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Sports

Japan dig deep to rescue point in World Cup opener against the Netherlands

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Japan twice came back from a goal down to secure a 2-2 World Cup draw with the Netherlands on Sunday as Daichi Kamada’s 88th-minute deflection earned Hajime Moriyasu’s side a point in the Group F clash at Dallas Stadium. The game came to life after a tense opening 45 ⁠minutes, with Virgil van Dijk giving the Dutch the lead with a pinpoint header in the 51st minute before Keito Nakamura levelled six minutes later.

But while Crysencio Summerville looked to have won all three points for Ronald Koeman’s side with a curling strike in the 64th minute, Japan levelled when Kamada deflected Koki Ogawa’s powerful header into the net.

A ​relatively ⁠uneventful first half started promisingly for the Dutch when Donyell Malen forced Zion Suzuki into action, the Japan goalkeeper palming the ball over the bar in ⁠the third minute.

Virgil van Dijk gave the Netherlands the lead in the second half
Virgil van Dijk gave the Netherlands the lead in the second half (Reuters)

That early warning jolted the Japanese into taking control of possession, a move that limited openings for both sides. Hiroki Ito’s ‌defensive work denied Malen in the 34th minute and, from the resulting Tijjani Reijnders corner, Suzuki kept out the forward’s header before Shogo Taniguchi hacked clear.

With two minutes left in the half, Nakamura almost put Japan in front, pulling his shot wide of Bart Verbruggen’s right post having been found by Ritsu Doan’s searching cross. Moments later Ayase Ueda hit the side netting while Suzuki gathered another Malen header in stoppage time.

The Netherlands made a bright start to the second half and that were rewarded six minutes after the resumption when Van Dijk struck. Reijnders’ free kick was headed clear by Doan to Frenkie de Jong and he shuttled possession to Ryan Gravenberch for the Liverpool man to send an inviting cross towards his clubmate, who nodded beyond Suzuki via the inside of the post.

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Keito Nakamura slotted home the first equaliser to kick start Japan's resurgence
Keito Nakamura slotted home the first equaliser to kick start Japan’s resurgence (Reuters)

Within seven minutes the Japanese were level. Takefusa Kubo’s cutback from the byline found Nakamura lurking in the area and, after a ‌couple of touches to control, the winger drove his deflected shot into the ​bottom corner.

Parity was to last seven minutes as the Dutch reclaimed the lead through Summerville, the West Ham United winger bending a perfectly placed left-foot strike around Suzuki from just inside the area.

Kubo ⁠shot over the bar with an effort on the run as Japan sought to respond again and, with two ‌minutes remaining, their efforts ​paid off.

Substitute Ogawa powered his header towards goal ‌and, with the ball taking a deflection ​off the head of the unwitting Kamada, Verbruggen was unable to deny the Japanese a second equaliser.

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Taylor Hall goes from No. 1 pick to MVP to Stanley Cup champion with Hurricanes

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Taylor Hall was a No. 1 pick in the draft in 2010. He was the NHL’s MVP in 2018.

Now, he is a Stanley Cup champion.

No longer in the prime of his career, Hall was one of the biggest reasons the Carolina Hurricanes won 16 of 19 games during this playoff run.

“He’s fast, he’s physical (and) he makes great plays with the puck,” defenseman Jaccob Slavin said. “He’s selling out to block shots. And so you need that. He’s really just been a complete player this whole playoffs.”

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Hall at 34 took on a workmanlike role on a line alongside 23-year-old Logan Stankoven and 22-year-old Jackson Blake. That trio led the way through the first three rounds of the playoffs and in the final against Vegas. Hall was a force in every way — generating offense, hammering opponents and sacrificing himself on defense.

“Every line on our team has a physical aspect, and I think it falls on me to play like that,” Hall said. “Florida last year, there wasn’t a guy on their team that didn’t hit and didn’t make it really, really hard to be on the ice against them and you watch and learn.”

Hall fit in quickly with Carolina

With Chicago, Hall played Carolina on Jan. 20, 2025, and liked what he saw in a hard-fought overtime loss.

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“I got a first-hand glimpse of the intensity in which we play,” Hall said.

His agent had approached him about the Hurricanes’ interest in him and a few days later he joined them as part of the same three-team trade that got them Mikko Rantanen. Initially, Hall was not in shape to play coach Rod Brind’Amour’s brand of hockey.

But general manager Eric Tulsky liked what he saw in Hall.

“He brings a blend of speed, skill and heaviness that really fits for us,” Tulsy said. “He has the ability to get pucks into the zone, win pucks along the way and he has the vision and creativity and skill to get pucks to the middle and create scoring chances off it. We spend a lot of time in the offensive zone, and we need players like him who can not just win the battle along the wall but get it to premium ice and create those top-tier chances and he’s been able to do that for us.”

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Hall settled in the Raleigh area, and before the end of April signed a three-year extension worth just over $3 million annually. A lot went into it, including a bad experience as a free agent during the pandemic and being able to drive his dog to his offseason home.

“I was happy here, and I love the way we play and ultimately I saw this as a place that I think we could be here,” Hall said. “That’s what I envisioned, and everything else seemed like it made a lot of sense.”

Brind’Amour as a player was a grinder, a defense-first center who made a living out of stopping players like Hall. As a coach, he knew all about Hall’s skill as a winger, his 93-point season in 2017-18 with New Jersey that got him the Hart Trophy and the kind of offensive talent the Hurricanes were getting.

The player who arrived was nothing like that.

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“He didn’t bring any of that, ‘I’m an MVP’ and I’m going to do it this way.’ It was, ‘What do I have to do?’” Brind’Amour said. “When he first got with us, he was playing like 12 minutes a night. It didn’t matter. It was whatever he has to do to win. That’s refreshing, and that’s good on him.”

Hall helped Carolina reach the 2025 Eastern Conference Final, then he and the team faltered against the defending-champion Panthers. That turned out to be an important lesson for a guy in his 30s thirsty for a title.

“I didn’t play well in that conference final at all, and I think just the way that Florida played and the way that I played, it was a learning experience for me even at 33,” Hall said. “It was just different way to play in the playoffs. There’s a way to play, and there’s a way that the really good teams do it. I took it over the summer and tried to just get better and better.”

Putting that into practice allowed Hall to set a record. His 18 seasons between getting drafted by Edmonton are the most before hoisting the Stanley Cup in league history for a No. 1 pick.

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All because Hall made a conscious decision to fit exactly what the Hurricanes needed.

“It’s great for the role that we need him to play,” Slavin said. “I think he still has all the talent in the world, and you witness it night in and night out. He’s been great. And, yeah, has he adapted a little bit to how we play here? I think so. But that just speaks to the player that he is.”

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Former AEW Champion’s Deal Ending

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A former AEW National Champion has faced his share of ups and downs in the Jacksonville-based promotion. Jurassic Express’s Jack Perry quickly became popular among fans after the inception of the company. However, things became difficult once they split. Marko Stunt had left AEW later, Luchasaurus became Christian Cage’s henchman, and Jungle Boy was establishing himself as a singles star.

During that phase in 2023, Jack Perry crossed paths with CM Punk. The two even had an infamous backstage altercation, which led to the Second City Saint’s firing and Jungle Boy’s suspension. After returning from suspension, he introduced the ‘Scapegoat’ gimmick. While it drew attention in its early phase, it didn’t go over with the crowd. He dropped the character in 2026 and is now once again a top babyface of the company. He has also reunited with Luchasaurus.

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Jack Perry became National Champion a few months ago and had a short reign with the gold. He lost it to Mark Davis a few months ago. Not only that, the Don Callis Family member went on to eliminate him from the Owen Hart Foundation tournament quarterfinals.

Wrestling Observer Newsletter‘s Bryan Alvarez said Jack Perry’s contract is set to end soon, and he is currently negotiating a new deal with All Elite Wrestling.

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Veteran slammed AEW for releasing footage of Jack Perry and CM Punk

While speaking on Gabby AF, D’Von Dudley addressed Tony Khan, airing the backstage fight between Perry and Punk a few years ago at All In 2023. The WWE veteran said that Tony Khan aired the ‘dirty laundry’ for ‘cheap ratings’.

“I’m not in AEW, so I don’t really know what’s going on there, but I don’t think it should have been appropriate to air something like that, even though it happened months ago…. that’s something that you just don’t air out. That’s your dirty laundry. You keep that to yourself. The problem was handled. Punk moved on, now it’s time for AEW to move on. Jack Perry is somewhere in Japan and let’s just leave it like that. ‘Oh, well, we need to expose this because Punk needs to be exposed.’ No, you did it for a cheap rating. I’m sorry. I’m not the only one that feels that way. There’s a lot of AEW hardcore fans that feel the same way,” he said.

It will be interesting to see whether the former National Champion renews his deal with the company.

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