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The pieces are all in place for the Masters as the world’s top golfers look to earn the green jacket. Follow the action using our live leaderboard.
The Boston Bruins look to punch their ticket to the playoffs as they host the Tampa Bay Lightning. Catch the game at 12:30 p.m. ET / 9:30 a.m. PT on Sportsnet and Sportsnet+, and follow every play with our NHL live tracker.
As the Pittsburgh Penguins and Washington Capitals play twice over the NHL’s final weekend of regular-season action, it’s become difficult not to wonder if it’ll be the last time we see Sidney Crosby and Alexander Ovechkin go head-to-head.
The “Great 8” is not under contract after the 2025-26 season and has already made it known he’ll decide on his future in the summer.
So, after two decades of captivating hockey fans as competitors turned admirers, Crosby sat down to share his thoughts with The Athletic on Ovechkin’s uncertain future, something he admits has “been on my mind quite a bit.”
“I’ve been thinking about him a lot, because I know it’s something that has got to be on his mind constantly right now. When you get to a certain age, it’s the way it is. Every player is going to have to deal with it at some point.”
It’s no secret that Crosby is also in the twilight of his career at age 38 and in his 21st NHL season, but his Penguins are in a better spot at this point — having clinched a spot in the Stanley Cup Playoffs for the first time since 2022 — than Ovechkin’s Capitals. Washington is going to miss the playoffs for the second time in four seasons and is in the midst of a roster retool.
The Penguins’ competitive outlook and Crosby being under contract through next season have made his future, at least in the short-term, a simpler situation to navigate than the many potential paths Ovechkin can consider after this season.
“He’s accomplished so much and has had an amazing career,” Crosby explained. “And I know that he still has an incredible passion for that game. That’s obvious. It’s definitely crossed my mind a lot lately, wondering what he’s going to do, because you don’t know what’s going to happen.”
And should the NHL’s all-time leading goal scorer decide to hang up his skates, Crosby has no qualms admitting it would feel unusual.
“Yeah, it would be so weird if he’s not around anymore,” the Penguins star said. “It would be weird, especially because we’ve (almost) always been in the same division. We see each other so often. We came into the league together. So, really, it’s all we’ve ever known. There have been changes. You play with a lot of different guys over the course of 20 years. But for me, seeing him a few times a year, and seeing him in the playoffs, has always been a constant.”
Including the playoffs, Crosby and Ovechkin have faced off 101 times. And it’s the battles between their two teams — meeting in the post-season four times, each series going at least six games, including two Game 7s — that the Cole Harbour, N.S. native will seemingly think about most when he eventually calls it quits and looks back on his career.
“Those were incredible series,” the Penguins captain said. “We had to go through them to get there. The way that both teams played in the regular season was just getting into position to play each other in the playoffs. We basically built our teams with the other team in mind, knowing that the other one would probably be there. And the way those series went, the Game 7s. There are a ton of memories from those games, those series. There will be a ton of memories for me in terms of playing against (Ovechkin) over the years, but those series will stick out above everything else. I’ll think about those forever.”
And in looking back on their clashes, Crosby finds himself admiring much more about Ovechkin’s game than just his goal-scoring prowess.
“People talk about (Ovechkin’s) shot, and yeah, it’s great,” Crosby said. “But the thing about him back then was, he’d have six or seven huge hits during the course of a game, even though he was playing all of those minutes. That’s so hard to do. Just an incredible hockey player.”
So as the pair of future Hall of Famers prepare to share the ice for possibly the last time in their storied careers, Crosby is grateful for the opportunity to do so.
“If this is it for him, if that’s the way it works out, I think it’s pretty cool that the schedule worked out the way it did,” Crosby said. “I feel very fortunate that I’ve gotten to be in the same division against the greatest goal scorer of all time. It’s been an honour.”
The first of back-to-back games between the Penguins and Capitals takes place on Saturday. Catch the action on Sportsnet+ at 3 p.m. ET / 12 p.m. PT.
The Toronto Maple Leafs can pick the brain of a buzzy candidate for their front office.
The Leafs and New Jersey Devils have been granted permission to talk to Florida Panthers assistant GM and head of analytics Sunny Mehta, Sportsnet confirmed on Thursday.
The Athletic was first to report the news.
Mehta, 47, has been part of the Panthers’ front office for both of their Stanley Cup wins the past two years after being hired in September 2023.
Mehta is highly regarded for his work with analytics.
He studied music at the University of Miami, then made a living playing guitar in New Orleans.
Mehta served as a trader at Peak6 Capital Management at the Chicago Board of Trade and got his master’s degree in data science from City University of New York.
His also thrived as a poker player, and he co-authored two books on the subject: Professional No-Limit Hold ‘Em: Volume One (2007) and Small Stakes No-Limit Hold ‘Em (2009).
Mehta headed up the NHL’s first full-time analytics department with the Devils from 2014 to 2018.
After leaving the Devils, Mehta consulted for the Washington Capitals in the 2019-20 season. He also worked for the Arizona Coyotes in 2010-11, as well as for six Major League Baseball teams through a partnership with Zelus Analytics.
The Leafs fired GM Brad Treliving earlier this month, while the Devils parted ways with GM Tom Fitzgerald earlier this week.
Bryson DeChambeau is living up to his “Mad Scientist” nickname this week.
The American golfer told ESPN he will play with a 5-iron made with a 3D printer at the Masters.
DeChambeau said he has been working on building his own clubs for years.
When asked why he’ll debut one this week, he said: “Because they’re finally ready.”
“There’s this nature that I have about myself where innovation is a habit of mine, and I really find and take pride in that ability to learn — even through failure, even through making a bad decision or a good decision — what I can get from that,” DeChambeau added.
DeChambeau finished in the top 10 at the past two Masters, but the LIV Golf League member is still looking for his first green jacket.
He has two major championships, at the U.S. Open in 2020 and ’24.
DeChambeau has long been associated with physics-based approaches to golf, often using unique clubs.
“We’ll see where it goes. We’ll see where it takes me,” DeChambeau said of the new club. “All I could say now is, if I don’t put them in the bag, it’s my fault now.”
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