
By SuperWest Sports Staff
Sports
Bryson DeChambeau wins LIV Golf Singapore
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Bryson DeChambeau bounced back from an embarrassing moment in the sand trap and a tense playoff hole to win LIV Singapore on Sunday – the fourth title in the Saudi-backed series of his career.
DeChambeau suffered the mistake in the third round. He was on hole No. 5 when he hit his ball from the rough, tripped and fell into the bunker all with giant insects flying around him. Unfortunately, his shot landed in a separate bunker on the other side of the course.
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Bryson DeChambeau reacts on the 18th green after the final round of Aramco LIV Golf Singapore on Sunday, March 15, 2026, in Sentosa, Singapore. (Mateo Villalba/LIV Golf via AP)
He managed to record a bogey at the hole on his way to a third round 72.
DeChambeau bounced back in the fourth round, shooting a 66 and narrowly defeating Richard T. Lee in a playoff for the win. Lee missed a two-foot putt on his fifth shot that would have sent the tournament into a second playoff round.
It’s the first title for DeChambeau this season. He last won at LIV Golf Korea in May, defeating Charles Howell III by two strokes. He also has wins at LIV Golf Chicago and LIV Golf Greenbrier. It’s also his first victory in a 72-hole tournament since he won the U.S. Open at Pinehurst No. 2 in 2024.
PAIGE SPIRANAC APPLAUDS COMMENTER FOR LEWD REMARK THAT LIFTS HER SPIRITS

Captain Bryson DeChambeau of Crushers GC reacts after his chip onto the fourth green during the final round of Aramco LIV Golf Singapore on Sunday, March 15, 2026, in Sentosa, Singapore. (Chris Trotman/LIV Golf via AP)
Lee was attempting to be the first wild card golfer, one who is not affiliated with a team, to win the singles competition. But his putt went left and spun around the cup.
“It was a short putt and I wanted to just hit it hard, and I hit it a little too hard,” Lee said. “I think the adrenaline was pumping a little bit.”
DeChambeau said it reminded him of John Daly narrowly missing out on defeating Tiger Woods at the World Golf Championships playoff in 2005.
“To actually see that happen in front of you, for you to be the positive receiving side of it, it’s just a weird feeling,” DeChambeau said. “But it’s a win and something I’ll appreciate for the rest of my life. Even if I lost today, I was still looking pretty good at my game. I was excited the way I was striking it coming in the last couple days.”

First place individual champion, Captain Bryson DeChambeau of Crushers GC, holds the trophy after the final round of Aramco LIV Golf Singapore on Sunday, March 15, 2026, in Sentosa, Singapore. (Mateo Villalba/LIV Golf via AP)
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DeChambeau is second in the LIV Golf standings behind Jon Rahm.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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Sports
Valero Texas Open: Round 3 suspended due to weather
Apr 4, 2026; San Antonio, Texas, USA; Robert MacIntyre reacts to his shot from the second tee during the third round of the Valero Texas Open golf tournament. Mandatory Credit: Daniel Dunn-Imagn Images The third round of the Valero Texas Open was suspended due to incoming storm systems in the area around TPC San Antonio on Saturday.
Play was halted at 12:51 p.m. ET with lightning detected in the area. Heavy rainfall is expected before tapering off around 4 p.m.
World No. 11 Robert MacIntyre of Scotland resides in first place at 15-under par through six holes of his third round, two strokes ahead of Ludvig Aberg of Sweden.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Updated 2027 SuperWest Football Commitment Tracker
Welcome to our 2027 SuperWest Football Commitment Tracker, where you can search or sort by player, program, position, and 247Sports composite stars and ratings.
The table is updated regularly as new commitments are reported.
You’ll also find a breakdown of each category in the table below the trackers.
| Player | Program | Position | Stars | Rating | Commit Date |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rashad Streets | Oregon | Edge | 4 | .9734 | 04/03/2026 |
| Javon Vital | USC | RB | 3 | .8800 | 04/02/2026 |
| Cooper Cook | UNLV | DL | 0 | .0000 | 04/01/2026 |
| Mikey Barth | ASU | K | 3 | .8200 | 03/31/2026 |
| Tytan DeJong | BYU | ATH | 3 | .8550 | 03/30/2026 |
| Caleb Camping | ASU | TE | 3 | .8550 | 03/30/2026 |
| Josiah Poyer | USC | LB | 3 | .8700 | 03/29/2026 |
| Myles Baker | Cal | S | 4 | .9167 | 03/29/2026 |
| Drew Fielder | USC | OT | 4 | .9371 | 03/28/2026 |
| Colton McKibbel | UCLA | LB | 4 | .9090 | 03/27/2026 |
| Jon Ioane | Washington | DL | 4 | .9143 | 03/26/2026 |
| Danny Lang | USC | CB | 4 | .9522 | 03/25/2026 |
| Jackson Batch | Ore St | ATH | 3 | .8300 | 03/19/2026 |
| Keshawn Barkus | Nevada | RB | 0 | .000 | 03/18/2026 |
| Jeremy Adeyanju | Washington | RB | 4 | .8975 | 03/15/2026 |
| Honor Fa’alave-Johnson | USC | ATH | 5 | .9913 | 03/14/2026 |
| Zane Rowe | Oregon | DL | 4 | .9533 | 03/13/2026 |
| Troy Bowens | Cal | Edge | 4 | .9176 | 03/13/2026 |
| Rufai Azeez | Nevada | WR | 3 | .8400 | 03/13/2026 |
| Max Bates | UNLV | LB | 3 | .8000 | 03/11/2026 |
| Isaiah Leilua | Washington | LB | 3 | .8800 | 03/10/2026 |
| Blake Gunter | Cal | WR | 3 | .8600 | 03/07/2026 |
| Luke Farrell | UNLV | QB | 3 | .8600 | 03/05/2026 |
| Matamatagi Uiagalelei | Washington | DL | 3 | .8550 | 02/22/2026 |
| Quentin Hale | USC | WR | 4 | .9763 | 02/20/2026 |
| Jack Devine | SDSU | QB | 3 | .8400 | 02/20/2026 |
| Isaia Vandermade | USC | DL | 3 | .8650 | 02/17/2026 |
| CaDarius McMiller | Oregon | RB | 4 | .9300 | 02/14/2026 |
| Justin Coach | Washington | LB | 3 | .8600 | 02/12/2026 |
| Ethan Coach | Washington | LB | 3 | .8650 | 02/12/2026 |
| Davon Dericho | Colorado | CB | 3 | .8700 | 02/12/2026 |
| Eli Woodard | USC | WR | 4 | .9285 | 02/10/2026 |
| Tycen Johnson | ASU | WR | 3 | .8700 | 02/06/2026 |
| Gunnar Perry | Cal | LB | 3 | .8500 | 02/06/2026 |
| Braxton Huynh | SDSU | WR | 3 | .8300 | 02/05/2026 |
| Mike Davis Jr. | UCLA | LB | 3 | .8500 | 02/04/2026 |
| Nasim Eason | SDSU | CB | 3 | .8550 | 02/02/2026 |
| Michael Farinas | UCLA | WR | 3 | .8650 | 02/02/2026 |
| Avery Michael | Oregon | OT | 3 | .8900 | 02/01/2026 |
| Titus Osterman | Washington | LB | 3 | .8550 | 01/31/2026 |
| Justin Ortiz | Fresno State | OT | 3 | .8400 | 01/30/2026 |
| Zerek Sidney | Washington | WR | 3 | .8850 | 01/29/2026 |
| Sam Ngata | Oregon | LB | 3 | .8650 | 01/24/2026 |
| Giovanni Hodge | Cal | Edge | 3 | .8750 | 01/23/2026 |
| Aaryn Washington | USC | CB | 4 | ..9553 | 01/10/2026 |
| Phoenix Pollard | UNLV | OL | 3 | .8450 | 01/09/2026 |
| Tayven Collins | New Mexico | S | 3 | .8550 | 01/04/2026 |
| Maurice Williams | Washington | ATH | 3 | .8811 | 12/24/2025 |
| Alijah Landrum-Hamilton | Wyoming | WR | 3 | .8400 | 12/16/2025 |
| Braylon Pope | Washington | WR | 4 | .9325 | 12/15/2025 |
| Weston Nielsen | ASU | QB | 3 | .8900 | 12/13/2025 |
| Nico Bland | ASU | WR | 4 | .9191 | 12/02/2025 |
| Trey Smith | Arizona | WR | 3 | .8700 | 12/01/2025 |
| Kingston Parks | Utah | WR | 3 | .8450 | 11/20/2025 |
| Blake Nadler | Nevada | QB | 3 | .8000 | 11/15/2025 |
| Jalani Culpepper | Arizona | ATH | 3 | .8400 | 10/29/2025 |
| Kael Snyder | Boise State | QB | 3 | .8700 | 10/19/2025 |
| Jaxson Wilson | UNLV | DL | 3 | .8250 | 06/03/2025 |
| Cameron Pritchett | Oregon | Edge | 4 | .9202 | 06/02/2025 |
Breakdown by Program, Player, Stars, and Average Rating
| Team | Avg | Commits | 5-star | 4-star | 3-star |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| USC | 91.00 | 9 | 1 | 5 | 3 |
| Oregon | 89.50 | 6 | 0 | 4 | 2 |
| Cal | 87.80 | 5 | 0 | 2 | 3 |
| Washington | 87.80 | 10 | 0 | 2 | 8 |
| Colorado | 87.00 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
| UCLA | 87.00 | 3 | 0 | 1 | 2 |
| Boise State | 87.00 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
| ASU | 86.60 | 5 | 0 | 1 | 4 |
| New Mexico | 85.00 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
| Arizona | 84.50 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 2 |
| BYU | 84.00 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
| Utah | 84.00 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
| Wyoming | 84.00 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
| Fresno State | 84.00 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
| SDSU | 84.00 | 3 | 0 | 0 | 3 |
| UNLV | 83.00 | 5 | 0 | 0 | 4 |
| Ore St | 83.00 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
| Nevada | 82.00 | 3 | 0 | 0 | 2 |
Sports
Cooper Flagg scores 51: Can he catch Kon Knueppel in Rookie of the Year race?
On Friday night, Dallas Mavericks rookie Cooper Flagg, 19, did something no teenager had ever done. The No. 1 pick in the 2025 Draft dropped 51 points, becoming the youngest player — and only teenager — in NBA history to drop a 50-piece.
Flagg did it while shooting 19 of 30 (63.3%) from the field. The Mavericks also needed every single one of those points, too, as they lost to the Orlando Magic, 138-127. Flagg poured in 24 fourth-quarter points to try to pull the Mavericks back from the dead and a 30-point deficit. Mavericks assistant Frank Vogel (filling in after Jason Kidd was ejected) initially removed Flagg from the game with under four minutes to play and his team trailing by 17. Flagg had 45 at that point, and a chorus of boos from the home crowd followed.
Soon after, however, Flagg was back in the game and pushed his point total to 51. In doing so, Flagg became the youngest player to score 50 points in an NBA game, passing Brandon Jennings, who scored 55 in 2009 at age 20. Flagg also became just the third rookie since the ABA/NBA merger in 1976 to score 50, joining Jennings and Allen Iverson (1997).
“It’s always fun getting into that type of mode,” Flagg said after the game. “The basket feels big. Your teammates are looking out for you, helping you out. But I love to win, so that was my main focus. It’s hard for me to fully enjoy myself out there when we’re down 20, down 10, down 15 for the majority of the game.”
The most impressive aspect of Flagg’s performance wasn’t the highlight reel dunks or the countless times he made a mockery of Orlando’s defense by taking several defenders off the dribble to score with ease at the rim or from mid-range. It was, surprisingly, Flagg’s 3-point shooting that stuck out the most.
The rookie went 6 of 9 from long range, the most 3s he’s made in a single game this season. It’s also the most 3s he’s taken in a game this season, too. If you’ve watched Flagg at all, you know his 3-point shooting is by far his weakest offensive skill. He’s only had six games this season in which he’s made more than two 3-pointers in a game. He has more games where he’s connected on zero 3-pointers (26) than he’s had games where he’s made two 3-pointers (11).
His 3-point shooting, now up to 29.3% for the season, is a work in progress. Friday night’s performance showed there’s hope that he can become a more consistent threat from there with time. He was drilling catch-and-shoot 3s, but even more impressively, Flagg had several pull-up 3s that provided flashes of what his future could hold.
It was a statement performance for the rookie, and it put him in good company with some all-time greats. Flagg has topped 40 points three times this season. Only Michael Jordan (7) and Iverson (5) have more 40-point games as a rookie since the merger.
After the game, his teammates and coaches were singing his praises.
“He should be Rookie of the Year. It’s unbelievable,” Kidd said. “The country is not watching the same thing that we get to watch on a daily basis. The things that he’s done, he’s in rare air. He’s with the GOAT when you talk about MJ and what he did in his rookie year — and as a teenager.”
It’s no surprise to see Kidd endorse his star for Rookie of the Year, and it’s pretty hard to argue with him after Friday night. But where exactly does Flagg stack up against Kon Knueppel of the Charlotte Hornets, the frontrunner for the award?
Tale of the tape: Flagg vs. Knueppel
Knueppel, Flagg’s former teammate at Duke, is currently the favorite for Rookie of the Year (-350 at FanDuel). But after Friday’s performance, Flagg certainly made this race interesting and isn’t too far behind in the odds at +250.
Despite what passionate fans might say on both sides of this race, this is a lot closer than anyone is willing to admit, and performances like Flagg’s on Friday could significantly sway the conversation.
Head-to-head stats
|
Cooper Flagg |
65 |
20.8 |
6.6 |
4.5 |
1.2 |
47.2% |
29.3% |
|
Kon Knueppel |
77 |
18.8 |
5.4 |
3.4 |
0.7 |
48.3% |
43.1% |
Flagg’s on pace to become the first rookie since Jordan to lead his team in points, rebounds, assists and steals. He owns the top three highest scoring totals by a rookie this season. In a typical year, Flagg would be far ahead in the Rookie of the Year conversation, no question. Historically, the award has always gone to a rookie on a rebuilding team. If Flagg won the award right now, he’d certainly be deserving of it. He’s been the most important player on a roster that has been in flux all season.
He’s not just the offensive engine for the Mavericks; he’s also defending at a level above what rookies are expected to do. He’s efficient from mid-range, can get to the rim at will and finishes at a rate (68%) higher than the likes of Devin Booker and Donovan Mitchell, per Cleaning the Glass.
That’s not to say Knueppel shouldn’t win the award. He’s averaging 18.8 points on near 50/40/90 splits. He shattered the rookie 3-point record and has been a catalyst for Charlotte transforming from a lottery mainstay to an actually competitive team.
But Knueppel is also benefiting from playing alongside LaMelo Ball and Brandon Miller. He’s become one of the best off-ball threats in the league in part because of the attention those two attract, but also because of the high IQ Knueppel has with his off-ball movement. It’s not outrageous to say Knueppel is the best 3-point shooter in the league not named Stephen Curry, and the numbers back that up. Knueppel is second in the league in 3-point percentage (minimum five 3PA/G), proving he’s not just good by rookie standards. He’s lighting the league on fire.
When it comes down to it, there’s a case for both players, or a co-winner situation like Grant Hill and Jason Kidd in 1995. But because no one likes ties, Knueppel might have the edge because the Hornets are in position to earn a playoff spot if they can get through the play-in round first. They’ve almost doubled the number of wins the Mavericks have (42 to 24). In a Rookie of the Year race this close, the team results might actually be the deciding factor. Even a historic 51-point outing from Flagg might not be enough to significantly pull voters back on his side to overtake Knueppel in this race.
Sports
The P/PTSD Perspective: KOC Confirms Position Switch, Cowboys, and Early GM Momentum
PurplePTSD works in partnership with Vikings Territory, similarly doing their utmost to offer top-notch coverage of the Minnesota Vikings. As a result, we’re promoting five of their top articles of the past month in “The P/PTSD Perspective.” Take a peek at some of their best stuff.
The P/PTSD Perspective: April 4th, 2026
1) Kevin O’Connell Confirms Player’s Position Switch: Blake Brandel can do it all. Quite possibly, Brandel could be the solution at center. He’s a veteran who works hard and who likes to compete. The issue is twofold: he’s likely not the world’s best option and elevating him means losing the valued depth.
2) Cowboys Prevent a Possible Vikings Reunion: Dallas made the move to enhance its d-line depth. Jonathan Bullard is a rugged veteran who is akin to a fourth-line forward in hockey, someone who specializes in killing penalties. Nobody thinks that 50 goals are going to get scored; rather, the new add does the dirty work that allows a team to win.
3) There’s Early Momentum in Vikings’ GM Search: Rob Brzezinski has had a nice offseason in charge. Like a quarterback starting for a few games before struggling over the long haul, Brzezinski will need to answer questions about his capacity to shine over years and not months.
4) Former Vikings Defender Calls it a Career: He’ll very reasonably get consideration for the Hall of Fame. The corner did excellently for a long time. Eventually, time comes for even the best players, so it’s time to hang up the cleats.
5) Bane 1.0: Vikings 7-Round 2026 NFL Mock Draft: Going a full seven rounds is bold. Minnesota can’t simply crush the opening selection, as vital as that is. Rather, there needs to be value found from the 2nd onward. Check out how Mr. Bane sees things unfolding.
Enjoy the extra reading, Vikings fans.
Sports
Schiller fancies 2026 Australian derby outsider dezignation strongly
Tyler Schiller’s premier Group One engagement on the opening leg of The Championships at Randwick is Briasa, protector of the T J Smith Stakes crown, but he sees greater potential in his two lesser-noticed alternatives.
Besides that, the expert hoop connects with Paul Preusker’s Steparty ($19) in the Doncaster Mile (1600m) and Dezignation ($151) from Matt Smith’s stable for the ATC Australian Derby (2400m), both of whom he deems capable of major impacts.
Positioned as the extreme roughie in the Derby contest, Dezignation nevertheless surged to claim fifth from this weekend’s adversary Storm Leopard ($5) in the Tulloch Stakes (2000m), distinguishing himself through confirmed suitability for the full distance over many foes.
Having taken the mount on the gelding for the debut time in that prep run, Schiller departed favorably inclined.
“He sneaks in off a really good run in the Tulloch,” Schiller said.
“He got back and was taken off the bridle a long way from home, and he stayed on super strong. He just needed a bit further, which he is going to get this weekend.
“As long as he backs up, he’s going to have a really good chance, and he’s got a lovely barrier compared to his outside barrier the other day.
“If it’s a good staying test, he is going to be in the finish.”
Steparty similarly escapes the limelight in the Doncaster Mile, where talk dominates around impressive filly Sheza Alibi.
A repeated Group 1 podium finisher, the five-year-old has sampled Sydney runs earlier, including second in the 2024 The Ingham (1600m) via the Doncaster path.
Following successive victories in Tasmania this February, he enters Saturday’s showcase after a near-miss fifth to Tom Kitten during the All-Star Mile (1600m) at Flemington, aided by a favorable gate six for a conservative ride.
“He’s a really nice horse. He’s got a great attitude and he’s another one flying under the radar,” Schiller said.
“He got beaten a length and a bit in the All-Star Mile off a tough, wide run, and he’s going as good as ever.
“Fingers crossed, barrier six is a lovely barrier in the Doncaster. Hopefully he can bounce and get a bit of cover somewhere and save himself for late. He drops a lot in weight, so I think he might surprise a few people.”
Across recent three weight-for-age efforts, Steparty managed 59kg, dropping to 51.5kg for Randwick.
Schiller pursues an initial Derby conquest alongside a follow-up Doncaster Mile after Celestial Legend’s success under him two years ago.
Discover betting sites offering strong racing odds for the ATC Australian Derby.
Sports
The Vikings’ Biggest Offseason Surprises So Far
Believe it or not, although the Minnesota Vikings’ offseason has not been stuffed to the gills with constant action, the last few months have brought quite a few surprises. So, we ranked them.
Minnesota’s offseason has featured more curveballs than expected, with surprises on the roster, staff, and front office.
The draft is less than three weeks away, and it’s time to recap the offseason to date.
Several Unforeseen Moves Have Reshaped Minnesota’s 2026 Outlook
Ranking the Vikings’ offseason surprises from bottom to top (No. 1 = top offseason surprise).
5. No Head Coach Love for Brian Flores
In 2025, the Vikings’ defense ranked third in the NFL per EPA/Play and DVOA. In 2024, the same unit checked in at No. 2. Overall, Flores has fostered the league’s second-best defense overall since arriving in the Twin Cities three years ago. The guy deserves another head coach opportunity.
In January and February, the Pittsburgh Steelers and Baltimore Ravens came knocking for Flores, interviewing him for the vacant head coaching job.
Flores did not land either position. For a week or so, it felt like Flores would take the bait and depart from an esteemed franchise like PIT or BAL. Instead, those organizations picked other candidates, and Flores is back in Minnesota for Year No. 4.
4. No Starting Center Signed
Ryan Kelly, a four-time Pro Bowler, retired from the NFL after one year with the Vikings. Minnesota would need a replacement starting center, right? Nope.
These men were available, and the Vikings signed none:
- Tyler Linderbaum (LV)
- Elgton Jenkins (CLE)
- Tyler Biadasz (LAC)
- Cade Mays (DET)
- Luke Fortner (CAR)
- Lloyd Cushenberry III (BUF)
Instead, it sounds like Minnesota will promote jack-of-all-trades offensive lineman Blake Brandel to the starting center spot, and draft a center somewhere in the draft’s middle rounds.
3. Letting Jonathan Greenard Trade Smoke Become a Thing
In early March, ESPN’s Adam Schefter tweeted that Greenard was available for trade, wanting a contract extension and hoping to earn more than his current $19 million per year salary. After all, Micah Parsons and Aidan Hutchinson earn over $45 million per season, and they play Greenard’s position.
Since the Schefter tweet, the Greenard trade smoke has cooled, but that doesn’t mean he’s off the trade block.
The Vikings will claim to be playoff hopefuls in 2026, and trading top-tier EDGE rushers is usually the last thing a serious team does; in fact, the NFL’s best teams go out of their way to add pass rushers.
ESPN’s Kevin Seifert on the latest Greenard trade fodder: “The Vikings made other moves to trim nearly $50 million from their 2026 cap total, but Greenard’s $19 million salary for this season sits in a tier below the league’s top pass rushers.”
“Until an adjustment occurs, a trade is possible if the Vikings are intrigued enough by an offer. Otherwise, the Vikings want Greenard to be part of a dynamic group of outside linebackers that includes veteran Andrew Van Ginkel and Dallas Turner, a 2024 first-round draft pick.”
2. The Kyler Murray Dream Came True
Back in December, websites like this one published articles outlining how much Murray might cost in a trade — because surely the Arizona Cardinals wouldn’t let Murray leave for nothing and pay for him to play elsewhere.
What happened? The Cardinals let Murray leave for nothing and are paying for him to play elsewhere — for the Minnesota Vikings.
From the moment Arizona “softly benched” Murray in November, it felt like the Vikings could have a shot at landing him in the 2026 offseason. Arizona later released him, and it just became a foregone conclusion that Murray would sign with the Vikings. He didn’t really entertain any alternatives.
In Minnesota, Murray has a chance to forge a Drew Brees-like path in 2026 — become the long-term starter after his previous team didn’t want him.
1. Kwesi Adofo-Mensah Fired
The Seattle Seahawks won the NFC Championship on January 25th, a club led by Sam Darnold. The Vikings let Darnold leave in free agency seven months prior. Seattle won the Super Bowl with the Vikings’ quarterback while the Vikings missed the playoffs altogether.
Someone had to pay, evidently.
Meanwhile, Adofo-Mensah hit on about 15%-25% of his draft selections from 2022 to 2025, a mark that was as embarrassing as it was shocking. It would be hard for you to pick worse players while drafting from your living room couch.
So, on January 30th, five days after Darnold and Co. won the NFC title game, the Vikings’ ownership put its foot down and canned Adofo-Mensah. The move was only stunning because of the timing; most teams make front office changes in early- or mid-January, not in the final days of the month.
Adofo-Mensah lasted four offseasons, and the timing of his removal shocked Vikings fans.
Here’s to hoping the draft classes can now fetch decent players.
Sports
Hurricanes bid to blow past skidding Islanders
Apr 2, 2026; Raleigh, North Carolina, USA; Columbus Blue Jackets center Cole Sillinger (4) and Carolina Hurricanes left wing Taylor Hall (71) watch the play during the third period at Lenovo Center. Mandatory Credit: James Guillory-Imagn Images The Carolina Hurricanes have taken one important step, but they clearly want to accomplish more in the final weeks of the regular season.
They’ll have a chance to do that when the New York Islanders visit for Saturday night’s game in Raleigh, N.C.
The Hurricanes (48-21-6, 102 points) will play their first game since clinching a playoff spot with Thursday night’s 5-1 home victory against the Columbus Blue Jackets.
“There hasn’t been that many downs, to be quite honest,” Carolina coach Rod Brind’Amour said. “We’ve played pretty consistently throughout this year, and I think that shows.”
This is the eighth consecutive season that the Hurricanes have qualified for the postseason.
“You have to be good for six months,” Brind’Amour said of the achievement of withstanding the physical and mental grind. “We’ve got to finish out the year hard and get across the finish line (of the regular season) the best that we can.”
The Islanders (42-30-5, 89 points) are teetering on the Eastern Conference playoff line, and they’ll take a three-game losing streak into Saturday’s game. They lost 4-1 at home to the Philadelphia Flyers on Friday night.
Islanders coach Patrick Roy said the team needs to take care of its own business without being distracted by results of other games.
“Everybody is watching every game. Everybody is watching the standings,” Roy said. “At the end of the day, it’s about what you do. … If you start thinking about what’s happening around you, this is where problems start.”
During their current skid, they’ve been outscored 16-7.
The Metropolitan Division-leading Hurricanes still are in a battle for the No. 1 seed in the Eastern Conference, so there’s more to accomplish.
“There’s always room to improve, and hopefully we can keep it going and be even better coming down the stretch,” Hurricanes center Sebastian Aho said. Carolina allowed only 10 shots on goal by Columbus, matching the fewest allowed in franchise history.
The Hurricanes, who’ve won three of their last four games, have received regular contributions from captain Jordan Staal, who played in his 1,400th career game Thursday.
“He’s the leader of all that,” Brind’Amour said.
The Hurricanes insist they don’t want to let up, particularly with the chance to secure the top seed in the Eastern Conference. “This year is a unique opportunity again,” Aho said.
For the Islanders, Saturday marks the third set of games on back-to-back days in a two-week period. Goalie Ilya Sorokin has handled both ends of those in both previous cases, going 1-1 in the back ends of those assignments. He has played in 10 consecutive games, though Roy was non-committal on the team’s goalie plan for Saturday.
Roy said New York likely will be without defenseman Tony DeAngelo, a former Hurricane dealing with a lower-body injury, for the Carolina trip.
The Hurricanes topped the Islanders 6-2 on Oct. 30. Despite the gap in the schedule, there might not be any surprises Saturday night. “There are no secrets,” Brind’Amour said. “Everybody knows what everybody is doing. You got to go talk about execution. You’ve got to go do it.”
The Islanders and Hurricanes also will meet in the regular-season finale April 14.
–Field Level Media
Sports
DAZN forced to apologise as Derek Chisora vs Deontay Wilder broadcaster hit by sound issues
Derek Chisora and Deontay Wilder are set to go head-to-head in a heavyweight fight at London’s O2 Arena
DAZN have been forced to apologise during their live coverage of the undercard of Saturday’s fight between Derek Chisora and Deontay Wilder. The broadcaster issued their apology during the fight between Ashton Sylve and Raul Antonio Galaviz Hernandez.
A message at the top of the screen said: “Sorry, we temporarily lost sound. It’ll be back as soon as possible”.
Saturday’s heavyweight fight at the O2 Arena in London sees Chisora return to the ring for the first time in over a year. His last fight was a unanimous decision win over Otto Wallin in February 2025.
The Brit takes on America’s Wilder, who has won just two of his last six fights and comes into the contest on the back of a knockout win over Tyrrell Anthony Herndon.
Chisora tipped the scales going into Saturday’s fight at a career-high weight at 19st 1lbs while Wilder weighed in at 16st 2lbs.
Speaking after the main broadcast on DAZN had begun, presenter Ade Oladipo said: “I did hear there were a few gremlins with the sound a bit earlier for those of you that are watching it on YouTube.
“Those gremlins have now gone, so make sure you buy the pay-per-view.”
The fight has been dubbed one of the last of both men’s careers. Chisora, 42, has already promised that he will hang up his gloves following the bout on Saturday and hopes to pick up one last win over the American.
There will be more to follow. We’ll bring you the very latest updates on this breaking news story.
Sports
Chase DeLauter embraces hot start as Guardians host Cubs
Cleveland Guardians’ Chase DeLauter reacts to his two-run home run against the Chicago Cubs during the home opener April 4, 2026, in Cleveland. Cleveland Guardians rookie Chase DeLauter has appeared in three home games in his young career, two of them during the 2025 American League wild-card series, when he made his major league debut.
The fourth appearance will occur Saturday night when the Chicago Cubs continue their three-game set in Cleveland.
Cubs left-hander Shota Imanaga (0-1, 7.20 ERA) will oppose Guardians right-hander Slade Cecconi (0-1, 12.46).
DeLauter moved into a tie for the major league lead with five home runs, belting a two-run shot and singling home another run as the Guardians won 4-1 in their home opener Friday.
Before all four of his plate appearances, the sellout crowd of 36,396 loudly sang along with his walk-up song, “Take Me Home, Country Roads” by John Denver.
“It’s awesome hearing that from the first time; I get chills every at-bat,” said DeLauter, who grew up in West Virginia, where the song is set. “A lot of players look at it like, ‘Is that walk-up going to catch on?’ So I love that the crowd is real involved in it here.”
DeLauter had three hits to raise his average to .346 and his three RBIs gave him eight, along with a 1.293 OPS. He missed Cleveland’s previous game after fouling a ball off his surgically repaired left foot Tuesday in a game at the Los Angeles Dodgers.
The 6-foot-3, 235-pounder almost caused another injury after touching the plate on his homer, excitedly body-checking teammate Steven Kwan in celebration. Kwan was momentarily stunned before smiling.
“It’s incredible what he’s doing,” Guardians manager Stephen Vogt said. “Chase is comfortable, he’s not big eyed, and he’s doing a phenomenal job for us. It’s a really fun start for him this year.”
Cecconi spent two years with the Arizona Diamondbacks but has not faced the Cubs. He was rocked for six runs in 4 1/3 innings at the Seattle Mariners on Sunday, hitting two batters.
Imanaga beat the visiting Guardians on July 2, 2025, giving up three runs in 5 1/3 innings. He is 1-0 with a 5.23 ERA in two career starts against Cleveland, allowing five homers in 10 1/3 innings.
The 32-year-old from Japan made his season debut against the Washington Nationals on Sunday, taking the loss with five innings of four-run ball. Imanaga struck out seven over 82 pitches.
Chicago’s rotation became a concern for manager Craig Counsell when starter Cade Horton threw only 17 pitches Friday before leaving with right forearm discomfort. Horton is 12-4 in his first 24 starts in the majors.
“Any time you take a pitcher out of the game in the second inning, you’re concerned,” Counsell said. “He’ll probably get imaging and that’s concerning, as well. It’s going to be an (injured list) stint, but let’s get more information before we get too far.”
Career starter Colin Rea worked 3 1/3 innings of one-run ball following Horton and is the most likely candidate to assume his spot in the rotation. The righty began the season in the bullpen with the Cubs overflowing with arms.
That is no longer the case with Horton sidelined until at least mid-April.
“We’ll see what happens, but I think we’ve got the depth to handle those innings,” said Rea, who has the Cubs’ only save this year. “I’ve done it in the past, and we’ve got some guys built up for depth in Triple-A. I just hope it’s nothing too serious with Cade.”
–Field Level Media
Sports
England backs shine as Bath beat Saracens to reach Champions Cup quarter-finals
Bath turned to a quartet of their England backs to turn the tide as they edged into the Champions Cup quarter-finals with a 31-22 victory over Saracens.
Trailing 10-0 at the interval at the Recreation Ground, the hosts burst into life with tries from Henry Arundell, Joe Cokanasiga, Ben Spencer and Ollie Lawrence as they set up a last-eight appointment at home against Northampton.
Spencer’s 59th-minute finish of an audacious attack that began on their own try-line looked to be pivotal but determined Saracens refused to throw in the towel and were only truly beaten when Arundell ran in his second in the 80th minute.
Bath’s scrum needed rescuing after a humbling first half with the introduction of prop Thomas du Toit making the difference and the South Africa tighthead was named man of the match.
Unlike their visit to the Recreation Ground a fortnight ago when they were overwhelmed 62-15, it was clear Saracens meant business from the start as they halted an early Bath onslaught including holding up a forward drive over the line.
Having proved their mettle in defence, they surged ahead in the 14th minute when Charlie Bracken deceived Cokanasiga with a dummy from the base of a maul and raced over.
It was poor defending from Cokanasiga, but at the other end Saracens continued to show far greater determination as the outstanding Tom Willis bulldozed a way through heavy traffic to rescue a dangerous position.
Bath’s scrum was beginning to buckle and they were also suffering at the breakdown, but the visitors were their own worst enemies at times with Fergus Burke failing to find touch with a penalty.
Rhys Carre rampaged into space and Noah Caluori almost crossed in the left corner before Guy Pepper was shown a yellow card for cynically heading the ball away on the floor.
So many elements of Saracens’ game were firing but the points they deserved proved elusive with a Farrell penalty their only other score in a half they had controlled.
To punish their wastefulness, Arundell sprinted across after being released by Charlie Ewels early in the second half and then Cokanasiga scooped up a loose ball to weave over after Lawrence had carried into space.
The tries sandwiched a dramatic reversal in the scrum with Beno Obano sin-binned for a cumulation of penalties before Du Toit forced a penalty, providing Cokanasiga with the platform to score.
Bath led for the first time and then produced the highlight of the afternoon by stopping Saracens from scoring by dislodging the ball from Andy Onyeama-Christie as he ran at the line before striking with a move that began from their own whitewash.
Cokanasiga escaped the 22, found Alfie Barbeary who waited for Spencer and the England scrum-half had gas to finish from long range.
Maro Itoje and then Ivan van Zyl burst through the breakdown and Saracens were far from done as a period of pressure ended with Max Malins touching down in the left corner.
But Harry Wilson was the next to see yellow for a dangerous tackle on Miles Reid and soon after Lawrence crashed over from close range.
Caluori replied for Saracens, but Bath had the final say at the death through Arundell.
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