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  • TCU knocks off No. 5 Iowa State in major upset to keep NCAA tournament hopes alive

    TCU pulled off its biggest win of the season on Tuesday night, and may have saved its chances at reaching the NCAA tournament.

    The Horned Frogs survived late to knock off No. 5 Iowa State 62-55 at Schollmaier Arena. It marked just their second win over a ranked opponent all season after a pretty rough run against the top half of the Big 12 conference so far. Naturally, that sparked a huge court storm celebration in Fort Worth.

    Though they never led by more than double digits, the Cyclones (21-2, 8-3 Big 12) felt in control of the contest — at least until the final stretch. After mounting a 10-0 run to take the lead back in the second half, Iowa State shut down offensively. The Horned Frogs (15-9, 5-6) closed the game on a 12-0 burst of their own, and held the Cyclones to just a single made field goal in the final four minutes.

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    Micah Robinson led TCU with 17 points and six rebounds. Tanner Toolson added 17 points off the bench and was the only other player to hit double figures. TCU went just 5-of-18 from the 3-point line, and missed eight free throws.

    The win was an important one for TCU’s tournament résumé. While they beat Florida early on, the Horned Frogs have dropped every other ranked matchup they’ve had this season and entered Tuesday having lost six of their last 10. Undoubtedly, their hopes at an NCAA tournament big were dwindling fast.

    Tamin Lipsey led Iowa State with 12 points and five assists, and Joshua Jefferson added 12 points with nine assists and eight rebounds. Iowa State committed 17 turnovers and also only made five 3-pointers in the loss. The Cyclones made it to the free throw line only eight times, compared to the 23 for the Horned Frogs.

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    The loss snapped a five-game win streak for the Cyclones, and came ahead of what is sure to be a rough stretch for them to end the regular season. They’ll host No. 9 Kansas next on Saturday, and the Jayhawks are fresh off a win over top-ranked Arizona on Monday night. The Cyclones will then take on No. 3 Houston and No. 22 BYU next week, and still have No. 16 Texas Tech and Arizona waiting for them before the end of the regular season. Though several wins there would make a big difference, Iowa State’s chances at actually securing a No. 1 seed in the NCAA tournament are suddenly looking significantly slimmer.

    TCU, on the other hand, now has a real shot at making a run before the Big 12 tournament next month. With just one ranked game left in the regular season, a strong finish would put the Horned Frogs in position to make the NCAA tournament for the fourth time in the past five seasons.

  • Blue Jays OF Anthony Santander to undergo shoulder surgery, miss 5-6 months

    The Toronto Blue Jays got bad news Tuesday as they look ahead to defending their AL pennant.

    Right fielder Anthony Santander needs surgery on his left labrum and is expected to miss five-to-six months. The latter end of that timeline projects a return sometime in August, well past the All-Star break.

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    Manager John Schneider announced the news to reporters Tuesday. Santander will likely miss more than half the 2026 season on the heels of playing just 54 games in his first season in Toronto.

    Contract so far not paying off for Blue Jays

    Santander, 31, made his first All-Star team in 2024 as a member of the rival Baltimore Orioles, sending him into the offseason as one of the better hitters available in free agency. He joined the Blue Jays that winter on a five-year, $92.5 million contract.

    Various injuries including to his shoulder limited Santander to 54 regular-season games in 2025. He returned for the final week of the regular season and appeared in five postseason games in the ALDS against the Yankees and the ALCS against the Mariners.

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    But the Blue Jays removed him from their ALCS roster before Game 4 due to a back injury, and he did not make Toronto’s World Series roster.

    Why have the surgery now?

    Schneider told reporters Tuesday that Santander was “feeling good after the season” and the goal this offseason was to avoid surgery while resting and rehabbing in November and December.

    But he experienced a setback when he returned to hitting in January, prompting the Blue Jays and Santander to ultimately opt for surgery. He’ll have the procedure Wednesday, more than three months after the conclusion of Toronto’s season in a Game 7 loss to the Dodgers in the World Series.

    “Unfortunate with the timing, obviously, after the season he had, too, for sure,” Schneider said. “But just a setback after he started hitting and ramping up in January.”

  • Victor Wembanyama goes off for 25 points in first 8 minutes of Spurs’ blowout win over Lakers

    Victor Wembanyama does it all on the basketball court. On Tuesday he put his scoring hat on.

    The San Antonio Spurs superstar scored 25 points against the Los Angeles Lakers — in the first eight minutes of the game.

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    It was a remarkable scoring output that no other Spurs player has produced in the play-by-play stat-tracking era dating back to 1997-98. That includes the tail end of David Robinson’s career, Kawhi Leonard’s Spurs prime and the entirety of Tim Duncan’s career.

    He did it from inside and out and tallied most of those points during a stretch in which he scored 17 consecutive Spurs points.

    Wembanyama went 8 of 9 from the field and 3 of 4 from the 3-point line while adding three rebounds during the opening flurry. The Spurs piled up a 47-30 lead against a Lakers team playing without Luka Dončić, LeBron James or Austin Reaves. The missed game was James’ 18th of the season, which made him ineligible for end-of-season awards and snapped his unprecedented 21-year All-NBA streak.

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    By halftime, Wembanyama had 37 points on 12-of-17 shooting from the floor, 10-of-12 shooting from the line and 3-of-5 shooting from behind the arc. He added 9 rebounds, 2 assists, 1 steal and 1 block in a stat line that would be outstanding for any NBA star for a full game.

    The Spurs built an 84-55 lead at that point over the shorthanded Lakers. And with San Antonio on the first half of a back-to-back set, there wasn’t a ton of motivation to play him much after halftime.

    Wembanyama dropped three points in the third quarter to get to 40 on the night. It was the sixth 40-point game of Wembanyama’s three-season career, one more than Duncan totaled in his 19 seasons.

    By the end of that period, the Spurs’ lead had ballooned to 34 points. From there, the Spurs cruised to the 136-108 win without any further heroics needed from Wembanyama. He finished shooting 13 of 20 from the field with 12 rebounds and two assists to go with his 40 points.

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    Luke Kennard led the Lakers with 14 points and five assists. Drew Timme added 14 points off the bench and Jaxson Hayes finished with 13 points. The Lakers fell to 32-21 with the loss. They’ll host the Dallas Mavericks on Thursday in their final game before the All-Star break.

    Carter Bryant added 16 points off the bench for the Spurs to go with Wembanyama’s night. Dylan Harper finished with 15 points and Harrison Barnes added 11. They were the only other three players besides Wembanyama to hit double figures for San Antonio.

    The Spurs have now won five straight to get to 37-16 on the season. They’ll take on the Golden State Warriors on Wednesday.

  • Winter Olympics 2026: Nick Baumgartner out to prove age is just a number

    Nick Baumgartner, in his own words, is no anomaly.

    Like every other 44-year-old on the planet, he will wake up with strange aches and need a little more time to get the engines revved up than he required a decade ago. The gray hairs are coming in nonstop on the beard and with less frequency up top, an area often covered by a backwards hat. A college football player at Northern Michigan once upon a time, Baumgartner has had to trade power lifts for fast-twitch and flexibility exercises to reduce injury risk and ensure all his energy is channeled into the stuff that will matter when he steps on a snowboard.

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    But motivation to endure every step of a painstaking process, day after day, just for one more shot at the Olympics? Even after his long-awaited gold medal in 2022, that’s the part Baumgartner still can’t get enough of.

    “You’d think it would get old,” said Baumgartner, who will go to Milano Cortina trying to break his own record as the oldest snowboarding medalist in Olympic history. “But I still love it as much as I did when I started. I think part of the reason I didn’t burn out is because I was in my 20s before I even started snowboard cross. I’m making up for time lost at the front end.”

    Four years ago in Beijing, Baumgartner was heartbroken and on the verge of tears after failing short of the semifinals in the men’s snowboard cross, an event where competitors race through a course of curves and jumps in an elimination format until there’s four competitors left for the final run. It was just one little mistake, Baumgartner said, but it was costly: At age 40 and still medal-less at his fourth Olympics, he could feel time running out.

    But the mixed team snowboard cross event — new to the Olympics four years ago — was his salvation. Paired with Lindsey Jacobellis, whose own Olympic history had been dotted with disappointment, they were so elated to win a gold that it didn’t even matter that their friends and family were thousands of miles away because of the COVID rules Beijing put in place that made travel almost impossible.

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    “To finally knock that off after years of falling short and falling short, nothing could have muted that celebration,” said Baumgartner. “Then when I went home, it got crazy.”

    BEIJING, CHINA - February 12: Lindsey Jacobellis and Nick Baumgartner of the United States celebrate their gold medal win during the Mixed Team Snowboard Cross at Genting Snow Park during the Winter Olympic Games on February 12th, 2022 in Zhangjiakou, China.  (Photo by Tim Clayton/Corbis via Getty Images)

    Lindsey Jacobellis and Nick Baumgartner celebrate their gold medal win during the Mixed Team Snowboard Cross at the 2022 Winter Olympics in Beijing. (Photo by Tim Clayton/Corbis via Getty Images)

    (Tim Clayton via Getty Images)

    Despite sub-freezing temperatures, it seemed like the entire population of Iron River, Michigan, was there to celebrate Baumgartner with a parade, some of which he traversed in a car with his sons and some of which he walked with his dog on a leash, handing out high-fives to fans waving American flags in a scene straight out of a Norman Rockwell painting.

    For many, it would have been the perfect way to end an unlikely career that has taken him from the snowy Michigan winters around Lake Superior to mountains all around the world.

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    But Baumgartner wasn’t done chasing medals. And who knows, maybe Milan Cortina won’t be his last hurrah. The thought of competing in Salt Lake City in 2032 when he’ll be 52 has undoubtedly crossed his mind.

    “I had my best career at 40,” he said. “You never know. Absolutely, absolutely, absolutely we’re doing everything we can, and we’re using all technology and everything at our grasp to be able to be better at this.”

    Age is a real thing with consequences he feels every day, but Baumgartner is determined to stay young enough to compete, even with the sacrifices and inconveniences it requires. Twice a week, Baumgartner will drive 90 minutes from his home in Iron River to the gym where he trains in Marquette, Michigan, sleep in his van and get his workout in the next day and then drive back home. And he never misses a session.

    “Don’t believe the excuses,” he said. “Find a way to make it happen. If I stop moving, I’m going to be in big trouble. But if I continue to keep moving and keep doing stuff and take care of my body and train, I think I’ll be fine.”

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    The training is different now than it was at the start of his career. It’s all fast-twitch and explosive movements, designed to get him moving quickly out of the gate before gravity and experience take over. Everything is closely monitored by technology so that he can back off if the machines say he’s pushing so hard he’s at risk of injury.

    In a sport where the prime age is generally late 20s, it’s what Baumgartner must do to remain relevant enough for his skill and knowledge to overcome declining physicality.

    “This bus will go fast downhill, but I got to get it out of the garage fast enough,” he said. “As long as I can keep that speed and stay in the hunt, then anything’s possible.

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    “I’ve seen so many kids that have all the talent in the world to beat me, and on paper they should crush me, and they never beat me. It’s because I put in the miles. I’ve been in the trenches for too long.”

    Will that lift him to one more medal — this time with his family in attendance? Realistically, it won’t be easy. Baumgartner hasn’t been a regular on the podium at World Cup events the last few years, his best recent finish coming in Turkey about a year ago when he finished third.

    But Baumgartner keeps pushing the expiration date on his career further and further into the future. He believes if his 44-year-old body is up for one last great run, the Olympics will bring it out of him.

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    “I’m a competitor, and I love pushing myself,” he said. “I love setting goals that people think are unreachable and going out there and proving them wrong. And by doing this and setting these goals and keep knocking them off, it just relights the fire.”

  • Winter Olympics: Four years after last-lap heartbreak, Kristen Santos-Griswold returns for one more shot at gold

    MILAN — Imagine having everything you’ve wished for, everything you’ve worked for, everything you’ve trained for, right there in front of you, just a few seconds away. And then imagine losing it all, all at once, through no fault of your own.

    Team USA speed skater Kristen Santos-Griswold, who will compete Thursday in the 500-meter event, has spent the past four years trying to skate out from under a cloud of what-if. Four years ago in Beijing, Santos, at her first Olympics, was leading on the final lap of the 1000m medal race. A gold medal was just a lap away.

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    And then Italy’s Arianna Fontana attempted a daring move, diving inside Santos-Griswold to attempt to capture the lead. The two skaters became entangled and spun out on the ice. Fontana’s move was later deemed illegal, but that wasn’t enough to give Santos-Griswold a medal; Olympic records will always show she finished fourth, just off the podium.

    “The hardest part about this sport,” Santos-Griswold said recently, “is that kind of concept of, you can be the best, you can be the fastest, and things just don’t work out for you.”

    Already older than most of her competitors, with another heartbreaking near-miss in her history — a badly-timed injury cost her a probable spot in the 2018 Olympics — Santos-Griswold knew her best chance at an Olympic medal might have just shattered on the Beijing ice.

    But she also knew she still had more to give to this maddening, exhilarating sport.

    (L-R) USA's Kristen Santos and Italy's Arianna Fontana fall in the final A of the women's 1000m short track speed skating event during the Beijing 2022 Winter Olympic Games at the Capital Indoor Stadium in Beijing on February 11, 2022. (Photo by Manan VATSYAYANA / AFP via Getty Images)

    Kristen Santos-Griswold was crashed out of the 1000m by Italy’s Arianna Fontana while in the lead at the 2022 Olympics. (Manan VATSYAYANA / AFP via Getty Images)

    (MANAN VATSYAYANA via Getty Images)

    The long road back from Beijing

    “After 2022 was really hard. I’m not going to lie, I had to take a little bit of a step back from the sport and really reflect and decide if it was something that I wanted to keep doing,” she said. “I couldn’t really talk to my family that much or other people because everyone’s got an opinion about what you should do. I really needed to make that decision for myself.”

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    She spent months wrestling with the decision of whether to commit another four years to the Olympics, weighing the pros and cons of shaping her life around another moment that could slip right from her fingers. But in the end, the decision was obvious.

    “I knew if I stepped away at that moment,” she says, “I would regret it forever.”

    What followed for Santos-Griswold was an intense period of self-examination, an attempt to understand why exactly her entire identity was wrapped up in being a skater. She began figure skating in Connecticut at age 3, then switched to speed skating at 9 when she saw races on the Disney Channel. And from that day to now, at age 31, Santos-Griswold’s life has focused on and revolved around speed skating.

    “The concept of being an athlete, and being specifically a speed skater, has really defined my whole life,” Santos-Griswold says. “And thinking that you’re done with that, and no longer going to be an athlete, can be really daunting.”

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    Seeing that end coming — combined with the acceptance of the inherent unfair nature of speed skating — helped clarify her understanding of how to prepare for Milan.

    “Every day [leading up to Beijing], I thought about the Olympics. Every single thing I did was like, how is this going to affect me at the Olympics?” she recalls. “I ate right. I slept right. I trained right. I did everything right and it still didn’t happen for me.”

    The solution, then, was to begin the long, slow separation of self from skater. She began to focus on the journey rather than the destination, enjoying the moments that “normal,” non-Olympians appreciate all the time — going out for an unscheduled bite to eat, taking a day off training to attend a friend’s wedding. Standard days for the rest of us, stark breaks with training and regimentation for Olympians.

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    She also had to put 2022 into context of the rest of her life. “I was definitely angry. I was upset. I was resentful. It feels unfair,” she says. “It’s so unfair to be so close to be in the last lap of the 1000, be about to medal, and get taken out.”

    Acceptance of that moment, and of the sport that led to it, helped her heal from the pain of the loss. “I chose the sport. I chose to be there every day on the ice. And I think that that’s something that makes the sport that much more exciting,” she says. “Every win is that much more special. Because you didn’t just overcome the physical things for it. You overcame so many mental aspects. And you had to adapt so much within a single race.”

    ROTTERDAM, NETHERLANDS - MARCH 17: Wolrd Champion Kristen Santos-Griswold of United States of America competing on the Women's 1000m Final A on Day 3 during the ISU World Short Track Championships 2024 at Rotterdam Ahoy on March 17, 2024 in Rotterdam, Netherlands. (Photo by Marcel ter Bals/DeFodi Images via Getty Images)

    Kristen Santos-Griswold celebrates winning the 1000m at the 2024 World Short Track Championships. (Marcel ter Bals/DeFodi Images via Getty Images)

    (DeFodi Images via Getty Images)

    The fire returned, and so did the wins

    Soon enough, a funny thing happened — she won, and kept on winning. In 2024, she became the first American short-track speed skater to capture world championship medals at all three individual distances (500m, 1000m and 1500m) at the same event since speed skating became an Olympic sport in 1992. The next year, she won her first Crystal Globe, awarded to the best overall short-track skater, and ended the season ranked No. 1 in the world.

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    In 2025, she also finally watched a replay of the catastrophic Beijing race for the first time since it occurred. She wept, feeling the pain of the moment, but she also saw the possibilities and the missed opportunities in the race, too. She was in position to medal, yes, but perhaps she could have positioned herself better … or perhaps there was nothing she could have done whatsoever. Sometimes, things just go sideways.

    And now, starting with this week’s 500m event, she’s racing with a new mantra: Untouchable. To her, that means her goal now is “to be ahead, and so far ahead that no one could affect my race,” she says. “This sport is really unpredictable, and a lot that you can’t control. The best way to control other people is to make it so they can’t even affect how you’re going to race.”

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    Kristen Santos-Griswold isn’t the same racer she was in 2022. She’s married, she has a college degree, she freely admits that she doesn’t have the energy of her younger teammates. She’s full into her “work smarter, not harder” era.

    And yet, she’s also more centered than she’s ever been, more willing to put in the hard work without a guarantee of a result, and accept that which she cannot change.

    “I had to really sit there and think, if in four years the same thing happens again, would that be worth it?” she says. “Obviously, I’m here. So I did decide that it would be.”

  • Milan Cortina: What to watch today in the Winter Olympics — Chloe Kim hits halfpipe as U.S. chases gold in speed skating, ice dance (2/11)

    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 is up to seven total medals so far in Italy, and will have several opportunities to add to that count in Day 5 of the 2026 Winter Olympics.

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    Jordan Stoltz will attempt to continue his dominant run throughout speed skating in the 1,000 meters, and the women’s double luge will have its first ever gold medal awarded at the Olympics later Wednesday. Madison Chock and Evan Bates are back in action with their final ice dancing event. Oh, and Chloe Kim will hit the halfpipe for the first time, too.

    Here are the top five things to watch on Wednesday at the 2026 Milan Cortina Olympics:

    1. Jordan Stoltz looks to defend world record in speed skating

    It’s time for Jordan Stoltz to take the ice in Italy. The Team USA speed skating star will open with the 1,000 meters on Wednesday, the event in which he already holds the world record. He made his Olympics debut in Beijing four years ago and finished only 14th in the 1,000 meters, though he’s widely considered a medal favorite every time he takes the ice in these games.

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    But the 1,000 meter is his best event. Stoltz has five wins at that distance already this season, and has won 14 races in a row in that distance on the World Cup level. Stoltz will also compete in the 500 meters, 1,500 meters and mass start.

    2. Chloe Kim hits the halfpipe

    Chloe Kim is ready for her first event in Italy. The top name in the sport will open her quest to become the first person to win three straight gold medals in the halfpipe, starting with qualifying Wednesday. Kim was 17 when she won gold in South Korea in 2018, and she backed it up in Beijing four years ago, too. But Kim is now dealing with a torn labrum, which she suffered during training in Switzerland.

    If she can get through qualifying, the final of the women’s halfpipe is set for Thursday.

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    3. U.S. team chasing first ever women’s double luge gold

    The women’s doubles luge was added to the Olympics for the first time this year after more than six decades on the men’s side. It’ll be up to Chevonne Forgan and Sophia Kirkby to lead the way for the United States.

    The duo, who are the only American women’s pairing, won bronze at the first ever world championship back in 2022. They’ve looked good so far, too, with a top five time in five of their six training runs. But it’s Austria’s Selina Egle and Lara Kipp who are the favorites, as they both lead the World Cup standings and have won three training runs so far.

    4. Chock and Bates chasing gold in ice dance

    Madison Chock and Evan Bates will enter Wednesday’s ice dance free skate in second place, so they’ll have to rally a bit in order to pull off the gold medal. They trailed France’s Laurence Fournier Beaudry and Guillaume Cizeron by less than half a point after the rhythm dance portion of the competition on Monday.

    The married couple are the reigning world champions in the event, and are just days removed from helping the U.S. win a second straight team gold medal. But the individual medal is the last piece they’ve been chasing after a fourth-place finish in Beijing.

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    5. Can Ryan Cochran-Siegle medal again in Super-G?

    All eyes will be on Ryan Cochran-Siegle when he hits the Super-G on Wednesday. He was the only American Alpine skier to win a medal at the Beijing Olympics when he won silver in the event four years ago.

    But competition is stiff for Cochran-Siegle to improve on that finish this time around. Switzerland’s Marco Odermatt is the favorite in the event, with already two wins to his name this season. A trio of Austrians have dominated the World Cup season race, too, and Italy’s Giovanni Franzoni is a big name to watch.

    He has his work cut out for him, but he is the only returning medalist from Beijing. That has to count for something.

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    Olympics schedule for Wednesday, Feb. 11 (Day 5)

    Alpine Skiing

    Super-G

    • 5:30 a.m.: Men’s final (USA Network)🏅

    Biathlon

    15-kilometer individual

    • 8:15 a.m.: Women’s final (airs at 9:15 a.m. on USA Network)🏅

    Curling

    Men’s round-robin

    • 1:05 p.m. Sweden vs. Italy, Canada vs. Germany, Czechia vs. USA (airs at 5 p.m. on CNBC), China vs. Great Britain

    Figure Skating

    Free Dance

    • 1:30 p.m.: Finals (USA Network; NBC coverage begins at 2:15 p.m.)🏅

    Freestyle Skiing

    Moguls

    • 5 a.m.: Women’s qualifying

    • 8:15 a.m.*: Women’s final (USA Network)🏅
      *Light situation needs to be checked

    Hockey

    Women’s pool play

    • 8:30 a.m.: Finland vs. Canada

    Men’s pool play

    • 10:40 a.m.: Slovaki vs. Finland (USA Network)

    • 3:10 p.m.: Sweden vs. Italy (USA Network coverage begins at 3:25 p.m.)

    Luge

    Doubles

    • 11 a.m.: Women’s run 1 (USA Network)

    • 11:50 a.m.: Men’s run 1 (USA Network)

    • 12:45 p.m.: Women’s run 2 (USA Network; NBC coverage begins at 12:55 p.m.)🏅

    • 6 p.m.: Men’s run 2 (USA Network)🏅

    Nordic Combined

    Normal hill

    • 3 a.m.: Men’s ski jump (USA Network coverage begins at 4 a.m.)🏅

    Snowboarding

    Halfpipe

    • 4:30 a.m.: Women’s qualifying (USA Network coverage begins at 4:45 a.m.)

    • 1:30 p.m.: Men’s qualifying (NBC coverage begins at 1:40 p.m.)

    Speed Skating

    1000 meters

    • 12:30 p.m.: Men’s final (airs at 1:15 p.m. on NBC)🏅

  • Winter Olympics 2026: IOC bans two Ukrainian athletes from wearing helmets focusing on war

    Ukrainian skeleton athlete Vladyslav Heraskevych has been told by the International Olympic Committee that he cannot wear a helmet that commemorates Ukrainian athletes killed in the war with Russia. Ukrainian freestyle skier Kateryna Kotsar was told the same thing about her “be brave like Ukrainians” helmet.

    The IOC pointed to article 50.2 of the Olympic charter which states, “no kind of demonstration or political, religious or racial propaganda is permitted in any Olympic sites, venues or other areas.” Heraskevych’s helmet features images of over 20 athletes and coaches, including figure skater Dmytro Sharpar, hockey player Oleksiy Loginov and weightlifter Alina Peregudova, who have died since the 2022 Russian invasion.

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    In an Instagram post, Heraskevych, who was Ukraine’s flag-bearer at the Opening Ceremony, said that the IOC’s decision “simply breaks my heart.”

    “The IOC has banned the use of my helmet at official training sessions and competitions. A decision that simply breaks my heart. The feeling that the IOC is betraying those athletes who were part of the Olympic movement, not allowing them to be honored on the sports arena where these athletes will never be able to step again.

    “Despite precedents in modern times and in the past when the IOC allowed such tributes, this time they decided to set special rules just for Ukraine.”

    During the 2022 Olympics in Beijing, Heraskevych held up a sign that read, “No war in Ukraine” days before the invasion began. The IOC did not respond.

    Vladyslav Heraskevych's helmet commemorates over 20 Ukrainian athletes and coaches killed in the war with Russia. (Photo by FRANCK FIFE / AFP via Getty Images)

    Vladyslav Heraskevych’s helmet commemorates over 20 Ukrainian athletes and coaches killed in the war with Russia. (Photo by FRANCK FIFE / AFP via Getty Images)

    (FRANCK FIFE via Getty Images)

    “Back then, in that action, they saw a call for peace and did not apply any sanctions against me,” Heraskevych wrote on social media Tuesday. “Now, at the Olympics, we have already seen a large number of Russian flags in the stands, on the helmet of one of the athletes — and for the IOC, this is not a violation.”

    Kotsar said she wanted to wear her helmet, which reads “be brave like Ukrainians” during the Games, but was told by the IOC that it was “propaganda.”

    According to the Associated Press, the IOC said it “decided to make an exception” this time and allow Heraskevych to wear a black armband, which the three-time Olympian has rejected. It’s unclear whether the IOC made the same offer to Kotsar. Armbands have been previously banned at the Olympics.

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    “We don’t want everyone wearing a black armband for every competition,” said IOC spokesman Mark Adams. “But where there’s a good reasoning it will be considered properly.

    “The Games need to be separated from not just political and religious topics, but all types of interference so that all athletes can concentrate on performance.”

    Ukraine’s Olympic committee told the IOC that it believes the helmet meets the IOC’s rules since it “does not carry any political slogans, and does not express any racial discrimination.”

    “What we’ve tried to do is to address his desires with compassion and understanding,” Adams said. “He has expressed himself on social media and in the training and, as you know, we will not stop him expressing himself in press conferences, as he leaves competition in the mixed zone and elsewhere. We feel that this is a good compromise in the situation.”

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    Heraskevych will continue to wear the helmet during training sessions.

    “We will continue to fight for the right to compete in this helmet,” Heraskevych told reporters on Tuesday. “I truly believe that we didn’t violate any law and any rules.”

    Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has expressed support with a social media post thanking Heraskevych for “reminding the world the price of our struggle.”

  • Olympics 2026: How to watch Team USA compete in Bobsled at the Winter Games

    This year, the U.S. is sending 14 athletes to compete in Bobsled at the 2026 Winter Games in Milan-Cortina, Italy. You can catch all of Team USA’s Bobsled competitions, including monobob, 2-woman, and 4-man Bobsleigh, live from Italy, streaming on Peacock.

    Here’s a complete schedule of all Team USA’s Bobsled events at this year’s games, along with a rundown of who is competing. While every race will stream on Peacock, some will also be broadcast on NBC and USA Network. (To see specific air times, check out the official NBC Olympics broadcast schedule, and toggle your search to “TV Only.”) Here’s a rundown of how to watch every Bobsled event at the 2026 Winter Games.

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    And 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 Milan-Cortina 2026.

    How to watch Bobsled at the 2026 Winter Olympics

    Image for the mini product module
    Image for the mini product module

    Dates: Feb. 15 – 22

    TV channels: NBC, USA

    Streaming: Peacock, DirecTV, and more

    Where can I stream Bobsled at the 2026 Winter Olympics?

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

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

    Where to watch Bobsled on TV:

    Team USA men’s and women’s Bobsled coverage will be split between NBC and USA, which you can stream on DirecTV, Hulu + Live TV, and more. NBC will only be airing select coverage live. For specific times on NBC, make sure to check out the official NBC Olympics broadcast schedule, and toggle your search to “TV Only.”

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    How to watch Olympic Bobsled without cable:

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    Who is on the Team USA Bobsled team?

    These are the athletes on Team USA’s Bobsled team:

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    • Kaillie Armbruster Humphries, 40, Calgary

    • Frank Del Duca, 34, Bethel, ME

    • Caleb Furnell, 24, Lee’s Summit, MO

    • Azaria Hill, 27, Santa Clarita, CA

    • Kris Horn, 31, Pembroke, MA

    • Jasmine Jones, 29, Greensburg, PA

    • Kaysha Love, 28, Herriman, UT

    • Elana Meyers Taylor, 41, Douglasville, GA

    • Boone Niederhofer, 32, San Antonio, TX

    • Jadin O’Brien, 23, Pewaukee, WI

    • Hunter Powell, 29, Fort Collins, CO

    • Bryan Sosoo, 29, Laurel, MD

    • Carsten Vissering, 28, Bethesda, MD

    • Josh Williamson, 29, Sanford, FL

    2026 Team USA Bobsled TV schedule (tentative):

    The official times for Bobsled at the upcoming Winter Games have not been released yet. All events will stream on Peacock and NBCOlympics.com.

    Sunday, Feb 15

    • Women’s Monobob — Runs 1–2
      Early heats

    Monday, Feb 16

    • Women’s Monobob — Runs 3–4 (Medal Runs)

    Tuesday, Feb 17

    • Men’s Two-Man Bobsled — Runs 1–2

    Wednesday, Feb 18

    • Men’s Two-Man Bobsled — Runs 3–4 (Medal Runs)

    Thursday, Feb 19

    • Women’s Two-Woman Bobsled — Runs 1–2

    Friday, Feb 20

    • Women’s Two-Woman Bobsled — Runs 3–4 (Medal Runs)

    Saturday, Feb 21

    • Men’s Four-Man Bobsled — Runs 1–2

    Sunday, Feb 22

    • Men’s Four-Man Bobsled — Runs 3–4 (Medal Runs)

    More ways to watch the 2026 Winter Olympics

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  • Winter Olympics 2026: What injury? Chloe Kim puts any health questions to rest with massive qualifying run

    LIVIGNO, Italy — Torn labrum and all, there’s no slowing down Chloe Kim when there’s an Olympic halfpipe in sight.

    The American superstar snowboarder showed it’s all systems go for her third consecutive gold medal Wednesday, putting down a clean qualifying run that scored 90.25 — nearly three points better than Japan’s Sara Shimizu with American Maddie Mastro qualifying in third place.

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    Though scores reset for Thursday’s final, when riders get three attempts to show their best, Kim’s almost effortless trick execution and noticeably elite amplitude on her first qualifying attempt answered every question about the mental and physical preparation she might have had coming into her third Olympics.

    “I knew I could do it,” she said. “I’ve been doing this for 22 years. Muscle memory is a thing. I might be better at snowboarding than I am at walking. Obviously there’s some nerves, but I think at the Olympics, I’m just so happy I made it — especially this time around.”

    In January, Kim slammed her left shoulder into the top of the pipe during a crash in Switzerland, limiting much of her preparation for these Games. She spoke Monday about the brace she has to wear to compete, joking that it might actually make her better. Kim was also anxious because she hadn’t taken part in a serious competition in nearly a year.

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    But all it took was one run to prove yet again that when she’s even close to her best, she’s just better than everyone else in women’s halfpipe.

    “She played it well by taking time off to rest and recover after it unfortunately happened,” said teammate Madeline Schaffrick, who finished 15th and did not qualify for the finals. “Chloe was very smart about it.”

    Kim’s qualifying run, which included a cab 1080 and a frontside 900, was not as ambitious as what she plans for Thursday’s final. She revealed that there were “maybe two hits” from the qualifying run that will be part of her final program. With riders having three chances in the final to nail their run, Kim said she won’t feel quite as much pressure.

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    “I’m really excited,” she said. “I think I feel like I’m in a good place. I’ve landed all the components of my finals run, I just haven’t put them all together. So I’ll get to do it on the big day.”

    As far as her health, Kim said the shoulder has been “very well behaved” and that there haven’t been any setbacks.

    “I’ve been working relentlessly on getting it as strong as possible, and obviously the shoulder brace is really helpful,” she said. “We have an amazing medical staff and an amazing physical therapist. So it takes a village, but it’s working.”

    Kim’s will attempt to make history Thursday by becoming the first snowboarder to win three consecutive golds. Shaun White won halfpipe gold three times but in 2006, 2010 and 2018.

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    Some of Kim’s strongest opposition might come from within Team USA.

    Mastro, who missed the finals by one spot in 2022, said she was so nervous Wednesday morning she couldn’t get any food down and was looking forward to the pasta bolognese in the athletes’ lounge now that her place in the final is secure. She actually put down two very good runs, improving on her second try to get in third position.

    “I haven’t always had the best Olympic performances or qualifiers so after my first run, I was just really happy to land one and perform that way,” she said. “It washed away some anxieties, a lot of anxious energy. I can finally eat, which is nice.”

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    Team USA will have a third entrant in the 12-rider finals with 19-year old Bea Kim, who will enroll at Columbia this fall, advancing in her first Olympics.

  • Milan Cortina 2026: Team USA’s historic day at the Olympics

    Yahoo Sports AM is our daily newsletter that keeps you up to date on all things sports. Sign up here to get it every weekday morning.

    🚨 Headlines

    🇺🇸 Team USA’s historic day: For the first time ever at the Winter Olympics, Team USA won five medals in five different sports on the same day, capturing three silvers (curling, freeskiing, cross-country skiing) and two bronzes (luge, alpine skiing).

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    🏈 SB ratings down slightly: This year’s Super Bowl averaged 124.9 million viewers, which was down from last year’s record number (127.7 million). But it did set a new high for peak viewership, with 137.8 million tuning in during the second quarter.

    ⚾️ Verlander comes home: Justin Verlander is returning to the Tigers on a one-year, $13 million deal, coming back for his 21st season to the team that drafted him all the way back in 2004.

    🏀 All-Star replacements: Raptors forward Brandon Ingram (for Stephen Curry) and Rockets center Alperen Şengün (for Shai Gilgeous-Alexander) have been named as injury replacements for this weekend’s All-Star Game in Los Angeles.

    ⛳️ Woods to FSU: Rising high school senior Charlie Woods, son of Tiger, has committed to play golf at Florida State. The 17-year-old from The Benjamin School in Palm Beach, Florida, is the ninth-ranked golfer in the Class of 2027.

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    🇺🇸 Snapshots: Yesterday in Milan

    (Anne-Christine Poujoulat/AFP via Getty Images)

    (Anne-Christine Poujoulat/AFP via Getty Images)

    Tesero — Ben Ogden captured a historic silver in Tuesday’s sprint classic, becoming the first American man in 50 years to win an Olympic medal in cross country skiing. Bill Koch, a 1976 silver medalist, was the only other one to do so. And in a bit of kismet, Ogden grew up in the Bill Koch Youth Ski League and has skied with Koch, a fellow Vermonter.

    As for the winner? That would be Norway’s Johannes Høsflot Klæbo, who’s won two golds at these Games and seven in his career, just one shy of the record. With four events left, the 29-year-old is almost certain to leave Milan as the winningest Winter Olympian ever. Look at this speed!

    (Marco Bertorello/AFP via Getty Images)

    (Marco Bertorello/AFP via Getty Images)

    Cortina d’Ampezzo — Mikaela Shiffrin’s Olympic struggles continued at the team combined, where she and Breezy Johnson finished one spot off the podium after an uncharacteristically poor slalom in which she placed 15th (of the 18 finishers). Americans Jackie Wiles and Paula Moltzan took bronze behind duos from Austria and Germany.

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    Olympic yips? It’s hard to comprehend what we’re witnessing with Shiffrin, who remains an all-time great in her prime but just can’t seem to perform at the Olympics. She went 0-for-6 in Beijing and is now 0-for-1 in Milan, despite dominating the World Cup circuit in between. Shiffrin has two events left in Milan (slalom, giant slalom) to end her Olympic drought.

    (Gregory Shamus/Getty Images)

    (Gregory Shamus/Getty Images)

    Milan — The U.S. wasn’t supposed to dominate Canada the way they did their other opponents, but they put the hammer down anyway in a 5-0 rout to clinch the No. 1 seed in the knockouts. Next up? Italy in the quarterfinals.

    O no, Canada: The five-time gold medalists (in just seven tournaments) entered this game with a 37-3 record in the Olympics and had never been shutout. The Americans are just on another level at the moment… and have now won seven straight games against their rivals to the north.

    (Richard Heathcote/Getty Images)

    (Richard Heathcote/Getty Images)

    Cortina d’Ampezzo — Ashley Farquharson rallied to claim bronze in singles luge, joining Erin Hamlin in 2014 as the only American women to medal in a sport that continues to be dominated by one country: Germany.

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    Second to none: No country has won a higher percentage of the Winter Olympics medals in any one sport than Germany has in luge, with 89 of 163 all-time (55%). They’re even more dominant in women’s singles, having won 36 of 51 medals (71%) and 13 of 17 golds, including this year’s.

    More highlights: Defending slopestyle gold medalist Alex Hall was dethroned but still took silver; curling duo Korey Dropkin and Cory Thiesse lost a heartbreaker to Sweden to take silver; Ilia Malinin landed another backflip in the short program and will enter Friday’s free skate final in first place.

    We’ll be spotlighting America’s best athletes throughout the Games. Follow Team USA’s progress on their homepage, and for in-depth Olympics coverage, go to ours.

    🥇 Medal table: Day 5

    (Yahoo Sports)

    (Yahoo Sports)

    28 of 116 events completed. Full table.

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    🏀 Big Number: 10 teams

    Michigan is the only team with a top five offense and defense. (Jaime Crawford/Getty Images)

    Michigan is the only team with a top five offense and defense. (Jaime Crawford/Getty Images)

    Since 2002, all but one* NCAA men’s basketball champion ranked among the top 25 teams nationally in both offensive and defensive efficiency, per KenPom.

    This year’s list: With just under five weeks until Selection Sunday, only 10 teams currently fit that criteria:

    Notably absent: Miami (Ohio), the nation’s only remaining undefeated team, is nowhere near joining that group, with the 63rd-ranked offense and 146th-ranked defense.

    *Odd man out: 2014 UConn was the only team to buck the trend. They finished the season with the 10th-best defense but just the 39th-best offense.

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    🏈 NFL power rankings

    (Taylar Sievert/Yahoo Sports)

    (Taylar Sievert/Yahoo Sports)

    The Super Bowl champion Seahawks sit atop our way-too-early 2026 power rankings as the offseason gets underway.

    Looking ahead: Is Seattle on the brink of a dynasty? They have a strong roster with a fantastic coach, not many pending free agents, and the fifth-most projected cap space in the league. But they also just lost their offensive coordinator, and it’s never easy to climb back up the mountain.

    📚 Good reads

    LaMelo Ball and Kon Knueppel high five after a recent Hornets victory. (Kent Smith/NBAE via Getty Images)

    LaMelo Ball and Kon Knueppel high five after a recent Hornets victory. (Kent Smith/NBAE via Getty Images)

    🏀 Kelly Iko: Why the surging Hornets could be here to stay

    The Hornets, who were a bleak 11-22 at the beginning of 2026, have turned the page rather quickly, winning 14 of 21 games since then. But it’s what they’ve been able to accomplish in the past couple weeks that is truly remarkable. Since Jan. 22, Charlotte is second in the league in point differential, scoring 121 points per 100 possessions, and is allowing just 108.8 points per 100 possessions — giving them the league’s No. 2 unit at both ends of the floor.

    Banks, 19, celebrates after scoring a goal for FC Augsburg. (Harry Langer/picture alliance via Getty Images)

    Banks, 19, celebrates after scoring a goal for FC Augsburg. (Harry Langer/picture alliance via Getty Images)

    ⚽️ Steven Goff: Meet Noahkai Banks, the teenage Bundesliga starter making his case for Mauricio Pochettino’s World Cup roster

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    With the World Cup just four months away, much of coach Mauricio Pochettino’s U.S. roster has fallen into place. There is, however, an intriguing candidate without any senior international matches on his portfolio — a Hawaiian-born, German American teenager standing 6-foot-4 and starting at center back in the Bundesliga.

    Chuck Wepner is draped on the ropes after Andre the Giant picked him up and tossed him in their forgotten match at Shea Stadium. (Bettmann Archive via Getty Images)

    Chuck Wepner is draped on the ropes after Andre the Giant picked him up and tossed him in their forgotten match at Shea Stadium. (Bettmann Archive via Getty Images)

    🥊 Sean Wheelock: The night Andre the Giant fought the real-life Rocky Balboa: Was it real or was it all show? An investigation

    In a new Uncrowned series, combat sports television commentator, historian, officials trainer and regulator Sean Wheelock takes an in-depth and analytical look at infamous matches from MMA, boxing, pro wrestling, bare-knuckle, and the long and confused history of mixed-match fighting to determine whether controversial bouts were Shoots (legitimate competition) or Works (predetermined results).

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    📺 Watchlist: Wednesday, Feb. 11

    (Henk Jan Dijks/Marcel ter Bals/DeFodi Images via Getty Images)

    (Henk Jan Dijks/Marcel ter Bals/DeFodi Images via Getty Images)

    ⛸️ Speed Skating, Men’s 1000m

    American phenom Jordan Stolz, the world record holder in the 1000m, headlines the field for today’s speed skating final (12:30pm ET, NBC) as the 21-year-old Wisconsin native begins his quest for Olympic history.

    4-for-4? This is the first of four events Stolz will compete in, and he’s favored in all of them. If he leaves Milan with four golds, he’d be second only to fellow American speed skater Eric Heiden, who won a record five golds at the 1980 Lake Placid Games.

    🏒 Men’s Hockey

    The first Olympic hockey tournament since 2014 to feature NHL players gets underway today, with Slovakia vs. Finland in the opener (10:40am, USA) and Italy vs. Sweden later in the day (3:10pm, Peacock).

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    NHL representation: 147 NHL players are in Milan, including at least one from all 32 teams. The U.S., Canada and Sweden all have full 25-man rosters of NHL players and Finland is right behind them with 24. The rest: Czechia (11), Switzerland (10), Germany (7), Slovakia (7), Latvia (6), Denmark (6), France (1) and Italy (0).

    ⛸️ Figure Skating, Free Dance

    The ice dance champions will be crowned today in Milan (1:15pm, USA), where three-time defending world champions Madison Chock and Evan Bates go for their second gold of these Games after helping the U.S. win the team event on Sunday.

    Where it stands: Chock and Bates finished Monday’s rhythm dance segment in second place, just 0.46 points behind France’s Laurence Fournier Beaudry and Guillaume Cizeron. They’ll need to make up that gap in today’s longer free dance routine.

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    🎯 Biathlon, Women’s 15km Individual

    Did you know: Biathlon is the only Winter Olympics sport in which the U.S. has never won a medal? Four American women will try to change that today (8:15am, Peacock), led by Michigan Tech grad Deedra Irwin, who finished seventh in Beijing.

    How it works: Racers take five laps around a 3km cross-country skiing track, stopping four times to shoot targets with a rifle. The shooting sections, which alternate between standing and prone, each include five targets. Every missed target incurs a one-minute penalty.

    🥇 Medal events

    • ⛷️ Nordic Combined: Men’s Normal Hill (7:45am, Peacock)

    • 🎿 Freeskiing: Women’s Moguls Final (8:15am, USA)

    • 🛷 Luge: Men’s and Women’s Doubles (11am, USA)

    Daily schedule.

    Kiki Rice drives to the basket during Sunday's win over Michigan. (Jaime Crawford/Getty Images)

    Kiki Rice drives to the basket during Sunday’s win over Michigan. (Jaime Crawford/Getty Images)

    More to watch:

    • 🏀 NCAAW: No. 2 UCLA at No. 13 Michigan State (8pm, Peacock) … The Bruins’ 17-game winning streak is the third-longest in the nation behind UConn (41) and NDSU (20).

    • 🏀 NBA: Knicks at 76ers (7:30pm, ESPN); Spurs at Warriors (10pm, ESPN) … Elite scorers Tyrese Maxey (28.8 ppg) and Jalen Brunson (27.4 ppg) go head-to-head in Philly.

    • ⚽️ EPL: Manchester City vs. Fulham (2:30pm, Peacock) … City (15-5-5) are six points behind league-leading Arsenal (17-5-3) with one-third of the season left to play.

    • 🏀 Unrivaled: 1-on-1 Tournament (7pm, truTV) … Kelsey Mitchell, Paige Bueckers, Allisha Gray and Breanna Stewart are the top seeds in the 32-player mid-season event.

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    Got plans tonight? Gametime is the best place to score last-minute tickets to the events happening in your city. Get tickets now!

    ⚾️ MLB trivia

    Verlander in 2014. (Rob Carr/Getty Images)

    Verlander in 2014. (Rob Carr/Getty Images)

    Justin Verlander is returning to the Tigers, where he was famously part of a 2014 pitching staff that had five past or future Cy Young winners.

    Question: Who were the other four?

    Hint: Their first initials are M, D, R, R.

    Answer at the bottom.

    ⚾️ Yahoo Fantasy: Play ball

    (Yahoo Sports)

    (Yahoo Sports)

    Yahoo Fantasy Baseball is back, and playing is easier and more fun than ever. Get your crew together and launch a league today.

    New features:

    • Upgraded Commissioner Tools: Everything you need to manage your draft and your league is now all in the app, all in one place.

    • Easier Roster Management: With the new pitcher calendar, you can view which games your pitchers are starting weekly to make smarter lineup decisions.

    • Social-First Community: With Fantasy Feed, you can join the conversation, follow live plays and connect with millions of fans.

    Create or join a league.

    _________________________________________________________________________________

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    Trivia answer: Max Scherzer, David Price, Rick Porcello, Robbie Ray

    We hope you enjoyed this edition of Yahoo Sports AM, our daily newsletter that keeps you up to date on all things sports. Sign up here to get it delivered to your inbox every weekday morning.