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The journey to WrestleMania is officially underway, and two spots have been secured.

The 2025 Royal Rumble officially kicked off the start of WWE’s biggest time of the year, as the iconic first premium live event took place Saturday in front of a record crowd at Lucas Oil Stadium. The night was headlined by the men’s and women’s Royal Rumble matches. Each had 30 entrants, and only one emerged. On the women’s side, a former winner won for the second time, and in the stacked men’s side, an underdog came through for a shocking victory.

The WWE Tag Team Championships were on the card in a two-out-of-three falls match, and that match ended with the return of another pairing. Cody Rhodes and Kevin Owens took their heated rivalry into another Undisputed WWE Championship bout, and it ended in brutal fashion.

WrestleMania 41 is more than 75 days away, but the extravagant event is about to take shape. Check out the highlights and analysis from Royal Rumble 2025:

Watch: Royal Rumble postshow

Men’s Royal Rumble match

At WrestleMania 41, it will indeed be ‘Main Event’ Jey Uso in the limelight. The ‘master of yeet’ will be headlining WrestleMania 41 after he outlasted one of the most stacked men’s Royal Rumble cards of all time to cement his spot at WWE’s premier event.

There were plenty of big names in the match and a case could’ve been made for any of them. However, in the end it was Uso and John Cena as the final two stars left. They each traded blows, with Uso’s super kicks and Cena’s Five-Knuckle Shuffle. The two stars went over the ropes on the edge of the ring, and Cena looked like he would win his third Royal Rumble when he got the Attitude Adjustment set up. However, Uso jumped off and back in the ring and pushed Cena out. Cena was just as shocked as the entire WWE world, and he went back in to congratulate the winner.

Analysis: What an upset. In the lead-up to the Royal Rumble, people were arguing which former champion would be the one headed to WrestleMania. No one thought it would be Uso, and that’s why you must always expect the unexpected. A surprise win will make the build-up to WrestleMania rather interesting, for Uso and other stars who easily could’ve been the victor, as plenty of big matches are on the horizon in the coming months.

Another development to watch from people that didn’t win was the brawl between Seth Rollins, Roman Reigns and CM Punk. Rollins clearly lost his self control with a vicious assault on Reigns that included two curb stomps on the “Tribal Chief” and his continued attack on Punk. In addition, Punk was clearly frustrated with the “Wiseman” Paul Heyman, considering he owes Punk a favor. A storyline may be brewing between all parties and headed toward a match at WrestleMania.

All entrants for the men’s Royal Rumble match are listed below, as well as when/if they were eliminated.

No. 30: Logan Paul

Eliminated by John Cena.

No. 29: LA Knight

Eliminated by AJ Styles.

No. 28: Damian Priest

Eliminated by LA Knight.

No. 27: Sami Zayn

Eliminated by Jey Uso.

No. 26: Dominik Mysterio

Eliminated by Damian Priest.

No. 25: Seth Rollins

Eliminated by CM Punk.

No. 24: CM Punk

Eliminated by Logan Paul.

No. 23: John Cena

Eliminated by Jey Uso.

No. 22: Braun Strowman

Eliminated by John Cena.

No. 21: AJ Styles

Styles makes his first appearance since October. Eliminated by Logan Paul.

No. 20: Jey Uso

Winner.

No. 19: Shinsuke Nakamura

Eliminated by Jey Uso.

No. 18: Finn Balor

Eliminated by John Cena.

No. 17: Drew McIntyre

Eliminated by Damian Priest.

No. 16: Roman Reigns

Eliminated by CM Punk.

No. 15: Joe Hendry

The TNA World Champion returns to WWE. Eliminated by Roman Reigns.

No. 14: The Miz

Eliminated by Roman Reigns.

No. 13: Ludwig Kaiser

Eliminated by Penta.

No. 12: Jacob Fatu

Eliminated by Braun Strowman.

No. 11: Andrade

Eliminated by Jacob Fatu.

No. 10: Jimmy Uso

Eliminated by Jacob Fatu.

No. 9: Sheamus

Eliminated by Roman Reigns.

No. 8: IShowSpeed

Streamer replaces Akira Tozawa. Eliminated by Bron Breakker.

No. 8: Akira Tozawa

Did not enter match after attack from Carmelo Hayes.

No. 7: Bron Breakker

Eliminated by Roman Reigns.

No. 6: Otis

Eliminated by IShowSpeed.

No. 5: Santos Escobar

Eliminated by Bron Breakker.

No. 4: Carmelo Hayes

Eliminated by Bron Breakker.

No. 3: Chad Gable

Eliminated by Jacob Fatu.

No. 2: Penta

Eliminated by Finn Balor.

No. 1: Rey Mysterio

Eliminated by Jacob Fatu.

Ladder match for Undisputed WWE Championship: Cody Rhodes (c) vs. Kevin Owens

With no love lost between the two, they quickly tried to brutalize each other right off the bat, with Owens using a piece of the ladder as a weapon. Rhodes loves taking the action into the crowd, and he lured Owens into the spectators to give fans a front-row seat to the devastation.

The action eventually found its way back around the ring, and Rhodes quickly stopped an attempt by Owens to climb the ladder. Owens later brought out a mini-ladder − made famous by Hornswoggle − and it quickly became the weapon both stars used. Later, Rhodes was about to grab the titles when Owens pushed him off and he was left dangling on the hook. He found his way back to the ladder, but was unable to grab the championships. Owens later tried the Ruthless Package Piledriver on the ladder, and Rhodes countered it to send the challenger into the steel. The favor was returned when Owens did a powerbomb to send Rhodes forcefully into a ladder.

Owens sent Rhodes off the top rope and into the ladder in the craziest spot of the match. Officials came ringside to check on both stars, who were clearly damaged, and Sami Zayn then came out. The two stars eventually got up, and Rhodes executed a Cross Rhodes. The champion suddenly felt rage and busted Owens’ face open. The two met at the announcer’s table, and Owens tried the piledriver again, but Rhodes turned it around sent Owens through the ladder, breaking it in the process. With Owens down, Rhodes climbed the ladder and claimed both championships to retain.

Analysis: What a brutal one that was. The feud was boiling between Rhodes and Owens, and yet they even took it up another notch in a ladder match where nothing went to waste. It was easy to see Rhodes winning, but it was how he did it that was the shock of it all. Fed up, he ditched the ‘good guy’ persona and did all he had to do to retain his championship. Sending Owens through the ladder, when he was already covered in his blood, sent a strong message that Rhodes can be just as sinister as anyone else. It seems like something to remember as WrestleMania 41 approaches.

With another successful title defense, it’s likely Rhodes finally has Owens in his rear-view mirror and he now awaits to see what happens in the men’s Royal Rumble. WrestleMania 41 will definitely feature ‘The American Nightmare’ in the main event.

Two-out-of-three falls match for WWE Tag Team Championship: #DIY (Johnny Gargano and Tommaso Ciampa) (c) vs. Motor City Machine Guns (Alex Shelley and Chris Sabin)

Part one of the tag team title match showcased why #DIY is among the best duos in WWE. Gargano and Ciampa executed the perfect fake tag that had Shelley thinking Gargano was the legal person in. However, Gargano didn’t tag in, allowing Ciampa to catch the challenger off guard. Ciampa got a high knee on Shelley and secured the first pin to get the advantage for the champions.

Momentum was high for Ciampa and Gargano in the second round. They continued to beat up on a fatigued Shelley. #DIY used tricks again to distract the referee from seeing Shelley tag Sabin in. The referee forced Shelley back in the match and the assault continued on him. Shelley recovered from a deep hole, thanks to Sabin finally getting in the fold. The challengers got Ciampa out of the picture and teed off on Gargano, getting their own pinfall to send the match to a decisive third round.

With one pinfall needed, all four competitors tried to get the upper hand, going off on each other. Ciampa got Sabin on his own with a drop knee maneuver, but the pin attempt was unsuccessful. The Motor City Machine Guns then thought they had the victory in their hands, only for Gargano to break the pin attempt at the last second. Gargano went for a kick on Shelley, but it went haywire when he accidentally kicked Ciampa. Gargano looked to be done when two people in hoodies appeared and distracted the referee. It turned out to be the Street Profits, and Angelo Dawkins used a crutch to hit Shelley. It was the turning point and the champions got the second pin to retain. Their reward? A beatdown from the Street Profits.

Analysis: The Street Profits are back and are hunting for blood. It’s been a few months since they’ve been seen, but they made an emphatic return with their eyes set on claiming more tag team gold.

Aside from the teams participating in the title match, the tag team picture had gotten a bit stale with #DIY and the MCMG the only viable champions. The return of the Street Profits adds a much-needed new player to the mix, and it looks nothing like the duo fans have loved for years. The heel turn could mean the Street Profits are on a warpath for success, and new champions could be coming in the next few months.

Women’s Royal Rumble match

In a stacked field, it’s the ‘Queen’ that comes out on top.

Charlotte hasn’t been in action since December 2023, and not only did she make her return, she solidified her spot at WrestleMania 41 by winning the women’s Royal Rumble.

She entered at No. 27 and although she didn’t make many eliminations, she made the ones that mattered. The final three was Charlotte, powerhouse Nia Jax and NXT sensation Roxanne Perez. Perez and Charlotte worked together to get Jax out, setting up a final two of young star vs. decorated veteran. However, Perez was at a disadvantage by being outside of the ropes. Charlotte just needed to land a nasty kick to the head and Perez went out, giving Charlotte the win.

She’s the first two-time women’s winner.

Other notable moments included the returns of Alexa Bliss and Nikki Bella, and Jordynne Grace made her first appearance as part of the WWE roster after leaving TNA.

Analysis: It seemed too predictable, and maybe that’s why it was somewhat of a shock. Charlotte has always been a main event name, yet it seemed like it would be too much of a rush to thrust her into the WrestleMania spot after missing more than a year. Yet she adds another notch in her family’s wrestling legacy. It may not be the popular move and is another instance of Charlotte passing by other stars, but her name will certainly be a headliner at WrestleMania 41.

Aside from the winner, Perez put up an incredible performance. She is destined to be on the main roster at any moment. She came in at No. 3 and capitalized on her opportunity to shine, setting a women’s record for time in the Royal Rumble. She may not have won, but finishing as the runner-up shows signs she is a main roster champion in the near future, and 2025 could be a big one for ‘The Prodigy.’

All entrants for the women’s Royal Rumble match are listed, as well as who eliminated them.

No. 30: Nikki Bella

The WWE Hall of Famer returns. Eliminated by Nia Jax.

No. 29: Nia Jax

Eliminated by Charlotte.

No. 28: Giulia

The NXT Women’s Champion appears. Eliminated by Roxanne Perez.

No. 27: Charlotte

Charlotte returns to WWE from injury. Winner.

No. 26: Raquel Rodriguez

Eliminated by Nix Jax.

No. 25: Trish Stratus

The WWE Hall of Famer returns. Eliminated by Nia Jax.

No. 24: Stephanie Vaquer

Eliminated by Nix Jax.

No. 23: Candice LeRae

Eliminated by Trish Stratus.

No. 22: Zelina Vega

Eliminated by Nia Jax.

No. 21: Alexa Bliss

Bliss makes her return to WWE. Eliminated by Liv Morgan.

No. 20: Michin

Eliminated by Charlotte.

No. 19: Jordynne Grace

The newest WWE signing arrives after finishing her time in TNA. Eliminated by Giulia.

No. 18: Natalya

Eliminated by Liv Morgan.

No. 17: Piper Niven

Eliminated by Charlotte.

No. 16: Jaida Parker

Eliminated by Jordynne Grace.

No. 15: Naomi

Eliminated by Nix Jax.

No. 14: Maxxine Dupri

Eliminated by Pure Fusion Collective (Sonya Deville, Zoey Stark and Shayna Baszler).

No. 13: Sonya Deville

Eliminated by Bianca Belair and Naomi.

No. 12: Bayley

Eliminated by Roxanne Perez.

No. 11: Shayna Baszler

Eliminated by Bayley.

No. 10: Bianca Belair

Eliminated by Nix Jax.

No. 9: Lash Legend

Eliminated by Chelsea Green.

No. 8: Zoey Stark

Eliminated by Iyo Sky.

No. 7: Ivy Nile

Eliminated by Maxxine Dupri.

No. 6: B-Fab

Eliminated by Chelsea Green.

No. 5: Chelsea Green

Eliminated by Piper Niven.

No. 4: Lyra Valkyria

Eliminated by Ivy Nile.

No. 3: Roxanne Perez

Eliminated by Charlotte.

No. 2: Liv Morgan

Eliminated by Nix Jax.

No. 1 Iyo Sky

Eliminated by Nix Jax.

When is Royal Rumble 2025?

Royal Rumble 2025 is Saturday, Feb. 1 at 3 p.m. ET.

Where is Royal Rumble 2025?

The 2025 Royal Rumble will be at Lucas Oil Stadium − home of the NFL’s Indianapolis Colts − in Indianapolis.

How to watch Royal Rumble 2025

The event can be streamed on Peacock, but you must have their premium or premium-plus subscription to watch. Internationally, it will be available on Netflix in most markets.

Royal Rumble 2025 match card

Matches not in order

Men’s Royal Rumble match
Women’s Royal Rumble match
Ladder match for Undisputed WWE Championship: Cody Rhodes (c) vs. Kevin Owens
Two-out-of-three falls match for WWE Tag Team Championship: #DIY (Johnny Gargano and Tommaso Ciampa) (c) vs. Motor City Machine Guns (Alex Shelley and Chris Sabin)

How does the Royal Rumble match work?

The 30-person match starts off with two entrants, and every two minutes, another competitor enters the match.

The only way to be eliminated from the match is to be thrown over the top rope of the ring and both feet must hit the floor. If only one foot hits the floor or goes under the top rope, the competitor may re-enter the ring. The match goes until there is one person remaining in the ring that hasn’t been eliminated. The winner of the match then gets a guaranteed championship match at WrestleMania.

Who’s in the men’s Royal Rumble match?

Heading into Saturday night, 18 of 30 participants have been announced. To see the full list, click here.

Who’s in the women’s Royal Rumble match?

Heading into Saturday night, 14 of 30 participants have been announced. To see the full list, click here.

WrestleMania 41 sign goes up

It’s that time of the year. The Royal Rumble means the WrestleMania sign goes up, and it will be present during Monday Night Raw and Friday Night SmackDown leading up to the event.

Jordan Mendoza’s Royal Rumble 2025 predictions

Men’s Royal Rumble match: John Cena
Men’s Royal Rumble surprise: Joe Hendry
Women’s Royal Rumble match: Iyo Sky
Women’s Royal Rumble surprise: Nikki Bella
Ladder match for Undisputed WWE Championship: The feud was something Rhodes needed, and there should be plenty of ridiculous spots in this one. While Owens winning would certainly add intrigue to start the year, Rhodes is on his way to another WrestleMania main event. Winner: Cody Rhodes.
Two-out-of-three falls match for WWE Tag Team Championship: The Motor City Machine Guns have been a great addition to WWE, but it feels like they haven’t been used to their full potential. #DIY has had a great turnaround recently, and they should get the first pinfall before the challengers get the last two for a title change to start February. Winner: Motor City Machine Guns.

James H. Williams’ Royal Rumble 2025 predictions

Men’s Royal Rumble match: CM Punk
Men’s Royal Rumble surprise: Dolph Ziggler
Women’s Royal Rumble match: Charlotte Flair
Women’s Royal Rumble surprise: AJ Lee
Ladder match for Undisputed WWE Championship: Rhodes will retain and position himself to headline WrestleMania as the defending champion for a third consecutive year. This should be the end of the feud and possibly the last we see of the Winged Eagle title that Owens stole from Rhodes. Winner: Cody Rhodes.
Two-out-of-three falls match for WWE Tag Team Championship: Gargano and Ciampa will find a way to retain the titles on a big stage. The Motor City Machine Guns will head into the event with momentum after picking up a victory (along with Los Garzas) over #DIY and Pretty Deadly during an eight-man tag team match but #DIY was also spotted backstage with Tama Tonga. The backstage segment could be leading to a potential tag match down the road with Tonga and Jacob Fatu. Winner: #DIY.

Men’s Royal Rumble history

The match first took place in 1988 – with “Hacksaw” Jim Duggan winning the inaugural event – and it’s been held every year since. However, it wasn’t until 1993 that the winner received a championship opportunity at WrestleMania. Here are the past 10 winners. The full list of winners is here:

2015: Roman Reigns
2016: Triple H (second win)
2017: Randy Orton (second win)
2018: Shinsuke Nakamura
2019: Seth Rollins
2020: Drew McIntyre
2021: Edge (second win) 
2022: Brock Lesnar (second win)
2023: Cody Rhodes
2024: Cody Rhodes (second win)

Women’s Royal Rumble history

The women’s Royal Rumble match was introduced in 2018, with Asuka winning the first edition. Here are the list of winners:

2018: Asuka
2019: Becky Lynch
2020: Charlotte Flair 
2021: Bianca Belair
2022: Ronda Rousey
2023: Rhea Ripley
2024: Bayley

How successful are men’s Royal Rumble winners at WrestleMania?

Since 1993, the winner in the men’s match has mostly been successful in capturing a title at the flagship event, going 17-12 in those matches for a 58.6% success rate. There have been some instances of Royal Rumble winners either not getting a championship opportunity at WrestleMania or, like John Cena in 2008, deciding to cash in their opportunity prior.

See the full list of how men’s Royal Rumble winners fared at WrestleMania here.

How successful are women’s Royal Rumble winners at WrestleMania?

The women’s winners have been quite successful at WrestleMania. Royal Rumble victors are 5-2 − a 71.4% win percentage − in WrestleMania matches with two straight wins.

See the full list of how women’s Royal Rumble winners fared at WrestleMania here.

Best number to enter the Royal Rumble?

Save the best for last when it comes to the men’s match. Five winners have come in at No. 30, the most of any entry number. All of the wins have happened since 2007. The second most is No. 27 with four wins and No. 1 and No. 24 with three wins. Nos. 4, 6, 7, 9, 11, 12, 17, 20, 21 and 26 have never been winners.

In the women’s match, it’s either been early or later in the match with the most success. No. 3 and No. 28 each have two wins. Nos. 1, 17 and 25 make up the other victories.

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The World Series champion Los Angeles Dodgers bolstered their rotation in a big way this winter, signing two-time Cy Young winner Blake Snell and Japanese phenom Roki Sasaki – but Shohei Ohtani’s return to the mound is still up in the air.

Ohtani, who signed a $700 million contract with the Dodgers in the 2023-24 offseason, didn’t pitch in his first year with the club after having elbow surgery in September 2023. But he became the first player in baseball history to hit 50 home runs with 50 stolen bases, winning his third career MVP award.

When and if Ohtani joins the Dodgers rotation in 2025 has been a big question as spring training gets set to begin. During the Dodgers’ fan festival on Saturday, the 30-year-old Japanese star couldn’t offer specifics on when he might make his first big-league pitching appearance since August 2023.

‘Hard to pinpoint when. Generally looking at a couple of weeks to a month of leeway,’ Ohtani said. ‘It will depend on how my first bullpen session will go.’

Meanwhile, Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said it ‘sounds about right’ that Ohtani could return to pitching in May.

All things Dodgers: Latest Los Angeles Dodgers news, schedule, roster, stats, injury updates and more.

Ohtani had surgery on his left (non-throwing) shoulder after suffering a dislocation during Game 2 of the Dodgers’ World Series triumph over the Yankees.

He began throwing off a mound last August and while the team was intentionally vague leading up to October, the Dodgers didn’t end up rushing him back in the postseason.

Ohtani had a 3.01 ERA in 86 starts across six seasons with the Los Angeles Angels from 2018-2023, racking up 608 strikeouts in 481 ⅔ innings.

Los Angeles is set to deploy a six-man rotation and if all goes according to plan, the Dodgers could begin the season with Snell, Sasaki, Yoshinobu Yamamoto, Tyler Glasnow, Tony Gonsolin and Dustin May making up the staff.

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At an ice rink near Washington, local residents piled flowers and stuffed animals on a table in the lobby.

In the outskirts of Boston, the leader of a storied figure skating club choked back tears.

Yet as the figure skating community continued to grapple with the deaths of more than 15 skaters, coaches and parents in a fatal plane crash Wednesday night, the grief was not limited to the clubs and towns that lost some of their own.

In the days since the tragedy, its ripple effects have been felt in ice rinks and skating clubs across the country and even around the world, from Raleigh and San Francisco to Montreal and Tallin, Estonia, where the European Figure Skating Championships are taking place. There are teenage skaters who lost best friends. Olympic veterans and hopefuls who lost coaches. Their shared grief stretches across disciplines, time zones and even generations, reaching those in almost every corner of the sport, in one way or another.

‘What you learn in skating is you fall down constantly, but you get up,’ 1956 Olympic champion and U.S. Figure Skating Hall of Fame inductee Tenley Albright told USA TODAY Sports on Friday. ‘And so that’s what we need to do now, except we’re not quite sure how to get up.’

The collision between a small commercial flight and a military helicopter near Washington Reagan National Airport is the deadliest U.S. aviation disaster in over two decades. Authorities had yet to release the names of the victims as of Friday night but indicated that all 67 people aboard the two aircrafts are presumed to be dead.

The fact that so many of the passengers on American Airlines 5342 were returning from the same event − a development camp for promising young figure skaters, held in Wichita, Kansas after the 2025 national championships − made it all the more tragic.

While U.S. Figure Skating has yet to identify any of the skaters on board, USA TODAY has confirmed that some of them were as young as 11 years old.

“We’re all grieving this,’ 1968 Olympic gold medalist Peggy Fleming said, ‘on all kinds of levels.’

The president of the International Skating Union, which is the international federation that oversees figure skating, said Friday that the organization intends to pay tribute to the victims of the crash at the 2025 world championships, which will take place in Boston in March.

At the European championships, a moment of silence preceded the start of Thursday’s events.

‘The only thing that the skaters over there can talk about is how the plane crash has affected them,’ said Jackie Wong, a figure skating analyst for Rocker Skating who has been involved in the sport in various capacities for more than 25 years. ‘Because they knew people who were there, and they knew people who knew people who were there. It’s heartbreaking.’

The figure skating community in the United States is spread out across nearly 900 member, high school and collegiate clubs, according to U.S. Figure Skating. But in recent years, many of the sport’s elite skaters have worked and trained together at a handful of regional hubs, including those in Boston, Delaware and the Washington D.C. area − all of which lost skaters, coaches and parents in Wednesday’s crash.

Wong said the incident has had intense emotional ripple effects throughout the figure skating community, in part because so much of that community just convened in Wichita for the national championships. It also speaks to changing dynamics within the sport, he said.

‘I think in decades past, there was more of a feeling of rivalry,’ Wong explained. ‘Skaters from different countries, generally, would train in their own countries. And now, there’s a lot of cross-pollination across countries, across geography, across coaches. … There is a lot of camaraderie, a lot of being happy with other people’s successes − even if it’s not your own.’

The relatively small, tight-knit nature of elite figure skating meant that few people in the sport were more than a few degrees of separation away from someone who was on the flight.

In an interview with CBS News on Friday, for example, retired Olympic champion Brian Boitano recalled competing alongside Vadim Naumov and Evgenia Shishkova, the 1994 pairs world champions from Russia who later became highly-regarded coaches in Boston. Albright remembered seeing Spencer Lane, 16, skate in a professional show put on by her daughter. And in local television news reports, executives from clubs and ice rinks across the country shared stories of people they knew who were impacted, or ways that their own figure skating communities were grieving.

‘You can see it on the online forums, social media,’ said Laura Patterson, a coach at AZ Ice in Glibert, Arizona who said she worked as an official in Wichita last week. ‘I mean, we’re all friends nationwide, whether you’re officials or coaches. Everyone’s been reaching out to everyone during this time right now.’

For many in the skating community, including Albright and Fleming, the tragedy immediately brought back memories of the last aviation disaster that hit the sport: A plane crash on Feb. 15, 1961 that killed all 18 members of the U.S. figure skating team, plus 16 coaches, officials, judges and family members.

Fleming’s coach, Billy Kipp, was among those on board the flight, which was en route to the world championships in Prague. She was 12 years old at the time.

‘Our community’s been through this before and we know how to stay strong and help each other. So we will get through this,’ said Fleming, now 76.

‘My heart goes out to all those families that lost their kids and lost their mothers and coaches. I mean, it’s just terrible. It’s just terrible that we have to go through this again.’

Now, like then, the figure skating community is grieving both the people that have been lost but also the bright futures that have been lost with them.

U.S. Figure Skating hosted the national development camp in Wichita, which ran from Monday to Wednesday, to expose the top young skaters in the country to high-level training. The camp was filled with possible 2030 and 2034 Winter Olympians, and the coaches − like Naumov and Shishkova − who were expected to help lead them to the top of the sport.

‘When you lose coaches like this, you lose the future of the sport as well,’ Doug Zeghibe, the chief executive of the Skating Club of Boston, said in a news conference Thursday.

Albright, 89, said the club will miss the expert instruction and guidance of its coaches − and miss seeing some of their teenage skaters walking through the front door of the club’s facility in Norwood, Massachusetts. She said it will be strange not to be able to watch their intensity, their smiles, their improvement. But, like in 1961, they will do their best to move on.

‘There were other skaters and other coaches who tried to fill in, and in many ways did,’ Albright recalled. ‘But the loss that we all feel is always there.’

Follow the reporters on social media @tomschad.bsky.social and @joshlpeter11.

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AMES, Iowa.— It’s been quite a while since Iowa State basketball experienced the bitter taste of defeat at home.

The loss ends Iowa State’s 29-game winning streak at Hilton Coliseum.

Tamin Lipsey paced the Cyclones (17-4, 7-3 Big 12) with 20 points. Curtis Jones had 14 points but shot just 1-of-10 in the second half. Joshua Jefferson had 13 points.

The Cyclones shot 19-of-52 overall (36.5%) and 8-of-18 (44.4%) from deep. They shot 27.3% in the second half, including a 22.2% mark from long range. They also committed 18 turnovers in the loss.

Frustration was mounting, momentum was going Kansas State’s way and Iowa State coach T.J. Otzelberger was tagged with his first technical foul of the season. A few moments later, Kansas State’s Brendan Hausen drilled a deep 3-pointer to cap off a 20-4 second-half run to give the Wildcats a 58-39 lead with 13:45 remaining.

Hausen raised both of his arms in celebration and Hilton Coliseum was no louder than a library.

Iowa State managed to regroup and string together a 13-0 run and cut the deficit down to six after an and-1 by Gilbert made it 58-52 with 10:06 left in the game.

The Cyclones and the Hilton Coliseum crowd appeared to have a second wind, but that would be the closest Iowa State would get to catching Kansas State.

Hausen knocked down another 3-pointer to spark an 8-0 run for the Wildcats. Once Kansas State extended its lead back to double figures, it never dipped below that.

Every Kansas State starter scored in double figures. Dug McDaniel led the way with 20 points and five assists. Coleman Hawkins added 17 points, seven boards and four steals. Hausen finished with 15 points and three steals. Max Jones had 12 points, while David N’Guessan chipped in 10 points.

Kansas State held a narrow 37-35 halftime lead. The Cyclones opened the game on a 13-4 run, but then started to have turnover issues.

At one point, Iowa State coughed up the ball seven times in a 5:32-long stretch, as Kansas State started to dig its heels and come back from a tough start. The Wildcats were also strong on the offensive glass and had numerous second-chance opportunities.

Iowa State started to tighten up its possessions towards the end of the first half, but it did most of its damage by drawing fouls and getting to the free-throw line to stay within reach of Kansas State before getting outscored 43-26 in the final 20 minutes of action.

The Cyclones are back on the road Monday night for a rematch with Kansas. Iowa State defeated Kansas in their earlier meeting on Jan. 15, 74-57, at Hilton Coliseum. Tip-off is scheduled for 8 p.m. CT.

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Washington Capitals star Alex Ovechkin is back from his fractured left fibula and resuming his pursuit of Wayne Gretzky’s NHL career goal record.

Ovechkin, 39, who scored 15 times in his first 18 games, had missed 16 games after absorbing a leg-on-leg collision during a Nov. 18 game against the Utah Hockey Club. He returned on Dec. 28 and has scored nine goals since.

Ovechkin entered this season needing 42 goals to break Gretzky’s record of 894 career goals, which has stood since 1999. The Washington captain has 24 goals this season, with 30 games left.

This season, he moved into second place with 20 consecutive 20-goal seasons and set a record for the number of goalies he has scored against in his career.

If he doesn’t reach the record this season, he has one more season left on his contract.

Here’s where Ovechkin stands in his chase of Gretzky’s goal record:

How many career goals does Alex Ovechkin have?

Ovechkin has 877 career goals.

How many goals does Alex Ovechkin need to pass Wayne Gretzky?

Ovechkin needs 18 goals to break Gretzky’s record.

How many goals does Alex Ovechkin have this season?

Ovechkin has 24 goals and 14 assists in 36 games. Factoring in the 16 games he missed, that is a 44-goal pace, giving him a chance to break the record this season.

What did Alex Ovechkin do in his last game?

Ovechkin had one goal on two shots in a 5-4 overtime loss to the Winnipeg Jets. He scored in the third period on a drive from the point.

When is Alex Ovechkin’s next game?

The Capitals play Tuesday, Feb. 4, at home against Florida. Ovechkin has 44 goals in 72 career regular-season games vs. the Panthers.

Alex Ovechkin goals in 2024-25

Oct. 19: 1 vs. New Jersey
Oct. 23: 1 vs. Philadelphia
Oct. 29: 2 vs. N.Y. Rangers
Oct. 31: 1 vs. Montreal
Nov. 2: 1 vs. Columbus
Nov. 3: 1 vs. Carolina
Nov. 6: 1 vs. Nashville
Nov. 9: 2 vs. St. Louis
Nov. 17: 3 vs. Vegas
Nov. 18: 2 vs. Utah
Dec. 28: 1 vs. Toronto
Dec. 29: 1 vs. Detroit
Jan. 2: 1 vs. Minnesota
Jan. 4: 1 vs. N.Y. Rangers
Jan. 11: 1 vs. Nashville
Jan. 16: 1 vs. Ottawa
Jan. 23: 1 vs. Seattle
Jan. 30: 1 vs. Ottawa
Feb 1: 1 vs. Winnipeg

Alex Ovechkin career goal breakdown

Even strength: 554, third overall

Power play: 318, a record

Short-handed: 5

Empty net: 62, a record

Game winners: 134, second overall, one behind Jaromir Jagr’s record

Overtime goals: 27, a record

Multi-goal games: 177, second overall

Goalies scored against: 179, a record

Hat tricks: 31, sixth overall

20-goal seasons: 20, tied for second

30-goal seasons: 18, a record

40-goal seasons: 13, a record

Alex Ovechkin empty-net goals

Ovechkin has a record 62 empty-net goals, but Gretzky is up there, too, with 56. Ovechkin passed Gretzky in that category last season.

Alex Ovechkin goals per season

Season: Goals, career total

2005-06: 52, 52
2006-07: 46, 98
2007-08: 65*, 163
2008-09: 56*, 219
2009-10: 50, 269
2010-11: 32, 301
2011-12: 38, 339
2012-13: 32*, 371
2013-14: 51*, 422
2014-15: 53*, 475
2015-16: 50*, 525
2016-17: 33, 558
2017-18: 49*, 607
2018-19: 51*, 658
2019-20: 48*, 706
2020-21: 24, 730
2021-22: 50, 780
2022-23: 42, 822
2023-24: 31, 853
2024-25: 24, 877

*-led league in goals that season

NHL’s top goal scorers all-time

The top 21 NHL all-time goal scorers all have 600 or more goals. All of the players are in the Hockey Hall of Fame, except Ovechkin, Sidney Crosby and Jagr, who are still playing.

1. Wayne Gretzky, 894 goals in 1,487 games

2. Alex Ovechkin, 877 goals in 1,462 games

3. Gordie Howe, 801 goals in 1,767 games

4. Jaromir Jagr, 766 goals in 1,733 games

5. Brett Hull, 741 goals in 1,269 games

6. Marcel Dionne, 731 in 1,348 games

7. Phil Esposito, 717 goals in 1,282 games

8. Mike Gartner, 708 goals in 1,432 games

9. Mark Messier, 694 goals in 1,756 games

10. Steve Yzerman, 692 goals in 1,514 games

11. Mario Lemieux, 690 goals in 915 games

12. Teemu Selanne, 684 goals in 1,451 games

13. Luc Robitaille, 668 goals in 1,431 games

14. Brendan Shanahan, 656 goals in 1,524 games

15. Dave Andreychuk, 640 goals in 1,639 games

16. Jarome Iginla, 625 goals in 1,554 games

17. Joe Sakic, 625 goals in 1,378 games

18. Bobby Hull, 610 goals in 1,063 games

19. Sidney Crosby, 609 goals in 1,326 games

20. Dino Ciccarelli, 608 goals in 1,232 games

21. Jari Kurri, 601 goals in 1,251 games

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The 2025 Senior Bowl ended in emotional fashion, with former TCU receiver Jack Bech catching a game-winning touchdown from two yards out from Memphis’ Seth Henigan for the American team.

Bech, who broke down crying after the game after hugging his family and teammates, was wearing No. 7 in honor of his brother, Tiger Bech, who died in the New Orleans attack on New Year’s Day. He not only caught the game-winning touchdown but also finished with six receptions for 68 yards and was named the Senior Bowl MVP on Saturday.

Every player’s helmet at the Senior Bowl on Saturday had a No. 7 sticker in honor of Tiger, who played college football at Princeton. Bech said postgame that his brother was on his mind as he was named the best receiver on the American squad in the practices leading up to the game, certainly improving his NFL draft stock.

‘My brother had some wings on me,’ Bech told NFL Network after the game. ‘He gave it to me, and he let that all take place. Our lord and savior Jesus Christ, Tiger, nothing else but them. They’re the reason I did what I did today, I attribute it all to them.’

Expert NFL playoff picks: Unique data and betting insights only at USA TODAY

Bech was impressive even before the touchdown on Saturday, also climbing the ladder for a highlight 1-on-1 reception earlier in the game.

The American team defeated the National team 22-19 on Saturday in Mobile, Alabama.

Follow along below for highlights from the 2025 Senior Bowl:

Watch 2025 Senior Bowl live with Fubo (free trial

Senior Bowl live updates

Jack Bech scores game-winning touchdown

What a moment for Bech, who catches the game-winning touchdown from Henigan to win the Senior Bowl for the American team.

Bech was wearing No. 7 in honor of his brother, who died during the New Orleans attack early on New Year’s Day. He was shown crying after the game in celebration of the touchdown.

Bech was phenomenal today and improved his draft stock throughout the week.

Sebastian Castro makes big fourth-down stop

Castro makes an impressive open-field tackle on Milroe, who tried to scramble for a first down on fourth-and-4.

UCLA’s Oluwafemi Oladejo with second sack

Oladejo has been a problem on the defensive line today, with his second sack of the game. He got to Milroe quick there.

American team with its own trick play touchdown

Henigan passes to UCF’s RJ Harvey, who throws a 25-yard pass to Maryland’s Tai Felton for the touchdown.

Henigan then hits TeSlaa for a two-point conversion to make the score 19-16 in the fourth quarter.

Tyler Shough hits Da’Quan Felton for touchdown

Shough, who’s up to 9 of 13 passing for 61 yards, tosses a touchdown to Virginia Tech’s Da’Quan Felton to give the National team a 19-8 lead.

National team also converts the two-point attempt.

Junior Tafuna recovers fumble

Henigan fumbles the snap, and Tafuna recovers for the National team. Tafuna has had a strong day, also with a sack in the first half.

Memphis’ Seth Henigan enters at QB

Henigan enters at QB for the American team, although Milroe might re-enter at some point in the fourth quarter.

Milroe and the American team struggled mightily on offense in the third quarter.

Taylor Elgersma makes 43-yard throw

Taylor Elgersma makes a nice 43-yard completion to Illinois’ Pat Bryant, showing off his strong arm. Elgersma won the Canadian equivalent of the Heisman Trophy this season.

Canadian QB Taylor Elgersma enters game

Elgersma, who attended Canadian university Wilfrid Laurier, hopes to be the first Canadian quarterback in the NFL in 22 years.

A spot opened up for Elgersma after a few quarterback prospects backed out of the game.

Jalen Milroe enters game, receives cheers

Milroe enters the game for his first drive of the Senior Bowl and receives loud cheers. The Senior Bowl, of course, is located near the Crimson Tide’s home of Tuscaloosa.

Senior Bowl heads into halftime at 8-8

American and National teams are tied at 8 headed into halftime. Alabama’s Jalen Milroe to take over at quarterback for the American squad in the second half.

Tulane’s Caleb Ransaw intercepts Tyler Shough

Shough makes a bad throw decision, which goes straight into the arms of Tulane safety Caleb Ransaw. Ransaw also made a big tackle on the drive.

Landon Jackson strip sacks Jaxson Dart

Arkansas lineman Landon Jackson beats his man and gets to Jaxson Dart, sacking the quarterback and forcing a fumble, which is recovered by the National team.

Nice play by the Razorback.

Dart throws 2-point pass to TeSlaa

Dart works through his progressions, finding TeSlaa in the back of the end zone for a two-point conversion. TeSlaa makes his second tough grab of the day, this time to tie the game at 8.

Dart scrambles for a score

Dart gets the American team on the board, as the pocket collapses and he escapes for a touchdown scramble.

Dart broke a tackle there near the end, showcasing his power and scrambling ability.

Jaxson Dart completes deep pass to Bech on flea flicker

American team dials up a flea flicker, and Dart throws a deep pass to Bech, who comes down with the pass over two defenders. Bech has three receptions for 54 yards so far.

That play might’ve been a touchdown if Dart put some more air under the ball.

Louisville’s Tyler Shough enters for Dillon Gabriel

Shough, who finished his seventh year of college football at Louisville after stints at Oregon and Texas Tech, enters at quarterback for the National team in relief of Dillon Gabriel.

Utah’s Junior Tafuna with the sack

Nice play by Tafuna, who gets to Leonard for the sack.

Riley Leonard with a couple nice throws

Leonard steps up in the pocket and fires a strike on third-and-12 to Arkansas’ Isaac TeSlaa, who comes down with the pass in traffic. Leonard has made some nice throws so far today.

Iowa’s Sebastian Castro forces, recovers fumble

Castro forces and recovers a fumble, giving the ball back to the National team.

There’s no replay review at the Senior Bowl, although video appeared to show the American team runner was down on contact, so the play stands.

Senior Bowl players honoring Tiger Bech

TCU’s Jack Bech, who just made a nice grab from Riley Leonard, is wearing No. 7 in honor of his brother, former Princeton player Tiger Bech, who died in the New Orleans attack on New Year’s Day.

Each player in the game is also wearing a No. 7 sticker on their helmets.

Bech was also named the top receiver on the American squad, according to coaches and players in the week leading up to the game.

Ollie Gordon throws trick play touchdown

Gordon catches a backward pass and tosses it downfield for Iowa State’s Jayden Higgins, who makes a great adjustment on the ball and comes down with the touchdown reception, showing off his length and size.

National team takes an 8-0 lead after Gabriel throws to Miami tight end Elijah Arroyo for the two-point conversion. Nice throw-and-catch by Gabriel and Arroyo there with the tight coverage.

USC’s Woody Marks picks up first down

Marks, who has plenty of experience as a pass catcher, catches a screen behind the line of scrimmage and picks up the first down.

Marks ran for 1,133 yards with nine touchdowns this season, putting himself firmly on the NFL draft radar.

Oklahoma State’s Ollie Gordon II with quick start

Oklahoma State RB Ollie Gordon II, who led the nation in rushing yards two seasons ago, starts the first drive with back-to-back nice runs.

Senior Bowl underway from Mobile

Miami’s Xavier Restrepo returns the kickoff, and we’re underway from the Senior Bowl. Dillon Gabriel and the National team to start first.

Riley Leonard, Dillon Gabriel to start at quarterback

Dillon Gabriel will start at quarterback for the National team, while Riley Leonard will start the first half and Jalen Milroe will start the second half for the American team.

Senior Bowl announcers

Rhett Lewis will handle play-by-play duties on Saturday, with Charles Davis as the color analyst. NFL draft expert Daniel Jeremiah will also be on the call, with insider Tom Pelissero as the sideline reporter.

Senior Bowl time today

Time: 2:30 p.m. ET
Date: Saturday, Feb. 1
Location: Hancock Whitney Stadium (Mobile, Alabama)

The 2025 Senior Bowl is set to kick off at 2:30 p.m. ET on Saturday, Feb. 1, from Hancock Whitney Stadium in Mobile, Alabama.

What channel is the Senior Bowl on today?

TV channel: NFL Network
Streaming: NFL Network app, Fubo

The 2025 Senior Bowl will air live on NFL Network, with streaming options available on the NFL Network app or Fubo, which offers a free trial to potential subscribers.

2025 Senior Bowl rosters

Here are the 2025 Senior Bowl rosters:

Quarterbacks

Jalen Milroe, Alabama
Jaxson Dart, Ole Miss
Dillon Gabriel, Oregon
Will Howard, Ohio State
Riley Leonard, Notre Dame
Tyler Shough, Louisville

Running backs

Donovan Edwards, Michigan
Ollie Gordon II, Oklahoma State
RJ Harvey, UCF
Jarquez Hunter, Auburn
Woody Marks, USC
Damien Martinez, Miami
Kalel Mullings, Michigan
Devin Neal, Kansas
Brashard Smith, SMU
Bhayshul Tuten, Virginia Tech
Marcus Yarns, Delaware

Wide receivers

Elic Ayomanor, Stanford
Jack Bech, TCU
Pat Bryant, Illinois
Chimere Dike, Florida
Da’Quan Felton, Virginia Tech
Tai Felton, Maryland
Jayden Higgins, Iowa State
Tez Johnson, Oregon
Jaylin Lane, Virginia Tech
Jaylin Noel, Iowa State
Xavier Restrepo, Miami
Jalen Royals, Utah State
Arian Smith, Georgia
Kyle Williams, Washington State

Tight ends

Elijah Arroyo, Miami
Gavin Bartholomew, Pitt
Jake Briningstool, Clemson
CJ Dippre, Alabama
Harrold Fannin Jr., Bowling Green
Terrance Ferguson, Oregon
Jackson Hawes, Georgia Tech
Gunnar Helm, Texas
Moliki Matavao, UCLA
Mason Taylor, LSU

Offensive linemen

Anthony Belton, NC State
Logan Brown, Kansas
Josh Conerly Jr., Oregon
Ajani Cornelius, Oregon
Garrett Dellinger, LSU
Aireontae Ersery, Minnesota
Miles Frazier, LSU
Emery Jones Jr., LSU
Marcus Mbow, Purdue
Armand Membou, Missouri
Wyatt Milum, West Virginia
Jonah Monheim, USC
Jack Nelson, Wisconsin
Tate Ratledge, Georgia
Jalen Rivers, Miami
Caleb Rogers, Texas Tech
Jonah Savaiinaea, Arizona
Jackson Slater, Sacramento State
Ozzy Trapilo, Boston College
Jalen Travis, Iowa State
Carson Vinson, Alabama A&M
Jared Wilson, Georgia
Grey Zabel, North Dakota State

Interior defensive linemen

Darius Alexander, Toledo
Yahya Black, Iowa
Jamaree Caldwell, Oregon
Alfred Collins, Texas
Joshua Farmer, Florida State
Ty Hamilton, Ohio State
Cam Jackson, Florida
Walter Nolen, Ole Miss
Omarr Norman-Lott, Tennessee
Aeneas Peebles, Virginia Tech
Shemar Turner, Texas A&M
Deone Walker, Kentucky

Edge rushers

Vernon Broughton, Texas
Jordan Burch, Oregon
Donovan Ezeiruaku, Boston College
Mike Green, Marshall
Tyrion Ingram-Dawkins, Georgia
Jared Ivey, Ole Miss
Landon Jackson, Arkansas
Sai’vion Jones, LSU
Jah Joyner, Minnesota
Kyle Kennard, South Carolina
Oluwafemi Oladejo, UCLA
Ty Robinson, Nebraska
T.J. Sanders, South Carolina
Nic Scourton, Texas A&M
Barryn Sorrell, Texas
Josaiah Stewart, Michigan
Shemar Stewart, Texas A&M
Princely Umanmielen, Ole Miss
David Walker, Central Arkansas

Linebackers

Eugene Asante, Auburn
Jeffrey Bassa, Oregon
Shemar James, Florida
Demetrius Knight Jr., South Carolina
Cody Lindenberg, Minnesota
Nick Martin, Oklahoma State
Jalen McLeod, Auburn
Smael Mondon Jr., Georgia
Collin Oliver, Oklahoma State
Tyreem Powell, Rutgers
Karene Reid, Utah
Carson Schwesinger, UCLA

Cornerbacks

BJ Adams, UCF
Trey Amos, Ole Miss
Maxwell Hairston, Kentucky
Tommi Hill, Nebraska
Bilhal Kone, Western Michigan
Mac McWilliams, UCF
Jacob Parrish, Kansas State
Darien Porter, Iowa State
Quincy Riley, Louisville
Jaylin Smith, USC
Upton Stout, Western Kentucky
Dorian Strong, Virginia Tech
Azareye’h Thomas, Florida State

Safeties

Billy Bowman, Oklahoma
Sabastian Castro, Iowa
Maxen Hook, Toledo
Rayuan Lane III, Navy
Andrew Mukuba, Texas
Caleb Ransaw, Tulane
Lathan Ransom, Ohio State
Jonas Sanker, Virginia
Dante Trader Jr., Maryland
Malik Verdon, Iowa State
Hunter Wohler, Wisconsin

Specialists

Austin Brinkman, West Virginia (LS)
James Burnip, Alabama (P)
Jeremy Crawshaw, Florida (P)
Ryan Fitzgerald, Florida State (K)
Caden Davis, Ole Miss (K)
William Wagner, Michigan (LS)

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Less than 24 hours before the New York Rangers and Boston Bruins dropped the puck on Saturday afternoon, the Blueshirts made the move to reacquire forward J.T. Miller, plus Erik Brannstrom and Jackson Dorrington from the Canucks in exchange for Filip Chytil, Victor Mancini and a conditional first round pick.

Miller found the back of the net twice but it wasn’t enough as Bruins forward David Pastrnak tallied a hat trick in the Rangers’ 6-3 loss in Boston.

After a 10-game point-streak (7-0-3), the Rangers have lost three in a row. They failed to gain any ground in a highly contested Eastern Conference playoff picture and now sit six points back of the Bruins for the second and final wild card spot.

It’s a quick turnaround for the Rangers, who return back home to Madison Square Garden to face the Vegas Golden Knights on Sunday night.

New York only has four games left — three at home and one on the road — before the two-week break in action for the 4 Nations Face-Off tournament.

It will be a crucial stretch to pick up any points possible before the stop for the Blueshirts, who face off against the Bruins again on Tuesday night at MSG.

J.T. Miller impact felt immediately in first game

What a 24 hours it’s been for Miller.

The veteran forward didn’t land in Boston until 4 a.m. after coming on a flight over from Dallas where Vancouver was playing on Friday night.

Miller brought an immediate spark to the Rangers’ lineup, tying the game at 1-1 past the halfway point of the first period.

On the scoring play, Artemi Panarin’s forecheck led directly to a loose puck that went right to Miller, who slapped it home for the Rangers’ first goal of the afternoon.

The 13-year-veteran wasn’t done there, as he added his second of the night on the power play when he tipped a shot from Mika Zibanejad to cut the Bruins’ lead in half.

The goals were Miller’s first with the Rangers since Feb. 25, 2018 and his first multi-goal performance with the organization since March 28, 2017.

He had one other two-goal effort this season with the Canucks, coming less than a month ago on Jan. 6.

‘He (J.T. Miller) brings a unique combination of skill, size and physicality to our team. He helps us here in the short-term, but he will be a key part of our core moving forward,’ Rangers president and general manager Chris Drury said in a statement released by the team on ‘X’ (formerly known as Twitter) before the game.

‘He’s a terrific 200-foot player. He plays both sides of the puck, both special teams, he has a physical element and a high level of compete that we’re excited to bring to our group.

Second period the difference maker

Despite trailing 2-1 after 20 minutes, momentum swung in favor of the Bruins once the puck dropped to start the second period.

Boston scored less than four minutes in to extend its lead and would later take a 4-1 advantage late in the second after Pavel Zacha scored on the power play.

The Rangers posted only two shots on goal in the second period and their first one didn’t come until the 10:32 mark.

The Bruins — who came into the 30th ranked power play (13.6 percent), were able to score two goals on the man advantage against New York’s fourth-ranked penalty kill (83.7 percent).

Whenever the Rangers would score to tie or cut into Boston’s lead, the Bruins would always have an answer.

This came case in point in the third period. After Miller scored his second goal 35 seconds into the final frame, Boston responded immediately, with Pastrnak adding his second of the afternoon 46 seconds later. He added an empty netter to cement his first hat trick of the season.

Igor Shesterkin’s struggles continue

Since the Rangers’ 10-game point streak came to an end, Shesterkin has had a disastrous few outings.

The former Vezina Trophy winner has now allowed 14 goals in his last three games, all losses.

In the two earlier losses, Shesterkin surrendered four goals to the Hurricanes and five goals to the Avalanche, with both games coming on home ice.

Even with those disappointing performances, he still finished January with a solid 2.07 goals against average and .921 save percentage.

On a back-to-back and making a fourth consecutive start, it’s all but likely that backup Jonathan Quick will be in net on Sunday night. He’s still sitting on career win No. 399 after suffering losses in his last three starts.

After that, Shesterkin will make at least two to three more starts before the break to try to bounce back into form.

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As cities across the country vie for the next Women’s National Basketball Association team, the league quietly filed a trademark application this week for the name “Detroit Shock.”

The filing, dated Thursday, notes the intended use is for a basketball team, merchandise, jerseys and in-arena signage that could appear on TV or radio broadcasts. It could offer clues into the league’s ultimate decision for the location of a new franchise.

On Friday, Detroit Pistons owner Tom Gores submitted a bid for the Motor City to host a new team. The ownership group would be led by Gores and also includes Detroit Lions principal owner and chair Sheila Ford Hamp; former Detroit Pistons stars Grant Hill and Chris Webber; General Motors CEO Mary Barra; and Detroit Lions quarterback Jared Goff.

“Detroit is a sports town that loves its teams deeply and consistently shows up with unwavering passion,” Gores said in a statement.

The WNBA and Detroit Pistons did not immediately respond to CNBC’s request for comment on the trademark application.

The new trademark application by the WNBA is the only submission from the professional women’s basketball league since early December, according to Josh Gerben, a trademark attorney at Gerben IP, who is not involved with the specific filing.

Unlike other professional sports leagues where individual teams own their own trademark filings, the WNBA holds the rights to all names and logos for the league’s franchises, according to Gerben.

“Circumstantial evidence would be that [Detroit’s] is a winning bid and they’re very much planning on getting this going to have filed that trademark application,” Gerben told CNBC.

However, Gerben said the filing could also be a way for the league to protect itself against “squatters” or others trying to use the name.

Another trademark application was filed for the “Detroit Shock” by an individual named Ryan Reed in July 2023, but that trademark has yet to be approved. A person with the same name, purportedly based in Detroit, identifies as the founder of a women’s basketball league on LinkedIn.

Plenette Pierson (#23) of the Detroit Shock celebrates after winning game three of the WNBA Finals against the San Antonio Silver Star on Oct. 5, 2008.David Dow / NBAE via Getty Images file

The Detroit Shock were a WNBA team based in Auburn Hills, Michigan, from 1998 to 2009. The team won three WNBA Championships in 2003, 2006 and 2008. In 2009, the franchise moved to Tulsa, Oklahoma, where they played until 2015. Today, they play in Arlington, Texas, as the Dallas Wings.

WNBA Commissioner Cathy Engelbert said at the WNBA Finals in October that at least 10 cities had expressed interest in launching an expansion team.

“We’re not in a huge rush. We’d like to bring it in ’27 or no later than ’28,” Engelbert said at the time in regard to adding a 16th team.

Cleveland, Kansas City, Philadelphia, St. Louis, Houston, Austin, Nashville and Milwaukee are among the locations seeking to bring women’s professional basketball to their cities.

This post appeared first on NBC NEWS

Fewer than five weeks remain before the NHL trade deadline.

So far, there have been 21 trades (including January blockbusters involving Mikko Rantanen and J.T. Miller). There will be more trades as teams build toward a Stanley Cup run or make moves for their long-term future. The trade deadline is March 7.

There also have been four coaching changes this season, plus extensions signed by Igor Shesterkin, Jake Oettinger, Logan Thompson, Alexis Lafreniere, Linus Ullmark and others this season. Other top players also remain eligible for extensions, including Mitch Marner, John Tavares, Brock Boeser and Rantanen.

Follow along here this season for signings, trades, transactions and other news from the NHL:

Feb. 1: Stars acquire Mikael Granlund, Cody Ceci from Sharks

The Dallas Stars give up a 2025 first-round pick and a conditional third-round pick for forward Mikael Granlund and defenseman Cody Ceci. Dallas was short on both positions because forwards Tyler Seguin and Mason Marchment are injured, as are defensemen Miro Heiskanen and Nils Lundqvist.

Granlund led the Sharks with 45 points in 52 games and will add to a solid forward group, especially with Marchment getting closer to returning. Ceci led San Jose in ice time and blocked shots. Both newcomers are pending unrestricted free agents. The conditional third-round pick will be a fourth-rounder if the Stars don’t reach the Stanley Cup Final.

Jan. 31: Rangers acquire J.T. Miller in deal with Canucks

The New York Rangers and Vancouver Canucks, two teams in the midst of disappointing seasons, swung a big trade Friday night they hope will shake things up for the better.

Vancouver shipped center J.T. Miller along with Erik Brannstrom and Jackson Dorrington to the Rangers in exchange for Filip Chytil, Victor Mancini and a conditional first-round pick in the 2025 draft, the teams announced. The pick is top-13 protected, according to multiple reports.

The Canucks weren’t done dealing Friday, either, flipping that first-round pick to the Pittsburgh Penguins in a separate deal, along with Danton Heinen, Vincent Desharnais and Melvin Fernstrom. They got back Marcus Pettersson and Drew O’Connor. – Jace Evans

ANALYSIS: Who won the trade?

Jan. 31: Flyers, Flames swap forwards in four-player trade

Joel Farabee and Morgan Frost went to Calgary and Andrei Kuzmenko, Jakob Pelletier, a 2025 second-round pick and a 2028 seventh-rounder went to Philadelphia. The deal was announced early Friday morning following the two teams’ games.

Farabee, a two-time 20-goal scorer, and Frost, who has hit double digits three times, can give the Flames scoring depth as the team tries to hold on to a playoff spot. Farabee is signed through 2027-28 and Frost is a pending restricted free agent.

Kuzmenko, a pending unrestricted free agent, wasn’t going to be re-signed in Calgary after the former 39-goal scorer (with Vancouver) had four goals this season. But it gives the Flyers a chance to see how he fares with Russian rookie Matvei Michkov, a fellow former Kontinental Hockey League player. Pelletier can fit in the Flyers’ bottom six forward group and kills penalties. He’ll be a restricted free agent.

Jan. 31: Golden Knights sign Brandon Saad for rest of the season

The Vegas Golden Knights signed forward Brandon Saad (pro-rated $1.5 million) for the rest of the season after he was cut loose by the St. Louis Blues. The Blues had waived the two-time Stanley Cup winner, but the sides agreed to terminate the rest of his contract so he could become a free agent. Saad’s numbers (seven goals) have dropped off this season, but he scored 26 last season.

Also: The New York Islanders claimed defenseman Adam Boqvist off waivers from the Florida Panthers and sent rookie Isaiah George to the American Hockey League. The Islanders recently added defensemen Tony DeAngelo and Scott Perunovich after injuries to Noah Dobson and Ryan Pulock. … Logan Cooley, the Utah Hockey Club’s No. 2 scorer, is out indefinitely with a lower-body injury. He’ll be re-evaluated after the 4 Nations Face-Off. … Seattle Kraken forward Yanni Gourde, who has been mentioned as a trade candidate, will be out five to seven weeks after sports hernia surgery.

Jan. 29: Kraken waive goalie Philipp Grubauer

The Seattle Kraken placed former No. 1 goalie Philipp Grubauer on waivers and plan to send him to the American Hockey League if he clears. Grubauer, who was the team’s top goalie early in the franchise’s history, has been supplanted by Joey Daccord. Grubauer has lost six in a row for the second time this season and has a 3.83 goals-against average and .866 save percentage in 21 appearances. He’s signed through 2026-27 at a $5.9 million cap hit.

Jan. 29: Kings’ Drew Doughty to make season debut

The Los Angeles Kings get a key player back with defenseman Drew Doughty scheduled to make his season debut Wednesday night against the Florida Panthers. The 2016 Norris Trophy winner, who broke his ankle in the preseason, has had at least 50 points the past two seasons and Brandt Clarke is the only Kings defenseman close to that pace this season. Los Angeles’ power play has also dropped from 12th last season to 29th this season. Doughty’s return also puts him in the mix for a spot on Team Canada at the 4 Nations Face-Off after the withdrawal of Alex Pietrangelo. Doughty won gold medals at the 2010 and 2014 Olympics and the 2016 World Cup.

Also: Philadelphia Flyers goalie Samuel Ersson will replace injured New Jersey Devils netminder Jacob Markstrom for Team Sweden at the 4 Nations Face-Off. … Devils coach Sheldon Keefe announced that captain Nico Hischier is week-to-week with an unspecified injury.

Jan. 28: Wild’s Kirill Kaprizov needs surgery for lower-body injury

Minnesota Wild star Kirill Kaprizov will have surgery for the lower-body injury that had kept him out of the lineup for 12 games after Christmas. General manager Bill Guerin said the surgery isn’t season-ending, but will keep him out the lineup for a minimum of four weeks. Kaprizov had 50 points in 34 games before the injury and two assists in three games after he returned but was ‘very uncomfortable,’ coach John Hynes said. The Wild went 7-5 without Kaprizov and are third in the Central Division.

‘It’s not the end of the world,’ Guerin said. ‘We’re going to keep playing and continue to get better. When Kirill’s healthy and all healed up, he’ll be back and we’ll be even better.’

Also: The St. Louis Blues placed forward Brandon Saad on waivers and will send him to the American Hockey League if he clears. Saad, 32, who had 26 goals last season, has seven in 43 games. He’s signed through next season at a $4.5 million cap hit.

Jan. 27: Capitals’ Logan Thompson gets six-year extension

Washington Capitals goaltender Logan Thompson will average $5.85 million in the extension, up from his current $766,667 cap hit. Thompson has been one of the top stories and goaltenders this season. Acquired in the offseason, he has put together a 22-2-3 record, 2.09 goals-against average and .925 save percentage. He ranks second in the league in MoneyPuck’s goals saved above expected. Thompson, 27, mostly has split time with Charlie Lindgren (11-9-2), who’s a pending unrestricted free agent, and the pairing has helped lift the Capitals to the top record in the league. ‘With his size (6-4) and exceptional athleticism, we are confident that this signing will enhance one of the most critical positions on our team, especially as he enters the prime years of his career,’ Capitals general manager Chris Patrick said in a statement.

Jan. 27: Islanders acquire Scott Perunovich from Blues

The New York Islanders give up a conditional 2026 fifth-round pick for Scott Perunovich to address another injury on their blue line. The trade was announced after Ryan Pulock (upper body) was placed on the injured list. Perunovich had six points in 24 games with the St. Louis Blues this season. Last week, the Islanders signed free agent defenseman Tony DeAngelo for the remainder of the season because Noah Dobson is out with a lower-body injury.

Jan. 26: Rangers sign Will Borgen to five-year extension

New York Rangers defenseman Will Borgen, who was acquired in the Kaapo Kakko trade, will average $4.1 million in the deal, according to ESPN. Borgen has three points, 29 hits and 29 blocked shots since arriving in New York.

Also: The Vegas Golden Knights announced that defenseman Alex Pietrangelo was withdrawing from the 4 Nations Face-Off to ‘tend to an ailment and prepare for the remainder of the regular season with Vegas.’ Team Canada will need to announce a replacement before the Feb. 12-20 tournament.

Jan. 24: Mikko Rantanen traded in blockbuster deal

The Colorado Avalanche no longer have to worry whether they can fit pending free agent Mikko Rantanen in their salary structure. The two-time 100-point scorer was traded to the Carolina Hurricanes for Martin Necas, Jack Drury, a 2025 second-round pick and a 2026 fourth-rounder. The Hurricanes also get Taylor Hall from the Chicago Blackhawks, who retained 50% of Rantanen’s salary.

The Avalanche pay MVP Nathan MacKinnon $12.6 million a year, and that was likely their top limit for Rantanen. Though Colorado loses a prolific scorer, Necas is the Hurricanes’ top scorer and is signed through next season. Drury is also signed through 2025-26 and will be a restricted free agent.

Last year, the Hurricanes were also aggressive before the deadline, but they lost in the second round and weren’t able to re-sign Jake Guentzel.

TRADE GRADES: Who won blockbuster deal?

Jan. 24: Devils’ Jacob Markstrom out with knee sprain

Jan. 17: Oilers sign John Klingberg for one year

The Edmonton Oilers added defensive depth by signing veteran John Klingberg for the remainder of the season. Terms weren’t disclosed.

Klingberg, 32, who had season-ending hip surgery in November 2023, is known for his puck-moving ability and work on the power play. He has 412 points in 633 games, plus 39 points in 63 playoff games.

The 2024 Stanley Cup finalists traded Cody Ceci and chose not to match an offer sheet to Philip Broberg during the offseason.

Jan. 15: Penguins place goalie Tristan Jarry on waivers

The Pittsburgh Penguins placed goalie Tristan Jarry on waivers after Tuesday’s 4-2 loss to the Seattle Kraken in which he gave up three goals on 17 shots. A Kraken short-handed goal leaked through him in the first period, and Seattle scored twice in 50 seconds in the third period to overcome a 2-1 deficit.

The veteran two-time All-Star was sent to the American Hockey League in late October and recalled on Nov. 9. Jarry is in the second season of a five-year contract that carries a $5.375 million cap hit. He has a 3.32 goals-against average and .886 save percentage.

‘He’s continued to come in here, put the work in and that’s not been a question at all,’ general manager Kyle Dubas said. ‘That just hasn’t materialized the way we would like it to on the ice. At this level, you get to the point where you have to do what’s right … for him and for us.’

Jan. 14: Canadiens’ Emil Heineman out after accident

Montreal Canadiens forward Emil Heineman will be out three to four weeks after being hit while crossing a street in Utah. The team said the accident occurred Monday and Heineman suffered an upper-body injury. ‘He got hurt crossing a street yesterday,’ coach Martin St. Louis told reporters on Tuesday. ‘I don’t think it was at a high speed but enough to cause some damage. It’s unfortunate.’ The Canadiens are in Salt Lake City to play the Utah Hockey Club. Heineman, 23, has 17 points in 41 games this season. He ranks third among NHL rookies with 10 goals.

Jan. 10: Oilers’ Evander Kane has knee surgery

Evander Kane will need more time before he makes his season debut after he had knee surgery on Thursday. The Edmonton Oilers said Kane would need four to eight weeks of recovery time, which will pause his rehab from the abdominal surgery he had in September. Kane, 33, had 24 goals last season plus eight points in the Oilers’ run to the Stanley Cup Final. He was unable to play the final five games of that round because he had been slowed in the playoffs by a sports hernia. He has another year left on his contract at a $5.125 million cap hit.

Also: The Ottawa Senators signed forward Ridly Greig to a four-year, $13 million contract extension.

Jan. 6: Rangers claim Arthur Kaliyev off waivers from Kings

Arthur Kaliyev, 23, had two seasons of double-digit goals, though he dropped to seven goals last season. He has yet to play in the NHL this season because of injury but completed a five-game conditioning stint. The former second-round pick averages about 12 minutes a game. He’ll likely fill a bottom-six role after the Rangers’ earlier trade of Kaapo Kakko.

Jan. 5: Ducks re-sign Frank Vatrano for three years

The Anaheim Ducks are often sellers leading up to the trade deadline, but they lock in their third-leading scorer, Frank Vatrano, for three years. He would have drawn a lot of interest if the Ducks had made him available. TSN’s Pierre LeBrun reports that the deal is worth $18 million but deferred money lowers the salary cap hit to $4.57 million. He scored 37 goals last season and has 20 points this season. He had a three-point night after the signing was announced.

Jan. 3: Bruins re-sign Mark Kastelic

The rugged forward’s deal averages $1.567 million a year. He was tied for the team lead with 76 penalty minutes and had 151 hits.

Dec. 28: Nashville Predators, Colorado Avalanche make trade

The Nashville Predators called up forward Vinnie Hinostroza, the American Hockey League’s leading scorer, then traded forward Juuso Parssinen to the Colorado Avalanche. The Avalanche also get a 2026 seventh-round pick and the Predators get back forward Ondrej Pavel and a 2027 third-round pick.

Hinostroza, a 374-game NHL veteran, signed a two-year deal with the Predators in the offseason but had spent the entire season in the AHL. So has Pavel. Parssinen had five points in 15 games with Nashville this season. The Predators and Avalanche swapped backup goaltenders earlier in the season.

Dec. 27: Avalanche give extension to Mackenzie Blackwood

The Colorado Avalanche gave goalie Mackenzie Blackwood a five-year extension 18 days after acquiring him in a trade. Terms weren’t disclosed, but reports said it was worth $5.25 million a year, up from the current cap hit of $2.35 million in his contract that expires this summer.

The Avalanche goaltending struggled at the beginning of the season, and Colorado traded Justus Annunen to the Nashville Predators for Scott Wedgewood on Nov. 30. The Avalanche shipped out Alexandar Georgiev to the San Jose Sharks on Dec. 9 for Blackwood.

Blackwood has gone 3-1 with a 2.03 goals-against average and .931 save percentage since arriving.

Dec. 26: Red Wings fire coach Derek Lalonde, hire Todd McLellan

The Detroit Red Wings fired coach Derek Lalonde on Thursday after two-plus seasons and brought in veteran Todd McLellan to try to turn around the season.

McLellan, 57, who won a Stanley Cup with the Red Wings as an assistant coach in 2008, was signed to a multi-year contract as the franchise’s 29th head coach. He has a 598-412-134 regular-season record over 16 seasons with the Los Angeles Kings, Edmonton Oilers and San Jose Sharks, making the playoffs nine times. He was with the Red Wings from 2005-08 and left after the championship season to join the Sharks.

Associate coach Bob Boughner also was fired, and Trent Yawney was hired as an assistant coach. The Red Wings had lost nine of their last 12 games to follow to seventh place in the Atlantic Division

Dec. 19: Bruins waive forward Tyler Johnson

The Boston Bruins placed forward Tyler Johnson on unconditional waivers for the purpose of terminating the one-year contract he signed in November. That would make him free to pursue opportunities with other teams. Johnson had two points in nine games this season and the move follows the Bruins claiming Oliver Wahlstrom off waivers.

Dec. 18: Rangers trade Kaapo Kakko to Kraken

The New York Rangers get back defenseman Will Borgen and 2025 third- and sixth-round picks in exchange for Kaapo Kakko, the No. 2 overall pick of 2019. The trade happened less than a day after Kakko complained about being a healthy scratch. ‘It’s just easy to take the young guy and put him out,’ he said Tuesday. ‘That’s how I feel.’

Kakko, 23, has never matched the expectation of being that high a pick, getting 40 points in his top season in 2022-23. He has 14 points this season and was named by Finland to the 4 Nations Face-Off.

The trade is the second recent shake-up move by the sliding Rangers, who dealt captain Jacob Trouba, a defenseman, to the Anaheim Ducks on Dec. 6. Borgen, who was taken by the Seattle Kraken in the expansion draft, had 20 or more points and averaged nearly 200 hits the past two seasons but has just two points and a minus-13 rating this season.

In other trades Wednesday:

The Montreal Canadiens and Nashville Predators swapped defensemen with Alexandre Carrier, 28, heading to Montreal in exchange for Justin Barron, 23. Carrier gives the Canadiens an experienced right-shot defenseman. He signed a three-year deal this offseason and the Predators save $2.6 million in cap space with the trade.

The Pittsburgh Penguins acquired defenseman P.O. Joseph from the St. Louis Blues for future considerations. Joseph will help the Penguins with defenseman Marcus Pettersson out with an injury. Joseph played his first four NHL seasons with Pittsburgh.

Dec. 18: Justin Schultz retires after 12 NHL seasons

Defenseman Justin Schultz, 34, who won back-to-back Stanley Cup titles with the Pittsburgh Penguins, announced his retirement after 12 seasons with four NHL teams. Originally drafted by the Anaheim Ducks in 2008, he couldn’t reach terms with that team and joined the Edmonton Oilers as a free agent in 2012, making the all-rookie team. Schultz was traded to the Penguins in 2016 and won championships that season and the following season. He played two seasons each with the Washington Capitals and Seattle Kraken, finishing his NHL career with 71 goals and 324 points in 745 games. Schultz signed to play in Switzerland this season but stepped down after eight games.

Dec. 14: Blues acquire Ducks’ Cam Fowler in trade

The St. Louis Blues give up minor league defenseman Jeremie Biakabutuka and a 2027 second-round pick to land defenseman Cam Fowler, 33, who spent his entire NHL career with the Anaheim Ducks. St. Louis also gets a 2027 fourth-round pick and the Ducks retain about 38.5% of Fowler’s remaining salary.

The Blues, who will be without Torey Krug (ankle) this season, get a veteran defenseman who averages more than 21 minutes a game in ice time. Fowler was moved eight days after the Ducks acquired defenseman Jacob Trouba in a trade.

“This was a difficult trade to make considering what Cam has meant to this organization,” general manager Pat Verbeek said. “He has been a valuable and respected member of our team for 15 seasons, representing the Ducks with ultimate class. … After meeting with Cam several times over the last few months, it became clear to both of us it may be time for a change.”

Also: The Boston Bruins claimed forward Oliver Wahlstrom off waivers from the New York Islanders. The Maine native had played for Boston College in 2018-19.

Dec. 13: Islanders waive Oliver Wahlstrom, Pierre Engvall

The New York Islanders have placed forwards Oliver Wahlstrom and Pierre Engvall on waivers, Sportsnet’s Elliotte Friedman reports. The move happened after injured forwards Mat Barzal and Anthony Duclair returned to practice. Engvall, who signed a seven-year contract in 2023, passed through waivers earlier this season and played six games in the American Hockey League. He has six points in 20 games. Wahlstrom, a 2018 first-round pick, has four points in 27 games.

Also: The Minnesota Wild claimed defenseman Travis Dermott off waivers from the Edmonton Oilers. The Wild placed defenseman Jake Middleton on long-term injured reserve after he was hit in the hand by a shot on Thursday night. … The Vegas Golden Knights signed forward Keegan Kolesar to a three-year, $7.5 million contract extension.

Dec. 12: Canucks’ J.T. Miller returns from personal leave

Vancouver Canucks forward J.T. Miller said he was returning from his personal leave and played Thursday night against the Florida Panthers. The Canucks announced his leave of absence on Nov. 19. The team went 5-3-2 while he was away.

Miller, who has 16 points in 17 games this season and topped 100 last season, said he wouldn’t answer questions about why he was away from the team.

‘I’m excited to play,’ he said. ‘I want to play and obviously a fun game against the defending champions. Just happy to be around the guys and looking forward to tonight.’

Miller skated a little more than 14 minutes, had two assists and won 60% of his faceoffs.

While he was away, he was named to Team USA for February’s 4 Nations Face-Off.

Also: Anaheim Ducks forward Travis Zegras had surgery for torn meniscus in his right knee and is expected to miss six weeks. … The Utah Hockey Club claimed defenseman Dakota Mermis off waivers from the Toronto Maple Leafs.

Dec. 10: Kevin Shattenkirk announces retirement

Defenseman Kevin Shattenkirk announced his retirement on Tuesday after 14 NHL seasons with seven teams. He won a Stanley Cup in 2020 with the Tampa Bay Lightning. Drafted 14th overall by the Colorado Avalanche in 2007, he also played for the St. Louis Blues (five 40-point seasons), Washington Capitals, New York Rangers and Anaheim Ducks before joining the Boston Bruins in 2023-24 for what would be his final season.

Shattenkirk, 35, finishes with 103 goals, 381 assists and 484 points in 952 career games, plus 48 points in 91 playoff games. He scored in overtime during Game 4 of the 2020 Stanley Cup Final.

Dec. 9: Avalanche land Mackenzie Blackwood in goalie trade with Sharks

The Colorado Avalanche’s season-opening goaltending tandem of Alexandar Georgiev and Justus Annunen is out after a subpar start. Now they’re running with Mackenzie Blackwood and Scott Wedgewood after separate trades with the San Jose Sharks and Nashville Predators, respectively.

The Blackwood trade is the latest one and includes forward Givani Smith and a draft pick going to Colorado, while forward Nikolai Kovalenko and two picks go to San Jose. Blackwood has a .904 save percentage to Georgiev’s .874, and he made 49 saves in his last game. Georgiev was pulled in his second-to-last start.

GOALIE SWAP: Full details of Avalanche-Sharks trade

Dec. 6: Rangers trade Jacob Trouba, extend Igor Shesterkin

The sliding New York Rangers dominated the news Friday by trading captain Jacob Trouba and giving Igor Shesterkin an eight-year extension that makes him the highest-paid NHL goalie.

The Rangers officially announced the extension on Saturday.

The Trouba trade happened first Friday with the Rangers getting back defenseman Urho Vaakanainen and a 2025 fourth-round pick. But the biggest part is the Anaheim Ducks took on Trouba’s $8 million cap hit, giving the Rangers flexibility. Trouba, who has struggled this season and didn’t waive his no-trade clause this summer, adds a veteran presence to the young Ducks. He and new teammate Radko Gudas are two of the hardest hitters in the league.

Shesterkin will average $11.5 million in his new deal, according to reports, moving him past Carey Price ($10.5 million) as the top-paid goaltender. The Rangers rely heavily on Shesterkin, who faces a lot of high-danger shots.

Also: The Edmonton Oilers and Montreal Canadiens pulled off a minor trade. Forward Jacob Perreault, son of former NHL player Yanic Perreault, heads to Edmonton for defenseman Noel Hoefenmayer. … The Carolina Hurricanes placed forward Brendan Lemieux on unconditional waivers to terminate his contract. He requested the move so he can pursue another opportunity, general manager Eric Tulsky told the team’s website.

Dec. 5: Blackhawks fire coach Luke Richardson

The last-place Chicago Blackhawks fired coach Luke Richardson. Anders Sorensen, coach of the Blackhawks’ Rockford IceHogs team in the American Hockey League, was named interim head coach.

The move happened with generational player Connor Bedard going through a sophomore slump and unhappy with his production. He recently ended a 12-game goal drought and didn’t make the Canadian roster for this season’s 4 Nations Face-Off.

‘As we have begun to take steps forward in our rebuilding process, we felt that the results did not match our expectations for a higher level of execution this season and ultimately came to the decision that a change was necessary,’ general manager Kyle Davidson said in a statement about the coaching move.

Richardson leaves Chicago with a 57-118-15 record.

Dec. 4: Stars’ Tyler Seguin to have hip surgery, miss 4-6 months

The Dallas Stars announced that forward Tyler Seguin will have surgery on his left hip on Thursday and is expected to miss four to six months. That timeline would have him out of the lineup until near the end of the regular season or into the playoffs. Seguin, 32, had been having a strong season, ranking third on the team with 20 points in 19 games.

4 NATIONS FACE-OFF: Rosters announced

Nov. 30: Wild acquire defenseman David Jiricek from Blue Jackets

The Minnesota Wild acquired former first-round pick David Jiricek, 21, from the Columbus Blue Jackets for a package that includes 22-year-old defenseman Daemon Hunt and a package of draft picks including a top-five protected 2025 first-round pick. Jiricek, a 2022 sixth-overall pick who had been sent to American Hockey League, will report to the Wild’s AHL team. The other picks heading to Columbus: 2026 third- and fourth-rounders and a 2027 second-rounder. The Wild get a 2025 fifth-round pick.

Nov. 30: Predators, Avalanche swap goaltenders

The Colorado Avalanche acquired backup goalie Scott Wedgewood from the Nashville Predators for backup goalie Justus Annunen and a sixth-round pick. The Avalanche, who have the league’s third-worst team goals-against average, were expected to make some sort of goaltending move but not necessarily this one. Annunen, 24, has slightly better stats this season, but he’s a restricted free agent at the end of the season. Wedgewood, 32, who was signed in the offseason and played five games for the Predators, has another year left on his contract.

Also: The NHL fined Boston’s Nikita Zadorov and Pittsburgh’s Evgeni Malkin $5,000 each for an exchange in Friday’s game. Zadorov poked Malkin with his stick from the bench, and the Penguins star responded with a slash toward the bench, hitting Mason Lohrei.

Nov. 25: Penguins acquire Philip Tomasino from Predators

Philip Tomasino (one point in 11 games) is the final year of his contract so the struggling Nashville Predators get something in return, a 2027 fourth-round pick. The equally struggling Pittsburgh Penguins get another person for their bottom six. The former first-round pick’s best season was 32 points as a rookie in 2021-22.

Nov. 24: Blues fire coach Drew Bannister, hire Jim Montgomery

In a surprising move, the St. Louis Blues on Sunday fired Drew Bannister after less than a year as coach, replacing him with former Boston Bruins coach Jim Montgomery.

The announcement from Blues president and general manager Doug Armstrong comes with the team losing 13 of its first 22 games this year. Bannister had taken over for Stanley Cup-winning coach Craig Berube last season and had his interim tag removed at the end of the season.

Montgomery, a former assistant to Berube, has an overall regular-season record of 180-84-33 as a head coach with Boston and Dallas. He was just let go by the Bruins last week after they lost 12 of their first 20 games. – Steve Gardner

Nov. 22: Golden Knights sign Brett Howden to five-year extension

Forward Brett Howden will average $2.5 million in the five-year contract extension. He plays in the Vegas Golden Knights’ bottom six and has eight goals this season.

After the Golden Knights lost free agents Jonathan Marchessault, Chandler Stephenson and others from their 2023 Stanley Cup title team this summer, they’ve been working to get extensions done early. Defensemen Shea Theodore and Brayden McNabb signed recently. Goalie Adin Hill and Keegan Kolesar also are pending unrestricted free agents from that championship team.

Nov. 19: Canucks’ J.T. Miller out indefinitely for personal reasons

‘Right now, our sole focus is making sure that J.T. knows the entire organization is here to support him,’ general manager Patrik Allvin said. ‘Out of respect to J.T., we will have no further comment at this time.’

Miller ranks second on the Canucks and is their top-scoring forward with 16 points in 17 games. He scored 103 points last season.

Nov. 19: Boston Bruins fire coach Jim Montgomery

The Boston Bruins made Jim Montgomery the first coaching casualty of the 2024-25 NHL season, firing him less than two seasons after he was named coach of the year.

Associate coach Joe Sacco, a former Colorado Avalanche head coach, will take over behind the bench as the interim head coach.

The move came after a blowout loss to the Columbus Blue Jackets on Monday. Montgomery, who was in the final year of his contract, was let go with the team sitting at 8-9-3 and sporting poor underlying numbers.

BRUINS: More details on coaching change

Nov. 18: Islanders’ Mike Reilly to have procedure on heart

General manager Lou Lamoriello told reporters that the pre-existing heart condition was discovered during routine testing for a concussion that had sidelined the defenseman since Nov. 1.

‘It’s probably a blessing in disguise of what transpired,’ Lamoriello said. ‘They detected this, something that you’re sometimes born with, but never knew.’

He said Reilly has been cleared from the concussion.

Nov. 15: Avalanche’s Valeri Nichushkin returns from suspension

Colorado Avalanche forward Valeri Nichushkin returned Friday night from his six-month suspension. He was suspended during the playoffs last May under Stage 3 of the NHL/NHLPA Player Assistance Program. He also was in the program for about two months earlier in the 2023-24 season and missed part of the 2023 playoffs for personal reasons. Nichushkin is a key offensive contributor with 28 goals in 54 games last season. Injured forwards Jonathan Drouin and Miles Wood also returned Friday.

Also: The Vegas Golden Knights signed defenseman Brayden McNabb, the franchise leader in games played, to a three-year contract extension that averages $3.65 million a year.

OILERS: Connor McDavid is fourth fastest to reach 1,000 points

Nov. 13: Sabres claim goalie James Reimer off waivers

The Buffalo Sabres claimed goaltender James Reimer off waivers, bringing him back to where he signed a free agent contract in the summer. Reimer was claimed by the Anaheim Ducks off waivers earlier this season when the Sabres tried to send him to the American Hockey League. The Ducks put him on waivers after the return of injured goalie John Gibson. Reimer, on a one-year, $1 million contract, played two games in Anaheim with a 4.50 goals-against average. No. 1 Sabres goalie Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen was hurt in Monday’s loss but hasn’t been ruled out for Thursday’s game.

Also: Boston Bruins defenseman Hampus Lindholm will be out ‘weeks’ with a lower-body injury after blocking a shot, coach Jim Montgomery said.

Nov. 12: Capitals reacquire Lars Eller in trade with Penguins

Center Lars Eller, 35, is a familiar face for the Washington Capitals after playing in Washington from 2016-23 and winning a Stanley Cup there in 2018. He kills penalties and is strong in the faceoff circle. The Pittsburgh Penguins’ side of the trade might be more interesting. They get a 2027 third-round pick and a 2025 fifth-rounder, and this also could be an indication that the Penguins are shaking up the roster after a disappointing start. Eller’s trade will allow the team to give more ice time to younger players. He’s a pending unrestricted free agent.

Also: The Winnipeg Jets claimed goalie Kaapo Kahkonen off waivers from the Colorado Avalanche and loaned him to their American Hockey League affiliate. They had lost him on waivers to the Avalanche last month.

Nov. 11: Flames’ Anthony Mantha to have season-ending surgery

Also: The Colorado Avalanche placed goalie Kaapo Kahkonen on waivers. They had claimed him off waivers from the Winnipeg Jets last month.

Nov. 9: Penguins recall veteran goalie Tristan Jarry from minors

The Pittsburgh Penguins recalled two-time All-Star goalie Tristan Jarry from his conditioning stint in the American Hockey League. Jarry was loaned to Wilkes-Barre/Scranton on Oct. 26 after recording a 5.37 goals-against average and .836 save percentage. His AHL numbers were 2.16, .926.

Also: The Philadelphia Flyers made rookie Matvei Michkov a healthy scratch for a second consecutive game.

Nov. 8: Kraken acquire Daniel Sprong from Canucks

The Seattle Kraken landed Daniel Sprong, one of their former players, in exchange for future considerations. The Kraken have struggled to score this season and Sprong had 21 goals for them two seasons ago. The forward has scored double-digit goals five times. He had one goal with Vancouver this season.

Oct. 30: Sharks acquire Timothy Liljegren from Maple Leafs

The Toronto Maple Leafs get defenseman Matt Benning, a 2025 third-round pick and a 2026 sixth-rounder. Liljegren, 25, had been limited to one game in Toronto this season, and the Maple Leafs recently committed to blue-liner Jake McCabe with a five-year extension. But Liljegren should fit in well in San Jose, which is building around younger players. Benning, 30, and Liljegren are signed through 2025-26.

This is the second day with an NHL trade after none previously since the season opened in North America.

Oct. 29: Utah acquires defenseman Olli Maatta from Red Wings

The Utah Hockey Club gives up a third-round pick as it addresses a desperate need for a veteran defenseman. Sean Durzi and John Marino are out long-term after surgery. Utah has been leaking goals during a four-game losing streak, including blowing a 4-1 lead late in the third period against the previously winless San Jose Sharks. Maatta is solid defensively and has nearly 700 games of NHL experience.

Oct. 28: Maple Leafs sign Jake McCabe to five-year extension

The Toronto Maple Leafs signed defenseman Jake McCabe to a five-year extension with an annual average value of $4.51 million. Sportsnet’s Elliotte Friedman reports there is some deferred money in the deal. McCabe, 31, had been acquired from the Chicago Blackhawks in a February 2023 trade and ranks fourth on the team in average ice time this season. He has three assists in nine games and a team-best plus-6 rating.

Also: The New York Rangers recalled rugged forward Matt Rempe from the American Hockey League after he played two games there. The Rangers play the Washington Capitals on Tuesday in what has become a feisty rivalry.

Oct. 26: Penguins send goalie Tristan Jarry to minors

The Pittsburgh Penguins sent two-time All-Star goaltender Tristan Jarry to their American Hockey League affiliate on a conditioning loan after his early season struggles. He had been sent home from the Penguins’ road trip to work on his game after recording a 5.47 goals-against average and .836 save percentage in three games. He was pulled from his last start on Oct. 16 and gave up six goals in the opener.

Jarry is in the second season of a five-year contract that carries a $5.375 million cap hit. Rookie Joel Blomqvist has had the most starts in the Penguins net this season and Alex Nedeljkovic recently returned from an injury.

Also: The New York Islanders signed rugged forward Matt Martin for the rest of the season. He had been to camp on a tryout agreement after spending 13 of his 15 seasons with the Islanders.

Oct. 25: Rangers’ Alexis Lafreniere gets seven-year extension

The New York Rangers and Alexis Lafreniere have agreed to a seven-year extension as he builds on last season’s breakthrough. The 2020 No. 1 overall pick will average $7.45 million in the deal, according to lohud.com, part of the USA TODAY Network. That’s up from this year’s $2.325 million cap hit. Lafreniere, 23, broke through with 28 goals and 57 points last season and added eight goals and 14 points in the playoffs. He is averaging a point a game this season through seven games and scored his fourth goal of the season on Thursday. He is signed through 2031-32.

Oct. 24: Golden Knights’ Shea Theodore signs for seven years

Vegas Golden Knights defenseman Shea Theodore will average $7.425 million in the extension, which kicks in next season and runs through 2031-32. Getting him signed now is important after the Golden Knights lost Jonathan Marchessault, Chandler Stephenson and others from their 2023 Stanley Cup team to free agency during the summer.

Theodore, 29, is the franchise’s top-scoring defenseman with 296 points and has opened this season with seven points in six games. Vegas’ top three defensemen (also Alex Pietrangelo and Noah Hanifin) are signed through at least 2026-27.

Oct. 22: Panthers give coach Paul Maurice contract extension

Maurice, who joined the Panthers in 2022-23, went to the Stanley Cup Final in his first season and won it last year. His 29 playoff wins are a franchise record.

He has 98 regular-season wins with Florida and his 873 career wins rank fourth all time in NHL history.

Also: The Blues signed forward Jake Neighbours to a two-year, $7.5 million contract extension.

Oct. 17: Stars’ Jake Oettinger signs eight-year contract extension

The Dallas Stars signed goalie Jake Oettinger to an eight-year, $66 million contract extension that kicks in next season. The $8.25 million cap hit matches the deals recently signed by the Bruins’ Jeremy Swayman and Senators’ Linus Ullmark.

Oettinger has led the Stars to the Western Conference final the past two seasons.

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Three more massage therapists have accused Baltimore Ravens placekicker Justin Tucker of sexual misconduct, bringing the total number to nine women who say the Pro Bowler was inappropriate during sessions.

The unnamed woman, who is only identified as M. in the story, said in 2015 that during her massage session with Tucker at the QG, a downtown Baltimore spa, he stroked her inner thigh and exposed himself, leaving what she said was sperm on the table.

“I understand that Justin Tucker is an important client to The QG, but as an employee of The QG who has tolerated the previous interactions with him, I no longer feel safe or comfortable working with him,’ the woman wrote in an internal report.

Tucker, 35, has called the allegations ‘unequivocally false,’ adding that the women took ‘innocuous or ambiguous interactions and skews them so out of proportion that they are no longer recognizable,’ calling the Baltimore Banner’s initial report ‘desperate tabloid fodder.’

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“I cannot be any clearer,” Tucker said in a statement. “These accusations are false and incredibly hurtful to both me, and more importantly, my family.”

The Baltimore Banner said they spoke to six massage therapists about Tucker and reported that two spas banned him from their business.

Tucker denied being inappropriate or being banned from any spa.

The NFL and the Ravens each put out statements concerning Tucker.

‘We first became aware of the allegations from the reporter investigating this story as they were not previously shared with the NFL,’ NFL spokesman Brian McCarthy said. ‘We take any allegation seriously and will look into the matter.’

‘We take any allegations of this nature seriously and will continue to monitor the situation,’ the Ravens said in a statement.

Tucker, the most accurate kicker in NFL history, signed a four-year, $24 million contract extension with the Ravens in 2022 and will earn a base salary of $4.2 million next season.

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