In a late Wednesday night series of court filings, Chris Gabehart and his retained attorneys responded to or otherwise addressed the continued legal claims made against him and Spire Motorsports by Joe Gibbs Racing.
The first document filed to the docket was a second first-person declaration in which the former engineer, crew chief and competition director made the case that his role as Chief Motorsports Officer has no overlap with his previous position at JGR.
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In this letter, Gabehart detailed in line-item fashion all the things he did last year as Joe Gibbs Racing competition director and his nine-race stint as crew chief for Ty Gibbs and the No. 54 team, which was one of reasons he became dissatisfied with his employment.
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Gabehart said Spire already has three crew chiefs and a competition director in Matt McCall. He wrote that Spire has a technical director and head of vehicle optimization and also does not serve in those capacities either.
Instead, the 44-year-old cited how much more expansive the Spire Motorsports umbrella is compared to Joe Gibbs Racing with teams that compete in Cup, Dirt Sprint Car, Dirt Late Models and Pavement Late Models. This is in addition to parent company TWG Motorsports owning Andretti Global and the General Motors Formula 1 team.
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His words are italicized below:
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“The breadth of Spire’s racing program is central to my role as Spire’s Chief Motorsports Officer. Whereas my position at JGR was confined to NASCAR Cup Series competition, my responsibilities at Spire focus on strategic initiatives and operational oversight across Spire’s entire multi-series motorsports enterprise. My job also involves interfacing regularly with TWG Motorsports teams to discuss and develop common best practices amongst the teams. This is currently done through periodic meetings and event visitation by team principals from each discipline that encourage communication and observation of all of the forms of racing in the TWG Motorsports platform.
“My current role at Spire sits at the executive level and encompasses strategic oversight across all of Spire’s racing programs, not just the NASCAR Cup Series. This structural difference is significant. At JGR, I reported within the NASCAR Cup Series hierarchy. At Spire, I operate at the executive leadership level with responsibility spanning multiple racing series and organizational functions. The scope and seniority of my position at Spire involves duties of an entirely different character than those I performed at JGR.”
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To wit, Gabehart says the role of ‘competition director’ was ‘organizationally parallel’ to positions like Production Director, Aero Director and Technical Director.
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At Spire, Gabehart says he is working towards big picture initiatives that go beyond NASCAR like targeting disciplines to expand into, maintaining Spire branding and competition standards across all the various teams under the corporate umbrella, working with Chevrolet and Hendrick Motorsports to acquire resources and become an asset with both.
His salary has been redacted as part of the public facing version of the declaration.
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Gabehart also continued to assert that he made clear in writing the reasons he was leaving Joe Gibbs Racing, something JGR said was not made clear enough or in its own individual memo to senior leadership. He maintains the fact that Joe Gibbs Racing even briefly began to work out the details with him on a separation agreement is proof of that understanding.
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In other words, Gabehart asserts that JGR was in violation of its contract with him rather than the other way around as they stopped paying him. Gabehart was a free agent as far as he was concerned, legally.
“Mr. Carmichael (Tim, JGR Chief Financial Officer) notes that I have not signed a complete mutual release agreement with JGR. That is accurate only in the limited sense that the parties did not ultimately finalize a separation agreement. After November 10, 2025, I remained engaged in good-faith discussions and then, in December, responded to JGR’s demand letter by agreeing to a comprehensive forensic review designed and directed by JGR. The parties’ failure to finalize a release was the result of JGR’s unilateral decision to change course, not because I failed to proceed under the Section 6, Paragraph 2 pathway we had been following in November.”
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That forensic analysis did not show any evidence that Gabehart shared any proprietary trade information with Spire Motorsports but the suspicion that he may have is what prompted this legal action. For their part, the Gabehart and Spire camps maintain this is punitive action ‘for daring to leave.’
In fact, Joe Gibbs Racing has also motioned the court to allow for expedited discovery, a more immediate version of the process that allows both parties of a lawsuit to obtain private documents and communications pertinent to the legal complaint.
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More on that below.
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Gabehart also refuted the declaration from longtime Joe Gibbs Racing competition employee Todd Berrier stating a conversation between them indicating that Gabehart had first met Spire co-owner Dan Towriss about a job last October.
“It asserts that on or about October 21, 2025, I told him that I had a meeting with Spire co-owner Dan Towriss about a potential job and that I later texted him confirming that I had that meeting. Mr. Berrier is mistaken. The first time I met Mr. Towriss was on February 28, 2026, at an IndyCar race in St. Petersburg, Florida. Any contrary statement is incorrect.”
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Towriss also submitted a declaration in support of that statement on Wednesday night.
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“To the best of my recollection, I did not meet with Mr. Gabehart, either in person or virtually, at any point in time in 2025. And, specifically, I did not meet with Mr. Gabehart in person or virtually on or around October 21, 2025. The first time I ever met Mr. Gabehart in person was on February 28, 2026 at the IndyCar race in St. Petersburg, Florida. The first time I ever spoke with Mr. Gabehart was during a brief phone call on January 9, 2026. During that call, Jeff Dickerson briefly introduced me to Mr. Gabehart.We did not discuss Mr. Gabehart’s employment with Spire during that Call.”
Gabehart also addressed the declarations by two Joe Gibbs Racing sponsors that Spire had reached out to essentially poach them. Gabehart says he has never met those two sponsor representatives nor shared information about their JGR partnerships with Spire.
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As for the revelation that Joe Gibbs Racing had spied on him as he met with Spire co-owner Jeff Dickerson over the winter …
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“I have also reviewed the declaration submitted by Ryan Simpson. Mr. Simpson is apparently a private investigator who was retained by JGR to conduct surveillance on me. I was unaware that JGR was spying on me. I do not know why JGR was spying on me or for how long. The meeting with Jeff Dickerson referenced in Mr. Simpson’s declaration was held in public at a restaurant in Mooresville, North Carolina. I was not trying to conceal that meeting.”
Dickerson also addressed that revelation in his own declaration on Wednesday night. He said that he and Gabehart have been friends for nearly two decades and have met for dinner regularly over that period. He says he brokered Gabehart’s first NASCAR job while launching Kyle Busch Motorsports. At the time, Dickerson was an agent and spotter for Busch.
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“On December 2, 2025, Mr. Gabehart and I met again, this time for lunch at Barcelona Burger and Beer Garden in Mooresville, North Carolina, which is adjacent to the Toyota Gazoo Racing Garage. We sat down at the table I am known to sit at, at a restaurant that I frequent.
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“The Toyota GR Garage is a high performance motorsports testing garage used by Toyota, which is in a technical alliance with JGR. Workers from the Toyota GR Garage routinely eat lunch at Barcelona Burger and Beer Garden. I had absolutely no concerns about any of those workers seeing me eating lunch with Mr. Gabehart because I understood that there was no applicable non-compete in place at the time I met with Mr. Gabehart. And, even if a non-compete had been in place, there is nothing that prevents me from eating lunch with a friend.
Unbeknownst to me, JGR had hired a private investigator to follow Mr. Gabehart around. The private investigator apparently took photographs of me eating lunch with Mr. Gabehart. I was surprised and, quite frankly, disturbed to learn that a competitor in our industry had hired someone to follow its former employee around. I cannot stress this enough: It is extraordinary for an organization in our business to hire a private investigator to follow around any employee, let alone a former employee. In my twenty-five years of experience in this industry, I have never once heard of a team doing so.
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“Despite JGR being well aware that Spire was recruiting Mr. Gabehart as early as December 2, 2025, no one at JGR ever contacted me to claim that Mr. Gabehart was subject to an applicable non-compete (until JGR filed this lawsuit). Even during the forensic examination process described below, no one at JGR ever contacted me to claim that Mr. Gabehart was subject to an applicable non-compete.”
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Gabehart’s full declaration letter can be read below.
Typically, the discovery process begins after both parties participate in a Rule 26(f) conference, where all parties involved in litigation meet to discuss settlement options and negotiate the terms of which documents and communications are subject to the process.
To be granted expedited discovery, a party must show ‘good cause’ or ‘reasonableness’ in the interest of justice and the potential for immediate harm in the absence of the process taking place.
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Effectively, Joe Gibbs Racing says it has reasons to believe Gabehart may have shared the competitive proprietary information he stored on his devices to Spire Motorsports as part of the change of employment.
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The legal team representing Gabehart disagreed with that conclusion in a Wednesday night filing. The separate legal team representing Spire also disagreed. Their reasons were practically the same.
From the Gabehart legal team’s filing:
“The Motion is unnecessary, premature, and seeks to circumvent the orderly discovery process that the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure are designed to ensure. JGR has already received the very information it claims to need: a comprehensive forensic examination of Mr. Gabehart’s personal devices, conducted by JGR’s own chosen forensic examiner, pursuant to a protocol drafted by JGR’s own counsel. That examination established that Mr. Gabehart did not transmit, distribute, or share any JGR Confidential Information (as defined in the Employment Agreement, ECF 8-2). At this time, there is no justification for departing from the traditional discovery timeline.”
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From the Spire legal team’s filing:
“JGR misunderstands the legal standard applicable to expedited discovery requests and wholly fails to demonstrate ‘good cause’ or the broad, expedited discovery it seeks in this case. Indeed, although expedited discovery is only appropriate when a movant would be irreparably harmed by abiding by Rule 26’s typical discovery schedule, JGR has utterly failed to articulate how it would be irreparably harmed in the absence of expedited discovery, as required. In fact, JGR affirmatively represents that expedited discovery is not necessary here because its pending Motion for a Preliminary Injunction provides sufficient evidence for this Court to conclude that JGR is likely to succeed on the merits of its claims, even without ‘having any access to expedited discovery.’ Dkt. That concession alone is a sufficient reason to deny JGR’s motion.”
Furthermore, both defendants have asked Judge Susan D Rodriguez, that if she does decide to grant JGR expedited discovery, that they both be eligible for the same on Joe Gibbs Racing over when it understood its agreement with Gabehart to have concluded.
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Because, again, both Spire and Gabehart say they acted under the conviction that there was no applicable non-compete clause.
The Gabehart response lists three reasons for reciprocal discovery:
“First, Defendants are entitled to discovery concerning Mr. Gabehart’s compliance with Section 6, Paragraph 2 of the Employment Agreement. JGR has taken the position that Mr. Gabehart did not validly exercise his rights under Section 6, and that his termination was ‘for cause.’ Defendants are entitled to explore JGR’s communications and documents relating to Mr. Gabehart’s written notice under Section 6, JGR’s evaluation of that notice, negotiation of a separation agreement with Mr. Gabehart, JGR’s decision to place Mr. Gabehart on ‘garden leave,’ JGR’s withholding of wages, and records concerning Mr. Gabehart’s employment status. These documents are exclusively in JGR’s possession and are directly relevant to whether any noncompete obligation applies.
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“Second, Defendants are entitled to discovery concerning JGR’s internal communications about Mr. Gabehart’s exercise of his contractual rights. The text messages between Mr. Gabehart and Tim Carmichael demonstrate that JGR leadership understood Mr. Gabehart was exercising his rights under Section 6 and did not blame him for doing so. Defendants are entitled to discover what other JGR personnel communicated about this subject, and whether JGR’s after-the-fact ‘termination for cause’ was a pretext designed to avoid the consequences of Section 6.
Third, Defendants are entitled to discovery concerning JGR’s decision to terminate Mr. Gabehart for cause after the forensic examination confirmed no misappropriation occurred. The alleged termination notice was not issued until February 9, 2026—three months after Mr. Gabehart exercised his rights under Section 6, nearly three months after JGR began withholding his wages, and after the forensic examination confirmed no misappropriation. Defendants are entitled to explore the circumstances of this belated termination decision, including what JGR knew and when.”
Gabehart’s legal team writes that if JGR is entitled to expedited discovery from Gabehart, than the inverse is also true.
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Spire’s legal team made a similar argument in their own filing:
“If, however, this Court concludes that ‘good cause’ exists to warrant expedited discovery in this case, Defendant respectfully requests discovery be reciprocal in nature and limited to non-privileged documents that bear on the narrow, central issue related to JGR’s pending preliminary injunction motion: whether the 18-Month Non-Compete Provision in Gabehart’s employment contract was applicable at the time Spire hired Gabehart. Instead of the broad discovery JGR seeks, the Court should order limited, targeted discovery concerning the circumstances under which Mr. Gabehart’s employment with JGR ended in November 2025, including internal JGR communications reflecting how JGR interpreted and responded to the November 6 notice and how it decided to stop paying Mr. Gabehart.”
The two sides will once again meet in court, before Judge Rodriguez, in Charlotte, North Carolina on Monday morning to expound on the arguments made in their legal filings over the past week.
Carlos Alcaraz is looking to find his form again at the Monte Carlo Masters next week after an early exit in Miami.
The Spaniard started the season in dominant fashion, putting together a 16-match winning streak.
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This run saw him complete the ‘Career Grand Slam’ at the Australian Open and later claim another title at the Qatar Open.
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However, since then, he has lost back-to-back matches to Daniil Medvedev in Indian Wells and Sebastian Korda in Miami.
Despite these setbacks, Alcaraz is still seen as one of the top players on tour and is widely expected to have a historic career.
That opinion is shared by Rick Macci, who previously coached Serena Williams.
Rick Macci backs Carlos Alcaraz to rival Djokovic’s Grand Slam Haul
Photo by Darrian Traynor/Getty Images
Novak Djokovic stands as the most decorated male player in history. With 24 majors to his name, he shares the record for most Grand Slam singles titles with Margaret Court.
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The former Andy Roddick and Maria Sharapova coach certainly thinks it’s possible.
Alcaraz has already picked up seven majors by the age of 22. In comparison, Djokovic had just one before turning 23.
Macci posted on X, saying: “Another major league reason the Spanish Magician is skyrocketing towards RARE AIR is his adaptability to play on every surface.”
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“His best surface is the one he is playing on. This is RARE. This is why Carlos barring injury will someday be a double digit slam stroker and be right there with the Joker.”
Following his loss to Korda in Miami, Alcaraz headed back to Murcia to start training for clay season.
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The Spaniard has been working alongside young Spanish talent Martin Landaluce as he gets ready for Monte Carlo, where he’ll be seeded first.
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Looking back at Carlos Alcaraz’s history in Monte Carlo
Alcaraz has only played the event twice, with his first appearance coming back in 2022.
Alcaraz was seeded eighth and received a bye through to the second round.
Korda ended up winning the match 6-7, 7-6, 3-6. Stefanos Tsitsipas later went on to claim the title, defeating Alejandro Davidovich Fokina in the final.
Three years later, Alcaraz returned to Monaco. He went on to win his first Monte Carlo title last year, defeating Lorenzo Musetti 3-6, 6-1, 6-0 in the final.
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Speaking after his victory over Musetti at the time, Alcaraz told reporters: “Well, I think today was about who is going to or who was going to deal with the nerves much better, the pressure. He played his first Masters 1000 final, a huge moment for him. For me as well because as I say it was a difficult month for me. And being in a final I just put pressure on myself. There were a lot of nerves.”
Mar 29, 2026; Baltimore, Maryland, USA; Minnesota Twins center fielder Byron Buxton (25) looks on during the first inning against the Baltimore Orioles at Oriole Park at Camden Yards. Mandatory Credit: Daniel Kucin Jr.-Imagn Images
The start of the season has been far from perfect for the Minnesota Twins.
But manager Derek Shelton sees reason for optimism ahead of Friday’s home opener against the Tampa Bay Rays.
“The one thing we’re learning about this club,” Shelton said, “is they fight.”
After playing their first six games on the road, the Twins return home for a three-game weekend set. Minnesota dropped its first two series in Baltimore and Kansas City but is coming off a 5-1 win over the Royals on Thursday afternoon.
Tampa Bay, which is starting the season with a nine-game road trip, has an identical record as the Twins with two victories and four losses. The Rays dropped two of three games at the St. Louis Cardinals and Milwaukee Brewers.
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The Rays are coming off an 8-2 loss in their series finale against the Brewers on Wednesday that featured uncharacteristically shoddy defense. Tampa Bay has committed nine errors through its first six games, which ranks among the worst in the league.
Rays manager Kevin Cash expressed confidence that his players would improve on defense.
“It’s going to be good,” Cash said. “We just haven’t been as good or as crisp as the standard so far.”
Star slugger Junior Caminero pinned the blame on himself for the defensive miscues. He committed three errors in the series finale against the Brewers.
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“I want to make perfect throws, I want to get the out,” Caminero said through a team interpreter. “Just right now, it’s not working.”
The 22-year-old Caminero, who finished with 45 home runs and 110 RBIs last season, also is looking to get going at the plate. He is hitting .238 (5-for-21) with zero homers or RBIs, and he has six strikeouts to go along with six walks.
Yandy Diaz leads the Rays with 12 hits, including two homers, and eight RBIs in six games.
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Twins right-hander Bailey Ober (0-0, 6.75 ERA) will look to stymie Diaz, Caminero and the rest of the Rays.
Ober is coming off a no-decision in his season debut against Baltimore. He allowed three runs on four hits in four innings, and he walked one and struck out one.
The 6-foot-9 hurler should be fresh after making only 56 pitches in his first start.
Tampa Bay will counter with another tall starter. Right-hander Joe Boyle (0-0, 3.00), who stands 6-8, will make his second start of the season.
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In his season opener, Boyle allowed two runs on three hits in six innings against the Cardinals. He walked none and struck out four, and he threw 52 of 75 pitches for strikes.
Byron Buxton will look to get back on track for the Twins. He has been quiet at the plate, hitting .174 (4-for-23) with no homers and one RBI.
The early-season slump is uncharacteristic for the Twins’ fan favorite who bashed 35 homers and swiped 24 bases a season ago.
Minnesota and Tampa Bay played six times last season, with each side winning three games. The Rays outscored the Twins 29-21 in those six contests.
Kansas City Royals veteran catcher Salvador Perez was expecting to DH for his squad in Thursday’s afternoon tilt against the Minnesota Twins.
Unfortunately for the 36-year-old, he had to get back behind the plate after rookie Carter Jensen was unavailable to play catcher for the Royals after sleeping through his alarm.
Jensen was scratched late as the Royals’ starting catcher for the game, but it’s usually an illness or injury that results in such a late change to the lineup. But when Jensen came in for the ninth inning, and was seen catching warmup pitches earlier in the game, reporters were curious.
Carter Jensen of the Kansas City Royals takes the field before the game against the Minnesota Twins at Kauffman Stadium in Kansas City, Mo., on March 30, 2026.(Mikayla Schlosser/MLB Photos)
Jensen, the Royals’ top prospect, didn’t make up an elaborate lie. He slept through his alarm and wasn’t able to get to Kauffman Stadium in time to properly prepare for the game.
“No running from it,” Jensen told reporters, via MLB.com, after a 5-1 loss to the Twins. “Just didn’t wake up to my alarm. Slept through it. Don’t really have an excuse, nor should I. It sucks. Happens. I felt like I let my teammates down, coaches down. Just learn from it and know it won’t happen again.”
Royals manager Matt Quatraro added: “He’s a stand-up guy, a really hard worker, a great kid. He feels terrible. He’s accountable to it. It’s not something that has been a pattern or any of that kind of stuff. Nobody feels worse than he does, and I think he’ll admit to that. And we’ll move on.”
While Quatraro took the high road when asked about Jensen, first baseman Vinnie Pasquantino laid into the rookie in big-brother fashion.
“You got a 36-year-old catcher preparing to DH today and then his world gets a little rocked an hour and a half before the game that he’s not going to be DH-ing,” he told reporters. “Credit to Salvy today for being ready, first and foremost. We’re glad Carter’s OK, right? That was kind of the initial thought when you’re trying to get a hold of his parents and everything like that. But once you find out he’s OK, it’s like, ‘All right, it’s a growing moment.’
Carter Jensen of the Kansas City Royals looks on during a game against the Seattle Mariners at Kauffman Stadium in Kansas City, Mo., on Sept. 18, 2025.(Sydney Schneider/MLB Photos)
“He’s really young. There are some things that cannot happen, and that’s one of them. He’s going to have to wear it on the chin, same way anybody would have to. It can’t happen.”
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Pasquantino added the team is “here for him,” but he also believes Jensen should likely invest in “another alarm clock or something.”
Jensen is already ahead of his teammate.
“There’s a lot to learn from it. Making sure if I don’t set one alarm, maybe set three, four, as many as possible. Moving forward, that’s what I’m going to do. Set a million alarms. Make sure I’m up. It stinks, though.”
Carter Jensen of the Kansas City Royals walks to the on deck circle during a spring training game against the Texas Rangers at Surprise Stadium in Surprise, Ariz., on March 18, 2026.(Brandon Sloter/Getty Images)
This lede was supposed to read: Canada’s Team Matt Dunstone is truly rounding into its best form heading into the playoffs at the men’s world championship in Ogden, Utah.
Instead, we now have to talk about the fact that the Canadians, specifically Dunstone, fell apart after the eighth end for the second straight day.
The Canadian rink did pull out the 6-5 extra-end victory over Norway, which finished 0-12, but there never should’ve been an extra end to begin with.
Up until the ninth end, the Canadian lineup of Dunstone, Colton Lott, E.J. Harnden and Geoff Walker, who was subbing for Ryan Harnden, were straight up dominating play against the Norwegians, and held a 5-2 lead.
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But just like in the game against Switzerland on Wednesday, Dunstone couldn’t make a key shot in the ninth end, helping Norway score two to cut the lead to 5-4.
Even then, everything should’ve been fine. Canada was still in control, up 5-4 with the hammer and could finish the game in the 10th end.
Dunstone was facing a double takeout on his last, but stuffed it and gave up a steal of one to the Norwegians to tie the game 5-5. In both cases, Dunstone softened the release and threw lighter than he wanted, causing more curl, and for him to miss the shot.
The skipper did show poise, however, in the extra end as he was able to regather himself and make a nice hit to win the game.
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There are still a lot of positives for this Canadian team, like the fact that it has looked amazing at times (all but two of the 16 ends played on Thursday) during this now eight-game winning streak, which it will take into the playoffs.
But with how the closing ends have gone in the last couple of games, there is reason to be concerned.
Surprisingly, the Canadians’ 10-2 record wasn’t good enough for a top-two spot at this year’s world championship, with Sweden and Scotland beating them on the draw to the button tiebreaker.
As a result, Dunstone’s Manitoba-based rink has to settle for third in the 13-team round-robin and will now face Italy, which finished sixth overall, in the qualification game. The winner will face Scotland in one semifinal, while Switzerland and the U.S. will battle in the other qualification game to match up against Sweden.
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Even though Dunstone defeated the Italians 9-2 on day one, it will be a much different team the Canadians will go against on Friday.
20-year-old rookie skip Stefano Spiller shot 60 per cent for Italy in that opening game after replacing Joel Retornaz, who decided to pull himself from the event, just a couple weeks before the championship began.
That will most likely not be the case again. Spiller is playing with a lot more confidence and has a better understanding of how his teammates want to play now.
Need to force Whyte to miss
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The favourite as we head to the playoffs has to be Scotland’s rookie team led by skip Ross Whyte. After starting 0-2, the Scots have won 10-straight games.
Sure, we can look at the whole team made up of Whyte, third Robin Brydone, second Craig Waddell and lead Euan Kyle and say all four have been a key part to its success this week — as a team they’re first overall at 89 per cent.
But when looking at the playoffs, the other top teams aren’t going to be as worried about them, as they will be with Whyte.
The Scottish skip has been a massive problem for every team he’s faced this week. He’s been the best skip in the field, shooting 89.4 per cent overall with no games below 81 per cent.
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Most importantly, it’s been the clutch shots that Whyte has made to either get his team out of trouble without the hammer or just to score one. Just ask Switzerland’s Team Marco Hoesli.
In the 10th end on Thursday, the Scots were up 5-4 without hammer, and Hoesli had one sitting back button buried to score his one.
Somehow, Whyte came through an incredibly tight port of three stones for an in-off to hit the Swiss stone and sit two. Switzerland ended up losing 7-4.
If any team is going to beat Scotland in the playoffs, the focus has to be on forcing Whyte into the hardest shots possible each end to hopefully earn a miss. If he makes them, then you live with it.
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We’re talking angled double runbacks, triple raises, forcing a draw to only the pin, because if not, he’s probably going to make whatever the shot is with ease on the way to a world championship as a rookie.
Edin’s shoot touch is back
Through seven games at this year’s world championship, Sweden’s Team Niklas Edin was perfect, rebounding from the disappointing 2026 Olympics, where his squad went 2-7.
Edin himself was shooting lights out, and looked like he had the magic touch back that helped him become a seven-time world champion — the most of all time.
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However, Sweden then proceeded to drop two important games to Switzerland and Canada on the same day, when Edin shot 57 and 75 per cent, respectively.
Edin lost his shooting touch and wasn’t able to get a handle on his draw weight, costing him both games.
Well, it seems that lit a fire under Edin, because the Swedes finished on a three-game winning streak, outscoring their opponents 28-6. Sweden also finished 10-2 on the week, good for first overall and a bye to the semifinals.
In those three games, we saw the same Edin to start the week, or maybe even a better version, as he shot 100, 94 and 100 per cent.
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Looking at the playoffs, Edin’s shot-making ability will be the driving force for Sweden to have success and help him find world championship No. 8. All season, when Edin has been on, the team goes, and when he doesn’t seem to have it, the team gets blown out.
EDMONTON — There are two things hockey players have always told us:
You can’t expect to just “flick a switch” when March rolls around and suddenly start playing the brand of game that can win in April and May. “This league’s too good,” we’ve heard at least 1,000 times.
And, home ice advantage means something. First place is everyone’s goal, every season.
Well, meet the Edmonton Oilers — a bunch of switch flickers who really don’t care much about where they finish. As long as it’s in the playoffs.
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This is your captain speaking:
“Just putting the X beside our name is the main thing. Just getting in, that’s our main focus,” said Connor McDavid, after Edmonton’s season-high fifth straight win, a 3-1 cruise past Chicago. “Where we’re seeded, I’m not too concerned about it.
“We can start a series on the road, we can start a series at home. We’re pretty comfortable either way. We just have to get in.”
Edmonton floated through the first half of the season, and then kept it on cruise through the Olympic break before finally hunkering down and putting together some semblance of the game that took them to the past two Stanley Cup Finals.
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They’ve gone 11-6-1 since the Olympics — that’s a .639 points percentage that is tops in the Pacific. Edmonton has reeled in its goals against with the help of a settled down D corps, which is centred on Connor Murphy-Darnel Nurse pairing that has been rock solid of late.
And here’s something you don’t hear every day: The goaltending has been excellent in Edmonton, with Tristan Jarry surrendering just a single rebound goal on 18 shots Thursday, while the Oilers rifled 38 shots at the Blackhawks net.
Suddenly, with the playoffs in sight, the Oilers are playing quality, competitive, defensive hockey.
“You want to be as consistent as you can and sometimes that’s hard in this league,” hemmed and hawed Adam Henrique, when asked about a team that found the light switch just in time. “As a group, we’ve found (their game)— and there’s no better time to do that than now.
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“With the schedule you’re playing every other day. It’s a playoff mentality and we know what that takes.”
With the Anaheim Ducks idle on Thursday after coughing up two late goals to lose in regulation on Wednesday, the Oilers pulled even atop the Pacific with 87 points. The Ducks have seven games left, Edmonton six, but the Oilers have the edge in the first tie-breaker, with six more regulation wins.
The Oilers haven’t won a Division since 1987 — the longest drought in the NHL — but good luck finding anyone on this team willing to convince you that home-ice advantage really matters.
“I don’t know if it’s absolutely necessary,” said head coach Kris Knoblauch. “It would be nice to finish first and put a banner up next fall, but this team — whether at home or road — it responds well. If we get into a Game 7, maybe. But we’re just trying to play as well as possible.”
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You’ll recall a year ago when the Oilers did not have home advantage in any of the first three rounds, and tore through the West with a 12-4 record. Then in the Final against Florida — a series that opened in Edmonton — they lost in six games.
So you’ll have to forgive the Oilers for not being fixated on first place. Honestly — and they’d never say it out loud — if Edmonton continue to build their game from where it’s at right now, they wouldn’t be overly concerned about whomever they get in Round 1 or 2.
“You want to give yourself the best opportunity and a lot of times that’s finishing first,” said Henrique, who banged home his first goal in 50 games on a breakaway, then breathed a huge sigh of relief. “We know in the past that it doesn’t matter.”
MCG will play host to Sunday’s
Round 4 AFL game between Melbourne Demons and
Gold Coast SUNS. The game kicks off at 3:15 pm with Gold Coast SUNS heading into the game as favourites with the bookmakers. Continue reading for our in-depth preview of the Melbourne Demons vs.
Gold Coast SUNS
game and give you our free tips and bets.
Melbourne will look to make a statement as it faces a quality opponent in what promises to be a high-intensity contest. The Demons’ strength around stoppages and defensive structure remains a key asset, while their ability to convert forward entries will be under scrutiny. Their opponents bring speed and attacking flair, setting up an intriguing tactical battle. Expect a physical contest, with territory and pressure likely to dictate the flow. This match offers a strong indicator of both teams’ readiness to contend and their capacity to execute under pressure.
In the first game he ever played against the Vancouver Canucks, Quinn Hughes was understated.
Nearly four months since his trade to the Minnesota Wild, the Canucks’ ex-captain had only one point and was plus-four Thursday as his new team beat his old one 5-2 in St. Paul, Minn. At five-on-five, shots were 20-10 for the Wild, and scoring chances 14-8 when Hughes was on the ice. He finished with 24:48 of playing time.
That would be a career game for some defenders but considering Hughes’ dynamic capabilities and dominance with the puck, he was quiet.
With two goals, three points and six shots, Matt Boldy was the big star for Minnesota on Thursday. Ryan Hartman also scored twice and Kirill Kaprizov hit the 40-goal mark for the fourth time in five seasons as the Wild pulled away from the Canucks, who were playing the second of challenging back-to-back games after stunning the National Hockey League-leading Colorado Avalanche 8-6 on Wednesday.
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The Wild had been resting and practising since Saturday.
Unlike with the needy Canucks, the Wild don’t require Hughes to launch 12 shots per game, be a one-man breakout and challenge defenders one-on-one on each possession in order to generate offence. They just need him to skate and pass and be himself.
Hughes’ first game against his former teammates was subdued. And in a post-game interview with Sportsnet’s Dan Murphy, so was he.
“Yeah, I mean, definitely a little weird,” Hughes said of facing the Canucks, with whom he shattered all franchise scoring records by a defenceman during his 6 ½ seasons. “But I think that, you know, you move on and I’m happy to be here right now. Probably being in Vancouver would be a little bit weirder than this. But yeah, like I said, it was nice that we got the win, and we have a big weekend coming up.”
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With the Wild pretty much locked into a first-round heavyweight tilt against the Dallas Stars, Hughes made it clear his focus is already shifting to the Stanley Cup Playoffs, something he experienced only twice with the Canucks.
The Canucks’ focus, since the moment they traded him to the Wild on Dec. 12 for three talented, younger players and a first-round draft pick, has been on a rebuild.
To that end, players reluctantly guaranteed the franchise the best draft-lottery odds by clinching 32nd place with seven games remaining.
At 22-45-8, the Canucks are 16 points behind the next poorest team and incapable of climbing out of last place overall. Despite a lot of lean seasons in their 56-year history, the Canucks have never finished at the bottom of the NHL standings. The Wild are 44 points ahead and clinched a Western Conference playoff spot with their win.
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For the Canucks, although there was a sobering finality to their freefall with yet another loss, there was certainly no shame in Thursday’s performance.
Despite the difficult early-morning arrival in the Twin Cities after the post-game charter across time zones from Denver — and playing their third road game in four nights against Stanley Cup contenders — the Canucks actually led 2-1 after the first period.
But the Wild took over the game in the second period and directly capitalized on unforced errors by young defenceman Zeev Buium and Elias Pettersson (Junior). Still, down 4-2, the Canucks had their goalie out and sustained offensive-zone pressure late in the game before Hartman iced it with an empty-netter.
“We competed,” coach Adam Foote told reporters in Minnesota. “(The Wild are) a big heavy playoff team built to go. They’ve got some explosive offensive players, but powerful as well, and they’re just heavy throughout. And I thought the guys competed to the wire with them. I really thought we played hard and didn’t back down.”
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Tom Willander and Jake DeBrusk scored goals for the Canucks, who play home games Saturday against Utah and Tuesday against Vegas before travelling again for a three-game tour of California.
Hooked in his last start after surrendering four goals on 11 shots Saturday in Calgary, minor-league callup Nikita Tolopilo was probably the best Canuck, finishing with 34 saves and little culpability on the four goals that beat him, which were: breakaway, breakaway, backside one-timer from a cross-ice pass, and a tip from the top of the crease.
A lot of people have been clamouring for more starts for Tolopilo. But the Canucks have so much invested in Kevin Lankinen, and badly need him to build back his game and some confidence heading into the summer, that Foote’s decision to lean heavily on his NHL veteran really shouldn’t be surprising.
But Tolopilo makes it harder on Foote when he plays like he did Thursday. In five starts in March, the undrafted 25-year-old was beaten 21 times on 123 shots for a save percentage of .829. April has started better. With seven Canuck games left, Tolopilo should get at least a couple of more starts.
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Mistakes have been part of the learning curve all season for the Canucks’ young defencemen. In Minnesota, Buium whiffed on the puck on one goal and Pettersson passed it straight to the opposition before another. And as television analyst Ray Ferraro superbly broke down for Sportsnet viewers, Willander was far too passive in allowing Hartman to stand uncontested in front of him to tip in the Wild’s fourth goal. The first Minnesota goal came from a giveaway by experienced defenceman Pierre-Olivier Joseph, so it’s not only the young guys who make mistakes.
But they’ve got to learn. Especially in the defensive zone. They’ve got to box out and, as Ferraro said, make opposition forwards uncomfortable in front of the Vancouver net.
Hughes was excellent with the puck from the day he stepped into the NHL from college — as Willander and Buium have done — but didn’t become an elite defenceman until he started devoting his summers to improving the defensive side of his game. This is hockey.
32 Thoughts: The Podcast
Hockey fans already know the name, but this is not the blog. From Sportsnet, 32 Thoughts: The Podcast with NHL Insider Elliotte Friedman and Kyle Bukauskas is a weekly deep dive into the biggest news and interviews from the hockey world.
Canuck enforcer Curtis Douglas thought he’d scored in Calgary but the goal was ruled off upon review due to a whistle. In Colorado, the six-foot-nine winger had a mind-blowing five shots on net (and three hits) in 6:18 of ice time. Imagine if he’d played 16 minutes. And Douglas was noticeable again in Minnesota, with one shot and two other attempts in 8:44 of TOI.
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The 26-year-old waiver pickup has now logged 38 NHL games with no goals (and nine fights). Douglas scored 57 times over his final two seasons of junior hockey in Windsor and his shooter instincts are still evident. We’re predicting Douglas will have an NHL goal before this season is over.
Douglas, of course, needs to play and the Canuck lineup got a little more crowded Thursday with the recall from the minors of centre prospect Ty Mueller, who wasn’t scored against during his 9:55 of playing time against the Wild. . . Nils Hoglander came out of the lineup — again — to make room for him while a highly motivated Aatu Raty was moved to the wing and registered four hits in 12:03 of ice time. The Canucks’ faceoff ace, Raty still took draws and went 11-3. . . Rested the last two contests after managing an injury while making it to 1,000 games in the NHL, winger Evander Kane is expected back in the lineup on Saturday so his achievement can be honoured by the Canucks before the faceoff against the Mammoth.
Mar 29, 2026; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA; Philadelphia Flyers right wing Travis Konecny (11) reacts after scoring a goal against the Dallas Stars in the second period at Xfinity Mobile Arena. Mandatory Credit: Kyle Ross-Imagn Images
The Philadelphia Flyers will look to inch closer to a playoff spot when they visit the New York Islanders on Friday in Elmont, N.Y.
The Flyers (37-26-12, 86 points) fell 4-2 to the visiting Detroit Red Wings on Thursday, keeping them two points back of the second wild card in the Eastern Conference — a spot now held by the Ottawa Senators.
“Every game’s a must-win at this point,” said forward Travis Konecny, who leads the Flyers in goals (27), assists (39) and points (66). “We’re looking at (Friday), another good team we’re playing against, but this locker room here, we all believe that we’re better than any opponent we’re playing right now.
“Tough to get the loss, but we have all the confidence in the world that we’re going to keep playing good.”
It was Philadelphia’s second straight loss after winning eight of its previous 10 games (8-1-1) to pull back into the thick of the playoff race. The team put 34 shots on goal against the Red Wings but also missed the net 21 times.
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“We’re missing the net way too much,” Flyers coach Rick Tocchet said. “It’s become a problem this year. I love the effort tonight. (Detroit) had a couple big moments, they scored and we didn’t, and that’s really what it came down to. We had our chances. We just didn’t put them in.”
Philadelphia has enjoyed a solid road record this season, going 20-13-4. Four of its final seven games will be on opposing ice.
The Islanders (42-29-5, 89 points), meanwhile, will aim to snap a two-game skid and pull within a point of second place in the Metropolitan Division. New York hasn’t played since Tuesday, when it dropped a 4-3 decision to the Buffalo Sabres. The Islanders enter Friday three points behind the second-place Pittsburgh Penguins.
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“We did some good things (against Pittsburgh and Buffalo),” forward Brayden Schenn said. “We just didn’t do enough good things to win hockey games. So being chased is always a thing. I know teams have games in hand on us now, but at the end of the day, we have to worry about controlling what we can, and that’s winning hockey games.”
The Islanders are only three points ahead of the Flyers, who have played one fewer game. Offense has been an issue for coach Patrick Roy’s squad, which has scored more than three goals only once over its past 11 games – a 5-2 home triumph against the Florida Panthers on March 28.
“It’s tight out there. There’s not much room,” Schenn said. “… Points are so crucial and valuable. We all know that. The way to score goals is getting people and pucks to the net.”
They’ll be hoping a strong home record can help them bounce back as they look to tighten their hold on a playoff spot. The Islanders are 21-13-2 as the hosts and will play five of their final six games on their own ice.
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“It’s massive,” forward Jean-Gabriel Pageau said. “We’ve been on the road so much and the travel part, from what I’ve learned (from) experience, it always catches up towards the end of the year. Just to have that final stretch at home will be massive for everyone.”
“If You Know Where We Came From” — Osimhen and Boniface reflect on their Journey
Victor Osimhen and Victor Boniface shared a moment online that quickly connected with fans, as both players reflected on how far they have come.
It started with Boniface, who wrote:
“Omo @victorosimhen9 don tell una before If you know where and Wetinx some of us don face bro Make I no talk”
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Osimhen responded: “Thank GOD for his Grace my guy!!! We made for life!!!✊”
Osimhen has often spoken about his upbringing in Lagos, where he sold water on the streets after losing his mother at a young age. Boniface also grew up facing challenges, raised by his grandmother after his mother’s accident.
Their stories have been part of their rise, and moments like this continue to resonate with fans.
Ocean Protect Stadium will play host to Sunday’s
Round 5 NRL game between Cronulla Sharks and
New Zealand Warriors. The game kicks off at 2:00 pm with Cronulla Sharks heading into the game as favourites with the bookmakers. Continue reading for our in-depth preview of the Cronulla Sharks vs.
New Zealand Warriors
game and give you our free tips and bets.
The Warriors will be eager to respond after being caught off guard in their previous outing. Their physicality and forward dominance remain strengths, but improved discipline and execution will be required. Their opponents bring structure and will look to control possession. Expect a hard-fought contest, with territory and completion rates playing a key role. This match offers the Warriors an opportunity to reassert their identity and return to form.
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