Sports
Canada captain Sidney Crosby not ruled out for Olympic return
Feb 18, 2026; Milan, Italy; Sidney Crosby of Canada walks out to the ice before a men’s ice hockey quarterfinal during the Milan Cortina 2026 Olympic Winter Games at Milano Santagiulia Ice Hockey Arena. Mandatory Credit: Geoff Burke-Imagn Images Veteran captain Sidney Crosby has not been ruled out for the remainder of the Milan Cortina Olympics, Team Canada coach Jon Cooper told reporters on Thursday.
Crosby, 38, sustained an apparent right leg injury in the second period of Wednesday’s 4-3 overtime win over Czechia when he ducked under a hit but had Radko Gudas fall over him.
One of a handful of NHL players who competed in the Olympics the last time they were permitted to compete in the Games in 2014, Crosby is doing everything he can to be available for Canada’s semifinal against Finland on Friday.
He underwent an MRI to assess the injury and did not participate in Thursday’s optional team skate, per ESPN.
“Sid is by no means ruled out of the tournament,” Cooper said Thursday. “We’ve got the best of the best looking at him. … We’re taking this day by day. And we’re not going to put anyone in harm’s way. But if he can play, he’s definitely going to. We’ll know more again in 24 hours.”
Crosby, who is competing in his third Olympics, is tied for third on the Canadian roster with six points (two goals, four assists) through four games.
Crosby is in his 21st NHL season, all with the Pittsburgh Penguins. In 56 games this season, he has 59 points (27 goals, 32 assists).
Canada is looking to win gold for the first time since the 2014 Sochi Olympics.
–Field Level Media
Sports
New York Mets Manager Carlos Mendoza Officially on Hot Seat
The Boston Red Sox fired manager Alex Cora this past week, and the Philadelphia Phillies did likewise with Rob Thomson, not even bothering to wait for May flowers to bloom. Your team’s manager might be next. At least five other Major League Baseball teams have managerial situations ripe for change.
The manager of the team with the worst record in the league has been on most short lists for the next manager to be canned, but it didn’t happen Friday. Instead, New York Mets president David Stearns gave manager Carlos Mendoza what some cynics call the “dreaded vote of confidence.”
Sometimes when a team struggles, the front office makes a point to express confidence in the manager’s job security. Reporters long ago identified such talk as the “dreaded vote of confidence,” because the struggling team frequently would fire the manager anyway. Maybe not that day or that week, but relatively soon.
Stearns told MLB.com as the Mets had approximately 99 things wrong with them, but Mendoza was not the one at fault.
“We don’t view this as a manager problem,” Stearns said.
OK.
“And we don’t intend to make a change,” he added.
Oof, there it is. The Mets don’t intend to make a change. Intentions are about as stable as momentum, which in baseball is only as good as your next starting pitching performance or horrendous injury. Stearns’ intentions are liable to flip 180 degrees if the Mets have one too many arduous nights at the ballpark.
Apparently not wanting to risk telling a lie to the New York media, Stearns couldn’t even bring himself to say: “We won’t make a change.” Instead, he should have phrased it: “We’re not considering making a change.” After all, nobody can publish what Stearns was considering unless he confirms it.
Regardless, a vote of confidence gives Mendoza more time. Only, more time for what? Juan Soto is back in the lineup and raking, but Francisco Lindor remains out because of a calf strain, and Jorge Polanco and Luis Robert Jr. also remain sidelined. Mendoza won’t have a full complement of players for weeks. In the meantime, the Mets lineup and bullpen remain full of holes, no matter if it’s because of injuries or not.
The Mets, heading west on a road trip to Anaheim and Denver, probably banked on getting healthy against weaker opponents. They got the upper hand in the series opener against the Los Angeles Angels after falling behind by three runs early. Showed some grit and gumption. A good show for the perception of Mendoza’s motivational profile.
But the Mets remain 11 1/2 games out of first place in the NL East already. It’s possible Mendoza gets a full season to get the Mets back to the playoffs. But it’s more likely Stearns schedules another Mendoza vote in about a week, and he’s the next manager to go.
Sports
White Sox pursue another memorable performance vs. Padres
May 1, 2026; San Diego, California, USA; Chicago White Sox first baseman Munetaka Murakami (5) rounds the bases after hitting a three-run home run during the second inning against the San Diego Padres at Petco Park. Mandatory Credit: Denis Poroy-Imagn Images Will Venable made it back to where it all began on Friday night: San Diego.
His MLB career started with the Padres in 2008, and he spent 7 1/2 seasons there, then went to the Texas Rangers and Los Angeles Dodgers before retirement. While he made plenty of memories playing in San Diego, Venable, 43, could start a new scrapbook there as Chicago’s manager.
The White Sox won 8-2 against the Padres on Friday, and the teams will meet again on Saturday in the second contest of a three-game serires.
The White Sox used their power to blow open Friday’s game early. MLB home run leader Munetaka Murakami blasted his 13th long ball of the season with two men aboard as part of a six-run second inning, and the lead grew to 8-0 before San Diego averted a shutout in the eighth.
Venable said his young team has embraced its underdog role as the White Sox seek their fifth straight victory.
“Obviously, these guys are getting some great results, and we’re changing that,” he said, “but we are still the underdogs, and that’s something I’m comfortable with, and like being in that role.”
Chicago went into Friday ranked ninth in the majors in homers. Most of that power comes from Murakami, Colson Montgomery and Miguel Vargas, who have combined for 28. Montgomery unloaded his ninth of the season in the fifth inning.
Lately, the team has gotten solid starting pitching, including six shutout innings from 6-foot-10 rookie left-hander Noah Schultz on Friday night. Right-hander Sean Burke (1-2, 3.21 ERA) will try to keep that run going in the series’ middle game.
Burke last worked on Sunday, firing 7 1/3 scoreless innings and allowing just three hits with no walks and four strikeouts in his team’s 2-1, 10-inning defeat to Washington. He’s faced the Padres twice in his career, going 0-1 with a 2.70 ERA in 10 innings.
Opposing Burke will be right-hander Michael King (3-1, 2.41 ERA), who hasn’t lost since April 3 in Boston, 5-2.
In his career against the White Sox, King is 1-1 with a 3.38 ERA in five games, one as a starter. That was Sept. 21, 2025, when he threw five shutout innings and struck out four in a 3-2 win.
The Padres would love a good outing from King. Their starters rank 22nd in MLB in ERA at 4.57 — nearly two full runs a game more than their biggest National League West rival, the Dodgers (2.95),
But San Diego manager Craig Stammen said he isn’t that concerned about the rotation.
“They’re hanging in there,” he said. “Some guys are pitching well and some guys are up and down. They’ve been able to pitch enough innings to keep the bullpen fresh.”
Reinforcements are on the way this month. Offseason signee Griffin Canning could join San Diego after one more rehab start in the minors, while former White Sox ace Lucas Giolito likely has two more minor league outings before he joins the rotation.
Giolito’s contract stipulates that he has to join the Padres by May 16.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Royals vie to ride power surge in rematch vs. Mariners
Apr 22, 2026; Kansas City, Missouri, USA; Kansas City Royals first baseman Vinnie Pasquantino (9) celebrates with team mates after scoring against the Baltimore Orioles during the fourth inning at Kauffman Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Denny Medley-Imagn Images When Jac Caglianone homered in the sixth inning Friday night in Seattle, nobody was more excited than Kansas City Royals teammate Vinnie Pasquantino.
Pasquantino pinched his fingers together in a traditional Italian hand gesture then greeted Caglianone at the top step of the dugout with a kiss on both cheeks.
The only thing missing was the espresso machine from the Team Italy dugout at the World Baseball Classic.
Pasquantino and Caglianone, who helped Italy place a surprising fourth in the tournament, both went deep in the sixth inning in the Royals’ 7-6 victory in the opener of a three-game series that continues Saturday in Seattle.
“From Day 1 he took me under his wing in spring training,” Caglianone said earlier this season. “He made sure once I got up to K.C. that my locker was next to his.”
Pasquantino had started each of the previous two games on the bench with lower back tightness. He showed no ill effects Friday, however, as he hammered a 95-mph fastball from Mariners right-hander Bryan Woo 404 feet off the facade of the second deck in right field.
Pasquantino, who admitted to using a heating pad in the dugout, also had an RBI single in a four-run first inning.
“He feels better,” Royals manager Matt Quatraro said before the game. “It’s a good thing for him to keep moving.”
Pinch-hitter Lane Thomas’ run-scoring single with one out in the eighth inning broke a tie for the Royals, who overcame a pair of two-run homers by Seattle’s Julio Rodriguez to win for just the fourth time in 16 road games this season.
Connor Joe and Randy Arozarena also homered for the Mariners, who had won six of their previous seven games.
“Tough, tough loss tonight,” said Mariners manager Dan Wilson, whose team rallied from a four-run deficit. “The one thing that stands out to me is how our guys really bounced back in this ballgame.”
The Mariners were without reliever Matt Brash, who was placed on the 15-day injured list earlier in the day with inflammation in his right lat.
That proved costly in the decisive eighth, as instead of bringing in Brash to face Thomas they had to leave in lefty Jose A. Ferrer, who allowed the go-ahead hit.
Saturday’s game is set to feature a pair of right-handers in the Royals’ Seth Lugo (1-1, 2.63 ERA) against the Mariners’ Emerson Hancock (2-1, 2.86).
Lugo is coming off his worst start of the season, in which he allowed seven runs on 14 hits in 6 1/3 innings Sunday to the visiting Los Angeles Angels. He didn’t get a decision as the Royals won 11-9 in 10 innings. Lugo is 1-1 with a 6.00 ERA in three career appearances against Seattle, with two starts.
Hancock took a no-decision Sunday at St. Louis in a game the Mariners won 3-2. He gave up two runs on seven hits over six innings. Hancock is 0-1, 7.50 in three career outings versus Kansas City, including two starts.
–Field Level Media
