
By Stephen Vilardo, SuperWest Sports
Sports
Five major storylines to watch on Canada’s men’s Olympic hockey team
When NHL players first went to compete in the Olympics back in 1998, it was memorable by Canadians for the wrong reasons. After a perfect preliminary round, a devastating shootout loss to Czech Republic — with Dominik Hasek at his best — ended Canada’s gold medal hopes with the visual of Wayne Gretzky left uninvolved on the bench.
From then on, however, the Canadian team has more or less been the one to beat at the Olympics.
In 2002, Canada won its gold medal with a 5-2 victory in the final against USA where Mario Lemieux and Joe Sakic had big Olympic moments. The 2006 event was forgettable for the Canadians, who struggled through the preliminary round before being shut out by Russia in the semis.
They returned to Vancouver in 2010 and, after a 1-1-1 preliminary round effort, launched from the extra game in the quarterfinal into a gold-medal game for the ages.
And in 2014 — the last with NHL involvement — the Canadians were utterly dominant. In six games total, Canada allowed just three goals against and shutout Team USA and Team Sweden in the semifinal and final to come away with gold. It was the first time a country had successfully defended its Olympic gold since the Soviet Union in 1988.
After a 12-year absence of NHL players, the best-on-best event is back at the Olympics, a moment players and fans alike have been waiting too long for. Canada returns as the favourite again, but only two players are back from the 2014 team.
What can we expect this time?
Ahead of Canada’s 2026 Olympic opener against Czechia Thursday (10:40 am ET), here are five storylines to keep in mind.
When Sidney Crosby was an NHL rookie in 2006, he didn’t make the cut for Team Canada’s Olympic entry. When he made his first Olympic roster in 2010, he was 22 years old.
Drew Doughty made the Olympic team in 2010 at 20 years of age in his second NHL season. He started as an extra man and ended the tournament on the ice in OT when Crosby scored the goal medal-winner.
This year, Macklin Celebrini became the youngest NHLer to ever be named to Canada’s men’s Olympic hockey team and he is the youngest player across this year’s entire men’s tournament. The 19-year-old is in his second NHL season and arrived at the break fourth in league scoring with 81 points in 55 games.
And, to start at least, he’s being put in a great position to succeed. In the pre-tournament practices, Celebrini has been lining up next to Connor McDavid, and opposite Tom Wilson, on Canada’s top line.
In the past, Canada has often been shy to include its youngest players, leaning more towards the established veterans. There was lots of discussion about including rookie defenceman Matthew Schaefer on the 2026 Canadian team, but in the end the team went with players who have more experience and competed at last year’s 4 Nations when Schaefer was in the OHL.
That makes Celebrini’s selection all the more notable. He’s a special talent and now he’s being put on the biggest stage. How will he respond and will he be able to hang next to McDavid from beginning to end?
What does the old guard still have to offer?
At the other end of the age spectrum, we have Crosby (38) and Doughty (36) as the only returning players from the 2014 Olympic team, the last that included NHL players. Brad Marchand (35) has played for Canada at the World Championship, he was the team’s leading goal scorer at the World Cup a decade ago and made last year’s 4 Nations team. Mark Stone (33), has twice been a major offensive contributor for Canada at the World Championship, and was also part of the 4 Nations team a year ago.
All four of these players have had big tournaments wearing the maple leaf in the past, but now they represent the four oldest skaters on the 2026 Olympic team. Can they keep pace with their younger teammates? Do they have the speed to make a difference later on in the tournament when the games get tougher? The seasons each have had in the NHL so far suggest they have plenty left to offer.
Crosby is leading the Penguins in a resurgent year as they push back to the playoffs. Stone has been Vegas’ second-highest scorer and the key player on their power play despite missing 16 games. Marchand is second in scoring on an injury-riddled Panthers lineup and just had another monster playoff run last spring. Doughty leads all Kings in average ice time, but won’t have to carry such a heavy load at the Olympics.
In all likelihood, this will be the last Olympic Games for each of these players. What can they deliver?
Will Connor McDavid have a generational Golden moment?
Crosby’s 2010 gold medal-winner was a moment that resonates with an entire generation the same way Paul Henderson’s 1972 Summit Series clincher did. You remember where you were and you can probably recite the play-by-play call.
Canada’s 2014 win was so dominant that the air tight defence is what’s remembered most and the absence of NHLers ever since has robbed us of anyone else having that special national highlight.
At last year’s short 4 Nations event, McDavid had his moment, scoring the OT winner against Team USA off a pass from Mitch Marner in the championship game. It was his first opportunity for a “golden moment” and when Canada needed him most, this generation’s best player stepped up at the critical time.
Ah, but the 4 Nations doesn’t hold the same cache as the Olympics, when the whole world is watching. McDavid gets to his first Olympics as this season’s NHL scoring leader, closing the gap on Nathan MacKinnon by averaging nearly two points per game since Dec. 1. McDavid will be hungry to follow his finish from the 4 Nations, seeking his own national Olympic moment and gold medal.
Who will emerge as Canada’s No. 1 goalie?
There was enough concern about Canada’s choice of netminders heading into the 4 Nations last year because no one in the running was putting forth anything close to an award-winning season. What a change that was from a country used to seeing the likes of Roberto Luongo, Martin Brodeur and Patrick Roy at past best-on-best events. In the end, Jordan Binnington emerged as the No. 1 and his strong finish in the championship final still gives him momentum heading into the Olympics.
But the picture is much different this time. Only Binnington returns from the 4 Nations threesome, with Sam Montembeault and Adin Hill replaced by Logan Thompson and Darcy Kuemper. Statistically, Thompson stands out in the NHL this season, among the league leaders in save percentage and GAA. Meantime, Binnington is statistically one of the worst netminders in the NHL, ranking last among all goalies by Goals Saved Above Expected (GSAE).
And, to be fair, Thompson played well enough to be on Team Canada at the 4 Nations last year as well. His NHL numbers were better than any of the goalies Canada named to the team, but there were other concerns.
“They didn’t put him on the team last year because there was real concern he would not handle being a backup well,” Elliotte Friedman explained on an episode of 32 Thoughts: The Podcast.
This time, Thompson may have the best chance to unseat Binnington as Canada’s starter by the medal round.
“It’s a dream come true,” Thompson told NHL.com’s Tom Gulitti of joining Canada at the Olympics. “I’m going to just go there and soak it all in and do any role that they want me to be. Whether that’s practice goalie, backup, handing out the water bottles, I’m just going to be happy to be there and I’m going to do whatever I can to the best that I can.”
Binnington will still be a factor, at least early on. Will he lose the job? Will Thompson, or Kuemper, take it from him? Will any of them quell Canadian fears that goaltending could be the country’s undoing?
How will Tom Wilson’s game translate to international competition?
It’s always difficult to fill out the final few spots on a Canadian best-on-best hockey roster, but the knock on Wilson in the past has often related to his style of play and how it might (negatively) translate to the international game, or how it might potentially cost Canada in a critical game.
Wilson plays with an edge and he toes the line between what’s legal and illegal with the ferocity in which he attacks the opponents. Wilson has been suspended six times and fined three more times in the NHL, the last coming in March 2024. His longest was a 20-game suspension (reduced after he served 16 games) for a head check in 2018.
This season, Wilson leads the Capitals in scoring and his selection to Team Canada is indicative of how he’s evolved his game in recent seasons to be more aware of when he is crossing the line.
And, now it appears the international game is also evolving to close the gap in officiating standards between how it and NHL calls games.
“Last week, one Olympic executive said that, when IIHF officials were invited to join their NHL counterparts at last summer’s orientation camp, there was special emphasis on teaching international referees not to overreact to big hits. Will it work? We’ll find out.”
However this ultimately plays out could have a massive impact on Wilson at the Olympic tournament. Can he be the physically dominating player he is with the Capitals, or will there still be a barrier between his physical skill and how international games tend to be officiated?
Sports
India v England live: Score and updates from T20 World Cup semi-final as cricket giants collide
India 34/1 (3), Samson 25, Kishan 0, Archer 0-26 (2)
And Sanju Samson makes Brook pay! Archer drops slightly shorter and is positively walloped up into the third tier over midwicket. Samson is good at picking that sort of length.
Substance, meet style. An elegant carve of a yorker through third man for four. What touch India’s opener is in.
Harry Latham-Coyle5 March 2026 13:43
Dropped! India 24/1 (2.2), Samson 15, Kishan 0, Archer 0-16 (1.2)
A goober! Oh, Harry Brook!
How crucial could that be? It’s an absolute sitter for the England captain at mid-on as Sanju Samson mistimes a drive, but Brook inexplicably lets it burst between his fingers in front of his face.
Harry Latham-Coyle5 March 2026 13:41
OUT! Abhishek Sharma c Salt b Jacks 9 (7b 2×4 0x6), India 20/1 (2)
The Wankhede falls silent! Hoisted to deep midwicket!
Abhishek Sharma had just shuffled down and planted Will Jacks over extra cover for a one bounce four, but comes a-cropper as he tries to keep the momentum rolling. He’s not quite to the pitch of a ball dragged slightly shorter and can only haul it high in the air, with Phil Salt settling safely beneath it. A vital strike for England with India just getting going.

Harry Latham-Coyle5 March 2026 13:39
India 16/0 (1.1), Samson 11, Abhishek 5, Jacks 0-4 (0.1)
It will be Will Jacks from the other end, off-spin to the left-handed Abhishek – and he’s flayed away immediately! Just a hint of width and a little too short and the southpaw swats him for four through point.
Abhishek is all about intent, like most of this new breed of Indian batters.
Harry Latham-Coyle5 March 2026 13:36
India 12/0 (1), Samson 11, Abhishek 1, Archer 0-12 (1)
Jofra Archer has an excellent record in T20Is against Sanju Samson, the pair former Rajasthan Royals teammates. He beats the bat second ball with a bit of away movement.
That’s a fine riposte, though, Archer deposited up over mid-on with Samson sitting back in his crease. And that’s six! Short, too straight and swivelled high over the short fine leg fielder! That’s a poor ball, really, and given the treatment.
Can Archer get fuller? Yes, caressed to cover for a sharp single. Abhishek Sharma replies in kind to keep the strike at the end of the over.
Harry Latham-Coyle5 March 2026 13:34
India 0/0 (0,1), Samson 0, Abhishek 0, Archer 0-0 (0.1)
A calm start. Sanju Samson runs the first ball to short third for no run. Good lift from Jofra Archer on a surface with a slight green tinge.
Harry Latham-Coyle5 March 2026 13:31
India 0/0 (0), Samson 0, Abhishek 0
Unsurprisingly, it’ll be Jofra Archer with first use of the gleaming white Kookaburra. Harry Brook directs a few fielders around before taking up his position. Jamie Overton is at first slip for England to the right-handed Sanju Samson. It looks like square leg and deep backward point are the permitted two men out.
Harry Latham-Coyle5 March 2026 13:30
England vs India
Out come the teams. This opening powerplay feels huge – Jofra Archer aside, England aren’t blessed with new-ball options. Opening with Liam Dawson would be a huge risk against the free-swinging Abhishek Sharma; similarly, Sanju Samson may fancy himself against Will Jacks’ off-breaks.
Harry Latham-Coyle5 March 2026 13:23
LAST TIME OUT: England finish Super 8s with perfect record
England had already qualified for the semi-final when they faced New Zealand in their final Super 8s game but produced an impressive performance to win by four wickets



Luke Baker5 March 2026 13:20
Sports
IND vs ENG: Rohit Sharma caught chatting with India captain Suryakumar Yadav ahead of toss at T20 World Cup semi-final | Cricket News
India faced England in the T20 World Cup semi-final at Wankhede Stadium on Thursday, with an interesting moment before the toss as Rohit Sharma, India’s T20 World Cup 2024-winning captain, was seen chatting with current skipper Suryakumar Yadav. The conversation caught the attention of fans and cameras just before the crucial match began.At the toss, England captain Harry Brook won and chose to bowl first. India’s captain Suryakumar Yadav said his team would have preferred to bat as well, believing the pitch looked good and conditions were suitable for batting.“We were looking to bat first. Semifinal, big game, and there’s wind around too. Don’t think there will be much dew. Looks a good one (the pitch). The best one. Credit to all the curators and groundsmen. Same team,” Surya said at the toss.Watch Rohit Sharma attending IND vs ENG T20 World Cup semi-final:Brook explained England’s decision and admitted India had more experience at the venue.“We’re going to have a bowl. Looks like a good wicket, hopefully we can get off to a good start with the ball. They’ve obviously got a lot more experience on this ground than us. T20 cricket is such a fickle game, you never know what’s going to happen. Hopefully we can keep them quiet (the crowd). Overton comes in for Rehan.”Looking at their journey to the semi-finals, India had a mixed campaign. They started with a narrow win over USA, followed by victories against other teams in the group stage. However, they suffered a heavy loss to South Africa in the Super-8 round before bouncing back with important wins against Zimbabwe and West Indies to secure a place in the last four.England’s path was also uneven at first. They scraped past Nepal, lost to West Indies, and struggled in wins over Scotland and Italy. But their form improved in the Super-8 stage with strong victories against Sri Lanka, Pakistan, and New Zealand, which helped them become the first team to qualify for the semi-finals.At Wankhede, England had played two earlier matches with a 1–1 record, while India had won their only game at the venue against USA by 29 runs. Historically, the two sides are evenly matched at this ground, with England winning in 2012 and India returning the favour in 2025.
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How the U.S. Women’s Open winner got her swagger back
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MW Tournament Likely Boise State’s Best Path to Big Dance
The Broncos sent their senior class out in style in their final regular-season game at ExtraMile Arena.
Fueled by a career-high 33 points from Drew Fielder, the nine-point win kept Boise State’s slim at-large hopes alive.
It also dealt a severe blow to San Diego State’s Tournament resume, in an inconsistent stretch for them, but that’s a column for another day.
What does the current winning streak mean for Boise State’s NCAA Tournament chances? Here are my thoughts on the path ahead.
The good news is that the final regular-season home win marks the Broncos’ fourth consecutive victory, their 10th in the last 13 games.
Since struggling to a 1-5 start to conference play in January, Leon Rice has his squad playing at a high level.
Will it be enough?
At 19-11, Boise State is putting together a strong campaign once again, but it may be too little too late for their at-large NCAA hopes.
Simply put, the Broncos still have more work to do, but not enough time in which to do it.
The regular-season finale takes them to Colorado State, obviously not a game the Broncos can afford to drop, and then a run in Vegas would be needed.
And if they are to make that run, they’d probably have to cross the finish line first to punch their ticket.

That stretch of five losses in six games to ring in the New Year put BSU in too deep a hole.
The selection committee is supposed to (and claims to) look at the totality of a season. If they do, the Broncos might just have a case.
The non-conference slate offered up a neutral site win over St. Mary’s, a victory that keeps looking better and better by the day as the Gaels are stacking the wins.
Two of the three non-conference losses came at the hands of Power Conference programs at the Maui Invitational, against USC and NC State.
The latter was a Quad 1 contest, and the Wolfpack are finishing strong.
The glaring problem with the non-conference slate is the opening loss to Hawai’i Pacific, which is difficult to overlook.
In Mountain West play, as bad as the opening stretch was, two of the three losses since then may be the most damaging.
During that 10-3 two-month period, the Broncos dropped a pair of games—to UNLV at home and Grand Canyon on the road—securing season sweeps for those opponents.
Boise State could not afford the home losses in particular, and, in any case, the Broncos should not have gone 0-4 against those two teams.
The Broncos have been playing much better over the last couple of months, a testament to Leon Rice’s ability to keep his players pushing throughout the season.
The current hot streak gives Boise State hope of making a deep run in Vegas next week. But that prospect raises another pesky issue for the Broncos this season—Utah State.
The road to the conference tournament crown would likely go through the Aggies at some point, and the later, the better.
If the MW Tournament started today, Boise would be the 6-seed, meaning a meeting with USU would only come in the title game. But that could change.
Boise State has not been competitive in its two games against the Aggies, losing by an average of 22 points per contest.
Their nine other defeats came by an average of 8.2.
While the Broncos hope to be playing well into March on neutral courts, that senior night win may not be the final game at ExtraMile for this group.
Sports
Paul Scholes’ brutal Michael Carrick dig and Man United boss’ response – ‘I’d feel guilty’
Paul Scholes criticised Manchester United, and seemingly Michael Carrick, following defeat to Newcastle and it’s not the first time the midfielder has questioned his former team-mate
Paul Scholes sent tongues wagging and eyebrows raising with his post-match assessment of Manchester United‘s defeat to Newcastle. The legendary United midfielder appeared to take a dig at his former team-mate and United boss Michael Carrick in savage fashion.
“Michael has definitely got something special about him… cos United have been c**p last four games… night,” he posted on his Instagram Story, which has since been deleted.
But it’s not the first time the United icon has questioned Carrick, who is in charge at Old Trafford until the end of the season. Scholes accused Carrick and other coaches of disloyalty in 2021.
Carrick, Mike Phelan and Kieran McKenna remained at the club when Ole Gunnar Solskjaer was sacked. While caveating that the trio were ‘good friends’, Scholes wasn’t afraid to highlight that he disagreed with their decision.
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“I feel with Ole he put a lot of trust into Michael, Kieran (McKenna) and Mike Phelan which is why they shouldn’t be at the club now,” Scholes said at the time.
“They’re all good friends and they’re good people but if I was them I’d feel guilty still working at the club after Ole put so much trust in them.”
Taking an interim role to lead the team following Solskjaer’s exit, Carrick was quizzed about Scholes’ comments. The midfielder, who played alongside Scholes 160 times, revealed he had spoken to Solskjaer before taking the reins.
“It’s been an emotional few days,” he said. “The first person I spoke to after Ed (Woodward) offered me the role was Ole. I thought that was the right thing to do.”
Carrick has also spoken to Solskjaer more recently, after beating him to the United job earlier this year. The former England international suggested the pair remain close.
“Yeah, I spoke to him,” Carrick said. “I’m close, we’ve been through a lot together, so he’s been fully supportive and as you’d expect.
“He’s some man and I respect him an awful lot. He wished us all the best and he was happy that we got the right result.”
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How 1 man’s quest for perfect putter led to creation of L.A.B. Golf
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Australia opens World Baseball Classic with victory over Chinese Taipei
TOKYO — Australia opened the World Baseball Classic on Thursday by beating Chinese Taipei 3-0 on Robbie Perkins’ two-run homer in the fifth inning and Travis Bazzana’s homer in the seventh at the Tokyo Dome.
The two big swings were enough in a tight game dominated by pitching on both sides. Chinese Taipei managed only three hits, and Australia had seven.
It was a critical victory for Australia, which also won its first game in 2023, defeating South Korea enroute to reaching the quarterfinals and a narrow 4-3 loss to Cuba.
Australian starter Alex Wells pitched three no-hit innings, with Jack O’Loughlin negotiating the next three and allowing only two hits and setting the stage for the bullpen.
O’Laughlin got the victory with a save for Jon Kennedy. Po-Yu Chen was the losing pitcher.
Following Perkins’ homer, Chinese Taipei put two runners on in the sixth with two out but failed to score. The second to reach base was Chieh-hsien Chen, who was hit by a pitch on his right hand and left the game.
Australia loaded the bases in the bottom of the sixth and failed to score when Chris Burke popped out on the second pitch from reliever Yi Chang.
Bazzana, who is expected to start in Triple A this season in the Cleveland Guardians farm system, added the insurance run on a towering shot to right field. Bazzana was the first pick in the 2024 MLB amateur draft.
Chinese Taipei put two runners on the top of the ninth and almost tied the game on a deep flyout by Lyle Lin.
South Korea-Czechia later
In the second Group C game later in Tokyo, South Korea faced Czechia. Defending champion Japan opens play in Group C on Friday against Chinese Taipei.
The top two teams in the group advance to the quarterfinals in the United States, joining the top two in the other three groups.
Sports
NFL news: Myles Garrett slapped with 9th traffic citation
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He may be one of the best players in the NFL, but Cleveland Browns star defensive end Myles Garrett isn’t great at following traffic laws.
The 2025 Defensive Player of the Year was cited for driving 94 mph in a 70-mph zone on Interstate 71 in Congress Township, Ohio, which is between Cleveland and Columbus, back on Feb. 21, according to court records.
This speeding ticket marks the ninth since Garrett has entered the NFL since his rookie season in 2017, which includes a scary moment where he flipped his Porsche in 2022 after an incident where speeding was a factor.
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Cleveland Browns defensive end Myles Garrett (95) reacts during the second half of an NFL football game against the San Francisco 49ers, Sunday, Nov. 30, 2025, in Cleveland. (AP Photo/David Richard)
Garrett was cited then for going 65 mph in a 45-mph zone at the time.
Garrett was also driving a Porsche during this traffic stop, as the Wayne County Sheriff’s Office pulled over the Browns star as he was going 24 mph over the speed limit in the early hours last month. Before being pulled over, Garrett was spotted at a college basketball game between Bowling Green and Miami of Ohio in Oxford, which is near Cincinnati.
Prior to this ticket, Garrett was pulled over during Browns training camp on Aug. 9, when he was driving 100 mph in a 60-mph zone in Strongsville, Ohio, which is near the team’s Berea training facility.
The Browns had just returned home from their preseason matchup against the Carolina Panthers, which led to a $250 fine for Garrett as well.
He was peppered with questions from the media about his speeding past following his then-eighth citation, but he declined to respond.

Myles Garrett of the Cleveland Browns looks on during the second quarter in the game against the New England Patriots at Gillette Stadium on October 26, 2025, in Foxborough, Massachusetts. (Maddie Meyer/Getty Images)
“I’d honestly prefer to talk about football and this team than anything I’m doing off the field other than the back-to-school event that I did the other day,” Garrett said to media on Aug. 20.
Garrett added that he tried to “keep my personal life personal. And I’d rather focus on this team when I can.”
It was hard not to ask Garrett about what happened in 2022, when he suffered a shoulder and biceps strains, among other less serious injuries, after his car flipped over. He had to miss the team’s Week 4 contest against the Atlanta Falcons, though he returned to his normal self that year. He had 16 sacks and two forced fumbles in 16 games for Cleveland.
This past year, Garrett broke the single-season sack record (23) with a league-high 33 tackles for loss in an insane campaign that made him a lock for the Defensive Player of the Year Award in his ninth season for the Browns. He had now made it three straight first-team All-Pro honors and five overall.

Myles Garrett of the Cleveland Browns looks on during warmups prior to the game at Gillette Stadium on Oct. 26, 2025 in Foxborough, Massachusetts. (Billie Weiss/Getty Images)
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But Garrett will now have to either appear in court on March 10, or pay a fine of more than $100 for his latest speeding ticket, per WKYC in Cleveland. After signing a then-record four-year, $160 million extension with Cleveland last year, the latter is likely the option he’ll choose.
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“He’s a bad guy”: Oleksandr Usyk names the only opponent he truly disliked
Personal vendettas rarely get in the way of sportsmanship and respect when Oleksandr Usyk steps through the ropes.
Usyk became the undisputed cruiserweight world champion with three victories on away soil, winning in Poland to get his hands on the WBO belt, before unifications in Latvia and Russia in the semi-final and final of the World Boxing Super Series.
After defending the undisputed throne against Tony Bellew, the Ukrainian then moved up to heavyweight and replicated the feat to become the first undisputed heavyweight champion of the four-belt era – trumping the likes of Anthony Joshua, Daniel Dubois and Tyson Fury.
Since overcoming ‘AJ’ to become a household name, Usyk has continued to stick to his values and show complete respect to opponents – that includes Fury, who did his best to drag the Ukrainian southpaw into a war of words.
However, when speaking to DAZN Boxing, Usyk explained why the only dance partner of his career that he did not ‘love’ was Germany’s Marco Huck, who he collided with back in 2017, in the quarter-final of the WBSS.
“My weakness, [is that] I love people. I love my opponent. Only one of my opponents, I didn’t love, it is Marco Huck.
“Yeah, he is a bad guy because this man said bad words for [about] my mama.”
Following a heated build-up, Usyk declared that he would ‘bury’ Huck when they fought and that he did, knocking the Berlin-based former world champion out in his own backyard in round 10 of their battle at Max Schmeling Hall.
Years prior to the bout, Huck had enjoyed the joint longest run as champion in the cruiserweight ranks, racking up 13 defences of the WBO belt. He still competes at 41-year-old, now at heavyweight, although at a much lower level than in his day.
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Canucks show ‘more fight’ in close loss to Hurricanes
Losing should never be acceptable. But if they can lose the way they did Wednesday, 6-4 against the elite Carolina Hurricanes, the Canucks will earn respect and patience from their fans during what is going to be a loyalty-testing rebuild. Which ones aren’t?
Uncompetitive and unredeemable in their last two losses, and challenged Wednesday morning by general manager Patrik Allvin to show “more fight,” the Canucks dug in and competed against the soaring Hurricanes, who needed an empty-net goal from Nikolaj Ehlers to complete a hat trick that secured his team’s 15th win in 20 games.
Even after Carolina reeled off four straight goals in 10 minutes in the second period to pull away 5-2, the Canucks didn’t disintegrate as they have in so many games since the New Year when they’ve surrendered goals in bunches.
Canuck Brock Boeser scored during a five-on-three power play late in the second period, and Nils Hoglander blistered a one-timer from Elias Pettersson’s nice pass to make it 5-4 at 6:45 of the third.
And even shorthanded, but skating five-against-five with their goalie pulled, the Canucks made it uncomfortable for the Hurricanes in the final minute before Ehlers scored with 14 seconds to go.
Disappointed, but not embarrassed.
“I mean, it’s tough when you’re in a spiral like this,” centre Teddy Blueger said. “We go down like we did last game against Dallas (6-1 loss on Monday) and you can just feel the energy kind of drain out. It’s tough to pick yourself back up; that’s maybe a bit of human nature. But we’ve got to fight that. I think the least we can do is compete and fight in every game, no matter the score.
“Obviously, we’d probably like to have a couple of those goals back (in the second period) with the breakdowns and stuff. But I think in terms of competing and fighting back and not getting deflated like we have been, I thought that was pretty good tonight.”
Defenceman Filip Hronek said: “The effort was there today. I’m pretty happy about that. But we have to be consistent with that, and we have to have that effort for 60 (minutes) and not 35 or whatever minutes.”
As a group, the Canucks top players were far more noticeable than they’ve been in most games since the team collapsed into 2026 on a freefall that is now 2-17-4 since Dec. 29.
Certainly not known for his physicality, Boeser recorded a career-high seven hits as Vancouver out-hit Carolina 30-13. Specifically challenged by Allvin during the GM’s morning press conference after the Tyler Myers trade, Pettersson played with a little more spark and had his second two-point game since Nov. 17. And Hronek, the last defenceman standing from the Canucks’ National Hockey League playoff run less than two years ago, may have been the best player on either team, finishing with a goal and two assists and a plus-two rating in the loss.
The last-overall Canucks just need a lot more of this, no matter what else happens before Friday’s trade deadline.
“It feels a whole lot better when the guys are trying like that,” rookie defenceman Tom Willander said. “You know, some of these teams are very good and they’re tough, and you’re not going to win all of them. But you always have to compete. I don’t feel like it’s just about playing well; I feel like if you compete, you’re just going to get a lot better. Even practices are better.”
The Canucks weren’t winning even before they started trading important players like Quinn Hughes, Kiefer Sherwood and Myers (which is why they traded them to start this rebuild). So nobody expects this hollowed-out team to be winning now, especially with star goalie Thatcher Demko out for the season after hip surgery.
But what the Canucks had lost along with 21 of 23 games before Wednesday was baseline competitiveness — the basic, professional combination of preparedness and execution that every team requires to be respectable.
Thirteen of the previous 18 regulation losses were by three or more goals, and in its last two losses, Saturday in Seattle and Monday at home against Dallas, Vancouver was outscored 11-2.
Despite what some unfamiliar with the last century may think, these aren’t the darkest days in franchise history. The Canucks were in peril of being sold and moved a couple of times, and when Brian Burke was hired as GM in 1998, ownership charged him with saving the franchise in a city where Rogers Arena was half-empty many nights.
But this rebuild will turn black if the Canucks not only lose but surrender. Nobody wants to watch that.
So Allvin challenged his players to dig in and compete.
“I want to see more fight in the group,” he told reporters. “It’s their job, the players’ job and our job, to prepare every night for the fans and playing for the crest. You can lose games, but you’ve got to play the right way and you’ve got to compete. And that’s what I want to see from my group here moving forward. I want to see us getting better. Losing games is not great for anyone, and we owe it to the fans here that have been great in Vancouver, and our players should play hard every night.”
“One-hundred-percent agree,” Willander said. “I think that’s something (fight) you need more of. You know, you can’t always be at your best, but you can always work hard. I feel like you need to compete and show up even on the days you’re not, you know, not everything is clicking. And I feel like that’s going to be so important later on when you want to win those big games.”
From now until the end of the season, all of the Canucks’ games are big for respect – their own and from the people they need to support the rebuild by buying tickets to watch them play.
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