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The WNBA and WNBPA appear to be at an impasse as the deadline for new collective bargaining agreement approaches on Friday, Jan. 9.

The league has not moved off of any of the numbers from its last offer reported in December.

‘We are at a bit of standstill,’ WNBPA vice president Napheesa Collier said when asked about the CBA on ‘Good Morning America’ on Monday, Jan. 5. ‘The timeline is coming up in a couple of days. It’s gonna expire.’

Collier, who was appearing on GMA to tout the second season of Unrivaled, a 3-on-3 league she co-founded with Breanna Stewart, said no one wants a work stoppage but the players will continue to ask for what they believe they deserve.

‘We’re just excited to show at Unrivaled that it is possible to pay the players and create a successful business,’ Collier said. ‘And that’s what we hope to do in the WNBA as well.

‘We feel really confident in what we’re asking for, and I just feel really blessed to be able to play and create something that is already showing that these things are possible.’

WNBA players voted to authorize the WNBPA’s executive committee to ‘call a strike when necessary,’ in late December. The current CBA is set to expire on Jan. 9, 2026, following two extensions from the original Oct. 31 deadline.

The league has proposed a system where players would receive in excess of 70% of net revenue, a person with direct knowledge of the situation told USA TODAY Sports. The WNBA’s offer includes a maximum $1 million base salary, with a projected revenue sharing component that raises players’ max total earnings to more than $1.3 million in 2026. The maximum salary would grow to nearly $2 million over the life of the agreement. The proposal raises the minimum salary to more $250K and the average salary to more than $530K, growing to more than $780,000 over the life of the deal.

The players have prioritized increased revenue sharing and salary structures in negotiations. According to The Athletic, the league has offered revenue sharing at 15% while the union has proposed 30%. The sides also differ on how that percentage, as well as the salary cap, would be calculated.

When asked to comment on the bargaining, WNPBA executive director Terri Jackson sent this statement to USA TODAY Sports:

“The players know the difference between doing business and creating click-bait. They are focused on the system. Despite what the league and the teams are trying to do, the players are not confused by the numbers. The players want a meaningful share of the revenue they are creating. They want to be properly valued in these negotiations and this next CBA. They do not want to be paid last with only a fraction of the dollars left over. 

‘I cannot comment on the specifics of any proposal but I can speak hypothetically.  The players would not have opted out of the 2020 CBA with a fixed salary system giving them less than 10% of the revenue that their labor drives only to agree to a salary system that is arguably tied to revenue but now gives them less than 15%. The business has grown considerably and the league and the teams project incredible sustainable growth into the (foreseeable) future.

‘How do the capital investors, Changemakers, any one who cares about women’s sports, supports women athletes, understands the value of this investment believe this could be a good deal? Again, hypothetically speaking.”

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

A deepening political realignment across Latin America came into focus over the weekend at a summit of the Community of Latin American and Caribbean States, or CELAC, and sharpened further Monday at the United Nations Security Council, where governments publicly split over the U.S. role in the capture of Venezuelan strongman Nicolás Maduro.

At CELAC, several leftist governments attempted to push through a joint statement condemning Maduro’s detention. The effort failed after a bloc of countries consisting of Argentina, Bolivia, Paraguay, Peru, Ecuador, El Salvador, Panama, the Dominican Republic, and Trinidad and Tobago blocked consensus, preventing the regional body from issuing a unified defense of the Venezuelan leader, Merco Press agency reported.

The breakdown exposed growing fractures within what has long been a left-leaning regional forum and underscored the erosion of automatic solidarity with Caracas.

Melissa Ford Maldonado, director of the Western Hemisphere Initiative at the America First Policy Institute, said the fractures reflect a broader regional reckoning with the consequences of socialist and narco-authoritarian rule.

‘We are witnessing a regional awakening across Latin America,’ Maldonado told Fox News Digital. ‘The failure of socialism, communism and narco-authoritarian rule has become impossible to ignore.’

The shift is increasingly visible at the ballot box, where voters in several countries — last month alone in Chile and Honduras — have moved away from entrenched left-wing governments and toward right-of-center leaders campaigning on themes of security, sovereignty, border control and law and order — messages that echo aspects of President Donald Trump’s political approach in the United States.

‘The developments at CELAC this weekend reflect that reality,’ Maldonado said. ‘The fact that several governments blocked a collective defense of Nicolás Maduro shows how divided the authoritarian left has become. Venezuela has become a cautionary tale.’

That division carried over into the Security Council on Monday, where Latin American and Caribbean states took sharply different positions, with some openly backing Washington and others denouncing the U.S. action as a violation of international law.

Argentina emerged as the most forceful regional supporter of the United States, praising President Donald Trump and framing Maduro’s capture as a decisive blow against organized crime.

‘The Government of the Argentine Republic values the decision and determination demonstrated by the President of the United States of America and his government, and the recent actions taken in Venezuela that resulted in the capture of dictator Nicolás Maduro, leader of the Cartel of the Suns,’ Argentina’s representative Francisco Fabián Tropepi told the council, adding the Maduro regime ‘has not only constituted a direct threat to the citizens systematic violation of human rights in the state appropriation of the country’s resources and destruction of democratic institutions, but also to the entire region by leading and exploiting its networks of drug trafficking and organized crime.’

Paraguay echoed that framing, claiming Maduro’s continued presence ‘was a threat to the region,’ adding that ‘the removal of the leader of a terrorist organization should immediately lead to the restoration of democracy and the rule of law in Venezuela, making it possible for the will of the people, expressed at the ballot box, to become the foundation for the country’s reconstruction,’ its representative Marcelo Eliseo Scappini Ricciardi said.

Other CELAC members took the opposite view, condemning the U.S. action and warning that it set a dangerous precedent.

Brazil ‘categorically and firmly’ rejected what it called armed intervention on Venezuelan territory, describing the capture of Maduro as ‘a very serious affront to the sovereignty of Venezuela and an extremely dangerous precedent for the entire international community.’ 

Mexico denounced the operation as a violation of the U.N. Charter, arguing that external efforts to impose political change historically worsen conflicts and destabilize societies. Chile also condemned what it called unilateral military action and warned against foreign interference, while Cuba and Nicaragua delivered blistering denunciations of Washington, accusing the United States of imperial aggression and calling for Maduro’s immediate release.

The split at the U.N. mirrored the breakdown at CELAC, where governments increasingly appear unwilling to speak with one voice on Venezuela, even as they stop short of endorsing U.S. military force.

According to Maldonado, ‘Governments are increasingly forced to choose between defending failed autocracies, corruption and repression or responding to their own citizens,’ she said. ‘More governments are unwilling to carry that burden.’

Maldonado described Maduro’s capture as a break with decades of U.S. restraint in the region, ‘It shows that the United States is deadly serious about defending itself and the hemisphere, about stopping the flow of drugs, dismantling cartel-state alliances and about fighting back against the influence of China, Russia and Iran in our neighborhood.’

She argued that the regional reaction, split though it is, reflects a broader ideological shift.

‘There is a clear rightward shift underway in the region, and it is a healthy one,’ Maldonado said. ‘It reflects a growing alignment around the core principles of freedom, liberty, personal responsibility, national sovereignty and prosperity.’

While critics at the U.N. warned that U.S. action risks undermining international law, supporters argue the status quo had already collapsed under the weight of Venezuela’s humanitarian and security crisis.

‘Venezuela’s collapse has taught the region what happens when the state becomes your everything,’ Maldonado said. ‘When the state controls your job, your housing, your healthcare, your education, your courts and your information, freedom becomes conditional.’

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

The Golden State Warriors lost a close game to the Los Angeles Clippers, 103-102, at Intuit Dome in Inglewood, California, on Jan. 5.

The contest was officially decided on a missed potential game-winning baseline fade away from Warriors forward Jimmy Butler, who ended the game with 24 points and four steals.

There was a controversial missed goaltend call with 7:57 left in the fourth quarter that led to a furious Warriors head coach Steve Kerr being ejected when the team was gaining momentum after trailing most of the game.

With just around eight minutes remaining in the fourth quarter, the Warriors were down 81-74, and looked to cut into the Clippers lead after starting the period down by 10. Draymond Green found Gary Payton II on a backdoor cut, who then went for a layup off the backboard.

Clippers forward John Collins was credited with a block on Payton but replays showed the Payton had the ball on the glass before Collins made contact and should have been called a goaltend, according the 2025-26 NBA Rulebook. The score would have been 81-76, but instead it was 81-74.

An irate Kerr who was upset with the missed goaltend call, went screaming after an official, and had to be restrained by Payton and assistant coach Terry Stotts. Kerr received back-to-back technical fouls at 7:57 in the fourth quarter and was ejected from the game. Stotts took over as coach for the remainder of the game.

Stotts spoke to reporters after the game in place of Kerr and explained he was answering questions instead of Kerr ‘because I’m saving Steve some money.’

‘What particularly? I think it was that goaltending call that was missed. There were probably some other things, but that was the last straw, probably. I don’t want to speak for Steve,’ Stotts said after the game. ‘I didn’t see a replay but it seemed at the time that it was obvious that it was a goaltend.’

After a Collins made technical free throw and Kris Dunn adding two more free ones after getting fouled, the Clippers led by 10.

Their lead grew to 13 with under five minutes in the game, but one last push from Golden State got them to within a one-possession game.

Warriors guard Stephen Curry scored 27 points and had three steals, his night ended early when he fouled out the game with 42.7 seconds left in the game and his team down, 101-100.

Kawhi Leonard led the Clippers with 24 points, while rookie guard and Southern California native Kobe Sanders scored a career-high 20 points and added seven rebounds.

Los Angeles is now 13-22 and is 11th in the Western Conference standings, while Golden State is 19-18 at the No. 8 spot.

Warriors vs. Clippers highlights 

Clippers vs. Warriors game notes

It was all Clippers in the first period as they led the Warriors, 31-19. 

In the second quarter, Warriors outscored the clippers 32-24, but still Golden State trailed Los Angeles, 55-51 at the half. Curry had 12 points in the second quarter, 14 in the half. Leonard had 14 points in the half for the Clippers. 

The Clippers’ lead grew to double-digits by the end of the third quarter but the Warriors wouldn’t go away.

Green sparked a 4th quarter run with his defensive presence which turned to easy offense for Payton and Gui Santos when it wasn’t it was all eyes on Curry.

A controversial no-call on what was believed to be a goaltend led to Kerr’s ejection. The Warriors would have been down by five but instead found themselves back at a 10-point deficit, which grew to 13.

Butler scored timely baskets, as did Curry but that stopped when he fouled out with 42 seconds in the game. Green scored to give them one more chance. Butler missed the game-winner.

‘I haven’t seen the replay but live it looked like a goaltend,’ Green said to reporters after the game. ‘Our group kept fighting. That’s what gotta do in that situation and we did. It’s just unfortunate we couldn’t come out with the win.’

Green added: ‘I thought we played well. We couldn’t hit shots. We missed a lot of shots, shots that normally make or can make. We took care of the ball. We defended without fouling. I thought we did a lot of good things. We forced turnovers. We just didn’t capitalize enough.’

Warriors’ keys to the game

Unselfish play, spread the ball around: When the Warriors are at their best, they are playing a well-rounded version of team basketball. Everyone is in motion, getting good looks whether at the rim or open shots. The key will be to knock down those looks when the opportunity arises. Warriors just missed shots, going 38% on 92 field goals including 24% on 41 three-point attempts.

Who’s the answer for Kawhi: Warriors will have to throw multiple defenders at Clippers forward Kawhi Leonard to try and stop him. Expect heightened defensive focus from everyone, especially De’Anthony Melton, Gary Payton Jr., Draymond Green and Jimmy Butler. It was a good job, defensively, on Kawhi. He scored 27 but shot 10-of-25 and had five turnovers.

Productivity from bench: Bench production is key for the Warriors. When they’re playing together and get going, they can compliment Golden State’s stars well. Last game they outscored Utah’s bench, 46-30. Warriors bench outscored the Clippers’ bench 36-15.

Warriors’ next five games

Jan. 7 vs. Milwaukee Bucks
Jan. 9 vs. Sacramento Kings
Jan. 11 vs. Atlanta Hawks
Jan. 13 vs. Portland Trail Blazers
Jan. 15 vs. New York Knicks

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Sweden finished a perfect 7-0 at the world junior hockey championship and played a nearly perfect final to take home a gold medal for the first time since 2012.

Sweden scored short-handed and on the power play, set up by great plays from Flyers prospect Jack Berglund. Then draft-eligible Ivar Stenberg took over in the third with a tremendous skating display before a Sascha Boumedienne goal. He added an empty netter after Czechia pulled close on goals by Adam Jiricek and Matej Kubiesa.

The Swedes usually know heartbreak at the tournament with strong group play and disappointing playoffs. They had lost four of their previous five semifinals, but they got past Finland, 4-3 in a shootout, That set the stage for winning their third gold medal in the 50 years of the tournament.

Silver medalist Czechia gets its fourth consecutive medal and Vojtech Cihar was named tournament MVP. Swedish goalie Love Harenstam, Jiricek and Swedish forward Anton Frondell also received honors.

Sweden vs Czechia highlights

Tournament awards

Final score: Sweden 4, Czechia 2

Czechia made it close at the end, scoring two goals with their goalie pulled. But Sweden played a nearly perfect game for 57 minutes to make the difference. Sweden wins its first gold medal since 2012. Czechia gets silver.

Ivar Stenberg puts it away

The draft-eligible forward tucks in an empty-netter. Sweden 4, Czechia 2

Czechia scores again

Matej Kubiesa scores with 23 seconds left. Sweden 3, Czechia 2

2 minutes left

Czech goalie out. It’s 6-on-5 again.

Czechia breaks through

Adam Jiricek scores on a one-timer with 2:24 left. Sweden 3, Czechia 1.

Czechs pull goalie

It’s 6-on-5

5 minutes left

3-0 Sweden, which leads 35-20 in shots.

Czechia power play

Linus Eriksson is called for holding. Needless to say, Czechia needs to score here. They don’t. No shots. Several Sweden blocks. About 12 minutes left.

Sweden goes up 3-0

This is why Ivar Stenberg is getting so much draft attention. He stickhandles down the ice and around the Czech zone before feeding Sascha Boumedienne for a one-timer. Sweden 3, Czechia 0

Early third period

Still not a lot of space out there, but Czechia gets a couple shots.

Third period underway

Sweden controlling play so far.

End of second: Sweden 2, Czechia 0

Another special teams goal for Sweden. And they look good on the penalty kill, too. Sweden is limiting Czechia’s chances. Just 11 Czech shots so far. Twenty more minutes of this, and Sweden gets gold.

Czechia power play

Loke Krantz is called for interference. Sweden kills it off, blocking several shots.

Sweden scores on power play

Another nice assist by Jack Berglund. Victor Eklund capitalizes. Sweden 2, Czechia 0

Sweden power play

Vojtech Cihar is called for cross-checking.

Sweden pressuring

Ivar Stenberg hits the post.

Second period underway

1-0 Sweden.

End of first: Sweden 1, Czechia 0

Giving up a short-handed goal is never good and Czechia didn’t look good in its coverage. That mistake is the difference in this game. Shots are 10-6 Sweden.

Sweden scores short-handed

Jack Berglund puts on a stickhandling display and then feeds Casper Juustovaara for a short-handed goal. Sweden 1, Czechia 0

Czechia power play

Sascha Boumedienne is called for delay of game.

Czechia power play

Ivar Stenberg is called for holding the stick. It’s killed off. One shot.

Lucas Pettersson in Sweden lineup

He had missed Sunday’s game because he was ill.

Game underway

Sweden’s Love Harenstam vs. Czechia’s Michal Orsulak, Both played in Sunday’s semifinals.

What channel is Sweden vs Czechia world juniors hockey gold-medal game today?

TV channel: NHL Network

Livestream: Fubo, which offers a free trial to new subscribers, or Sling TV.

Watch world junior championships on Fubo

What time is Sweden vs Czechia world juniors hockey gold-medal game today?

Date: Monday, Jan. 5

Time: 8:30 p.m. ET (7:30 local time)

The Sweden-Czechia game is scheduled to start at 8:30 p.m. ET at the Grand Casino Arena in Saint Paul, Minnesota, the home of the Minnesota Wild. The start time could be delayed if the bronze medal game runs long.

World juniors hockey gold-medal game: How to watch, stream

Time: 8:30 p.m. ET on Monday, Jan. 5

Location: Grand Casino Arena (Saint Paul, Minnesota)

TV: NHL Network

Streaming: Fubo and certain levels of Sling TV carry NHL Network.

World junior championships medal games today

Monday, Jan. 5

All times p.m. ET

Canada 6 Finland 3 (Canada wins bronze)

Sweden, Czechia lines

Sweden players to watch

Forward Anton Frondell is the No. 3 overall pick of the Blackhawks. He has five goals. Ivar Stenberg and Viggo Bjorck are eligible for the 2026 NHL draft.

Czechia players to watch

Vojtech Cihar entered the day tied for the tournament lead with 11 points, though Canadian players have passed him. He scored twice in the semifinals. Defenseman Tomas Galvas, passed over in the NHL draft, has nine points.

Sweden’s recent record in gold medal games

Sweden last won gold in 2012. More recently, it has lost four times in gold medal games: to the USA in 2024, Canada in 2018, Finland in 2014 and USA in 2013.

Czechia will win fourth consecutive medal

The Czechs are guaranteed at least a silver medal. In the three tournaments before this, they won bronzes in 2024 and 2025, plus silver in 2023.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The Los Angeles Rams travel to Charlotte for the second time this season to take on the Carolina Panthers. This time around, the winner goes home.

The Rams enter the playoffs as the NFC’s No. 5 seed after finishing second in the NFC West. The Panthers are the No. 4 seed in the conference after winning a tiebreaker in the NFC South.

Rams quarterback Matthew Stafford had three turnovers during the team’s 31-28 Week 13 loss to the Panthers. The Rams have lost two of their past three games as they enter the postseason but are a dangerous team. The Panthers have lost three of the last four games and are the only sub.-500 team to qualify for the playoffs.

How will the Rams vs. Panthers wild-card matchup go? Here’s what to expect ahead of their Jan. 10 playoff battle:

Rams vs. Panthers wild-card game odds

The Rams are a big road favorite in this contest, according to the BetMGM NFL odds.

Spread: Rams (-10)
Moneyline: Rams (-625); Panthers (+450)
Over/under: 46.5

Our guide to NFL betting odds, picks and spreads has you covered.

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Rams vs. Panthers matchups to watch

Led by MVP candidate Matthew Stafford, the Rams have one of the best offenses in the NFL. The upstart Panthers won the NFC South and have the confidence that they defeated Los Angeles earlier this season. Here’s a look at some of the most notable matchups to watch.

Panthers pass defense vs. Rams aerial attack

Matthew Stafford tossed two interceptions in the previous meeting against the Panthers. Puka Nacua and Davante Adams combined for 10 catches for 130 yards. Adams also had two touchdown receptions.

The Panthers defense allowed 203.9 passing yards per game during the regular season.

It’ll be interesting to see if Panthers standout cornerback Jaycee Horn travels with either Nacua or Adams. Adams has typically drawn the opposing team’s top corner while defenses shade an extra defender to Nacua.

Stafford is the third player in NFL history with at least 45 touchdown passes and fewer than 10 interceptions in a season, per NFL Research.

Panthers pass rush versus Rams offensive line

The Panthers defense sacked Stafford twice and pressured him four times in their Week 13 victory. Derrick Brown had a strip sack. Brown had a team-best 35 pressures and his five sacks were tied for a team-high during the regular season. Brown and Carolina’s ability to get after Stafford will be key if the Panthers want to pull off the upset.

Jared Verse, Byron Young and Rams front seven against Panthers offense

The Rams have one of the best defensive fronts in football. Verse and Young combined for 19.5 sacks this season. The Rams defense ranked near the top of the league in both pass rush win rate and run stop win rate during the regular season.

Los Angeles had 10 pressures and sacked Bryce Young twice in Week 13. But the Panthers rushed for 164 yards and averaged a little more than four yards per carry. Carolina was the more physical team in the trenches previously. The Rams have to change that if they want to be victorious on Saturday.

Early prediction for Rams vs. Panthers

Rams 27, Panthers 20

Week 13 was probably the worst game of Matthew Stafford’s MVP-caliber season. Stafford committed three turnovers in the loss in which hardly anything went the Rams way. I predict the Rams take better care of the football and send the Panthers packing this time. Los Angeles is the more talented team. However, the Panthers have a lot of bulletin-board material because they are a big home underdog.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The Chicago Bears and Green Bay Packers rivalry dates back to the earliest days of the NFL, and yet they’ve only ever met in the playoffs two times.

A new chapter will be added in the storied history of these teams in the wild-card round of this year’s postseason, when the Bears host the Packers for a third matchup this year. Chicago and Green Bay each won its home game in the two divisional clashes during the regular season, so this meeting in the playoffs will serve as something of a high-stakes rubber match for the season series.

It’s also a rubber match for the all-time postseason series. The Bears won the first playoff matchup between the two teams in 1941. It took over 60 years for the next postseason meeting in 2010, when the Packers won the NFC championship en route to a Super Bowl 45 victory.

Here’s what to know ahead of Chicago’s first home playoff game in seven years:

Bears vs. Packers wild card game odds

The Bears hold a very slight edge over the Packers in the wild-card matchup, according to the BetMGM NFL odds as of Jan. 5. Not interested in this game? Check out expert picks and best bets for every NFL game this week.

Spread: Bears (-1)
Moneyline: Bears (-110); Packers (-110)
Over/under: 46

Our guide to NFL betting odds, picks and spreads has you covered.

New to sports betting? USA TODAY readers can claim exclusive promos and bonus codes with the best online sportsbooks and sports betting sites.

Bears vs. Packers matchups to watch

Ben Johnson vs. Matt LaFleur

Two of the game’s best offensive minds are set to meet in another head-to-head matchup. We’ve seen plenty of this before, when Johnson was the Lions’ offensive coordinator playing the Packers twice per year. But we’ve only seen the two face off as head coaches twice – earlier this year – and never with the stakes so high. Expect to see both of these young masterminds reach deep in their bag to pull out any and everything they can to put more points on the board and move on to the divisional round.

Jordan Love and Packers WRs vs. Bears passing defense

Love was knocked out of the latter matchup between these two teams earlier this year with a head injury, but he put on a show against the Bears in the earlier regular season meeting, throwing for 234 yards and three touchdowns. Chicago’s defense led the NFL in takeaways during the regular season, boosted by a league-leading 23 interceptions as a defense – including one against Love.

The Bears’ takeaway-focused defensive strategy had major boom-or-bust potential all year – Chicago still had the 10th-worst scoring defense despite the turnovers – and they’ll need to figure out how to stop Love and the Packers’ young wideouts without relying so heavily on interceptions.

Packers’ Micah Parsons-less pass-rush vs. Bears O-line and Caleb Williams

In the first 15 weeks of the season, when Green Bay had their prized offseason acquisition healthy, the Packers ranked seventh in dropback success rate allowed (43.9%) and had 34 sacks as a team with 61 tackles for a loss. Since Parsons’ injury in Week 15, Green Bay is allowing the sixth-highest success rate on dropbacks (53.2%) and had two sacks as a team – both by third-stringers against Max Brosmer in Week 18 – with 11 TFLs.

The Bears’ re-tooled offensive line has been one of its biggest strengths this year, and Williams evades sacks better than almost any other starting quarterback. His 10.8% pressure-to-sack rate is third-lowest of quarterbacks with nine or more starts this year. The Packers are going to have a hard time getting to the quarterback in this matchup and are still looking for their first win without Parsons active.

Early prediction for Bears vs. Packers

Bears 24, Packers 23

It’s a division game in the playoffs. If the first two games these two teams played in the regular season were any indication, this one is also coming down to the wire.

Ultimately, the Packers have looked like a different (read: weaker) team since Parsons suffered his season-ending ACL tear. Quarterback Jordan Love’s absence with a concussion did nothing to help their outlook as they lost four straight to end the season, but at least they’re getting him back for this game.

Week 18 weirdness aside, the Bears have looked resurgent in their first season under Johnson, particularly on offense. Williams has taken a step forward in his second season as a pro, and the offensive line is suddenly among the league’s best, opening up more possibilities in the run and passing games.

Green Bay has won three playoff games since LaFleur took over as head coach in 2019 and only one in the last four years. The injury to Parsons and lack of home-field advantage thanks to their four-game slide down the stretch may be enough to keep LaFleur and the Packers from a fourth playoff win since 2019 and first in two years.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The NBA season is nearing its midway point, meaning we’ve got a pretty good understanding of who’s real, who’s fake, and who’s trying to make a name. In the Eastern Conference, one thing is for certain: both the Detroit Pistons and New York Knicks are serious contenders.

The Pistons currently sit atop the Eastern Conference Standings with a 27-9 record; they entered the night three games better than the second-place Knicks (23-13) and added another game to their lead in the standings with a 121-90 rout over New York at Little Caesars Arena.

It was a much-needed win for the Pistons, whose cracks have started to show. Detroit had lost three of its last five games entering Monday, including a loss to the struggling Utah Jazz (12-22). Furthermore, the Pistons were playing the second game of a back-to-back Monday night, making this matchup against an experienced Knicks squad that much tougher — and their dominating win that much more impressive.

The Knicks, however, have suffered a similar drought. They’ve now lost each of their last four games to the Pistons, San Antonio Spurs, Atlanta Hawks and Philadelphia 76ers.

Stream Knicks vs. Pistons with Peacock

FINAL: Pistons 121, Knicks 90

The Pistons went into cruise control mode in the fourth. Despite some impressive jumpers by Deuce McBride midway through the quarter, it became clear quickly that the game had gotten away from the Knicks as Cade Cunningham only played the first four minutes of the final frame before subbing out for the night. He finishes with 29 points, 13 assists, three rebounds and two blocks.

On their second-to-last possession of the game, Daniss Jenkins slammed home the exclamation point on Detroit’s 30-point blowout win.

END Q3: Pistons 89, Knicks 70

The Pistons rode Cunningham’s hot hand to start the second half on a 17-5 run and take full control of the game. Cunningham doubled his point total on the night with 15 in the third; he’s now scored a game-high 29 points while shooting an incredible 64.7% (11-for-17) from the floor.

With just under 30 seconds left in the frame, Jaden Ivey grabbed a missed shot by Tyler Kolek on the rebound and took it coast to coast for a layup to push Detroit’s lead to 20 points.

Cade Cunningham takes over in third quarter

Cade Cunningham keeps pouring it on in the third quarter, scoring eight of the Pistons’ last 10 points and forcing the Knicks to call a timeout. He’s getting others involved, too: Detroit’s first nine assists of the game all came from their star point guard before Paul Reed added one by finding Cunningham himself for a three from 28 feet.

Cunningham’s also active on the defensive side of the ball; he played the Knicks’ 2-on-1 perfectly and bait Deuce McBride into attacking the rim before emphatically sending the ball into the stands.

END Q2: Pistons 64, Knicks 54

The second quarter featured remarkable defensive adjustments from Detroit. The Pistons learned what wasn’t working at the end of the first quarter and moved accordingly.

Detroit’s scoring is led by Cade Cunningham with 14 points. The former No. 1 overall pick is shooting a stellar 6-of-9 from the field. The team is also getting scoring from a multitude of places, with four other players with at least seven points, including seven from Dannis Jenkins, who has also added three assists on the night.

The variety of scoring for Detroit is in sharp contrast with the Knicks who have 17 points from Jalen Brunson, but only four players with more than five points. Mikal Bridges needs to improve his efficiency (3-of-8) if New York wants any chance of coming back in the second half.

END Q1: Pistons 30, Knicks 29

The Detroit Pistons got out to a sizable early lead thanks to great early shooting. The Knicks, meanwhile, were ice cold, but were kept afloat by Jalen Brunson’s hot hand. Brunson started the game 4-of-5 from the field, and while he cooled down afterwards, finishing the quarter shooting 6-of-10, that start gave the rest of the Knicks just enough time to get their footing, particularly Jordan Clarkson, who managed six points within three minutes of entering the game.

The Knicks slowly clawed their way back into the game, bringing themselves to within one thanks to a late steal. Mayhem went down in the last 15 seconds. We saw two missed shots, and a steal. It wasn’t clear which team would head into the break with the lead. In the end, the Pistons managed to hold their lead, but given the momentum the Knicks have built in the last six minutes of game time, it wouldn’t be a shock to see the Knicks grab that lead very early into the second.

How to watch New York Knicks vs. Detroit Pistons

Tonight’s matchup between the New York Knicks and Detroit Pistons will stream exclusively on Peacock.

Date: Monday, Jan. 5, 2026
Time: 7 p.m. ET
Where: Little Caesars Arena in Detroit
TV: N/A
Stream: Peacock

Knicks vs. Pistons betting odds

Here are the latest odds for the Knicks vs. Pistons game, according to BetMGM as of Monday afternoon:

Spread: Pistons +1.5
Money: Knicks -120; Pistons +100
Over/under: 232.5

Injury report for Knicks-Pistons

New York Knicks:

Josh Hart – out (right ankle)
Landry Shamet – out (right shoulder)

Detroit Pistons:

Cade Cunningham – probable (right hip)
Jalen Duren – out (right ankle)
Tobias Harris – out (left hip)
Caris LeVert – doubtful (left knee)
Duncan Robinson – probable (left calf)

New York Knicks starting lineup

*Lineups listed per NBA.com

PG: Jalen Brunson
SG: Mikal Bridges
SF: OG Anunoby
PF: Karl-Anthony Towns
C: Mitchell Robinson

Detroit Pistons starting lineup

*Lineups listed per NBA.com

PG: Cade Cunningham
SG: Duncan Robinson
SF: Ausar Thompson
PF: Paul Reed
C: Isaiah Stewart

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Sweden and Czechia will look to end long droughts when they meet on Monday, Jan. 5 in the gold medal game of the world junior hockey championship.

Sweden last won the tournament for the world’s best under-20 players in 2012. They last appeared in the gold medal game in 2024. They had lost four of the previous five semifinals but got past Finland, 4-3 in a shootout, on Sunday, Jan. 4. The Swedes are unbeaten after defeating Slovakia, Switzerland, Germany, USA, Latvia and Finland.

Czechia last won it all in 2001 and last was in the gold medal game in 2023. It lost to Canada that year but has beaten the Canadians in the playoffs for three consecutive years, including 6-4 on Sunday. Czechia lost to Canada in the opening game of this year’s tournament, but since has beaten Denmark, Finland, Latvia, Switzerland and Canada.

Here’s what to know about today’s gold-medal game between Sweden and Czechia at the world junior hockey championship, including how to watch:

Ivar Stenberg puts it away

The draft-eligible forward tucks in an empty-netter. Sweden 4, Czechia 2

Czechia scores again

Matej Kubiesa scores with 23 seconds left. Sweden 3, Czechia 2

2 minutes left

Czech goalie out. It’s 6-on-5 again.

Czechia breaks through

Adam Jiricek scores on a one-timer with 2:24 left. Sweden 3, Czechia 1.

Czechs pull goalie

It’s 6-on-5

5 minutes left

3-0 Sweden, which leads 35-20 in shots.

Czechia power play

Linus Eriksson is called for holding. Needless to say, Czechia needs to score here. They don’t. No shots. Several Sweden blocks. About 12 minutes left.

Sweden goes up 3-0

This is why Ivar Stenberg is getting so much draft attention. He stickhandles down the ice and around the Czech zone before feeding Sascha Boumedienne for a one-timer. Sweden 3, Czechia 0

Early third period

Still not a lot of space out there, but Czechia gets a couple shots.

Third period underway

Sweden controlling play so far.

End of second: Sweden 2, Czechia 0

Another special teams goal for Sweden. And they look good on the penalty kill, too. Sweden is limiting Czechia’s chances. Just 11 Czech shots so far. Twenty more minutes of this, and Sweden gets gold.

Czechia power play

Loke Krantz is called for interference. Sweden kills it off, blocking several shots.

Sweden scores on power play

Another nice assist by Jack Berglund. Victor Eklund capitalizes. Sweden 2, Czechia 0

Sweden power play

CIHAR Vojtech Cihar is called for cross-checking.

Sweden pressuring

Ivar Stenberg hits the post.

Second period underway

1-0 Sweden.

End of first: Sweden 1, Czechia 0

Giving up a short-handed goal is never good and Czechia didn’t look good in its coverage. That mistake is the difference in this game. Shots are 10-6 Sweden.

Sweden scores short-handed

Jack Berglund puts on a stickhandling display and then feeds Casper Juustovaara for a short-handed goal. Sweden 1, Czechia 0

Czechia power play

Sascha Boumedienne is called for delay of game.

Czechia power play

Ivar Stenberg is called for holding the stick. It’s killed off. One shot.

Lucas Pettersson in Sweden lineup

He had missed Sunday’s game because he was ill.

Game underway

Sweden’s Love Harenstam vs. Czechia’s Michal Orsulak, Both played in Sunday’s semifinals.

What channel is Sweden vs Czechia world juniors hockey gold-medal game today?

TV channel: NHL Network

Livestream: Fubo, which offers a free trial to new subscribers, or Sling TV.

Watch world junior championships on Fubo

What time is Sweden vs Czechia world juniors hockey gold-medal game today?

Date: Monday, Jan. 5

Time: 8:30 p.m. ET (7:30 local time)

The Sweden-Czechia game is scheduled to start at 8:30 p.m. ET at the Grand Casino Arena in Saint Paul, Minnesota, the home of the Minnesota Wild. The start time could be delayed if the bronze medal game runs long.

World juniors hockey gold-medal game: How to watch, stream

Time: 8:30 p.m. ET on Monday, Jan. 5

Location: Grand Casino Arena (Saint Paul, Minnesota)

TV: NHL Network

Streaming: Fubo and certain levels of Sling TV carry NHL Network.

World junior championships medal games today

Monday, Jan. 5

All times p.m. ET

Canada 6 Finland 3 (Canada wins bronze)

Sweden, Czechia lines

Sweden players to watch

Forward Anton Frondell is the No. 3 overall pick of the Blackhawks. He has five goals. Ivar Stenberg and Viggo Bjorck are eligible for the 2026 NHL draft.

Czechia players to watch

Vojtech Cihar entered the day tied for the tournament lead with 11 points, though Canadian players have passed him. He scored twice in the semifinals. Defenseman Tomas Galvas, passed over in the NHL draft, has nine points.

Sweden’s recent record in gold medal games

Sweden last won gold in 2012. More recently, it has lost four times in gold medal games: to the USA in 2024, Canada in 2018, Finland in 2014 and USA in 2013.

Czechia will win fourth consecutive medal

The Czechs are guaranteed at least a silver medal. In the three tournaments before this, they won bronzes in 2024 and 2025, plus silver in 2023.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The NFL wild-card weekend schedule has been released, creating advantages for some teams and disadvantages for others.
The Houston Texans and Aaron Rodgers benefit from extra rest with a Monday night game.
Los Angeles teams and the Green Bay Packers face challenging road games and short rest weeks.

The NFL playoffs haven’t started yet, but some have already won while others have lost.

After 18 weeks of regular-season action, the wild-card round of the playoffs is about to get underway. The NFL released the schedule during halftime of ‘Sunday Night Football’ between the Baltimore Ravens and Pittsburgh Steelers in Week 18, giving fans a look at the menu of games on tap for the weekend.

The schedule might only reveal time and place, but some teams will certainly enjoy their spot more than others.

Here’s a look at the winners and losers from the NFL wild-card weekend schedule.

Winners

NFL fans

It’s a long season that spans 18 weeks and 272 games. Watching every minute of every game is impossible, but that issue goes away in the playoffs. All eyes are on one game at a time, allowing fans to enjoy the story that each contest tells. With a loaded slate of playoff football ahead, it’s hard for the fans to not walk away as big winners.

TV networks

What would the playoffs look like without the Kansas City Chiefs? Not too bad, if you base it on the wild-card schedule. The networks have to be thrilled with some of these matchups. Saturday’s schedule brings a rematch for the Panthers and Rams, before wrapping up with the Bears and Packers renewing their rivalry.

Sunday will see two of the AFC’s best in Jacksonville when the Bills battle the Jaguars, the 49ers and Eagles meet in a rematch of the 2022 NFC Championship Game, and then the Chargers take on the Patriots in a duel between two of the better quarterbacks in the sport.

That’s all before the round concludes on ‘Monday Night Football’ when the Texans head to Pittsburgh to play the Steelers.

Houston Texans

The Houston Texans have been to the playoffs eight times in their history. They have been the 4:30 p.m. ET Saturday kickoff all eight times in the wild-card round, until now. Perhaps that’s a sign that the Texans should be taken seriously as contenders, or maybe it’s just that the 8-9 Panthers deserved the early spot a little more. Whatever the reason, it takes a lot for the NFL to break tradition and it just did that in a big way by scheduling Houston for the final game of wild-card weekend.

That’s not the only reason for Houston to claim victory though. We also can’t forget that DeMeco Ryans’ team plays a physical style of football. They’ll have the luxury of playing the weakest AFC playoff opponent and get an extra day of rest before doing so. It’s a new era in Houston.

Aaron Rodgers

Winning has been a foreign concept to Rodgers in recent seasons, but the four-time NFL MVP is back in the postseason. His team’s inclusion in the schedule is enough to make the quarterback a winner, but the 42-year-old also gets some extra rest ahead of this playoff matchup.

He’ll probably need it with this Texans defense coming to town, but that extra day might make the difference.

Losers

Los Angeles football

The Rams not only have to travel east to battle the Carolina Panthers in the wild-card round, but they also have to do it on a short week. It’s an unfortunate reality for the team that was in possession of the NFC’s top seed just a few weeks ago. The Rams should be able to take care of business against a Panthers team that beat them on Nov. 30, but the travel spot is certainly less than ideal and could make for a closer matchup than everyone predicts.

Just like the Rams, the Chargers also have something to be annoyed about when it comes to the schedule. They also have to travel east, but they get stuck with a night game in New England against the Patriots. For a team used to playing indoors, they now have to deal with the elements on a Sunday night at Gillette Stadium. Good luck.

Green Bay Packers

The walking wounded head back to Chicago for the second time in four weeks. Jordan Love hasn’t played since that Saturday night in the Windy City, when he exited with a concussion. The Packers will try to piece together a winning game plan against the Bears, but they’ll have to do it without the luxury of a full week to practice.

Already without Micah Parsons and Tucker Kraft, the Packers are losers of four straight and haven’t played particularly well in that time either. Maybe they can flip the switch, but they’ve already struggled to win the battle in the trenches against the Bears team twice in 2025. It’s a tall task asking them to do it in the Bears’ first playoff home game since 2019.

CBS

Fox got a pair of games. Amazon, NBC and ESPN got prime time matchups. CBS got the 1 p.m. ET kickoff on Sunday. Ouch.

There’s an argument to be made that the Bills and Jaguars should’ve been the ‘Sunday Night Football’ matchup, which is certainly good for CBS. However, they don’t get a prime time window or multiple games to make up for that. Despite the great matchup, they drew the shortest straw out of all the networks.

NFL playoff schedule

The NFL playoffs will kick off on Jan. 10 with the league’s first two wild-card matchups before concluding on Feb. 8 with Super Bowl 60 at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, California.

Wild-card weekend

All times Eastern

Saturday, Jan. 10

Los Angeles Rams at Carolina Panthers, 4:30 p.m. ET, FOX
Green Bay Packers at Chicago Bears, 8 p.m. ET, Prime Video

Sunday, Jan. 11

Buffalo Bills at Jacksonville Jaguars, 1 p.m. ET, CBS
San Francisco 49ers at Philadelphia Eagles, 4:30 p.m. ET, FOX
Los Angeles Chargers at New England Patriots, 8 p.m. ET, NBC

Monday, Jan. 12

Houston Texans at Pittsburgh Steelers, 8 p.m. ET, ESPN/ABC

Divisional round

Saturday, Jan. 17

AFC/NFC divisional game: 4:30 p.m.
AFC/NFC division game: 8:15 p.m.

Sunday, Jan. 18

AFC/NFC divisional game: 3 p.m.
AFC/NFC divisional game: 6:30 p.m.

NFL conference championship round

Sunday, Jan. 25

AFC championship game: 3 p.m.
NFC championship game: 6:30 p.m.

Super Bowl 60

Date: Feb. 8, 2026
Location: Levi’s Stadium (Santa Clara, California)
Time: 6:30 p.m.
TV: NBC

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Eventually, Shesterkin got up and didn’t appear to be able to put weight on his leg as a Rangers player and trainer supported him. Backup goalie Jonathan Quick came into the game after the first period play.

The Rangers later announced that Shesterkin wouldn’t return to the game because of a lower body injury.

Igor Shesterkin injury update

The Rangers goalie has a lower-body injury and isn’t returning to Monday’s game.

If he’s out long term, that would be bad news for the Rangers, who entered the day three points out of a playoff spot.

Shesterkin is tied for second in the league with 17 wins and 2.47 goals-against average and .912 save percentage.

Quick has a 2.11 goals-against average and a .924 save percentage in 10 appearances, but he’s 39 and has averaged around 25 appearances a season in New York.

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