Author: rb809rb

  • Winter Olympics: Mikaela Shiffrin still looking for first medal after 11th in giant slalom

    MILAN — Mikaela Shiffrin’s Olympic woes continue. Dominant everywhere else on earth and on the calendar, Shiffrin can’t seem to figure out how to get on the podium during the two weeks of the Olympics. Her latest result: 11th place in the giant slalom, 0.92 seconds behind gold-medal winner Federica Brignone of Italy and 0.25 seconds off the podium.

    On her first run of the day, Shiffrin skied exactly the run she needed on her initial attempt. Skiing with speed but a touch of caution, Shiffrin posted a time of 1:04.25, 0.28 seconds behind the two leaders before her. Once all of the 76 skiers in the first run had their opportunity on the slopes, Shiffrin stood in seventh overall, 1.02 seconds behind Brignone.

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    Shiffrin’s second run of the day started well enough, but she floated around the early turns and simply could not create enough speed in the second half of the course. She finished 0.25 seconds behind the in-race leader, good for seventh place at the time of her finish. And not even that would hold as the first-run leaders were still to come.

    It’s the second gold for Brignone at these Games, after she won the super-G, capping a remarkable comeback. Just last April, Brignone suffered a catastrophic wreck in the giant slalom event of the Italian Championships. She broke her left tibia and fibula and ruptured her left ACL, but fought her way back into the Olympics and a role as Italy’s flag bearer at the Opening Ceremony.

    Sweden’s Sara Hector and Norway’s Thea Louise Stjernesund tied for the silver.

    But it’s another podium without Shiffrin, another opportunity for the same uncomfortable questions to gain volume, even if giant slalom isn’t her best event.

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    “When I think about it, I’m three tenths off of the podium in 10th or something,” Shiffrin said after. “It’s such a high level of competition. It is really, really cool that we as athletes were able to showcase that on this day.”

    Shiffrin came into the Milan Olympics with something to prove, an odd but true statement about a skier who’s won more World Cup events than anyone, male or female, in history. But her 10 World Cup victories, including one in the Czech Republic just days before the start of these Olympics, mean absolutely nothing when she’s standing atop the mountain at Cortina d’Ampezzo.

    For whatever reason, the Olympics have bedeviled Shiffrin the past four-plus years. After she claimed two golds and a silver in her first two Games, Sochi in 2014 and Pyeongchang in 2018, Shiffrin skied into Beijing in 2022 looking to establish absolute dominance over her sport. But she didn’t even finish three of the events she entered, and left Beijing without a medal.

    She later conceded that the ghosts of Beijing hung over her, and a devastating wreck in Killington in 2024 further dented her confidence. And despite all her victories since then, a struggle in the women’s team combined event earlier in these Games gave those ghosts new life.

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    In that event, teammate Breezy Johnson posted the fastest time in the downhill half of the competition, meaning Shiffrin only needed to perform at her level in her signature event, the slalom, to shake off her recent past and bring home another medal. But Shiffrin skied a tentative run, and she and Johnson finished 0.06 seconds off the podium. (Shiffrin’s misfire meant teammates Jackie Wiles and Paula Moltzan won bronze, a small comfort in an otherwise depressing day.)

    Shortly after the team event, Shiffrin took to social media for a pair of posts that seemed to point toward her mindset. On Friday, she posted “Olympic Reflections” that almost seemed like a preemptive strike at criticism of her performance. “May we all champion one another, tread lightly on what we don’t fully comprehend, and have the fortitude to keep showing up,” she wrote.

    Then, hours before the giant slalom competition, Shiffrin posted a video expressing “an overwhelming sense of gratitude that I simply get to be here, after everything” — specifically referencing her devastating Killington wreck.

    Shiffrin has one event remaining at the Olympics, the slalom on Wednesday.

  • Winter Olympics 2026: Canada women’s curling team accused of violating rules after men face same allegations

    Controversy now hangs over Canada’s women’s curling team, following cheating allegations against the men’s squad.

    Both Canadian curling teams have been accused of the same infraction, double-touching the stone — or touching it again after release. As a result, both countries and their respective Olympic committees have asked that the

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    The women’s team were called for the rules violation during Saturday’s match versus Switzerland, which Canada lost 8-7. Officials stopped play, ruling that Rachel Homan touched her stone again after releasing it. The stone was removed from the sheet, stunning Canada’s skip.

    Teammate Emma Miskew could be seen asking officials why the call couldn’t be reviewed by video. She was told that the umpire needed to be trusted on such a judgment. Additionally, video is not typically used to review plays during a match under World Curling rules.

    After the match, Homan denied that she committed any kind of infraction.

    “I don’t understand the call. I’ll never understand it,” Homan added. “We’ve never done that. It has nothing to do with us.”

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    Canada’s men’s curling team also accused of double-touching

    The double-touching allegation follows the men’s Canadian curling team being accused of the same violation during Friday’s 8-6 victory over defending gold medalist Sweden. Swedish third Oskar Eriksson alleged that Canada’s Marc Kennedy touched the stone as it passed the hog line, after which the player can’t make contact again.

    Kennedy profanely disputed the accusation, as seen on camera.

    “I haven’t done it once,” Kennedy said. “You can f*** off.”

    However, Eriksson didn’t back down.

    Eriksson then asked, “You haven’t done it once?”

    An impassioned Kennedy reiterated while pointing toward himself, “I haven’t done it once.”

    Eriksson said back, “I’ll show you a video after the game.”

    That exchange briefly dispelled the notion that curling may be the nicest sport of all. Of course, the stakes of competition are higher in the Winter Olympics.

    Canada skip Brad Jacobs responded with his own allegations, asserting that Eriksson’s accusation was “desperate,” the team felt “targeted” and this may be a deliberate tactic by the Swedish team.

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    “It felt like that was premeditated,” Jacobs said. “We also heard that they did the same thing against the Italian team. So I don’t know what they’re doing and what they’re trying to pull.”

    World Curling clarifies double-touching rules

    The dual controversies compelled World Curling to release a statement reminding players, teams and fans of the rules regarding double-touching.

    That included a clarification that re-touching the handle before the stone crosses the hog line is allowed, but touching the granite as it moves forward is not allowed. In light of the accusations against Canada, officials will be “observing the delivery” more closely.

    In a press release, World Curling also said the Canadian team was issued a verbal warning for Kennedy’s use of profane language. Citing Rule R.19, the organization added that “further inappropriate behaviour” would result in additional sanctions.

    Improper conduct, foul or offensive language, equipment abuse, or wilful damage on the part of any team member is prohibited. Any violation may result in suspension of the offending person(s) by the curling organisation having jurisdiction.

  • Dave Dombrowski’s comments still linger for Bryce Harper heading into new season: ‘For Dave to say those things, it is still wild to me’

    Bryce Harper is still not over the comments Philadelphia Phillies president of baseball operations Dave Dombrowski made in October when he questioned the outfielder’s ability to reach another level of stardom.

    “He didn’t have an elite season like he has had in the past,” Dombrowski said at the time. “And I guess we only find out if he becomes elite or if he continues to be good. … Can he rise to the next level again? I don’t really know that answer. He’s the one who will dictate that more than anything else.”

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    Harper addressed the comments before the start of the season with reporters at spring training.

    “For Dave to say those things, it is still wild to me,” Harper said.

    Harper also said he did not have the season or the numbers he wanted. He finished last season with 27 home runs, 75 RBIs and a .261 batting average with an .844 OPS. His numbers were down from his first few seasons with the Phillies, and he was limited to 132 games after dealing with a wrist injury.

    Despite his performance, the 33-year-old was still surprised by Dombrowski’s comments because of the organization’s policy of keeping everything in-house.

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    This is not the first time Harper has addressed Dombrowski’s comments. In November, he said he felt uncomfortable and hurt about the possibility of trade speculation. In December, he posted a TikTok of himself taking swings while wearing a shirt that said “Not Elite.

    Harper wore the shirt after Dombrowski attempted to walk back his comments on the “Foul Territory” podcast and said the two had a nice conversation.

    With Opening Day around the corner and six years remaining on Harper’s contract, it appears Harper and Dombrowski still have fences to mend.

  • Winter Olympics: U.S. Figure Skating will not appeal controversial judging in ice dance competition

    MILAN — Madison Chock and Evan Bates will remain silver medalist ice dancers at the Milan Olympics. U.S. Figure Skating did not appeal the controversial judging that awarded their French competitors the gold medal in last week’s ice dance event.

    Last Wednesday, Chock and Bates, who are the reigning world and national champions in ice dance, performed an outstanding free skate routine that put them at the top of the medal leaderboard … right up until France’s Laurence Fournier Beaudry and Guillaume Cizeron topped them and skated away with the gold medal.

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    The American duo were visibly devastated after the medal ceremony, with Chock calling it “bittersweet” to come so far and fall short of gold. The next day, Chock called for “transparent judging” on CBS News. “I think it’s also important for the skaters, that the judges be vetted and reviewed to make sure that they are also putting out their best performance,” she added, “because there’s a lot on the line for the skaters when they’re out there giving it their all, and we deserve to have the judges also giving us their all and for it to be a fair and even playing field.”

    A deeper examination of the skating scores indicated that while bias existed all up and down the judges’ panel, the French judge favored Fournier Beaudry and Cizeron by a greater degree than any other judge’s bias in other directions.

    However, the International Skating Union contended there was no malfeasance at work. “It is normal for there to be a range of scores given by different judges in any panel and a number of mechanisms are used to mitigate these variations,” the governing body said in a statement. “The ISU has full confidence in the scores given and remains completely committed to fairness.”

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    U.S. Figure Skating had 24 hours to appeal the result, but opted not to do so. “There has been a lot of thoughtful, and at times emotional, discussion about the ice dance competition in Milan,” USFS CEO Matt Farrell told USA Today Sports in a statement. “Working together with Madi and Evan after the Games, we will have thoughtful and intentional discussions about the best way to support them and the future of the sport. For now, we plan to join them in supporting the success of U.S. Figure Skating in Milan.”

    The pairs and women’s events remain to be skated in Milan. Team USA already has a team gold medal, won in part by Chock and Bates.

  • Winter Olympics 2026: Erin Jackson barely misses podium in 500m

    MILAN — Halfway through her signature race, American speedskater Erin Jackson appeared to be in strong position to challenge for a podium spot.

    The 2022 Olympic champion in the 500 meters was closely pursuing world record holder and pre-race favorite Femke Kok down the backstretch.

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    Then, just before she entered the curve, Jackson briefly lost her balance. In a one-and-a-quarter-lap race where milliseconds matter, that turned out to be the difference between Jackson wearing a medal around her neck or going home empty-handed.

    Kok turned on the afterburners and left Jackson behind, taking gold in an Olympic record 36.49 seconds. Jutta Leerdam of the Netherlands took silver in 37.15, a reversal of their one-two finish in the women’s 1,000 when it was Leerdam who edged Kok for gold.

    Jackson settled for fifth place, more than eight tenths of a second behind the winner but only five hundredths of a second shy of bronze. It was a disappointing near miss for a skater who has endured an injury-plagued season yet arrived in Milan ranked No. 3 in the world in speedskating’s shortest, most explosive race.

    Gold medallist Femke Kok of the Netherlands competes against Erin Jackson of the U.S., rear, in the women's 500 meters speedskating race at the 2026 Winter Olympics, in Milan, Italy, Sunday, Feb. 15, 2026. (AP Photo/Antonio Calanni)

    Gold medallist Femke Kok of the Netherlands competes against Erin Jackson of the U.S., rear. (AP Photo/Antonio Calanni)

    (ASSOCIATED PRESS)

    “The back stretch, my feet got away from me a little bit,” Jackson said. “I had a little stumble going into the second corner. And then I just finished as strong as I could. Overall I’m pretty happy with the race, but it sucks to miss out on the podium by so little, especially with a stumble midway through.”

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    Had the 33-year-old Jackson made the podium, it would have added to her remarkable list of accomplishments since transitioning from the roller rink to the ice in adulthood less than a decade ago. When she won in Beijing four years ago, she became the first Black woman to earn a Winter Olympics gold in an individual sport. She followed that by winning two more World Cup titles in the women’s 500 and by being elected by her teammates to serve as one of Team USA’s two opening ceremony flag bearers nine days ago.

    Whereas most of her competitors come from regions where winter sports thrive, Jackson grew up in sun-kissed Ocala, Florida, more than an hour from the nearest ice rink. Her skating career began on wheels, not blades.

    For more than three decades, Renee Hildebrand has been training Ocala kids to become inline speedskating world champions. Promising young athletes seldom gravitate toward inline speedskating on their own, so Hildebrand would seek out talent by sidling up to parents at youth soccer games or open skate sessions at roller rinks.

    Hildebrand told Yahoo Sports before the Beijing Olympics that she first spotted Jackson not long after her mother enrolled her in artistic roller skating. At the time, Rita Jackson envisioned her 7-year-old daughter as a figure skater on wheels.

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    “I’d come to the rink and she’d be flying around on her little art skates,” Hildebrand recalled. “Her teacher would be like, ‘Slow down, you’ve got to do your jump!’ She’d be like, ‘I just want to go fast!’”

    Hildebrand sought out Jackson at the rink and told her, “You need to do speed skating.” Within months of her first in-line speedskating practice, Jackson was pushing her older teammates and displaying world-class potential as a sprinter.

    At age 24, after graduating from the University of Florida with a degree in materials science and engineering, Jackson finally decided to see if she could have the same success on ice that she did on a roller rink. She followed in the footsteps of fellow Ocala natives and Hildebrand pupils Brittany Bowe and Joey Mantia, who had already made that transition and were beginning to find their footing.

    Jackson’s story went mainstream in early 2022 after she nearly blew her chance to qualify for the Beijing Olympics. She slipped while racing the 500 at the U.S. Olympic Trials and could only salvage third place in a race she had been heavily favored to win.

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    Only the top two skaters qualified for the Olympics, but Bowe selflessly gave up her own spot in the 500 so her close friend could replace her and USA Speedskating could send its strongest possible team. Jackson then validated Bowe’s sacrifice a month later by surging to a historic Olympic gold.

    Jackson remained one of the top women’s speedskating sprinters in the world after the Beijing Games, but injuries have sent her tumbling down the standings this season. A hamstring injury forced her to withdraw from a World Cup event in December and skate cautiously for the next few weeks. She also endures lingering pain from herniated discs in her lower back.

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    When Jackson arrived in Milan, she described herself as “feeling great” and “ready to go.”

    “My hamstring is as good as it’s been,” she said. “My back is same old, but I’ve gotten used to dealing with it.”

    The first test was the women’s 1,000, a race that Jackson began contesting only during this Olympic cycle. She finished off the medal stand in sixth place, her second-best result at that distance against global competition.

    Then on Sunday came the 500, Jackson’s signature race, the one where a podium finish was far more realistic.

    “I will need to have a really clean race,” Jackson said earlier this week.

    It wasn’t quite clean enough.

  • Padres’ Manny Machado praises Dodgers for spending big on free agents: ‘I f***ing love it’

    Manny Machado doesn’t have a problem with the Los Angeles Dodgers’ spending.

    While many Major League Baseball team owners wrung their hands and protested over the payroll disparity throughout the sport after the reigning World Series champions signed free agent outfielder Kyle Tucker to a mega-millions contract, Machado welcomed the aggressive spending by the San Diego Padres’ National League West rival.

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    The Padres’ star third baseman added some profanity to emphasize his point while speaking to reporters on Sunday.

    “I f***king love it,” Machado said, via ESPN’s Jesse Rogers. “Every team should be doing it. That sh** is f***ing great for the game.”

    As USA Today’s Bob Nightengale points out, Machado is staunchly opposed to MLB implementing a salary cap and limiting earning potential for the players.

    However, the debate over a cap ignited further after the Dodgers inked Tucker, considered the top free agent on the offseason market, to a four-year, $240 million deal and outbid rival suitors including the New York Mets and Toronto Blue Jays.

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    Kyle Tucker deal with Dodgers ignited MLB salary cap debate

    A shorter-term agreement paying Tucker an average annual salary of $60 million was particularly grating to many in the sport. One team owner told The Athletic that it was “a 100% certainty” that clubs would push for a salary cap in the next collective-bargaining agreement.

    “These guys are going to go for a cap no matter what it takes,” a source familiar with conversation among MLB owners said to The Athletic’s Evan Drellich.

    Following consecutive World Series titles, the Dodgers go into the 2026 season with a projected payroll of $395 million, according to FanGraphs. That will cost the team at least an estimated extra $100 million in luxury tax for going over the $244 million threshold.

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    Among MLB teams, the Mets are second in team payroll but nearly $30 million behind the Dodgers. The only other club to exceed a projected $300 million is the New York Yankees.

    The Padres rank ninth with an estimated $219 million payroll, so Machado’s remarks may have been a prompt for his team’s owners to write bigger checks to compete with the Dodgers in the NL West. However, the Padres will likely go up for sale soon and that might curb any additional spending. San Diego just added outfielder Nick Castellanos, along with pitchers Griffin Canning and German Marquez. But those players didn’t require multiyear or large-money contracts.

    Machado did give Padres general manager A.J. Preller credit for getting a player like Castellanos at a below-market price while the Philadelphia Phillies pay the majority of his $20 million. San Diego is only obligated to pay Castellanos the major-league minimum of $780,000.

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    “You get a $20 million player for pennies on the dollar, I think that kind of deserves an extension for A.J.,” Machado said, via The Athletic’s Dennis Lin.

  • Winter Olympics 2026: Japan’s Ikuma Horishima crosses finish line backward — unintentionally — in chaotic race en route to silver

    Dual moguls are chaos.

    Japan’s Ikuma Horishima botched his landing on his last jump in the men’s round of 16 Sunday at the Milan Cortina Olympics, then bounced back up to ski backward over the finish line. And he still won.

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    Despite the mishap, Horishima still crossed the finish line first ahead of USA’s Nick Page and eventually advanced to the event’s gold-medal race. There he finished behind Canada’s Mikaël Kingsbury to win silver in the first-ever men’s dual moguls competition at the Winter Olympics. Australia’s Matt Graham won the consolation final to secure bronze.

    Here’s how it happened. Horishima, skiing on the right in the video below, started to lose control of his run after the first of two jumps. But he didn’t miss a gate and recovered in time to hit the ramp for his second jump.

    He crash landed on the jump, but maintained his downhill momentum and popped back up skiing backward before the finish line, where he crossed just ahead of Page.

    It turned out that he didn’t need to cross first as Page missed a gate during his own rocky run and was disqualified. As long as Horishima completed a legal run, he would be declared the winner.

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    It added up to the second wild dual moguls finish in as many days.

    One of the women’s semifinals on Saturday saw similar chaos. In that race, USA’s Jaelin Kauf crashed early, and appeared to be done. But her competitor, France’s Perrine Laffont, missed one of her gates and was disqualified. Kauf got back up from her crash and eventually crossed the finish line to secure the win due to Laffont’s disqualification.

    Like Horishima on Sunday, Kauf rode her good fortune to a silver medal, her second of the Games and third in Olympic competition.

  • NBA All-Star Weekend 2026: How to watch, full events schedule, where to stream free and more

    It’s time for NBA All-Star Weekend! The midseason exhibition tournament will be held this Sunday, Feb. 15, at Intuit Dome in Inglewood, Calif. But before the big All-Star Championship Game, there’s a star-studded celebrity game, the slam dunk contest and more fun NBA events for fans to enjoy. This year’s All-Star game also features a new format, with three teams competing (USA Stars, USA Stripes, and World) in a round-robin style. Yahoo Sports broke down the new NBA All-Star competition format for you.

    Most of the action will air across NBC and Peacock. Here’s the full NBA All-Star Weekend schedule and everything you need to know to watch the game.

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    How to watch the 2026 NBA All-Star Weekend

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    Dates: Feb. 13-15

    Location: Intuit Dome, Inglewood, Calif.

    TV channel: NBC, ESPN

    Streaming: Peacock

    When is the 2026 NBA All-Star game?

    The 2026 NBA All-Star Championship Game will be held this Sunday, Feb. 15. Leading up to the All-Star Game, NBA All-Star Weekend has a packed slate of events, including the 3-point and slam dunk contests. NBA All-Star Weekend events run from Friday, Feb. 13 – Sunday, Feb. 15.

    NBA All-Star Weekend schedule:

    Friday, Feb. 13

    • Ruffles NBA All-Star Celebrity Game: 7 p.m. ET (ESPN)

    • Rising Stars Game 1 – Team Melo vs. Team Austin: 9 p.m. ET (Peacock)

    • Rising Stars Game 2 – Team Vince vs. Team T-Mac: 9:55 p.m. ET (Peacock)

    • Castrol Rising Stars Championship: 10:35 p.m. ET (Peacock)

    • NBA HBCU Classic (Hampton vs. North Carolina A&T): 11 p.m. ET (Peacock)

    Saturday, Feb. 14

    • NBA All-Star Media Day presented by AT&T: 1:30 p.m. ET (NBA App, NBA TV)

    • Commissioner Adam Silver News Conference: 4 p.m. ET (NBA App, NBA TV)

    • NBA All-Star Saturday Night: 5 p.m. ET (NBC, Peacock)

    • State Farm 3-Point Contest: 5 p.m. ET (NBC, Peacock)

    • Kia Shooting Stars: 5 p.m. ET (NBC, Peacock)

    • AT&T Slam Dunk Contest: 5 p.m. ET (NBC, Peacock)

    Sunday, Feb. 15

    • NBA G League Next Up Game: 2:30 p.m. ET (NBA App)

    • All-Star Game 1 – Stars vs. World: 5 p.m. ET (NBC, Peacock)

    • All-Star Game 2 – Stripes vs. Game 1 Winner: 5:55 p.m. ET (NBC, Peacock)

    • All-Star Game 3 – Stripes vs. Game 1 Loser: 6:25 p.m. ET (NBC, Peacock)

    • All-Star Championship: 7:10 p.m. ET (NBC, Peacock)

    What channel is the NBA All-Star game on?

    The Majority of NBA All-Star Weekend events will air on NBC and stream live on Peacock. The exceptions to that rule are the NBA All-Star Celebrity Game, which will air on ESPN, and the media events, which will air on NBA TV and stream in the NBA App.

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    How to watch the NBA All-Star game without cable

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    Parks and Recreation and The Office, every Bravo show and much more.

    For $17 monthly you can upgrade to an ad-free subscription which includes live access to your local NBC affiliate (not just during designated sports and events) and the ability to download select titles to watch offline.

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  • 2026 Daytona 500: How to watch, race day schedule, updated start time, where to stream free and more

    Happy Daytona Speedweek! It’s nearly time for the 2026 Daytona 500. This week, Nascar’s fastest drivers are headed down to Daytona Beach, Fla. to race 500 miles around the iconic oval track at Daytona International Speedway. The full entry list won’t be determined until after Thursday’s Duel races, with eight contenders still vying for the four remaining Daytona 500 spots. Qualifiers and practices are airing across FS1 and the CW App. The main event will air on Fox. Here’s what you need to know about tuning into the Daytona 500.

    How to watch the Daytona 500 without cable

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    Date: Sunday, Feb. 15

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    Time: 1:30 p.m. ET/10:30 a.m. PT

    Location: Daytona International Speedway

    TV channel: Fox, FS1

    Streaming: DirecTV, Fox One, CW App and more

    When is the 2026 Daytona 500?

    The Daytona 500 will take place on Sunday, Feb. 15, 2026. Daytona Speedweeks events run from Feb. 11-15.

    Daytona 500 start time:

    The 2026 Daytona 500 will officially start at 1:30 p.m. ET/10:30 a.m. PT. It was moved up an hour due to incoming storms.

    What TV channel is the Daytona 500 on?

    The Daytona 500 Cup Series race will air on Fox. Select coverage of qualifiers and practices will air across FS1 and the CW App.

    How to watch the Daytona 500 without cable

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    How many miles is the Daytona 500?

    The Daytona 500 is a 500-mile-long race. The racecourse is 200 laps around the 2.5-mile oval track at Daytona International Speedway.

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    2026 Daytona 500 odds

    Looking for odds for this year’s Daytona 500? Yahoo Sports has you covered.

    Daytona Speedweek schedule

    There are loads of events at the Daytona International Speedway leading up to Sunday’s Daytona 500 race. Here’s the schedule for everything happening at Daytona Speedweeks from Feb. 11-15.

    NASCAR Speedweeks at Daytona (All Times Eastern)

    Wednesday, February 11

    • 10 a.m. ET — Cup Series practice (FS1)

    • 8:15 p.m. ETDaytona 500 Qualifying
      One lap, all cars; top two spots set (FS1)

    Thursday, February 12

    • 5 p.m. ET — Truck Series practice (FS1)

    • 7 p.m. ETDuels at Daytona
      Two 60-lap / 150-mile races; set rest of 500 field (FS1)

    Friday, February 13

    • 3 p.m. ET — Truck Series qualifying (FS1)

    • 4:30 p.m. ET — O’Reilly Auto Parts Series practice (CW App)

    • 5:30 p.m. ET — Cup Series practice (FS1)

    • 7:30 p.m. ETFresh From Florida 250 — Truck Series
      100 laps / 250 miles (FS1)

    Saturday, February 14

    • 10 a.m. ET — O’Reilly Auto Parts Series qualifying (CW App)

    • 12 p.m. ETDaytona ARCA 200 — ARCA Menards Series
      80 laps / 200 miles (FOX)

    • 3 p.m. ET — Cup Series final practice (FS1)

    • 5 p.m. ETUnited Rentals 300 — O’Reilly Auto Parts Series
      120 laps / 300 miles (CW)

    Sunday, February 15

    • 1:30 p.m. ETDaytona 500 — Cup Series
      200 laps / 500 miles (Fox)

    2026 Daytona 500 field

    Position/Driver/Car number/Team

    No. 1/Kyle Busch/8/Richard Childress Racing

    No. 2/Chase Briscoe/19/Joe Gibbs Racing

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    No. 3/Joey Logano/22/Team Penske

    No. 4/Chase Elliott/9/Hendrick Motorsports

    No. 5/Ryan Blaney/12/Team Penske

    No. 6/Carson Hocevar/77/Spire Motorsports

    No. 7/Austin Dillon/3/Richard Childress Racing

    No. 8/Kyle Larson/5/Hendrick Motorsports

    No. 9/Brad Keselowski/6/RFK Racing

    No. 10/Michael McDowell/71/Spire Motorsports

    No. 11/John Hunter Nemechek/42/Legacy Motor Club

    No. 12/Christopher Bell/20/Joe Gibbs Racing

    No. 13/Shane van Gisbergen/97/Trackhouse Racing

    No. 14/Josh Berry/21/Wood Brothers Racing

    No. 15/Daniel Suarez/7/Spire Motorsports

    No. 16/Ricky Stenhouse Jr./47/Hyak Motorsports

    No. 17/Casey Mears/66/Garage 66

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    No. 18/Tod Gilliland/34/Front Row Motorsports

    No. 19/Ryan Preece/60/RFK Racing

    No. 20/Ty Gibbs/54/Joe Gibbs Racing

    No. 21/Alex Bowman/48/Hendrick Motorsports

    No. 22/Denny Hamlin/11/Joe Gibbs Racing

    No. 23/Cole Custer/41/Haas Factory Team

    No. 24/Erik Jones/43/Legacy Motor Club

    No. 25/Noah Gragson/4/Front Row Motorsports

    No. 26/Tyler Reddick/45/23XI Racing

    No. 27/Bubba Wallace/23/23XI Racing

    No. 28/Riley Herbst/35/23XI Racing

    No. 29/Corey Heim/67/23XI Racing

    No. 30/Zane Smith/38/Front Row Motorsports

    No. 31/Jimmie Johnson/84/Legacy Motor Club

    No. 32/Connor Zilisch/88/Trackhouse Racing

    No. 33/Cody Ware/51/Rick Ware Racing

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    No. 34/Ty Dillon/10/Kaulig Racing

    No. 35/AJ Allmendinger/16/Kaulig Racing

    No. 36./Austin Cindric/2/Team Penske

    No. 37/Ross Chastain/1/Trackhouse Racing

    No. 38/BJ McLeod/78/Live Fast Motorsports

    No. 39/William Byron/24/Hendrick Motorsports

    No. 40/Justin Allgaier/40/JR Motorsports

    No. 41/Chris Buescher/17/RFK Racing

  • Tabitha Peterson leads U.S. women’s curling team to 6-5 comeback win over China, stealing points in final 2 ends

    The United States women’s curling team still has three matches remaining in the round-robin session of the 2026 Winter Olympics. However, Team USA may not earn a more thrilling win than its comeback victory over China on Sunday.

    The team of Tabitha Peterson, Cory Thiesse, Tara Peterson and Taylor Anderson-Heide fell behind 4-1 after the fifth end. But the rally began with a 2-0 win in the fifth, cutting the match deficit to 4-3. The U.S. comeback appeared to be stanched with China expanding its lead to 5-3 heading into the seventh end. Yet that just set up an impressive comeback during the next three ends.

    “We just had to stick with it,” said Tara Peterson, the Team USA skip (via NBC Sports). “We had a good team meeting at the fifth end break of what we needed to do to flip it around for us for the second half, and we got more energy and our draw speed got a little bit better, and we kind of kept the pressure on them to make some tough shots.”

    With that added energy, Team USA stole the point in the ninth and 10th ends for an improbable win. And the Americans pulled off the victory with a stirring comeback, creating one of the most spectacular victories in U.S. curling memory

    Still down 5-4 going into the ninth end, Rui Wang missed on her attempt to knock a U.S. stone out of the button. That allowed Team USA to steal the point and tie the match at 5-5 going into the 10th end. From there, the best was truly saved for last.

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    China had the hammer going into the final end and built a virtual fortress of stones around the button. But Tabitha Peterson somehow managed to maneuver through the traffic with a deft touch to make it difficult for Wang to thread the proverbial needle with her next throw.

    Unfortunately for China, Wang didn’t get enough of a push, leaving her stone at the back of the house. That opened an opportunity for Peterson to lay her stone closest to the center, stealing the point and a win for the U.S.

    “I think it says a lot about our team. We’re not going to give up,” Peterson said after the match, via Olympics.com. “Just keep the game tight, and anything can happen, even if it’s a steal in the last end.”

    After six sessions in round-robin play, the U.S. is second in the standings at 4-1. Only Sweden is ahead with a 5-0 record and Switzerland is right behind Team USA at 3-1. The Swiss face Great Britain on Monday at 3:05 p.m. ET. Meanwhile, the U.S. will face home country Italy earlier in the day at 1:05 p.m. ET.