Sports
Zach Werenski vetoes trade to Dallas Stars
According to multiple sources, the Dallas Stars and Columbus Blue Jackets had a verbal agreement on a Zach Werenski trade, which was to be completed on Wednesday morning, only to have it vetoed by the Norris Trophy winner. (Werenski has a full no-move clause.)
Apparently, the calendar needed to flip to July 1 before it could happen, due to contractual and/or cap reasons. Thomas Harley was to be the centrepiece of the return, but other players/picks may have been involved, too.
Werenski’s decision appears to indicate two things: that his preference — for now — is the Eastern Conference, and that the relationship between player and the Blue Jackets is falling apart in what could be its final days.
Sportsnet reported last week that Columbus planned to meet with Werenski post-draft, but, apparently, the player felt he had addressed his future back in April, saying that he’d play out his current contract (two years remaining), but would not commit to an extension.
The Stars appear to be caught in the middle, unaware that their trade — which, sources say, was agreed to late Monday — could be vetoed. They were informed Tuesday night.
We’ll see how things evolve, but it’s taken a nasty turn.
Sports
Chaotic street takeover breaks out in Pacoima after Mexico’s World Cup win
A street takeover broke out at a Pacoima intersection Tuesday night following Mexico’s World Cup win, with drivers performing dangerous donuts as crowds looked on.
Video from AIR7 showed a man sitting on the ledge of a car window as the vehicle spun in circles in the intersection. At one point, several spectators approached a vehicle and were seen recording the driver’s stunts from just a few feet away.
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Tire marks from burnouts were visible on the street as multiple vehicles participated in the street takeover.
A few blocks away, Los Angeles police formed a skirmish line as officers cleared another gathering.
Fans took to the streets across Los Angeles on Tuesday night to celebrate Mexico’s 2-0 victory over Ecuador in the World Cup.
Fans took to the streets across Los Angeles to celebrate Mexico’s victory over Ecuador in the World Cup.
AIR7 also captured scenes along Whittier Boulevard in East Los Angeles, where fans gathered at an intersection waving green, white and red Mexican flags.
Similar celebrations occurred in Huntington Park and Boyle Heights, where crowds shut down intersections. In other parts of the San Fernando Valley, AIR7 recorded fireworks lighting up the night sky.
Mexico’s win over Ecuador secured the team’s first World Cup knockout-stage victory in 40 years. Mexico will play in the Round of 16 on Sunday.
Sports
World Cup 2026: Mexico beat Ecuador to reach last 16 and end 40-year knockout drought

Mexico ended a 40-year wait for a World Cup knockout-stage victory on Tuesday, beating Ecuador 2-0 to reach the last 16. Goals from Julián Quiñones and Raúl Jiménez secured El Tri’s first win beyond the group stage since the 1986 tournament they hosted.
Sports
Celtic may seek to sign Givdas Gineitis as Arne Engels replacement – Scottish gossip
Celtic may make a move for Torino’s Lithuania midfielder Gvidas Gineitis, 22, as a replacement for Belgium international Arne Engels, 22, who is being tracked by Crystal Palace, Nottingham Forest and Roma. (Sun), external
Italian media link Rangers midfielder Thelo Aasgaard, 24, with Atalanta, whose head coach Mauricio Sarri is a fan of the Norway international. (Sun), external
Dundee defender Luke Graham, 22, is set for a seven-figure move to either Portsmouth or frontrunners Stoke City. (Sun), external
Motherwell manager Alfred Johansson sees it as his role to unearth the club’s next Elijah Just and Lennon Miller. (Record), external
New Dundee United defender Michael Forbes, 22, hopes to use his move to Tannadice to force his way into the Northern Ireland squad. (Record), external
Sports
Serena Williams, 44, ousted by 20-year-old Maya Joint in Wimbledon return
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Serena Williams fought hard but ultimately lost in her first singles match since 2022 on Tuesday at Wimbledon, falling to 20-year-old Australian Maya Joint, 6-3, 6-7 (6), 6-3, in the first round on Centre Court.
There’s a common axiom in sports that “Father Time is undefeated” and that rang true in London on Tuesday night.
Williams, 44, had not played a singles match since the 2022 U.S. Open, when she lost to Ajla Tomljanovic in the third round in what many believed would be the final match of her legendary career.
Instead, nearly four years later, she walked back onto the grass at the All England Club.

Serena Williams lost to 20-year-old Australian Maya Joint in the first round at Wimbledon in her first singles match since the 2022 U.S. Open. (Robert Prange/Getty Images)
And not just any court.
Centre Court.
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The same court where Williams won seven of her 23 Grand Slam singles titles, an Olympic gold medal and authored some of the most dominant moments of the modern women’s tennis era.
This one, obviously, was different.
Williams entered Wimbledon as a wild card and with far more questions than expectations.
How much tennis did she still have in her legs?
Could her serve still carry her through pressure games?
Could one of the greatest competitors in sports history summon enough of the old Serena to make this more than a ceremonial comeback?
For a while, the answer looked complicated.
Joint, the 87th-ranked women’s player in the world, came out sharp and took the opening set 6-3. After the set got to 3-3, with each player holding each of her first three serves, Joint won the next three games, breaking Serena once to take the first set.
It was a reminder that nostalgia does not win tennis matches, especially at Wimbledon, where the grass can punish even small dips in movement and timing.

Serena Williams reacts during her match against Maya Joint during their ladies’ singles first-round match of The Championships Wimbledon 2026 at the All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club. (Cameron Spencer/Getty Images)
But Williams’ fought back in the second set.
Despite being broken in the first game and falling down 3-1, Williams eventually forced a tiebreak. The 20-year-old Australian had match point with a 6-5 lead in the tiebreak, but Williams won the next three points to square the match.
Williams came out strong in the third set, getting the first break to take a 2-1 lead. But that’s when it seemed that Williams’ age started to become a bigger factor.
Her daughters, Olympia and Adira, were in attendance, along with her husband Alexis Ohanian and sister Venus Williams. Venus is also scheduled to team with Serena in doubles at Wimbledon, giving the tournament another Williams sisters moment after years of uncertainty over whether fans would ever see that again.
Williams has spent most of the past four years away from the tour after saying in 2022 that she was “evolving away” from tennis. She never fully closed the door, though.
She won Wimbledon singles titles in 2002, 2003, 2009, 2010, 2012, 2015 and 2016. She reached four other Wimbledon finals. She and Venus also built one of the great doubles partnerships in tennis history, including six Wimbledon women’s doubles titles together.
So when Williams accepted a wild card into the singles draw, it immediately became one of the biggest stories of the tournament.
That’s the power of Serena.

Serena Williams celebrates after winning a point against Maya Joint during their women’s singles first-round match at the Wimbledon Championships. (Henry Nicholls/AFP via Getty Images)
Even after nearly four years without a singles match, even at 44, even with no real evidence that she could contend at a Grand Slam again, her presence changed the feel of the draw.
Unfortunately for Williams, she did not get the storybook result Tuesday, but this was never going to be judged like an ordinary first-round loss.
Not really.
Yes, Williams is out of the singles draw after losing to a woman less than half her age. But the fact that she even took the court is a story in and of itself.
Now comes the obvious question.
Was this just a Wimbledon one-off, or was it the first step toward one more run in New York?
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The U.S. Open main draw begins Aug. 30, and if Williams wants another singles swing this summer, Flushing Meadows would be the obvious place to do it. That’s where she played her last singles match before this comeback. That’s where American tennis fans believed they said goodbye to her in 2022.
Maybe they did.
Maybe they didn’t.
Either way, Serena Williams taking the court at a Grand Slam tournament is good for tennis, particularly in the United States.
And if Tuesday was any indication, plenty of people would show up to watch her try it again.
Sports
BBC Sport quiz: Who am I? Guess the tennis superstar no 2
Welcome to our tennis Who am I? game.
The rules are simple – guess the tennis player in as few attempts as possible.
After each wrong guess you unlock a new clue. Guess the answer after as few clues as possible to score more points.
Three is a good score, four or five points is exceptional.
Good luck!
Today’s player and clues are set by BBC Sport’s Huzaifah Khan.
After more quizzes? Go to our dedicated Sports Quizzes pages and sign up for notifications to get the latest quizzes sent straight to your device.
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Ecuador’s Hincapie becomes second player sent off for covering mouth at World Cup
MEXICO CITY — Ecuador’s Piero Hincapié became the second player to be issued a red card at the World Cup under FIFA’s new rule that calls for a player to be sent off for covering their mouth during a confrontational exchange with an opponent.
Hincapié was sent off in the 95th minute of Ecuador’s 2-0 loss to Mexico Tuesday in the round of 32. He was shown the red card following an exchange with Mexico forward Santi Giménez.
FIFA established the new rule to prevent players from hiding abusive comments to opponents by covering their mouths.
Paraguay’s Miguel Almirón was the first player to be punished under the new rule when he was sent off in a group stage match against Turkey last week.
While Ecuador’s tournament is over, Hincapié will be suspended for the team’s next international match.
Sports
Thoughts and predictions on the NHL off-season
Not a ton of predictions tonight, been working on the Zach Werenski story. But I’ve got a few.
First, Werenski himself: The most important thing is that cooler heads prevail. One rumour making the rounds Tuesday night is that Werenski’s camp is so upset at recent developments that all trade possibilities will be rejected. (I absolutely believe that’s part of what happened with Dallas.) But that might be short-term hot-headedness, as opposed to realistic long-term outcome. We’ll see.
I don’t think Toronto will fool around. The Maple Leafs will step up and take their swing. (Werenski and wife Odette’s roots are not difficult travel to Toronto, which is believed to be a reason he’d consider the Maple Leafs.) I’d be very curious to see what Tampa offers. If Florida wants to trade a legitimate player from its roster, the Panthers could be a player, too.
As Michael Keaton once said: “You wanna get nuts? Come on! Let’s get nuts!”
Connor Hellebuyck: I don’t buy the New Jersey hype. It’s not a contract that fits the profile of new GM Sunny Mehta. Hellebuyck would waive to Buffalo, but a couple of sources have said since last weekend that a trade wasn’t as close as we thought. Some of the rumoured Sabres returns have new trade protection. Winnipeg would love to bring him back, but I think it’s unlikely.

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Free agency kicks off on Sportsnet
Sportsnet is your home for the start of free agency. Watch the Signing Season special Wednesday, starting at 11:30 a.m. ET / 8:30 a.m. PT on Sportsnet or Sportsnet+.
Dylan Larkin: Steve Yzerman would rather make no trade than what he thinks is a bad trade.
Jason Robertson: Wants Dallas to budge. Don’t see it now. My guess is they go to arbitration. Unless Yzerman decides he’s the best option for Larkin.
Sergei Bobrovsky: Heard Edmonton had interest, but I’ve honed in on Toronto. Believe his last ask of Florida was three years, $21 million. So I’d expect the overall dollars to come in around there.
Bowen Byram: Signs Wednesday, $12 million range.
Nico Hischier: Signs Wednesday, just under $12 million per year.
Quinn Hughes: 3 x $18 million, sometime in July. That’s my whopper pick. I don’t think Cale Makar, Connor Bedard, Macklin Celebrini or Leo Carlsson sign with their current teams Wednesday.
Darnell Nurse: Pittsburgh wanted Edmonton to take back a contract. The Oilers didn’t like whatever was presented to them. Philadelphia’s had a challenge putting all of the different pieces together in and out. Boston’s shown interest, but that’s also about what has to go out to make it work. I believe the Sharks are very interested, but Nurse remains east-focused as I write this.

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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.
Mason Marchment: There was a lot of interest. Montreal, I think Toronto. Someone made a great point that a sentimental favourite might be San Jose, longtime NHL home of his late father Bryan. The two were extremely close.
Alexander Nikishin: A lot of interest. Carolina will hold until they get what they want, which includes a player. Rangers are believed to have offered a first and another pick. But that didn’t do it. Heavy competition, with many asking: what does he want on his next deal? Can’t sign an offer sheet.
The centres: Los Angeles, Philadelphia, Toronto, Utah, Vancouver. These teams were all around Noel Acciari, Erik Haula, Boone Jenner, Scott Laughton, Colton Sissons (Nashville reunion?), Kevin Stenlund. I believe Utah still lusts after Vincent Trocheck, who prefers the east. Kings tried to get Haula before Laughton, but he was hurt at the time. They like him.
Rasmus Andersson: He’s staying.
Stuart Skinner: If Hellebuyck is traded, Winnipeg makes the most sense. Otherwise, I’d take a shot if I was the Mammoth. They need to lighten Karel Vejmelka’s load.
The defencemen: San Jose. Sharks need D. Ian Cole? Jamie Oleksiak? Jacob Trouba?
Ryan Shea: Had a really good year. Heard Lightning really liked him. But they also have their eyes on Werenski and John Carlson, if he doesnt sign in Carolina. Good player.
Alexander Ovechkin: he returns in 2026-27.
Offer sheets: Last year, the Hurricanes threatened the Oilers (who signed Evan Bouchard) and the Rangers (who acquiesced and traded them K’Andre Miller). I think they’re considering doing it again. I have a theory, but I’m too chicken to say it. I also believe Seattle is considering it, as they basically created an offer-sheet trade for Jason Robertson, if he’d taken their cash. I also believe Mavrik Bourque is another potential target. I don’t want to get everyone’s hopes up, but there’s lots of noise out there.
Sports
Graham Potter faces brutal reality after France’s knockout blow ends Sweden’s World Cup journey
Graham Potter’s season ended as it began, with a 3-0 defeat. And there the similarities may have ended, given that the victorious teams were Sunderland and France. Eliezer Mayenda, Daniel Ballard and Wilson Isidor, Potter’s tormentors in August, are rarely compared with Kylian Mbappe and Bradley Barcola, who ended Sweden’s World Cup.
He has gone from the Stadium of Light to the MetLife Stadium. Sacked by West Ham, a saviour for Sweden, there has been a redemptive feel to it. The eventual verdict must be that he is among those culpable for West Ham’s relegation, even if his own participation in their campaign was curtailed by a September firing. He got five games with the Hammers in the Premier League, four with Sweden in the World Cup.
He ended it looking more comfortable in his skin and confident in his demeanour than he ever appeared at Chelsea and West Ham. It also finished with Sweden being utterly outclassed by France. The consolation prize may be that they lost to the eventual World Cup winners. “We had to be perfect and even if we were I am not sure if that would have been enough, if I am brutally honest,” said Potter. “I personally haven’t seen a better team.”
Sweden may be a more forgiving environment than east or west London – though his axed predecessor Jon Dahl Tomasson might disagree – but Potter could be spared a brutal inquest. It is a perilous time to be a manager of a European side returning home. Steve Clarke and Ronald Koeman are gone, falling on their own swords. Julian Nagelsmann may fall on someone else’s. Potter’s Sweden were porous at the back in the United States but he has enhanced his reputation in the last few months. He will survive.
Realism dictated Sweden were underdogs against France. “You look at the careers and CVs of the French team and compare them to ours,” said Potter. The magnificence of Michael Olise and Mbappe meant they would have demolished many a side. And, in the wider picture, Potter has taken Sweden further than felt feasible.
Or, indeed, fair. They propped up a pool in qualifying, winless with two points. The nonsensical Nations League rules gave them a reprieve in the form of a play-off. Potter, and Viktor Gyokeres, capitalised, his hat-trick against Ukraine and 88th-minute winner against Poland booking them a transatlantic flight.
They peaked early, the opening 5-1 thrashing of Tunisia the first time Sweden had scored more than four in a World Cup match since 1938. Another slice of history followed as they lost 5-1 to the Netherlands; no one had done the 5-1 double in consecutive World Cup games before. A draw with Japan was laudable. A third-placed finish – another backdoor route of advancing – meant they met France, and their match.
“I have no complaints with the players,” Potter added. “I said to them after the game that it is no disgrace to lose to France. For us, this is a foundation to go forward. I am proud of what we have done so far.”
It is evident he has a bond with his charges, which rarely felt the case at Chelsea and West Ham. Perhaps his confidence in himself and belief in them was reflected in his bold decision to play 4-4-2 against France. Certainly, Potter is a manager of many ideas, not all of them good. He got his team wrong at the start against the Dutch. Fielding captain Victor Lindelof in midfield against Japan, however, was a qualified success.
But the context means it is hard to brand his tactics in the MetLife a mistake. “You can play four or three or five [in midfield] but the quality of the opponent is the quality of the opponent,” shrugged Potter. And the quality of Sweden is disproportionately distributed in a top-heavy team; with Alexander Isak and Gyokeres and Anthony Elanga, his three best players may all be forwards, and he played them all. It would have been intriguing where and how Potter would have accommodated Dejan Kulusevski if fit.
Unlike many a Swedish side of old, however, there was rather less talent at the back. Sweden conceded 10 goals in four games, a tally that reflects their shortcomings as well as a demanding fixture list. Potter was pleased the veteran Lindelof said he wants to continue his international career; Sweden nevertheless need a formula to keep clean sheets.
Potter talked, too, of the youth of much of a squad in which Yasin Ayari and Lucas Bergvall are two with considerable potential to improve. “We are a young, developing team,” he said. “We have had a great tournament to grow and learn. To recover after the Netherlands and get a point against Japan was fantastic and we have to learn from that.”
For now, Potter is at a stage where Sweden seem on an upward curve. Time will tell if this is part of progress or an illusion of it. But as his season of rejection and renewal, when he was cast aside in his own country and found a new home in his adopted one concluded, Potter had an air of contentment.
Sports
World Cup 2026: France thrash Sweden as they reach round of 16

France secured a comfortable 3-0 victory over Sweden in the World Cup round of 16. France will face Paraguay in the round of 16 on 4 July.
Sports
Sami Zayn says Johnny Gargano needs the right spark to return on SmackDown
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WWE star Sami Zayn has used Johnny Gargano as a sounding board for his complaints over the last few weeks on “Friday Night SmackDown.”
Gargano, known as “Johnny Wrestling,” has been lying face down during most of his segments for months. He hasn’t spoken to anyone nor has he been in a wrestling ring since Stand & Deliver all the way back in April. The only signal to know that Gargano is actually alive is when Zayn has spoken to him.
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Myles Borne competes against Johnny Gargano during NXT: Stand and Deliver at The Factory in St. Louis, Missouri, on April 4, 2026. (Bradlee Rutledge/WWE Via Getty Images)
Zayn talked about Gargano and what it would take to get him moving again in an interview with Fox News Digital before he won the Undisputed WWE Championship at Night of Champions.
“I think he’s an immensely talented person. Anyone who’s followed his career, actually watched his work especially in NXT, knows what he’s capable of,” Zayn said. “Some people when they come to the main roster never really got to showcase what they’re made of and I definitely think he falls into that category. …
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Sami Zayn enters the ring during a WWE live event at Palacio Vistalegre in Madrid, Spain, on June 4, 2026. (Andrew Timms/WWE)
“He’s almost in this sort of vegetative state or whatever and he just needs like the Prince Charming or whatever is to come around and swoop him and get him out of it. … I think something just needs the right spark to get him to remember who he is and I do think if, and when, that happens we’re gonna get to see a side of him that’s very exciting, that hasn’t been seen in a very long time.”
Gargano is one of the best pure wrestlers on the roster.
He put on some of the best matches in NXT history. He’s won the NXT Championship, NXT North American Championship and the NXT Tag Team Championship, which made him the first NXT Triple Crown champion.
On the main roster, he’s been a WWE tag team champion twice.

Candice LeRae and Johnny Gargano look on during SmackDown at KFC YUM! Center in Louisville, Ky., on Feb. 27, 2026. (Mike Marques/WWE via Getty Images)
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But every fan is hoping that he gets another shot at wrestling again and snaps out of this slumber and gets back to what he does best.
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