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Takeaways: Stars capitalize on momentum swings to top Wild in Game 3

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At the 92:10 mark of a game that began on a Wednesday and wrapped up in the wee hours of a Thursday, Wyatt Johnston tipped the puck past Wild goalie Jesper Wallstedt and silenced the crowd in the State of Hockey as the Dallas Stars beat Minnesota 4-3 in double overtime. 

Matt Duchene had three points, including the goal that forced extra time, as the Stars took a 2-1 series lead in this Western Conference first-round series. If Game 3 was any indication, this one could well go the best-of-seven distance. 

Dallas, owners of the NHL’s second-best power play during the regular season, struck three times with the man advantage, including Johnston’s winner. 

The Wild had two power plays in overtime, but failed to convert on both in front of fans who were on their feet at Grand Casino Arena in Saint Paul for all of overtime.  

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The game was back and forth and back and forth again, and it saw the Stars get out to an early 2-0 lead, and Wild star forward Matt Boldy leave the ice after a hit to the head before returning to help flip the script on the game, though only temporarily. 

Wild goalie Jesper Wallstedt, the 23-year-old rookie who managed to look calm and collected all game long, made 32 saves in his first home start of the Stanley Cup Playoffs, and the winner was a tight deflection he didn’t have a chance to stop. 

Here are our takeaways from Game 3, which saw Wild defender Quinn Hughes log a game-high 43:47 minutes of ice time. 

Boldy down but definitely not out

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In the first period, Stars captain Jamie Benn skated through the slot and clipped Boldy as he skated by, making contact with Boldy’s head. Boldy immediately went down on the ice and didn’t return for the rest of the period. 

You could hear the collective sigh of relief in Minnesota when the star winger came back in the second — and did Boldy ever come back. Early in the second frame, the 25-year-old winger led a rush into the offensive zone, wheeling through three Stars players and corralling a bouncing puck before he found a wide-open Joel Eriksson Ek in the slot, who then found a wide-open net to tie the game. Eriksson Ek pointed at his winger afterwards — it was a heck of a pass. 

Boldy, who recorded a career-high 42 goals this season, now has four points this series. He nearly added to that tally: Boldy wired one off the post on a power play, and in the third he narrowly missed cashing in on a rebound after a short-handed two-on-one with Eriksson Ek. 

For a team that has been without veteran playmaker Mats Zuccarello for the last two games due to injury, losing Boldy would’ve been worse than a sucker punch. 

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The Stars forward figured in big on both his team’s goals in the first frame, the first coming on the power play. Just 1:15 into the game, Robertson threaded a laser-beam pass through traffic to find Mikko Rantanen for an easy deflection to give the Stars the early lead. 

Then, with about six minutes to go in the first, Robertson made it 2-0 Dallas after a turnover that led to a two-on-one. Robertson looked off his winger and then snapped it into the back of the net from his off-wing.  

Robertson now has goals in all three games this series.

There were so many in this game, and one of the biggest came late in the second period after Dallas squandered a massive opportunity. 

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Minnesota was already short-handed when Boldy fired the puck over the glass, incurring a delay of game penalty and gifting Dallas a five-on-three for 41 seconds. But the Wild survived it all, and stymied the Stars’ usually lethal power play. 

Not only that, but just seven seconds after Boldy got out of the penalty box, Nick Foligno found Michael McCarron streaking down the ice, and McCarron wired one over Jake Oettinger’s blocker to give the Wild a 3-2 lead. 

It was McCarron’s first-ever playoff goal, and talk about a boost from a monster penalty kill.  

The shot seemingly caught Oettinger by surprise, and otherwise the Stars netminder was solid in Game 3, with 28 saves to record the win. The first goal came on the Wild power play after Marcus Johansson fired a shot from the slot that deflected off at least two bodies and pin-balled its way into the net. Oettinger also didn’t have a chance on the second goal thanks to Boldy’s shiftiness, and that sweet dish. 

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It was late in the third when Oettinger made a pair of big saves on a two-on-one while Dallas was on the power play. Duchene tied things up seconds later thanks to some incredible patience from Rantanen, who waited and timed a pass that Duchene one-timed into the back of the net from a bad angle. 

The momentum had swung yet again in Game 3, and for the last time. 

Game 5 is on Saturday at 7 p.m. CT in Saint Paul. 

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IPL 2026: Ravi Shastri almost blunders at toss; forgets Ruturaj Gaikwad’s name in MI vs CSK match – Watch | Cricket News

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IPL 2026: Ravi Shastri almost blunders at toss; forgets Ruturaj Gaikwad's name in MI vs CSK match - Watch
Ravi Shastri (l), Hardik Pandya, and Ruturaj Gaikwad

A brief pause at the toss caught attention as commentator Ravi Shastri appeared to forget the name of Chennai Super Kings captain Ruturaj Gaikwad during the IPL 2026 match against Mumbai Indians on Thursday.While conducting the toss, Shastri introduced Mumbai Indians skipper Hardik Pandya but stopped briefly before naming Gaikwad.“For the Blues (MI), it’s Hardik Pandya, for the yellow,” Shastri paused briefly before taking the name of “Ruturaj Gaikwad”.Pandya won the toss and chose to bowl first in the match between the two five-time champions.Mumbai Indians went in with the same playing XI from their previous game, with Rohit Sharma missing his third straight match due to a hamstring issue.For Chennai Super Kings, MS Dhoni is still recovering from a calf strain and has not played a game in IPL 2026.Speaking at the toss, Pandya said, “We are going to bowl first. I think a lot of boxes were ticked (in the last match against GT). The intensity was there. I think we needed that kind of a game where everyone comes in and chips in. Yeah, we had a perfect game. Yes, I think that was a conscious effort – that no matter what happens, intensity is in your control. I just wanted to make sure that we enjoy ourselves.”Gaikwad said, “We would have bowled first as well, but it was a 50-50 call. It looks a good wicket and coming here at Wankhede Stadium, you have to bat well irrespective of whether you’re batting first or bowling first. So it is just about putting up a great show even if you’re batting first. We are doing really well. It’s just that we are not able to cash in on a couple of moments.”TeamsMumbai Indians: Hardik Pandya (c), Quinton de Kock (wk), Naman Dhir, Suryakumar Yadav, Tilak Varma, Sherfane Rutherford, Mitchell Santner, Jasprit Bumrah, Krish Bhagat, AM Ghazanfar and Ashwani Kumar.Chennai Super Kings: Ruturaj Gaikwad (c), Sanju Samson (wk), Sarfaraz Khan, Dewald Brevis, Shivam Dube, Kartik Sharma, Jamie Overton, Noor Ahmad, Anshul Kamboj, Gurjapneet Singh and Mukesh Choudhary

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Fan Letters: Has David Bruce’s Departure Changed The Dynamic?

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Want to have your say on all things Sunderland? Drop us a line and we’ll publish your views! RokerReport@yahoo.co.uk

Dear Roker Report,

Is the club’s outlook towards the fans changing with the departure of David Bruce?

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Let me be clear: the club and everyone around have been brilliant and there’s a close connection with fans. But the recent stories about fans wishing to move seats and come out of premium into general sales looks less sympathetic to fans now.

Derek Ballard

Ed’s Note [Phil]: Hi, Derek. Thank you for your letter.

I certainly don’t wish to come across rudely in my reply, but I’m going to keep it short and sweet.

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Perhaps I’ll write a longer article on this very subject at some stage but for now, I’d simply say, “Yes”. I do have growing concerns about what’s happening in terms of customer service and fan/club relations, particularly in the light of what’s come out recently.

Perhaps it’ll all be ironed out and rectified soon, with a renewed effort to keep supporters in the fold and feeling valued. I hope it is.

Dear Roker Report,

I just wanted to say how much I enjoy the podcast — I’m an avid listener.

Of course, I’m a Sunderland supporter and originally from Trimdon Station, Co. Durham. Supporting the club has always been a passion; a family affair, passed down from my dad, Ted, who’s still following Sunderland faithfully at 91.

Now retired and a season card holder, I live near Tring in Hertfordshire and travel to matches by train via London.

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The journeys give my idle hands time to sketch and occasionally put pen to paper in a more poetic way. It’s a new thing for me which I’m enjoying — just for the fun of it. Whether any of it’s actually good is open to debate – my art teacher back in 1972 certainly didn’t think so!

I’ve included a picture and a poem inspired by The Keel Crossing, trying to capture a sense of the old and the new coming together.

Like your podcast. I put it together for a great old school friend, Geoff Brown, whom I reconnected with last season after many decades. For his birthday. A mention too for my brother David, nephew George and all the faithful in L19 of the Jimmy Montgomery Stand. Sunderland ‘Til I Die.

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It may be of interest to you. I hope so.

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Haway the  Lads and Haway the podcast!

Paul Lee

Keel Crossing — The Bridge of Hope

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O’er steel and river’s breadth, we go,

From weight of life to matchday glow.

Each step together gathers force,

A confluence of our common cause.

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Red and white, in scarves and song,

A thousand separate lives made strong,

Side by side, the young, the old,

Together in the Sunlun’ fold.

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Here hope is lit with every stride,

Renewed each time the tides collide,

A ritual walk, a faithful stream,

Across the span of one shared dream.

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The Bridge is now a meeting place,

Where tales of heroes interlace,

New legends rise, old oaths are sworn,

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In colours proudly, boldly worn.

And as the stadium’s lights appear,

The matchday thunder drawing near.

On Keel Crossing, hand in hand,

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Hope walks with us into the stand.

A tidal wave of rising sound,

Increasing as we near the ground.

And all as one, we wise men say:

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“Haway the Lads! Haway, Haway!”

Ed’s Note [Phil]: Hi, Paul. Thank you for getting in touch.

That’s one hell of piece of writing. It certainly captures the optimism that I think we’re all feeling on match days — and will hopefully continue to feel for a long time to come!

Thanks for taking the time to send it to us.

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IShowSpeed Possibly Injured at WrestleMania 42; Logan Paul Explains: “I f**king smoked him”

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WrestleMania 42’s opener was The Usos and LA Knight vs. The Vision and IShowSpeed. To set the mood of Night 1, and to be shown for the first time on ESPN 2, the match was kept short. However, the post-match drama was exciting and kept fans engaged as Logan Paul punched his teammate Speed for what he felt was a betrayal of their team.

While speaking on his Impaulsive podcast, Logan suggested that Speed had turned out to be a liability. His running into Logan and then Austin Theory cost them the match, and that felt wrong to him. Thus, Paul punched him for causing them to lose. Paul claims that it was one of his cleanest punches, which landed hard and knocked Speed down.

“I punched him hard as f**k. I’m not going to lie, it was one of my cleanest punches. I f**king smoked him,” Logan Paul said.

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While The Maverick had only this to say about the attack on the podcast, he did more than that at WrestleMania 42. Logan attacked Speed at the ringside and put him on the announcer’s table. He was climbing onto the ring’s corner post to hit Speed with a splash, but The Usos and Knight intervened.

They saved Speed from being on the receiving end of the splash. Paul ended up on the announcer’s table with The Usos and Knight egging on a groggy and possibly concussed Speed to hit a frog splash on Paul.

He seemed disoriented after the punch from Logan, and it took him a while to understand what The Usos were telling him to do. He barely made it to the top turnbuckle. As the tag team champion was held down by the babyfaces, IShowSpeed went airborne and hit Logan with an IShowSplash through the table.

Speed may still be recovering from the punch and the aftermath of the splash on Logan, as his last live stream was from ‘Mania, and he hasn’t streamed since.

What matches were there on WrestleMania 42 Night 1?

After that WrestleMania 42 opener, Jacob Fatu and Drew McIntyre competed in an Unsanctioned Match, where the former took the win. Later, Brie Bella and a returning Paige won the Women’s Tag Team Championship in a Fatal 4-Way Match, and Becky Lynch defeated AJ Lee for the Intercontinental Championship.

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Gunther then defeated Seth Rollins, and Liv Morgan won the Women’s World Championship by dethroning Stephanie Vaquer. Cody Rhodes retained his Undisputed WWE Championship against Randy Orton to close out the show.

If the quote from the first half of the article is used, please credit the Impaulsive podcast and give an H/T to Sportskeeda for the transcription.