Wednesday, 25 February 2026

Mexican cartel clashes fuel worries in lead-up to FIFA World Cup

GUADALAJARA, Mexico — Hugo Alejandro Pérez was in his house a few miles from the Mexican stadium that is slated to host FIFA World Cup games when gunfire and explosions erupted just outside his door.

The 53-year-old restaurant owner was already skeptical about his city, Guadalajara, hosting the international sporting event.

He saw a government that failed to fix basic things, like water service to his home, along with cartel violence in the surrounding state of Jalisco and shook his head. The surge of bloodshed this week following the Mexican military’s killing of the country’s most powerful cartel boss offered more confirmation of his doubts.

“I don’t think they should host the World Cup here,” Peréz said. “We have so many problems, and they want to invest in the World Cup? With all the violence, it’s not a good idea.”

Peréz joined other people Tuesday in questioning Guadalajara’s capacity to be a host city for the summer soccer competition, even as the Mexican government vowed that the international event — hosted jointly by Mexico, the United States and Canada — will not be affected.

President offers ‘every guarantee’ for World Cup

President Claudia Sheinbaum was asked at her daily news briefing what guarantees there are that World Cup matches will be held in Jalisco. “Every guarantee,” she said, adding that there was “no risk” for fans coming to the tournament.

Jalisco Gov. Jesús Pablo Lemus said he had spoken with local FIFA officials, who have “absolutely no intention of removing any venues from Mexico. The three venues remain completely unchanged.”

The same day, the Portuguese soccer federation said it was “closely monitoring the delicate situation” in Mexico.” Its national team was scheduled to play Mexico’s team in a friendly on March 28 at the newly renovated Azteca Stadium in Mexico City, which is scheduled to host the opening World Cup match on June 11.

Jalisco, in central Mexico, was already facing scrutiny. The state been plagued by some of the starkest examples of cartel violence in recent years, including the discovery of a cartel killing site at a ranch last March and a crisis of disappearances.

The state, with Guadalajara as its capital, is the central hub for the Jalisco New Generation Cartel, whose leader Nemesio Oseguera Cervantes, or “El Mencho,” was killed Sunday in a capture attempt by the military.

The operation and waves of violence killed 70 people. Cartel gunmen set fire to cars to block streets in states across the country, namely Jalisco, and fought with Mexican forces into Monday as the government said the conflict was under control.

The death of Oseguera Cervantes came as Mexico’s government has stepped up its offensive against cartels in an effort to meet demands by U.S. President Donald Trump to crack down on criminal groups. The cartel, also known as CJNG, is one of the fastest-growing criminal networks in Mexico.

The White House confirmed that the U.S. provided intelligence support to capture the cartel leader and applauded Mexico’s army for taking down a man who was one of the most wanted criminals in both countries. On Tuesday night, U.S. President Donald Trump appeared to briefly reference the operation during his State of the Union address, saying “We’ve also taken down one of the most sinister cartel kingpins of all. You saw that yesterday.”

Drug lord’s death could lead to more violence

Peréz, the restaurant owner, also commended Sheinbaum’s efforts to go after cartels, saying the government has taken cartel violence more seriously then her predecessors. At the same time, he said, local authorities in Jalisco have fallen short in protecting civilians.

The root concern for many is that the death of “El Mencho” could pave the way for more violence. Killing capos, in what’s become known as the “kingpin strategy,” has been criticized by Sheinbaum herself because it can often spark internal conflict between cartel factions and push rival cartels to make territorial grabs.

Vanda Felbab-Brown, an academic at the Brookings Institution, said she doesn’t see more acts of “revenge” by the cartel as likely, but the future remains uncertain, especially after leading figures in both CJNG and the Sinaloa Cartel have been knocked out in recent years.

“If there is no clear line of succession (in CJNG), we might see a lot of fighting within the cartel, its breakup, and there are a lot of scenarios,” she said.

On Sunday, when firefights broke out between the cartel and soldiers, and gunmen began to burn a car just feet in front of Peréz’s house, he let people on the street scramble inside his home to seek cover. The fighting raged for an hour.

Now he says he doesn’t see the point of holding the games, adding that he doubts any of the money from the games will trickle down to businesses in working-class neighbourhoods like his, even if they are just a 10-minute drive from the stadium. Similar tensions have simmered in Mexico City.

The World Cup is expected to be a $3 billion economic engine in Mexico, according to the Mexican Soccer Federation.

“It doesn’t help us residents at all, honestly. They should move it to Monterrey or Mexico City. But right now here, we’re not convinced,” he said. “Things aren’t in good enough shape for foreigners to be coming to Jalisco for an event like this.”

On Monday, some foreign tourists trapped in the violence in the city of Puerto Vallarta took to social media to warn of the violence, with a few remarking that they didn’t plan to return.

Hope of snapping back to normal

Despite that, Guadalajara was snapping back to its normal rhythm Tuesday. Many businesses opened their doors for the first time in two days, and streets were packed with traffic.

Workers were busy fixing up the exterior of the soccer stadium that will host World Cup matches. Cyclists zipped around outside the stadium, and parents played with children in parks.

Heavily armed police officers and National Guard members roamed the city, a sign for some that the government had the situation under control.

Juan Carlos Pila, a 55-year-old taxi driver, rolled his eyes at the reports of violence after spending two days waiting with his family for things to calm down. He said social media and local news outlets were overplaying the extent of the violence.

“People should come, man. Everyone is welcome,” he said.

Others, like Maria Dolores Aguirre, simply hoped for the best. Aguirre runs a small corner story in the cobblestoned tourist town of Tapalpa tucked away in Jalisco’s mountains, where Mexico’s military killed “El Mencho.”

Aguirre’s family business of over 50 years depends on the flow of tourists to the normally sleepy town. Now she worries bloodshed will deal a blow to her livelihood and change towns like hers.

“It’s going to affect us. It’s collateral damage,” Aguirre said. “The government is going to have to have a lot of security. … The entire world just saw what happened and, of course, people are going to think twice about coming.”



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Tuesday, 24 February 2026

Real Madrid’s Courtois disappointed with Mourinho’s criticism of Vinicius over racism claim

MADRID — Real Madrid goalkeeper Thibaut Courtois was disappointed with José Mourinho’s criticism of teammate Vinícius Júnior for accusing Benfica player Gianluca Prestianni of racism last week.

Courtois commented on Tuesday, a day before Madrid hosted Benfica in their Champions League playoffs second leg. Madrid’s 1-0 win in Lisbon last week was overshadowed by Vinícius’ allegation that Prestianni called him “monkey” after the Brazil forward scored and celebrated by the Benfica corner flag.

Prestianni denied racially insulting Vinícius while confronting him with his shirt over his mouth, but was provisionally suspended for one match by UEFA on Monday and will not play Wednesday’s match at Santiago Bernabeu Stadium. He and Mourinho, who is also suspended after being sent off late in the game for referee dissent, still travelled to Madrid.

Mourinho, a former Madrid coach, said after last week’s match that Vinícius shouldn’t have provoked Benfica fans by dancing in front of the Benfica flag to celebrate his second-half winner. The coach suggested that something always happens in stadiums where Vinícius plays.

Courtois said it wasn’t right to use Vinícius’ celebration to justify the alleged act of racism.

“Mourinho is Mourinho, and as a coach he will defend his club and what his player told him,” Courtois said. “The only thing that disappoints me is that he used Viní’s celebration. He didn’t do anything wrong. He celebrated like many of our rivals have, because when they score on us, the euphoria is double or triple. But it’s over, we have to move on.”

Mourinho did not speak in Benfica’s news conference at the Bernabeu on Tuesday; an assistant spoke instead.

Bayern Munich coach Vincent Kompany was among those who also criticized Mourinho for attacking Vinícius after last week’s match.

Benfica has defended Prestianni, saying the Argentine player was the victim of a “defamation campaign.” It lamented that he was provisionally suspended by UEFA while an investigation remained open.

Madrid was fully behind Vinícius and coach Álvaro Arbeloa said on Tuesday that UEFA had a chance to do more against racism.

“We are facing a great opportunity to make a significant step forward in the fight against racism,” he said. “UEFA has always been a strong advocate in the fight against racism, and now they have the opportunity not to leave it as just a slogan or a nice banner before matches. I hope they seize this opportunity.”

Arbeloa added Vinícius, who has five goals in his last four matches, was “very motivated” for Wednesday’s match.

“Vini has always shown great courage and character,” Arbeloa said. “I don’t know how anyone else in his situation would react. He has always done so bravely, showing tremendous personality. That has always been his response and it always will be because he is a fighter. Tomorrow he will come out to fight and play a great match, showing that he is one of the best players on the planet.”



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Monday, 23 February 2026

How lack of coaching adjustments played role in Canada’s loss to USA



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Sunday, 22 February 2026

Connor Hellebuyck comes up big as U.S. downs Canada in OT of gold-medal game

Connor Hellebuyck has slayed his demons.

The U.S. goalie dismissed any notion that he couldn’t perform when it counts most, making a whopping 41 saves to lead his country to a 2-1 overtime victory over Canada in the gold-medal game at the Winter Olympics on Sunday.

Hellebuyck stopped several grade-A Canadian chances throughout regulation and the extra frame to keep his team in it despite the ice being tilted his way.

In the first period, the Winnipeg Jets netminder stonewalled Canada captain Connor McDavid on a breakaway.

In the second, he was crucial as the U.S. killed off a 5-on-3 Canadian power play.

And Hellebuyck saved his best for the third period, when he robbed Devon Toews of a potential go-ahead goal with a diving stick save.

In overtime, Hellebuyck started the play that led to the eventual Jack Hughes winner, earning the secondary assist on what will go down as a legendary goal for the Americans.

His 41 saves broke a record for the most saves in a gold-medal game in an Olympics with NHL participation, surpassing Ryan Miller’s 36-save effort for Team USA at Vancouver 2010.

The 32-year-old from Commerce Township, Mich., has faced criticism throughout his NHL career for being among the best regular-season goalies only to falter in the post-season.

He was in the losing net at the 4 Nations Face-Off last February, and won the Hart and Vezina Trophies before his Jets fell in the second round of the NHL post-season.

Now, he’s led his country to Olympic glory — and was named the goalie of the all-tournament team for his efforts.

He’ll have a well-deserved gold medal dangling around his neck.

  • Follow the medal race at Milano Cortina 2026
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Saturday, 21 February 2026

Raptors recall Jamison Battle from G League

The Toronto Raptors have added their resident sharpshooter back into the fold.

Jamison Battle was recalled by the Raptors on Saturday after a one-game stint in the G League, the team announced.

Battle, 24, was assigned to the G League for the first time this season on Friday and played in the Raptors 905’s win over the Windy City Bulls. The six-foot-seven wing scored 22 points and shot 6-of-13 from three-point range.

In his sophomore season with the Raptors, Battle has averaged 3.1 points per game while shooting a team-high 41.5 per cent from three. He shot 40.5 per cent from deep during his first season, which ranked second among all rookies.

Yet despite his shooting talent, Battle has been a DNP-CD — did not play, coach’s decision — in four of the Raptors’ last 10 games. In the six games he touched the floor, Battle averaged only 6.7 minutes.

Battle was signed by Toronto after going undrafted in 2024, and earned a two-way spot after shooting a combined 17-of-29 (58.6 per cent) from three between Summer League and the pre-season in 2024-25.

He was later converted to a standard contract after the trade deadline as he continued to shoot the lights out.

Battle’s next chance to make an impact for the Raptors will come on Sunday when they take on the Milwaukee Bucks at 3:30 p.m. ET / 12:30 p.m. PT.



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Friday, 20 February 2026

What to keep an eye on for Raptors’ final regular season games



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Thursday, 19 February 2026

Orioles 3B Jordan Westburg ‘physically unable’ to participate at spring training

SARASOTA, Fla. — Baltimore Orioles third baseman Jordan Westburg has been unable to take part in spring training after a right oblique injury during the offseason, and it was unclear Thursday whether an elbow issue also was keeping him off the field.

“He’s just unable to participate right now,” first-year manager Craig Albernaz told reporters Thursday. “He’s getting evaluated by our medical team and also outside people to make sure we have a plan in place, and see what’s going on with Jordan to get him going.”

When asked whether it was the oblique or a new elbow issue for Westburg, the manager replied, “Just physically unable to go.”

Albernaz also was asked whether there was a fear that any issues for Westburg are worse that originally thought.

“Just want to make sure that we do our due diligence and make sure Jordan is in the best chance to play this year,” Albernaz said.

Westburg, who turned 27 on Wednesday, hit .265 with 17 homers and 41 RBs in 85 games last season, when he missed time with a left hamstring strain and a right ankle sprain. He hit .265 with 18 homers and 63 RBIs in 107 games in 2024, when he appeared in the All-Star Game two weeks before sustaining a broken right hand when getting hit by a pitch.

Mike Elias, the team’s president of baseball operations, said last week at the start of camp that Westburg was recovering from a right oblique injury that could delay his participation in spring training games. The first game is Saturday.

The Orioles will be without second baseman Jackson Holliday to start the season after surgery last week to repair a broken hamate bone in his right hand.



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Wednesday, 18 February 2026

Winter Olympics men’s curling: Scores, standings and schedule

Team Brad Jacobs will aim to get Canada back on top of the Olympic podium for men’s curling for the first time since 2014 this month in Italy.

Here are the standings, schedule and results:

ROUND-ROBIN STANDINGS

Team 

Wins 

Losses

Switzerland (Yannick Schwaller)

8

0

Canada (Brad Jacobs)

7

1

Great Britain (Bruce Mouat)

5

4

Norway (Magnus Ramsfjell)

4

4

Italy (Joel Retornaz)

4

4

U.S. (Daniel Casper)

4

5

Germany (Marc Muskatewitz)

3

5

Sweden (Niklas Edin)

2

6

Czechia (Lukas Klima)

2

6

China (Xiaoming Xu)

2

6

Top four teams advance to semifinals.

SCHEDULE/RESULTS

ROUND-ROBIN

Draw 11: Wednesday, Feb. 18

Canada 8, Italy 3
Czechia 10, China 5
Switzerland 10, Norway 4
Great Britain 9, U.S. 2

Draw 12: Thursday, Feb. 19, 3:05 a.m. ET / 12:05 a.m. PT

Sweden vs. Czechia
Italy vs. Switzerland
China vs. Germany
Norway vs. Canada

PLAYOFFS

Thursday, Feb. 19, 1:05 p.m. / 10:05 a.m. PT

Semifinals

Friday, Feb. 20, 1:05 p.m. ET / 10:05 a.m. PT

Bronze-medal game

Saturday, Feb. 21, 1:05 p.m. ET / 10:05 a.m. PT

Gold-medal game

PREVIOUS RESULTS

Draw 1: Wednesday, Feb. 11

Italy 7, Sweden 6
Canada 7, Germany 6
U.S. 8, Czechia 7
Great Britain 9, China 4

Draw 2: Thursday, Feb. 12

Germany 5, Norway 4
Switzerland 8, U.S. 3
Great Britain 6, Sweden 3

Draw 3: Friday, Feb. 13

Canada 6, U.S. 3
Italy 9, Great Britain 7
Norway 8, China 6
Switzerland 7, Czechia 3

Draw 4: Friday, Feb. 13

Switzerland 9, China 7
Norway 7, Czechia 4
Germany 6, Italy 5
Canada 8, Sweden 6

Draw 5: Saturday, Feb. 14

Great Britain 7, Czechia 4
Sweden 6, China 4
Switzerland 9, Canada 5
U.S. 8, Germany 6

Draw 6: Sunday, Feb. 15

U.S. 8, Sweden 5
Great Britain 9, Germany 4
Norway 10, Italy 7

Draw 7: Sunday, Feb. 15

Canada 6, China 3
U.S. 10, Norway 8
Italy 10, Czechia 5
Switzerland 6, Great Britain 5

Draw 8: Monday, Feb. 16

Norway 7, Great Britain 6
Canada 8, Czechia 2
Germany 7, Sweden 3
China 11, Italy 4

Draw 9: Tuesday, Feb. 17

Switzerland 9, Sweden 4
China 8, U.S. 5
Czechia 9, Germany 7

Draw 10: Tuesday, Feb. 17

Switzerland 8, Germany 4
Italy 8, U.S. 5
Canada 9, Great Britain 5
Sweden 7, Norway 4



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Tuesday, 17 February 2026

Ronda Rousey vs. Gina Carano to headline MMA event in May

Two trailblazers of modern women’s combat sports are set to step back into the cage this spring.

Former UFC champion Ronda Rousey and women’s mixed martial arts pioneer Gina Carano will meet in a featherweight contest at a May 16 MMA event at the Intuit Dome in Los Angeles, Most Valuable Promotions (MVP) announced Tuesday.

Rousey hasn’t fought since late in 2016 when she was stopped by Amanda Nunes at UFC 207 as she attempted to win back her bantamweight title. The Riverside, Calif., native was a lifelong judoka and won an Olympic bronze medal in judo in 2008 before beginning her MMA career and taking the sport by storm.

The 39-year-old began her MMA career in 2010 and started off 12-0 as a pro. She became a star and champion in the defunct Strikeforce organization, winning all her fights by first-round armbar, and was the inaugural UFC women’s bantamweight champion before eventually losing her belt to Holly Holm in 2015. Rousey returned 13 months later, lost to Nunes in 48 seconds, and she hasn’t been around the sport much since then.

Rousey never formally announced her retirement from MMA and has admitted in recent years that sustaining concussions throughout her career contributed to her walking away from fighting. Following her UFC run, she went on to star in several Hollywood movies and became a WWE superstar for a few years.

Before Rousey’s rise to superstardom, Carano was the face of women’s MMA and regarded as the first woman to become a major MMA star in North America.

Carano began her combat sports career competing in Muay Thai and made her MMA debut in 2006. She began her MMA career 7-0, and her fight with Julie Kedzie in 2007 made history by becoming the first women’s MMA bout to be broadcast live on national network television in the United States.

Her fight with Cris Cyborg in the summer of 2009 made more history by being the first major MMA event headlined by two women when they were featured in the main event of a Strikeforce card.

Carano was stopped by Brazil’s Cyborg, who went on to become an all-time great, and hasn’t fought professionally since her first and only loss 16.5 years ago.

Now 43, Carano has enjoyed a successful post-fighting career in show business, starring in several big-budget action movies and playing a popular recurring character in the Star Wars universe on the hit show The Mandalorian.

Carano has been away from combat sports for longer than Rousey has, but she recently returned to training. She previously trained out of Albuquerque, N.M., with famed trainer Greg Jackson, who also worked with UFC champions Georges St-Pierre, Jon Jones, Andrei Arlovski, Rashad Evans and Holly Holm, among others.

In recent months, Carano has been training with coach John Wood at Syndicate MMA in Las Vegas as she gets back into fight shape.

A hypothetical Rousey vs. Carano matchup has been speculated on over the years, but based on the timing and trajectories of their respective careers, it never previously made sense to pair the two together.

“Ronda came to me and said there is only one person she would make a comeback form, and it has been her dream to make this fight happen between us,” Carano said via the official press release. “She thanked me for opening up doors for her in her career and was respectful in asking for this fight to happen.

“This is an honour. I believe I will walk out of this fight with the win and I anticipate it will not come easy, which I welcome. This is as much for Ronda and me as it is for the fans and mixed martial arts community. What a time to be alive.”

The event will be professionally sanctioned in the state of California under the Unified Rules of MMA. Rousey vs. Carano will be scheduled for five, five-minute rounds, contested in the 145-pound division. The athletes will wear four-ounce MMA gloves, and the cage will have a hexagonal shape, just like the Strikeforce cage in which Rousey and Carano used to compete.

This will be the first MMA event held by MVP, which was co-founded by Jake Paul in 2021 and has exclusively promoted boxing events since its debut. 

“MVP has always been driven by disruption and delivering the biggest moments in combat sports on a global scale, and today we are officially bringing that energy to MMA for the first time,” Paul stated in the press release. “Ronda Rousey and Gina Carano are the two most formative figures in the history of women’s MMA; they are the icons who shattered the glass ceiling and helped build the foundation this sport stands on. MVP’s conviction in women’s boxing was driven by the success achieved by Ronda Rousey, who was the biggest star of the entire sport of MMA during her career.”

MVP will host a Rousey vs. Carano Kickoff Press Conference on March 5 at the Intuit Dome. No other matchups have been announced for the May 16 card at this time, but the lineup is expected to be filled out in the coming weeks.



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Monday, 16 February 2026

Mets owner Steve Cohen: Bichette talks ‘moved quickly’

New York Mets owner Steve Cohen has revealed more about the timeline leading up to his team signing Bo Bichette.

Speaking to reporters at spring training Monday, Cohen confirmed that talks with Bichette accelerated after Kyle Tucker spurned the Mets for the Los Angeles Dodgers in mid-January.

Tucker’s four-year, $240-million agreement with the Dodgers was first reported on Jan. 15. Bichette then agreed to a three-year, $126-million deal with the Mets on Jan. 16.

Cohen said that “the body was still warm” after the Mets learned Tucker would be joining the Dodgers when agents began calling New York to pitch their clients.

“I actually went to bed annoyed,” Cohen said of the whirlwind 24 hours. “But the agent for Bo had called us right after and discussions started. You never know how they’re going to go but they moved really quickly.”

Before his surprise move to the Mets, Bichette was reported to be in talks with the Philadelphia Phillies over a longer-term deal. Instead, he opted for a similar short-term deal to the one Tucker signed, which includes a higher annual salary and allows him to test free agency again in his prime.

According to Spotrac, the Mets have just over $480 million committed to their roster for 2026 after luxury tax costs are calculated, second only to the Dodgers ($527 million).

“(The Dodgers) are formidable. They have the ability to spend. So do I, by the way,” Cohen said. “And they built a great team but I think we built a great team. I think we’ll be really competitive this year and the goal is to meet them somewhere along the way in the playoffs.”

Bichette is one of many new faces at Mets spring training. The team underwent a major roster overhaul this winter after missing the playoffs with a disappointing 83-79 record.

The Mets acquired ace Freddy Peralta in a trade with the Brewers, outfielder Luis Robert Jr. in a trade with the White Sox and second baseman Marcus Semien in a trade with the Rangers. New York also signed free agents Jorge Polanco, Luke Weaver and MJ Melendez, while Pete Alonso (Orioles) and Edwin Diaz (Dodgers) signed elsewhere.

Cohen said the busy off-season was all about putting a winning roster on the field.

“We haven’t won. I really want to win. Each year that goes by, I get more annoyed,” Cohen said. “It’s hard to know when to make those changes, and sometimes they happen in a way you don’t fully anticipate or expect.

“Saying goodbye is always tough but saying hello is kinda fun.”



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Sunday, 15 February 2026

Watch Live: Olympic Daytime

Skeleton, figure skating and freestyle skiing are featured on Olympic Daytime. The broadcast starts at noon ET / 9 a.m. PT.



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Saturday, 14 February 2026

Italy’s DiGiacinto suspended for hit to head of Slovakia’s Fehervary

Italian forward Cristiano DiGiacinto has been suspended one game for a hit to the head on Slovakian defenceman Martin Fehervary.

Sportsnet’s Elliotte Friedman reported that the Hamilton, Ont., native will not be eligible to play in Italy’s final preliminary game against Finland.

The hit came during the second period of Friday’s game between Italy and Slovakia, which saw the host team lose 3-2.

The play was reviewed for a major penalty, but was ruled a two-minute minor for an “illegal check to the head or neck.”

Fehervary stayed in the game and did not miss a shift after taking the head contact.



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Friday, 13 February 2026

How to handle 2026 NBA All-Star competitions from betting standpoint



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Canada’s Victoria Mboko advances to final at Qatar Open

Victoria Mboko’s strong start to the 2026 season continued Friday.

The Canadian teen beat Latvia’s Jelena Ostapenko 6-3, 6-2 to advance to the final of the Qatar Open.

Mboko, ranked 13th in the world, recorded wins over top-10 players Mirra Andreeva and Elena Rybakina earlier this week. She opened her season by reaching the final of the Adelaide International and then made the round of 16 at the Australian Open.

The latest win guarantees Mboko will be in the top 10 for the first time next week.

Mboko, 19, will next face the winner of the other semifinal between No. 14 seed Karolina Muchova of Czechia and Maria Sakkari of Greece at the WTA Tour 1000-level event.

Mboko was ranked outside the top 300 at the beginning of last season. She went on a big winning run underneath the tour level before capturing the National Bank Open Presented by Rogers title last August in Montreal.



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Watch Live: Olympic Daytime

Hockey and curling are on the menu Friday on Olympic Daytime. The broadcast starts at noon ET / 9 a.m. PT.



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‘Best seat in the house’: How coaches treat 13th forward, seventh defenceman differently

MILAN — Oliver Ekman-Larsson has geared up for both of Team Sweden’s Olympic games, but he did something Friday against Finland that he didn’t do Wednesday versus Italy.

He played hockey.

Serving as his country’s seventh defenceman, the veteran clocked an ice time of 0:00 in Sweden’s opening win.

“I was joking around that I had the best seat in the house,” Ekman-Larsson said, chuckling, downplaying the fact that his only exercise was during warmups.

No big deal, he argued. So, please, don’t turn it into one.

“I’m here to support my team, and I’m here to play if they need me to play,” Ekman-Larsson said. “We’re going to need everybody that’s here to kind of pull together and be on the same page, and that’s where we are.”

Ekman-Larsson saw a whopping 7:36 in Friday’s 4-1 loss to Finland, while 13th forward Filip Forsberg jumped from 67 seconds’ worth of ice time in the opener (one shift!) to a hardy 9:31 Friday — even though the Swedes were desperate for a goal.

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  • Keep up with Olympic men’s hockey

    The men’s hockey tournament at Milano Cortina 2026 runs from Feb. 11-22. Follow along with all the scores and standings.

    Scoreboard

Swedish coach Sam Hallam defends his deployment by pointing to the expanded IIHF roster rules, which permit 13 forwards and seven defencemen as opposed to the 12 and six customary in the NHL and used at the 4 Nations Face-Off.

“If we wouldn’t dress seven and 13 and get an early injury, I would look pretty stupid,” Hallam said.

“We can’t play 25. That’s the honest truth about it. You’re here to play for our country, and it’s a tournament. We’re going to need each and every one of them. That’s the way it is, but everybody can’t play.”

Finland’s seventh D-man, Oliver Kapanen, got the Ekman-Lasson treatment Friday, clocking a 0:00 TOI. (An anti-Oliver bias is at play, perhaps?)

Meanwhile, Canada and the U.S. made more use of their extra skaters Thursday. 

(The longer bench benefitted Canada coach Jon Cooper, who simply plugged in Shea Theodore when Canadian defenceman Josh Morrissey was injured mid-game.)

At worst, the extra bodies can mess up the rotation and rhythm of a team in sync.

At best, a specialist can enhance special teams, swipe a big D-zone face-off, or score a critical shootout goal.

“It can be challenging at times, not as much for the coach but for the player. You never want somebody to sit there and be a grocery stick and not get to play at all,” Cooper said.

“That’s kind of pointless. You want to keep guys involved, but you also don’t want to ruin the chemistry of a line that’s going. So, a lot of communication goes on with that, and it can kind of divide the team a bit.”

Until Morrissey went down, Theodore’s primary task was to quarterback Canada’s second power-play unit. While depth centres Bo Horvat and Sam Bennett took turns Thursday on the fourth line, Horvat scored, Bennett laid some heavy hits, despite practising on the “fifth” line.

  • Follow the medal race at Milano Cortina 2026
  • Follow the medal race at Milano Cortina 2026

    See how all the countries are doing in the overall standings at the Winter Olympics.

    Medal table

“They’re sitting there thinking, ‘Oh, my God, I thought I might be out of the lineup. I don’t care if I get one shift, I don’t care.’ And so, that’s what’s great about this group,” Cooper said.

In Team USA’s debut romp over Latvia, seventh defenceman Noah Hanifin skated a respectable 11:01 and finished plus-2. Thirteenth forward Vincent Trocheck registered an assist in his 9:11. 

Both were given 14 shifts.

“We want to keep these guys involved and utilize the bench. That was the game plan going in,” U.S. coach Mike Sullivan said. “We’ve had discussions with the players themselves on how we were going to utilize them throughout the course of the game, and what their role is and define expectations a little bit. These guys have been just awesome with respect to embracing anything that we brought to them.”

Sullivan and his staff studied each player skillset, considering PK roles, power-play proficiency and defensive specialists.

“These guys are willing to accept anything,” Sullivan said. “We have very capable guys deep into our lineup. You know, maybe other teams don’t feel that way. But we feel strongly that we do. And because of that, we feel very confident that we can use them all.”



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Thursday, 12 February 2026

Lindsey Vonn undergoes ‘successful’ third surgery since downhill crash

CORTINA D’AMPEZZO, Italy — Lindsey Vonn had a “successful” third surgery on her broken left leg following her downhill crash at the Olympics, the American skier said Wednesday.

Vonn posted an update on Instagram that included photos of her giving a thumbs up sign in her hospital bed with a metal frame attached to her leg.

“I had my third surgery today and it was successful. Success today has a completely different meaning than it did a few days ago,” Vonn said. “I’m making progress and while it is slow, I know I’ll be OK.”

The 41-year-old Vonn crashed 13 seconds into her run during Sunday’s race at the Milan Cortina Games and was airlifted off the course by helicopter. She said late Monday she had suffered a “complex tibia fracture that is currently stable but will require multiple surgeries to fix properly.”

Vonn’s father, Alan Kildow, told The Associated Press on Monday that she is surrounded by family “at all times” at the hospital in Treviso where she is being treated.

“Thankful for all of the incredible medical staff, friends, family, who have been by my side and the beautiful outpouring of love and support from people around the world,” Vonn added. “Also, huge congrats to my teammates and all of the Team USA athletes who are out there inspiring me and giving me something to cheer for.”



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Wednesday, 11 February 2026

Report: Diamondbacks’ Corbin Carroll breaks hamate, will miss WBC

The Arizona Diamondbacks got some bad injury news to start their 2026 season.

Star outfielder Corbin Carroll suffered a broken hamate in his right hand during a live batting practice session on Tuesday, MLB.com’s Steve Gilbert reported.

Carroll is set to have surgery on Wednesday and will miss the upcoming World Baseball Classic, ESPN’s Jeff Passan reported. His status for Opening Day is also in question.

Carroll, 25, finished sixth in National League MVP voting in 2025 after slashing .259/.343/.541 with 31 home runs and 32 stolen bases.

Selected in the first round of the 2019 draft by Arizona, Carroll has emerged as one of baseball’s top young stars across his four MLB seasons.

The five-foot-10 speedster won NL Rookie of the Year in 2023 and is a two-time all-star. Carroll has led the senior circuit in triples in each of the past three seasons and has 82 career homers and 123 stolen bases.

Carroll was expected to be a starter in Team USA’s outfield at the WBC, a group that is now made up of Aaron Judge, Byron Buxton and Pete Crow-Armstrong.



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Tuesday, 10 February 2026

Watch Live: U.S. vs. Sweden in Olympic mixed doubles gold-medal game

The U.S. faces Sweden for gold in mixed doubles curling. Watch the game live Tuesday at 12:05 p.m. ET / 9:05 a.m. PT



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Monday, 9 February 2026

‘They are really nice people’: Curlers laugh off miscue in key moment

CORTINA D’AMPEZZO, Italy — In any other Olympic sport, a tie game with the result hanging in the balance would create tension between teams. Not in curling. 

When U.S. mixed doubles curler Korey Dropkin accidentally kicked his stone off the centre line Monday, in the middle of a decisive match against Italy in the Winter Games, the Italian duo laughed and waved it off, trusting the American to return it to its original position.

There were no debates involved, no refs called in, no bad-mouthing.

“For us it was really fine,” said Stefania Constantini, the curler from Cortina, glowing after the match, which her team won 7-6. “We just had a laugh together because they are really nice people.”

The moment highlighted one of the many reasons the niche sport of curling has such a dedicated fanbase — teams are easygoing and friendly to each other on the ice, even in the most heated moments. Monday’s game decided who would play whom in the semifinals, and the U.S. had been hoping for a win to avoid having to play Italy again. 

Though that wish did not come true, it was clear there were no hard feelings. Dropkin said after the match that he and his mixed doubles partner and Minnesota native, Cory Thiesse, would focus on “being a little sharper here and there and just trying to be a little more precise” when playing Italy again tonight. 

“We’re a tough team to beat twice,” he said. “They’re gonna have to bring their A game.”

Despite the Italian team’s easygoing approach, Dropkin, who hails from Massachusetts, couldn’t fully escape a chide from his friend, Thiesse. In this Olympiad’s mixed doubles field, where many of the teams are married, siblings or best friends, it often seems there’s been more tension between partners than between competing teams.

“You’re lucky you didn’t fall!” she quipped.

“Thanks Cor,” he said, grimacing. 

The semifinals will be played Monday evening at 6:05 local time. Along with the repeat between the U.S. and Italy, Sweden’s curling siblings Isabella and Rasmus Wrana will play Britain’s best friends, Bruce Mouat and Jennifer Dodds, the top-ranked team in the field.

Recounting the moment he stumbled, Dropkin said he’d kicked the stone because he’d forgotten it was there. 

He’d placed it originally as a “high guard,” or a stone meant to shield those behind it — one that forces opponents into making angled shots.

“You don’t see too many high guards in the game of mixed doubles,” said Dropkin after the game. “I kinda completely forgot about it, even though I’m the one who tossed it up there. They were gracious enough to not really sweat it.

“I think everyone’s got good spirits out there. There’s no hard feelings from one team to another.”

In a curling match, two teams compete to see which can get the most granite stones closest to a bullseye target called the tee by sliding them along a narrow sheet of ice. 

The distance between where a player must release the stone and the tee at the other end is about 28 metres. The sheet is only five meters or 16.4 feet wide and both teams’ stones accumulate every round, so it gets crowded.

Each round, for up to 10 rounds, teams have eight chances to slide the specialized 44-pound (20 kg) stones toward the tee. They can aim directly for the centre, try to knock their opponents’ stones away or nudge their own stones closer to the target. Strategies include blocking and take-outs.



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Gavin McKenna’s hearing in assault case pushed back to March

The preliminary hearing for top NHL prospect Gavin McKenna in an alleged assault case in Pennsylvania has been postponed by a month.

The court in Centre County, Pa., where Penn State University is located and where McKenna plays for the school’s men’s hockey team, said in an email that the hearing scheduled for Wednesday has been stayed until March 11.

McKenna faces a misdemeanour simple assault charge after Pennsylvania’s district attorney’s office said last week it had withdrawn a previous felony aggravated assault charge against the 18-year-old from Whitehorse, Yukon.

The alleged assault is reported to have occurred Jan. 31 in State College, Pa., with the victim allegedly being punched and suffering two jaw fractures that required his jaw to be wired shut.

The felony aggravated assault charge was dropped after the district attorney’s office said Friday there was insufficient evidence, noting investigators determined there was no intent to cause serious bodily injury after reviewing video of the alleged incident.

McKenna, who is also facing harassment and disorderly conduct charges, is widely regarded as one of the top two prospects for the upcoming NHL draft, along with Swedish forward Ivar Stenberg.



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Watch Live: U.S. vs. Italy in Olympic mixed doubles curling semifinal

The U.S. faces Italy in a mixed doubles curling semifinal at the Winter Olympics. Watch the game Monday at 12:05 p.m. ET / 9:05 a.m. PT.



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Did Kenneth Walker earn big contract with Super Bowl LX performance?



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Sunday, 8 February 2026

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.

“I felt confident and I feel not surprised, but I feel relieved. I’m really emotional right now. It’s something that since the beginning of this season, I said to my team around me, I said ‘I need something more,’” Maltais, who broke down into tears when her bronze was secured, told CBC Olympics after the race.

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.

“I just hope I can finish media so I can eat cake,” Lollobrigida told CBC Olympics.

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.

“It wasn’t easy. It was a challenge,” Maltais said. “We went all in, and that was the motto this season. We’re going all in and there’s no status quo. We’re taking a risk, but I had people around me who were really smart and made me comfortable that being uncomfortable made me better.”

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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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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Mexican cartel clashes fuel worries in lead-up to FIFA World Cup

GUADALAJARA, Mexico — Hugo Alejandro Pérez was in his house a few miles from the Mexican stadium that is slated to host FIFA World Cup games...