Sports
J.J. McCarthy Trade Theory, DeAndre Hopkins, CB in the Draft
The Minnesota Vikings’ rumor mill never stops, and it especially doesn’t stop on the weekend before the draft. Here’s a look at the current lay of the land.
Draft week has arrived, and the Vikings have no shortage of talking points.
The draft gets underway in Pittsburgh on Thursday night, and here’s the speculative Vikings stuff to know in the meantime.
Three Storylines Framing Minnesota’s Latest Rumor Cycle
The Purple Rumor Mill for April 18th, 2026.
Rumor: J.J. McCarthy makes sense as a trade candidate for the Pittsburgh Steelers.
The Vikings have shown no interest in moving McCarthy, but NFL writer Sayre Bedinger mapped out potential landing spots this week, pointing to the Steelers, New York Jets, and Los Angeles Rams.
He noted about McCarthy to Pittsburgh, “The long-term outlook at the quarterback position for the Pittsburgh Steelers is extremely unclear. Aaron Rodgers is probably going to come back for the 2026 season, but after this year, who knows what the Steelers are going to do? They’ll be at the mercy of wherever they fall in the draft, or stuck in the purgatory that is cycling through veteran retreads.”
“There is no long-term vision right now, which is why taking a shot on McCarthy’s upside and getting him in the building with Mike McCarthy could make a lot of sense. He’d be able to spend a year learning from Aaron Rodgers, getting acclimated to the offense, and really giving the Steelers a reason to not be desperate in next year’s draft. It also keeps them flexible there.”
If McCarthy requested a trade, the Steelers might make sense as a destination, but until then, it’s reasonable to expect that McCarthy will stay in Minnesota. He’s only 23 and has time to watch and learn.
Rumor: DeAndre Hopkins, indeed, will be a free-agent option for the Vikings after the draft.
Star Tribune’s Ben Goessling re-floated Hopkins as a post-draft wide receiver solution for the Vikings, and the idea still has some traction.
He joined Paul Allen’s show on KFAN this week, and Allen inquired: “So the Jalen Nailor spot, do the Vikings want a veteran wide receiver … or do you think O’Connell and the gang are sitting on something sneaky they love in the draft?”
Goessling replied, “I’m going to answer that yes — to both. I think, if they could find a veteran — I mean, DeAndre Hopkins’ name has come up. If you could get a guy in here like a Hopkins, that has rapport with Kyler Murray — it depends on what he wants to play for, it depends on what he wants his role to be.”
If Hopkins signs a cheap contract, which seems likely, the move offers considerable upside. The Vikings need a reliable WR3, a role Hopkins suits well, and training camp would determine the receiving corps’ hierarchy, with a younger player potentially surpassing him.
Hopkins’ established redzone prowess tends to endure, and even in a limited role, he would provide a dependable scoring threat. A deal in the $2–3 million range would represent a sensible investment for this potential payoff.
Rumor: A Round 1 cornerback probably isn’t a priority for Minnesota.
Not so fast on the idea of the Vikings picking a Round 1 cornerback next week.
Analyzing the draft, The Athletic‘s Alec Lewis weighed in this week, “Coaching input will be weighed heavily. And unlike previous seasons, the Vikings have a bevy of picks in the top 100. The team’s leadership knows it needs to find hits.”
“The Vikings haven’t used a first- or second-round pick on a cornerback since Brian Flores arrived, and I don’t expect them to start now, especially after signing free agent James Pierre.”
Before Lewis’s assertion, cornerback tracked as a draft need — and it likely still holds that label. It’s just that Flores doesn’t seem to need cornerbacks for his defense to cook.
Lewis’s opinion has credence when viewed in the context of recent Vikings draft history. In 2023, rather than selecting a cornerback in the 1st Round, they chose Jordan Addison. They repeated this pattern in 2024, opting for J.J. McCarthy and Dallas Turner, and again in 2025 when they drafted Donovan Jackson.
Despite cornerback consistently being a position of need during each of those draft cycles, Minnesota waited until after the 1st Round to address it — or just ignored the position altogether.
It wouldn’t be shocking if the Vikings were content with Byron Murphy Jr., Isaiah Rodgers, and the aforementioned Pierre. Perhaps Minnesota will find a cornerback in the middle or late rounds of the draft and call it good.
Sports
Manny Pacquiao names the top 3 greatest fighters of all time
Recognised as an all-time great by almost every boxing fan, Manny Pacquiao is undeniably one of the most talented and adored fighters to have graced the sport. When asked to name his own top three greatest fighters, there was a common theme amongst the names selected by the Filipino icon.
Pacquiao remains as boxing’s only eight-division world champion, having first claimed world honours as a flyweight and then repeated the feat as high as super-welterweight during an arduous and ongoing three-decade long career.
At 47-years-old, ‘Pac Man’ is attempting to further enhance his legacy, with plans to break his own world record as the oldest welterweight champion in boxing history, having previously won the title at the record-breaking age of 40 years and 215 days, and held it for two additional years.
Whilst unsuccessful in his challenge for Mario Barrios’ WBC welterweight crown upon his comeback to the sport, Pacquiao had been rumoured for a shot at Rolando Romero’s WBA title, before talks collapsed.
Although, Pacquiao is now preparing for a shock rematch with perennial rival Floyd Mayweather, but there remains some uncertainty surrounding that bout, as to whether it will be an exhibition contest or a fully professional encounter.
Pacquiao continues to build hype for the event and pile pressure on Mayweather to agree to a sanctioned bout and in an interview with Inside The Ring, the beloved veteran refused to name Mayweather amongst his top three fighters of all time.
Instead, Pacquiao picked those who, like himself, were truly loved by fight fans around the globe during their respective careers.
“Excluding me; Muhammad Ali, Sugar Ray Leonard, Julio Cesar Chavez.”
It’s no surprise to see the Filipino icon select the legendary trio, with each of Ali, Leonard and Chavez widely regarded as three of the greatest boxers to ever lace up a pair of gloves.
Pacquiao is scheduled to face Mayweather on Saturday, September 19, with further details regarding the fight expected to emerge in the coming weeks.
Sports
Three underdogs that could pull off first-round upsets in Stanley Cup Playoffs
Last year’s first round of the Stanley Cup playoffs was relatively chalky. Only two lower-seeded teams — Edmonton and Florida — advanced to the next round (and ultimately the Stanley Cup Final).
As evidenced by the six new teams in this year’s field, there is an element of unpredictability that has been missing recently. Here are three lower-seeded teams that can pull off first-round upsets:
Opponent: Pittsburgh Penguins
Odds of winning series: 55.1 per cent
The eighth edition of the “Battle of Pennsylvania” is certainly the unlikeliest, as neither team was predicted to make the playoffs at the start of the season.
Pittsburgh, which is back in the playoffs for the first time since 2022, was an offensive powerhouse during the regular season, finishing third in scoring and fifth in expected goals. But Philadelphia, making its first post-season appearance since 2020, was one of the league’s top defensive teams this season, especially after the Olympic break. From Feb. 25 to April 16, the Flyers were third in expected goals against per 60 minutes (2.69).
More specifically, the Flyers shut down their opponents off the rush following the Olympics, allowing the fewest rush scoring chances per 60 minutes (4.99) and fewest total rush goals (eight). The Penguins, meanwhile, generated the fourth-most rush chances per 60 minutes (7.03) and scored 71 rush goals in the regular season, tied for second most. That will go a long way in determining who wins this series.
There is also the question of whether Penguins goaltender Stuart Skinner can put his shaky playoff performances from his days in Edmonton behind him. Skinner made 16 quality starts in 27 tries (59.3 per cent) for the Penguins following the trade last December, but he posted a quality-start rate of just 46 per cent (23/50) for the Oilers in the playoffs.
Opponent: Vegas Golden Knights
Odds of winning series: 52.9 per cent
On the surface, it seems odd that the playoff-inexperienced Mammoth are favoured against the battle-tested Golden Knights, who are 7-0-1 since John Tortorella replaced Bruce Cassidy as head coach late last month.
Vegas has continued playing excellent defence under Tortorella, leading the league in expected goals against per 60 minutes since March 30. And now the Golden Knights are getting outstanding goaltending as well. Carter Hart is 6-0-0 with 5.3 goals saved above expected (GSAE) since Tortorella took over behind the bench. He has allowed 10 goals in his six starts (1.66 goals-against average).
Despite the recent improvement in net, however, the Golden Knights finished the regular season with the worst goaltending in the league based on GSAE. If Vegas’ goaltending reverts back to its pre-Tortorella form, then Utah has a path to win the series.
The Mammoth have a host of dynamic skaters, starting with captain Clayton Keller, whose 417 slot-driving plays (passes and carries) ranked sixth in the league during the regular season. Dylan Guenther led all forwards with 177 one-timer attempts, and he scored 17 of his team-high 40 goals in that fashion. And Nick Schmaltz is an incredibly effective net-front player, scoring 23 of his 33 goals this season from the inner slot, tied for sixth most in the league.
Defensively, the Mammoth are no slouches, either. Their defensive-zone denial rate of 49.9 per cent led the league, right ahead of the Golden Knights at 49 per cent.
Opponent: Carolina Hurricanes
Odds of winning series: 45 per cent
This is the Spider-Man pointing meme of first-round playoff series. Carolina and Ottawa share many similarities. For one, they are two of the top teams in the league at tilting the ice. The Hurricanes (54.4 per cent) and Senators (54 per cent) ranked fourth and fifth, respectively, in expected-goal share at five-on-five during the regular season. (In all situations, Ottawa finished second in expected goals against per 60 minutes, while Carolina finished fifth.)
The Hurricanes won at least one playoff series in each of coach Rod Brind’Amour’s first seven seasons and can become the third team in league history to extend that streak to eight by defeating the Senators. But despite leading the league in shot attempts on an annual basis, Carolina has had difficulty scoring at times in the post-season. In the Hurricanes’ 10 series wins under Brind’Amour, they have averaged 3.47 goals per game. But they have scored only 2.03 goals per game in the seven series they have lost.
Ottawa has what it takes defensively to frustrate Carolina. One key to a Senators upset will be the play of their shutdown line, which is anchored by Selke Trophy candidates Michael Amadio and Shane Pinto. The linemates generated 54.9 per cent of the expected goals at even strength during the regular season despite starting only 17.7 per cent of their shared shifts in the offensive zone. (Amadio and Pinto will surely get acquainted with the Hurricanes’ top line of Andrei Svechnikov, Sebastian Aho and Seth Jarvis.)
Senators goaltender Linus Ullmark is also entering the playoffs on a bit of a roll. He saved 5.8 goals above expected over his final six starts of the regular season.
Sports
Why Rickie Fowler’s 3rd driver of the year isn’t cause for alarm
Sports
Padraig Harrington makes BOLD Rory McIlroy Masters prediction
For 38 consecutive major starts that spanned a decade, Rory McIlroy didn’t win a major. Now, after his back-to-back Masters titles, he has won two in his past five starts.
So, what’s next? Another Irish star is predicting big things.
“Rory could win 10 of them at this stage, or five of them, anyway,” said Padraig Harrington, speaking at Concession Golf Club in Florida on Tuesday ahead of this week’s Senior PGA Championship. “He probably will still be competitive at 50 years of age around that golf course. For him, it was interesting that he won that one with his short game, which makes him even better a player.
“He’s always been a superb chipper, but now it’s with the putting and things like that,” he continued. “A very rounded game and a game that looks like it has a lot of longevity in it. So he’s in a very nice place going forward, particularly at that tournament that you would think. It’s amazing when you win one, that he’s now got two, and we’re thinking that maybe two or three or five would be realistic around that golf course.”
Harrington’s point that McIlroy, who turns 37 next month, could compete at Augusta National past his prime isn’t crazy. Jack Nicklaus famously won at Augusta National at age 46 in 1986. Tiger Woods was 43 when he won in 2019. Even Fred Couples, who plays little golf these days, became the oldest player to make a Masters cut when he made the weekend as a 63-year-old in 2023.
Last week, McIlroy held a six-shot, 36-hole lead at Augusta but lost it all in the third round Saturday. He started Sunday sharing the lead with Cameron Young but fell back after a double-bogey 5 on the par-3 4th hole, but he took control with back-to-back birdies on 12 and 13 and beat Scottie Scheffler by one.
“He showed some real good character there,” Harrington said. “You know, psychology-wise he really won that tournament. His mentality and how he went about things, that’s a very strong showing for him. He obviously still has the physical side of the game, but to show that short game and the mental side of the game means he looks like he would be a very strong force for a while to come in the game.”
While we won’t make our own claims regarding how many more Masters titles McIlroy might win, we will say he has work to do. Nicklaus holds the record with six Masters victories. Woods has five, and Arnold Palmer won four. If McIlroy wins one more, he’ll be the sixth golfer to win three.
Sports
Curry Leads Warriors in Play-In comeback win over Clippers
Stephen Curry delivered when it mattered most as the Golden State Warriors came from behind to beat the Los Angeles Clippers 126-121 in the SoFi NBA Play-In Tournament.
Golden State trailed by 13 points with under 10 minutes remaining, but closed the game on a 16–5 run to keep their season alive.
Curry led the charge, finishing with 35 points and seven three-pointers, including 27 in the second half.
“That’s what you live for right there,” Curry said.
While Curry controlled the offense, Draymond Green anchored the defense, limiting Kawhi Leonard in the closing stages.
Leonard managed just two shots in the fourth quarter before the game slipped away.
“Hall of Fame defender. It was hard to even get shots up,” Leonard said.
Curry’s moment came late when he knocked down a go-ahead three with 50 seconds remaining, falling into the crowd as the shot dropped.
“This is what you work all year for, all summer, offseason,” Curry said. “We’re not guaranteed a (playoff) series yet, but these nights make everything worth it… Considering how our season has gone… for us to play the way we did tonight was special.”
Head coach Steve Kerr also said:
“For one night, we’re us. We’re champions again,” Kerr said. “I don’t care. Just absolutely beautiful to watch.”
After a difficult regular season, the win leaves Golden State one victory away from securing a playoff series.
“I know we’re not satisfied,” Curry added. “We want to go to Phoenix and guarantee a playoff series against OKC. That’s the next goal… The eight guys that got on the floor all had a part in making it happen.”
Sports
‘We have to get behind the team’: Whitecaps fans rally as relocation rumours swirl
Barry Walker has spent every Vancouver Whitecaps game this season leading fan chants and holding up signs that read “STAY CAPS STAY.”
The 75-year-old superfan said the posters replace the ones he previously carried that said “Go Caps Go.” He swapped them out as rumours around the future of the Major League Soccer club grew in recent months.
“Of course we want our Whitecaps to stay. We don’t want them to go to another city, so that’s the intention of the signs,” he said in an interview Friday.
Walker, who said he has not missed a Whitecaps home match in 12 years, has made it his mission to increase fanfare at the games.
“The crowds are getting more educated. They’re loving the team more and every year is getting a little better,” he said. “The last couple of years have been fantastic.”
Similar calls were made earlier this week by midfielder Thomas Muller, who encouraged fans to fill the lower bowl during games at BC Place.
The Whitecaps faced Sporting Kansas City at BC Place on Friday, winning 3-0.
An announced crowd of 21,777 fans attended the match, marking the 18th consecutive MLS game with more than 20,000 people at the stadium.
Throughout the game, the crowd was engaged, gasping at a near header goal at the 2nd minute, then jumping from their seats and erupting in cheers when Emmanuel Sabbi scored a scrappy goal at the 13th minute mark.
The same energy came at 23rd and 28th minutes, as the team scored two more before halftime.
Fan Kevin Schachter, 42, said it is “huge” for him to have a local MLS team in Vancouver where he can attend games live.
The Winnipeg native said he moved to Vancouver a few years ago and has become “quite a significant supporter since.”
“I know there’s a risk of losing the club and that would be devastating,” he said in an interview.
The team made its first MLS Cup final appearance last year, where it fell to Lionel Messi’s Inter Miami.
New Whitecaps fan Lauren Bugliarisi said it is her first year with season tickets.
“We started following closely after the end of last season when it was picking up and we were winning a lot after the playoffs,” the 30-year-old said in an interview ahead of kickoff Friday.
“It feels like the first team that I’ve followed that has gone far. It’s just nice to get to cheer for Vancouver and see us go far and be doing well.”
Bugliarisi said she feels the excitement around the sport has continue to grow this year as the FIFA World Cup nears. Vancouver will host seven matches in June and July.
“That’s part of the reason why we started following Vancouver as well,” she said of the tournament. “It feels like it’s going to be this next wave of sports for our city.”
Alison Martin, 31, sported a Whitecaps scarf as she made her way to her seats alongside her father.
They’ve have seasons tickets since around 2015, she said, and have “pretty much been to every game since.”
“I love coming to these games. I find it’s the best sporting experience throughout the Lower Mainland, and now that we also have the (Northern Super League’s) Vancouver Rise, it is fantastic,” Martin said, noting she has seasons tickets to Rise games as well.
“It just seems like every weekend there’s a soccer game.”
She said the fan experience has grown in recent years.
“It’s always just been so electric. I always tell people like if you want to have a good sporting experience come to a Whitecaps game,” Martin said.
“If they left the city, it would be really sad and I think there would be a huge gap in the sporting community and the energy of the city.”
For some, including Schachter, it’s about soaking up every minute of live professional soccer in case the end is near.
“If this is the last time we have a top-tier team, I want be here for every moment of that,” he said.
But Walker is doing what he can to prevent that from happening, and is encouraging other Vancouverites to do the same.
“I think people should know they should come here and watch the Whitecaps. Simple as that, because it’s going to help the team stay here,” he said. “We have to get behind the team.”
Sports
Crucible pays tribute to John Virgo at World Championship
Watch as the Crucible pays tribute to snooker legend and BBC commentator John Virgo, who died aged 79 in February.
Sports
Women’s Six Nations: Dallavalle starts as Cox withdraws with injury
Wales: Powell; Singleton, Dallavalle, Keight, Joyce; George, Lockwood; Pyrs, Jones, Tuipulotu, Aiono, Crabb, Lewis, Williams (capt), King
Replacements: Reardon, Davies, Rose, John, Metcalfe, Evans, Bevan, De Vera.
France: Barrat; Grando, Rousset, Vernier, Murie; Arbez, Bourdon Sansus; Brosseau, Lazarko, Khalfaoui, Zago, Fall Raclot, Berthoumieu, M Feleu (capt), L Champon
Replacements: Riffonneau, Mwayembe, Deshaye, Soqeta, Escudero, A Chambon, T Feleu.
Sports
Magic crush Hornets, tap into the team everyone expected just in time
Go back and look at all the NBA preseason predictions. Just about everyone had the Orlando Magic being a top-four team in the East and a legitimate threat to win the conference. They had the star duo of Franz Wagner and Paolo Banchero. They had the defense. The depth. They made the big trade for Desmond Bane, sending four first-round picks to the Memphis Grizzlies in a clear signal that they, too, believed this was their chance to rise in a wide-open East.
It did not exactly go according to plan.
Orlando struggled all year to establish any sustainable momentum. Injuries hit them pretty hard. Jalen Suggs (to whom Orlando’s lineup successes are highly connected) and Wagner combined to miss 73 games. But it was more than that. The team was just off.
Banchero became a punching bag for his inefficiency and dumb decisions, even though the numbers were remarkably similar to past seasons. As expectations rise, so does frustration, and even when Banchero had solid stretches, the Magic were still a blah team.
They wound up in the Play-In Tournament and lost to the Philadelphia 76ers in the 7-8 game, largely in the same uninspiring fashion they displayed all season. It made it seem like Friday night’s do-or-die game vs. the Charlotte Hornets was a forgone conclusion. The Magic would lose, slink into the offseason, fire Jamahl Mosley and start looking at potential trades for Banchero.
That also did not go according to plan.
Instead, the Magic obliterated the Hornets, who showed up expecting to put on their usual circus act, only to realize the Magic were there for a demolition derby.
It was the version of the Magic that everyone expected to see from the start this season, especially with the physical, at times straight-jacket, defense. Banchero was superb with 25 points, taking and making efficient shots and making quick decisions to get downhill and finish with force.
And again …
And again …
And when Charlotte managed to cut the drive off, he did this:
This was superstar stuff from Banchero, who was hesitant in all the wrong ways on Wednesday against Philly but isn’t exactly new to playing like this in the biggest games. He averaged 29-8-4 on 44% 3-point shooting against the Celtics in the playoffs last year, and he has averaged 28 points, 8.5 rebounds, 4.1 assists and 2.3 steals on 41.8% 3-point shooting across 12 career playoff games.
Is this version of the Magic a threat to the Pistons?
There’s no saying this will carry over against the top-seeded Detroit Pistons in the first round. But there’s also no saying it won’t. Again, this is the team the Magic were supposed to be all along. Banchero has had sustained stretches of this kind of play. He’s a superstar-level talent. Bane has been good all season. Wagner is rounding back into form. Suggs is a beast. This is about as talented as a No. 8 seed team can be in the Eastern Conference, and they are facing something of a mirror-image opponent in the Pistons.
Both teams smother you with physical defense that is officiated way more leniently in the playoffs; this stands to be an absolute street-fight series. Both teams struggle to shoot. The Magic don’t have a creator like Detroit’s Cade Cunningham, but you could make a case that Orlando’s big three of Banchero, Wagner and Bane represent more star power than Cunningham and Jalen Duren.
Both teams do the bulk of their damage inside. Nobody gets to the free-throw line more than the Magic, but the Pistons are close. Orlando is a good offensive rebounding team, but Detroit is better. Everything about a series like this screams slugfest, which might not be everyone’s cup of tea, but it could be fun nonetheless.
Can the Magic beat the Pistons? Probably not. When you have a whole season’s worth of evidence against a single game, go with the former. But don’t completely rule out the Magic, who are not your typical No. 8 seed in terms of talent.
If they bring the fight like they did Friday night, the team everyone expected to show up all season might actually stick around a little longer.
Sports
Cole Palmer responds to Man Utd links: ‘I’ve got no plans to move from Chelsea’
Cole Palmer has shut down talk of a move to Manchester United by insisting that he has “no plans” to leave Chelsea.
Palmer, a Manchester City academy graduate and boyhood United fan, has been linked with a switch back to his home city amid struggles this season at Stamford Bridge.
But the England international has reiterated his commitment to the Blues ahead of the visit of United on Saturday evening.
“Everyone just talks,” he told The Guardian when probed on the reports. “When I see it I just laugh.

“Obviously Manchester is my home. All my family are there, but I don’t miss it. Maybe I’ll miss it if I don’t go for three months or something. But then when I get home I think there’s nothing there for me anyway.
“I’ve got no plans to move from Chelsea. We’ve still got a lot to play for. We’ve got the FA Cup semi-final [against Leeds] and if we finish in a Champions League spot it puts us in a good position to sign players that we need.”
There were claims earlier this season that Palmer was homesick after enduring a challenging period marked by injury and a dip in form.
The 23-year-old has managed 10 goals in all competitions this term, down from 18 last season and 27 in a stunning debut campaign in 2023/24.
Chelsea head coach Liam Rosenior firmly stated that Palmer is “very happy” at the club in a direct response to reports of homesickness.
“I’ve had numerous conversations with Cole and he seems very happy to be here, he is very happy to be here,” Rosenior confirmed.
“He’s a huge part of our plans in the long term. He’s an outstanding player. Every player goes through difficult moments in their career in terms of injury. It’s not any reflection of his quality.”
Palmer’s statement of commitment to Chelsea acts as a refreshing change of pace for the Blues hierarchy, who have seen a couple of their top stars question the project in recent weeks.
Enzo Fernandez was suspended by the club for two games following an interview during the international break in which he appeared to court Real Madrid, while Marc Cucurella said Chelsea made the wrong decision in parting ways with Enzo Maresca in January, blaming “the instability around the club” on the former manager’s departure.

Chelsea require a change in fortunes in their bid to earn Champions League qualification this term, sitting four points off fifth-place Liverpool having lost four league games in their last five.
But Palmer says that he and his teammates have the trust of the owners to achieve, which is one of the reasons captain Reece James put pen to paper on a long-term contract in March.
“We spoke to the owners and they’re sure of the players that are going to do it,” Palmer added. “Reece won’t sign a six-year contract if he’s not spoken to the owners and the directors.
“Me and Reece spoke a lot. About things we need, players we need to sign and how things need to be. He wouldn’t sign a new contract if he didn’t know what was going on.”
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