Monday, 9 March 2026

WBC Roundup: South Korea joins Japan in quarterfinals after win over Australia

South Korea advanced to the quarterfinals of the World Baseball Classic, moving past the first round for the first time since 2009 by beating Australia 7-2 on Monday night at the Tokyo Dome behind four RBIs from Bo Gyeong Moon, who leads the tournament with 11.

The South Koreans (2-2) finished second in Group C behind Japan and Shohei Ohtani, and they will next play in Miami on Friday. South Korea, Australia and Taiwan all had identical records, and South Korea needed to beat Australia by five runs or more to advance based on a tiebreaker of fewest runs allowed divided by defensive outs.

Australia would have advanced with a win or a loss by four runs or fewer.

Hyun Min Ahn hit a decisive sacrifice fly in the ninth that scored Hae-Min Park standing up. Do Yeong Kim walked against Jack O’Loughlin leading off and Park, a pinch runner, reached third when Jung Hoo Lee’s grounder off O’Loughlin’s glove went to shortstop Jarryd Dale, whose throw to second bounced into short right field for an error.

With Australia needing one run to advance, Chris Burke walked with one out in the bottom half and Lee robbed Rixon Wingrove of an extra-base hit with a sliding, backhand catch in the right-center gap. Pinch-hitter Logan Wade followed with a game-ending popout to Moon, and the first baseman threw his glove high in celebration.

  • Watch the World Baseball Classic on Sportsnet
  • Watch the World Baseball Classic on Sportsnet

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Winner Ju Young Son pitched a scoreless first. Loser Lachlan Wells allowed two runs, two hits and two walks in 1 2/3 innings.

Moon had three hits, including a second-inning homer off Wells, and is batting .538 (7 for 13). Lee and Moon had RBI doubles in the third, and Moon added a run-scoring single for a 5-0 lead in the fifth.

Robbie Glendinning homered in the bottom half but Do Yeong Kim’s RBI single boosted the lead to 6-1 in the sixth. Top prospect Travis Bazzana hit a run-scoring single in the eighth.

Japan (3-0) closes group play on Tuesday against the Czech Republic (0-3).



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Manitoba’s Matt Dunstone wins first-ever Brier title

ST. JOHN’S, N.L. — Matt Dunstone dropped to his knees on the pebbled ice as tears filled his eyes and he pumped both fists and said, “Oh my god,” while more than 6,000 fans, most of whom were on their feet, celebrated the moment right along with him. 

Then in came a sliding E.J. Harnden, the veteran second who celebrated the moment as fast as he possibly could, wrapping Dunstone in a hug.

Dunstone and his Team Manitoba have done it. On the Winnipeg skipper’s third trip to the Brier final, the 30-year-old Dunstone earned his first national championship title with a definitive 6-3 victory over Kevin Koe and his Team Alberta, who were undefeated up until the final.  

For Dunstone, runner up at the 2023 and 2025 Brier and Canada’s Olympic Trials this past November, it’s an enormous breakthrough. Losses in those finals led the skip to tears, but on Sunday night in St. John’s, those tears were at last happy, as Dunstone, third Colton Lott and brothers E.J. and Ryan Harnden won their first Brier as a team.  

“I don’t know what that feels like until now — man, it’s the best,” Dunstone said of the happy tears he was still crying. “This moment feels way more incredible than I ever would have imagined.” 

The game in front of a sold-out crowd at Mary Brown’s Centre was a close one that saw both skips curling in the 90th percentile through the first half, and it was a question of who’d make a small mistake first. That came in the seventh end when Koe missed a runback hit with his first, and Dunstone told his teammates: “It’s time to dance.”  

Did the skipper ever dance, executing a beautiful soft tap to score three for a 4-2 lead. 

“I picked a bad spot to miss, and it cost us,” said Koe, the four-time national champion, not long after his ninth career Brier final.

Koe isn’t sure what his future holds, and the 51-year-old said he and teammates Tyler Tardi, Aaron Sluchinski and Karrick Martin hadn’t yet talked about what’s to come next just yet. 

“Obviously I can still play good enough to play in a Brier final, so that’s pretty good and we’ll see,” Koe said. 

E.J. Harnden, meanwhile, is set to retire at the end of this season, but the now four-time Brier winner will see his career extended since the win at nationals means his team will represent Canada at world championships, which open later this month in Utah.

“I’m not done yet!” a grinning and laughing E.J. Harnden said of a win that he described as “everything,” as he looked up at the arena’s ceiling in disbelief.  

“This being my last Brier and to win it, that was the goal, but to actually do it and realize how hard it is to win a Brier, this is incredible,” he added, smiling ear-to-ear. “I couldn’t be happier. I couldn’t be happier for Matt and Colton and Ryan. It’s been 13 years for Ryan (since he won his first), first Brier for Colton, Matt. I said I really wanted to be a part of that, and now I am. This is phenomenal.” 

Dunstone pointed out that after the heartbreak at Trials, his team focused on being ready to win the Brier, knowing it could be their last event as a foursome, with E.J. retiring. “Holy s—!” the skip said with a laugh, since they’d just accomplished exactly that, and lifted the Tankard together.  

“There’s no words that can describe this feeling,” added a grinning Lott. “Being so close last year and then in 2023, we felt that heartbreak. And we know that that’s always a possibility. And to actually be on the winning side of it, it’s just a phenomenal feeling.” 

And to do it with Dunstone, who he’s been curling with since juniors, who Lott calls “my brother on the ice, off the ice.” 

On the ice Sunday night, Dunstone made the shot of the game in nine, when he basically put it away, connecting on a clutch double for a deuce that saw him kick up one knee and pump a fist in the air and scream “yes!” before pumping both fists. 

That gave Team Manitoba a 6-3 lead with an end to go in a game that finished that way and saw Dunstone curl a game-high 94 per cent. The team curled a collective 90 per cent, and for E.J. Harnden, the highlight of the win was not only accomplishing this one last time with his brother, who he won Olympic gold with back in 2014, but with Lott and Harnden, who he’s certain will win many more titles. 

“They brought the love, the curling back to me,” said Harnden, the 42-year-old father of two. “To see them win, they deserve this more than anyone.” 

While Dunstone came into this final with what some would’ve seen as a monkey on his back, having lost three big finals with a chance to represent Canada on the line, he said he didn’t feel any of that pressure or weight. 

“Absolutely none this time,” as he put it. “The heartbreak that I’ve had, that this group has had over the last three years, the amount that I learned from that, I played free and loose all week. And you know, when you feel the hurt enough times you don’t really get too scared of it when you know what’s at the end of the road.” 

It’s not that Dunstone is numb to it, but he understood what it was like to lose a big one, knowing that in a week or so he’d feel better and move onto what’s next, because that’s what he’s had to do in the past. 

This time is different, though. This time, Dunstone and Lott and the Harnden brothers, who the skipper calls “the best sweeping duo in the game,” will be moving on with Canada Maple Leafs on their backs, at the world championships.

“I feel very honoured, very blessed to be able to go and represent Canada on the world stage, especially after seeing Team Jacobs go and do what they did, it was very inspirational,” Dunstone said of the Olympic gold medallists, who he beat earlier Sunday in the Brier semifinal. “I feel really fortunate and just can’t wait to do the same.” 

Dunstone thought about all the “sad beers” he’d drank after big events with teammates and family, and he couldn’t wait to have “happy beers” and celebrate the win with all of them, and with that well-earned Tankard. 

“It was tons of fun. Everything needed to be fun,” Dunstone said, tears still in his eyes, and no doubt more to come in the celebration ahead. “You don’t get these moments too often, and why pass it by?”



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Sunday, 8 March 2026

John Daly II just three back of lead in PGA Tour debut in Puerto Rico

RIO GRANDE, Puerto Rico — Ricky Castillo was hoping to be in Florida this week for his first $20 million signature event. Instead he’s at the Puerto Rico Open and making it pay off, posting a bogey-free round of 4-under 68 in strong wind Saturday to take a one-shot lead into the final round.

On a day of big movements — John Daly II tied for the lead at one point and 18-year-old Blades Brown challenging again — Castillo chipped in for birdie on the 12th hole and kept a steady hand on the closing holes at Grand Reserve Golf Club.

Castillo was at 12-under 204 and will be in the final group with John Parry of England, who earned his PGA Tour card off the European tour standings last year.

“This is the position that all of us have dreamed of and want to be in a chance to win a golf tournament,” Castillo said. “I’ve been fortunate to have that opportunity a few times and haven’t gotten it done, so hopefully we’ll do it tomorrow.”

Brown holed a 50-foot eagle putt on the par-5 14th, the highlight of his 3-under 69 that gives the teenager a second chance this year to become the youngest PGA Tour winner in 95 years. He was in the final group with Scottie Scheffler at The American Express until fading Sunday.

“All this is just experience,” said Brown, who graduated high school in January.

He didn’t do a lot wrong that week. A pair of late bogeys long after Scheffler had pulled away led to a 74 and dropped him into a tie for 18th. But the kid didn’t look overwhelmed playing next to the No. 1 player in the world and looks forward to Sunday. He’s just one shot off the lead.

“Just having that moment and that experience with Scottie and Si Woo (Kim) and being in the final group is going to help me tomorrow being in the hunt again,” Brown said. “I’m really looking forward to it. I love to compete and it’s going to be a fun day tomorrow.”

Matti Schmid shot 68 and was in the group one shot behind along with Chandler Blanchet, who took a four-shot lead into the third round and lost too many shots on the green, particularly a couple of short putts. Blanchet shot 74.

Daly, the 22-year-old son of two-time major champion John Daly, also looks poised in his PGA Tour debut. He had a share of the lead when he hit 5-iron onto the green at the par-5 12 for eagle that put him at 10 under. And on the next par 5, he took driver off the deck to the front of the green, only to three-putt for par from about 75 feet.

But he missed the green left on the 18th, chipped too strongly and ended a streak of 46 consecutive holes without a bogey when he lipped out the 15-foot par putt. Daly is three off the lead.

“It was solid,” he said of his round. “For sure it was the windiest day of the week so far. It was really hard to get the numbers right. But stayed in it well, hit some good shots. Sucks to make my first bogey in a while on 18. Hit a good second shot, just the wind let it rise in the air. Oh, well, it was a good day.”

Castillo was 11 points away from getting into the Arnold Palmer Invitational with its $20 million purse. The winner of the Puerto Rico Open — the $4 million purse is equal to what the winner gets at Bay Hill — gets a spot in The Players Championship and the PGA Championship.

Ben Silverman of Thornhill, Ont., is four back of the lead, while Adam Hadwin of Abbotsford, B.C., is five off the pace.



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Saturday, 7 March 2026

World Baseball Classic Highlights: Venezuela 6, Netherlands 2



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Friday, 6 March 2026

Luke Schenn nearing record for most teams played for

Luke Schenn is on the move again and nearing a record in the process.

The veteran defenceman was traded late on Thursday from the Winnipeg Jets to the Buffalo Sabres in a deal that also landed Logan Stanley in Western New York.

Once Schenn suits up for a game with the Sabres, it will be the 10th different NHL team he will have played for.

Only Mike Sillinger has played for more teams, with 12.

Schenn’s career includes two stops with the Toronto Maple Leafs and Vancouver Canucks, plus games with the Flyers, Kings, Coyotes, Ducks, Lightning, Predators and Jets. Notably, it does not include the Pittsburgh Penguins, who acquired Schenn from the Predators last year but flipped him to the Jets before he appeared in a game.

Schenn has appeared in 1,118 NHL games over his career.



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WBC Roundup: South Korea joins Japan in quarterfinals after win over Australia

South Korea advanced to the quarterfinals of the World Baseball Classic, moving past the first round for the first time since 2009 by beatin...