Category: Sport

  • MLB 26-and-under power rankings, Nos. 20-16: Can Anthony Volpe, James Wood and Munetaka Murakami deliver on their potential?

    Yahoo Sports’ 26-and-under power rankings are a remix on the traditional farm system rankings that assess the strength of MLB organizations’ talent base among rookie-eligible and MiLB players. By evaluating all players in an organization entering their age-26 seasons or younger, this project aims to paint a more complete picture of each team’s young core. Our rankings value productive young major leaguers more heavily than prospects who have yet to prove it at the highest level, and most prospects included in teams’ evaluations have already reached the upper levels of the minors.

    To compile these rankings, each MLB organization was given a score in four categories:

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    • Young MLB hitters: scored 0-10; 26-and-under position players and rookie-eligible hitters projected to be on Opening Day rosters

    • Young MLB pitchers: scored 0-10; 26-and-under pitchers and rookie-eligible pitchers projected to be on Opening Day rosters

    • Prospect hitters: scored 0-5; prospect-eligible position players projected to reach MLB in the next 1-2 years

    • Prospect pitchers: scored 0-5; prospect-eligible pitchers projected to reach MLB in the next 1-2 years

    We’re counting down all 30 organizations’ 26-and-under talent bases from weakest to strongest, diving into five teams at a time. In addition to the scores for each team in each category, we’ll highlight the key players who fall into each bucket and contributed most to their organization’s place in the rankings. Below, we dig into Nos. 20-16.

    Read more: 26-and-under rankings Nos. 30-26 | Nos. 25-21

    20. Atlanta Braves (total score: 14/30) | 2025 rank: 7

    Young MLB hitters (6/10): C Drake Baldwin, OF Michael Harris II
    Young MLB pitchers (5/10): RHP Spencer Schwellenbach, RHP Hurston Waldrep, RHP AJ Smith-Shawver
    Prospect hitters (0/5): 1B/3B David McCabe, SS John Gil, SS Alex Lodise, OF Pat Clohisy
    Prospect pitchers (3/5): RHP Didier Fuentes, RHP J.R. Ritchie, RHP Owen Murphy, LHP Cam Caminiti, RHP Lucas Braun, RHP Ian Mejia

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    Few teams have tumbled further down our rankings over the past few seasons than the Braves, who have seen the Spencer Strider/Ronald Acuña Jr./Austin Riley core graduate from eligibility. What’s left is a much less certain future. The Braves have struggled to develop and promote minor-league reinforcements, particularly on the position-player front, which has hurt them in recent seasons.

    But it’s not all bleak. Drake Baldwin is the reigning NL Rookie of the Year, for Pete’s sake. The 24-year-old backstop was magnificent at the plate last season and offered more from a defensive perspective than some prognosticators expected. He’s probably never going to win a Gold Glove, but Baldwin absolutely rakes and should settle as one of the better catchers in baseball over the next decade. Sean Murphy’s injury and Atlanta’s decision to move on from longtime DH Marcell Ozuna should provide Baldwin ample playing time going forward.

    Michael Harris II is coming off one of the weirdest campaigns in recent memory. The fleet-footed outfielder was his typically excellent self defensively but battled through an all-time awful first half in 2025. His .559 OPS at the end of June was dead last among qualified hitters. He rebounded enough in the second half (.789 OPS) to finish the year with a respectable statline. Harris’ elite defensive chops mean he has more leeway to struggle at the plate, but he’s always going to be a streaky hitter due to his swing-happy approach. As a whole, that probably makes him more of a great complementary piece than a cornerstone.

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    In an earlier draft of these rankings, before the spring training injury bug came a’biting, we had the Braves slotted in a few spots higher. Then news broke that both Spencer Schwellenbach and Hurston Waldrep are to undergo surgery to remove loose bodies in their elbows. That procedure is not nearly as concerning as Tommy John, but it’s certainly not good news. And Schwellenbach’s issue comes on the heels of an elbow fracture that derailed the second half of his 2025 season. Both guys could still contribute in 2026, but we were inclined to round down based on their recent injuries.

    Down on the farm, Atlanta has a handful of arms primed to climb up the ladder. J.R. Ritchie, a 2022 first-rounder, is the likeliest to make a significant impact this season. He experienced a nice velocity bump last year and now projects as a solid No. 4 starter type. Didier Fuentes, still just 20 years old, was unfairly thrust into the rotation as an emergency option last season and got absolutely obliterated. More minor-league seasoning could turn him into a usable big-league starter. Cam Caminiti is much further away — he hasn’t pitched above Low-A — but the long-limbed lefty might have the highest ceiling of any arm in this system. It’s a strong group.

    That’s not the case on the position-player front, where the Braves’ hitting prospects were the only group in all of baseball that received a zero. Atlanta was one of three organizations, alongside Houston and Anaheim, that didn’t have a single position-player prospect on any of the major prospect sites’ top-100 lists. And unlike the Astros and Angels, the Braves didn’t even have a hitter honorably mentioned. It’s a bleak situation. Their second-rounder last year, Alex Lodise, has real juice but tons of chase. Diego Tornes, their top signing from the 2025 international class, is 17 years old. Pat Clohisy stole 99 bases last season but might not have the impact power necessary to be more than a fourth or fifth outfielder.

    Some of this drought is defensible. Atlanta’s run of contention has relegated it to the back of the draft’s first round for much of the past decade. The Braves have also used six straight first-round picks (2020-2024) on pitchers. And Baldwin (a third-rounder) turning into what he has turned into almost evens the equation. Still, the team’s issues with hitting development are striking, as are its failures in Latin America. — J.M.

    19. New York Yankees (total score: 15/30) | 2025 rank: 26

    Young MLB hitters (5/10): OF Jasson Domínguez, C Austin Wells, SS Anthony Volpe
    Young MLB pitchers (5/10): RHP Cam Schlittler, LHP Ryan Weathers, RHP Cade Winquest
    Prospect hitters (2/5): OF Spencer Jones, SS George Lombard Jr.
    Prospect pitchers (3/5): RHP Ben Hess, RHP Bryce Cunningham, RHP Carlos Lagrange, LHP Elmer Rodriguez, RHP Chase Hampton

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    All three of New York’s young big-league hitters had 2025 seasons to forget. Jasson Domínguez failed to capitalize on a batch of early-season playing time and eventually ceded his job to an ascending Trent Grisham. He’s likely to spend much of this year in Scranton or the Yankee Stadium dugout. Austin Wells regressed after a breakout 2024, finishing his campaign with a putrid .275 on-base percentage, the ninth-worst mark among players with 400 PAs. He still cranked 21 long balls and remains an elite pitch-framer/game-caller.

    Then there’s Anthony Volpe, the local kid, the prospect prince that was promised. Three years into his big-league career, the offensive impact he showcased in the minors has yet to emerge on a consistent basis. Most concerningly, Volpe’s defensive numbers backed up big-time in 2025. That’s mostly due to a batch of errors on routine plays and not necessarily a decline in his physical abilities, but it’s worrying nonetheless. Offseason surgery to repair a shoulder issue that reportedly dogged him for much of last season could help Volpe get back on track, but the gap between what he is and what he was supposed to be remains enormous. This might be his last year to prove that he’s the Yankees’ shortstop of the future.

    Cam Schlittler’s emergence was a major story of New York’s 2025 season, culminating in a historically dominant Game 3 shutout against Boston in the wild-card series, in which he sat 100 mph and punched out 12. His more forgettable outing against Toronto in the ALDS was a reminder that Schlittler, like many other arms, can be a bit too reliant on his high-octane fastball. When that heat is a bit frostier (95-97), Schlittler is hittable, particularly when he can’t find the zone. Whether he can maintain his velocity deeper into starts or find more consistent secondaries will determine whether he’s a midrotation piece or a frontline arm moving forward. Either way, this is a massive win for a seventh-rounder out of Northeastern.

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    As is often the case with Yankees prospects, George Lombard Jr. and Spencer Jones have gotten a ton of press relative to their small-market counterparts. Both are immensely talented but come with unavoidable concerns. For Lombard, it’s all about his ability to hit for average. Few talent evaluators doubt the raw juice or his defensive skills at short, but he hit just .215 last year across 469 Double-A plate appearances. Even if it clicks for him, he’s going to be a Trevor Story, Willy Adames, Cubs-era Dansby Swanson type of shortstop. If it doesn’t click, he’ll look like a less extreme version of Gabriel Arias.

    Speaking of extreme, let’s pivot to Jones, one of the most polarizing hitters of the decade. The 24-year-old clocked 35 homers and posted a .274 average across 116 minor-league games last season. He also struck out at a preposterous 35.4% clip. It is very, very difficult to be an impact big leaguer with that much swing-and-miss, especially if you aren’t a sensational defender. Jones isn’t a butcher in center, but he’s not Pete Crow-Armstrong. The range of outcomes here is cavernous. Jones could be a lefty Aaron Judge clone. Or he could also be in the KBO in two years. It all depends on how he fares against big-league pitching. Evaluators are almost universally skeptical, but we can’t wait to see how it goes.

    As always, the Yankees have a handful of pop-up arms down on the farm. Few organizations are consistently better at minor-league pitching development than the Yanks, who frequently flip their pitching prospect depth at the deadline to supplement the big-league club. Elmer Rodriguez was drafted out of a Puerto Rican high school by Boston in the fourth round in 2021 and dealt to the Yankees for Carlos Narváez last winter. He has a nasty, bowling ball sinker that pushed him to a 54.5% ground-ball rate last year (the seventh-highest mark among minor leaguers with at least 100 innings). He probably won’t win any Cy Youngs, but Rodriguez should pitch in the bigs for a long time.

    Carlos Lagrange is a different story. The 22-year-old is a mountain of a man, officially listed at 6-foot-7, 248 pounds. His fastball regularly touches triple digits, and his slider is a true bat-misser. He also doesn’t always know where the ball is going. That’s why, despite having thrown 120 innings last year, Lagrange is probably a reliever when it’s all done and dusted. If it plays out that way, he could become one of the best back-end arms in the league, in a Dellin Betances mold. His stuff is that good. There’s a non-zero chance he contributes to the Yankees’ bullpen this season. — J.M.

    Can Munetaka Murakami, James Wood and Anthony Volpe take steps forward and deliver on their potential in 2026?

    Can Munetaka Murakami, James Wood and Anthony Volpe take steps forward and deliver on their potential in 2026?

    (Taylor Wilhelm/Yahoo Sports)

    18. Chicago White Sox (total score: 15/30) | 2025 rank: 28

    Young MLB hitters (6/10): SS Colson Montgomery, INF Chase Meidroth, C Kyle Teel, INF Miguel Vargas, 1B Munetaka Murakami, C Edgar Quero, UTIL Luisangel Acuña, UTIL Brooks Baldwin, INF Lenyn Sosa, OF Everson Pereira, INF Curtis Mead
    Young MLB pitchers (3/10): RHP Shane Smith, RHP Sean Burke, RHP Jonathan Cannon, RHP Grant Taylor, RHP Mike Vasil, RHP Wikelman González, RHP Alexander Alberto, RHP Jedixson Paez
    Prospect hitters (2/5): OF Braden Montgomery, 2B Sam Antonacci, INF Caleb Bonemer, INF William Bergolla Jr.
    Prospect pitchers (4/5): LHP Hagen Smith, LHP Noah Schultz, RHP David Sandlin, RHP Tanner McDougal, LHP Christian Oppor

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    Few teams, if any, can match the White Sox in terms of the sheer quantity of 26-and-under players expected to contribute at the major-league level in 2026, a predictable product of Chicago’s rebuild. It’s rare for a team coming off 102 losses to be burgeoning with hope and anticipation for the season ahead, but Chicago has assembled several promising building blocks and is now far enough removed from the catastrophe that was 2024 that vibes on the South Side are surprisingly good. While there’s still ample work to be done (and money to be spent) before this team will be considered a viable contender, the White Sox can no longer be shrugged off as years away from relevance.

    A position-player group bereft of talent not long ago has experienced an infusion of upside via all three avenues of acquisition: the draft and development of a potential homegrown star in Colson Montgomery, the hefty Garrett Crochet trade return including Kyle Teel, Chase Meidroth and Braden Montgomery, and the shocking free-agent addition of Munetaka Murakami. Let’s start with the franchise shortstop Montgomery, whose climb to the majors was a slow burn but whose arrival was well worth the wait. His power has long been his calling card, and that was immediately on display, with 21 home runs in 71 games as a rookie, but it was Montgomery’s huge strides with the glove — he rated as a plus defender at shortstop after years of talent evaluators pegging him as a soon-to-be third baseman — that amplified his star potential. The strikeouts might always be an issue, but shortstops with his kind of pop don’t grow on trees.

    Teel and Edgar Quero (also acquired via trade) project as above-average bats for their position, but both catchers will need to improve as defenders for the White Sox to feel comfortable with them as the no-doubt backstop tandem of the future. Meidroth’s elite contact skills and defensive versatility make him one of several useful role players (Brooks Baldwin, Luisangel Acuña, eventually Sam Antonacci) for manager Will Venable to deploy. Miguel Vargas and Lenyn Sosa have notably more offensive upside than the aforementioned role players, but their defensive deficiencies could squeeze them off the roster soon unless they really start to rake.

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    Then there’s Murakami, arriving from Japan with a legendary NPB résumé and enormous questions about how his skill set will translate against MLB arms. That skepticism surrounding Murakami makes his value within this project far different than, say, that of Yoshinobu Yamamoto, whose proven ace status significantly boosted the Dodgers’ young MLB pitchers score the past two years. That said, Murakami’s upside is unrivaled in this org outside of Montgomery, so his presence still bolstered Chicago’s case for a strong score in the young MLB hitters category.

    While the bats are in a much better place compared to a year ago, progress on the mound was more uneven for Chicago in 2025. Rule 5 pick turned All-Star Shane Smith was an undeniable win for the front office and coaching staff, but he still projects more as a midrotation or back-end arm than a frontline force; the same can be said about Jonathan Cannon and Sean Burke. Grant Taylor can be an impact reliever if he can stay healthy, but that has proven to be quite a big if.

    There’s enviable depth at the upper levels of Chicago’s system, but the most prominent prospect arms turned in a mixed bag of results last season. It seemed likely that at least one of Hagen Smith or Noah Schultz would debut for Chicago in 2025, but Smith’s command struggles and Schultz’s recurring injury interruptions determined otherwise. Getting those two talented southpaws back on track is pivotal for Chicago’s long-term outlook on the mound. On a more positive note, the less-heralded and later-drafted duo of Tanner McDougal (fifth round, 2021) and Christian Oppor (fifth round, 2023) turned in terrific campaigns and have put themselves on the prospect radar. — J.S.

    17. Washington Nationals (total score: 15/30) | 2025 rank: 10

    Young MLB hitters (7/10): OF James Wood, SS CJ Abrams, OF Daylen Lile, OF Dylan Crews, INF Luis García Jr., 3B Brady House, INF Nasim Nuñez, INF José Tena, CF Jacob Young, OF Robert Hassell III
    Young MLB pitchers (2/10): RHP Brad Lord, RHP Cole Henry, LHP DJ Herz, LHP Mitchell Parker
    Prospect hitters (3/5): C Harry Ford, 1B Yohandy Morales, SS Seaver King, OF Christian Franklin, OF Andrew Pinckney, SS Eli Willits, INF Gavin Fien, 1B Abimelec Ortiz
    Prospect pitchers (3/5): RHP Jarlin Susana, RHP Travis Sykora, RHP Luis Perales, LHP Alex Clemmey, LHP Jackson Kent

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    It’s a time of substantial change in the nation’s capital, with a new leadership group helmed by 36-year-old president of baseball operations Paul Toboni taking the reins in October. The forward-thinking exec has already begun the long process of modernizing this organization’s processes. That bodes well for the long run, even if this turns out to be a rough year at the big-league level.

    Even if the 2026 Nats have no chance to win the World Series, the club can still take meaningful steps forward. That starts and ends with this core of young hitters. James Wood earned an All-Star nod in 2025 but looked exhausted throughout a statistically poor second half. A player this tall and long-limbed is always going to run a high K rate, but his 32.1% mark from 2025 needs to tick down if he’s going to evolve into an MVP candidate.

    Trade rumors have swirled around CJ Abrams all winter, but he looks primed to begin the year in D.C. It’ll be interesting to see how he fares with a new, upgraded coaching staff. Abrams hasn’t quite reached his offensive ceiling and remains a very flawed defensive player. Still, there aren’t many 25-year-old shortstops who can hit at an above-average clip. Daylen Lile (.845 OPS) was one of the few pleasant surprises of Washington’s abysmal 2025. His bat looks legit, but his defensive numbers were dreadful. Improvement on that front could make him a real difference-maker.

    Dylan Crews, the No. 2 pick in the 2023 draft behind Paul Skenes, has had a start-and-stop first few years to his MLB career, mostly due to injuries. The talent hasn’t gone anywhere, though, and we think Crews will have a breakout 2026. The rest of this impressively deep group has more warts, as we have big questions about Brady House’s hit tool, Robert Hassell III’s power and Luis García Jr.’s glove.

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    A total dearth of young MLB pitching is part of why most prognosticators have the Nats pegged for the NL East cellar. Mitchell Parker was the second-worst qualified starter by ERA last season. Brad Lord could develop into a back-end rotation piece but needs to upgrade his secondaries. Cole Henry will start the year as Washington’s closer but is probably more of a seventh- or eighth-inning arm on a contender.

    This farm system has taken a big step forward over the past 12 months, thanks to a strong 2025 draft and a handful of big-leaguer-for-prospect trades. Harry Ford, acquired this winter for reliever Jose Ferrer, might finish this season as Washington’s primary catcher. He’s tracking like a capable every-day option, with a patience-over-power profile. Eli Willits was the No. 1 overall pick last summer, but he just turned 18 and, despite his immense promise, is years away from big-league impact. The same is true for Gavin Fien, a 2025 first-rounder acquired in the MacKenzie Gore deal.

    Jarlin Susana might have the highest ceiling of any pitcher in the minor leagues, with a triple-digit heater and a soul-snatching slider. He’ll miss the first few months due to an injury and might end up in the bullpen. Travis Sykora, also injured, is built like an oak tree. He was tracking like a potential No. 2 starter before he hit the shelf.

    We believe in this new leadership group and some of the interesting player development hires the Nationals have made. There’s a chance this system, bolstered by another big draft and maybe an Abrams trade, looks even more stacked a year from now. — J.M.

    16. Chicago Cubs (total score: 15/30) | 2025 rank: 17

    Young MLB hitters (6/10): OF Pete Crow-Armstrong, INF/OF Matt Shaw, C/DH Moisés Ballesteros
    Young MLB pitchers (5/10): RHP Cade Horton, RHP Daniel Palencia
    Prospect hitters (2/5): OF Kevin Alcántara, 1B Jonathon Long, 3B Pedro Ramirez, 2B James Triantos, INF Jefferson Rojas, OF Ethan Conrad
    Prospect pitchers (2/5): RHP Jaxon Wiggins, RHP Brandon Birdsell

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    Fresh off one of the more hot-and-cold offensive seasons in recent memory — 27 homers and 29 steals with a .868 OPS through the end of July; just four homers and six steals with a .533 OPS over the final two months — Pete Crow-Armstrong is a difficult player to forecast. Last year was an exaggerated manifestation of his immense raw talent being undermined by his swing-at-everything approach. PCA’s game-changing defense in center field and havoc wreaked on the basepaths afford him multiple ways to make the Cubs a better ballclub no matter what he’s doing at the plate. But for the soon-to-be 24-year-old to become more valuable than volatile, he’ll need to dial in a more dependable offensive game plan.

    Matt Shaw finished his rookie year strong at the plate but is transitioning to a superutility role in the wake of Alex Bregman’s arrival at the hot corner. Can manager Craig Counsell find Shaw enough at-bats for him to remain a key cog or will he ultimately become a trade chip sent to flourish elsewhere? Moisés Ballesteros’ bat is even more promising than Shaw’s, but his defensive polish as a backstop lags far behind, which could limit him to DH duty in the short term, capping his overall value. On the farm, Kevin Alcántara’s physical tools continue to tantalize, but his production has yet to demand at-bats in the majors. Conversely, all Jonathon Long has done in the minors is rake, including a full season of mashing at Triple-A in 2025, but his corner-only glove makes his path to playing time in Chicago rather narrow.

    It’s hard to put too much stock into any reliever because of their inherent volatility, but Daniel Palencia finally translating his elite velocity into reliable high-leverage results was an encouraging development last season; now let’s see if he can do it again. Cade Horton’s 2.67 ERA across 118 innings earned him a narrow runner-up finish to Drake Baldwin in the NL Rookie of the Year race. The run-prevention speaks for itself, but the shape of Horton’s effectiveness, featuring a sharp decrease in strikeout rate from what he demonstrated in college and the minors, was an odd quirk of his introduction to the majors and is worth monitoring entering Year 2. Horton’s season also ended on a sour note, with a rib fracture that rendered him unavailable for October. A healthy Horton should be a fixture in Chicago’s rotation for years to come, but his ability to find more swing-and-miss could determine whether we underrated him in this exercise or properly assessed him as more of a midrotation starter than a frontline one.

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    The upside of hard-throwing and near-ready right-hander Jaxon Wiggins helps Chicago avoid an especially low score in the prospect pitching category, but beyond him, there’s a severe lack of impressive arms in this system. Wiggins dominated High-A and Double-A hitters last summer before a brief taste of Triple-A in September. Chicago’s rotation looks set with veterans for now, but Wiggins could be a factor later in 2026 — if injuries don’t necessitate his arrival even sooner. — J.S.

  • Winter Olympics 2026: Corinne Stoddard proves herself right, wins speedskating bronze

    MILAN — The best way to redeem a terrible Olympics? Win a medal on the way out the door.

    Team USA’s Corinne Stoddard claimed a short track speedskating bronze medal in the women’s 1,500 meters with a time of 2:32.578 in a stellar finals performance Friday at the Milano Ice Skating Arena. The medal marked an end to what had been an extremely frustrating Olympics for Stoddard, who had struggled in her individual events and failed to come close to a medal at all in any event, individual or relay.

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    South Korea’s Kim Gilli (2:32.076) and Choi Minjeong (2:32.450) took gold and silver, respectively.

    Stoddard led for almost the entire race, only surrendering the lead to Kim and Choi in the race’s final laps. Stoddard managed to hold off China’s Jingru Yang and Italy’s Arianna Fontana as she came to the line to claim her first Olympic medal. The difference between a bronze medal and a finish off the podium: 0.135 seconds.

    “I led more than I would have liked,” Stoddard said. “I knew I probably couldn’t win with how much I had led, but I knew I could stay on the podium, so I just tried to defend my spot and stay on the podium.”

    The race was not unlike a NASCAR race or a Tour de France, where the leader is in the worst position to win late because they’ve been carving the air for the following pack. But fortunately for her medal chances, Stoddard was finally able to keep from falling back in the pack.

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    “I think the pressure of the Olympics was just getting to me, and the fear of not going the way I know how to,” Stoddard said after her race. “But I knew going into this Olympics I had a chance to win multiple medals … So today was just to prove to myself that I can skate under a lot of pressure.”

    A two-time Olympian, Stoddard’s best finish prior to this race was seventh place in the 1,000m in Beijing in 2022. She also owns a world championship silver medal in the 3,000m relay and world championship bronzes in 1,500m and mixed team relay.

    Stoddard had struggled in the Milan Cortina Olympics prior to the 1,500m. She finished eighth in both the 3,000m relay and the mixed team relay. In her individual events, she finished 24th in the 1,000m and 31st in the 500m. She suffered multiple falls and, she said Friday, substantial online abuse as a result.

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    But an Instagram post she made earlier this week gained approving comments from figures as diverse as Snoop Dogg, Team USA speedskater Brittney Bowe, and speedskating legend Apolo Ohno:

    “I feel like every race before this one, I was trying way too hard, going 110% instead of 95%,” she said, “and that just inevitably makes you crash, makes you slip, makes you just not skate like yourself.”

    Just in the nick of time — on the final race of the slate — she found her groove.

    “That’s a great way to end such a terrible Olympics and also confidence going into four years from now,” she said. “When I get to France, I know I can do this.”

  • Milan Cortina: What to watch today in the Winter Olympics — Speed skating race for medals; men’s hockey, women’s curling semifinals (2/20)

    The Winter Games have begun in Italy. From the rink to the slopes, a new generation of stars has emerged to chase gold. We’ll keep you connected to all of the thrilling moments and top stories as we track the medal race each day of the Games.

    The United States boosted its medal count to 27 at the 2026 Winter Olympics after Day 13’s slate of events. That includes gold medal wins by Alysa Liu in women’s figure skating and Team USA’s win over Canada in women’s ice hockey. Speed skating sensation Jordan Stolz also took silver in the 1,500 meters.

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    For Day 14, Team USA has gold in its sights in short track and long track speed skating events, while also playing for berths in gold medal finals in men’s ice hockey and women’s curling with semifinal matches.

    Here are the top four things to watch on Friday at the 2026 Milan Cortina Olympics:

    1. Team USA turns in dominant win vs. Slovakia

    The United States turned in their most impressive win thus far Friday, taking down Slovakia 6-2 in the semifinal to advance to the gold-medal game.

    The U.S. received two goals from Jack Hughes, with four other players chipping in scores of their own. While Slovakia tried to rally late, the deficit proved to be too large for them to truly make it a game in the third period.

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    As a result, Team USA will play in the gold-medal game for the first time since 2010. They’ll take on Canada in a rematch of that 2010 final, which Canada won.

    2. U.S. women’s falls to Switzerland in semifinals

    Beating Switzerland in consecutive matches proved too difficult for Team USA on Friday. A day after defeating Switzerland to advance to the semifinals, Team USA lost 7-4 to the Swiss team Friday.

    Switzerland played a strong defensive game, limiting Team USA to just one point in the ends in which they scored. Switzerland also controlled the hammer, forcing multiple scoreless ends to keep the final stone.

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    While the U.S. tried to make it tough in the 10th end, Switzerland executed on its hammer throw, picking up two points to seal the victory.

    With the loss, Team USA will play Canada for the bronze medal Saturday.

    3. Kristen Santos-Griswold chases gold in short track speed skating (2:15 p.m. ET)

    In the women’s 1,500 meters, American Kristen Santos-Griswold pursues her first gold medal in her second Winter Olympics. (She finished short of the podium in heartbreaking fashion at the 2022 Beijing Games.) Her final chance at a medal in Milan Cortina comes in what is arguably her best event.

    For the men’s 5,000 meters relay, home country Italy (which won bronze in Beijing) is one of the eight teams competing for a medal with Korea (silver in Beijing), the Netherlands and reigning gold medalist Canada in Final A. Final B is comprised of Belgium, Japan, China and Hungary.

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    4. Brittany Bowe falls short in final event

    Brittany Bowe took her final laps as an Olympic speed skater on Friday afternoon in Milan. She received an ovation from the heavily pro-Netherlands crowd at the speed-skating arena, though her head-to-head rival Antoinette Rijpma-de Jong received a louder one. Bowe sprinted off the starting line, and at the 300m mark was 0.69 seconds ahead of the leaders’ pace. That mark stayed at 0.46 seconds at 700m, and just 0.17 at 1100m. But she steadily began losing pace, and she crossed the line 0.55 seconds behind the lead time.

    She would go on to finish fourth in the event, leaving her off the podium. It marked the third time Bowe has finished fourth in an event at the 2026 Games.

    Olympics schedule for Friday, Feb. 20 (Day 14)

    Biathlon

    15 kilometer mass start

    • 8:15 a.m.: Men’s final (USA Network; airs on NBC at 12:15 p.m.)🏅

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    Bobsled

    Two-woman

    • 12 p.m.: Heats 1, 2 (Heat 1 airs live on NBC; Heats 1 and 2 air on USA Network at 4:15 p.m.)

    Curling

    Women’s

    • 8:05 a.m.: Semifinals (One semifinal will air on USA Network at 9 a.m. with the other airing at 8 p.m.)

    Men’s

    • 1:05 p.m.: Bronze-medal game (airs on USA Network at 5 p.m.)🏅

    Freestyle Skiing

    Ski cross

    • 4 a.m.: Women’s qualifying (USA Network)

    • 5:55 a.m.: Women’s final (USA Network coverage begins at 6 a.m.)🏅

    Halfpipe

    • 1:30 p.m.: Men’s final (NBC)🏅

    Hockey

    Men’s semifinals

    • 10:40 a.m.: Teams TBD (USA Network coverage begins at 11:50 a.m.)

    • 3:10 p.m.: Teams TBD (NBC)

    Short Track

    1500 meters relay

    • 2:15 p.m.: Men’s and women’s finals (USA Network) 🏅

    Speed Skating

    1500 meters

    • 10:30 a.m.: Women’s final (airs at 11 a.m. on USA Network and 1 p.m. on NBC)🏅

  • Winter Olympics 2026: Alex Ferreira’s long wait ends in Olympic gold — ‘I am greatness, and this is my moment’

    LIVIGNO, Italy — As he reached his late 20s in a sport where the window does not stay open very long, Alex Ferreira had a career epiphany.

    He had won a silver medal in his first Olympics, won World Cup and X Games titles, carved out a niche as a content creator as well as a reputation as one of the best halfpipe skiers ever. It wasn’t enough.

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    “I think people didn’t look at me as a champion,” he said. “People kind of looked over me. That’s how I felt. Maybe they didn’t, but that’s how I felt. I was sick of people not taking me professionally, so I started treating myself way more professionally.”

    After a disappointing bronze by his standards in Beijing four years ago, Ferreira stopped living like the stereotype of a freestyle skier and instead started treating himself like a stock broker. He traded late-night parties for an 8 p.m. curfew. He didn’t miss a day in the gym and began bringing his own food on the road. He reduced his life to skiing, family and close friends, all because he knew there was one thing missing from his résumé and probably only one more chance to get it.

    “I feel like I’m the best every single day when I put my shoes on,” he said. “But the gold medal, the Olympic gold medal, does solidify you in the (history) books.”

    Friday night, he finally got it.

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    With a technical and beautiful final run down the halfpipe — a trio of 1080s, a couple 1620s and an all-you-can-eat buffet of grabs — the 31-year old Ferreira reached the bottom of the halfpipe, whipped his right pole around like a lasso and celebrated as a score of 93.75 came in to put him in first place.

    It was the run Ferreira came here to do, and he nailed it. But there were still three more skiers still to go, and in this sport where it all comes down to the judges, there are never any guarantees.

    “It was a living nightmare,” Ferreira said. “I hate it. I hated every second of it.”

    But 19-year-old Estonian Henry Sildaru came up three quarters of a point short. American legend Nick Goepper, a three-time Olympic medalist in slopestyle, crashed on the rim of the pipe trying to land a massive final trick. And then finally, Canadian Brendan Mackay put down a terrific run that Ferreira was convinced would beat him — only to see the scoreboard flash Mackay in third place.

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    Just like that, he was the Olympic champion. Finally.

    “It’s way different,” he said. “There’s nothing like gold.”

    As they realized he had finally done it, Ferreira’s throng of supporters at least a dozen deep began to celebrate and sob. His friends locked arms and pointed in disbelief as he stepped onto the podium with the medal around his neck. His father Marcelo Ferreira, a former professional soccer player in his home country of Argentina, danced in the snow as they sang, “Ole, Ole, Ole.” They had all been on the journey together, convinced it would one day pay off.

    LIVIGNO, ITALY - FEBRUARY 20:  Alex Ferreira of Team United States celebrates winning the Men's Freeski Halfpipe Final on day fourteen of the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympic games at Livigno Snow Park on February 20, 2026 in Livigno, Italy. (Photo by Ian MacNicol/Getty Images)

    Alex Ferreira of Team United States celebrates winning the men’s freeski halfpipe. (Photo by Ian MacNicol/Getty Images)

    (Ian MacNicol via Getty Images)

    Suddenly, here it was — and it was better than any of them thought it would be.

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    “Oh my God, it’s indescribable,” Marcelo said. “Now he has the full cycle. This is the most beautiful closing of a career of a real champion.”

    Ferreira draped the American flag and moved toward a monitor, where he watched the reaction of his family at the moment he won gold. That’s when the tears started flowing.

    “He wanted to just f***ing go for it,” his sister, Lourdes, said. “Honestly, I think he was the least nervous he’s ever been because he knew what he was going for. He knew what he wanted.”

    Ferreira might dispute that last point. Because of the nerves he woke up with, he called everything that happened before the competition “the worst day of my life,” needing to down ibuprofen to get rid of a nasty headache.

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    But as he stood at the top of the halfpipe before each run, you could see him repeating something, convincing himself this would finally be the day.

    “I kept telling myself, ‘I am greatness, and this is my moment,’” he said. “I can feel it in my bone marrow.”

    Ferreira does not deny the pressure he felt to get this done, especially now that he’s in his 30s. In 2023-24, he won all seven events on the Dew Tour. A lot of people — including Ferreira himself — wondered if he peaked too early. Even his mother Colleen would joke with him that it was too bad the Olympics weren’t coming up right away.

    “It’s almost unheard of and not really what you want to have two or three years before an Olympics,” said Gus Kenworthy, a longtime competitor of Ferreira’s who represents Great Britain. “It’s the wrong time to peak. But he came out tonight and put it down. He’s got a super technical run and he executed it perfectly. I’m really, really  happy for him.”

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    There are a lot of ways the story could have been different Friday. Mackay was maybe one clean landing on his second run away from putting up a score that would have been impossible to beat. If Goepper had landed his final trick in his pursuit of becoming the first freeskier to medal in slopestyle and halfpipe, he probably wins the gold and Ferreira is contemplating whether to push that window open for another four years.

    “[Goepper]’s got huge balls — just absolutely unbelievable,” Ferreira said. “For him to go for it in that moment took serious guts. He’s a real man.”

    But maybe it all worked out exactly the way it should. After two Olympics of frustration, followed by mild depression, Ferreira put in the work to change his life and the trajectory of his career all to have one moment he couldn’t guarantee would ever come.

    It’s one thing to be considered the best who’s never won the biggest prize in your sport. It’s quite another to have one chance every four years to shed that label and have everything you wanted come true.

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    “It’s 100 times better than I ever thought it would be,” he said. “It’s the most beautiful moment I’ve ever experienced in my life. I’m so insanely grateful and just goes to show, never give up and always believe in yourself.”

  • Winter Olympics 2026: Team USA’s OT win over Canada was the most-watched women’s hockey game on record

    A record number of people tuned in to watch Team USA women’s hockey rally to stun Canada and claim a gold medal on Thursday in Milan.

    NBC announced that an average of 5.3 million people watched the United States’ 2-1 overtime win against Canada on both USA Network and Peacock, which made it the most-watched women’s hockey game on record. The game peaked at 7.7 million viewers in overtime.

    That was part of a massive overall Olympics day for NBC, too. The network announced that it averaged about 26.7 million viewers in total on Thursday, which made it the largest Winter Games weekday audience since 2014. It was also the 14th straight day that the Olympics audience surpassed 20 million viewers.

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    After rallying to force overtime with Hilary Knight’s late goal in the third period, Megan Keller waved past Canada’s Claire Thompson and snuck the puck between the legs of goaltender Ann-Renee Desbiens to officially give the United States the win.

    Knight is now the all-time leading scorer in U.S. women’s Olympic hockey history with that goal, the 15th of her career.

    “There was no way we were losing this game,” Knight said after the game. “That’s all. Simple as that. We had some awesome heavy hitters on the ice.

    “I knew we were going to get possession, so I just had to find a place in front of the net.”

    The United States men’s team will attempt to follow their lead in their gold medal match against Canada on Sunday. The men rolled past Slovakia 6-2 in the semifinals on Friday to reach the final for the first time since the 2010 Olympics.

  • Kansas coach Bill Self says Darryn Peterson must ‘finish’ games to ‘change narrative’ of willingness to play

    Amid star player Darryn Peterson facing criticism for missing games or leaving them early due to injuries or illness, Kansas men’s basketball coach Bill Self says the freshman guard must take initiative to change the national conversation about him.

    “There is a way to change the narrative. Play. Finish,” Self told reporters on Friday. “Now, if his body allows him to, fantastic. If it doesn’t allow him to, then they’ll say something again the next game.”

    “But that’s the way to get people to quit talking,” he added. “It’s not me saying, ‘It’s not fair.’ I don’t think that really keeps anybody from having an opinion on a national level, or on this level, or any level, to be quite candid.”

    Peterson, 19, has played in only 15 of the Jayhawks’ 26 games this season. But he has also left three of those games early, most recently Wednesday’s 81-69 win over Oklahoma State. Peterson has missed games due to hamstring, quad and ankle injuries and taken himself out because of flu-like symptoms and cramping.

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    That limited availability has led to questions about Peterson protecting himself for the 2026 NBA Draft, which could affect his prospects of being the No. 1 overall pick.

    Self says the speculation over why Peterson has missed games or finished them early is misguided, but acknowledges that such conjecture can’t be controlled.

    “He hasn’t finished games. The reasons why they say he hasn’t finished games is 100% false,” Self said. “So, at least in 70 to 80% of the reasons why, with what they’ve said that I’ve heard. I can’t say 100% of everything would be false, but that’s the narrative that’s being out there.”

    The Kansas coach asserted the speculation over Peterson’s mindset is “100% false,” then seemed to say, well, maybe it’s not entirely false. But that chatter will only be silenced if Peterson plays and continues to show the talent that makes many evaluators believe he will be the top player available in this summer’s NBA Draft.

    [Get more Jayhawks news: Kansas team feed]

    In his 15 games, Peterson has averaged 20 points per game while shooting 43% on 3-pointers. Despite leaving the matchup with Oklahoma State after playing 18 minutes, he still scored 23 points and shot 6-for-10 from long range. Peterson scored a season-high 32 points in a 104-100 overtime win over TCU. That’s the kind of production that has NBA teams coveting the opportunity to draft him.

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    Self supported Peterson, saying that he’s dedicated to basketball in addition to being a gifted scorer.

    I don’t know that we’ve had a guy that studies the game, has prepared himself for this moreso than what Darryn Peterson has,” Self said. “He loves ball. He can’t get enough ball… Nobody’s put more time in outside of practice working on their game on an individual than what he has over a lifetime.”

    With five games remaining in Kansas’ regular season, along with the Big 12 conference and NCAA tournaments approaching, Peterson has plenty of opportunity to alter whatever perceptions are being formed about him. Especially if that includes a national championship run. The Jayhawks face Cincinnati (14-12) on Saturday before big matchups versus No. 2 Houston (23-3) and No. 4 Arizona (24-2) next week.

  • Winter Olympics 2026 Day 14 recap: USA, Canada will play for men’s hockey gold; Alex Ferreira wins gold in freeski halfpipe

    The Milan Cortina Olympics delivered plenty of excitement for Team USA on Friday with a gold medal in men’s freeski halfpipe and another medal in women’s 1,500m short track speedskating.

    Also, Norway set a record for most golds won at a single Winter Olympics with Johannes Dale-Skjevdal winning the men’s 15km mass start biathlon. Norway has earned 17 gold medals at the 2026 Winter Games.

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    Here are five of the top stories from Day 14 of the Milan Cortina Olympics:

    U.S. men’s hockey rolls over Slovakia; Canada awaits in gold medal game

    The U.S. men’s hockey team will leave Milan with a medal after defeating Slovakia 6-2 in Friday’s semifinal matchup. That would be the Americans’ first medal in ice hockey since the 2010 Vancouver Games.

    But Team USA has eyes on gold — potentially its first since the 1980 “Miracle on Ice” team finished atop the podium — and its inevitable matchup with Canada is next in Sunday’s gold medal game. Team Canada had a tougher time advancing to the final, falling behind 2-0 to Finland before rallying for a 3-2 win.

    Get up early on Sunday! The U.S. and Canada drop the puck at 8:10 a.m. ET.

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    Women’s curling team loses in semifinal to Switzerland

    Beating Switzerland in consecutive matches proved too difficult for Team USA on Friday. A day after defeating Switzerland to advance to the semifinals, Team USA lost 7-4 to the Swiss team Friday.

    Switzerland played a strong defensive game, limiting Team USA to just one point in the ends in which it scored. Switzerland also controlled the hammer, forcing multiple scoreless ends to keep the final stone.

    While the U.S. tried to make it tough in the 10th end, Switzerland executed on its hammer throw, picking up two points to seal the victory.

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    With the loss, Team USA will play Canada for the bronze medal Saturday.

    Alex Ferreira wins gold in men’s halfpipe

    Competing in his third (and likely final) Winter Olympics, U.S. halfpipe skier Alex Ferreira earned an elusive gold medal in men’s halfpipe. His gold joins the silver he won in 2018 at PyeongChang and bronze at Beijing in 2022. Landing a 1620 spin in his final run (drawing a 93.75 score), Ferreira, 31, finished .75 points ahead of Estonia’s Henry Sildaru, just 19 years old. Canada’s Brendan Mackay took bronze.

    Team USA nearly had two spots on the podium, but Nick Goepper took a hard fall on the edge of the halfpipe attempting his final trick. Had he medaled, Goepper would have been the first male freeskier to win in both halfpipe and slopestyle. Before switching to halfpipe, he won silver at Beijing and PyeongChang, and earned bronze at Sochi in slopestyle.

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    Corinne Stoddard takes bronze in women’s 1,500m short track speedskating

    Team USA added to its speedskating medal count with Corinne Stoddard earning bronze in the women’s short track 1,500 meters competition. Stoddard’s bronze is the first medal the U.S. has won in short track since 2018.

    Competing in her second Winter Games, Stoddard improved upon her seventh-place finish at Beijing in the 1,500 meters with a 2:32.578 time in Milan. That beat out China’s Jingru Yang for bronze. South Korea took the top two spots on the podium with Kim Gilli (2:32.076) taking gold and Choi Minjeong (2:32.450) winning silver.

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    Brittany Bowe finishes fourth in final Olympic race

    Speedskater Brittany Bowe had one last opportunity to win a medal in Milan Cortina in what is likely her final Winter Olympics. Competing in the long track speedskating 1,500 meters event, Bowe, 37, got off to a strong start but could not maintain her pace and was eventually overtaken.

    Antoinette Rijpma-de Jong of the Netherlands won gold, followed by Norway’s Ragne Wiklund taking silver and Canada’s Valerie Maltais earning bronze. Bowe finished fourth, missing the podium for the third time at the 2026 Games. Nevertheless, she had a memorable Olympics, getting engaged to U.S. women’s hockey captain Hilary Knight before Team USA won gold on Thursday.

    Highlight of the day

    Tage Thompson gave the U.S. men’s ice hockey team a 2-0 lead, firing in a shot from a tough angle. Standing nearly parallel to the net, Thompson took a pass out wide from Jack Eichel and found open space between Slovakia goalie Stanislav Skorvanek’s right pad and the post.

    One more thing

    Lindsey Vonn is now the 2026 real-life version of 1970s TV character Jamie Sommers.

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    “I’m bionic for real now,” Vonn said on social media after sharing a scan of her broken left leg with the myriad plates and screws surgeons inserted to repair the injury. Vonn broke her leg in a crash during her downhill run on Feb. 8 and had to be airlifted from the slope. After undergoing several surgeries in Italy, she returned to the United States earlier this week.

    On the 1970s TV series “The Bionic Woman,” Lindsay Wagner portrayed a professional tennis player who suffered critical injuries during a skydiving accident and receives bionic implants from a government agency. She then becomes a part-time operative who carries out missions with her enhanced abilities.

    No word on whether or not Vonn will become a secret agent now that her competitive skiing days are likely over. But if that happened, would she tell us?

  • De’Andre Hunter to become third Kings starter to undergo season-ending surgery amid franchise-record losing streak

    Injuries and losses continue to pile up for the Sacramento Kings. Kings forward De’Andre Hunter will undergo season-ending eye surgery, according to NBA insiders Chris Haynes and Marc Stein.

    Hunter, 28, was acquired by the Kings earlier this month in a trade that sent Dennis Schröder and Keon Ellis to the Cleveland Cavaliers. He was injured in his second game as a King against the Los Angeles Clippers on Feb. 6. This season, he averaged 13.7 points, 4.1 rebounds, and 2 assists while shooting 41.5% from the field.

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    Hunter is the third Kings player to undergo season-ending surgery this week. Zach LaVine and Domantas Sabonis will also miss the rest of the season with their respective injuries. LaVine and Sabonis are the Kings’ highest-paid players and both rank among the team’s top three leading scorers.

    Sacramento will now rely on a mix of veterans and young players in the absence of its top stars. DeMar DeRozan and Russell Westbrook are both over 35 years old, while the return of Keegan Murray from a left ankle sprain and contributions from rookie Maxime Raynaud could provide some bright spots.

    The Kings’ shutdowns come amid the league’s efforts to combat tanking. The NBA has already fined the Indiana Pacers and the Utah Jazz for what commissioner Adam Silver described as “overt” tanking behavior.

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    Now on a franchise-worst 15-game losing streak, the 12-45 Kings haven’t logged a win since Jan. 16 against the Washington Wizards. They hold the worst record in the NBA and are on pace to miss the playoffs for the third consecutive year. Before their playoff appearance in the 2022–23 season, the Kings endured a 16-season playoff drought.

  • Scottie Scheffler just barely makes cut at the Genesis Invitational to keep alive streak dating back to 2022

    LOS ANGELES — Scottie Scheffler’s run is still alive, barely.

    Scheffler fought back all the way back from dead last on the leaderboard Friday morning to make the cut on the number at the midway point of the Genesis Invitational. After wrapping up his weather-delayed opening round in the morning, Scheffler posted a 3-under 68 in the second round to get to even par for the week.

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    It took a 7-footer that Scheffler just narrowly snuck in for par on the final hole to keep him safe. Scheffler let out a fist pump after it fell, and then slowly walked to high-five his caddie in what was perhaps the most emotion he showed all day.

    “I tried to make a mess of a pretty basic chip there on 18. Caught it a little thin and just dug in, so it was nice to be able to hole a putt and get another two cracks at the course,” he said. “I started the day not where I wanted to, but yeah, battled and it looks like I get another couple rounds to see what I can do.”

    That final putt was enough to get him through to the weekend, giving him his 68th consecutive made cut. That’s the longest active streak on the PGA Tour, something Scheffler’s been building since late 2022. It’s by far the biggest active streak on tour, after Xander Schauffele’s 72-event cut streak was snapped last month. Harris English is the next closest with 22 straight made cuts.

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    By comparison, Tiger Woods holds the all-time record with 142 consecutive cuts made from 1998-2005.

    Scheffler’s last missed cut was at the FedEx St. Jude Championship in August 2022. Since then, Scheffler has won 16 times on Tour, including at three major championships, and recorded 45 top-five finishes. He entered this week having finished no worse than T4 in his three starts this season, and he’s built up a ridiculous lead in the Official World Golf Rankings. Scheffler, who has been No. 1 since mid-2023, is nearly 300 points ahead of world No. 2 Rory McIlroy.

    While he’s been historically great in recent years, Scheffler has struggled so far this week at Riviera Country Club. He was 5-over for the day without a single birdie when play was suspended on Thursday night, which forced him to finish eight holes early on Friday morning. Scheffler got two back early to wrap his 3-over 74 Round 1, and then he made three straight birdies at the turn of his second round to get right into the mix after yet another rough start to his round.

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    But finally, it was a birdie save at the short par-5 17th that did it. Scheffler went up-and-down from the bunker to get to even par for the first time all day.

    “[I was] very aware,” Scheffler said of the cutline. “I mean, I pretty much knew I had to get to at least even par with the way the conditions were.”

    Even though Scheffler has managed to finish inside the top four in each of his last two starts, he’s had to fight back after slow starts — something that continued again this week in Los Angeles. He started the WM Phoenix Open 2-over before finishing T3, and was at even par last week at Pebble Beach before his T4 finish.

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    Scheffler will enter the weekend 12 shots back of Marco Penge and Jacob Bridgeman, who share the lead at the midway point. McIlroy is just a shot back of that duo, too. Scheffler has a long way to go to even get within striking distance of the lead.

    But if anyone has figured out how to pull that feat off on Tour time and again, it’s Scheffler.

    “This place and I have like a weird relationship,” Scheffler said. “I feel like I can play so well out here and I just haven’t yet.”

  • Winter Olympics 2026: Team USA demolishes Slovakia, setting up epic showdown vs. Canada in gold-medal game

    Winter Olympics 2026: Team USA demolishes Slovakia, setting up epic showdown vs. Canada in gold-medal game

    MILAN — There’s no need for any further debate over whether the U.S or Canada brought a stronger roster to Milan.

    The North American hockey superpowers will finally settle it on the ice.

    Hours after the Canadians rallied from a two-goal deficit against Finland to advance to Sunday’s Olympic gold-medal match, the Americans responded with a far less stressful semifinal victory. Jack Hughes netted a pair of goals and goaltender Connor Hellebuyck turned away all but two shots he faced as the Americans overwhelmed Slovakia 6-2 in the second of Friday night’s two semifinals.

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    The U.S. is seeking its first Olympic gold in men’s hockey since the famed 1980 “Miracle on Ice” team engineered one of the most stunning upsets in sports history. The Americans have played in two gold-medal matches since then, suffering losses to nine-time Olympic champion Canada at the Vancouver Games in 2010 and the Salt Lake City Games in 2002.

    While Canada has historically had the upper hand in the rivalry, the Americans arrived in Milan with the strongest roster they’ve ever brought to an Olympics and the belief that it is at last their time again. The U.S. can’t match Canada’s array of top-tier attacking talent, but the Americans have a three-time Vezina Trophy winner in goal and some of the NHL’s top defensemen.

    “You want to go through the best and right now that’s them,” U.S. defender Quinn Hughes said. “If we played them in a best-of-seven, it would probably go seven. On Sunday, it’s just going to be whoever is better on that day.”

    MILAN, ITALY - FEBRUARY 20: Jack Hughes #86 of Team United States celebrate his second goal with teammates during the Ice Hockey Semifinal match between Team United States and Team Slovakia on day fourteen of the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympic games at Milano Santagiulia Ice Hockey Arena on February 20, 2026 in Milan, Italy. (Photo by Xavier Laine/Getty Images)

    Team USA will face Canada for the gold medal after a 6-2 drubbing of Slovakia in Friday’s semifinal.

    (Xavier Laine via Getty Images)

    The rivalry between the U.S. and Canada went from a simmer to a full boil at this time last year when the North American neighbors met twice at the 4 Nations Face-Off. There were three fights in the opening nine seconds of a 3-1 U.S. win in round-robin play as Brady and Matthew Tkachuk and JT Miller sought to set a physical tone and send a message that the U.S. would not back down or be intimidated.

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    Connor McDavid helped Canada secure revenge in the 4 Nations final. His overtime goal was the difference in a hard-fought 3-2 Canada win.

    When asked what it will take to flip that result, American forward Dylan Larkin said, “It’s going to take that one performance, that one guy to step up, to have the game of his life.”

    “It’s going to be a battle for the ages,” Larkin added.

    Before they.could shift their focus to Canada, the Americans first had to handle their business against underdog Slovakia.

    In many ways, Slovakia was a favorable semifinal draw for the U.S. The Slovaks have a total of seven NHL players on their Olympic roster. The Americans had the luxury of not dressing a forward who has been named to two of the last three NHL all-star games and a defenseman who is the highest-paid player in Anaheim Ducks history.

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    And yet U.S. players were adamant before Friday’s game that Slovakia was not a team they could afford to overlook. Buoyed by a trio of young, hungry stars, a well-organized system and unmatched cohesiveness and chemistry, the Slovaks entered the semifinals as these Olympics’ most pleasant surprise.

    It started in the prelims when Slovakia won a group that included Sweden and Finland to earn a bye to the quarterfinals. Then the Slovaks earned their place in the semifinals by skating circles around a German team with high expectations and more high-end talent.

    Asked earlier this week if he was surprised Slovakia had advanced to the semifinals, American forward Brady Tkachuk said, “No, they’ve had a great tournament. They have great players. It’s going to be a really difficult game.”

    Echoing that, Quinn Hughes said, “It’s going to be an extremely hard test. They’ve been rolling.”

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    Turns out Slovakia wasn’t so threatening. The Americans seized control soon after the puck dropped.

    The U.S. opened the scoring barely four minutes into the game by catching Slovakia making an ill-timed line change. Defenseman Zach Werenski fed a streaking Dylan Larkin as he charged through the neutral zone right down the middle of the ice. Larkin fired a blast from just inside the left faceoff circle, beating goaltender Samuel Hlavaj stickside.

    The Americans doubled their lead just seconds into a power play late in the opening period. Tage Thompson’s screaming one-timer from the bottom of the left face-off circle glanced off the right shoulder of Hlavaj and caromed into the net.

    It stayed 2-0 until more than halfway into the second period. Then Hughes and Jack Eichel struck within 19 seconds of one-another and Hughes added a second goal not long after that. After that, it was just a matter of the Americans getting through the rest of the game healthy so that they could begin looking ahead to Canada.

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    After that, it became more difficult for the Americans to focus on Slovakia with Sunday’s showdown against Canada looming. Hellebuyck, who stopped every shot he faced in the opening two periods, allowed Slovakia to get a pair of third-period shots past him.

    “Tonight I got a little bored in there and it cost me a goal,” Hellebuyck admitted.

    Boredom won’t be an issue Sunday, not against the likes of Connor McDavid, Nathan MacKinnon and Macklin Celebrini.

    It’s U.S.-Canada for Olympic gold. The stakes could not be higher.

    “This is the pinnacle of the sport,” Matthew Tkachuk said. “This is as good as it gets.”

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    Here’s how USA vs. Slovakia unfolded in real time:

    Live coverage is over35 updates
    • Chris Cwik

      Chris Cwik

      For the first time since 2010, Team USA is moving on to the gold-medal game. The Americans secured their spot in the final with a dominant 6-2 win over Slovakia in the semis.

      With the win, Team USA will meet its rival Canada. The two met in the gold-medal game back in 2010, with Canada coming out on top. This time around, the U.S. will be looking for revenge.

    • Chris Cwik

      Chris Cwik

      With the U.S. up 6-2, things got chippy at the end of the third period. Brady Tkachuk, Matthew Tkachuk and Erik Cernak got into it, with punches being thrown.

      All three were assessed penalties that took them out for the rest of the game.

    • Chris Cwik

      Chris Cwik

      Brady Tkachuk put on a nasty move on a breakaway to put the U.S. up 6-1 in the semifinal.

      Slovakia quickly got that one back, scoring to make it 6-2, but Tkachuk’s goal is worth replaying.

    • Chris Cwik

      Chris Cwik

      Slovakia is running out of time, but trying whatever it can to make this a game again. Pavol Regenda scored with under seven minutes to play, making it a 6-2 lead for Team USA.

      Slovakia will need four more quick scores to tie things up, but it was a start. The U.S. just needs to hold out for six more minutes.

    • Chris Cwik

      Chris Cwik

      It’s officially a blowout in the semifinal. With under 10 minutes to go, the U.S. is up 6-1 after a score by Brady Tkachuk.

      The score pushed Team USA’s lead back up to five goals, and killed any momentum Slovakia may have gained after their first score of the contest.

      Team USA just needs to avoid a massive collapse here and they’ll move on to the gold-medal game.

    • Chris Cwik

      Chris Cwik

      Now this is the face of a man who is having a good time watching some hockey.

      Former Philadelphia Eagles center Jason Kelce is enjoying himself cheering on Team USA.

    • Chris Cwik

      Chris Cwik

      Slovakia won’t be shut out in the semifinal. After a misplay by Connor Hellebuyck behind the goal, Jurai Slafkovsky took advantage with a score.

      Slovakia still has work to do following the goal. They trail 5-1 with 14 minutes to play in the third period.

    • Chris Cwik

      Chris Cwik

      Team USA won’t have Tage Thompson the rest of the way in the semifinal. Thompson was ruled out for the third period for “precautionary reasons.”

      There’s not much information on a possible injury for Thompson. His status for a possible gold-medal game is unclear at the moment.

      His status should be addressed following the semifinal.

    • Chris Cwik

      Chris Cwik

      Just 20 minutes separate Team USA from a spot in the gold-medal game.

      The Americans lead 5-0 over Slovakia. The U.S. just needs to hold on a little longer in order to advance.

      They’ve played well in the contest, leading the way 26-13 in shots on goal.

    • Chris Cwik

      Chris Cwik

      Team USA has five goals in the semifinal and two have come from Jack Hughes. With another score, Hughes would have a hat trick.

      Here’s how his second goal of the second period looked:

    • Chris Cwik

      Chris Cwik

      This is getting ugly. Team USA picked up another score in the second period, going up 5-0 heading into the third period.

      Slovakia will need one heck of a comeback in the third period to make this one interesting. After two goals in the first period, Team USA was even better in the second, picking up three more goals.

      There’s an opportunity for even more in the third period, as Team USA will have a power play to begin the period.

    • Chris Cwik

      Chris Cwik

      Slovakia is falling apart against Team USA. After changing goalies, Slovakia committed a cross-checking penalty, giving the Americans another power play.

      At 4-0, the game is quickly getting out of hand. Another goal could clinch a win for Team USA now. Time is quickly running out for a Slovakia comeback. There’s roughly two minutes left in the second period.

    • Chris Cwik

      Chris Cwik

      It took 19 seconds for Team USA to turn this game into a potential blowout.

      After a goal by Jack Hughes put the Americans up 3-0, Jack Eichel followed up with a goal of his own 19 seconds later. That put the U.S. up 4-0 with 7:27 to play.

      Slovakia decided to change its goalie with things looking grim.

    • Chris Cwik

      Chris Cwik

      The U.S. nearly went up 3-0 against Slovakia in the second period, but officials spotted the puck was kicked in by a skate.

      Officials noticed the play immediately, and never signaled for a goal. A replay confirmed that call, keeping it 2-0 Team USA.

    • Chris Cwik

      Chris Cwik

      Team USA keeps committing penalties and then keeps killing Slovakia’s power plays. Slovakia is now 0-for-3 in power play chances after the U.S. made it through another penalty unscathed.

      Now, the Americans will have a shot to play with an extra man. Martin Fehervary was called for a holding call, giving the U.S. two minutes to try and secure a third score.

    • Chris Cwik

      Chris Cwik

      Team USA and Slovakia fought through 4-on-4 play, with both teams failing to score. It was briefly back to 5-on-5 with roughly 14 minutes to go in the second period.

      But then Charlie McAvoy was called for high sticking, giving Slovakia yet another power play. Team USA has killed every Slovakia power play thus far, but can’t keep playing a man down in the contest. It’s only a matter of time before Slovakia capitalizes. Team USA will need to clean things up moving forward.

    • Chris Cwik

      Chris Cwik

      A penalty by Auston Matthews will make it 4-on-4 hockey for the next minute or so. Matthews was called for hooking and will sit in the box for two minutes.

      His penalty came shortly after Slovakia was called for a roughing penalty. Once that penalty expires, Slovakia will have a brief power play before Matthews is allowed to return to the ice.

    • Chris Cwik

      Chris Cwik

      More pushing and shoving from Team USA and Slovakia to start the second period. After a gathering near Slovakia’s goal, Brady Tkachuk again got involved in a shoving match.

      This one resulted in a roughing call on Martin Fehervary, leaving to a power play for the Americans.

      Team USA already leads 2-0 in the second period. A score here would go a long way toward putting the Americans in strong position to advance.

    • Chris Cwik

      Chris Cwik

      Tage Thompson elevated the puck for Team USA’s second goal of the game.

      Here’s how it looked in real time:

    • Chris Cwik

      Chris Cwik

      Team USA picked up a power play and immediately capitalized. Shortly after Slovakia’s Milos Kelemen was called for tripping, Tage Thompson of Team USA scored.

      The goal occurred with under a minute to play in the first period. Neither team scored the rest of the way, making it 2-0 after the first period.

      Team USA played well, scoring twice in the first period for the first time in the 2026 Olympics. The Americans outshot Slovakia 11-8 in the first period as well.