Connect with us

Sports

NHL Power Rankings: Checking in on job security for all 32 general managers

Published

on

These days, NHL general managers are some of the busiest people on the planet. After the trade deadline hits at 3 p.m. ET / noon PT on Friday, though, they can settle back into a life of living and dying with the result of each game or fretting that the kid they drafted three years ago is officially a bust and might represent a tipping point in terms of remaining employed.

Honestly, these guys must blast Pepto-Bismal out of a water bottle like a goalie who just got scored on when we’re not looking. 

Of course, the upside to being one of only 32 people in the world to do what you do is undeniably high. On the very top level, constructing a Stanley Cup champion is something that stays on your resume forever and, in some cases, might even be something you request be etched on your tombstone. 

Only six general managers in the league — Stan Bowman, Bill Zito, Ken Holland, Doug Armstrong, Julien BriseBois and Kelly McCrimmon — have a championship to their name while holding that title. 

Advertisement

That leaves 24 men still searching for that first ring as a GM and, of course, some are much closer to realizing that dream than others.

  • 32 Thoughts: The Podcast
  • 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.

    Latest episode

With that in mind, and as the craziness of deadline rumours whirl all around us, we thought it prudent to use this week’s Power Rankings as check-in on the GM chair for all 32 clubs.

1. Dallas Stars (38-14-9) Jim Nill is the third-longest tenured GM in the league. The Stars are set up to win the Cup now and for the next few years. They just have to actually do it. 

2. Colorado Avalanche (41-10-9) Chris MacFarland took over from Joe Sakic just after the Avs won their title in 2022. Relative to last season — when he fixed Colorado’s goaltending problem on the fly, traded Mikko Rantanen for Martin Necas and acquired Brock Nelson at the deadline — this has been a relatively quiet year. 

Advertisement

3. Carolina Hurricanes (39-16-6) Eric Tulsky is in his second year on the job and the Canes are basically mentioned as a possible destination for every big offensive fish that comes on the trade market. Tulsky is an analytics expert who has to figure out how to get this team over the top. 

4. Buffalo Sabres (36-19-6) The Sabres hired Jarmo Kekalainen as a senior advisor in May and, about six months later, he was the Sabres GM. Kekalainen brings much more experience to the seat than many of his predecessors in Buffalo and while it’s hard to give him much credit for the team’s incredible surge in the past three months, he’s a man with the conviction and knowledge to meet this big moment in Western New York. 

5. Tampa Bay Lighting (38-17-4) Julien BriseBois has been Tampa’s GM for nearly eight years and has two rings to his credit. He feels like the right guy to keep the Bolts’ window to win open as long as possible, and would it surprise anyone if he had the final say in constructing Canada’s men’s team for the 2028 World Cup and 2030 Olympics?

6. Minnesota Wild (36-16-10) Between acquiring Quinn Hughes and winning gold in Milan, Bill Guerin is having himself a year. This is Year 7 for him in Minny and the Wild are well-positioned to push for a title. 

Advertisement

7. Pittsburgh Penguins (31-16-13) When Kyle Dubas landed in 2023, he was trying to immediately revive a team going the wrong way by doing things like trading for Erik Karlsson. Once the mandate became more future-focused, though, Dubas started doing a masterful job of picking up players who are making Pittsburgh’s long-term outlook brighter. This team making the playoffs — especially with Sidney Crosby injured for a significant stretch — would be one of the stories of the season.

8. Montreal Canadiens (33-18-9) Kent Hughes, hired four years ago, has done a great job overseeing the total rebuild. Now comes the hard part: how to jump from being competent to true contender. 

9. Detroit Red Wings (35-20-7) Only five GMs have had their jobs longer than Wings legend Steve Yzerman in Detroit. Hired in 2019, Yzerman appears poised to finally end Detroit’s extended playoff drought — which feels like it had to happen this year to avoid some hard questions — and trading for John Gibson last summer is a major factor in that. 

10. Anaheim Ducks (34-24-3) Pat Verbeek just passed his four-year anniversary as Ducks GM and the team is as well-positioned for future titles as any in the league. Choosing Leo Carlsson and Beckett Sennecke high in the draft when the team could easily have gone in other directions is a feather in Verbeek’s cap. 

Advertisement

11. Columbus Blue Jackets (31-21-8) Don Waddell is in his second year on the job in Columbus. The Jackets missed the playoffs by a hair in Year 1 and are on the outside looking in. Say this, though: it’s hard to argue with Waddell’s decision to replace Dean Evason — who, granted, was also hired by Waddell — with 70-year-old Rick Bowness. Columbus is 12-2-1 since Bowness took over in January. 

12. Boston Bruins (34-21-5) Don Sweeney, now on the job for more than a decade in Boston, leaned into a hard sell at this time last year and his B’s are back challenging for a playoff spot. Acquiring Fraser Minten from Toronto 12 months ago looks like a sizable ‘W.’

13. New York Islanders (35-22-5) Mathieu Darche has been on the job less than a year and the Islanders are looking good for a playoff return. Yeah, that has more to do with Ilya Sorokin’s fantastic goaltending and the incredible good fortune of moving up 10 spots in the lottery to draft Matthew Schaefer than anything the GM has done, but Darche got a good return for Noah Dobson and added some playoff savvy in the form of Ondrej Palat before the Olympic break. It feels like the Isles are in good hands. 

14. Vegas Golden Knights (29-19-14) Kelly McCrimmon took over for George McPhee in 2019, ahead of the Knights’ third season. It’s always foot-to-the-floor time in Vegas, but the club has won just eight playoff games since claiming the 2023 Cup. 

Advertisement

15. Utah Mammoth (32-25-4) The liquidating of futures has already begun in Utah with the acquisition of MacKenzie Weegar from Calgary and Bill Armstrong — hired in 2020 to run the Arizona Coyotes — will be a GM worth watching through the deadline and into the next couple seasons as the Mammoth try to make hockey memories in Utah. 

16. Ottawa Senators (29-22-9) Steve Staios’ best move may have come at last year’s deadline, when he snagged Dylan Cozens from Buffalo for Josh Norris. That said, Staios — hired in November 2023 — is dangerously close to watching his team miss the playoffs one year after getting back in the derby. 

17. Washington Capitals (31-25-7) A year ago, Chris Patrick — tabbed as GM in 2024 — and the Caps were the darlings of the league for an on-the-fly retool that seemed too good to be true. Some of that lustre has been lost in a campaign where the Caps could miss the playoffs, but they still have a quality team with good prospects like Cole Hutson coming. Even if Alex Ovechkin calls it a career in a couple months, Washington should remain competitive. It always feels worthwhile during this type of discussion to point out the Capitals have had just four GMs — David Poile, George McPhee, Brian MacLennan (current president of hockey operations) and Patrick — since 1982. 

18. Edmonton Oilers (30-24-8) Stan Bowman was hired in 2024 to push the Oilers over the top. It didn’t happen in Year 1 and it’s fair to question some of the moves — hello, Tristan Jarry — he’s made in pursuit of that goal in Year 2. 

Advertisement

19. Seattle Kraken (29-23-9) It sure feels like Jason Botterill, promoted to the GM gig nearly 11 months ago, is itching to do something big. The Kraken went hard after Artemi Panarin and seem ready to move heaven and earth in pursuit of high-end talent the Kraken have yet to find. 

20. San Jose Sharks (30-25-4) Mike Grier took over a total rebuild in 2022 and, four years later, he’s at the helm of a team that looks like it can win a championship within the next two or three years. Credit Grier for looking at the standings this year and deciding to reward his team with the acquisition of Kiefer Sherwood. 

21. Philadelphia Flyers (28-21-11) Hired nearly three years ago to the day, Daniel Briere finds himself a seller again in Philly. That’s not necessarily the end of the world given where the team was, but it’s still hard to make heads or tails of what the Flyers’ future holds. 

22. New Jersey Devils (31-29-2) This has been a hugely disappointing campaign in Jersey and it’s fair to wonder if everything is on the table after the season. Tom Fitzgerald has been the GM since 2020.

Advertisement

23. Toronto Maple Leafs (27-24-11) Brad Treliving became the GM in 2023 and failed, in his first two seasons, to find the missing championship piece in Toronto. Now, as the Leafs embark on a new chapter, Treliving’s job description will change and people will most certainly speculate about his job security. 

24. Nashville Predators (27-26-8) What an odd two-plus year tenure Barry Trotz had as Nashville’s GM. He spent big, but apparently on the wrong players and now he’s made the decision to step away. Trotz will keep the seat warm until a new GM comes to town and gets to work on the huge lift of making Nashville a contender again. 

25. Florida Panthers (30-28-3) Bill Zito — hired in 2020 — has built a team that went to three straight finals and won the past two titles. Nobody is going to hold an injury-ravaged gap year against him. 

26. Los Angeles Kings (24-22-14) Ken Holland is in Year 1 on the job in L.A. and fired coach Jim Hiller coming out of the Olympic break. The Kings are sliding the wrong way under Holland, who is likely to go big-game hunting in the summer if he can’t swing another Artemi Panarin-like deal before the deadline. 

Advertisement

27. Winnipeg Jets (24-26-10) When Doug Armstrong sheds his GM label to move upstairs full time in St. Louis this summer, Winnipeg’s Kevin Cheveldayoff — hired in 2011 — will become the longest-tenured general manager in the NHL. It sure feels like he has a job for life in Manitoba, but another season like this one might put that notion to the test. 

28. Chicago Blackhawks (23-28-10) Kyle Davidson was hired in 2021 to execute a ground-up rebuild, and that does take time. However, it doesn’t help that a team in a very similar position and on the same kind of timeline — the San Jose Sharks — appears well ahead of the Hawks. 

29. St. Louis Blues (23-29-9) As noted, Doug Armstrong — who was hired in 2010 and has held his job longer than any GM in the league — will shuffle aside in coming month in a succession plan that sees Alex Steen take over. The latter becomes the main decision-maker at a time where just about anything seems on the table in St. Louis. 

30. Calgary Flames (24-29-7) A lot of Craig Conroy’s moves in recent years involved dealing veteran talent (usually on an expiring contract) for players or prospects in their early-20s. As Sportsnet’s Eric Francis noted, sending MacKenzie Weegar to Utah for three draft picks represents an organizational shift for Calgary. 

Advertisement

31. New York Rangers (23-29-8) Chris Drury has been the GM since 2021 and the Rangers have been going the wrong way for the past two years. You have to wonder how confident Blueshirts backers are in Drury being the guy overseeing another reset that — depending on how things break — could bubble into full-rebuild territory. 

32. Vancouver Canucks (18-36-7) Patrik Allvin took over as Canucks GM four years ago and it seems like there hasn’t been a dull moment since. At least now Canucks fans can sink in knowing the plan is to draft as high as possible the next couple Junes and completely reconstruct what’s happening on the West Coast. 

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Sports

Napoleonic targets 2026 Canterbury Stakes breakthrough

Published

on

A three-year-old hasn’t taken out the Canterbury Stakes in ten years, though co-trainer Tom Charlton feels Napoleonic is primed during his preparation to snap that sequence.

The previous success story from that age division against elder sprinters was Holler in 2016, trained by Charlton’s partner John O’Shea.

Those two both took the Red Anchor Stakes (1200m) at Flemington the previous spring, arriving at this Group 1 after a 1400m effort, an element Charlton deems crucial for Napoleonic Saturday.

“That should leave him in good stead this weekend,” Charlton said.

Advertisement

“He’s got good form, he comes into this third-up and, we feel, ready to run the best race of his preparation, which should put him right among the chances.”

For Napoleonic, March 7 was long anticipated, with his second in the Hobartville Stakes (1400m) locking in his feature.

Though the Randwick Guineas (1600m) lingered as a possibility for O’Shea and Charlton, the 1300m proved more suitable.

“We always had this race day as a plan, and we were just going to work out whether it was Randwick Guineas or Canterbury Stakes,” Charlton said.

Advertisement

“His last run was excellent, but we concluded the best option would be coming back to the 1300, rather than try to stretch him to a Randwick mile.”

The Canterbury Stakes (1300m) lacks recent three-year-old triumphs, but Napoleonic runs alongside age-peers Beiwacht and Nepotism.

He bolsters O’Shea and Charlton’s lineup, joined by 2024 Randwick Guineas hero Linebacker and The Ingham scorer Yorkshire on return.

Doncaster Mile is their mutual goal, Yorkshire rebounding from a small knock that bypassed last weekend’s Liverpool City Cup, as Linebacker’s plan has centred on this race.

Advertisement

Juvenile Scintillation bypasses Randwick after barrier woes in the Reisling Stakes (1200m).

Charlton indicated she’ll contest the Group 3 Ottawa Stakes (1000m) at Flemington concurrently.

“She’s going to run in Melbourne. Just the draw was a bit tricky in Sydney on Saturday.

“She did a good job on debut. She’s a nice, racy filly and hopefully we can get some black type.

Advertisement

Discover competitive betting sites offering odds for the Canterbury Stakes.

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Sports

India reach T20 World Cup final as England fall short

Published

on

Defending champions India are through to the T20 World Cup final after England fall short, missing out by seven runs.

Source link

Continue Reading

Sports

Naoya Inoue targeted for super fight by pound-for-pound star: “He’s the biggest challenge”

Published

on

Naoya Inoue is regarded by many to be the pound-for-pound king, but now there is a fellow multi-divisional world champion who is eyeing up a fight with the Japanese phenomenon, even targeting a clash with his brother first.

Inoue has ruled supreme in four weight classes but it is his recent efforts at bantamweight and super-bantamweight, where he became a two-division undisputed world champion, that have forced the world to take notice.

After claiming all four belts at 118lbs, he stepped up to 122lbs in 2023 and needed just two bouts to dethrone both unified titleholders and become the second multi-weight undisputed champion of the four-belt era.

Advertisement

Now, ‘The Monster’ is set for his toughest task to date, as he takes on unbeaten countryman Junto Nakatani on Saturday, May 2, at the Tokyo Dome in a historic event for Japanese boxing.

Should he come through that test unscathed, unified super-flyweight champion Jesse ‘Bam’ Rodriguez told The Ring that he is willing to face both of the Inoue brothers in the near future, ahead of a move up to bantamweight.

“The best fight to make for Bam at 118 right now is against the WBC champion, Takuma Inoue.

“That would be very exciting, to beat Takuma and then face the brother, Naoya, in a big fight.

“That’s a great fight and a great plan to look forward to and very well could be a possibility.

Advertisement

“The biggest challenge for Bam in the future is Naoya Inoue. He’s not going to hold back too long before going up against someone like him.”

Takuma Inoue won the vacant WBC bantamweight title with a victory over Tenshin Nasukawa in November, and a clash against Rodriguez could indeed pave the way to a future battle between ‘Bam’ and Naoya Inoue. Boxing News understands that Takuma is set to fight on the Inoue-Nakatani undercard against Kazuto Ioka.

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Sports

Zab Judah delivers verdict on Mayweather vs Pacquiao 2: “He has an edge”

Published

on

Floyd Mayweather and Manny Pacquiao are set to meet again, over a decade on from their fabled first encounter, and two-division world champion and former Mayweather opponent Zab Judah, weighing in on the surprise rematch.

Judah was touted to be one of the major threats to Mayweather during the early 2000s, but a loss to Carlos Baldomir scuppered their unification plans as the New Yorker lost his world title. Instead, he assumed the role of challenger when he collided with ‘Pretty Boy’ in 2006.

Mayweather dominated proceedings to defend his IBF welterweight world title and he would then go on to defeat stars such as Oscar De La Hoya, Ricky Hatton and Juan Manuel Marquez in the years to come.

Advertisement

However, the biggest rival of Mayweather’s career was Manny Pacquiao, who he was linked to fighting for a number of years before their eventual 2015 meeting, which came too late in the eyes of many fans.

Still, Mayweather outpointed the Filipino icon relatively comfortably and hung up the gloves two fights later, but now the pair are poised to run it back at the respective ages of 49 and 47 years old.

In an interview with MillCity Boxing, Judah was asked if Pacquiao ‘has an edge’ going into the fight given the fact he had a professional bout against then world champion, Mario Barrios, last year.

“I mean yeah you’re gonna give Manny an edge, because he has movement, he has fluidness and he has those good combinations. He is a combination puncher with speed and power, so he is always going to do good – and he is elusive.

“The only thing with Manny Pacquiao – his biggest problem is his defence, sometimes he slacks on the defence and gets caught standing straight there and allows his opponent to connect. Other than that, the guy is phenomenal.”

Advertisement

Mayweather-Pacquiao 2 takes place on Saturday, September 19 at The Sphere in Las Vegas, for what will be Mayweather’s third outing of the year.

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Sports

499 runs and 34 sixes later, India beat England to enter T20 World Cup final | Cricket News

Published

on

499 runs and 34 sixes later, India beat England to enter T20 World Cup final
Team India (AP Photo/Rafiq Maqbool)

TimesofIndia.com in Mumbai: 40 overs, 499 runs, 34 sixes, a last-over finish and the entire Wankhede Stadium on its feet singing “Maa Tujhe Salaam” in unison. One could not have asked for a more entertaining game of T20 cricket as India held their nerves to beat England by just seven runs and set a date with New Zealand in the summit clash of the 2026 T20 World Cup.The hosts had long yearned for a perfect game in the tournament. While this win too was far from it, it was enough for India to reach their fourth straight white-ball final. The bowlers had the cushion of runs and even when they leaked plenty, their early intent to look for wickets, something they could not do against the West Indies in Kolkata, was evident.Varun Chakravarthy was creamed for three sixes by Jacob Bethell but he responded by taking Jos Buttler’s wicket. Axar Patel was dispatched for back-to-back sixes by Tom Banton but the wily customer had the last laugh, taking the right-hander’s wicket off the third delivery. Before the emphatic response by the two spinners, India broke England’s back during the powerplay of the huge chase by picking three wickets: Phil Salt, Harry Brook and Jos Buttler.

Stars shine at Arjun Tendulkar’s Sangeet | Mumbai witnesses grand celebration

Hardik Pandya struck off the first delivery of his spell and Jasprit Bumrah did the same. The two demonstrated their experience. The former achieved good movement in his first over while Bumrah stunned Brook with a slower ball, and then Axar took a blinder to dismiss the England skipper. When it looked like India were firmly in command, Jacob Bethell and Will Jacks, England’s best cricketer in this tournament, combined to put India under pressure. But even as England got close, it was wickets that kept India in control. Another one came just when they badly needed it and it again took a spectacular effort from Axar and Shivam Dube.Arshdeep was reintroduced to break the momentum after the spinners lacked control and the left-armer bowled three wides on the trot. His last legal delivery was set to go for at least a boundary before Axar pulled off another stunning effort, with Shivam Dube completing the relay catch to get the Wankhede roaring again.

Bethell special

The pitch was a paradise for batting and while every bowler struggled to contain the batters, Varun’s meek surrender raised significant concerns. Throughout his four-over spell, the mystery spinner lacked control and penetration, consistently erring with shorter lengths. The true bounce allowed batters to comfortably sit back on the back foot and muscle deliveries into the stands without course correction. He leaked 64 runs from four overs, his most expensive outing in the format and the second most expensive in the tournament’s history.

Advertisement
India v England: ICC Men's T20 World Cup India & Sri Lanka 2026 Semi-Final

Jacob Bethell of England celebrates reaching his century during the ICC Men’s T20 World Cup India & Sri Lanka 2026 Semi-Final match between India and England at Wankhede Stadium on March 05, 2026 in Mumbai, India. (Photo by Prakash Singh/Getty Images)

With Bethell keeping England hanging by a thread, the required run rate boiled down to 61 from the last four overs. With two southpaws in the middle, India made the bold call to bowl Arshdeep early. While he kept things quiet initially, he conceded a six and a boundary off the last two deliveries, resulting in 45 runs needed from the last three overs.Arshdeep was reintroduced to break some momentum after spinners lacked control and after the left-armer bowled three wides on the trot, his last legal delivery was set to go for at least a boundary before Axar pulled off another stunning catch, with a neat assist from Shivam Dube, to get the Wankhede roaring again. The pitch was a dream to bat on and while every bowler struggled to contain the batters, Varun’s meek surrender raises significant concerns.Throughout his four-over spell, the mystery spinner lacked control and penetration, consistently erring with shorter lengths. The true bounce allowed batters to comfortably sit back on the back-foot and muscle deliveries into the stands, without course correction. He leaked 64 runs from four overs – his most expensive outing in the format and the second most in the tournament’s history. With Bethell keeping England hanging by a thread, the required run rate boiled down to 61 from last four overs. With two left-handers in the middle, India made the bold call to bowl Arshdeep early. While he kept things quiet initially, he conceded a six and a boundary off the last two deliveries, resulting in 45 runs from the last three overs.

Magical Bumrah

Then came the over that could well have decided which way the match was headed as Surya threw his last roll of the dice and handed Bumrah the ball to bowl the 18th over. And he delivered.

Advertisement
India v England: ICC Men's T20 World Cup India & Sri Lanka 2026 Semi-Final

Jasprit Bumrah of India celebrates the run out of Jacob Bethell of England during the ICC Men’s T20 World Cup India & Sri Lanka 2026 Semi-Final match between India and England at Wankhede Stadium on March 05, 2026 in Mumbai, India. (Photo by Prakash Singh/Getty Images)

Six deliveries around the toes resulted in only six runs, making the equation 39 off the last two overs. Hardik was on top of his mark to bowl the crucial over. Even after conceding a six off the first ball, he took the wicket of Sam Curran and ended the over with a dot, leaving Shivam Dube 30 runs to defend off the last six balls.Wankhede was on its feet. A mini conference was underway between Dube, Hardik and Surya and the tension was palpable. Centurion Bethell was on strike and his first hit went straight to Pandya, patrolling the long-off. England needed Bethell at the strike and the youngster tried to steal a second but Pandya’s rocket arm caught the 22-year-old short, ending England’s hope. Archer kept the scoreboard interesting with three sixes but it was too late as England fell short by seven runs.

Another Samson masterclass

The 14th over of the Indian innings was the only one in which England did not concede a boundary. On an evening when many boundaries and sixes were hit, Will Jacks’ third over was an anomaly. Boundaries and sixes flew thick and fast in the overs bowled around the off-spinner as India, riding on another Sanju Samson masterclass, demolished England by posting a mammoth total, batting them out of the game before they even came out to bat.

Advertisement
India v England: ICC Men's T20 World Cup India & Sri Lanka 2026 Semi-Final

Sanju Samson of India bats watched by England wicketkeeper Jos Buttler during the ICC Men’s T20 World Cup India & Sri Lanka 2026 Semi-Final match between India and England at Wankhede Stadium on March 05, 2026 in Mumbai, India. (Photo by Prakash Singh/Getty Images)

The bounce was true and with nothing happening off the surface or in the air, India feasted with a clinical batting display. It was Samson again who put on a real show of attractive strokeplay to score back-to-back half-centuries. If the unbeaten 97 in the stiff chase against West Indies at the Eden Gardens was a picture of calm, the 89 at Wankhede had domination written all over it. He never looked to slow down, even when Abhishek Sharma threw his wicket away to Jacks’ off-spin, and the manner in which he took down the predictable Jofra Archer was pure class.Samson did get a reprieve on 15 when Harry Brook dropped a dolly at mid-on off Jofra Archer’s bowling, but he made the most of it and from there onwards played a chanceless knock.England played the matchups card well but the bowlers’ execution was far from satisfactory. All of them had an economy rate in double digits, with Archer leaking 61 runs in his four overs.The 30-year-old kept digging in short to Samson, who came well prepared and stood deep in his crease to counter the extra bounce. The only occasion when the right-armer went a bit full brought an opportunity, but Harry Brook missed the sitter, handing the in-form Samson an early life. Samson then added 74 runs from the next 35 deliveries he faced.India were cruising and Wankhede was roaring. The chants of “Sanju Samson” grew louder with every big hit and Ishan Kishan ensured the momentum did not dip from the other end as he smashed an 18-ball 39. When the dangerous southpaw was dismissed in the tenth over, India controlled the situation at 117/2. Since spin was expected to play a part, they demoted Surya and sent Shivam Dube to pile on more misery on the opposition.

Poll

Who was the standout player of the match for India?

Advertisement

Dube did not disappoint. Even after Samson was dismissed 11 short of a well-deserved hundred, he aced his role to perfection by using his long levers to full effect and kept 250 within reach. For Surya, it was another ordinary outing in a knockout or must-win fixture of a multilateral tournament but Hardik Pandya covered up for the Indian skipper’s early departure as both he, and, later, Tilak Varma played strong cameos to push the side over the 250-run mark.India’s innings mirrored their training session two days before the match as the batters operated with significant intent. The Men in Blue hit 19 sixes and the sixathon made them the only side in men’s T20 history to have six totals in excess of 250 in the format. India have already hit 88 sixes in the tournament, the most in a single edition, and they are set to flirt with the century mark when they take the field in the title clash at the Narendra Modi Stadium on Sunday.Brief score:India: 253 for seven in 20 overs (Sanju Samson 89, Shivam Dube 43, Ishan Kishan 39; Will Jacks 2/40, Adil Rashid 2/41).England: 246 for 7 in 20 overs (Jacob Bethell 105; Jasprit Bumrah 1/33, Hardik Pandya 2/38).

Source link

Continue Reading

Sports

The Last Thing He Told Me season 2 episode 3 release date and time, what’s next, and everything you need to know

Published

on

The Last Thing He Told Me season 2 continues with episode 3 as the story follows Hannah Hall and Bailey Michaels after Owen Michaels’ unexpected return. The new season adapts The First Time I Saw Him, the sequel to the novel by Laura Dave, and expands the narrative introduced in the first season.

Episode 3 of The Last Thing He Told Me season 2 will release on Friday, March 6, 2026. The episode will be available to stream on Apple TV+ as part of the show’s weekly release schedule. The series stars Jennifer Garner as Hannah Hall and Angourie Rice as Bailey Michaels, continuing their search for answers as new details about Owen’s past emerge.


When does The Last Thing He Told Me season 2 episode 3 come out? Release time for all major time zones

The Last Thing He Told Me season 2 (Image via YouTube/Apple TV)The Last Thing He Told Me season 2 (Image via YouTube/Apple TV)
The Last Thing He Told Me season 2 (Image via YouTube/Apple TV)

The third episode of the second season of The Last Thing He Told Me will make its debut on Friday, March 6, 2026, in accordance with the weekly schedule that has been established by Apple TV+. Every Friday, fresh episodes of the series are made available on the platform.

Advertisement

Below is the release schedule for The Last Thing He Told Me season 2 episode 3 across major time zones.

Region Release Time Release Date
Eastern Time (ET) 12:00 AM March 6, 2026
Central Time (CT) 11:00 PM March 5, 2026
Pacific Time (PT) 9:00 PM March 5, 2026
Greenwich Mean Time (GMT) 5:00 AM March 6, 2026
Central European Time (CET) 6:00 AM March 6, 2026
Philippines Time (PHT) 1:00 PM March 6, 2026
Australian Eastern Time (AEST) 4:00 PM March 6, 2026

Viewers can watch the second season of The Last Thing He Told Me exclusively on Apple TV+. The platform releases each episode weekly, allowing audiences to follow Hannah and Bailey’s story as it unfolds across the eight-episode season.


How many episodes of The Last Thing He Told Me season 2 are left?

The second season of The Last Thing He Told Me is comprised of a total of eight episodes. As of this week, the third episode will arrive, bringing the total number of episodes to five before the season is over.


A brief recap of The Last Thing He Told Me season 2 episode 2

In episode 2 of the second season of The Last Thing He Told Me, Hannah Hall and Bailey Michaels continue their hunt for answers following the death of Nicholas Bell and the reappearance of Owen Michaels. The two individuals continue to move about in an effort to avoid dangers that are associated with Owen’s history.

Advertisement

Hannah receives a visit from Grady Bradford, who has some fresh information. He asserts that the Campano family has collaborated with a global drug trafficking organization in order to facilitate their activities. Owen is allegedly attempting to obtain information related to illegal contracts that Nicholas Bell created while he is residing in Austin under a false identity, as stated by him.

Bailey is still suspicious of Grady’s actions and wonders the motivations behind his actions. Hannah and Bailey are both more concerned about him as a result of his involvement in violent situations and his private phone calls. Therefore, they make the decision to put some distance between themselves and him.

In light of the restricted options available, Bailey proposes making contact with Quinn, who may be an ally connected to the investigation under consideration. At the conclusion of the episode, Hannah and Bailey make their way to the residence of Hannah’s mother, with the expectation that it will serve as a temporary place of refuge for them as they plot their next move in the coming episodes.


Major events to expect from The Last Thing He Told Me season 2 episode 3

  • Hannah and Bailey search for answers while staying hidden. Episode 3 of The Last Thing He Told Me season 2 is expected to continue their attempt to remain out of reach while gathering information about Owen’s activities and the network connected to the Campano family.
  • New information about Owen Michaels’ secret mission may emerge. The storyline may further reveal how Owen operates under a false identity while collecting evidence related to criminal agreements tied to Nicholas Bell’s past dealings.
  • The connection between Quinn and Bailey may develop further. As The Last Thing He Told Me season 2 continues, Bailey’s decision to contact Quinn could introduce new leads, while also raising questions about whether Quinn can be trusted in the unfolding investigation.
  • Hannah’s past may play a larger role in the story. The move toward Hannah’s estranged mother suggests that upcoming episodes may explore her personal history and how it connects to the present situation involving Owen and the growing criminal conspiracy.

Viewers can watch The Last Thing He Told Me season 2 episode 3 when it premieres on March 6, 2026, exclusively on Apple TV+, where new episodes release every Friday.