Saturday, 7 February 2026

Raptors’ Scottie Barnes joins field as Shooting Stars returns to all-star weekend

It’ll be a busy all-star weekend for Toronto Raptors forward Scottie Barnes.

Barnes will compete in the Shooting Stars event on top of participating in the game itself, the league announced Saturday.

The Shooting Stars event has a two-round format, with all four teams competing in the first round and the top two advancing to the final round. Teams have 70 seconds to score points while rotating through seven designated shooting locations around the court, with all three players on a team shooting at each spot in a set order.

It’s a returning contest for the 2026 all-star Weekend. The event last took place in 2015 at the all-star game in New York. It will take the place of the skills competition, which is being tabled for at least this year.

Barnes will join Oklahoma City Thunder star Chet Holmgren and retired three-time all-star Richard Hamilton on Team All-Star for the event.

Allan Houston — a past Shooting Stars champion — will return to the event this year for Team Knicks, with current New York players Jalen Brunson and Karl-Anthony Towns joining him. Also in the shooting event: Team Harper (Ron Harper Sr. and his sons, San Antonio’s Dylan Harper and Boston’s Ron Harper Jr.) and Team Cameron (a nod to Duke, with Corey Maggette, Charlotte’s Kon Knueppel and Atlanta’s Jalen Johnson on that squad).

The last three Shooting Stars events were all won by the same trio — Chris Bosh, Swin Cash and Dominique Wilkins.

Barnes was named an all-star for the second time in his career and will play on Team USA Stars, coached by Detroit Pistons bench boss J.B. Bickerstaff.

Additionally, there will be a new dunk champion this year, with three-time winner Mac McClung not in this year’s field. McClung said going into last year’s dunk event that he expected it to be his last.

This year’s dunk participants: Miami’s Keshad Johnson, San Antonio’s Carter Bryant, Orlando’s Jase Richardson and the Los Angeles Lakers’ Jaxson Hayes.

All-star weekend will take place at the Intuit Dome in Los Angeles from Feb. 13-15.

–with files from the Associated Press



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Blue Jays invite RHPs Tanner Andrews, Nate Garkow to spring training

The Toronto Blue Jays are building up their pitching arsenal for spring training.

Right-handed pitchers Tanner Andrews and Nate Garkow have been given spring invites, the team announced Saturday.

The moves for the two righties come after the Blue Jays signed lefty pitcher Josh Fleming to a minor-league deal with a spring invite.

Andrews, 30, is a career minor-league reliever, having spent the last seven seasons moving between six different minor-league levels.

In 2025, he pitched with the Wichita Wind Surge, the Minnesota Twins’ double-A affiliate, where he earned a 3.78 ERA and 1.440 WHIP in 16.2 innings over 14 appearances out of the bullpen.

Garkow, 28, has been with the Blue Jays organization for the last two seasons, joining as a free agent ahead of the 2024 season.

In 39 appearances split between double-A New Hampshire and high-A Vancouver, the Arcadia, Calif., native pitched to a 3.19 ERA with a 1.118 WHIP over 53.2 innings.

Fleming, 29, spent all of 2025 as a reliever in triple-A with the Seattle Mariners. He posted a 4.91 ERA over 84.1 innings while striking out 44.

Originally drafted in the fifth round of the 2017 draft by the Rays, Fleming broke into the big leagues in 2020 with Tampa Bay.

He last pitched in the majors in 2024 with the Pittsburgh Pirates, carrying a 4.02 ERA over 31.1 innings.



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Speedskater Valerie Maltais wins bronze for Canada’s first medal at Olympics

Valerie Maltais has put Canada on the board.

The speedskater captured bronze in the women’s 3,000 metres on Saturday, giving Canada its first medal of the Winter Olympics.

Competing in her fifth Olympics, Maltais, 35, earned her third career medal.

The La Baie, Que. skater won a short-track silver in relay in the 2014 Olympics before making the transition to long-track in 2022 and joining forces with Ivanie Blondin and Isabelle Weidemann to win team pursuit gold.

On Saturday in Milan, Maltais raced in the third-last pair and was second overall after crossing the line in three minutes 56.93 seconds. She also was second in her heat as Italy’s Francesca Lollobrigida put down an Olympic record of 3:54.28 to win gold.

Maltais dropped to third when Norway’s Ragne Wilund edged her out in the second-last pair in 3:56.93.

Maltais held on for bronze when the Netherlands’ Joy Beune ended up fourth overall, more than a second behind the Canadian, in the final pair.

Maltais came into the Games in good form. She won a silver and two bronze medals in four World Cup races at this distance this season.

It was the second medal in a row for Canada at the Games in the women’s 3,000. Four years ago on opening day, Weidemann took bronze in the same event for Canada’s first medal.



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How Super Bowl LX can make history and build legacies

A championship title is up for grabs on Sunday, but that’s not the only thing at stake in Super Bowl LX. 

When the New England Patriots and Seattle Seahawks take the field in Santa Clara, there are narratives to rewrite, new chapters to open, and legacies to build.

Here’s a look at everything on the line this Sunday.

Sam Darnold

For nearly a decade, Sam Darnold’s career has been defined by the labels other people put on him. And there have been many. First, he was considered the consensus “safe pick” of the 2018 draft class, then crowned saviour and franchise future for the Jets after being selected third overall by New York. Within three years, he was branded a “bust” — a label that stuck to him during his two years in Carolina, then one season in San Francisco, with both stops furthering the narrative that he’d been relegated to career backup. He was slated to play the same role in Minnesota when he signed with the Vikings, but instead wore a new and more hopeful label: Comeback story. In the year that followed, we referred to him as the Vikings’ reclamation project, then a pending free agent, then a hot name on a cool QB market, a journeyman and, of course, finally, a Seahawk.

Now, after a season at the helm of Seattle’s explosive offence, he’s a Super Bowl starting quarterback. And he’s not just along for the ride. While Seattle’s defence was the biggest reason why the Seahawks claimed the top seed in the NFC, Darnold’s gusty performance against the Rams in the conference championship is the primary reason the club is back in the Super Bowl for the first time since 2015. 

Now, how we talk about Darnold after Sunday’s game is wholly up to the player himself. He is, at last, in position to define what his own NFL legacy is. A victory on Sunday would see him usher in this new chapter of his career with a real statement — and a label coveted by all who play: Super Bowl champ.  

Drake Maye

In just his second season as a pro, Drake Maye is already in rarified air. At 23 years and 162 days old, he can surpass Ben Roethlisberger as the youngest starting QB to win the Super Bowl (Roethlisberger was 25 days shy of his 24th birthday when his Steelers defeated the Seahawks in Super Bowl XL).

The near-instant success Maye has had at the helm of New England is reminiscent of the rapid rise of a certain other Patriots QB. Tom Brady, too, led the Patriots to the Super Bowl in his second pro season, going 4-0 in his first four playoff appearances at age 24. A win Sunday would see Maye match that feat. 

Obviously, Maye is not Brady — he’ll need eight more Super Bowl appearances and six rings to match the GOAT’s accomplishments in New England. But we can appreciate the budding career of the young franchise QB without saddling him with near-impossible expectations. For a franchise defined by two decades of dominance under the Brady-Belichick dynasties, Sunday brings an opportunity to open the beginning of the Maye-Vrabel era and appreciate it in its own right. 

Jaxon Smith-Njigba

After breaking out in his second season last year, Jaxon Smith-Njigba took over highlight reels in 2025 with an incredible campaign that put his chemistry with Sam Darnold on full display. Over the course of 17 regular-season games, Smith-Njigba averaged 15.1 yards per catch and totalled a league-leading 1,793 yards. It’s no surprise he was honoured as the NFL’s offensive player of the year as a result. 

With Darnold throwing him dimes against the L.A. Rams in the NFC Championship, we saw JSN at his best — including that casual one-handed grab we’ve all watched at least 20 times by now. That performance gave us all a front-row seat to a masterclass in catches, considering Rams WR1 Puka Nacua was on the other side of the matchup. 

Another masterful performance for JSN on the Super Bowl stage would solidify his status as one of the biggest stars in today’s NFL, which has no shortage of dynamic offensive weapons. It would also make him the youngest wide receiver to lead the league in receiving yards and then go on to win the Super Bowl in the same season. At 24 years and 359 days, come Sunday, he’d be in a league of his own in that respect. 

The last WR to lead the NFL in receiving yards and hoist the Lombardi Trophy in the same season? His own teammate, Cooper Kupp. 

Mike Vrabel

Already a well-respected coach from his time in Tennessee, Mike Vrabel’s homecoming in New England has been one of the best stories of the 2025 season. It’s hard to look at a franchise with such a winning tradition from the Bill Belichick days and call it a Cinderella story, but it’s still wildly impressive to see what Vrabel has done in such a short time with this organization.

Even before being named the new head coach in New England in January 2025, Vrabel was already a Patriots legend. As a longtime linebacker, he helped lead the club’s fearsome defence to three Super Bowl titles during the first dynasty years of the early 2000s. 

That he just took over a 4-13 squad and turned it into a 13-win powerhouse, complete with a division title and a berth in Super Bowl LX in the span of a single year, makes Vrabel a franchise icon on the field and on the sidelines. He was awarded coach-of-the-year honours for his remarkable turnaround, and can put the cherry on top of an incredible year this weekend. If he can guide the Patriots to a win on Sunday, Vrabel will become the first coach to take a losing team and turn it into a Super Bowl-winning squad in his first season. He can also become the first person to win a Super Bowl as both a player and a head coach with the same franchise. 

Mike Macdonald

Mike Macdonald is a defensive mastermind. His work at the helm of the Baltimore Ravens’ top-ranked defence in 2023 earned him the top job in Seattle, and in the two years since he took over as head coach, the Seahawks have become a fearsome unit. That he posted back-to-back double-digit-win seasons in his first two years on Seattle’s sideline is incredibly impressive. That he did so with two different quarterbacks adds to that feat. A Super Bowl victory in Year 2 would solidify his status as one of the best coaches in the game today and would also mark a major victory for the defensively inclined. 

As the saying goes, defence wins championships. But recent Super Bowls have seen offensive-minded head coaches take over the spotlight, and hiring cycles have reflected that.

Recent coaching trends have seen offensive co-ordinators getting the most attention on the hiring circuit, but Macdonald’s success — and Vrabel’s too — could sway the trend in the other direction. The last defence-first head coach to win the Super Bowl was Bill Belichick.

For Macdonald, there’s a little more history on the line. Not only can a win over the Patriots help ease the sting of football’s most shocking loss against the franchise in 2015, but he could also add his name to an impressive list. At just 38 years old, a win on Sunday would make Macdonald the third-youngest head coach to win a Super Bowl in NFL history, after Sean McVay and Mike Tomlin, both of whom were 36 when they won.



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Friday, 6 February 2026

National team icons headline Canadian baseball hall’s 2026 class

TORONTO – A generation of Canadian baseball came of age at the 1999 Pan American Games in Winnipeg, when a scrappy edition of the men’s national team made an inspired run to a bronze medal. 

Right in the middle of it all was Stubby Clapp, the diminutive middle infielder from Windsor, Ont., whose bases-loaded walk-off single in the 11th inning of a 7-6 win over the United States helped springboard the program to the Prairie podium, and beyond.

“That was a fun time, obviously,” Clapp recalled. “That group of players is just special because of the culture we had. It was not only on the field, but off the field. If three or four guys went to eat, you had 15 guys at the same table. We always travelled together, ate together, did everything together and that turned into winning together on the field. 

“I think that’s when we really started to put Baseball Canada back on the map.”

Very much so and deserved recognition for Clapp, the longtime heart and soul of the men’s national team, and the late Jim Baba, the beloved executive who touched the sport at all levels both at home and abroad, came Thursday when they were named for induction to the Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame.

Joining them on induction day, June 20 in St. Marys, Ont., will be women’s national team stalwart Kate Psota; Devon White, the Toronto Blue Jays’ five-time Gold Glove centre-fielder; Bill Stoneman, who threw two no-hitters for the Montreal Expos and later became the club’s general manager; and Paul Runge, who umpired 3,196 games in the majors. 

Recognition for the entire class was long overdue, given the breadth and depth of their contributions to Canadian baseball.

Clapp first rose to prominence at those Pan Am Games, but credited Baba’s decision to make him the last cut from a junior national team nearly a decade earlier for being “a huge springboard” in his career.

“Baseball Canada has been everything for me,” he said. “If Baseball Canada wasn’t around, I probably would have been working in the automotive industry. That’s just the truth.”

Instead, Clapp enjoyed an 11-year pro career that included 23 games in the majors with the St. Louis Cardinals in 2001, along with numerous other appearances with the national squad, including the 2004 and 2008 Olympics and the World Baseball Classic in 2006 and 2009, often with a penchant for big hits

Now first-base coach for the Cardinals, Clapp became so ingrained within the national team program that Baseball Canada named one of its annual awards after him, given to a player “whose perseverance, resilience and determination” carries them to the majors.

Asked to describe the characteristics of the national team culture he helped build, Clapp replied: “One word comes to mind – grit, you know? Grit and never quit. It’s a lot of fun to be a part of when you’re in these tournaments. It’s not like you have 162. Everybody understands you get four games to do what you have to do and move on to the next round. So everyone puts their head down, plays for each other and then we see what happens at the end.”

As big as Clapp’s front-facing impact was, Baba’s work behind the scenes may have been even more significant.

The native of Moose Jaw, Sask., who died of cancer last September, served as Baseball Canada’s executive director from 2000-2021, helping to build up both grassroots and high-performance programming across the country while also serving as a technical official within international federations. 

“My dad put his whole life into baseball,” said Baba’s daughter Melani. “Even up into his last days, he was still contributing his thoughts and ideas to the WBSC. So it really means a lot to have him honoured in this way. We wish he could be here with us to see the honour, but it means the world to see the impact he’s made on baseball through Canada and through the world.”

Psota, a first baseman from Burlington, Ont., was a member of the women’s national team from 2004 to 2018, winning seven medals, including silver at the 2015 Pan Am Games in Toronto and at the Women’s World Cup in 2008 and 2016. 

Along with 2024 inductee Ashley Stephenson, she was among the trailblazers who helped build up the women’s national team program she now helps coach. 

“It’s really incredible to see the growth from when we started in 2004 ’til now,” said Psota. “Even coaching in 2024, the skill level has increased significantly in the level of play in those tournaments. I’m just really excited moving forward building our program here in Canada, and hopefully getting a little bit of traction with this pro league that’s going on in the United States right now. I know there are a lot of excited people locally for that, a lot of my friends in Australia and the U.S. are on board. So I’m just hoping we get a lot of traction and move the game forward.”

White, among the most gifted defenders in Blue Jays history, was an integral part of the 1992 and 1993 World Series championship clubs, helping to both set the table atop the batting order and make life easier for his pitchers by stealing hits all over the outfield.

The native of Kingston, Jamaica, spent five of his 17 big-league seasons in Toronto and remains involved with the organization in player development, calling “preparation, discipline and work ethic” the traits from his own career he aims to pass down.

“We always talk about, if I ask you to be out on the field at nine o’clock, 8:45 is late to me,” said White. “So I try to emulate being that person, to be on time, prepare yourself for the game. When you practise, you’re supposed to practise harder than when you play the game. Those are things that made me successful. Every day I was shagging fly balls, regardless of whether I was a Gold Glove winner or not. I did it. You have to try to instill that in the younger players because they will take advantage of you if you don’t push them.”

Stoneman, a right-hander from Oak Park, Ill., spent five of his eight big-league seasons with the Expos and once his playing days were done, returned for a second chapter in Montreal, working in banking before rejoining the club and working his way up to GM. He served in that role in 1987 and ’88 and later spent nine seasons as GM of the Angels, winning the World Series in 2002.

He credited Jim Fanning, the first GM of the Expos and another member of the Canadian Hall, for teaching him “how to build a club – you build it from the ground up.”

“To me,” he continued later, “it was about developing people and seeing good young players become, great major-league players.”

Runge, born in St. Catharines, Ont., carved out a 25-year career umpiring in the National League, following in the footsteps of his father, Ed, who umpired in the American League from 1954-1970. Paul called four World Series – including the 1993 edition won on Joe Carter’s ninth-inning homer – and three all-star games. 

He described the Carter homer as “pretty spectacular,” but later added that calling such high-stakes games is “pretty intense.”

“I can name three or four umpires that were very good officials who had that one play that lasted the rest of their life,” Runge continued. “I think of Larry Barnett in Boston (during Game 3 of the 1975 World Series), he made the correct call that was rated as wrong. Don Denkinger in Kansas City (during Game 6 of the 1985 World Series), that in St. Louis, they maintain it cost them the game. Both of those people had to move out of their houses in the winter. It can get pretty intense, and we’re well aware of that, so there is a certain degree of pressure. I was very fortunate. I had some good games in the World Series, but there was a lot more pressure.”



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Police say man needed jaw wired shut after being punched by Gavin McKenna

A police affidavit about the arrest of top National Hockey League prospect Gavin McKenna says he was allegedly caught on video punching a man twice in the face, resulting in surgery for a fractured jaw that needed to be wired shut.

McKenna is facing charges of aggravated and simple assault, harassment and disorderly conduct from the alleged confrontation on Jan. 31 in State College, Pa., where he is a member of the Pennsylvania State University men’s hockey team.

The 18-year-old from Whitehorse is widely considered a top-two prospect for the upcoming NHL entry draft this summer.

The police complaint filed on Wednesday says McKenna allegedly “engaged in a physical altercation by punching another male in the face twice, which caused serious bodily injury.”

Neither Pennsylvania State University nor the agency of Byron Ritchie, who has reportedly been acting as an advisor to McKenna’s family, responded to requests for comment.

The complaint includes the affidavit sworn by a patrolling officer for the State College Police Department, who was first dispatched to the Mount Nittany Medical Centre to speak with a patient who had allegedly been assaulted in the downtown neighbourhood of the municipality where the university is located.

The patient, the affidavit says, had “fractures to both sides of his jaw” and a missing tooth.

“The patient was in substantial pain and could hardly speak,” the affidavit says. “The patient had two friends in the room with him who were both witnesses to the assault.”

It says the two friends identified McKenna as the person who allegedly punched the victim “following an exchange of words between them and the group of people that McKenna was with.”

“The friends recognized McKenna due to the fact he is on the Penn State men’s hockey team,” the affidavit says. “The friends could not remember exactly what McKenna was wearing at the time of the assault, but knew he had on a backwards hat.”

The witnesses told police that they suspected McKenna was coming from a local pub hosting a hockey event on the day of the alleged assault, after Penn State hosted Michigan State in an outdoor game at Beaver Stadium, a 5-4 overtime loss for the Nittany Lions.

The friends said that the alleged assault took place in front of a parking garage, and the officer was able to review video footage from street cameras that he says show McKenna “throwing two punches at the patient’s face, which caused him to stumble backwards.”

The officer says McKenna was wearing “a white backwards hat, puffer jacket, jeans and white sneakers,” and the same officer later located blood on the ground outside the garage.

The affidavit says the injured man underwent surgery on Monday, and his jaw will remain wired shut for about two weeks unless “further medical intervention is required.”

This is McKenna’s first season at Pennsylvania State after previously playing with the Medicine Hat Tigers of the Western Hockey League.

In 24 games this year, he has 11 goals and 21 assists, along with 34 penalty minutes, and also recorded four goals and 10 assists in seven games played in this year’s IIHF World Junior U-20 tournament in Minnesota.

He is listed on the National Hockey League’s prospect ranking website as the top North American skater available in the upcoming entry draft, with Sweden’s Ivar Stenberg — widely discussed as this year’s top-two prospects — being listed as the top International skater.



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Auger-Aliassime tops Wawrinka to advance to Open Occitanie quarters

Canada’s Felix Auger-Aliassime defeated Switzerland’s Stan Wawrinka 6-4, 7-6 (3) in second-round men’s singles tennis action at the Open Occitanie on Thursday.

Auger-Aliassime fired 16 aces and won 82 per cent of his first-serve points.

The Montreal native broke on two of his 10 chances but held a 34-19 advantage on winners.

Wawrinka had five aces but four double faults, won 73 per cent of his first-serve points and broke on one of his four opportunities.

Auger-Aliassime had a bye through the first round as the tournament’s top seed.

He will next face sixth-seeded Frenchman Arthur Fils on Friday in the quarterfinals.



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Raptors’ Scottie Barnes joins field as Shooting Stars returns to all-star weekend

It’ll be a busy all-star weekend for Toronto Raptors forward Scottie Barnes . Barnes will compete in the Shooting Stars event on top of pa...