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  • Winter Olympics 2026: Meet the white-haired grandfather behind Jordan Stolz’s golden rise

    MILAN — Last Wednesday night, shortly after 1 a.m., Jordan Stolz’s coach went to speak with the speedskating superstar.

    Bob Corby found Stolz in the Olympic Village, still cradling the gold medal that he had secured earlier that evening by winning his first of four races on the sport’s biggest stage.

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    “Oh, you got a little trophy there?” the 75-year-old Corby quipped. “What did you do? Did you win a little tee ball tournament?”

    Stolz grinned before gesturing toward his medal and saying, “I’ve been thinking about this for a long time.”

    At first glance, Stolz and Corby might appear to be these Olympics’ most mismatched pairing — an unflappable 21-year-old speedskating phenom and the feisty white-haired grandfather who he lured out of retirement. And yet speedskating’s odd couple have brought out the best in each other during their seven years working together.

    Stolz has flourished under Corby’s old-school training methods, establishing himself as the planet’s most dominant speedskater with a real chance to add two more Olympic gold medals to the two he has already won in Milan. And Corby has reveled in helping a star pupil seize his moment in the spotlight more than four decades after an Olympic coaching flop that haunts him to this day.

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    The only speedskater ever to win five gold medals at the same Olympics endorsed Corby as the ideal coach to help Stolz chase greatness. Eric Heiden used to train with Corby and to this day refers to him as “the Skate Whisperer.”

    “He doesn’t let his ego get in the way of letting Jordan do his thing,” Heiden said. “He knows when to offer advice and coach and then understands when to let Jordan’s innate talent take over.”

    INZELL, GERMANY - MARCH 10: : Jordan Stolz of USA is given instructions on the track by his coach Bob Corby as he competes and wins the 1500m Men AllRound race during the ISU World Speed Skating Allround and Sprint Championships at Max Aicher Arena on March 10, 2024 in Inzell, Germany. (Photo by Dean Mouhtaropoulos - International Skating Union/International Skating Union via Getty Images)

    Bob Corby had dreams of competing in the Olympics himself, but ultimately found his calling as a coach. (Dean Mouhtaropoulos – International Skating Union/International Skating Union via Getty Images)

    (Dean Mouhtaropoulos – International Skating Union via Getty Images)

    Leaving Sarajevo empty handed

    Decades ago, Corby himself once had aspirations of competing at an Olympics in speedskating. He trained relentlessly for the 1972 and 1976 Winter Games, experimenting with yoga, nutrition and an array of different drills and exercises in an effort to shave just a few tenths of a second off his best times.

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    It wasn’t enough. There were always world-class American skaters who were faster than Corby at every distance. But those experiences helped Corby as a coach when he started working for the Madison Speedskating Club and for the U.S. International Speedskating Association while also studying physical therapy at the University of Wisconsin.

    One year after Heiden swept all five men’s speedskating races at the 1980 Winter Games in Lake Placid, the USISA tasked Corby with the job of helping prepare American speedskaters for the 1984 Olympics in Sarajevo. He inherited a young, inexperienced group since Heiden and many other top Americans had chosen to hang up their skates.

    The buildup to the Sarajevo Games was marred by infighting over staff shortages, fundraising failures, training sites and coaching methods. Reports from the time period describe a schism between speedskaters who supported Corby and those who backed other USISA coaches.

    The results once those Olympics started were also deflating. The Soviets and East Germans dominated. The Americans came home empty-handed. At 18 years old, Dan Jansen took fourth in the men’s 500. Twenty-year-old Nick Thometz finished one spot behind Jansen in the 500 and a hard-luck fourth in the 1,000. Bonnie Blair, then 19, cracked the top 10 in the women’s 500. But there were no American medalists, not even a paltry bronze.

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    “It was very disappointing,” Corby said. “You knew that they were just teenagers skating against 25- and 26-year-olds with more years of training, but it still was disappointing to go through the whole thing with them and not get a medal somewhere. I spent a long time afterward trying to analyze if I could have done anything to change things, to make it a little better.”

    Corby stepped away from the national team after 1984 but continued to coach speedskaters into the late 1980s. Then he gradually disappeared from the sport altogether as his physical therapy practice began getting busier and his kids showed a preference for soccer and skiing rather than speedskating.

    The first time that Corby met Stolz, he had no intention of coaching him. Speedskating coach Bobby Fenn, a longtime close friend of Corby’s, invited him to come watch a short-track meet in Madison nearly a decade ago. When they arrived, Fenn pointed to a rail-thin 12-year-old boy who he coached and told Corby, “Watch this kid. He’s pretty good.”

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    Corby, too, recognized Stolz had potential after watching him skate. He met Stolz and his parents that day through Fenn. He stayed in touch sporadically, even providing physical therapy to the young skater after he suffered a hip flexor.

    By then, Stolz’s speedskating ambitions had outgrown the backyard pond where he and older sister Hannah famously learned to skate. Stolz’s parents took him and Hannah to Milwaukee a few times a week to work with Fenn, a world-class coach best known for developing Shani Davis into an Olympic and world all-around champion.

    Then on Oct. 8, 2017, Fenn didn’t show up to the rink for a scheduled practice session. Later that day, the Stolz family learned the 73-year-old had passed away suddenly, the cause of death reportedly a heart attack. 

    Fenn’s death was very hard on both her children, Jane Stolz said. Hannah gradually retreated from speedskating, preferring to focus on her passion for raising exotic birds and doing taxidermy. Jordan also drifted. Davis filled in for Fenn for a little while, but when he accepted an opportunity to coach junior skaters in China, Jordan was coachless again.

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    While Corby had occasionally offered guidance and support during this time period, Jordan needed more than that. He asked Corby if he’d be willing to return to the speedskating world for the first time in more than two decades to coach him full-time.

    The timing, as Corby puts it, was “serendipitous” with him preparing to step back from his physical therapy practice. Plus, Corby says, “How on earth do you say no to a 14-year-old kid who calls you and asks you for help?”

    USA's gold medalist Jordan Stolz (L) listens to his coach Bob Corby after competing in the speed skating men's 1000m event during the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympic Games at Milano Speed Skating Stadium in Milan on February 11, 2026. (Photo by Piero CRUCIATTI / AFP via Getty Images)

    USA’s gold medalist Jordan Stolz (L) listens to his coach Bob Corby after competing in the speed skating men’s 1000m event during the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympic Games at Milano Speed Skating Stadium in Milan on February 11, 2026. (Photo by Piero CRUCIATTI / AFP via Getty Images)

    (PIERO CRUCIATTI via Getty Images)

    Turning a scrawny kid into a powerhouse

    Armed with pages of handwritten notes about which training techniques he’d keep from the buildup to the 1984 Olympics and which he’d scrap, Corby tailored a plan specifically for Stolz. Stolz spends much of his summer on his bicycle, building leg strength and aerobic capacity. He powers through draining sets of heavy squats, explosive jumps and single-leg workouts. He also hones his technique away from the ice, imitating his stride on a slide board or using cables as a resistance tool to simulate cornering on ice.

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    The emphasis on weight training helped Stolz evolve from a talented but scrawny kid into a powerhouse. By the time speedskating began to emerge from the COVID pandemic, Jordan didn’t just stand out among skaters his own age anymore. The 16-year-old took on the fastest men in America and beat them, clocking a national junior record time of 34.99 seconds in the men’s 500 at the 2021 U.S. Speedskating Championships.

    “I remember thinking, ‘Holy cow,’” Corby said. “This kid really has some talent.”

    The holy cow moments didn’t stop there.

    At 17, Stolz won both the men’s 500 and 1,000 at the U.S. Olympic Trials, qualifying him to participate in the Winter Games in both events.

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    At 18, he swept the gold medals in the 500, 1,000 and 1,500 at world championships.

    At 19, he did it again.

    Now Stolz is trying to top all of those feats at these Winter Games. He’s halfway to four gold medals, having already set a pair of Olympic records while outdueling Dutch sprinter Jenning de Boo to win the 1,000 and the 500. He’ll be a heavy favorite to win his third gold medal on Thursday in the 1,500, a distance he has dominated on the World Cup circuit. Then there’s the race that Stolz refers to as “a bonus,” the chaotic, unpredictable mass start.

    When asked why the partnership between he and Stolz has turned out so well, Corby said that Stolz responds well to being pushed — especially when the results show that the training programs are working.

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    “He can handle a pretty big workload,” Corby said. “He saw a real benefit to doing these types of workouts.”

    Spend even a few minutes at the speedskating arena in Milan on one of Stolz’s race days, and the bond between him and Corby is obvious. Corby is the last person Stolz speaks with before a race and the first person he high fives after he crosses the finish line.

    “This experience has been great,” Corby said with a laugh, “It doesn’t seem to bother him having a white-haired guy hanging around.”

  • Winter Olympics: American Jake Canter rides to bronze in slopestyle

    LIVIGNO, Italy — He had to wait an agonizingly long time, but the bronze medal in men’s snowboard slopestyle is Jake Canter’s.

    After stomping his final run for a score of 79.36 to put him third on the leaderboard, Canter had to wait for the rest of the field to finish to see if his score would hold up. Things got tense when Norway’s Marcus Kleveland, the second-to-last rider, crushed his own final run. The judges took an extraordinarily long time to post Kleveland’s score, leaving an anxious Canter waiting to see if he’d be knocked off the podium.

    When Kleveland’s score came in at 78.96, Canter breathed a huge sigh of relief. Moments later, when New Zealand’s Dane Menzies crashed on his run, it was celebration time for Canter.

    It’s the first Olympic medal for the 22 year old Coloradan, who won the Aspen World Cup in January to secure his place on Team USA.

    China’s star snowboarded Su Yiming won his second career Olympic gold (big air, 2022) while Japan’s Taiga Hasegawa took silver.

    Red Gerard, the 2018 gold medalist, finished sixth while 17-year old Ollie Martin finished ninth for Team USA.

  • Olympics 2026: How to watch Team USA compete in the men’s and women’s ice hockey playoffs at the Winter Games

    Team USA has been heavily favored to medal in the men’s and women’s ice hockey competition at the Milan Cortina Winter Olympics. The women’s team is guaranteed a medal; they’re playing in the gold medal game this Thursday against Canada (marking the seventh time in history that the two clubs have met in the gold medal clash). The men’s team is just entering the playoff round and they’ll play their quarterfinal against Sweden on Feb. 18 at 3:10 p.m. ET. The men’s gold medal final is scheduled for the very last day of the Games, on Sunday, Feb. 22.

    Read on for a complete schedule of every U.S. men’s and women’s hockey game at this year’s games, a rundown of who is playing for Team USA, and how to watch all the action. 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 the Milan Cortina Games.

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    How to watch Team USA ice hockey at the 2026 Winter Olympics

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    Dates: Now through Feb. 22

    Location: Milano Santagiulia Ice Hockey Arena

    TV channel: USA, NBC, CNBC

    Streaming: Peacock, DirecTV, and more

    Where can I stream ice hockey at the 2026 Winter Olympics?

    Every men’s and women’s ice hockey game at the Olympics, including the women’s gold medal final this Thursday, is available to stream on Peacock.

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

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

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  • 2026 NFL scouting combine: Fernando Mendoza and 14 other QBs among 319 players invited to Indianapolis

    How much will Fernando Mendoza do at the NFL scouting combine?

    The NFL released its invite list for the 2026 combine last Wednesday. The 2025 Heisman Trophy winner is one of 15 quarterbacks who were asked to participate in the combine, along with notable names like Alabama’s Ty Simpson, Vanderbilt’s Diego Pavia and Miami’s Carson Beck. Overall, 319 players have been invited to the combine.

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    Mendoza is widely expected to be the No. 1 pick in the 2026 NFL Draft by the Las Vegas Raiders after he led Indiana to a 16-0 season and the national championship. The Raiders recently hired Seattle Seahawks offensive coordinator Klint Kubiak to be their next head coach.

    With Mendoza a near-lock to be the No. 1 pick, it seems unlikely that he’ll do many of the physical drills at the combine. Top-tier quarterbacks have largely preferred to throw at their own pro days in recent seasons — and with no other real contenders to go at No. 1, there’s not much else that Mendoza needs to do to sell himself to the Raiders.

    Outside of Mendoza, Simpson is viewed as a possible first-round pick as well.

    Mendoza will have eight other teammates at the combine, including running back Roman Hemby and wide receivers Elijah Sarratt and Omar Cooper Jr. However, running back Kaelon Black and defensive end Mikail Kamara were not invited.

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    Hemby was Indiana’s leading rusher with 230 carries for 1,120 yards and seven scores. Black, a transfer from James Madison when coach Curt Cignetti was hired at Indiana, had 1,040 yards and 10 TDs on 186 carries.

    Kamara totaled 12 sacks and 22 tackles for loss in his two seasons at Indiana. Though he had just two sacks in 2025, he was massive in the College Football Playoff. His blocked punt in the third quarter of the national championship game win over Miami put the Hoosiers up 17-7.

    Here’s the complete invitation list for the 2026 NFL combine. The event begins on Feb. 26.

    Quarterbacks

    • Haynes King, Georgia Tech

    • Fernando Mendoza, Indiana

    • Behren Morton, Texas Tech

    • Cole Payton, North Dakota State

    Running backs

    • Kaytron Allen, Penn State

    • Demond Claiborne, Wake Forest

    • Jonah Coleman, Washington

    • Rahsul Faison, South Carolina

    • Jeremiyah Love, Notre Dame

    • Jadarian Price, Notre Dame

    • Nicholas Singleton, Penn State

    • Mike Washington Jr., Arkansas

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    Wide receivers

    • Vinny Anthony II, Wisconsin

    • Denzel Boston, Washington

    • Zachariah Branch, Georgia

    • Chris Brazzell II, Tennessee

    • Jeff Caldwell, Cincinnati

    • Kevin Coleman Jr., Missouri

    • Caleb Douglas, Texas Tech

    • Malachi Fields, Notre Dame

    • Emmanuel Henderson Jr., Kansas

    • Bryce Lance, North Dakota State

    • Donaven McCulley, Michigan

    • Eric Rivers, Georgia Tech

    • De’Zhaun Stribling, Mississippi

    • J. Michael Sturdivant, Florida

    • Brenen Thompson, Mississippi State

    • Jordyn Tyson, Arizona State

    • Reggie Virgil, Texas Tech

    • Harrison Wallace III, Mississippi

    • Jalen Walthall, Incarnate Word

    • Antonio Williams, Clemson

    Tight ends

    • Nate Boerkircher, Texas A&M

    • Khalil Dinkins, Penn State

    • John Michael Gyllenborg, Wyoming

    • Will Kacmarek, Ohio State

    • Miles Kitselman, Tennessee

    • Riley Nowakowski, Indiana

    • Dae’Quan Wright, Mississippi

    Offensive linemen

    • Evan Beerntsen, Northwestern

    • Chase Bisontis, Texas A&M

    • Jude Bowry, Boston College

    • Parker Brailsford, Alabama

    • Fernando Carmona, Arkansas

    • Dametrious Crownover, Texas A&M

    • Fa’alili Fa’amoe, Wake Forest

    • Matt Gulbin, Michigan State

    • Max Iheanachor, Arizona State

    • Olaivavega Ioane, Penn State

    • Diego Pounds, Mississippi

    • Ar’maj Reed-Adams, Texas A&M

    • Keylan Rutledge, Georgia Tech

    • Billy Schrauth, Notre Dame

    • Logan Taylor, Boston College

    • Caleb Tiernan, Northwestern

    • Carver Willis, Washington

    Defensive linemen

    • Vincent Anthony Jr., Duke

    • Jaishawn Barham, Michigan

    • Nick Barrett, South Carolina

    • DeMonte Capehart, Clemson

    • Brandon Cleveland, N.C. State

    • Dontay Corleone, Cincinnati

    • Dani Dennis-Sutton, Penn State

    • Skyler Gill-Howard, Texas Tech

    • George Gumbs Jr., Florida

    • Zxavian Harris, Mississippi

    • Romello Height, Texas Tech

    • Cashius Howell, Texas A&M

    • Aidan Hubbard, Northwestern

    • Quintayvious Hutchins, Boston College

    • Darrell Jackson Jr., Florida State

    • Bobby Jamison-Travis, Auburn

    • Marvin Jones Jr., Oklahoma

    • Joshua Josephs, Tennessee

    • Chris McClellan, Missouri

    • Kayden McDonald, Ohio State

    • Domonique Orange, Iowa State

    • Kaleb Proctor, Southeastern Louisiana

    • Nadame Tucker, Western Michigan

    • Damonic Williams, Oklahoma

    Linebackers

    • Keyshaun Elliott, Arizona State

    • Justin Jefferson, Alabama

    • Jacob Rodriguez, Texas Tech

    • Xavian Sorey Jr., Arkansas

    • Scooby Williams, Texas A&M

    Defensive backs

    • Keith Abney II, Arizona State

    • Marcus Allen, North Carolina

    • Brandon Cisse, South Carolina

    • Tacario Davis, Washington

    • Charles Demmings, Stephen F. Austin

    • Thaddeus Dixon, North Carolina

    • Ahmari Harvey, Georgia Tech

    • Davison Igbinosun, Ohio State

    • Chris Johnson, San Diego State

    • Jalon Kilgore, South Carolina

    • Latrell McCutchin Sr., Houston

    • Emmanuel McNeil-Warren, Toledo

    • Toriano Pride Jr., Missouri

    • Ephesians Prysock, Washington

    • DeShon Singleton, Nebraska

    • Robert Spears-Jennings, Oklahoma

    • Lorenzo Styles Jr., Ohio State

    • Zakee Wheatley, Penn State

    Special teams

    • P Tommy Doman Jr., Florida

    • P Ryan Eckley, Michigan State

    • P Jack Stonehouse, Syracuse

    • K Dominic Zvada, Michigan

  • Winter Olympics 2026: Team USA takes silver in cross-country team sprint as Norway’s Johannes Hoesflot Klaebo sets record

    Defeating Norway and the dominant Johannes Hoesflot Klaebo was going to be an impossible task for every team taking part in the men’s cross-country team sprint Wednesday. Of all the other teams to compete, the U.S. came the closest, picking up a silver-medal finish in the event.

    Team USA’s Ben Ogden and Gus Schumacher got stronger as the event progressed, eventually finishing just 1.4 seconds behind Klaebo and Einar Hedegart for the silver.

    It marked Ogden’s second medal of the 2026 Olympics. He also won the silver in the cross-country sprint, becoming the first U.S. male cross-country skier to medal since 1976. It was Schumacher’s first-ever Olympic medal.

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    There were some early stumbles for Team USA, as two poor legs had them sitting in 12th after exchange four. From there, though, both Ogden and Schumacher stepped up their game, posting excellent times in the final two legs to claim the silver medal.

    Johannes Hoesflot Klaebo sets Olympic record with 10th gold

    While the U.S. deserves plenty of credit for their finish, Klaebo was the bigger story. With the win, Klaebo picked up his 10th Olympic gold medal in cross-country skiing, extending his record for most golds in Winter Olympic history. He’s won every event in which he’s competed at the 2026 Milan Cortina Olympics so far.

    Klaebo has already picked up gold medals in the 10 km freestyle, 20 km skiathlon, individual sprint, 4 x 7.5 km relay and team sprint. He’ll also take part in the 50-kilometer mass start over the weekend, giving him another opportunity to extend his record and finish off one of the best individual Olympic performances of all time.

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    Klaebo was well-known in Norway prior to the 2026 Olympics, as he already had five gold medals, one silver medal and one bronze under his belt. But his performance this year propelled Klaebo into the worldwide spotlight, cementing him as one of the most dominant athletes in the Olympics.

  • Winter Olympics 2026: Dog disrupts cross-country skiing qualifiers as competitors reach finish line

    An unexpected visitor hit the Winter Olympics cross-country skiing course on Wednesday as a few teams were finishing up qualifiers. Just as two skiers were entering the final stretch, a dog appeared on the course, running after the two competitors as they finished the event.

    It’s unclear where the dog came from, but it somehow made its way directly onto the course. After running near the side of the course, the dog got distracted as skiers passed, and decided to chase them across the finish line.

    The dog appeared friendly, going up to one of the skiers after the qualifier ended. It’s unclear what happened from there, though it appears the dog was removed from the course without incident.

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    The Olympics initially celebrated its appearance, saying the dog should have won “all the medals” in a tweet. That tweet, however, was deleted.

    NBC also captured footage of the dog, saying it achieved the cheer of the day from the fans.

    The dog disrupted only qualifiers, not the final event. Sweden managed to win the gold medal in the final, with Switzerland taking silver and Germany winning bronze.

  • Brian Windhorst talks tanking troubles + biggest storylines after All-Star

    Subscribe to The Big Number

    Tom Haberstroh is joined by ESPN’s Brian Windhorst to dig into the NBA’s $500,000 fine for the Utah Jazz and debate whether fines can truly deter teams from benching their stars. Windhorst breaks down four of the league’s core values to explain why proposals to “fix” tanking rarely last.

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    The duo also look ahead to the second half of the season as the Spurs continue to close in on the Thunder in the Western Conference and Jayson Tatum’s return to the Celtics in the East begins to feel inevitable. Don’t miss Windhorst’s behind-the-scenes stories about his time covering the Miami Heat with Tom and where LeBron might have landed if the draft didn’t exist.

    (1:32) The Big Number: Jazz fined $500k

    (4:23) How can NBA fix tanking?

    (20:57) Would LeBron have gone to Cleveland without the draft?

    (27:44) Is the Jazz fine unfair?

    (36:08) Are Thunder vulnerable to Spurs in West?

    (54:46) Should Tatum return for Celtics this season?

    A close up shot of the lottery balls during the 2017 NBA Draft Lottery in New York, New York. Copyright 2017 NBAE (Photo by Michael J. LeBrecht II/NBAE via Getty Images)

    A close up shot of the lottery balls during the 2017 NBA Draft Lottery in New York, New York. Copyright 2017 NBAE (Photo by Michael J. LeBrecht II/NBAE via Getty Images)

    (Photo by Michael J. LeBrecht II/NBAE via Getty Images)

    🖥️ Watch this full episode on the Yahoo Sports NBA YouTube channel

    Check out all episodes of The Big Number and the rest of the Yahoo Sports podcast family at https://apple.co/3zEuTQj or at yahoosports.tv

  • Northern Illinois coach Thomas Hammock reportedly leaving Huskies to become a Seattle Seahawks assistant

    Northern Illinois coach Thomas Hammock is heading to the NFL.

    According to ESPN, Hammock is becoming the Seattle Seahawks’ running backs coach. Hammock has been the head coach at Northern Illinois for the past seven seasons and, per the report, had “multiple NFL opportunities.”

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    NIU went 35-47 in Hammock’s time with the school and was 3-9 in 2025. Before last year’s struggles, the Huskies had made it to consecutive bowl games in 2023 and 2024 and pulled the upset of the 2024 season when they beat Notre Dame in Week 2.

    That was Notre Dame’s only loss of the season before the Fighting Irish lost to Ohio State in the College Football Playoff championship game.

    Northern Illinois’ best season under Hammock came in 2021, when the Huskies went 9-5. NIU won the MAC title that season with a 41-23 win over Kent State in the conference title game before a 47-41 Cure Bowl loss to Coastal Carolina.

    Hammock leaves Northern Illinois as the school embarks on a new football era. NIU, a longtime member of the MAC, has joined the remade Mountain West Conference in football for the 2026 season. The Huskies’ shortest road trip will be to Air Force in Colorado Springs, Colorado. Their other three road games are at New Mexico, San Jose State and UNLV.

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    While NIU is off to the Mountain West, the MAC took a lucrative financial offer from Sacramento State for the California school to join the conference in football. Yes, a team from Illinois is in the Mountain West and a team from the capital city of California is in the Mid-American Conference. College sports do not make sense, sometimes.

    Hammock replaces Kennedy Polamalu, who took a leave of absence from the Seahawks in December and was not set to return in 2026. The Seahawks secured the No. 1 seed in the NFC late in the season and went on to win Super Bowl LX over the New England Patriots.

  • Curling fans, rejoice! A pro league is coming soon

    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

    🥇 Olympics headlines: The “Blade Angels” had mixed results in the short program; Mac Forehand won silver in an incredible freeski big air final; Lindsey Vonn returned home after multiple surgeries; the Americans took silver in team pursuit behind Italy, which hit Steph Curry’s signature “night, night” celebration as they crossed the finish line.

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    ⚾️ Clark resigns: MLBPA leader Tony Clark has resigned from his position after an internal investigation revealed an inappropriate relationship with his sister-in-law, who worked for the union beginning in 2023. This comes just months before the current CBA is set to expire.

    ⛳️ Tiger hints at potential return: Tiger Woods is still recovering from a torn Achilles, but he had a simple one word answer when asked if this April’s Masters was off the table for him: “No.”

    🏀 WNBPA submits new proposal: The WNBA players union submitted a new counterproposal to the league amid CBA negotiations, reducing both the revenue share and salary cap figures from their last proposal. The league still called it “unrealistic.”

    🏈 Heisman odds: Notre Dame QB CJ Carr opens as the 2026 Heisman Trophy favorite (+700 at BetMGM), just ahead of Texas QB Arch Manning (+800). Oregon QB Dante Moore (+1100), Ohio State QB Julian Sayin (+1200) and Indiana QB Josh Hoover (+1200) round out the top five.

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    🥌 Want more curling? A pro league is set to launch

    Team USA's Korey Dropkin, who won a silver medal in Milan, is among those who will compete in The Rock League. (Erick W. Rasco/Sports Illustrated via Getty Images)

    Team USA’s Korey Dropkin, who won a silver medal in Milan, is among those who will compete in The Rock League. (Erick W. Rasco/Sports Illustrated via Getty Images)

    From Yahoo Sports’ Jay Busbee:

    It happens every Winter Olympics, the curling renaissance. For two-plus weeks in February, Americans south of Canadian border states remember that curling exists.

    Riding a wave of patriotic fever and a strong belief that they too could be Olympic-level curlers, Americans fall in love with the sport … right up until the torch goes out.

    This year, curling aficionados are planning to keep the love going. Shortly after the Olympics wrap up in late February, the Rock League will launch.

    A collection of 60 of the world’s greatest curlers, complete with team names, the Rock League hopes to harness the expected momentum from Milan Cortina.

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    The new league might just revolutionize and professionalize curling as a sport. At the very least, it’ll be a fun watch with a couple beers close at hand. Win-win either way, right?

    “The sport finally needs a platform to professionalize,” says Nic Sulsky, CEO of The Curling Group, which owns The Rock League. “The players need an opportunity to make a little bit more money. There needs to be a proper business strategy.”

    Meet the teams: There will be six teams of 10 curlers (five men, five women), including multiple former Olympians. Each team will have its own logo and will mix together players from a wide range of nationalities.

    Coming soon: The Rock League will begin in April with a one-week “preview season” in Toronto. Then, beginning next January, it will kick off its touring with a four-week season that includes stops in Saskatchewan, Nova Scotia, New York and Ontario.

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    The last word: “It’s going to be a massive undertaking,” says John Shuster, the gold medal-winning skip of Team USA’s landmark 2018 squad who will play for Frontier Curling Club. “But every single player I’ve talked to is really excited to see where this is going to go.”

    🥇 Big Numbers: Olympics edition

    Team USA celebrates after their semifinal victory. (Sarah Stier/Getty Images)

    Team USA celebrates after their semifinal victory. (Sarah Stier/Getty Images)

    🏒 331 minutes, 23 seconds

    The U.S. women’s hockey team has gone 331 minutes, 23 seconds and counting since last allowing a goal, shattering both the men’s (245 minutes) and women’s records (199 minutes, 35 seconds) for the longest shutout streak in Olympic hockey history. They haven’t allowed a goal since the second period of their tournament-opening win over Czechia.

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    Poised for gold: The Americans will be heavy favorites in tomorrow’s gold-medal match against Canada. They already beat the Canadians, 5-0, during these Games and have won seven straight games against them, one shy of the rivalry’s all-time record.

    🇳🇴 93.1%

    How popular is cross-country skier Johannes Høsflot Klæbo in his native Norway? Well, coverage of his record-breaking ninth gold medal on Sunday earned a 93.1 share, which means 93.1% of people watching TV in Norway at that time were watching him. For reference, the last few Super Bowls have had an ~80 share in the U.S.

    Chasing 15: Klæbo won yet another gold Wednesday morning, his record 10th, while his 12 total medals are tied for fifth all-time behind Norwegian cross-country skier Marit Bjørgen (15), Norwegian biathlete Ole Einar Bjørndalen (14), Dutch speed skater Ireen Wüst (13) and Italian speed skater Arianna Fontana (13). The 29-year-old still has one event remaining in Italy.

    L-R: Domen, Nika, Cene and Peter as children. (Courtesy: Prevc family)

    L-R: Domen, Nika, Cene and Peter as children. (Courtesy: Prevc family)

    🇸🇮 4 siblings

    Slovenian brother and sister Domen and Nika Prevc — who combined to win five ski jumping medals in Milan, including mixed team gold together — made history alongside older brothers Cene and Peter. The Prevcs are now the first family ever to produce four Winter Olympic medal-winning siblings.

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    Medal haul: All in, the Prevc family has collected 10 Winter Olympic medals dating back to 2014. Nika (20) won gold, silver and bronze in Milan. Domen (26) won two golds in Milan. Cene (29) won silver in Beijing. Peter (33) won gold and silver in Beijing, plus silver and bronze in Sochi.

    🥇 $37,500

    That’s how much money American athletes earn for each gold medal they win at the Milan Cortina Olympics, which ranks just 15th among the 25 countries who responded to USA Today’s inquiry. Americans also get $22,500 for silver and $15,000 for bronze.

    Most and least: Singapore, competing in its third Winter Games and still seeking its first medal, will award $788,907 for gold, the most of any country. Hong Kong ($767,747), Italy ($213,418), Poland ($211,268) and Slovenia ($162,672) round out the top five, while Sweden, Norway and Great Britain are the only respondents who don’t pay athletes anything for winning medals.

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    🥇 Medal table: Day 12

    (Yahoo Sports)

    (Yahoo Sports)

    83 of 116 events completed. Full table.

    🏈 The age of realignment

    (Found Image Holdings/Corbis via Getty Images)

    (Found Image Holdings/Corbis via Getty Images)

    With Sacramento State moving from FCS to FBS and joining the MAC as a football-only member, the state of California will now have FBS schools in five different conferences. Three years ago, that number was two.

    • Mountain West: San José State

    • Pac-12: Fresno State, San Diego State

    Consider this: This upcoming school year, California’s FBS football programs will play conference opponents in 31 (!!!) different states, up from 10 three years ago. That includes seven teams in Ohio, five in Michigan, four in North Carolina, three in Texas, three in Indiana, three in Illinois, two in Massachusetts, two in Pennsylvania, two in Florida, one in Wyoming and one in North Dakota. Again, this is California we’re talking about here! Absolute madness.

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    ❤️ Why we love sports

    Yankee Stadium in 2003. (Jerry Driendl/Getty Images)

    Yankee Stadium in 2003. (Jerry Driendl/Getty Images)

    Keith Caulfield (Point Blank, Texas):

    In 2003, with interleague play still a novelty, my beloved Astros (NL at the time) were set to make their first swing through the AL East. My teenage son Cody and I circled two stops immediately: Yankee Stadium and Fenway Park.

    We flew to Boston and planned on a short easy drive to New York. Being from Texas, the built-in arrogance of living in the biggest state in the Union made me think it was a hop, skip and a jump to get to NYC. (We don’t believe all that hype about Alaska down here; it’s an optical illusion.)

    The situation in New York was very illuminating to us foreigners. The day before, the Astros had no-hit the Yankees using six pitchers, and the city was buzzing with commentary. Since it had been the lowly Astros that no-hit the Yanks, the town gave no credit to them. Instead, everybody in authority on the Yankees needed to be fired, right now.

    Keith at Yankee Stadium that day. (Keith Caulfield)

    Keith at Yankee Stadium that day. (Keith Caulfield)

    We arrived at Yankee Stadium in full Astros gear. As we crossed the street towards the ballpark, a yellow cab slowed to a near-stop in front of us. A big guy with a huge cigar leaned out of the window holding the sports section up with its headline about the no-hitter the day before.

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    His friendly greeting? “Not today, Mutha F**ers!”

    Cody, who had certainly heard all that before but couldn’t admit it, turned beet red. I looked over at him and said, “Cody, welcome to New York City.”

    The cabbie had been right — it was not the MFers day. The Astros lost. But we still had an unforgettable experience at “The House That Ruth Built,” and even sang “New York, New York” with Sinatra after the game.

    Back in Boston, Fenway delivered exactly what you hope for — history, characters and knowledgeable fans eager to talk about both. We learned all about the ballpark, Ted Williams and the other immortals. And we got to see Jeff Bagwell launch one over the Green Monster!

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    All in all, a great way to experience America: through the eyes of your kid and the lens of baseball.

    Keith (R) and Cody (L) with Cody's son, Asher. (Keith Caulfield)

    Keith (R) and Cody (L) with Cody’s son, Asher. (Keith Caulfield)

    ✍️ Submit your story: Do you have a fondest sports memory? Or an example of sports having a profound impact on your life? If you’d like to share, email me at kendall.baker@yahooinc.com. We’ll keep sharing your stories until they run out!

    📺 Watchlist: Wednesday, Feb. 18

    Team USA faces Sweden in today’s quarterfinal. (Maja Hitij/Getty Images)

    Team USA faces Sweden in today’s quarterfinal. (Maja Hitij/Getty Images)

    🏒 Men’s Hockey, Quarterfinals

    The last eight take the ice in Milan. Slovakia vs. Germany is already underway (6:10am ET, Peacock), followed by Canada vs. Czechia (10:40am, USA) and Finland vs. Switzerland (12:10pm, USA). Then the Americans take on Sweden in today’s finale (3:10pm, USA).

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    Group stage recap: The U.S. and Canada both went 3-0, with Canada earning the top seed on the strength of a +17 goal differential (USA was at +11). Canada’s Connor McDavid leads all players with nine points (2 goals, 7 assists), while his teenage teammate Macklin Celebrini and Germany’s Tim Stützle are tied for the most goals, with four each.

    ⛷️ Women’s Slalom

    Today is Mikaela Shiffrin’s last shot for an Olympic medal in Milan, with her second and final slalom run coming up shortly (7:30am, USA).

    Where it stands: Shiffrin finally delivered the ski we’ve been waiting for, with her first run from earlier this morning placing her in first by nearly a full second over the field. That means she’ll ski last for this upcoming second run, with the two times added together to determine the winner.

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    🥇 Medal events

    • 🏂 Snowboard: Women’s Slopestyle Final (8:30am, Peacock)

    • 🎯 Biathlon: Women’s 4x6km Relay (8:45am, Peacock)

    • ⛸️ Short Track: Men’s 500m Finals (2:15pm, USA); Women’s 3000m Relay Final (3pm, USA)

    Daily schedule.

    Can AJ Dybantsa and the Cougars hand Arizona their third straight loss? (David Buono/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

    Can AJ Dybantsa and the Cougars hand Arizona their third straight loss? (David Buono/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

    More to watch:

    • 🏀 NCAAM: No. 20 Arkansas at No. 25 Alabama (7pm, ESPN); No. 23 BYU at No. 4 Arizona (9pm, ESPN) … The Wildcats have lost two straight after winning their first 23 games.

    • ⚽️ Champions League: Qarabag vs. Newcastle (12:45pm, Paramount+); Olympiacos vs. Leverkusen (3pm, Paramount+); Bodø/Glimt vs. Inter Milan (3pm, Paramount+); Club Brugge vs. Atlético Madrid (3pm, CBSSN) … First-leg playoff matches to qualify for the Round of 16.

    • ⚽️ Women’s Champions League: Real Madrid (up 3-2) vs. Paris FC (12:45pm, Paramount+); Arsenal (up 4-0) vs. OH Leuven (3pm, Paramount+) … Second-leg playoff matches to qualify for the quarterfinals.

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

    🏀 NBA trivia

    (Adam Hagy/NBAE via Getty Images)

    (Adam Hagy/NBAE via Getty Images)

    The NBA season resumes tomorrow after a week-long pause for the All-Star break.

    Question: Which of the following teams is NOT currently in playoff or play-in position?

    (A) Bulls

    (B) Trail Blazers

    (C) Clippers

    (D) Hornets

    Answer at the bottom.

    📸 Photo finish

    (Hector Vivas/Getty Images)

    (Hector Vivas/Getty Images)

    Livigno, Italy — An athlete competes in the Men’s Snowboard Slopestyle Qualification on day nine of the Winter Games.

    Behind the lens: “Infrared” is a series of pictures taken at the Milano Cortina Winter Olympics with mirrorless cameras that have been modified to capture the electromagnetic spectrum beyond what’s visible to the human eye.

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    _________________________________________________________________________________

    Trivia answer: (A) Bulls

    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.

  • There’s never been another Dale Earnhardt, and there never will be

    Just 10 seconds into NASCAR’s 2026 Super Bowl ad touting the sport’s new slogan — “Hell Yeah” — there’s a telling detail on a license plate: The “e” in “Hell” is a 3. And in case you missed that, there’s a fan wearing a 3 jacket, and a Craftsman truck decked out in a familiar black paint scheme doing a dramatic slow-mo burnout. The message is unmistakable: No more screwing around. NASCAR’s bringing back that Dale Earnhardt attitude.

    Twenty-five years after his sudden, shocking death on the final lap of the 2001 Daytona 500, Dale Earnhardt remains as vital to NASCAR as ever. A quarter-century after we last saw his Goodwrench No. 3 knifing through the pack, Dale Earnhardt is still exactly what NASCAR wants to be.

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    Sure, the tattoos Earnhardt fans got during his lifetime are fading and sagging. The last Cup driver to run in a race with Earnhardt, Ryan Newman, retired more than two years ago. But you don’t have to look far to see Earnhardt’s persistent influence. He’s the focus of new documentaries, books, endless social media recollections. His image — sunglasses, mustache, attitude, black No. 3 flag — is still everywhere at NASCAR tracks.

    (Amy Monks/Yahoo Sports illustration)

    (Amy Monks/Yahoo Sports illustration)

    No other driver — not Jeff Gordon, not Chase Elliott, not even Earnhardt’s boy — has ever come close to matching The Intimidator’s impact. And given the way that NASCAR, and American culture, have trended in the years since his death, it’s likely no one ever will.

    If Dale Earnhardt hadn’t existed, a team of marketers — or a superhero movie screenwriter — couldn’t have created a more perfect avatar of NASCAR’s ideal self-image. Born in the blue-collar mill town of Kannapolis, North Carolina, he lived hard and raced harder. Some people climb over obstacles; Earnhardt just drove right through them.

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    He was mean as hell; you don’t get the name “The Intimidator” because you’re a go-along, get-along kind of guy. But he also inspired deep respect up and down the garage. You might not like him, you definitely wouldn’t outrun him, but you damn sure respected him. Drivers from Jeff Gordon to Jimmie Johnson to Kurt Busch have spent the last 25 years telling stories of how nervous they were in Earnhardt’s presence, and these are NASCAR’s champions.

    But Earnhardt wasn’t just a surly S.O.B. Besides being tougher than a three-dollar steak, Earnhardt was also funny as hell. His disgust at drivers who complained about going too fast at Talladega created one of racing’s all-time great quotes: “Put a kerosene rag around your ankles so the ants won’t climb up and eat that candy ass.” It’s tough to say which was scarier — Earnhardt in your rear-view mirror charging at you, or Earnhardt in his sunglasses smiling at you.

    DAYTONA BEACH, FL - FEBRUARY 15:  Dale Earnhardt Sr. (April 29, 1951 - February 18, 2001) driver of the #3 GM Goodwrench Chevrolet celebrates with every crew member of every team on pit road after winning the 1998 NASCAR Winston Cup Daytona 500 at the Daytona International Speedway on February 15, 1998 in Daytona Beach, Florida.  (Photo by ISC Archives/CQ-Roll Call Group via Getty Images)

    Dale Earnhardt celebrates with every crew member of every team on pit road after winning the 1998 Daytona 500. (ISC Archives/CQ-Roll Call Group via Getty Images)

    (RacingOne via Getty Images)

    Sure, he wasn’t perfect. He played by the rules right up until the rules didn’t suit him. If he needed to turn someone to win a race, like Terry Labonte in Bristol, well, he’d rattle their cage and plead innocence later. He could be a tough man to love, whether you were his wife or his friend or his child. And he was beyond stubborn; it’s tough to reconcile the fact that he refused to wear the neck-protecting HANS device that could have saved him from the exact spinal injury that killed him.

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    In the years since Earnhardt died, American culture has swung away from the worship of the car, and of Earnhardt’s brand of tough, unapologetic masculinity. Maybe he would have changed with the times, or maybe he would have stubbornly remained set in his ways. Or maybe both. He was complex and unpredictable, and he swerved away from expectations just like he swerved around slower-moving cars.

    Earnhardt swung conservative in his political beliefs, but famously once cut the Confederate flag off his truck’s bumper sticker after he understood the offense it caused. He was as wealthy as a king, but he loved driving his tractor on his farm — sometimes even riding up to unsuspecting onlookers trying to catch a glimpse of his estate. He stoked a public rivalry with Gordon, but privately went into business with him, monetizing their personality clashes.

    But he didn’t whine. He didn’t play victim. He just strapped himself into his Goodwrench No. 3 and figured out how to beat you, one way or another.

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    Even now, Earnhardt’s influence persists far beyond the grandstands of NASCAR tracks. Anyone who’s ever felt the hum of an engine in their bones, or mashed the gas on an open highway, discovers that bit of Earnhardt in their soul. Maybe that’s why his absence still hurts, and always will.

    Raise hell. Praise Dale. Now and forever.