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  • ‘What about getting to tomorrow?’: Danny Casper overcame a mystery illness to land in Italy looking for curling gold in Olympics

    MILAN — Danny Casper didn’t understand why his body was failing him.

    A mysterious illness had stripped the 22-year-old of the ability to perform even the most basic tasks. Almost overnight, he went from skippering one of America’s top-ranked curling teams to struggling to climb out of bed or walk downstairs without assistance.

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    At first, Casper brushed it off when his neck and back ached near the end of a February 2024 mixed doubles tournament. He attributed the soreness to his clumsy technique sweeping to try to influence the path of the curling stone. As skipper and primary tactician for his men’s team, Casper typically left sweeping duty to his teammates. In mixed doubles, that was not an option.

    The discomfort became all Casper could think about soon after he returned to his home in the Minneapolis suburbs. Sharp pain shot down his arms and legs. His hands and feet endlessly tingled as if he had slept on them funny. He relied on his roommates for meals and laundry. He barely had enough feeling in his fingers to crudely pound out text messages on his phone.

    When Casper first underwent a battery of diagnostic tests, medical experts came away as perplexed as he was. One doctor suggested to Casper that he might be suffering from Vitamin B deficiency. Casper shot him a withering look, later telling friends, “I’m no doctor and I’m sure Vitamin B is important, but I think this is worse than that.”

    As weeks passed without a diagnosis or viable treatment plan, Casper’s mental state darkened. He no longer worried about recovering in time for the upcoming curling season. In his most hopeless moments, as he stared at the ceiling above his bed, his thoughts would drift to “the worst possible stuff.”

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    “I would try to watch shows and stuff to pass the time, but it was pretty terrible,” Casper told Yahoo Sports. “For awhile, it was like, forget curling. What about getting to tomorrow?”

    Well, tomorrow has come and it’s landed Casper in Cortina, Italy, where on Wednesday Casper led Team USA to victory over Czechia in their opening match of these Olympic Games.

    Though Casper arrives not 100 percent, his goal is still the same: gold.

    United States' Daniel Casper, center, Ben Richardson, right, and Aidan Oldenburg, in action during the men's curling round robin session against Czechia, at the 2026 Winter Olympics, in Cortina d'Ampezzo, Italy, Wednesday, Feb. 11, 2026. (AP Photo/Misper Apawu)

    Danny Casper, center, Ben Richardson, right, and Aidan Oldenburg, in action during the men’s curling round robin session against Czechia. (AP Photo/Misper Apawu)

    (ASSOCIATED PRESS)

    Curling or soccer?

    For Casper, of all people, to utter the words “forget curling,” is a window into how much he was suffering. This was a kid from the New York suburbs who moved halfway across the country at 18 to pursue his dream of curling in the Olympics.

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    Casper first became familiar with the sport by attending his parents’ curling matches at the Ardsley Curling Club along the east bank of the Hudson River. When Casper turned 11, his dad signed him up to start curling at the club.

    In an unlikely but fortuitous coincidence, Casper grew up in the same small New York town as an older teen whose dad was a former national champion curler. Andrew Stopera had a decorated junior career, leading his team to three straight national junior championships from 2017-19. Throwing stones with Stopera and trying in vain to stay competitive fueled Casper in those early days.

    When Casper was finishing his sophomore year in high school, the multi-sport athlete realized he needed to pick a path. Did he want to pursue soccer in hopes of securing a scholarship offer from a top-tier college? Or did he want to focus on curling and see how far he could go if he made it his priority?

    Watching John Shuster’s American quartet win Olympic gold in 2018 helped nudge Casper toward curling. So did some timely praise from Stopera’s father, who told Casper he was “pretty good at this” and might be able to compete at the national and international level one day.

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    “What did I know then?” Casper said. “I was like, ‘Oh, that sounds fun.’ Soccer was my main focus at the time, but it was like, OK, maybe play soccer in college and then what? Curling was pretty interesting and unique and in theory something I could do a little longer. That’s kind of what drew me to it.”

    Rather than staying in the New York area after high school, Casper moved to the curling hub of Minneapolis in 2019 and continued his studies at the University of Minnesota. It was there that he linked up with former world junior silver medalists Luc Violette and Ben Richardson, as well as fellow up-and-comer Chase Sinnett.

    That quartet took silver at the 2023 World University Games and finished second behind Shuster’s powerhouse team at the 2023 National Championships. Team Casper’s winning ways appeared poised to continue even after Sinnett departed after the 2023-24 season and Aidan Oldenburg replaced him.

    Then Casper fell ill without warning.

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    The body that had served him for 22 years began to malfunction and nobody could figure out why.

    American rapper Snoop Dogg (left) with USA's Daniel Casper at the Cortina Curling Olympic Stadium, Italy. Picture date: Friday February 6, 2026. (Photo by Andrew Milligan/PA Images via Getty Images)

    American rapper Snoop Dogg (left) with USA’s Danny Casper at the Cortina Curling Olympic Stadium, Italy. (Andrew Milligan/PA Images via Getty Images)

    (Andrew Milligan – PA Images via Getty Images)

    Finding an answer

    In June 2024, four months after Casper began experiencing unexplained symptoms, the United States Olympic and Paralympic committee flew him to Florida to undergo additional testing. Only then did Casper at last receive the explanation that he had been seeking.

    Doctors diagnosed Casper with Guillain-Barré Syndrome, a rare condition in which the body’s immune system mistakenly attacks its nerves. There’s no cure for GBS, doctors told Casper, but with treatment and physical therapy, he could expect to fully recover in as little as eight months to a year.

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    “Once they told me this should be something that should go away, something that we can test out different medicines with, that was a big relief,” Casper said. “That made me more optimistic for everything curling-wise and life-wise.”

    While Casper desperately wanted to rejoin his team for the start of the 2024-25 curling season, he didn’t yet feel up to sliding a 44-pound granite stone down a narrow sheet of ice. He sat out the first two months of the season and played only when his health allowed it thereafter, forcing his teammates to cycle through a series of short-term replacement skippers.

    Casper has returned to lead his team this season, grateful to have the opportunity to compete against the top teams in the world again and eager to prove that he and his teammates belong among them. They validated their status as America’s top-ranked men’s team entering Olympic Trials by scraping their way to the final and dethroning Shuster’s decorated, experienced squad in a tense best-of-three showdown.

    There was still one more hurdle left for Team Casper to represent the U.S. at the Milan Cortina Games, but Casper and his teammates cleared it with ease. They claimed one of two remaining Olympic berths with a dominant showing at a last-chance global qualification tournament in early December.

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    The fairytale story would be a healthy Casper triumphantly skippering the U.S. to a gold medal, but in reality, his road to recovery hasn’t been as smooth or as speedy as doctors hoped. Even now, two years removed from his first symptoms, there are still telltale warning signs that he still doesn’t have the same strength or dexterity in his hands that he once did.

    On bad days, he might show up to the ice with his shoe laces untied because he was unable to tie a tight knot. Or he might ask his teammates for help opening a bottle of water or flipping over his rock to clean it.

    “For him to be able to go out there and play like he’s playing with this condition, it’s incredible,” said Rich Ruohonen, who frequently filled in for Casper last season and now serves as the team’s alternate. “He’s healthier now than he has been, but he still has a lot of problems, a lot of pain. Most people would probably give up. He doesn’t let anything affect him.”

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    Casper’s condition didn’t allow him to throw as often as he’d have liked leading up to the Olympics. He compares himself to NFL veterans who practice in a limited fashion a couple times a week to save their legs or their bodies for game day.

    And yet even at less than 100%, Casper’s goals for these Olympics are no different than any other tournament he has ever entered. The guy who was confined to his bed less than two years ago expects to be standing atop the medal podium in Italy.

    “I always struggle wrapping my head around people who say their goal is to make the playoffs or to get bronze,” Casper said. “No, the goal is always to win. I don’t know why it ever would be anything else.”

  • Abby Wambach leaves Casey Wasserman’s agency amid Jeffrey Epstein ties as LA28 committee continues to back him

    Though LA28 organizing committee chairman Casey Wasserman has been linked to Jeffrey Epstein in a series of emails that were released late last month, leaders of the organizing committee said Wednesday that Wasserman should continue to serve as the committee chair.

    This development comes as Wasserman’s talent agency has lost several high-profile clients, including former soccer star Abby Wambach.

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    After a review of his past conduct and Wasserman’s “strong leadership,” the LA28 committee said, he should remain in charge of the LA28 organizing committee.

    “We found Mr. Wasserman’s relationship with Epstein and [Ghislaine] Maxwell did not go beyond what has already been publicly documented,” the board’s executive committee said in a statement on Wednesday, via The Los Angeles Times.

    “Twenty-three years ago, before Mr. Wasserman or the public knew of Epstein and Maxwell’s deplorable crimes, Mr. Wasserman and his then-wife flew on a humanitarian mission to Africa on Epstein’s plane at the invitation of the Clinton Foundation. This was his single interaction with Epstein. Shortly after, he traded the publicly-known emails with Maxwell.

    “The Executive Committee of the Board has determined that based on these facts, as well as the strong leadership he has exhibited over the past ten years, Mr. Wasserman should continue to lead LA28 and deliver a safe and successful Games.”

    MILAN, ITALY - FEBRUARY 03: Chairman of LA28 Casey Wasserman speaks during the IOC Session at the Main Media Centre MPC at Allianz MiCo on February 03, 2026 in Milan, Italy. (Photo by Andreas Rentz/Getty Images)

    Casey Wasserman will continue to serve as the chair of the LA28 organizing committee despite new emails that linked him to Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell. (Andreas Rentz/Getty Images)

    (Andreas Rentz via Getty Images)

    What are Casey Wasserman’s connections to Epstein, Maxwell?

    Emails between Wasserman and Maxwell from 2003 were released late last month by the U.S. Department of Justice, as part of a release of millions of files.

    Maxwell, a convicted sex offender and longtime associate of Epstein, told Wasserman in an email thread that she had thought of him at “inappropriate moments.”

    “I think of you all the time … So what do I have to do to see you in a tight leather outfit?” Wasserman wrote back. “I am in NY tonight, you’re not, what am I to do?”

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    Their correspondence continued, and Wasserman was married at the time. He and his wife divorced in 2021 after two decades together.

    The high-powered Hollywood agent and businessman emphasized in a statement earlier this month that he “never had a personal or business relationship with Jeffrey Epstein,” and that he was “terribly sorry for having any association with either of them.”

    “I deeply regret my correspondence with Ghislaine Maxwell which took place over two decades ago, long before her horrific crimes came to light,” Wasserman said.

    Wasserman was appointed chairman of the LA28 organizing committee in 2017. The US Olympic and Paralympic Committee has since backed the Wasserman-led organizing committee despite the emails.

    Los Angeles will host the Olympics in 2028, which marks the city’s first Games since 1984.

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    Former USWNT star Abby Wambach leaves Wasserman’s agency

    Several major stars have left Wasserman’s agency since the emails were released. Longtime U.S. women’s national team star Abby Wambach joined that group on Wednesday.

    Wambach retired from the sport in 2015, and is not actually represented by Wasserman himself. Her agent, however, is part of his agency. The two-time Olympic gold medalist, who is USWNT’s all-time leading scorer, also called on Wasserman to step down.

    “I know what I know, and I am following my gut and my values,” she wrote, in part. “I will not participate in any business arrangement under his leadership … Casey should resign. He should leave, so more people like me don’t have to.”

    Wambach is just the latest to leave Wasserman’s agency. Most notably, Grammy award winner Chappel Roan announced this week that she was leaving, too.

  • Winter Olympics 2026: Lindsey Vonn posts picture from hospital bed, says she had third surgery on fractured leg: ‘I’ll be OK’

    Lindsey Vonn provided another update on her health on Wednesday, this time with a picture. The U.S. alpine skier announced on Instagram that she had a third surgery on her fractured left leg and posted an image of herself from a hospital bed. She had a bulky brace on her leg and gave a thumbs-up with her right hand.

    “I had my 3rd surgery today and it was successful,” Vonn wrote. “Success today has a completely different meaning than it did a few days ago. I’m making progress and while it is slow, I know I’ll be ok.”

    (Instagram/lindseyvonn)

    Vonn injured her leg in a crash 13 seconds into her run at the alpine downhill competition at the Milan Cortina Olympics on Sunday. The injury required Vonn to be airlifted off the mountain and is expected to be career-ending for the 41-year-old.

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    Vonn wrote in a previous update that she’d sustained a complex fracture of her tibia. Per Yale Medicine, a complex fracture is “when the bone breaks into bits and pieces, when the soft tissue surrounding the bone is severely damaged, or when the patient has other illnesses or injuries that complicate treatment and healing.”

    The brace around her leg demonstrates just how significant the damage was. It’s not clear if her surgery Wednesday was her last to repair the injury. Vonn previously wrote that the injury “will require multiple surgeries to fix properly.” She also wrote that she has “no regrets” despite the devastating injury.

    Vonn skied on a torn ACL in the same left leg that she’d sustained just days before the start of the Olympics on Jan. 30. Her decision to ski on her injured leg drew scrutiny and speculation that it contributed to her crash.

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    Vonn’s right arm got caught in a gate at the top of her run, sending her flying through the air at a high rate of speed and crashing into the ground.

    She previously wrote that her ACL tear had nothing to do with her crash.

    “I was simply 5 inches too tight on my line when my right arm hooked inside of the gate, twisting me and resulted in my crash,” Vonn wrote. “My ACL and past injuries had nothing to do with my crash whatsoever.”

    In her update on Wednesday, Vonn thanked her supporters and medical staff and sent a note of congratulations to her alpine skiing teammate and all of the Team USA athletes competing at Milan Cortina.

    “Thankful for all of the incredible medical staff, friends, family, who have been by my side and the beautiful outpouring of love and support from people around the world. Also, huge congrats to my teammates and all of the Team USA athletes who are out there inspiring me and giving me something to cheer for.”

  • Ex-NFL first-round pick Darron Lee eligible for death penalty in girlfriend’s murder case, prosecutor says

    Former NFL first-round pick Darron Lee was arrested and charged with first-degree murder last week after his girlfriend’s death. A judge on Wednesday opted to keep Lee in jail without bond, according to the Associated Press.

    Lee is due back in court for a preliminary hearing on March 9.

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    Hamilton County District Attorney Coty Wamp reportedly said the case is eligible for capital punishment, though it’s still unclear if the state will seek the death penalty. Wamp also said Lee was on probation in both Florida and Ohio for aggravated assault with a deadly weapon, battery and attempted batteries.

    From the AP:

    “Mr. Lee was in a home with a female that was, for lack of a better term, beaten to death,” Wamp said in court, arguing for the judge to withhold bond. “And the explanation that he gave doesn’t make any sense whatsoever.”

    First responders in Hamilton County, Tennessee, reportedly found the unnamed victim Feb. 3 and determined she was dead after attempting life-saving measures. Preliminary findings led to detectives ruling the death a result of homicide, with Lee taken into custody at the scene.

    In addition to a murder charge, Lee, 31, faces a charge of tampering with evidence. Additional charges could be added pending the outcome of the investigation.

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    Lee was a second-team All-American linebacker and won the 2015 College Football Playoff with Ohio State, earning defensive MVP honors in the Sugar Bowl semifinal win over No. 1 Alabama. He was selected 20th overall by the New York Jets in the 2016 NFL Draft.

    Over the course of three seasons, Lee started 36 games for the Jets and appeared in 40 total, accruing 241 total tackles, 17 tackles for loss, four sacks and three interceptions. However, he was suspended four games in 2018 due to a substance abuse violation and struggled enough that the Jets declined his fifth-year option.

    The Jets eventually traded Lee to the Kansas City Chiefs in 2019. He appeared in 16 games but started only two and was inactive for Kansas City’s Super Bowl LIV victory. He was suspended for four games again the following offseason, and he never found significant playing time after that.

    Lee’s last appearance in an NFL game was with the Buffalo Bills in the 2020 season. He joined the Las Vegas Raiders in 2021, but was released in training camp.

  • NBA suspends 4 players for Pistons-Hornets brawl, including 7 games for Isaiah Stewart

    The NBA announced punishments stemming from the brawl during the Detroit Pistons and Charlotte Hornets game on Monday night, when four players were ejected from the game.

    The punishments are as follows:

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    Stewart received a harsher punishment because he left the bench to get involved and because of his history of infractions.

    Multiple skirmishes happened during Monday’s game. The first involved Diabate and Duren, when the former fouled Duren. The two exchanged words before Duren shoved Diabate in his face. Diabate then charged at Duren, and things escalated from there before the scuffle was broken up.

    Then, Bridges charged at Duren and threw a punch, and Stewart left the bench to join the scuffle. After referee review, the four players, plus Hornets coach Charles Lee, were ejected from the game.

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    Detroit currently holds the top spot in the Eastern Conference at 39-13 and has the second-best record in the NBA. Duren has become a key part of what’s been built in Detroit as the team’s starting center. He’s averaging 17.7 points and 10.4 rebounds per game and has been a consistent double-double performer. Duren will reportedly still be permitted to play in this weekend’s All-Star Game.

    As the backup center, Stewart is the player who does the dirty work in Detroit. That includes getting into scuffles and even full-blown fights, which is why he’ll miss the next seven games. While Stewart isn’t one of the team’s stars, his role is important, and the Pistons will miss his contributions of 10 points and five rebounds per game while he’s out.

    For Charlotte, these suspensions come as the Hornets battle for the final play-in spot in the East. At 25-29, with a one-game lead over 11th-place Chicago, Charlotte cannot afford to miss any key contributors right now, especially Bridges, who averages 18.2 points and 6.1 rebounds per game. Diabate is the team’s leading rebounder, grabbing 8.6 per game.

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    Each player was also fined by the NBA alongside the suspensions.

    Fine amounts:

  • Naz Reid, Mouhamed Gueye fined $35K each after fight in Timberwolves’ win over Hawks

    The NBA fined both Atlanta Hawks forward Mouhamed Gueye and Minnesota Timberwolves center Naz Reid on Wednesday after their fight Monday night.

    Gueye and Reid were fined $35,000 each for the incident, which was the second fight across the league on Monday night. Neither player was suspended.

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    Early in the fourth quarter of the Timberwolves’ 138-116 win over the Hawks, Reid and Gueye started getting into it after Gueye was called for a foul for shoving Reid near the wing. Things escalated very quickly, and it took several assistants and other players to actually separate the two after they latched on to each other’s jerseys.

    Both Reid and Gueye were ejected from that contest at the Target Center. Gueye had 10 points and seven rebounds off the bench when he was thrown out. Reid had seven points and six rebounds for the Timberwolves.

    The fight in this game was largely overshadowed by the massive brawl that took place in the matchup between the Detroit Pistons and Charlotte Hornets on Monday night. That incident resulted in four players getting ejected and a number of suspensions being handed down from the league on Wednesday. Isaiah Stewart received the harshest punishment and will be suspended for seven games.

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    The Timberwolves hold a 33-22 record entering Wednesday night’s matchup with the Portland Trail Blazers. The Hawks, who have now lost back-to-back games, sit at 26-29. They’ll take on the Hornets on Wednesday night.

  • AL East offseason grades: Are the Yankees and Blue Jays set to repeat as the AL’s best? Can the Red Sox and Orioles keep up?

    No division spent more money on free-agent contracts this winter than the AL East, which, as a quintet, committed more than $900 million. That’s an impressive figure, considering Tampa Bay’s frugality and Boston’s bevy of trade acquisitions. It’s the rich getting richer, as this division has represented the American League in the World Series the past two years.

    But which teams spent well, and which teams spent weirdly? And what exactly were the Rays up to, finagling their way into all those three-way deals? Let’s run through the richest division in baseball and grade their offseasons.

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    More offseason grades: NL East | NL Central | NL West | AL Central | AL West

    Toronto Blue Jays

    Significant outgoing free agents: SS Bo Bichette, SP Chris Bassitt, SP Max Scherzer, RP Seranthony Domínguez, INF Isiah Kiner-Falefa, INF Ty France

    Major moves:

    • Signed SP Dylan Cease to a 7-year deal

    • Signed SP Cody Ponce to a 3-year deal

    • Signed RP Tyler Rogers to a 3-year deal

    • Retained SP Shane Bieber on a 1-year player option

    • Signed 3B Kazuma Okamoto to a 4-year deal

    • Traded RP Matt Strahm to the Royals for RP Jonathan Bowlan

    • Signed RP Zach Pop to a 1-year deal

    Offseason grade: B

    Toronto kicked off the winter with a bang, jumping the market to sign Cease on the largest deal for a pitcher in franchise history. They followed that by inking Ponce and Rogers to bolster their pitching depth. It was a show of force, a sign of intent, a celebratory continuation of Toronto’s historic October run. Their hot pursuit of Kyle Tucker, the market’s consensus top player, only served to reinforce the franchise’s rise to behemoth status.

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    Ultimately, Tucker chose the Dodgers, leaving the Jays second-best once again. That development, alongside the departure of Bichette, makes this lineup definitively worse than the one that took the field for World Series Game 7. That’s not a slight toward Okamoto — he could well be an impact bat while providing Toronto the international stardom it’s been wanting for years — as much as a reminder of Bichette’s legacy up north.

    The club’s complete disinterest in retaining the franchise icon, whose Game 7 homer was two outs away from immortality, was fascinating. Perhaps the singular focus on Tucker played a factor. Perhaps both parties were ready to move on. Either way, the Jays will enter 2026 with a worse lineup and an improved infield defense, with Okamoto at third, Ernie Clement at second and Andrés Giménez at short.

    Had they landed Tucker, this would be an easy A, but Toronto failed to land a top-tier offensive partner for Vladimir Guerrero Jr.

    Can the Yankees and Blue Jays repeat as the American League's top two teams? Can the Red Sox and Orioles bounce back into the mix?

    Can the Yankees and Blue Jays repeat as the American League’s top two teams? Can the Red Sox and Orioles bounce back into the mix?

    (Grant Thomas/Yahoo Sports)

    New York Yankees

    Significant outgoing free agents: RP Devin Williams, RP Luke Weaver, OF Austin Slater

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    Major moves:

    • Re-signed OF Cody Bellinger on a 5-year deal

    • Retained OF Trent Grisham via qualifying offer

    • Acquired SP Ryan Weathers from the Marlins for four prospects

    • Re-signed INF Amed Rosario on a 1-year deal

    • Re-signed 1B Paul Goldschmidt on a 1-year deal

    • Re-signed RP Paul Blackburn on a 1-year deal

    • Re-signed SP/RP Ryan Yarbrough on a 1-year deal

    Offseason grade: B

    The epitome of running it back, New York’s offseason was the transactional equivalent of reheating leftovers. That’s not an egregious strategy, considering how good the 2025 Yankees were, but the sheer scale of the continuity here is striking. In all, the Yankees retained six (!!) free agents from last year’s club and made just one significant external addition.

    Keeping Bellinger in pinstripes was downright massive. He’s a perfect fit for the current roster, with his stellar outfield defense a real asset in Yankee Stadium’s spacious left field. Bellinger’s bat isn’t what it once was, but he finished second in WAR among Yankees last year, behind only Aaron Judge, for a reason. He’s a valuable player, one who helps give the 2026 Yankees one of the best lineups in baseball.

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    Beyond that, it was a generally underwhelming winter in the Bronx. GM Brian Cashman is clearly comfortable banking on another strong year from his offense to go with a returning-from-injury Gerrit Cole and a full season of young flamethrower Cam Schlittler. But it’s hard to give a team with only one new face anything higher than a B. Besides, this bullpen still feels … under-addressed, with Williams and Weaver leaving via free agency.

    Boston Red Sox

    Significant outgoing free agents: 3B Alex Bregman, SP Lucas Giolito, RP Steven Matz, RP Justin Wilson, OF Rob Refsnyder, SP Dustin May, RP Liam Hendriks

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    Major moves:

    • Signed SP Ranger Suárez to a 5-year deal

    • Acquired SP Sonny Gray from the Cardinals for SP Richard Fitts and a pitching prospect

    • Acquired 1B Willson Contreras from the Cardinals for SP Hunter Dobbins and two pitching prospects

    • Acquired INF Caleb Durbin, INF Andruw Monasterio, INF Anthony Seigler and a 2026 Competitive Balance Round B pick from the Brewers for SP Kyle Harrison, INF David Hamilton and SP Shane Drohan

    • Acquired SP Johan Oviedo, a pitching prospect and a catching prospect from the Pirates for OF Jhostynxon Garcia and a pitching prospect

    • Traded RP Jordan Hicks and a pitching prospect to the White Sox for a pitching prospect and salary relief

    • Signed INF Isiah Kiner-Falefa to a 1-year deal

    • Nontendered 1B Nathaniel Lowe

    Offseason grade: B

    The rotation is better, the lineup is worse, and we are tired. Boston’s winter was exhausting to follow. I can only imagine how chief baseball officer Craig Breslow feels.

    Opting to let Alex Bregman walk after spending all of 2025 lauding his leadership qualities and offensive reliability was a questionable choice. The immediate pivot to Ranger Suárez was odd but should push this rotation from good to excellent. The same is true for the additions of Sonny Gray and Johan Oviedo.

    But the Red Sox didn’t exit October prematurely last season because they couldn’t prevent runs. No, they fell to the Yankees in the wild-card round because the offense lacked a difference-maker. Roman Anthony, who was hurt for the playoffs, might end up blossoming into that character, but that’s quite a lot to put on the shoulders of a 21-year-old. Willson Contreras is a proven commodity, but he’s closer to good than great. This corner outfield kitchen still has too many cooks between Anthony, Jarren Duran and Wilyer Abreu. Acquiring Caleb Durbin was a cheeky way to upgrade the infield, but he’s unlikely to compete for MVP votes.

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    This winter also served to put a bow on last year’s Rafael Devers blockbuster, as two more pieces from that move, Jordan Hicks and Kyle Harrison, were traded away. Jose Bello, a 20-year-old with seven appearances in Low-A, is the only player left in Boston’s organization who was acquired in the Devers deal. It’s yet another reminder that the decision to trade the star was effectively a salary dump and little more. Some of the money saved will go into the pockets of Contreras, Gray, Suárez and others, but it’s difficult to look at this roster and not wonder how much better it would be with Devers in it.

    Tampa Bay Rays

    Significant outgoing free agents: SP Adrian Houser

    Major moves:

    • Signed OF Cedric Mullins to a 1-year deal

    • Signed SP Nick Martinez to a 1-year deal

    • Signed RP Steven Matz to a 2-year deal

    • Signed OF Jake Fraley to a 1-year deal

    • Acquired five prospects from the Orioles for SP Shane Baz

    • Acquired UTL Gavin Lux in from the Cincinnati Reds as part of a three-team trade in which they sent Josh Lowe to the Angels

    • Acquired 3B Ben Williamson from the Mariners as part of a three-team trade in which they sent a prospect and a draft pick to the Cardinals

    • Acquired OF Jacob Melton and a pitching prospect from the Astros as part of a three-team trade in which they sent 2B Brandon Lowe, OF Jake Mangum and RP Mason Montgomery to the Pirates

    • Acquired RP Steven Wilson from the White Sox for OF Everson Pereira and a prospect

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    Offseason grade: B-

    Tampa Bay’s carousel to nowhere continues. This franchise, renowned for both its penny-pinching ways and its ability to uncover hidden value, appears to be taking a small step back entering 2026. Thankfully, the Rays went about it in a fun way, inserting themselves into three different three-way deals.

    Quite a bit of talent left town among Baz, Montgomery and both Lowes, with mostly prospects arriving in return. Mullins, Martinez and Matz are all worthwhile additions — a sign that even though the Rays are doubtful to contend, the door is still open just in case.

    In the main, this franchise is in something of a holding pattern until its stadium situation is resolved. That has been the case for some time now, though the new ownership group should help push the process forward. Until then, it’ll be more nibbling at the margins and hoping the farm system produces another star to pair with Junior Caminero.

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    Baltimore Orioles

    Significant outgoing free agents: SP Tomoyuki Sugano, C Gary Sánchez

    Major moves:

    • Signed 1B Pete Alonso to a 5-year deal

    • Acquired SP Shane Baz from the Rays for four prospects and a Competitive Balance Round A draft pick

    • Acquired OF Taylor Ward from the Angels for SP Grayson Rodriguez

    • Signed RP Ryan Helsley to a 2-year deal

    • Re-signed SP Zach Eflin on a 1-year deal

    • Acquired INF/OF Blaze Alexander from the Diamondbacks for RP Kade Strowd and two prospects

    • Signed OF Leody Taveras to a 1-year deal

    • Signed SP Chris Bassitt to a 1-year deal

    Offseason grade: A-

    After years of frugality, the Orioles finally broke out the checkbook for a top-tier free agent, inking Alonso to a paradigm-shifting, five-year deal. He’ll provide the type of dependable offensive production Baltimore desperately lacked throughout its immensely disappointing 2025. More importantly, his signing was a signal of a new day in Charm City; new owner David Rubenstein is willing to spend at levels the previous leadership group was not.

    The two biggest trades of Baltimore’s winter were also significant departures in strategy for president of baseball operations Mike Elias, who has helmed the club since the 2018-19 offseason. Dealing Rodriguez and his four years of control for an impending free agent in Ward was an uncharacteristically aggressive maneuver for the typically calculating Elias. The same is true of the Baz trade, in which Baltimore parted with a cornucopia of prospects to land a potential frontline arm.

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    This was not a perfect offseason for the O’s — the bullpen could have used another boost, the rotation didn’t get a true ace — but it was a massive step forward. There’s an argument that no team in baseball improved as much as the one in Baltimore.

  • Winter Olympics 2026: France’s Julia Simon wins biathlon gold medal, 4 months after conviction for stealing from teammate

    In October, French biathlete Julia Simon was found guilty of theft and credit card fraud. On Wednesday, she earned her first individual Olympic gold medal.

    Simon won the women’s individual biathlon Wednesday in Italy with a time of 41:15.6, adding to a trophy case that already included a gold from the mixed relay earlier this week. Fellow Frenchwoman Lou Jeanmonnot took silver, with Bulgaria’s Lora Hristova receiving bronze.

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    French president Emmanuel Macron sent a congratulatory message to both Simon and Jeanmonnot.

    Simon entered the final shooting with the second-best time in a close race, but left it with a commanding lead because the leader, Germany’s Franziska Preuss missed two shots and incurred a two-minute penalty, while the third-place Lisa Hauser of Austria missed three times. Simon missed only once the entire race.

    Of course, Simon’s biggest break might have been being allowed to participate in the race at all.

    Via The Associated Press, Simon avoided jail time in French court four months ago with a three-month suspended prison sentence. She had admitted to repeatedly using the bank card of her teammate Justine Braisaz-Bouchet and a French team staff member, making online purchases of more than 2,000 euros.

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    Simon apologized to the victims, and implied she wasn’t in her right mind during the crimes:

    “I can’t explain it. I don’t remember doing it. I can’t make sense of it,” Simon said during her trial.

    Braisaz-Bouchet finished 80th in the same race Wednesday.

    While Simon didn’t go to prison, she still faced discipline from the French ski federation. The organization’s disciplinary committee opted to give her a six-month ban, but with five of the months suspended, opening the door for her to compete in the Milan Cortina Games. She was also fined 30,000 euros, but with half of that suspended.

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    Speaking on Wednesday, Simon said she was focused on preparing for the race when asked about her recent troubles, via the AP:

    “I have a lot of pleasure, when I train, when I race, when I compete, so it’s the most important thing for me,” she said. “I know I had a goal. I put all my energy in this goal, in myself. It was difficult months but I’m really proud of myself and today was a perfect race for me.”

    The 29-year-old Simon has won 10 golds in the biathlon world championships between individual and team events and won silver in the mixed relay at the Beijing Games in 2022.

  • Winter Olympics 2026: Madison Chock, Evan Bates win silver in emotional, painful ice dance

    MILAN — After every Olympic performance, from qualification to medal-winning, Olympic athletes must pass through what’s known as the “mixed zone” — a media labyrinth of cameras, recorders, lights and phones, all pointed directly at them.

    In a moment of triumph, it must feel like a glorious parade. But when your dream has just shattered in front of you, reliving the loss over and over again seems like a special kind of hell.

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    Madison Chock and Evan Bates won silver on Wednesday night in Olympic ice dance, but in the mixed zone, it felt like they lost gold. They proceeded through their media obligations, station to station, silver medals around their necks, eyes rimmed with tears, managing — just barely — to keep their grief in check.

    “Definitely it’s a little bittersweet,” Chock said, and then her voice broke. “Sometimes that’s just how it shakes out.”

    They’d worked so very hard for this moment. They’d worked for 15 years as partners, and now two years as husband and wife. They’d spent countless early mornings and late evenings at rinks all over the world, they’d competed in four Olympics together. They had very nearly reached the top of their mountain … only to watch someone else get there just as they were about to plant the flag.

    USA's Madison Chock and Evan Bates compete in the figure skating ice dance-free dance final during the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympic Games at Milano Ice Skating Arena in Milan on February 11, 2026. (Photo by JULIEN DE ROSA / AFP via Getty Images)

    USA’s Madison Chock and Evan Bates compete in the figure skating ice dance-free dance final during the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympic Games at Milano Ice Skating Arena in Milan on Feb. 11, 2026. (Photo by JULIEN DE ROSA / AFP via Getty Images)

    (JULIEN DE ROSA via Getty Images)

    Chock and Bates skated 19th of 20 teams on Wednesday night. Their toreador-inspired skate to Ramin Djawadi’s cover of “Paint It, Black” thrilled the substantial number of American fans in attendance at Assago Ice Skating Arena. Chock’s brilliant red matador’s cape/dress was one of the night’s highlights, and when the duo finished their routine, they embraced, bowed to the crowd in every direction, and waved again and again as they left the ice.

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    When the scores flashed across the arena’s screens, Chock and Bates received a final combined score of 224.39. It was a magnificent performance —  “our gold medal performance,” Bates said afterward — but it reigned for only a few minutes before France’s Laurence Fournier Beaudry and Guillaume Cizeron topped it with a score of 225.82. Canada’s Piper Gilles and Paul Poirier took bronze with a score of 217.74.

    There’s often something bittersweet about a silver medal, coming so very close to gold and yet falling short. As they worked their way through the mixed zone, the pair seemed to be trying to reconcile the reality of what had just happened to them, how decades of training and years’ worth of titles ended up just short of the top of the podium.

    “Sometimes you can feel like you do everything right and it doesn’t go your way,” Bates said. “And that’s life and that’s sport … We felt like we were very close.”

    The contrasts with their fellow medalists were striking. Gilles and Poirier were ecstatic, reveling in the joy of an unexpectedly high finish. Fournier Beaudry and Cizeron, both the focus of separate significant off-ice controversies, remained impassive and cool, allowing themselves smiles but little exuberance.

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    While Chock and Bates have been a known Olympic quantity for well over a decade, they’ve only ascended to the top of the ice dance mountain since Beijing. They’re the reigning and three-time World and Grand Prix Final champions, the reigning and seven-time U.S. champions. They’ve won gold medals twice as members of the U.S. team, most recently this past Sunday. Until Wednesday night, they’d never claimed their own individual medals.

    “We did everything we set out to accomplish,” Chock said. “There’s nothing more we could have done, nothing we would change.”

    A bit further down the standings, four Americans making their Olympic debuts notched respectable finishes.

    Christina Carreira and Anthony Ponomarenko, skating to selections from “Perfume: The Story of a Murderer,” finished with a combined score of 197.62 to end the Olympics ranked 11th. Emilea Zingas and Vadym Kolesnik, skating to Prokofiev’s Romeo and Juliet Op. 64, had a combined score of 206.72 and finished a surprising fifth.

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    “I mean, this is crazy. We’re top five at the Olympics. This is absolutely insane. If you told me one year ago today that I’d be top five at the Olympics, I would have said, ‘No, it’s a lie. It’s a straight-up lie.’ So I’m really happy to be here and to have the result that we did.”

    Zingas and Kolesnik are widely seen as the heirs to Chock and Bates’ throne … if, that is, the longtime duo does vacate it.

    Asked if this heartbreaking result made them want to return for one more Games, Chock and Bates didn’t even look at one another.

    “Not at the moment,” Bates said.

    “Not at the moment,” Chock quietly echoed, and then they were gone.

  • Olympics 2026: How to watch Team USA compete for gold in women’s Alpine super-G skiing at the Winter Games

    Medals have been awarded in the men’s super-G skiing competition, with Team USA’s Ryan Cochrane-Siegle taking home the silver, and now it’s the women’s turn. The women’s super-G final will take place at the Tofane Ski Centre in Cortina this Thursday morning with coverage starting at 5:30 a.m. ET, and you can catch the live feed on Peacock and USA. You’ll also be able to catch some coverage of the event on NBC’s Primetime in Milan coverage at 8 p.m. Thursday.

    Here’s a complete schedule of all Team USA Alpine Skiing events at this year’s games, along with a rundown of who is competing. (To see specific air times for all events, check out the official NBC Olympics broadcast schedule, and toggle your search to “TV Only.”).

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    If you want to learn even more about every event at this year’s Winter Games, here’s a guide to everything you need to know about the Milan Cortina Games.

    How to watch the women’s super-G skiing final at the 2026 Winter Olympics

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    Date: Thursday, Feb. 12

    Time: 5:30 a.m. ET

    Location: Tofane Ski Centre, Cortina d’Ampezzo

    TV channels: USA, NBC

    Streaming: Peacock, DirecTV, and more

    Where can I stream the women’s super-G skiing final at the 2026 Winter Olympics?

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

    For $17/month, you can upgrade to an ad-free Premium Plus 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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