorov and Larionov, they are ’ unrivaled at center. One of their defenseman, either Lidstrom or Chelios, will win the Norris Trophy The other will finish second. There’s also this Hasek fella. They say he can play some.

They have the playoff experience– ten players remain from the Stanley Cup teams of 1997 and ’98 - and the hunger. Hasek and Robitaille have never won Stanley Cups. The rest of the corps believes it hasn’t won enough of them. Funny how just six months ago, this team had its doubters. Too few pucks on the ice, too much Geritol in the medicine cabinet. It has been a long time since anyone worried about either one.

“The question was could (coach) Scotty (Bowman) find enough ice time to keep, everybody happy and I think Scotty has done that,” says GM Ken Holland. “It’s a happy bunch.”

Sure, the Wings have the NHL’s highest payroll, but the Rangers aren’t far behind and look where it got them. Holland deserves credit for bringing in the type of players that could coalesce around a single goal.

“Guys don’t care this year who gets it done as long as we get it done,” says winger Darren McCarty. “That’s really the secret to our success. No one’s got another agenda than to win. Unless we win the Stanley Cup this year it’s an unsuccessful season. Is that pressure? A little bit in a way, but nothing we haven’t all felt before.”

Any jealousy that has surfaced in the Wings’ midst has come from their opponents. Larionov and Fedorov have both heard from friends who say Detroit has such a great team they wish they could be part of it. They are awed by Detroit’s magical puck possession and its roster of stars.

“I got that sense,” Fedorov says, “but I said we still have our own problems.”

Michigan-Based Universities Dominating Recruiting With Top Class of 2025Michigan-Based Universities Dominating Recruiting With Top Class of 2025Michigan-based universities have solidified their dominance in the world of college hockey by securing top-tier recruiting classes for 2025, according to recent rankings.

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Players such as Tomas Holmstrom provide more than enough grit to see Detroit through in close games. “We feel we’ve got a team that can win 2-1 in the playoffs,” said GM Ken Holland.

Like, say, which future Hall of Famer’s mass-marketed T-shirt to wear in the dressing room? After the Leaf game, trade deadline pickup defenseman Jiri Slegr sports the Hasek model. It’s a caricature of a goalie with an angular head sprawled out in front of a net, bending like a boomerang. The bottom reads “Dominik Hasek Fan Club.”

“One thing surprised me,” Slegr says, sitting in his corner stall. “There are so many superstars and you don’t even know about it. They don’t act like superstars. They are just so friendly”

It is easy to be over-whelmed by this cast of active hockey heroes, to think that they have fundamentally changed the complexion of the team. At first glance, not only & are these a far cry from your father’s Red Wings, they’re not even your older brother’s. Along with the star-factor, it seems, has come decrease in the prominence of Detroit’s grit. McCarty is the prime example. 

Four years ago, if you were asked to identify four key Wings, Claude Lemieux’s hit-man would be on every list. This season McCarty was a healthy scratch nine times. His dream of stepping into the scoring bruiser role vacated by Martin Lapointe has never materialized.

“I was looking forward to that,” McCarty says. “But then after you sign guys like Brett Hull, Luc Robitaille, you’re bringing in 1,300 goals or 1,200 goals or whatever it is, so that sort of squishes the spot for that offensive move you’re looking for.”

McCarty’s ice time, as much as 17:04 in 1998-99, has fallen to less than 12 minutes a game. And his old Grind Line center Draper has been moved to right wing where his speed can be used in an offensive role.

But Detroit without old-time sandpaper doesn’t quite fit. This is a team that honors its Stanley Cup and award winners in red paint on white cinderblock in a hall-way under the stands. The Wings still have stanchions holding up their glass. A routine scrum can propel 20,000 Joe Louis fanatics their feet, hollering for blood.

And the truth is the Wings haven’t lost their grit; if anything, it’s only spread out better among the four ever-changing lines. Shanahan, Tomas Holmstrom, Draper, McCarty, even Robitaille all get dirty in battles for pucks along the boards.

If the Wings weren’t such a great skating team, you could even say their wall work was a strength.

As always, in the post-season they’ll need their hard hats as much as their talent. Foes may be awed by the Wings’ glitter, but that doesn’t mean they’ll abandon the fight in the alley

“You think they’re going to lay down with all that (superstar) baggage in the background?” asks center Sergei Fedorov. “It has never happened and it never will.”

If Fedorov and the Wings believe their own words, that might be the best sign of all. They certainly have so far.

Hall of Fame awaits Winged retirements

Detroit’s star-studded lineup includes nine potential Hall-of-Famers. Players are given four stars (shoo-in), three (a good shot) or two (on the bubble) to indicate their chances.

From landslide to Cup?

Detroit’s projected 17-point margin over the next-best regular season team would be the third-highest since 1967 expansion. The Wings had a 27-point margin in 1996, when they lost in the second round. Here’s how the runaway first overall finishers have fared come playoff time.

Detroit Red Wings 2025-26 Promotional ScheduleDetroit Red Wings 2025-26 Promotional ScheduleThe Red Wings announced their promotional schedule for the 2025-26 season

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Five NHL Teams With The Longest Competitive Windows

As the NHL continues to evolve with a rising salary cap and a greater emphasis on youth and speed, a team’s window to win can open and close faster than ever.

That makes long-term roster planning more important than ever. Franchises that can secure their core, be conscious of the cap and maintain a steady flow of young talent are better positioned to remain competitive season after season, even as the rest of the NHL evolves.

Five NHL teams, in particular, are built for the long haul. These teams aren’t just competing for a Stanley Cup next season – they structured their rosters with a balance of proven and upcoming young talent signed long-term, giving them the chance to be perennial contenders.

Florida Panthers

It seemed nearly impossible for Florida Panthers GM Bill Zito to lock up Sam Bennett, Aaron Ekblad and Brad Marchand as they were all due for significant raises following a second straight Stanley Cup victory. A rising salary cap and a clear desire to win by all of those players helped put together one of the most remarkable off-seasons in the Salary Cap Era.

With Aleksander Barkov, Matthew Tkachuk, Sam Reinhart, Carter Verhaeghe, Anton Lundell, Bennett, Marchand, Seth Jones, Ekblad and Gustav Forsling all signed until at least 2030, there isn’t a team that is better constructed for the rest of the decade to consistently challenge for a Stanley Cup.

Sergei Bobrovsky is entering the final season of his contract with a $10-million cap hit. While he would undoubtedly deserve around the same average annual value, this summer is proof that nobody should be surprised if the 36-year-old ends up taking less to help Zito add even more talent to this incredible roster.

In every area of the ice, the Panthers have legitimate star-level talents who have proven to shine in the biggest moments. There’s no reason to believe they won’t stay competitive for a very long time.

Andrei Svechnikov and Aleksander Barkov (Geoff Burke-Imagn Images)

Tampa Bay Lightning

While the Tampa Bay Lightning’s reign as back-to-back Stanley Cup champions in 2020 and 2021 may have felt like the end of the story for this core, there are many reasons to believe this group might not be done yet.

Brayden Point, Jake Guentzel, Brandon Hagel, Anthony Cirelli and Yanni Gourde are all under contract for at least the next five seasons. Victor Hedman and Erik Cernak will be leading the defensive core for the next four, and goaltender Andrei Vasilevskiy is around for at least the next three seasons. 

While Nikita Kucherov’s contract is just two seasons away from expiring, there are no indications that the perennial Hart Trophy candidate has any desire to leave. Why would he want to?

Not only do the Lightning have a core of remarkable forwards, but with no player earning more than $9.5 million per season, GM Julien Brisebois has a ton of flexibility with a rising cap to consistently build around the team’s depth year-over-year.

After trading prospect Isaac Howard this summer, a lack of upcoming prospects could be a cause for concern for this core as years progress, but there’s no doubt the Lightning have the foundation to compete for Stanley Cup championships continuously.

Dallas Stars

While Dallas fans may be disappointed with this Stars core’s inability to get past the Western Conference final over the last three seasons, adding a game-breaking talent, Mikko Rantanen, truly has changed the trajectory of this organization. It really feels like the question is not if, but when the Stars will hoist the Stanley Cup.

Even with Mason Marchment and Logan Stankoven being traded, Jason Robertson being a topic of trade speculation and Jamie Benn nearing the end of his career, the Stars still boast one of the most dangerous cores in the league.

Wyatt Johnston, Roope Hintz, Rantanen, Miro Heiskanen, Esa Lindell and Jake Oettinger are all signed for at least the next five seasons. They also have a mix of younger emerging talent they will likely retain for many years, highlighted by Mavrik Bourque and Thomas Harley.

Harley is obviously at a significantly different point in his development than Bourque as he potentially pushes for a roster spot on Team Canada at the 2026 Olympics. That said, with both players being just 23 years old, they reinforce how dominant the Stars look capable of being for the present and the foreseeable future.

New Jersey Devils

While the New Jersey Devils still need upgrades to truly be considered Stanley Cup contenders, having a core of Jack Hughes, Timo Meier, Jesper Bratt, Dougie Hamilton, Brett Pesce and Johnathan Kovacevic signed for at least three seasons makes it hard to believe they won’t find a way to make a deep run at some point.

That list excludes Nico Hischier, current RFA Luke Hughes and Jacob Markstrom, three integral players who are due for contracts over the next two years. The Devils likely won’t have issues retaining Hischier and Hughes, but they do have an important decision to make regarding Markstrom’s future with the club. 

After extending Jake Allen to a five-year deal with a modest $1.8-million cap hit, how much salary and term are they willing to commit to another veteran goaltender in Markstrom? They must decide whether Nico Daws is ready to become a full-time NHL netminder or whether there are alternative options they can target. It’s tough to project, but the Devils’ competitive window will change drastically if they fail to maintain a strong one-two punch in the crease.

Carolina Taking Risk, Setting The Standard With Jackson Blake SigningCarolina Taking Risk, Setting The Standard With Jackson Blake SigningThe Carolina Hurricanes have become known for thinking outside of the box, doing things their own way and even playing a brand of hockey that is unique to their team. So when they announced the eight-year extension of Jackson Blake, a rookie last year with 34 points in 80 games, there were eyebrows raised throughout the hockey world. When everyone took a step back and broke things down, the deal was viewed as a long-term value play despite the $5.117 AAV. 

Carolina Hurricanes

The past few seasons have been a rollercoaster for the Carolina Hurricanes.

With multiple exits in the Eastern Conference final and failing to retain two major rental acquisitions – Guentzel and Rantanen – GM Eric Tulsky has still managed to build this team for long-term success somehow.

The Hurricanes’ homegrown core of Sebastian Aho, Andrei Svechnikov, Seth Jarvis, Jackson Blake and Jaccob Slavin are all locked up for at least the next seven seasons. Tulsky also brought in Logan Stankoven, Nikolaj Ehlers and K’Andre Miller on long-term deals in the past few months.

Similarly to the Devils, the real question marks come in net, considering Frederik Andersen’s injury history and Pyotr Kochetkov’s unproven track record and struggles in the playoffs. However, the Hurricanes possess so much talent from top to bottom that it’s hard to deny their status as perennial contenders.

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How Buster Posey's MLB trade deadline selling approach shapes Giants' future

How Buster Posey's MLB trade deadline selling approach shapes Giants' future originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

SAN FRANCISCO — The last two weeks have been unfathomably bad for the Giants, but Buster Posey has actually watched this movie before. 

Posey was one of the stars of the 2016 team that came out of the All-Star break with a 1-7 road trip through San Diego, Boston and New York. If your counter is that this 2025 stretch has been filled with particularly hard-to-watch plays, take a few moments and find a video of Santiago Casilla’s walk-off balk at Petco Park nine years ago. 

That collapse led to the stunning Matt Duffy-Matt Moore swap, but there was a key difference back then. The 2016 Giants were the best team in baseball for most of the first half and had built such a cushion that they still found themselves in first place and 17 games above .500 on deadline day. 

This year’s group was nine games up just three weeks ago, but has been in a freefall ever since. The Giants dipped under .500 the day before the deadline, and that was enough for Posey to swallow hard and commit to becoming a seller, something the Giants have just about entirely avoided since moving to Oracle Park 25 years ago. 

“We wanted to be in a different position, to add. Unfortunately, with the way we’ve played, we had to make a decision here to try to add some talent that we felt like could help us going forward,” the president of baseball operations said. “Overall, I think Zack (Minasian) and myself and the rest of the group are happy with the players that we have coming to put on a Giants uniform now.”

The front office ended up parting with relievers Camilo Doval and Tyler Rogers, along with outfielder Mike Yastrzemski. On Wednesday morning, there were five players on the roster who had played with Posey in his final big league season. By 3 p.m. on Thursday, he had traded three of them. Only Logan Webb and Wilmer Flores remain from the last Giants team to reach the postseason. 

A lot has changed for the organization in the past four years, and a lot changed in the past 48 hours. The Giants held out hope for as long as possible that they could add a starting pitcher and make a second half run, but they pivoted to a sale while getting swept by the Pittsburgh Pirates. 

Posey said there was no one moment when a white flag was raised. It just became clear what had to be done. 

“I think it was watching the way we played over the last month and how poorly we played since the break,” Posey said. “We felt like this was a time that we needed to try to get back some players that will help us going forward in the future.”

Posey did not go nearly as far as he could have — Robbie Ray, Justin Verlander and others who could have been trade chips remained. The Giants would have needed to be “blown away” to trade Ray, and nobody crossed that threshold. Posey said he never approached Verlander to ask whether he wanted to continue his pursuit of 300 wins elsewhere. 

The Giants hoped to add to their rotation at the deadline, but when things went south, they opted not to subtract. Those hits went to the bullpen, which is now without the eighth- and ninth-inning arms. The Giants will likely install Randy Rodriguez as their closer, and that might be actually an upgrade, but the team’s best unit was torn apart by the deadline. 

Other than that, the Giants remain just about the same. Yastrzemski was in a platoon with Luis Matos, and the young outfielder might now get a chance to play everyday. The Giants also could call up Drew Gilbert — acquired in the Rogers trade — or give a shot to Marco Luciano or Grant McCray, who was scratched from the Triple-A lineup on Thursday, along with Kai-Wei Teng. 

There was really no excuse for the Giants to play as poorly as they did on the homestand, and if guys like Rafael Devers, Willy Adames, Matt Chapman, Jung Hoo Lee and Heliot Ramos can get going at the same time, they might still pile up some wins against a soft schedule over their next 53 games. 

But the hole is almost certainly already too deep. They are six games behind the San Diego Padres, who hold the final playoff spot at the moment and went absolutely nuts at the deadline, loading up in an attempt to run down the first-place Los Angeles Dodgers. Without Rogers and Doval, the Giants might start coughing up plenty of leads even if they can get them. 

The two right-handers were first and third, respectively, in the National League in appearances since 2022. Yastrzemski, one of Farhan Zaidi’s greatest moves, didn’t debut until he was 28, but he ended up playing 790 games for the Giants and posting seven straight two-WAR seasons. 

Beyond that, Rogers and Yastrzemski had become clubhouse leaders. They are both close with Webb, who is now the only Giant who has been around since the Bruce Bochy era. 

In trading those two and Doval, Posey was sending a message that his predecessor never committed to. Hanging around .500 wasn’t good enough. It was time for a big shakeup, and now it’s time to clean it up. 

“We just haven’t looked like the same team as we did at the beginning of the year,” Posey said. “I felt like at the beginning of the year it was, we harped on doing the little things right, it was clean baseball. We’ve kind of taken a 180. We’ve somehow got to recapture that form, that style of baseball that we had at the beginning of the season. 

“Losing a guy like Rog, like Doval, like Yaz — these are veteran players that do impact your team, but we still feel like we’ve got a group that should go out there and perform much better than they have the last month or so.”

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Report: Phillies add Gold Glove OF Harrison Bader from Twins for two prospects

PHILADELPHIA — The Philadelphia Phillies are acquiring outfielder Harrison Bader for two minor leaguers, a person with direct knowledge of the trade said Thursday, their second deal with the Minnesota Twins in two days after landing closer Jhoan Duran.

The person confirmed the swap to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because it was pending a review of medical records. ESPN was first to report it.

The 31-year-old Bader, a 2021 Gold Glove winner, remains a strong defender at all three outfield spots and has 12 home runs, 38 RBIs and a .778 OPS in 96 games. Bader adds another bat to an outfield that has struggled to put up big offensive numbers. He also has postseason experience, playing in five postseason series with the Cardinals, Yankees and Mets with a .809 OPS and five career homers.

The right-handed hitting Bader could fall into a platoon with left-handers Brandon Marsh in center or Max Kepler in left.

The Phillies are sending minor league outfielder Hendry Mendez and right-hander Geremy Villoria to the Twins for Bader.

The Phillies acquired Duran to round out the bullpen a day earlier. He has 16 saves and a 2.01 ERA in 49 appearances this season, striking out 53 in 49 1/3 innings. That deal cost the win-now Phillies a stronger pair of prospects in catcher Eduardo Tait and right-hander Mick Abel.

Philadelphia is battling the New York Mets for the NL East title. The Phillies won the division last year before they were eliminated by the Mets in their NL Division Series.

Red Sox settle for Dustin May after missing out on Merrill Kelly, Joe Ryan

Red Sox settle for Dustin May after missing out on Merrill Kelly, Joe Ryan originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

The trade deadline roller coaster was a rocky ride for Boston baseball fans on Thursday. But ultimately, after hours of boredom and nerves, they watched the Red Sox swing and miss at their top two targets.

Merrill Kelly? Sorry, he’s now a Texas Ranger.

Last-ditch, desperate efforts to steal the deadline and pony up whatever it costs to land Joe Ryan? No, he’s just about the only member of the Twins roster not on the move.

But perhaps, Red Sox fans, you could be interested in Dustin May?

Ultimately, that’s what Boston was able to get before the deadline bell rang, acquiring the 6-foot-6 May in exchange for James Tibbs III, the outfield prospect whom Boston acquired as part of the return package for Rafael Devers, and fellow outfield prospect Zach Ehrhard. Tibbs ranked fifth on the MLB Pipeline list of Sox prospects, while Ehrhard ranked 27th.

The right-handed May used to be a top young pitcher in baseball before his second Tommy John surgery set his career back in the summer of 2023. 

After missing all of the 2024 season, May returned this year to the Dodgers’ rotation. He’s gone 6-7 with a 4.85 ERA and 1.346 WHIP, a far cry from the 3.10 ERA and 1.049 WHIP he posted from 2019-23.

May previously underwent Tommy John surgery in 2021, which kept him off the mound for more than a year. 

May utilizes a four-pitch mix, heavily relying on a sweeper (41 percent usage rate) and sinker (36 percent). He throws his four-seam fastball just 16 percent of the time, and occasionally mixes in a cutter. He can help fill the fifth spot in the rotation, which has largely been occupied by Richard Fitts (demoted after his last start) and Hunter Dobbins (suffered season-ending knee injury earlier this month) this season, in place of the injured Tanner Houck. But he won’t do much to alter the expectations for a Red Sox team that entered deadline day in the second wild-card spot in the American League.

The Yankees (a game ahead of the Red Sox), Mariners and Rangers (both 1.5 games behind the Red Sox) all made significant additions at the deadline. Division leaders Toronto and Houston also made moves to get better.

The Red Sox got May and Steven Matz.

Making matters more painful for fans who wanted to see the Red Sox get aggressive and make some significant additions in a wide-open American League is the fact that Craig Breslow and Co. reportedly made some strong efforts to land both Kelly and Ryan, only to strike out on both fronts.

The Kelly pursuit seemed reasonable, as the 51-58 Diamondbacks have little use for a 36-year-old starting pitcher who’s due to hit free agency in the winter. And for a stretch, the Red Sox were heavily reported to be in discussions on Kelly. Yet rather swiftly, the Rangers swooped in and offered a package that got the trade done. (The Rangers sent their fifth, ninth and 13th-ranked prospects to Arizona in the deal.)

Yet with time left before the 6 p.m. deadline, Breslow had options. And according to Jon Morosi, he tried to fire up some last-minute talks for Ryan.

Acquiring Ryan — 26 years old, an All-Star for the first time this season, under team control through 2027, a perfect fit as a one-two punch with Garrett Crochet atop the Red Sox’ rotation — would have wiped away all of the frustration fans felt on Thursday. And it would have positioned the Red Sox rather strongly to not just secure a postseason berth for the first time in four years but also to perhaps make some headway toward a return to the World Series once those playoffs got underway.

Alas, that was not to be. Despite the Twins trading away 10 players before the deadline, they could not be convinced to trade Ryan.

For Breslow, this represents a second consecutive disappointing deadline. Last year, with the 57-51 Red Sox sitting 2.5 games out of the final AL wild-card spot, Breslow acquired James Paxton, who much like May was an underperforming Dodgers starter with an ERA close to 5. He also acquired backup catcher Danny Jansen and a trio of relievers — Luis Garcia, Lucas Sims, Quinn Priester. None helped the Red Sox do much of anything. The team went 24-30 in August and September and missed the playoffs by five games.

Matz should provide some help to a Boston bullpen that could use some. May will likely provide more or less the same type of impact that Dobbins and Fitts have given the team at the back of the rotation.

Yet this current team is eight games over .500 and is building some real interest and excitement in fans who had lost faith amid some of the floundering recent seasons. With so many hoping for Breslow to make a bold move to give the Red Sox a chance to make a real postseason run, the acquisitions of Matz and May certainly looks like the safe route.