Saturday, 10 January 2026

Swiss ski star Odermatt wins World Cup giant slalom for fifth straight victory at home

ADELBODEN, Switzerland — Swiss ski star Marco Odermatt is often unbeatable in the World Cup and especially at his home giant slalom classic that he won for a record fifth straight year Saturday.

Olympic giant slalom champion Odermatt raced through steady falling snow and worsening visibility to protect his first-run lead and win by 0.49 seconds from Lucas Pinheiro Braathen of Brazil. Leo Anguenot of France was third, 0.68 back.

Pinheiro Braathen led the applause in the finish area after watching Odermatt ski at his limit to exactly match the Brazilian’s time in the tough second run.

“He is really the king of this hill,” Pinheiro Braathen said of Odermatt to Swiss broadcaster RTS. “It is an honor to be able to stand as the last man up at the start gate with him and be able to fight him on arguably the coolest race that you guys have to offer.”

Odermatt has won each Adelboden giant slalom since 2022 to overtake the four-win streak of Swedish great Ingemar Stenmark from 1979 through 1982.

“Adelboden was my first love and it will always be my big love. I was here as a small kid,” Odermatt said.

Home wins once were rare and are wildly appreciated by a noisy crowd of about 25,000 fans on a signature day in Switzerland’s sports calendar.

“They really made me push harder,” Odermatt said of the home support. “This energy, this extra pressure and motivation helps.”

Racing began Saturday morning after a minute’s silence observed for the victims of the fatal fire in a bar in nearby Crans-Montana, which hosts World Cup races in three weeks’ time.

In another stellar World Cup season for Odermatt, the four-time defending overall champion has almost twice as many race points as his nearest challenger, Pinheiro Braathen.

Odermatt’s sixth race win this season was the 51st of his career, fourth on the all-time list, and 29th in giant slalom.

Pinheiro Braathen’s pride

Back when he was racing for his father’s nation Norway, Pinheiro Braathen sustained a season-ending knee injury at Adelboden in 2021 crashing over the finish line while setting a fast time in giant slalom.

One year later he stopped his giant slalom run approaching the steep final slope rather than tackle it again.

Pinheiro Braathen said Saturday he later had therapy to help him confront his issues with the storied hill.

“Words cannot describe how proud I am right now.”

Adelboden history

The Adelboden giant slalom has been a fixture on the men’s calendar since the first week of World Cup racing in January 1967. Then, the winner was another iconic ski name, Jean-Claude Killy.

The Chuenisbaergli course has signature rolling terrain over summer cow pastures. Skiers crest a rise before entering the steep final slope that funnels then down into a raucous finish area.

The course stages a slalom Sunday, that Odermatt will skip though Pinheiro Braathen will be a contender to repeat his 2023 win.



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Friday, 9 January 2026

How new Blue Jay Kazuma Okamoto compares to other MLB stars

While it’s impossible to know the outcome of any free-agent contract, the four-year $60 million deal the Toronto Blue Jays gave Kazuma Okamoto carries more uncertainty than most.

As successful as Okamoto has been in NPB, it’s tough to know how his skills will translate at the major-league level. Teams like the Blue Jays have more sophisticated information about Japanese players than they once did, but the sample size of NPB to MLB success stories is still small enough that there is more guesswork with Okamoto than a traditional free agent with experience in the majors.

There have only been 84 Japanese-born players in MLB history, and of that group, 13 have 1,000 or more plate appearances at the level. Only five position players (Ichiro Suzuki, Shohei Ohtani, Hideki Matsui, Seiya Suzuki, and Nori Aoki) have a career bWAR of 10 or higher. Just three (Ohtani, Matsui, and Ichiro) have 50 or more MLB home runs.

So, when the Blue Jays signed Okamoto — who has 248 NPB home runs — to a $60 million deal, they did so with the expectation that he’d be one of the most successful Japanese hitters and greatest sluggers of all time. Based on his track record, that’s not a ludicrous notion, but it is on the vague side. 

To set fair expectations a bit more specifically, we can examine the combination of what Okamoto’s contract says about the Blue Jays’ valuation of him and the early projections.

Comparables for Okamoto’s contract

While Okamoto’s contract is being widely discussed as a $60 million deal, the posting fee of approximately $10.8 million means the Blue Jays see him as worth just north of $70 million over four years.

It’s an unusual term in the recent free agent market, with no other position player signing for four years since 2022, outside of Koren import Sung-Mun Song, who got one quarter of Okamoto’s contract ($15 million) from the Padres in December.

Pitchers getting similar money to the Blue Jays’ outlay for Okamoto in recent years include Tanner Scott (four years, $72 million), Taijuan Walker (four years, $72 million), and Jameson Taillon (four years, $68 million). 

To expand the net to a few hitters, the list of players below is position players currently on contracts between three and five years in length that pay between $15-$20 million:

Player

Position

Career wRC+

Career fWAR/600 PA

Willson Contreras

C/1B

122

3.4

Tyler O’Neill

OF/DH

114

2.9

Seiya Suzuki

OF/DH

127

2.9

Christian Walker

1B

110

2.5

Josh Naylor

1B

115

2.1

Anthony Santander

OF/DH

109

1.5

Andrew Benintendi

OF

104

1.4

Nick Castellanos

OF/DH

109

1.2

Masataka Yoshida

OF/DH

109

0.7

There are a couple of contractual quirks with this group of players, as Anthony Santander’s deferred money could technically take him out of this AAV bracket, and Masataka Yoshida’s posting fee takes his total price a hair over $20 million. Technicalities aside, Okamoto is being paid like the players on the list above, which mostly consists of credible starters who are not stars. 

Many of the contracts this group signed put a premium on power and offensive production over straight WAR-per-dollar efficiency. Most of Okamoto’s worth is likely to come from his bat, but if he can hold up at third base, he could outperform most of these players in terms of total value.

Using value estimates to reverse-engineer expectations

Above, we used similar contracts to help establish a reasonable baseline expectation for Okamoto — or at least what the Blue Jays expect. Another way to go about that same goal is to find players who’ve recently produced on-field value closely matching what Toronto paid for Okamoto.

The list below shows position players who logged significant playing time in every season since 2022 and created between $65 and $75 million in value according to FanGraphs’ estimation  — and how they arrived at that value.

Player

Position

wRC+

Fielding Run Value

Marcell Ozuna

OF/DH

127

-4

Nathaniel Lowe

1B

119

-3

Teoscar Hernandez

OF/DH

118

-19

Bryan Reynolds

OF

113

-26

Lars Nootbar

OF

111

+5

Jake Cronenworth

1B/2B

106

0

Adolis Garcia

OF

105

+1

Luis Robert Jr.

OF

104

+21

Cedric Mullins

OF

101

+14

Ryan McMahon

3B

90

+25

These comparables tell us something slightly different than the ones above. This group represents reasonable outcomes for Okamoto’s production based on his contract. Instead of the players he is being paid similarly to, these are the guys who’ve actually delivered the production his contract warrants.

That’s a subtle difference and a slightly higher standard. Based on the Blue Jays’ investment in Okamoto, they are hoping he can replicate the output of this group. Of course, the shape of that production won’t match some of these players. It is unlikely he’ll produce nearly as much defensive value as Ryan McMahon — or as little as Teoscar Hernández.

Jake Cronenworth is probably the best comparison point here for how a successful Okamoto tenure could work. His combination of versatility, above-average offence, and adequate defence has made him valuable to the San Diego Padres over the last few seasons. Okamoto is a completely different hitter stylistically, who projects to produce more at the plate overall, but in terms of how his value could be distributed, that model makes some sense.

To find a comparable whose game looks a little more like Okamoto’s, it’s helpful to look at some projections.

Early projections

By the time the 2026 season rolls around, there will be more public projections for Okamoto than are available now, but the first ones paint the picture of an effective power hitter.

Projection System

BB%

K%

ISO

AVG

OBP

SLG

wRC+

Steamer

8.8%

16.9%

.196

.251

.323

.446

113

The Bat

9.9%

21.7%

.215

.236

.320

.451

114

There’s some disagreement on the shape of Okamoto’s offensive output, but the overall effectiveness comes out similarly, and his reputation as a strong power hitter who doesn’t strike out is reflected.

Using those projections — and his reputation — we sketched out the criteria for hitters who have produced at the plate over the last four seasons in a way that mirrors what Okamamoto could do.

The criteria are as follows:

A wRC+ between 110 and 117 for similar overall production.
An ISO between 180 and 230 to go a bit lower and higher than his projections and show a hitter with significantly above-average, but not elite, pop.
A K% below 25 per cent, to keep Okamoto’s contact ability in mind.

That yields a list (that perhaps unsurprisingly has some familiar names mentioned above):

Jarren Duran
Anthony Santander
Vinnie Pasquantino
Jorge Polanco
Christian Walker
Jordan Westburg
Jackson Chourio
Cody Bellinger
Bryan Reynolds
Sean Murphy
Danny Jansen 
Royce Lewis

Even with relatively tight criteria, you get quite the varied group, ranging from players who have been among MLB’s best position players in their best seasons to relatively unremarkable starters like Pasquantino, who’s never topped 1.5 fWAR in a single year. 

The type of hitter Okamoto currently projects to be is one that will always have value on an MLB roster, but isn’t really a needle mover unless he brings notable defensive (and/or base running) value.

If the newest Blue Jay is able to play a respectable third base he has a path to both providing value on his contract — and serving as an above-average starting player — without having to exceed expectations at the plate. If he doesn’t meet that bar in the field, whether that means poor play at third, being relegated to primarily first base, or getting overexposed in the outfield, he’ll need to be more of a great hitter than a good one.

That’s far from impossible for one of NPB’s biggest stars, but his contract and projections tell the story of someone ready to fit right into Toronto’s lineup rather than take it to the next level.



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Thursday, 8 January 2026

Why the most pressure is on Josh Allen and the Bills in AFC playoffs



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Wednesday, 7 January 2026

Penguins assign defenceman Harrison Brunicke to Kamloops Blazers

Harrison Brunicke is heading back to the Western Hockey League.

The Pittsburgh Penguins defenceman has been assigned to the Kamloops Blazers, president of hockey operations and general manager Kyle Dubas announced on Wednesday.

Brunicke, a native of Johannesburg, South Africa, has appeared in nine games for the Penguins this season, recording just one goal.

He has bounced around between the NHL and AHL, playing in five games for the Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins and notching four assists.

The 19-year-old was drafted by the Penguins in the second round of the 2024 NHL Draft. He became the second South Africa native to appear in an NHL game.

Brunicke spent parts of four seasons with the Blazers from 2021 to 2025, where he recorded 19 goals, 40 assists and 59 points in 151 career games.



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Tuesday, 6 January 2026

Oilers mid-season report: Is division lead a mere mirage?

EDMONTON — The Edmonton Oilers were in first place in the Pacific Division as they played (and lost) their first game of the second half of the season Saturday against Philadelphia.

At the same time, they’ve yet to win three games in a row this season, and their goal differential sits at a pedestrian minus-4.

So there are a few ways to look at the Oilers’ season to date.

They overcame the toughest slate in the National Hockey League prior to Christmas, playing out their entire Eastern Conference road schedule with more away games than any other team. The Oilers weathered their usual awful start after going four rounds the previous spring/summer and traded away their No. 1 goalie, yet they still find themselves tied for first in the Pacific with a far easier second-half schedule still ahead.

“We got off to a very slow start. I think that was anticipated,” head coach Kris Knoblauch said. “Through December we played a lot better, getting some traction. We’re in a pretty good spot, but we have a lot of room to grow.

“Our offensive game is about where it should be. We’re scoring goals, we’re generating enough chances. But there is a lot of improvement to make defensively, whether that’s off the rush, or our penalty kill, or defensive zone coverage. Whatever can do to limit our goals against.”

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Since the Christmas break, the Oilers have lost three times and were entirely outplayed in the game they won, stolen by goalie Calvin Pickard in Winnipeg. Edmonton is the fourth-worst defensive team in the NHL, averaging 3.36 goals against per game.

That’s why the Oilers can’t seem to win three games in a row.

“You want to be able to string three, four, five (games together), have those big win streaks at times during the season,” said centre Adam Henrique, who drags a whopping 34-game goalless skid into the second half. “We haven’t been able to find a way to get there yet, but I’m confident in this group.”

Key stats

Record: 20-16-6 (T-1st in Division, T-13th NHL)

Goals per game: 3.31 (Sixth in NHL)

Goals against per game: 3.36 (29th in NHL)

Power play: 33.6 per cent (First in NHL)

Penalty kill: 79.3 per cent (19th in NHL)

Best surprise

On a veteran team with few rookies in key roles, there aren’t a ton of surprises. Jack Roslovic fits the bill perhaps, a surprise free-agent signing during training camp who has fit in nicely on Leon Draisaitl’s right side.

Roslovic’s consistency — not a strong suit thus far in his career — has been the most pleasant surprise for the Oilers. He’s tied for third on the team with 12 goals, and has 20 points in just 29 games played. He’s been very good on a one-year deal.

Biggest disappointment

There are a couple of obvious ones here in July 1 disasters Andrew Mangiapane and Trent Frederic.

Mangiapane has already asked to be moved out, failing to find a fit with just 11 points and a team-worst minus-17 in the first half. He’s been a healthy scratch on and off of late, as has Frederic, and may well have lost his teammates with his desire to move on. Not a guy you want to go to war with when he’s quitting by Christmas.

Then there’s Frederic, who signed an eight-year deal in July and has proceeded to deliver three points in 41 games. This contract could be the worst one of Stan Bowman’s career if Frederic doesn’t find some traction.

Right now he just looks slow and ineffective — there’s nothing he does that makes you think, more of that and we’ll have a player here.

Big question for the second half

Which goalie will start Game 1 of the playoffs?

Bowman made a splashy deal when he moved Stuart Skinner out for Tristan Jarry, but Jarry quickly suffered a lower-body injury and hasn’t been seen since Dec. 18 in Boston. He’s not even practising with the team yet.

Earlier, Bowman slyly landed a recovering Connor Ingram, and since coming up from AHL Bakersfield, Ingram has given the Oilers three quality starts in four games. Meanwhile, backup Calvin Pickard has thrown his hat back into the ring with a string of excellent play, though he’s a backup here, not a No. 1.

So, can Jarry stay healthy, give the Oilers a higher brand of goaltending than Skinner, and make a genius out of Bowman? Or will the ex-Penguin — who has played just 17 games this season — forever be injured?

Stay tuned, folks.

Plenty must change if this Oilers team is going to get back to the Stanley Cup Final.



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Monday, 5 January 2026

Bengals retaining coach Taylor, director of player personnel Tobin

The Cincinnati Bengals are opting for continuity despite a poor 2025 season.

Head coach Zac Taylor will return for his eighth season in the top job with the Bengals, team president Mike Brown announced Monday.

Additionally, director of player personnel Duke Tobin will also return next year. Tobin has been the team’s de facto general manager since 2022.

“Our focus is on building a team that can consistently compete at the highest level, with the goal of winning championships,” Brown said in a statement. “After thoughtful consideration, I am confident that Duke Tobin and Zac Taylor are the right leaders to guide us forward. They have proven they can build and lead teams that compete for championships. We trust their plans and expect to return to our desired level of success.”

The Bengals, on the back of a 6-11 record, missed the playoffs for the third straight season and endured their first losing season since 2020, Taylor’s second year on the job.

They were hampered by injuries, however, as starting QB Joe Burrow missed nine games with turf toe. Cincinnati was 5-3 in the games in which Burrow did suit up.

Overall, Taylor has a 52-63-1 regular-season record since taking over the Bengals in 2019.



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Sunday, 4 January 2026

Marseille has two players sent off in loss to Nantes ahead of Paris derby

PARIS — Marseille’s year got off to a bad start when it had two players sent off and lost 2-0 at home to struggling Nantes in Ligue 1 on Sunday.

A win would have put some pressure on second-placed Paris Saint-Germain ahead of its game against Paris FC later Sunday in the first capital city derby in the French men’s league since 1990.

But Marseille’s defeat left it four points behind PSG in third spot. Marseille is now level on points with fourth-placed Lille, with the teams separated by goal difference.

Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang went straight into the Marseille starting lineup, despite only recently playing for Gabon at the Africa Cup of Nations.

Marseille fans held a minute’s silence before the game at Stade Velodrome in memory of former Marseille coach Jean-Louis Gasset, who died on Dec. 26 aged 72. Gasset had a brief spell in charge of Marseille in 2024.

After Nantes had an early goal ruled out for offside following a video review, Marseille midfielder Arthur Vermeeren was shown a straight red card in the 26th minute for a late tackle on goalkeeper Anthony Lopes.

Five minutes later, defender Fabien Centonze gave Nantes the lead when he tapped in after goalkeeper Geronimo Rulli saved Matthis Abline’s shot.

Marseille’s afternoon got worse when midfielder Bilal Nadir was shown a second yellow card and sent off in the 56th for fouling Deiver Machado from behind near the halfway line.

New signing Rémy Cabella sealed the win for 16th-placed Nantes with a late penalty.

In Sunday’s other matches, Le Havre faced Angers; Lorient took on last-placed Metz, and Brest hosted Auxerre.

Surprise leader Lens won at Toulouse 3-0 on Friday to ensure it kept top spot from PSG.



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Swiss ski star Odermatt wins World Cup giant slalom for fifth straight victory at home

ADELBODEN, Switzerland — Swiss ski star Marco Odermatt is often unbeatable in the World Cup and especially at his home giant slalom classic ...