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The Florida Panthers and Edmonton Oilers are back in the playoffs after their seesaw 2024 Stanley Cup Final that Florida won in Game 7, but this time they will have to start on the road.

Every champion since 2018 is in this year’s field and there are also several teams returning after long absences such as the Ottawa Senators and Montreal Canadiens.

Who will survive the four playoff rounds and come out on top?

USA TODAY’s Jason Anderson, Mike Brehm and Jace Evans provide their predictions for the Stanley Cup Final teams, the NHL champion and the Conn Smythe winner as playoff MVP:

Jason Anderson

Stanley Cup Final: Carolina Hurricanes vs. Colorado Avalanche

Champion: Colorado Avalanche

Conn Smythe: Cale Makar

It’s all coming together for the Avalanche. Nathan MacKinnon and Cale Makar look ready to take over, and while goalie Mackenzie Blackwood has no playoff experience, he sure looks ready for the big time. Gabriel Landeskog’s potential return from a years-long battle with injury could provide a major spark, and Colorado is one of the only teams that can skate with Carolina.

Mike Brehm

Stanley Cup Final: Tampa Bay Lightning vs. Colorado Avalanche

Champion: Colorado Avalanche

Conn Smythe: Nathan MacKinnon

The Avalanche have done more to address their issues than any other team. They traded both their goaltenders and the newcomers have done much better. They addressed their need for a No. 2 center with a trade for Brock Nelson, plus added center Charlie Coyle. This is a deep team. Just like in 2022, the Avalanche will beat the Lightning in the Final.

Jace Evans

Stanley Cup Final: Tampa Bay Lightning vs. Vegas Golden Knights

Champion: Tampa Bay Lightning

Conn Smythe: Nikita Kucherov

The path to the Final certainly won’t be easy — starting with a first-round matchup against the rival Panthers — but perhaps no team is as well-rounded as Tampa Bay. The Bolts were the highest-scoring team in the league and tied for third in goals against. Two of the men most responsible for those finishes, NHL leading scorer Nikita Kucherov and goalie Andrei Vasilevskiy, are some of the best playoff performers of the 21st century. They lead the way again and Kucherov finally gets his Conn Smythe.

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Russian President Vladimir Putin has announced a temporary Easter ceasefire in his country’s war with Ukraine, the Kremlin said Saturday.

The war has raged for more than three years and cost the lives of tens of thousands of people on both sides. 

‘Guided by humanitarian considerations, today from 18:00 to 00:00 from Sunday to Monday, the Russian side declares an Easter truce,’’ Putin said in a video posted by the Russian ministry of Foreign Affairs.

‘I order that all military actions be stopped for this period.’

In the video, Putin is joined by Chief of the General Staff Valery Gerasimov.

The move appeared to be scoffed at by Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy who said shortly after the announcement that air raid alerts were ringing out across Ukraine.

‘As for yet another attempt by Putin to play with human lives—at this moment, air raid alerts are spreading across Ukraine,’ Zelenskyy wrote on X while giving an update on troop positions. It wasn’t entirely clear of he was addressing the truce.

‘At 17:15, Russian attack drones were detected in our skies. Ukrainian air defense and aviation have already begun working to protect us. Shahed drones in our skies reveal Putin’s true attitude toward Easter and toward human life.’

Zelenskyy wrote that Ukrainian forces were battling in the Kursk region and holding their positions. 

‘In the Belgorod region, our warriors have advanced and expanded our zone of control,’ he wrote.

Russia’s Defense Ministry, however, said its forces pushed Ukrainian troops from one of their last remaining footholds in Russia’s Kursk region, where Ukrainian troops staged a surprise incursion last year.

The temporary ceasefire comes after President Donald Trump on Thursday said an 80-page minerals deal will be signed with Ukraine in one week. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent later amended that it would likely be signed on April 26. 

Details on the agreement still remain relatively unknown, though recent reporting by Bloomberg has suggested the U.S. has eased back its demands of repayment for its aid in Ukraine’s fight against Russia from $300 billion to $100 billion. 

On Friday, Trump said the U.S. will ‘just take a pass’ at peace efforts for Ukraine if Russian President Vladimir Putin refuses to agree to ceasefire terms. 

‘If for some reason, one of the two parties makes it very difficult, we’re just going to say ‘you’re foolish, you’re fools, you’re horrible people,’ and we’re going to just take a pass,’ Trump told reporters. ‘But hopefully we won’t have to do that.’

Fox News’ Caitlin McFall and The Associated Press contributed to this report. 

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The Anaheim Ducks fired coach Greg Cronin on Saturday despite a 21-point improvement in the standings.

Cronin, 61, just finished his second season with the team. He was hired in 2023 for his first NHL head coaching job after decades coaching in college hockey and the American Hockey League or as an assistant coach in the NHL.

The team improved by only one point in 2023-24 to 59 points but jumped to 80 points this season. Though the Ducks cut back significantly in goals allowed, they finished last in the league on the power play and in the bottom five in goals, penalty killing and 5-on-5 play.

“I want to personally thank Greg for his tireless work and dedication to the team,” general manager Pat Verbeek said in a statement. “He is responsible in many ways for the improvement we’ve seen from our young core. However, after several weeks of careful evaluation, I concluded we needed a change in direction and a new voice.

‘This was an extremely difficult decision for me to make, but I felt it was necessary to continue our progress toward becoming a Stanley Cup contender that I know we can be.”

Despite the improvement, the Ducks finished 16 points out of the playoffs.

Cronin is the first NHL coach fired since the regular season ended on Thursday. There were five coaching changes during the regular season: Boston Bruins, St. Louis Blues, Chicago Blackhawks, Detroit Red Wings and Philadelphia Flyers.

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The Memphis Grizzlies started hot, stayed hot, cooled off and then pulled away for a 120-106 victory over the Dallas Mavericks in the final NBA play-in game.

The Grizzlies built an early 20-10 lead, extended it to 34-14 in the first quarter and were up 66-41 in the second quarter. But the Mavs are pros, too, and in a league where few leads are safe, Dallas trailed 75-68 midway through the third quarter. The Mavs didn’t have enough gas to keep up.

Memphis’ five starters scored in double figures led by Jaren Jackson Jr. (24 points), Ja Morant (22 points) and Desmond Bane (22 points).

The Grizzlies earned the No. 8 seed and will play the top-seeded Oklahoma City Thunder in a Western Conference first-round series starting with Game 1 on Sunday.

Here are three takeaways from Friday’s Grizzlies-Mavericks play-in game:

Ja Morant’s ankle held up just fine

Grizzlies star guard Morant turned his right ankle in the third quarter of Wednesday’s play-in loss to Golden State and was listed as questionable for Friday’s game.

Morant started and scored 12 points in the first quarter including a sky-scraping one-handed putback dunk giving the Grizzlies a 29-14 lead with 4:27 left in the quarter. He also got to the free throw line five times and made all five and had three assists, three rebounds and two steals in the opening quarter.

Morant got his 22 points on 7-for-24 shooting (1-for-5 on 3s) and 7-for-7 on free throws. He added nine assists, seven rebounds and three steals.

The Mavericks’ future is under the microscope

The faster the Mavericks, who are one season removed from an NBA Finals appearance, can put this season behind them and get further from the Luka Dončić trade the better.

The trade was a public relations disaster and the impact it has had on an angry fanbase will linger, but the best thing for Dallas and Nico Harrison, the team’s embattled general manager/president of basketball operations, is to get to the draft, free agency and the start of next season with a roster as healthy as possible.

Kyrie Irving, who sustained a torn ACL on March 3, won’t be available to start the season, but Anthony Davis, P.J. Washington, Daniel Gafford, Klay Thompson, Caleb Martin, Dereck Lively II, Max Christie, Jaden Hardy and Naji Marshall should all be ready for training camp in the fall.

It’s clear – obviously so – that Harrison believes Davis can be the key to a championship, and Davis, who was bothered by a right leg issue, was spectacular in Friday’s loss. He finished with 40 points and nine rebounds, and midway through the third quarter, he had 31 of Dallas’ 68 points. It didn’t help that two Dallas starters (Lively and Washington) failed to score.

The Mavs’ front office and coaching staff (and an irked fanbase) want to see how this team performs when and if fully healthy.

Grizzlies face 68-win Thunder in first-round series

The reward for getting the No. 8 seed in the West through the play-in game format? A first-round series against Oklahoma City which set a franchise record with 68 victories.

But the Grizzlies aren’t your typical eighth seed. They won 48 games and are just two seasons from a 51-win season and three seasons from a 56-win season.

With Morant and Jackson plus other players who probably don’t get enough recognition (Bane, Santi Aldama, Scotty Pippen Jr., rookie Zach Edey), the Grizzlies are capable of making this tough on the Thunder. Remember, the Grizzlies were 35-16 and in second place in the West. But can they make it a long series?

It’s also a high-profile job audition for Grizzlies interim coach Tuomas Iisalo. The Finnish coach took over for Taylor Jenkins who was fired March 28. There is belief around the league that the Grizzlies want Iisalo, 42, to have a good showing so they can give him the full-time job.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Capital One Financial’s application to acquire Discover Financial Services in a $35.3 billion all-stock deal has officially been approved by the Federal Reserve and the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, the regulators announced on Friday.

“The Board evaluated the application under the statutory factors it is required to consider, including the financial and managerial resources of the companies, the convenience and needs of the communities to be served by the combined organization, and the competitive and financial stability impacts of the proposal,” the Fed said in a release.

Capital One first announced it had entered into a definitive agreement to acquire Discover in February 2024. It will also indirectly acquire Discover Bank through the transaction, which was approved by the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency on Friday.

Under the agreement, Discover shareholders will receive 1.0192 Capital One shares for each Discover share or about a 26% premium from Discover’s closing price of $110.49 at the time, Capital One said in a release.

Capital One and Discover are among the largest credit card issuers in the U.S., and the merger will expand Capital One’s deposit base and its credit card offerings. 

As a condition of the merger, Capital One said it will comply with the Fed’s action against Discover, according to the release. The Fed fined Discover $100 million for overcharging certain interchange fees from 2007 through 2023, and the company is repaying those fees to affected customers.

The OCC said it approved Capital One’s application on the condition that it would take “corrective actions” to remediate harm and address the “root causes” of outstanding enforcement actions against Discover.

After the deal closes, Capital One shareholders will hold 60% of the combined company, while Discover shareholders own 40%, according to the February 2024 release.

In a joint statement, Capital One and Discover said they expect to close the deal on May 18.

This post appeared first on NBC NEWS

Los Angeles Lakers guard Luka Dončić went into details in an interview with ESPN on Friday about the trade that shocked the basketball world in February, saying he hasn’t spoken to Dallas Mavericks general manager Nico Harrison since that trade.

Dončić was shipped to Los Angeles for Anthony Davis as part of the three-team deal with the Utah Jazz.

Harrison said he doesn’t regret making the deal, even though fans at every home game at the American Airlines Arena in Dallas have called for his firing. Harrison also repeated the claim that ‘defense wins championships’ as another reason he traded the five-time first-team All-NBA performer.

‘It’s just sad the way he’s talking right now,’ Dončić said to ESPN. ‘I never say anything bad about him, and I just want to move on. The fans, my ex-teammates, I’ll always keep at heart. It’s time for me to move on from there.’

Dončić said he thought when he first heard about the trade that it was an April Fool’s joke and that he broke his cell phone after throwing it across a room.

‘I mean it’s painful, depending on how you take it,’ Dončić said. ‘It mostly came from Dallas, so I didn’t want to talk back. But I don’t really read that much stuff. I’m just trying to focus on my journey.’

Los Angeles starts its first-round playoff series against the Minnesota Timberwolves on Saturday, while the Mavericks play their elimination play-in game on Friday against the Memphis Grizzlies.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

For the first time in the six-year history of the NBA Play-In Tournament, a 10-seed has clinched a playoff spot.

The Miami Heat toppled the Atlanta Hawks in overtime Friday night, 123-114, to secure the eighth and final spot in the Eastern Conference playoffs. And with that, Miami will face the Cleveland Cavaliers, who led the East with 64 victories, in the first round.

Tyler Herro led all players with 30 points on 10-of-21 shooting, while Andrew Wiggins chipped in 20 points. Miami, however, got massive shots from newly-acquired point guard Davion Mitchell, who scored 16 points and flushed three 3-point shots in overtime.

Trae Young led the Hawks with 29 points, but the Hawks, for the second consecutive season, were eliminated from playoff contention in the Play-In Tournament.

Here are three takeaways from Friday’s Heat-Hawks play-in game:

It’s that time of the season: Heat focus, intensity ramping up

The Heat, a recent below-average regular season team, have now gone through the Play-In Tournament each of the past three years to get to the postseason. But, once there, the Heat usually have ramped up their competitive intensity and efficiency. Miami likes its identity to be one of grit and competitiveness; it will once again have to prove it.

Can this Heat team make a similarly historic run like the one from two years ago? It’s highly unlikely. That 2022-23 team often needed Jimmy Butler to go nuclear and this iteration of the Heat often slogs through offensive stretches — particularly in second halves. Friday night was a perfect example; the Heat had stretches at the starts of the third and fourth quarter when their shot selection regressed, leading to lazy defensive effort on the other end. In the fourth quarter, after Miami started the period 1-of-9 from the field, the Hawks momentarily took the lead.

The Heat lost an NBA-worst 15 games this season when carrying a lead into the fourth quarter. Miami led by nine entering the period Friday night. Its biggest lead in the game was 17. Cleveland won’t be as forgiving.

Hawks’ slow start, particularly from deep, looms large in defeat

In the modern NBA, leads come and go. It’s the nature of the up-tempo pace played today, highlighted by the fact that even big men can hit 3s. In elimination games, however, slow starts can be lethal. Atlanta discovered that Friday night.

The Hawks started the game 0-for-5 and Miami scored the game’s first 10 points. Atlanta made just one 3 out of its first 13 shots from beyond the arc. All-Star guard Trae Young didn’t get going until the fourth quarter. And while the Hawks did eventually hold a six-point lead in the fourth quarter, resilient teams like the Heat force teams into mistakes. The Hawks clearly missed Jalen Johnson (torn labrum), who was looking like a candidate for Most Improved Player before suffering the injury. Young can be a special player in the clutch. But he has never played with an All-Star teammate. He turns 27 in September. The Hawks must give him more help.

Heat depth shines, but can it continue in the playoffs?

Miami had six players reach double figures, and backup point guard Davion Mitchell — who played 40 minutes of game time — was massive down the stretch. He laced three 3-pointers in overtime and provided energy with hustle plays, including a debilitating offensive rebound that all but put Atlanta out of reach. Forward Haywood Highsmith was also clutch with 12 points, 10 rebounds and several key defensive stops.

Rookie center Ke’lel Ware was highly effective in just more than 20 minutes, scoring 12 points on 6-for-6 shooting and grabbing eight rebounds. Ware, who sometimes gets into foul trouble and still is finding his way defensively, plays more in first halves. The Heat may need more of him in the third and fourth quarter, however, with the Cavaliers boasting Evan Mobley and Jarrett Allen — a pair of versatile bigs who can score and defend.

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Popovich, 76, has returned home and is fine.

The Spurs had no official comment Friday.

The team announced in mid-November that Popovich had a mild stroke on Nov. 2 and that he was expected to make a full recovery.

“At this point, a timeline for his return to the sidelines has not been determined,” the team said in a news release on Nov. 13.

On Feb. 27, Popovich released a statement, saying, “I’ve decided not to return to the sidelines this season. Mitch Johnson and his staff have done a wonderful job and the resolve and professionalism the players have shown, sticking together during a challenging season, has been outstanding. I will continue to focus on my health with the hope that I can return to coaching in the future.”

It is unknown if he will return for the 2025-26 season.

Popovich is the NBA’s all-time leader in coaching victories with 1,422 and among coaches with more than 500 career games, he has the seventh-best winning percentage (.621). He has led the Spurs to five NBA championships (2014, 2007, 2005, 2003, 1999).

The Spurs were 34-48 this season, and All-Star Victor Wembanyama, 21, missed the final seven weeks of the regular season with deep vein thrombosis in his right shoulder.

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Luka Dončić’s first assist to LeBron James was a 70-foot outlet pass resulting in an easy layup. Their offensive connection was immediate.

“It’s kind of a pick-your-poison when you have two brainiacs when it comes to the game of basketball on the floor at the same time,” James said.

Two brainiacs who also are two of the best players in the league.

Those long touchdown passes from Dončić to James are common – at least once a game it seems – illustrating 1) just how good of a rebounder Dončić is; 2) what an exceptional passer he is; and 3) the James-Dončić link has elevated the Los Angeles Lakers to title contender.

“The goal is to win a championship,” Dončić told reporters Thursday. “I think we have a great team. We have guys that are willing to go to war. Everybody is staying together. The chemistry is high, so I think we for sure have a chance.”

The third-seeded Lakers begin pursuit of the franchise’s 18th championship Saturday against the sixth-seeded Minnesota Timberwolves in an intriguing matchup. The two teams were separated in the standings by just one game. However, the Lakers didn’t get Dončić on the court until early February following the blockbuster trade with Dallas.

It’s rare that one team has two of the most gifted offensive players, and the Lakers present a multitude of problems.

After acquiring Dončić on Feb. 2, the Lakers went 22-13, including 18-10 with Dončić in the lineup. In the 23 games James and Dončić played together, the Lakers were 15-8, scoring 116.1 points and allowing 114.1 points per 100 possessions.

“In order for us to be the team ultimately we need to be, the ball needs to be in Luka’s hands,” James told reporters in March. “And then when Luka sits down, the ball can be in my hands or be in AR’s (Austin Reaves’) hands. But I’m very comfortable playing off the ball and finding my spots, running the floor, getting the outlet pass from Luka, being on the backside of the defense if he’s either being blitzed in pick-and-rolls or switched in pick-and-rolls. He attracts so many eyes and bodies.”

Timberwolves coach Chris Finch lost to Dallas in last year’s conference finals in five games. Minnesota struggled to slow down Dončić, who averaged 32.4 points, 9.6 rebounds, 8.2 assists and 2.2. steals and shot 47.3% from the field, 43.4% on 3-pointers and 84.6% on free throws in the five-game series won by the Mavs.

“He’s still the same amazing player,’ Finch told reporters. ‘When the ball’s in his hands, he controls so much of the game in the way it’s played, so we’ve got to do a better job of disrupting that. There’s certain things that we learned from being in a series with him last year that we need to put into action this year. Our discipline around him and the execution of those things has to be better. Last year, we were kind of feeling our way through some of it. And we’re going to have to be ready to do a multitude of things.’

The on-court development between James and Dončić hit pause when James missed seven games in March with a strained left groin. But the results in just two dozen games have been revealing.

In a 123-100 victory against Denver, Dončić had 32 points, 10 rebounds, seven assists and four steals, and James had 25 points, nine rebounds, five assists and three blocks.

In a 111-102 victory against Minnesota, James produced 33 points, 17 rebounds and six assists, and Dončić produced 21 points, 13 rebounds and five assists.

The Lakers beat Oklahoma City, Houston (twice), Memphis, Indiana and Orlando in the final three weeks of the season, and in Dončić’s big return to Dallas for the first time as a Laker, Dončić had 45 points, eight rebounds, six assists and four steals while James contributed 27 points and seven rebounds.

In his 28 games with the Lakers, Dončić averaged 28.2 points, 8.1 rebounds, 7.5 assists and 1.6 steals and shot 43.8% from the field, 37.9% on 3-pointers and 79.1% on free throws.

James hasn’t played with a shotmaker and playmaker like this since he was Kyrie Irving’s teammate with Cleveland in 2016-17.

“I think Luka needs to be the guy that controls the offense,” Lakers coach JJ Redick told reporters in late February. “And Bron and AR, because we’re going to stagger everybody, they’re going to have their times to be on the ball. But all three of those guys are very intelligent basketball players, and we can create mismatches. We can get teams in the blender.”

Unless the outcome is determined in the final minutes or it’s a blowout, there’s rarely a second where either James or Dončić are not on the court. That puts relentless pressure on opposing defenses every possession, and it has yielded an incredibly productive lineup when Dončić is on the court and James is on the bench.

In the 23 games where both Dončić and James have played, the Lakers score 122.2 points and allow 99 points per 100 possessions for an impressive plus-23.2 net rating when Dončić is on the court and James is on the bench, according to NBA data. Conversely, in those same 23 games, the Lakers score 106.6 points and allow 113.2 points per 100 possessions with James on the court and Dončić on the bench. Lineups shrink a bit in the playoffs, so it’s not like there will be many minutes when both aren’t on the court.

Still, Dončić’s value can’t be overstated. He attracts so much attention from defenses with his shooting and playmaking that his teammates benefit.

Jaxson Hayes has benefited from easy buckets at the rim on lobs from Dončić. There are better 3-point opportunities for Reaves, Rui Hachimura, Dorian Finney-Smith, Jarred Vanderbilt, Gabe Vincent, Jordan Goodwin and Dalton Knecht.

Finch also understands that too much attention on Dončić creates other advantages for the Lakers. “You can’t just commit to running around multiple guys at the ball,’ he said, ‘because now you’re giving maybe the best player in the game to ever have played (James) the chance to pick you apart in space.’

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Ja Morant was in the starting five in Friday night’s NBA Play-In Tournament game against the Dallas Mavericks in Memphis, a huge boost for the Grizzlies after Morant injured his ankle earlier this week.

Morant scored 22 points, dished nine assists and had three steals as the Grizzlies thrashed the Mavericks to earn the No. 8 seed in the Western Conference. They will play Oklahoma City in a first-round series starting Sunday.

Morant turned his right ankle with about 5 minutes remaining in the third quarter of a loss to the Golden State Warriors on Tuesday night. He spent several minutes on the floor and seemed to be in considerable pain. He was able to return for a free throw, but left the court for treatment. He returned in the fourth quarter and finished with 22 points.

Morant never went to the locker room, and the team said it was not planning to do X-rays Tuesday.

After the game, Morant told reporters: ‘I’m playing. That’s basically the answer I’m giving. It ain’t nothing different.’

The NBA playoffs begin Saturday.

(This story was updated with new information Friday night.)

This post appeared first on USA TODAY