London Knights Reveal Maple Leafs Forward Easton Cowan's Memorial Cup Championship Ring

Toronto Maple Leafs forward Easton Cowan will soon have his Memorial Cup ring.

The OHL's London Knights revealed the rings on Thursday morning, showcasing the one with Cowan's name on it. The 20-year-old was London's top player at the Memorial Cup in the spring, with three goals and four assists in five games.

Cowan was also the tournament's Most Valuable Player.

London was in the tournament in back-to-back years, and in that time, Cowan accumulated 15 points, which tied a franchise record, set by former Maple Leafs forward Mitch Marner.

Whenever Cowan and his former teammates acquire their rings, they could be getting two of them for being Memorial Cup Champions.

One of the rings contains the Knights' logo surrounded by what appears to be diamonds, with the player's name etched on the side. The other ring will have the player's number on it — also appearing to be surrounded by diamonds — along with 'London Knights' engraved on each side.

Cowan spent parts of four seasons with the Knights, from 2022 to 2025. The Mount Brydges, Ontario-born forward scored 84 goals and 220 points in 175 games with the OHL club.

He sits atop London's history books when it comes to playoff points. In 60 postseason games, Cowan scored 32 goals and 64 assists for 96 points. Not to mention, the forward also went on a historic (unofficial) point streak of 65 games. The OHL deemed it unofficial because the streak spanned over two seasons.

Cowan, now in his first NHL season, is an integral part of the Maple Leafs. His strong hockey IQ and competitiveness have allowed him to remain with the NHL club this year.

'It's A Little Too Embarrassing': Why Easton Cowan Was Summoned To Dance In Maple Leafs' Dressing Room After OT Winner Against Flyers'It's A Little Too Embarrassing': Why Easton Cowan Was Summoned To Dance In Maple Leafs' Dressing Room After OT Winner Against FlyersCowan scored the OT winner against the Flyers on Thursday night, marking the sixth win in their last eight games.

He has seven goals and seven assists through his first 35 games with Toronto.

Cowan, along with the Maple Leafs, is set to face Marner and the Vegas Golden Knights on Thursday night. It'll be the first time Cowan will play Marner, who was a role model for the young forward, in an NHL game.

Trade Rumors Heat Up: O’Reilly, Colton, and the Stakes in Colorado’s Cup Chase

Friday night will be a critical game for one former Colorado Avalanche player.

Ryan O’Reilly has long been a focal point in trade rumors, including speculation about a potential reunion with the Colorado Avalanche, the team that drafted him. Set to turn 35 in February, O’Reilly spent the first six seasons of his NHL career in Colorado (2009–2014), appearing in 427 games and compiling 90 goals and 156 assists during his tenure with the franchise.

Can Ryan O’Reilly Prove His Worth?

Even with the league’s best record, the most explosive offense, and the stingiest defense, coach Jared Bednar sees room for improvement at one position: the Avalanche remain thin at third-line center.

On Friday, the Avalanche (33-4-8) will take on the Nashville Predators (22-20-4), and O’Reilly, who has spent the past three seasons with Nashville, will be facing his former team.

Despite turning 35 soon, O’Reilly is on pace for one of the best seasons of his career. He is currently tracking to finish the year with 23 goals and 46 assists for 69 points.

That projection isn’t far off from his career-best campaign during the 2018-19 season, when he recorded 28 goals and 49 assists for 77 points. That same year, he also won the Stanley Cup and was awarded the Conn Smythe Trophy as playoff MVP, posting 23 points in 26 games, including eight goals and 15 assists.

Credit: Winslow Townson. O'Reilly hoisting the Stanley Cup in 2019 with the St. Louis Blues.
Credit: Winslow Townson. O'Reilly hoisting the Stanley Cup in 2019 with the St. Louis Blues.

Is Ross Colton at Odds with the Avalanche?

Over the past several seasons, the Avalanche have rotated Ross Colton between center and wing. On the wing, the former Stanley Cup champion has been highly productive, but his offensive output has generally dipped when deployed as the third-line center.

Recently, Colton has hinted at potential friction with the Avalanche. Last month, he managed just two points in 14 games, raising questions about his role and fit within the lineup.

The Robbinsville, New Jersey native found a spark when moved to the second line alongside Valeri Nichushkin and Brock Nelson against the Ottawa Senators, recording his first three-point game of the season.

Credit: Ron Chenoy. Ross Colton has not scored a goal since November 26 against the San Jose Sharks. 
Credit: Ron Chenoy. Ross Colton has not scored a goal since November 26 against the San Jose Sharks. 

“Feel like I’m playing well. I feel like part of it’s how you’re deployed, the minutes you’re getting. Long stretch there, we weren’t playing a lot, so it’s hard to do stuff when you’re playing less than 10 minutes,” Colton said. “We were doing everything that we could, playing the right way, doing little things right.”

While Colton’s performance against the Senators was encouraging, he won’t remain a second-line winger once captain Gabriel Landeskog returns from injury. Any offensive surge he produces could be short-lived.

Meanwhile, Jack Drury has filled the third-line center role over the past eight games, but it’s clear Bednar isn’t fully committed to him in that position. If he were, there wouldn’t be as much experimentation with the lineup.

Taken together, there’s a lot at stake for both Colton and O’Reilly — though in O’Reilly’s case, only if he actually wants to leave Nashville. Predators general manager Barry Trotz has made it clear that any trade involving O’Reilly would only happen at the player’s request.

Why O’Reilly Could Be a Perfect Fit

After the Avalanche traded O’Reilly and Jamie McGinn to the Buffalo Sabres in exchange for Nikita Zadorov, J.T. Compher, Mikhail Grigorenko, and a second-round pick, O’Reilly eventually landed in St. Louis, where his career truly took off. In his first season with the Blues, he won a Stanley Cup and was awarded the Conn Smythe Trophy as playoff MVP.

O’Reilly spent parts of five seasons with St. Louis before being traded to the Toronto Maple Leafs on February 17, 2023. He played 13 games with Toronto before signing with the Nashville Predators in the following offseason.'

Given his $4.5 million cap hit and consistent level of performance, O’Reilly would be a dream addition for an Avalanche team that is already one of the league’s most dangerous. In Nashville, he has been one of the few bright spots on a roster clearly in need of a new direction.

By comparison, Colton makes slightly less than O’Reilly at $4 million, but has only posted 20 points with five goals and 15 assists in 45 games. O’Reilly has nearly doubled that production despite being five years older and playing on a worse team.

The most significant obstacle could be a bidding war. Securing a player of O’Reilly’s caliber would likely demand a substantial return, yet the potential reward—a decisive edge in the pursuit of another Stanley Cup—could justify the cost. Should he deliver an eye-opening performance on Friday against the league’s top team, it would be difficult for Colorado to ignore the opportunity to at least place a formal offer.

Right now, the puck is in Colorado’s possession.

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Steve Kerr confident Jonathan Kuminga's trade demand won't distract the Warriors

Steve Kerr confident Jonathan Kuminga's trade demand won't distract the Warriors originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

SAN FRANCISCO – Warriors forward Jonathan Kuminga became trade eligible Thursday, and to state the obvious, he wants a new NBA team to call home.

The fifth-year pro has demanded a trade, league sources confirmed Thursday to NBC Sports Bay Area. Kuminga was in attendance for a rare home shootaround at Chase Center before the Warriors play the New York Knicks. Once reporters were allowed in, a smiling Kuminga sprinted off the court without comment. 

About six hours later, Warriors coach Steve Kerr, during his pregame press conference, was asked about the latest chapter in the Kuminga era that could end in the next three weeks by the Feb. 5 trade deadline. 

Kerr first reiterated his statement that he and Kuminga are on cordial terms. 

“Our relationship is fine,” he said. 

Aside from that, Kerr didn’t dive much deeper into the specifics of Kuminga’s hope for a fresh start. 

“There’s not a whole lot I can say about the other stuff,” Kerr continued. “It is what it is. Difficult situation for everybody. Part of this league, part of this job. We just keep moving forward. But it’s a tough situation and I don’t really have much to add.” 

Since being a healthy DNP-CD (Did Not Play, Coach’s Decision) on Dec. 7 in a blowout win against the Chicago Bulls, Kuminga has played in only one of the Warriors’ last 17 games. He played nine and half minutes in a one-point loss to the Phoenix Suns on Dec. 18. Kuminga hasn’t taken his black warmup shirt off and gotten off the bench to enter a game at all in the 13 games since.

In 12 of the Warriors’ 13 games during that span, Kuminga has continued to be a healthy DNP-CP. Kerr said on 95.7 The Game the morning of the Warriors’ eventual 37-point blowout loss against the Oklahoma City Thunder on Jan. 2 that Kuminga was in his plans to play. But Kuminga was a late addition to the Warriors’ injury report with lower back soreness and did not dress in a game Golden State also was without Steph Curry, Jimmy Butler and Draymond Green.

While the outside noise continues to become louder, Kerr says none of this is a hindrance to who Warriors are and won’t cause problems. 

“It won’t be a distraction,” Kerr said. “Jonathan’s a great young guy. His teammates like him. He’s handling himself well. There won’t be a distraction.” 

Kuminga signed a two-year, $48.5 million contract with a team option on the second season two days into training camp. The start of the season was seamless with Kuminga scoring 17 points on 6-of-11 shooting, having nine rebounds and six assists in an opening-night win against the Los Angeles Lakers. Kuminga started the first 12 games of the season, averaging 14.9 points, 6.8 rebounds and 3.l assists per game. 

The Warriors went 6-6 in those first 12 games. They’ve gone 16-13 after moving Kuminga out of the starting lineup two months ago. Kuminga has played in just six of those games, starting once, and averaging 16.5 minutes, 5.5 points, 4.8 rebounds and 1.5 assists.

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Dodgers sign top free agent outfielder Kyle Tucker to 4-year, $240 million deal

Dodgers sign top free agent outfielder Kyle Tucker to 4-year, $240 million deal originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

The wait ended the way so many modern baseball stories seem to in Los Angeles.

Kyle Tucker, the crown jewel of the 2026 MLB free agency class, is officially a Los Angeles Dodger.

Late Thursday night, the Los Angeles Dodgers finalized a deal with the four-time MLB All-Star and 2022 World Series Champion, agreeing to a four-year, $240 million contract that includes an opt-out after the second season. The pact carries one of the highest average annual values in baseball history and once again underscores the Dodgers’ willingness to operate at the very top of the sport’s financial ecosystem.

For months, Tucker’s free agency felt like a slow-burning standoff. Executives around the league believed his market would soar past $400 million on a long-term deal, especially given his age, durability, elite defense, and left-handed power bat. Tucker, coming off a season with the Chicago Cubs after being traded from the Houston Astros last offseason, was widely viewed as the rare free agent who checks every box: postseason pedigree, consistent production, and star presence without volatility.

But the market never quite erupted.

Instead, it pivoted.

As winter dragged on, the industry began buzzing about a different approach—shorter deals, massive annual value, and the chance for Tucker to re-enter free agency while still firmly in his prime. That’s where the Dodgers and New York Mets entered the picture in earnest. The Mets reportedly offered four years and $200 million, a strong bid that reflected their continued pursuit of top-tier talent. The Toronto Blue Jays, fresh off a 2025 World Series runner-up finish, went longest with their offer, hoping stability and years would sway the slugger north of the border.

In the end, Los Angeles wouldn’t be outdone.

The Dodgers pushed their offer to a level no one else could touch, combining financial dominance with flexibility.

According to Jeff Passan of ESPN, the deal is fully guaranteed. Includes opt-outs after years two and three. Comes with a $64 million dollar signing bonus, includes $30 million in deferred money, and is a record by AAV by over $6 million (previous record, Juan Soto by the New York Mets last season).

Tucker batted .266 with 22 home runs, 73 RBI, and 25 stolen bases in 136 games with the Cubs last season. He was voted to his fourth All-Star Game in July. 

Tucker is expected to start in right field for the Dodgers, moving Teoscar Hernandez to left field, where he played predominantly during the 2024 World Series season. The Dodgers needed another outfielder after left fielder Michael Conforto didn’t quite pan out as the team had thought in 2025.

Tucker slides into an already formidable Dodgers lineup as a middle-of-the-order force, capable of changing games with one swing while providing Gold Glove-caliber defense in the outfield. His postseason résumé only strengthens a team that measures success in October, not summer standings.

For the Dodgers, this signing isn’t just about winning the offseason. It’s about control—of the market, of the narrative, and of the championship window. While other teams blinked or hedged, Los Angeles leaned in.

Kyle Tucker bet on himself.

The Dodgers bet on now.

And once again, the rest of baseball is left reacting to a move that reshapes the balance of power—one expensive, deliberate swing at a time.

Dodgers sign top free agent Kyle Tucker to 4-year, $260M deal: Reports

Dodgers sign top free agent Kyle Tucker to 4-year, $260M deal: Reports originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

The wait ended the way so many modern baseball stories seem to in Los Angeles.

Kyle Tucker, the crown jewel of the 2026 MLB free agency class, is officially a Los Angeles Dodger.

Late Thursday night, the Los Angeles Dodgers finalized a deal with the four-time MLB All-Star and 2022 World Series Champion, agreeing to a four-year, $240 million contract that includes an opt-out after the second season. The pact carries one of the highest average annual values in baseball history and once again underscores the Dodgers’ willingness to operate at the very top of the sport’s financial ecosystem.

For months, Tucker’s free agency felt like a slow-burning standoff. Executives around the league believed his market would soar past $400 million on a long-term deal, especially given his age, durability, elite defense, and left-handed power bat. Tucker, coming off a season with the Chicago Cubs after being traded from the Houston Astros last offseason, was widely viewed as the rare free agent who checks every box: postseason pedigree, consistent production, and star presence without volatility.

But the market never quite erupted.

Instead, it pivoted.

As winter dragged on, the industry began buzzing about a different approach—shorter deals, massive annual value, and the chance for Tucker to re-enter free agency while still firmly in his prime. That’s where the Dodgers and New York Mets entered the picture in earnest. The Mets reportedly offered four years and $200 million, a strong bid that reflected their continued pursuit of top-tier talent. The Toronto Blue Jays, fresh off a 2025 World Series runner-up finish, went longest with their offer, hoping stability and years would sway the slugger north of the border.

In the end, Los Angeles wouldn’t be outdone.

The Dodgers pushed their offer to a level no one else could touch, combining financial dominance with flexibility. Four years. $260 million. An opt-out after year two. It was the perfect blend of security and leverage for Tucker—and a familiar aggressive strike from a franchise that has mastered the art of roster construction in the modern era.

Tucker batted .266 with 22 home runs, 73 RBI, and 25 stolen bases in 136 games with the Cubs last season. He was voted to his fourth All-Star Game in July. 

Tucker is expected to start in right field for the Dodgers, moving Teoscar Hernandez to left field, where he played predominantly during the 2024 World Series season. The Dodgers needed another outfielder after left fielder Michael Conforto didn’t quite pan out as the team had thought in 2025.

Tucker slides into an already formidable Dodgers lineup as a middle-of-the-order force, capable of changing games with one swing while providing Gold Glove-caliber defense in the outfield. His postseason résumé only strengthens a team that measures success in October, not summer standings.

For the Dodgers, this signing isn’t just about winning the offseason. It’s about control—of the market, of the narrative, and of the championship window. While other teams blinked or hedged, Los Angeles leaned in.

Kyle Tucker bet on himself.

The Dodgers bet on now.

And once again, the rest of baseball is left reacting to a move that reshapes the balance of power—one expensive, deliberate swing at a time.

Islanders Alter Power Play Unit Ahead Of Game vs. Edmonton

Ahead of their game against the Edmonton Oilers, the New York Islanders have made some changes to their power play. 

The Rematch: Islanders' Matthew Schaefer vs. Edmonton's McDavid & Draisaitl — Part 2The Rematch: Islanders' Matthew Schaefer vs. Edmonton's McDavid & Draisaitl — Part 2Rookie phenom Matthew Schaefer faces McDavid and Draisaitl again, minutes and stakes higher. Can he prove his growth against hockey's elite?

After going 0-for-6 for the first three games of their seven-game road trip, power-play coach Ray Bennett has elected to play Simon Holmstrom on the top unit, moving the struggling Jonathan Drouin to the second unit. 

This change did happen late in their 5-4 loss to the Winnipeg Jets, I believe. 

Holmstrom has been playing at the top of his game as of late, with four goals and one assist over his last four games. Drouin, who signed a two-year deal this summer worth $4 million annually, has gone 23 games without a goal. He has six assists over that span.

The Islanders' power play sits last in the NHL at 15.2 percent. They've been, more or less, able to overcome the man-advantage issues this season thanks to strong defense and tremendous goaltending, both of which have played a part in their penalty-kill bounce-back.

We'll see if Holmstrom can take advantage of his elevated power-play role.

Puck drop between the Islanders and Oilers comes your way at 9 PM ET. 

3 bold Knicks trade proposals ahead of 2026 deadline

The Knicks have hit a bit of a midseason rough patch, now 2-6 in their last eight games, missing Jalen Brunson, and in danger of falling out of the second seed. 

With the season at a pivotal juncture, fans and even management may not be satisfied only making a modest upgrade at the incoming trade deadline. 

New York’s cap, asset, and tradable talent limitations have left the rumor mill and fan base’s potential outcomes resigned to acquiring Jose Alvarado or Jeremy Sochan.

But if the losing continues and the Knicks get desperate, here are three bold trade ideas they can consider instead...

Knicks get: Cam Thomas
Nets get: Guerschon Yabusele and Tyler Kolek

What the Knicks lack in maneuverability they can make up for in pure, unadulterated risk-taking with this move. Thomas' value seemingly can’t be lower after a no-bid free agency followed by the Nets finding competence in his absence, which makes him an attractive candidate for an asymmetric trade.

New York would be risking a couple of reserve bodies, including Kolek, who remains a promising bench guard. This deal comes with a price if Thomas blows up across the river as well. 

But if this trade can set Thomas right and get him to buy into a contender, the Knicks would get more than just another reliable ball-handler. He’s one of the most gifted young scorers in the league, a three-level threat who would be far more dangerous in a pointed role off the bench.

Yes, this trade is the basketball equivalent of your friend pitching you on the unheard-of stock trading at $0.12 that he swears is going to the moon. But the Knicks don’t have much more than $0.12 to spend, and need to find a rocket fast.

Knicks get: Ivica Zubac
Clippers get: Mitchell Robinson, Yabusele, 2026 Wizards protected first round pick, 2032 Knicks first round pick

If Thomas is the penny stock, Zubac is the giant real estate development your well-off grandfather helped funnel your savings into. The Knicks take a swing on a real upgrade at center in talent and reliability without gutting their rotation.

Zubac is coming off a career-year in which he averaged 16.8 points, 12.6 rebounds and 1.1 blocks on 63 percent shooting from the field, made All-Defensive Second Team, and had a case to be an All-Star. He started off slower this year but is back at cruising altitude. While he isn’t the offensive rebounding freak Robinson is, he brings much more to the table overall.

Brunson would get his first real dynamic roll threat since Isaiah Hartenstein, someone who can screen hard, dive, and read the defense to make the right read. His low-post scoring is a major threat, too, offensive options that are largely off the table when Robinson’s playing. 

The price might look steep, but the market appears hot for Zubac’s services and the Clippers have little incentive to move him unless they’re getting a nice return. Even this package might not be enough, but if Los Angeles is willing to hear it out, New York has to consider a move like this. 

Knicks get: Jaren Jackson Jr.
Grizzlies get: Josh Hart, Robinson, Pacome Dadiet, 2026 Wizards protected first round pick, 2030 Knicks first round pick swap, 2032 Knicks first round pick, up to five second-round picks

Something short of a Giannis Antetokounmpo trade, but in the same vein of one last all-in push to make the Finals. This would absolutely decimate New York’s asset pile, but land them an All-Star two-way player that solves a few of their problems at once.

That would require Jackson returning to some of his past glory, as this season has been a down one for him. If he can tap into the player who won Defensive Player of the Year in 2022-23, or averaged 22 points on 38 percent shooting from three last season, the Knicks could make real noise with him.

Losing Hart, a core piece of the team’s identity and best friend of the team’s best player, won’t be an easy pill to swallow. But he has his flaws -- size and how defenses treat him from behind the arc. Same goes for Robinson, who is limited offensively and can’t make free throws.

Jackson isn’t perfect, but he can be a defensive upgrade at the four, make up for some of New York’s lack of size, somewhat spread the floor, and slide down to the five at times if needed. He also happens to be a former client of Leon Rose, making him a more realistic target than one would think.

The price is the price, especially with the return Memphis got for Desmond Bane. But if the Knicks feel their backs approaching the wall, and this is the trade that’s available to them, why wouldn’t they at least consider it?

Clayton Kershaw not quite done pitching, will play for U.S. in World Baseball Classic

CARY, N.C. — Clayton Kershaw isn’t done pitching just yet, agreeing to join the U.S. team for this year’s World Baseball Classic.

A left-hander who turns 38 two days after the March 17 championship game, Kershaw announced last September that he was retiring at the end of the season, his 18th in a stellar career for the Los Angeles Dodgers. He won his third World Series title and finished 223-96 with a 2.53 ERA and 3,052 strikeouts.

The three-time NL Cy Young Award winner wanted to pitch for the Americans in the 2023 tournament but was prevented because of insurance issues at a time he had a one-year, $20 million contract with the Dodgers.

New Chicago Cubs third baseman Alex Bregman also announced he will join the U.S. team.

Kershaw joins a U.S. pitching staff that includes right-handers David Bednar, Clay Holmes, Griffin Jax, Nolan McLean, Mason Miller, Joe Ryan, Paul Skenes and Logan Webb along with left-handers Tarik Skubal and Gabe Speier.

The American roster also includes catchers Cal Raleigh and Will Smith; infielders Ernie Clement, Gunnar Henderson, Brice Turang and Bobby Witt Jr.; outfielders Byron Buxton, Corbin Carroll, Pete Crow-Armstrong and Aaron Judge; and designated hitter Kyle Schwarber.

The U.S., which lost the 2023 championship game to Japan, opens March 6 against Brazil at Houston, part of a group that also includes Brazil, Britain, Italy and Mexico.

Michael Lorenzen and the Colorado Rockies finalize 1-year, $8 million contract

DENVER — Right-hander Michael Lorenzen and the Colorado Rockies finalized their one-year, $8 million contract.

Lorenzen gets a $7.75 million million salary this year, and the deal includes a $9 million club option for 2027 with a $250,000 buyout plus award bonuses.

Right-hander Bradley Blalock was designated for assignment to open a roster spot.

Lorenzen, 34, was 7-11 with a 4.64 ERA in 26 starts and one relief appearance last year for Kansas City, which guaranteed him $7 million in a one-year deal. He earned an additional $1 million in performance bonuses for innings and games pitched.

Lorenzen struck out a career-high 127 in 141 2/3 innings, but also tied for the major league lead with 12 wild pitches.

Colorado has lost 101 or more games in each of the past three years, including a major league-high 119 in 2025. It’s last winning record was 91-72 in 2018.

Paul DePodesta was hired as Colorado’s president of baseball operations in November, and Warren Schaeffer was promoted to full-time manager after finishing last season as the interim skipper.

The current nucleus for the rebuilding Rockies includes All-Star catcher Hunter Goodman and shortstop Ezequiel Tovar. The team also selected shortstop Ethan Holliday with the No. 4 pick in last year’s amateur draft.

Lorenzen broke into the majors with Cincinnati in 2015. He is 54-55 with a 4.08 ERA in 395 career appearances, also pitching for Texas, Detroit, Philadelphia and the Los Angeles Angels.

Lorenzen was traded from Detroit to Philadelphia on Aug. 1, 2023. He threw a no-hitter in his home debut with the Phillies, striking out five and issuing four walks in a 7-0 victory over Washington.

He would get $100,000 each for winning an MVP award or Cy Young Award and $50,000 for second through fifth in the voting. Lorenzen also would earn $100,000 apiece for BBWAA Reliever of the Year and Rivera/Hoffman Reliever of the Year, and $50,000 for second through fifth in the BBWAA voting and second or third in the Rivera/Hoffman.

He would earn $100,000 for World Series MVP, $75,000 for League Championship Series MVP, $100,000 for Comeback Player of the Year and $25,000 each for All-Star selection and winning a Gold Glove.

Tour de France reveals the six UK stage plans for historic 2027 Grands Départs

  • British roads will host the start of both races next year

  • First time both Grands Départs have been outside France

The men’s Tour de France will start in Scotland for the first time in 2027 and make its first visit to Wales when Britain stages the Grand Départ of the men’s and women’s races in the biggest festival of elite cycling on the isles since London 2012.

Across six days of racing on British roads, the men’s Tour will visit Edinburgh, Carlisle, Keswick, Liverpool, Welshpool and Cardiff, while the Tour de France Femmes races from Leeds to Manchester, then to Sheffield and also includes a central London stage. On Thursday night all host cities were illuminated by yellow beams in recognition of them staging the Tour.

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NBA Trade Rumors 2025-26: Jonathan Kuminga demands trade, Ja Morant eyes Miami, more

With just a few weeks until the Feb. 5 trade deadline, there is a lot of trade talk smoke but a few fires as well. Here is the latest on some of the key names.

Jonathan Kuminga

As of today (Jan. 15), Jonathan Kuminga can be traded — and he has demanded as much, reports Shams Charania and Anthony Slater of ESPN.

Kuminga demanding a trade is like a sixth grader saying they like KPop Demon Hunters — everyone already assumed that that was the case.

What we know is that a deal is not imminent. Part of the issue is that Steve Kerr barely playing Kuminga this season — he has not touched the court in 13 games — has damaged the Warriors' leverage. While the Warriors are posturing that they could just hold on to Kuminga into the summer when he becomes an expiring contract that would interest more teams, nobody thinks they are actually going to do that, something echoed by a report at The Athletic.

Sacramento, which has long had a fascination with Kuminga and his potential, remains in the mix for his services, but the offer of Malik Monk and a top-12 protected first-round pick put on the table last summer is no longer available, reports The Athletic (Monk's trade value is up, Kuminga's down since that offer). The ESPN story also mentions Dallas as a potential landing spot.

The Golden State Warriors have spoken with the Lakers, who have some interest in Kuminga, reports The Athletic. However, there isn't much traction there (Gabe Vincent and Maxi Kleber for Kuminga works under the CBA, but the Warriors want players who can help them win now and may shrug at that offer; why would the Lakers trade anything of real value to take a flier on if Kuminga can fit next to Luka Doncic and Austin Reaves?).

The key is that Golden State does not want to take back long-term money or bad contracts in any deal, but they want players who can help now. That said, the Warriors may ultimately have to take a deal they don't love, as it is clear both sides are more than ready to move on, something Tony Jones discusses at The Athletic. He also gets into why Kuminga and Warriors coach Steve Kerr have just never been on the same page.

"There are multiple reasons that Golden State can't wait to get him out of the building. He doesn't want to be a role player. He wants to be a star, which is understandable because that's how you get paid a boatload of money. But his self-awareness in that sense is nonexistent.

"He's not a ball-in-hand player. At this point in his career, he's a power forward who can make some shots and put the ball on the floor to attack closeouts. Kerr wants him to put his athleticism to use and play off the gravity Steph Curry and Jimmy Butler create. Attack gaps. Move without the ball. Finish at the rim. Most importantly, defend with energy. He doesn't do those things, and that's fine. What he needs to understand is that the Warriors wouldn't stop him from doing those things if he proved he could do them. He hasn't, and he has not come to grips with that."

The team that trades for Kuminga is essentially betting on the 6'7" wing's athleticism and potential breaking through in a different system — that he can consistently be the guy who (as Charania noted) averaged 24.3 points on 55.6% shooting in the final four games of the Warriors' second-round series loss to the Minnesota Timberwolves last May. The team that trades for him can either pick up the player option for next year and see how things fit, or work out a new deal (which would likely be shorter because he has to prove himself).

Ja Morant

It's the worst-kept secret in the league at this point: Ja Morant wants to go to Miami, something that's been reported multiple times in multiple places. You can add to that the report that Morant purchased a house in Miami to the list of reasons this might happen (although a number of players not with the Heat have offseason homes in the city).

Miami and Memphis have had "preliminary discussions," but talks have "not escalated," reports Anthony Chiang at The Miami Herald.

Morant and his team of advisors are meeting in Europe this week (where the Grizzlies are for games in Berlin and London) to discuss the situation and a path forward. Yahoo Sports’ Kelly Iko explained why Morant and his camp are pushing for Miami.

"The Heat have historically been regarded as one of the NBA's most detail-oriented and structured organizations, a major aspect of development that appeals to Morant, who has missed 34 games due to various suspensions. Morant also has a deep respect for Heat head coach Erik Spoelstra, who also runs Team USA; Morant desires to represent his country in the 2028 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles. Miami's veteran presence is an additional selling point and something Morant craves."

Two thoughts on the Heat and Morant, both discussed here before. First, Miami is not giving up much of anything to take this roll of the dice on Morant. The trade will certainly include Terry Rozier's contract (while he remains out and under federal indictment), and could include Simone Fontecchio or Davion Mitchel, and maybe a pick. Or it could be Rozier and Tyler Herro for Morant and Ty Jerome. The question is, are those deals palatable to the Heat?

Second, regarding Heat culture — it is not changing. Players come in and fit with it or flame out and get traded again (or let go). Morant would have to prove he can fit in, the system is not bending to him.

This whole saga still gives off the vibe that Memphis has a trade it can fall back on, it's just trying to find a better one. Toronto remains a team to watch, with Immanuel Quickley's salary being the big key, reports Marc Stein at The Stein Line.

Anthony Davis

The odd saga of Anthony Davis and reports of hand surgery on Wednesday — an ESPN report he was getting surgery, which Davis instantly denied, and the Mavericks coming out later in the day and saying he wouldn't get surgery but would get re-evaluated in six weeks — raised a few eyebrows around the league for this reason:

It sounded like someone was pulling the levers to make sure Davis would be traded before the deadline.

Which brings us to ESPN’s Tim MacMahon, who said on the Hoop Collective podcast that Davis' agent, Rich Paul, is working hard to get the big man out of Dallas and to a new home before Feb. 5.

"It is very clear that Rich Paul, who represents Anthony Davis, wants Anthony Davis traded before the deadline — and why would he want that? Because he believes it's in his best business interest. Because he has taken a 'We'll see' from the Mavericks regarding an extension as a 'no'. And there are teams where clearly Rich Paul considers it likely that AD would get the kind of extension that he's looking for when he becomes eligible in August.

"The Mavericks were going to explore the trade market regardless and they have been. This is ongoing. They do not feel like they have to trade Anthony Davis. They are telling me and anybody who will listen that they're not trading AD just to make a deal... They are insistent that they will only make a deal that makes sense for them. And what exactly that threshold is, there's not clarity on that. But it's some combination of draft compensation, promising young talent, and financial relief in the form of expiring salaries.

"'Rich Paul is not going to bully us.' That is a direct quote from a member of the Mavericks organization... A third source: [Owner Patrick Dumont] has no problem going into next year and seeing, with a healthy Kyrie [Irving] and a healthy AD, alongside Cooper Flagg, and seeing what it looks like."

Dumont realized too late the mistake he made with the Luka Dončić trade — maybe not the "why would you trade him?" part, but the part about opening the process to the market, being patient, and dealing from a position of strength. He's learned his lesson and is applying it to the Davis trade process.

An Anthony Davis trade still feels like it will be part of a blockbuster offseason of trades, but not at the deadline.

Other trade rumors

• While Michael Porter Jr. is considered the player most likely to be traded at the deadline, the Brooklyn Nets did some negotiating through the media with Brian Lewis of the New York Post reporting that Brooklyn is willing to be patient waiting for the right deal, and that includes holding on to him past the deadline. Everyone is posturing right now, as we get closer to the Feb. 5 deadline the trade offers will get much more real.

• Golden State has been linked to Michael Porter Jr., but the sides haven't spoken in more than a month, and there's not a lot of interest there from the Warriors, reports Shams Charania and Anthony Slater at ESPN.

• The Warriors do have interest in Trey Murphy III, but the Pelicans continue to rebuff calls for him or Herbert Jones at the deadline.

• Indiana is in the market for a big man and has called Atlanta about Onyeka Okongwu, Dallas about Daniel Gafford, the LA Clippers about Ivica Zubac of the LA Clippers and New Orleans about Yves Missi, Marc Stein reports.

• The Orlando Magic are calling teams looking to trade backup point guard Tyus Jones for second-round draft capital, Stein says at The Stein Line. While Jones has not fit as hoped with the Magic, he might be a very good roll of the dice by another team.

Philadelphia Flyers At Pittsburgh Penguins Preview: Lineup Changes, Where To Watch

The Battle of Pennsylvania will shift to Pittsburgh on Thursday night, after the two previous meetings were held in Philadelphia. 

The Pittsburgh Penguins and Philadelphia Flyers split those two games, with the Penguins winning the most recent one 5-1 on Dec. 1. It was one of the Penguins' most complete games of the season. 

Philadelphia comes into this game on a four-game losing streak, having also just played in Buffalo on Wednesday. The Flyers lost 5-2 and also saw starting goaltender Dan Vladar leave early with an injury. 

One of Samuel Ersson or Aleksei Kolosov will start in the net for the Flyers on Thursday.

Trevor Zegras continues to have a great first season with the Flyers, compiling 18 goals and 42 points in 45 games. He's also annoyed the Penguins in both of the teams' previous games this year, reigniting the rivalry a bit. 

Travis Konecny has also been good, racking up 14 goals and 39 points in 44 games. Owen Tippett is second on the team in goals with 15 and has 28 points. 

This is a massive game in the standings, as the two teams are tied with 52 points and just outside the final playoff spot in the Eastern Conference. A regulation win gets the winning team up to 54 points.

The Penguins are expected to roll with the same lines that they had during Tuesday's game against the Tampa Bay Lightning

Forwards

Rakell-Crosby-Rust

Chinakhov-Novak-Malkin

Mantha-Kindel-Brazeau

Dewar-Lizotte-Acciari

Defense

Kulak-Letang

Wotherspoon-St. Ivany

Shea-Clifton


Stuart Skinner will start in goal for the Penguins after having the night off on Thursday. Puck drop is set for 7 p.m. ET on ESPN. Fans can also listen to the game on 105.9 'The X.'


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John Higgins rides wild fluke to win final three frames and reach Masters semi

  • Scot recovers to deny Zhao Xintong 6-5 in the last eight

  • Judd Trump beats Mark Allen 6-2 to set up Higgins clash

John Higgins benefited from an outrageous fluke as he came from 5-3 down to beat world champion Zhao Xintong 6-5 on the final ball and reach the semi-finals of the Masters at Alexandra Palace.

Higgins made a horrible mess of a plant, only for one of the reds to fly into the opposite pocket and the cue ball to somehow land on the black, en route to squaring the match at 5-5. The 50-year-old Scot then took a tight decider, clearing the table from the final red to move one step closer to a third Masters title.

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How Finnie, Sandin-Pellikka Could Be The Catalysts For Future Stanley Cup Contender

Managing the salary cap is one of the most difficult challenges in building a Stanley Cup contender. Championship teams often rely on a mix of stars who outperform their contracts, savvy long term extensions signed at the right time, or in rare cases, young difference makers producing well above the value of their entry level deals.

The Detroit Red Wings currently find themselves in that rare third category.

Detroit has benefited this season from two 20-year-old rookies who are not only regular contributors, but trusted players in key roles. Forward Emmitt Finnie and defenseman Axel Sandin Pellikka have provided meaningful production while costing the organization less than a combined $1.8 million through the 2027-28 season.

Finnie has spent much of the season on Detroit’s first line, an uncommon responsibility for a rookie. Through 48 games, he has nine goals and 10 assists for 19 points and remains on pace for more than 30 points in his first NHL season. Despite a recent scoring dry spell, projections suggest Finnie could finish in the 40 to 45 point range, which would be a strong total for a 20-year-old adjusting to the NHL.

On the blue line, Sandin Pellikka has been equally impressive. The rookie defenseman has shown poise beyond his years, making confident plays with the puck and contributing offensively at a steady rate. He has recorded five goals and 12 assists for 17 points in 48 games, placing him on pace for roughly 30 points. That level of production is exceptional for a first year defenseman and adds another layer of depth scoring to the Red Wings defense.

Individually, neither stat line jumps off the page as a Stanley Cup defining performance. Collectively, however, the value of their contracts tells a different story.

Detroit’s ability to receive consistent, night to night contributions from two young players at such a low cap hit provides critical flexibility. If the Red Wings reach the playoffs this season but fall short of a deep run, that flexibility could become even more important moving forward.

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Maintaining a competitive roster while holding significant cap space allows general manager Steve Yzerman to be aggressive, whether through free agency or at the trade deadline.

That financial freedom could position Detroit to pursue a high impact star such as Artemi Panarin or another marquee player should the opportunity arise. More importantly, it allows the organization to supplement its core without sacrificing long term stability.

As the Red Wings continue their progression toward becoming a legitimate Stanley Cup contender, Finnie and Sandin Pellikka’s entry level contracts may be remembered as quiet but crucial advantages.

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Assessing Breslow's track record with pitchers after Suarez signing

Assessing Breslow's track record with pitchers after Suarez signing originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

After failing to re-sign Alex Bregman in free agency, Boston Red Sox chief baseball officer Craig Breslow turned to the starting pitching market for his first big-league signing of the offseason.

The Red Sox signed former Philadelphia Phillies left-hander Ranger Suarez to a reported five-year, $130 million contract on Wednesday. The 30-year-old posted a 3.20 ERA over 26 starts last season and profiles as a No. 2 starter behind ace Garrett Crochet.

Breslow also acquired right-handers Sonny Gray and Johan Oviedo earlier via trades in the offseason. The Crochet-Suarez 1-2 punch, followed by Gray, Oviedo, Brayan Bello, and several high-upside depth pieces, arguably gives Boston one of the best starting rotations in baseball for 2026.

While Breslow has undoubtedly struggled to add impactful position players, the former MLB relief pitcher has aggressively added arms since replacing Chaim Bloom as Red Sox CBO in 2023. That has especially been the case in the MLB Draft, where 29 of his 41 draft picks have been pitchers — including 15 of the club’s 21 picks in the 2025 draft.

Below, we’ll take a deeper dive into Breslow’s track record with the pitchers he has added via free agency, trade, and the draft.

* = no longer with organization

Free-agent signings

  • Liam Hendriks, RP* (free agent)
  • Cooper Criswell, SP/RP* (claimed on waivers by NYM)
  • Lucas Giolito, SP* (free agent)
  • Justin Wilson, RP* (free agent)
  • Patrick Sandoval, SP
  • Aroldis Chapman, RP
  • Ranger Suarez, SP

Suarez’s five-year deal is by far the biggest commitment the Red Sox have made to a free-agent starting pitcher since the Dave Dombrowski era. Otherwise, the Bloom and Breslow-led front offices have primarily handed out short-term deals for high-upside pitchers with injury histories. Giolito and Sandoval fall into that category for Breslow.

The Red Sox got one solid season out of Giolito, and Sandoval has yet to take the mound in a Red Sox uniform as he spent 2025 recovering from Tommy John surgery. As for free-agent relievers, Breslow can hang his hat on last offseason’s signing of veteran closer Aroldis Chapman. It was a scrutinized move with the 37-year-old coming off a rough year in Pittsburgh, but he bounced back to become MLB’s most dominant closer in 2025.

Criswell served as a solid swingman during his two years in Boston. Wilson exceeded expectations as one of the Red Sox’ most reliable relievers last season.

Trade acquisitions

  • Isaiah Campbell, RP* (signed minors deal with ARI)
  • Richard Fitts, SP* (traded to STL for Sonny Gray)
  • Greg Weissert, RP
  • Justin Slaten, RP
  • Jovani Moran, RP
  • Garrett Crochet, SP
  • Lucas Sims, RP* (free agent)
  • Luis Garcia, RP* (free agent)
  • Kyle Harrison, SP
  • Jordan Hicks, RP
  • John Holobetz, RP
  • Steven Matz, SP/RP* (signed w/ TBR as free agent)
  • Dustin May, SP* (signed w/ STL as free agent)
  • Sonny Gray, SP
  • Johan Oveido, SP

Breslow has preferred the trade market to free agency over his three years as Red Sox CBO. Outside of ace Garrett Crochet, the pitchers he has acquired via trade largely haven’t panned out.

Campbell was one of Breslow’s first trade acquisitions, and the right-hander amassed an 11.30 ERA over 14 appearances out of Boston’s bullpen. Weissert and Slaten have been solid, albeit unspectacular, relief options.

The 2024 trade deadline was a disaster for Breslow and Co. Lucas Sims and Luis Garcia were supposed to bolster the bullpen for a potential postseason run, but both were abysmal in their brief stints with Boston.

Richard Fitts showed some potential during his brief stint with the club before being sent to the St. Louis Cardinals in this winter’s Sonny Gray trade. Kyle Harrison and Jordan Hicks, both acquired from the San Francisco Giants in the Rafael Devers blockbuster, have been non-factors with the Red Sox thus far. Harrison was sent to Triple-A, while Hicks was a liability out of Boston’s pen in 2025.

Breslow added veterans Steven Matz and Dustin May before the 2025 trade deadline. May struggled across six outings with the club, though Matz proved to be a reliable relief option. Both have since left the club in free agency.

The Red Sox will hope the Gray and Oviedo additions put an end to Breslow’s lackluster streak of trade acquisitions.

Drafted players (Top 30 prospects)

  • Payton Tolle
  • Kyson Witherspoon
  • Brandon Clarke* (traded to STL for Sonny Gray)
  • David Sandlin
  • Anthony Eyanson
  • Marcus Phillips
  • Yhoiker Fajardo* (traded to STL for Willson Contreras)
  • Conrad Cason

Breslow has gone all-in on pitching in his first three drafts with the Red Sox. Left-hander Payton Tolle (No. 1 in org, per SoxProspects.com) and right-hander Kyson Witherspoon (No. 4) enter 2026 as two of the most exciting pitching prospects in the sport.

Brandon Clarke and Yhoiker Fajardo were used to acquire Gray and first baseman Willson Contreras in separate deals with St. Louis this offseason.

David Sandlin remains a top-10 prospect in Boston’s system. Eyanson, Phillips, and Cason are lesser-known pitching prospects drafted by Breslow and currently ranked inside the top 30.