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Deadspin | Aaron Judge, Ben Rice, Yankees take aim at rival Red Sox  Mar 28, 2026; San Francisco, California, USA; New York Yankees right fielder Aaron Judge (99) is congratulated by first baseman Ben Rice (22) after hitting a home run against the San Francisco Giants in the fifth inning at Oracle Park. Mandatory Credit: Cary Edmondson-Imagn Images   The rivalry is back, early.  For the first time since 2022, the Boston Red Sox and New York Yankees are squaring off in April. Their initial three-game series of the season — and their first encounter since the 2025 American League wild-card round — begins Tuesday night in Boston.  New York, which holds a one-game lead over the Tampa Bay Rays atop the AL East standings, completed a three-game series sweep of the Kansas City Royals with a 7-0 win on Sunday. Now, a nine-game, three-city road trip begins.  “To put up some big runs was huge,” Yankees outfielder Aaron Judge said. “We’ll definitely take this momentum into those series.”  Judge and first baseman Ben Rice both went deep on Sunday, giving them an MLB-leading 17 home runs this season as a duo. Judge’s two-run shot in the first inning proved to be all that the Yankees needed.  Rice, who hails from Cohasset, Mass., entered Tuesday leading the league in OPS (1.276) after homering in four consecutive games.   While the left-handed hitter sometimes has been held out of the lineup against southpaws, it is becoming increasingly difficult for manager Aaron Boone to make that decision.   “The bottom line is, he’s turning into — or even is — one of the really outstanding hitters in this league,” Boone said.  Eight of the Yankees’ 13 wins this season have featured at least two home runs. Trent Grisham also joined that action with a three-run blast on Sunday.  “This lineup last year had five guys who hit 30 homers,” Grisham said. “That’s felt by other teams.”  Still in search of his first win, right-hander Luis Gil (0-1, 7.00 ERA) will take the ball on Tuesday. He allowed all four runs on three homers across a five-inning start last Wednesday against the Los Angeles Angels.  Gil has enjoyed great career success against the Red Sox, posting a 2-1 record and 0.99 ERA in five starts. He pitched 11 innings and allowed only two runs to Boston last season.   The Red Sox scored six runs in the final three innings en route to an 8-6 Patriots’ Day win over the Detroit Tigers on Monday, securing a split of the four-game series.  After scoring four runs over the previous three days, the 12-hit breakout and a win were much-needed, especially with seven relievers being called upon after starter Sonny Gray exited in the third inning with right hamstring tightness.   “Sonny’s gonna get an MRI (Tuesday),” Red Sox manager Alex Cora said. “We don’t think it’s serious, but we have to see what’s going on.”  Monday marked Boston’s first win this season when its starter lasted fewer than six innings (1-13).  On top of the hits, five of which came with runners in scoring position, the Red Sox accepted eight walks and stole three bases. Ceddanne Rafaela’s two-out, two-run double in the seventh was the game-changing swing.  “We put pressure on the opposition. That’s where we’re at right now, right?” Cora said. “There were some good at-bats. … That’s what it’s going to take for us to score runs. We will maximize the roster.”  Cora’s club would certainly benefit from 24-year-old left-hander Connelly Early (1-0, 2.29) giving another quality start as well.  Early has not allowed more than two runs in any of his four outings this season and looks to build upon six innings of one-run ball in last Wednesday’s win over the Minnesota Twins, which was Boston’s last game before the current homestand.  “He looks different out there. He looks just so calm, always,” Red Sox outfielder Roman Anthony said. “We saw what he did in his debut, how unfazed he was. He started in the postseason. … He looks like he has 10 years (of experience).”  Early’s only history with New York was a start in the third and deciding game of last season’s playoff series. He fanned six while allowing three earned runs in 3 2/3 innings.  –Field Level Media   #Deadspin #Aaron #Judge #Ben #Rice #Yankees #aim #rival #Red #Sox

Deadspin | Aaron Judge, Ben Rice, Yankees take aim at rival Red Sox
Deadspin | Aaron Judge, Ben Rice, Yankees take aim at rival Red Sox  Mar 28, 2026; San Francisco, California, USA; New York Yankees right fielder Aaron Judge (99) is congratulated by first baseman Ben Rice (22) after hitting a home run against the San Francisco Giants in the fifth inning at Oracle Park. Mandatory Credit: Cary Edmondson-Imagn Images   The rivalry is back, early.  For the first time since 2022, the Boston Red Sox and New York Yankees are squaring off in April. Their initial three-game series of the season — and their first encounter since the 2025 American League wild-card round — begins Tuesday night in Boston.  New York, which holds a one-game lead over the Tampa Bay Rays atop the AL East standings, completed a three-game series sweep of the Kansas City Royals with a 7-0 win on Sunday. Now, a nine-game, three-city road trip begins.  “To put up some big runs was huge,” Yankees outfielder Aaron Judge said. “We’ll definitely take this momentum into those series.”  Judge and first baseman Ben Rice both went deep on Sunday, giving them an MLB-leading 17 home runs this season as a duo. Judge’s two-run shot in the first inning proved to be all that the Yankees needed.  Rice, who hails from Cohasset, Mass., entered Tuesday leading the league in OPS (1.276) after homering in four consecutive games.   While the left-handed hitter sometimes has been held out of the lineup against southpaws, it is becoming increasingly difficult for manager Aaron Boone to make that decision.   “The bottom line is, he’s turning into — or even is — one of the really outstanding hitters in this league,” Boone said.  Eight of the Yankees’ 13 wins this season have featured at least two home runs. Trent Grisham also joined that action with a three-run blast on Sunday.  “This lineup last year had five guys who hit 30 homers,” Grisham said. “That’s felt by other teams.”  Still in search of his first win, right-hander Luis Gil (0-1, 7.00 ERA) will take the ball on Tuesday. He allowed all four runs on three homers across a five-inning start last Wednesday against the Los Angeles Angels.  Gil has enjoyed great career success against the Red Sox, posting a 2-1 record and 0.99 ERA in five starts. He pitched 11 innings and allowed only two runs to Boston last season.   The Red Sox scored six runs in the final three innings en route to an 8-6 Patriots’ Day win over the Detroit Tigers on Monday, securing a split of the four-game series.  After scoring four runs over the previous three days, the 12-hit breakout and a win were much-needed, especially with seven relievers being called upon after starter Sonny Gray exited in the third inning with right hamstring tightness.   “Sonny’s gonna get an MRI (Tuesday),” Red Sox manager Alex Cora said. “We don’t think it’s serious, but we have to see what’s going on.”  Monday marked Boston’s first win this season when its starter lasted fewer than six innings (1-13).  On top of the hits, five of which came with runners in scoring position, the Red Sox accepted eight walks and stole three bases. Ceddanne Rafaela’s two-out, two-run double in the seventh was the game-changing swing.  “We put pressure on the opposition. That’s where we’re at right now, right?” Cora said. “There were some good at-bats. … That’s what it’s going to take for us to score runs. We will maximize the roster.”  Cora’s club would certainly benefit from 24-year-old left-hander Connelly Early (1-0, 2.29) giving another quality start as well.  Early has not allowed more than two runs in any of his four outings this season and looks to build upon six innings of one-run ball in last Wednesday’s win over the Minnesota Twins, which was Boston’s last game before the current homestand.  “He looks different out there. He looks just so calm, always,” Red Sox outfielder Roman Anthony said. “We saw what he did in his debut, how unfazed he was. He started in the postseason. … He looks like he has 10 years (of experience).”  Early’s only history with New York was a start in the third and deciding game of last season’s playoff series. He fanned six while allowing three earned runs in 3 2/3 innings.  –Field Level Media   #Deadspin #Aaron #Judge #Ben #Rice #Yankees #aim #rival #Red #SoxMar 28, 2026; San Francisco, California, USA; New York Yankees right fielder Aaron Judge (99) is congratulated by first baseman Ben Rice (22) after hitting a home run against the San Francisco Giants in the fifth inning at Oracle Park. Mandatory Credit: Cary Edmondson-Imagn Images

The rivalry is back, early.

For the first time since 2022, the Boston Red Sox and New York Yankees are squaring off in April. Their initial three-game series of the season — and their first encounter since the 2025 American League wild-card round — begins Tuesday night in Boston.

New York, which holds a one-game lead over the Tampa Bay Rays atop the AL East standings, completed a three-game series sweep of the Kansas City Royals with a 7-0 win on Sunday. Now, a nine-game, three-city road trip begins.

“To put up some big runs was huge,” Yankees outfielder Aaron Judge said. “We’ll definitely take this momentum into those series.”

Judge and first baseman Ben Rice both went deep on Sunday, giving them an MLB-leading 17 home runs this season as a duo. Judge’s two-run shot in the first inning proved to be all that the Yankees needed.

Rice, who hails from Cohasset, Mass., entered Tuesday leading the league in OPS (1.276) after homering in four consecutive games.

While the left-handed hitter sometimes has been held out of the lineup against southpaws, it is becoming increasingly difficult for manager Aaron Boone to make that decision.

“The bottom line is, he’s turning into — or even is — one of the really outstanding hitters in this league,” Boone said.

Eight of the Yankees’ 13 wins this season have featured at least two home runs. Trent Grisham also joined that action with a three-run blast on Sunday.

“This lineup last year had five guys who hit 30 homers,” Grisham said. “That’s felt by other teams.”

Still in search of his first win, right-hander Luis Gil (0-1, 7.00 ERA) will take the ball on Tuesday. He allowed all four runs on three homers across a five-inning start last Wednesday against the Los Angeles Angels.


Gil has enjoyed great career success against the Red Sox, posting a 2-1 record and 0.99 ERA in five starts. He pitched 11 innings and allowed only two runs to Boston last season.

The Red Sox scored six runs in the final three innings en route to an 8-6 Patriots’ Day win over the Detroit Tigers on Monday, securing a split of the four-game series.

After scoring four runs over the previous three days, the 12-hit breakout and a win were much-needed, especially with seven relievers being called upon after starter Sonny Gray exited in the third inning with right hamstring tightness.

“Sonny’s gonna get an MRI (Tuesday),” Red Sox manager Alex Cora said. “We don’t think it’s serious, but we have to see what’s going on.”

Monday marked Boston’s first win this season when its starter lasted fewer than six innings (1-13).

On top of the hits, five of which came with runners in scoring position, the Red Sox accepted eight walks and stole three bases. Ceddanne Rafaela’s two-out, two-run double in the seventh was the game-changing swing.

“We put pressure on the opposition. That’s where we’re at right now, right?” Cora said. “There were some good at-bats. … That’s what it’s going to take for us to score runs. We will maximize the roster.”

Cora’s club would certainly benefit from 24-year-old left-hander Connelly Early (1-0, 2.29) giving another quality start as well.

Early has not allowed more than two runs in any of his four outings this season and looks to build upon six innings of one-run ball in last Wednesday’s win over the Minnesota Twins, which was Boston’s last game before the current homestand.

“He looks different out there. He looks just so calm, always,” Red Sox outfielder Roman Anthony said. “We saw what he did in his debut, how unfazed he was. He started in the postseason. … He looks like he has 10 years (of experience).”

Early’s only history with New York was a start in the third and deciding game of last season’s playoff series. He fanned six while allowing three earned runs in 3 2/3 innings.

–Field Level Media

#Deadspin #Aaron #Judge #Ben #Rice #Yankees #aim #rival #Red #Sox

Mar 28, 2026; San Francisco, California, USA; New York Yankees right fielder Aaron Judge (99) is congratulated by first baseman Ben Rice (22) after hitting a home run against the San Francisco Giants in the fifth inning at Oracle Park. Mandatory Credit: Cary Edmondson-Imagn Images

The rivalry is back, early.

For the first time since 2022, the Boston Red Sox and New York Yankees are squaring off in April. Their initial three-game series of the season — and their first encounter since the 2025 American League wild-card round — begins Tuesday night in Boston.

New York, which holds a one-game lead over the Tampa Bay Rays atop the AL East standings, completed a three-game series sweep of the Kansas City Royals with a 7-0 win on Sunday. Now, a nine-game, three-city road trip begins.

“To put up some big runs was huge,” Yankees outfielder Aaron Judge said. “We’ll definitely take this momentum into those series.”

Judge and first baseman Ben Rice both went deep on Sunday, giving them an MLB-leading 17 home runs this season as a duo. Judge’s two-run shot in the first inning proved to be all that the Yankees needed.

Rice, who hails from Cohasset, Mass., entered Tuesday leading the league in OPS (1.276) after homering in four consecutive games.

While the left-handed hitter sometimes has been held out of the lineup against southpaws, it is becoming increasingly difficult for manager Aaron Boone to make that decision.

“The bottom line is, he’s turning into — or even is — one of the really outstanding hitters in this league,” Boone said.

Eight of the Yankees’ 13 wins this season have featured at least two home runs. Trent Grisham also joined that action with a three-run blast on Sunday.

“This lineup last year had five guys who hit 30 homers,” Grisham said. “That’s felt by other teams.”

Still in search of his first win, right-hander Luis Gil (0-1, 7.00 ERA) will take the ball on Tuesday. He allowed all four runs on three homers across a five-inning start last Wednesday against the Los Angeles Angels.

Gil has enjoyed great career success against the Red Sox, posting a 2-1 record and 0.99 ERA in five starts. He pitched 11 innings and allowed only two runs to Boston last season.

The Red Sox scored six runs in the final three innings en route to an 8-6 Patriots’ Day win over the Detroit Tigers on Monday, securing a split of the four-game series.

After scoring four runs over the previous three days, the 12-hit breakout and a win were much-needed, especially with seven relievers being called upon after starter Sonny Gray exited in the third inning with right hamstring tightness.

“Sonny’s gonna get an MRI (Tuesday),” Red Sox manager Alex Cora said. “We don’t think it’s serious, but we have to see what’s going on.”

Monday marked Boston’s first win this season when its starter lasted fewer than six innings (1-13).

On top of the hits, five of which came with runners in scoring position, the Red Sox accepted eight walks and stole three bases. Ceddanne Rafaela’s two-out, two-run double in the seventh was the game-changing swing.

“We put pressure on the opposition. That’s where we’re at right now, right?” Cora said. “There were some good at-bats. … That’s what it’s going to take for us to score runs. We will maximize the roster.”

Cora’s club would certainly benefit from 24-year-old left-hander Connelly Early (1-0, 2.29) giving another quality start as well.

Early has not allowed more than two runs in any of his four outings this season and looks to build upon six innings of one-run ball in last Wednesday’s win over the Minnesota Twins, which was Boston’s last game before the current homestand.

“He looks different out there. He looks just so calm, always,” Red Sox outfielder Roman Anthony said. “We saw what he did in his debut, how unfazed he was. He started in the postseason. … He looks like he has 10 years (of experience).”

Early’s only history with New York was a start in the third and deciding game of last season’s playoff series. He fanned six while allowing three earned runs in 3 2/3 innings.

–Field Level Media

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#Deadspin #Aaron #Judge #Ben #Rice #Yankees #aim #rival #Red #Sox

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FIBA Women’s World Cup 2026 groups: Defending champion U.S. to face China, Italy, Czech Republic <div id="content-body-70890171" itemprop="articleBody"><p>The U.S. women’s basketball team will face China, Italy and the Czech Republic in the women’s FIBA World Cup in September, looking to win its fifth consecutive title.</p><p>The World Cup will be held from September 4-13 in Berlin, with the WNBA taking a nearly three-week break in its season to accommodate the event. The Americans have won the last four World Cups, dating back to 2010. They took bronze in 2006.</p><p>The U.S. squad could feature a lot of young talent, including Caitlin Clark, Paige Bueckers and Angel Reese, to go along with veterans A’ja Wilson and Breanna Stewart. The young trio helped the Americans win a World Cup qualifying tournament in Puerto Rico last month.</p><p><b>ALSO READ | <a href="https://sportstar.thehindu.com/basketball/billy-donovan-steps-down-chicago-bull-head-coach-nba-basketball-news/article70889800.ece" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">NBA: Billy Donovan steps down as Chicago Bulls coach</a></b></p><p>The Americans are in Group D. They beat China for the gold medal in the 2022 World Cup.</p><p>Buoyed by the success of the 2022 World Cup in Australia, the field was expanded to 16 teams for the first time since 2018.</p><p>The winner of each group will advance to the quarterfinals. The second- and third-place finishers in the four pools will play each other for the other four spots in the quarters.</p><h4 class="sub_head">GROUPS</h4><ul class="article-body article-bullet-list"><li> Group A: Japan, Spain, Germany, Mali </li><li> Group B: Hungary, Korea, Nigeria, France </li><li> Group C: Belgium, Australia, Puerto Rico, Türkiye </li><li> Group D: USA, Czechia, Italy, China </li></ul><p class="publish-time" id="end-of-article">Published on Apr 21, 2026</p></div> #FIBA #Womens #World #Cup #groups #Defending #champion #U.S #face #China #Italy #Czech #Republic

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‘This Is a Gardening Show’ and 4 More Shows to Watch for Earth Day

The Carolina Hurricanes are either the best team in hockey, or the biggest frauds in the Stanley Cup Playoffs — it all depends on who you ask. The Canes made history on Saturday night in Philadelphia with their eighth straight playoff win, and their second sweep in a row. It made them the first team in NHL history to sweep their first two series since the 1987 best-of-seven format began, the first team to start 8-0 in the playoffs since 1985, and only the fifth team in NHL history to start the playoffs 8-0.

Yet nobody can settle on whether this team is really a Stanley Cup favorite yet.

A lot of factors go into the acrimony when discussing Carolina. There’s long-standing bitterness over southern hockey being a thing, especially following back-to-back years of the Florida Panthers hoisting the cup. There’s the fact that the team plays hockey in a manner that runs counter to everything we know about success in the modern NHL. Also, there’s simply a reality that the Canes have had a pretty easy path through the postseason thus far, facing two teams that were bad strategic mismatches for them.

What that doesn’t mean, however, is that either the Ottawa Senators or Philadelphia Flyers are “bad teams.” Finishing with 99 and 98 points on the season, respectively, the Sens and Flyers were better than the entire Western Conference Pacific Division, better than the Utah Mammoth who the Golden Knights beat in the first round, and just one win worse than the Bruins, who the Sabres bested in the opening round. Yet, it’s become cool to hate on the Hurricanes’ opponents thus far as a means to discredit Carolina as being a legitimate team — foisting them with criticism no other team in the field is left with.

It’s absolutely fair to say that both Ottawa and Philadelphia were thrown into a mismatch blender. Both teams thrived during the regular season when playing on clean ice, with open passing lanes and room to set up plays. This is what the Hurricanes excel at stopping, running brutal forechecks with gutsy defensive rotations that flip the formation to send defensemen up ice to hassle opposing defenseman on the puck, allowing the forwards to stay home.

One of the hallmarks of Carolina hockey is to forget the model of play that wins in the NHL, and instead change the game into Hurricanes hockey. They thrive in limiting the effectiveness of star players, making the game be about depth rather than top-line strength, then take over when their third and fourth lines are stronger than their opponents. There’s no coincidence that hockey fans were wondering why Brady Tkachuk and Tim Stützle disappeared in the Sens series, or why Trevor Zegras and Travis Konecny couldn’t make inroads in round two. This was the Canes’ doing, and it worked.

This past week Brady Tkachuk explained why it was near-impossible to deal with the Hurricanes’ defense in his series, and noticing that it was happening to the Flyers as well.

“Their D… they have the best sticks I’ve ever seen. It was crazy. Some of the plays you’d just be like ‘I can get this through,’ like Slav [Jaccob Slavin] has probably the best stick in the league. I had two Grade-A’s [scoring chances] and they hit his stick and up in the netting. I was like ‘how on earth is that not in the back of the net?’”

The length of the Carolina blueliners is causing massive problems for any team trying to play pretty, puck rotation hockey. Throughout the Flyers series we saw the Philly attack get decimated due to deflections from Slavin, K’Andre Miller, and Alexander Nikishin — with their pairings in Jalen Chatfield, Shayne Gostisbehere, and Sean Walker serving more as the more traditional net battlers. This layered defense has been impenetrable in the playoffs and has been offset with the Canes showing more fight and edge that they have previously.

So why is there so much doubt that this can carry over to the cup? There are three fair statements to make:

  1. The Hurricanes haven’t faced an elite, 90+ point player yet in the playoffs
  2. They’ve been so good defensively that it seems impossible to keep it up
  3. Carolina’s best players really haven’t turned up yet

Forgive the pun, but you can see the storm brewing for Carolina that this incredible run could go south quickly (another pun, sorry). Getting the better of Stützle or Konecny is one thing, but when that caliber of player changes to Nathan McKinnon, Martin Nečas, Nick Suzuki, or Kirill Kaprizov — can this same approach still work? Is there a break point to this defensive dominance where Carolina can be overwhelmed by star players, and if that happens can the Canes recover?

That is the real worry right now, and it’s fair to question what is happening with the Carolina top line. The heroes of the playoffs thus far for the Canes has been the Hall/Stankoven/Blake line two, which has been phenomenal — but there has been pronounced quietness from Andrei Svechnikov, Sebastian Aho, and Seth Jarvis on the top line, outside of a few glimmers of magic. We know that historically the NHL playoffs have been won through star power, even by teams like the Panthers who were bruising, but still leaned on Matthew Tkachuk, Sam Bennett, and Brad Marchand to drag them through.

If the Canes can’t get that top-line performance firing then there’s a chance they can’t assert their will on the game, which has a domino effect on the rest of the lines, thereby putting more pressure on the defense to bail the team out.

The biggest questions about the Hurricanes won’t get answered for some time, with Saturday being the earliest their next series can begin. Whether the Sabres or Canadiens come out of the Atlantic, either team will be the best opposition Carolina has faced, with more star power and deeper lines. If the Canes are able to keep up this dominance in the Eastern Conference Finals then we can really talk about their chances to beat the Avs or Wild in the West.

So are the Canes really cup favorites or pretenders? They’re both, and neither, and bizarrely somewhere in the middle. Carolina is a unique Rod Brind’Amour team that approaches hockey in a way no one else does, which means we can’t use the typical yardsticks to measure their potential. It’s all a big guessing game, but that’s what make these playoffs so much fun.

#Carolina #Hurricanes #history #Stanley #Cup #story">The Carolina Hurricanes made history, but the Stanley Cup is a different story  The Carolina Hurricanes are either the best team in hockey, or the biggest frauds in the Stanley Cup Playoffs — it all depends on who you ask. The Canes made history on Saturday night in Philadelphia with their eighth straight playoff win, and their second sweep in a row. It made them the first team in NHL history to sweep their first two series since the 1987 best-of-seven format began, the first team to start 8-0 in the playoffs since 1985, and only the fifth team in NHL history to start the playoffs 8-0.Yet nobody can settle on whether this team is really a Stanley Cup favorite yet.A lot of factors go into the acrimony when discussing Carolina. There’s long-standing bitterness over southern hockey being a thing, especially following back-to-back years of the Florida Panthers hoisting the cup. There’s the fact that the team plays hockey in a manner that runs counter to everything we know about success in the modern NHL. Also, there’s simply a reality that the Canes have had a pretty easy path through the postseason thus far, facing two teams that were bad strategic mismatches for them.What that doesn’t mean, however, is that either the Ottawa Senators or Philadelphia Flyers are “bad teams.” Finishing with 99 and 98 points on the season, respectively, the Sens and Flyers were better than the entire Western Conference Pacific Division, better than the Utah Mammoth who the Golden Knights beat in the first round, and just one win worse than the Bruins, who the Sabres bested in the opening round. Yet, it’s become cool to hate on the Hurricanes’ opponents thus far as a means to discredit Carolina as being a legitimate team — foisting them with criticism no other team in the field is left with.It’s absolutely fair to say that both Ottawa and Philadelphia were thrown into a mismatch blender. Both teams thrived during the regular season when playing on clean ice, with open passing lanes and room to set up plays. This is what the Hurricanes excel at stopping, running brutal forechecks with gutsy defensive rotations that flip the formation to send defensemen up ice to hassle opposing defenseman on the puck, allowing the forwards to stay home.One of the hallmarks of Carolina hockey is to forget the model of play that wins in the NHL, and instead change the game into Hurricanes hockey. They thrive in limiting the effectiveness of star players, making the game be about depth rather than top-line strength, then take over when their third and fourth lines are stronger than their opponents. There’s no coincidence that hockey fans were wondering why Brady Tkachuk and Tim Stützle disappeared in the Sens series, or why Trevor Zegras and Travis Konecny couldn’t make inroads in round two. This was the Canes’ doing, and it worked.This past week Brady Tkachuk explained why it was near-impossible to deal with the Hurricanes’ defense in his series, and noticing that it was happening to the Flyers as well.“Their D… they have the best sticks I’ve ever seen. It was crazy. Some of the plays you’d just be like ‘I can get this through,’ like Slav [Jaccob Slavin] has probably the best stick in the league. I had two Grade-A’s [scoring chances] and they hit his stick and up in the netting. I was like ‘how on earth is that not in the back of the net?’”The length of the Carolina blueliners is causing massive problems for any team trying to play pretty, puck rotation hockey. Throughout the Flyers series we saw the Philly attack get decimated due to deflections from Slavin, K’Andre Miller, and Alexander Nikishin — with their pairings in Jalen Chatfield, Shayne Gostisbehere, and Sean Walker serving more as the more traditional net battlers. This layered defense has been impenetrable in the playoffs and has been offset with the Canes showing more fight and edge that they have previously.So why is there so much doubt that this can carry over to the cup? There are three fair statements to make:The Hurricanes haven’t faced an elite, 90+ point player yet in the playoffsThey’ve been so good defensively that it seems impossible to keep it upCarolina’s best players really haven’t turned up yetForgive the pun, but you can see the storm brewing for Carolina that this incredible run could go south quickly (another pun, sorry). Getting the better of Stützle or Konecny is one thing, but when that caliber of player changes to Nathan McKinnon, Martin Nečas, Nick Suzuki, or Kirill Kaprizov — can this same approach still work? Is there a break point to this defensive dominance where Carolina can be overwhelmed by star players, and if that happens can the Canes recover?That is the real worry right now, and it’s fair to question what is happening with the Carolina top line. The heroes of the playoffs thus far for the Canes has been the Hall/Stankoven/Blake line two, which has been phenomenal — but there has been pronounced quietness from Andrei Svechnikov, Sebastian Aho, and Seth Jarvis on the top line, outside of a few glimmers of magic. We know that historically the NHL playoffs have been won through star power, even by teams like the Panthers who were bruising, but still leaned on Matthew Tkachuk, Sam Bennett, and Brad Marchand to drag them through.If the Canes can’t get that top-line performance firing then there’s a chance they can’t assert their will on the game, which has a domino effect on the rest of the lines, thereby putting more pressure on the defense to bail the team out.The biggest questions about the Hurricanes won’t get answered for some time, with Saturday being the earliest their next series can begin. Whether the Sabres or Canadiens come out of the Atlantic, either team will be the best opposition Carolina has faced, with more star power and deeper lines. If the Canes are able to keep up this dominance in the Eastern Conference Finals then we can really talk about their chances to beat the Avs or Wild in the West.So are the Canes really cup favorites or pretenders? They’re both, and neither, and bizarrely somewhere in the middle. Carolina is a unique Rod Brind’Amour team that approaches hockey in a way no one else does, which means we can’t use the typical yardsticks to measure their potential. It’s all a big guessing game, but that’s what make these playoffs so much fun.  #Carolina #Hurricanes #history #Stanley #Cup #story

The Canes made history on Saturday night in Philadelphia with their eighth straight playoff win, and their second sweep in a row. It made them the first team in NHL history to sweep their first two series since the 1987 best-of-seven format began, the first team to start 8-0 in the playoffs since 1985, and only the fifth team in NHL history to start the playoffs 8-0.

Yet nobody can settle on whether this team is really a Stanley Cup favorite yet.

A lot of factors go into the acrimony when discussing Carolina. There’s long-standing bitterness over southern hockey being a thing, especially following back-to-back years of the Florida Panthers hoisting the cup. There’s the fact that the team plays hockey in a manner that runs counter to everything we know about success in the modern NHL. Also, there’s simply a reality that the Canes have had a pretty easy path through the postseason thus far, facing two teams that were bad strategic mismatches for them.

What that doesn’t mean, however, is that either the Ottawa Senators or Philadelphia Flyers are “bad teams.” Finishing with 99 and 98 points on the season, respectively, the Sens and Flyers were better than the entire Western Conference Pacific Division, better than the Utah Mammoth who the Golden Knights beat in the first round, and just one win worse than the Bruins, who the Sabres bested in the opening round. Yet, it’s become cool to hate on the Hurricanes’ opponents thus far as a means to discredit Carolina as being a legitimate team — foisting them with criticism no other team in the field is left with.

It’s absolutely fair to say that both Ottawa and Philadelphia were thrown into a mismatch blender. Both teams thrived during the regular season when playing on clean ice, with open passing lanes and room to set up plays. This is what the Hurricanes excel at stopping, running brutal forechecks with gutsy defensive rotations that flip the formation to send defensemen up ice to hassle opposing defenseman on the puck, allowing the forwards to stay home.

One of the hallmarks of Carolina hockey is to forget the model of play that wins in the NHL, and instead change the game into Hurricanes hockey. They thrive in limiting the effectiveness of star players, making the game be about depth rather than top-line strength, then take over when their third and fourth lines are stronger than their opponents. There’s no coincidence that hockey fans were wondering why Brady Tkachuk and Tim Stützle disappeared in the Sens series, or why Trevor Zegras and Travis Konecny couldn’t make inroads in round two. This was the Canes’ doing, and it worked.

This past week Brady Tkachuk explained why it was near-impossible to deal with the Hurricanes’ defense in his series, and noticing that it was happening to the Flyers as well.

“Their D… they have the best sticks I’ve ever seen. It was crazy. Some of the plays you’d just be like ‘I can get this through,’ like Slav [Jaccob Slavin] has probably the best stick in the league. I had two Grade-A’s [scoring chances] and they hit his stick and up in the netting. I was like ‘how on earth is that not in the back of the net?’”

The length of the Carolina blueliners is causing massive problems for any team trying to play pretty, puck rotation hockey. Throughout the Flyers series we saw the Philly attack get decimated due to deflections from Slavin, K’Andre Miller, and Alexander Nikishin — with their pairings in Jalen Chatfield, Shayne Gostisbehere, and Sean Walker serving more as the more traditional net battlers. This layered defense has been impenetrable in the playoffs and has been offset with the Canes showing more fight and edge that they have previously.

So why is there so much doubt that this can carry over to the cup? There are three fair statements to make:

  1. The Hurricanes haven’t faced an elite, 90+ point player yet in the playoffs
  2. They’ve been so good defensively that it seems impossible to keep it up
  3. Carolina’s best players really haven’t turned up yet

Forgive the pun, but you can see the storm brewing for Carolina that this incredible run could go south quickly (another pun, sorry). Getting the better of Stützle or Konecny is one thing, but when that caliber of player changes to Nathan McKinnon, Martin Nečas, Nick Suzuki, or Kirill Kaprizov — can this same approach still work? Is there a break point to this defensive dominance where Carolina can be overwhelmed by star players, and if that happens can the Canes recover?

That is the real worry right now, and it’s fair to question what is happening with the Carolina top line. The heroes of the playoffs thus far for the Canes has been the Hall/Stankoven/Blake line two, which has been phenomenal — but there has been pronounced quietness from Andrei Svechnikov, Sebastian Aho, and Seth Jarvis on the top line, outside of a few glimmers of magic. We know that historically the NHL playoffs have been won through star power, even by teams like the Panthers who were bruising, but still leaned on Matthew Tkachuk, Sam Bennett, and Brad Marchand to drag them through.

If the Canes can’t get that top-line performance firing then there’s a chance they can’t assert their will on the game, which has a domino effect on the rest of the lines, thereby putting more pressure on the defense to bail the team out.

The biggest questions about the Hurricanes won’t get answered for some time, with Saturday being the earliest their next series can begin. Whether the Sabres or Canadiens come out of the Atlantic, either team will be the best opposition Carolina has faced, with more star power and deeper lines. If the Canes are able to keep up this dominance in the Eastern Conference Finals then we can really talk about their chances to beat the Avs or Wild in the West.

So are the Canes really cup favorites or pretenders? They’re both, and neither, and bizarrely somewhere in the middle. Carolina is a unique Rod Brind’Amour team that approaches hockey in a way no one else does, which means we can’t use the typical yardsticks to measure their potential. It’s all a big guessing game, but that’s what make these playoffs so much fun.

#Carolina #Hurricanes #history #Stanley #Cup #story">The Carolina Hurricanes made history, but the Stanley Cup is a different story

The Carolina Hurricanes are either the best team in hockey, or the biggest frauds in the Stanley Cup Playoffs — it all depends on who you ask. The Canes made history on Saturday night in Philadelphia with their eighth straight playoff win, and their second sweep in a row. It made them the first team in NHL history to sweep their first two series since the 1987 best-of-seven format began, the first team to start 8-0 in the playoffs since 1985, and only the fifth team in NHL history to start the playoffs 8-0.

Yet nobody can settle on whether this team is really a Stanley Cup favorite yet.

A lot of factors go into the acrimony when discussing Carolina. There’s long-standing bitterness over southern hockey being a thing, especially following back-to-back years of the Florida Panthers hoisting the cup. There’s the fact that the team plays hockey in a manner that runs counter to everything we know about success in the modern NHL. Also, there’s simply a reality that the Canes have had a pretty easy path through the postseason thus far, facing two teams that were bad strategic mismatches for them.

What that doesn’t mean, however, is that either the Ottawa Senators or Philadelphia Flyers are “bad teams.” Finishing with 99 and 98 points on the season, respectively, the Sens and Flyers were better than the entire Western Conference Pacific Division, better than the Utah Mammoth who the Golden Knights beat in the first round, and just one win worse than the Bruins, who the Sabres bested in the opening round. Yet, it’s become cool to hate on the Hurricanes’ opponents thus far as a means to discredit Carolina as being a legitimate team — foisting them with criticism no other team in the field is left with.

It’s absolutely fair to say that both Ottawa and Philadelphia were thrown into a mismatch blender. Both teams thrived during the regular season when playing on clean ice, with open passing lanes and room to set up plays. This is what the Hurricanes excel at stopping, running brutal forechecks with gutsy defensive rotations that flip the formation to send defensemen up ice to hassle opposing defenseman on the puck, allowing the forwards to stay home.

One of the hallmarks of Carolina hockey is to forget the model of play that wins in the NHL, and instead change the game into Hurricanes hockey. They thrive in limiting the effectiveness of star players, making the game be about depth rather than top-line strength, then take over when their third and fourth lines are stronger than their opponents. There’s no coincidence that hockey fans were wondering why Brady Tkachuk and Tim Stützle disappeared in the Sens series, or why Trevor Zegras and Travis Konecny couldn’t make inroads in round two. This was the Canes’ doing, and it worked.

This past week Brady Tkachuk explained why it was near-impossible to deal with the Hurricanes’ defense in his series, and noticing that it was happening to the Flyers as well.

“Their D… they have the best sticks I’ve ever seen. It was crazy. Some of the plays you’d just be like ‘I can get this through,’ like Slav [Jaccob Slavin] has probably the best stick in the league. I had two Grade-A’s [scoring chances] and they hit his stick and up in the netting. I was like ‘how on earth is that not in the back of the net?’”

The length of the Carolina blueliners is causing massive problems for any team trying to play pretty, puck rotation hockey. Throughout the Flyers series we saw the Philly attack get decimated due to deflections from Slavin, K’Andre Miller, and Alexander Nikishin — with their pairings in Jalen Chatfield, Shayne Gostisbehere, and Sean Walker serving more as the more traditional net battlers. This layered defense has been impenetrable in the playoffs and has been offset with the Canes showing more fight and edge that they have previously.

So why is there so much doubt that this can carry over to the cup? There are three fair statements to make:

  1. The Hurricanes haven’t faced an elite, 90+ point player yet in the playoffs
  2. They’ve been so good defensively that it seems impossible to keep it up
  3. Carolina’s best players really haven’t turned up yet

Forgive the pun, but you can see the storm brewing for Carolina that this incredible run could go south quickly (another pun, sorry). Getting the better of Stützle or Konecny is one thing, but when that caliber of player changes to Nathan McKinnon, Martin Nečas, Nick Suzuki, or Kirill Kaprizov — can this same approach still work? Is there a break point to this defensive dominance where Carolina can be overwhelmed by star players, and if that happens can the Canes recover?

That is the real worry right now, and it’s fair to question what is happening with the Carolina top line. The heroes of the playoffs thus far for the Canes has been the Hall/Stankoven/Blake line two, which has been phenomenal — but there has been pronounced quietness from Andrei Svechnikov, Sebastian Aho, and Seth Jarvis on the top line, outside of a few glimmers of magic. We know that historically the NHL playoffs have been won through star power, even by teams like the Panthers who were bruising, but still leaned on Matthew Tkachuk, Sam Bennett, and Brad Marchand to drag them through.

If the Canes can’t get that top-line performance firing then there’s a chance they can’t assert their will on the game, which has a domino effect on the rest of the lines, thereby putting more pressure on the defense to bail the team out.

The biggest questions about the Hurricanes won’t get answered for some time, with Saturday being the earliest their next series can begin. Whether the Sabres or Canadiens come out of the Atlantic, either team will be the best opposition Carolina has faced, with more star power and deeper lines. If the Canes are able to keep up this dominance in the Eastern Conference Finals then we can really talk about their chances to beat the Avs or Wild in the West.

So are the Canes really cup favorites or pretenders? They’re both, and neither, and bizarrely somewhere in the middle. Carolina is a unique Rod Brind’Amour team that approaches hockey in a way no one else does, which means we can’t use the typical yardsticks to measure their potential. It’s all a big guessing game, but that’s what make these playoffs so much fun.

#Carolina #Hurricanes #history #Stanley #Cup #story

The final stages of the 2025-26 Premier League season are fast approaching, and both West Ham United and Tottenham Hotspur are looking to secure their futures in the league. 

Tottenham Hotspur’s draw with Leeds United at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium and West Ham United’s contentious defeat to Arsenal mean that both sides are still in serious danger of losing their top-flight status. 

Here is how Tottenham Hotspur and West Ham United can still survive relegation:

Tottenham Hotspur

Tottenham still has its fate in its own hands, leading West Ham by two points with two games to spare. A pair of wins would confirm its safety, while a win and a draw would likely be enough as well given its superior goal difference. Any defeats, however, and it leaves itself reliant on West Ham’s result to be sure of safety. 

Remaining fixtures: Chelsea (A), Everton (H)

West Ham United

West Ham United needs Spurs to lose at least once if it is to stay in the league now. Two wins would keep it up if Spurs loses at least once, while a single win would be sufficient if Spurs was to lose twice. 

Remaining fixtures: Newcastle United (A), Leeds United (H) 

Teams Teams MP W D L GS GA GD Points
17. Tottenham 36 9 11 16 46 55 -9 38
18. West Ham United 36 9 9 18 42 62 -20 36

Published on May 12, 2026

#Premier #League #relegation #scenarios #Tottenham #Hotspur #West #Ham #stay #TOT #LEE">Premier League 2025-26 relegation scenarios: How can Tottenham Hotspur, West Ham stay up after TOT vs LEE?   The final stages of the 2025-26 Premier League season are fast approaching, and both West Ham United and Tottenham Hotspur are looking to secure their futures in the league. Tottenham Hotspur’s draw with Leeds United at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium and West Ham United’s contentious defeat to Arsenal mean that both sides are still in serious danger of losing their top-flight status. Here is how Tottenham Hotspur and West Ham United can still survive relegation:Tottenham HotspurTottenham still has its fate in its own hands, leading West Ham by two points with two games to spare. A pair of wins would confirm its safety, while a win and a draw would likely be enough as well given its superior goal difference. Any defeats, however, and it leaves itself reliant on West Ham’s result to be sure of safety. Remaining fixtures: Chelsea (A), Everton (H)West Ham UnitedWest Ham United needs Spurs to lose at least once if it is to stay in the league now. Two wins would keep it up if Spurs loses at least once, while a single win would be sufficient if Spurs was to lose twice. Remaining fixtures: Newcastle United (A), Leeds United (H)   Teams   Teams  MP  W  D  L  GS  GA  GD  Points  17.  Tottenham  36  9  11  16  46  55  -9  38  18.  West Ham United  36  9  9  18  42  62  -20  36Published on May 12, 2026  #Premier #League #relegation #scenarios #Tottenham #Hotspur #West #Ham #stay #TOT #LEE

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