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Plagued by early deficits, Wild turn page to meet Blackhawks

NHL: Utah Mammoth at Minnesota WildMar 10, 2026; Saint Paul, Minnesota, USA; Minnesota Wild left wing Nick Foligno (71) in action during the first period against the Utah Mammoth at Grand Casino Arena. Mandatory Credit: Matt Krohn-Imagn Images

A three-game winless streak has done little to compromise the Minnesota Wild’s solid playoff positioning.

Still, the locker room knows better than to get complacent as the stretch run nears.

A visit Tuesday to the slumping Chicago Blackhawks offers a chance for Minnesota to snap the skid and move closer to securing a postseason berth. The Wild are eager to seize it as they make the most of their current funk.

“The mood is good, I think. I truly do. I think adversity right now could be a positive,” defenseman Jake Middleton said. “We’ve got a lot of new bodies in the room. The lineup is kind of interchangeable game-to-game. Learning how to play in these types of situations could be a good thing for this group.”

Minnesota is entrenched in third place in the Central Division, six points behind the Dallas Stars and 14 ahead of the Utah Mammoth.

The Wild can thank the Blackhawks for preventing the Mammoth from creeping closer in the standings.

While Chicago is just 3-4-2 since play resumed after the Olympic break, all three victories during that span came against Utah.

After sweeping a home-and-home with the Mammoth last week, with both games requiring overtime, the Blackhawks were unable to sustain momentum Saturday in a 4-0 road loss to the Vegas Golden Knights.

Vegas beat Chicago goaltender Spencer Knight for three goals in the first 12 minutes. The Blackhawks allowed multiple power-play goals for the first time since Dec. 7.

“I don’t think we started well enough, pretty evidently,” Blackhawks defenseman Alex Vlasic said. “They jumped on us quick. (Against) a good team like that, they’re hard to compete with once they get a lead.”

Minnesota can attest to the difficulty of emerging from early holes, as home losses to the Philadelphia Flyers on Thursday and New York Rangers on Saturday showed.

In Sunday’s 4-2 loss to visiting Toronto, the Maple Leafs struck for three goals in the middle period. Although Vladimir Tarasenko responded, scoring twice in 23 seconds to reach 700 career points, Minnesota fell short.

“Obviously when you’re down three, it feels like a huge mountain to climb,” Wild goalie Jesper Wallstedt said. “But I thought we did an unbelievable job with sticking with what works for us and we continued to play the style of hockey that we want to play.

“We gave it a good push, but unfortunately (Sunday) it wasn’t enough.”

Tuesday marks the beginning of a home-and-home between the Blackhawks and Wild, who are set to conclude the season series on Thursday in Minnesota.

Minnesota defeated host Chicago 4-3 in overtime on Nov. 26 and earned a 4-3 shootout win at home on Jan. 27.

The Blackhawks expect defenseman Wyatt Kaiser (left shoulder) to play Tuesday after he missed the Vegas game due to injury.

Also set to return: former Blackhawks captain Nick Foligno. Tuesday is his first game in Chicago since the Blackhawks traded him to Minnesota on March 6.

Reunited with his brother Marcus, who is week-to-week with a lower body injury, Nick Foligno tallied one assist in his first five games with the Wild.

–Field Level Media

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Why the NCAA Tournament Selection Process Still Doesn’t Make Sense

What we’ve got here, Keith Gill, is failure to communicate.

Or maybe I should direct my ire not at Gill, the Sun Belt Conference commissioner and this year’s NCAA Tournament selection committee chair, but at CBS for bungling the delivery of the biggest news of Selection Sunday.

Somebody help me out, because the committee did the right thing — they put Miami (Ohio) in the tournament — and somehow it still feels like Gill was backpedaling and playing defense on the topic throughout Sunday.

Miami, as in the “other” Miami, had a historic 31-0 regular season, the fourth perfect regular season this millennium, but the RedHawks had neither “beaten anybody” nor won their games all that convincingly. Four wins, including three in the Mid-American Conference, needed overtime and a handful of others came by two points in regulation.

But winning is winning, and prejudiced analysts like ex-Auburn coach Bruce Pearl were saying some wild things about whether Miami deserved an at-large NCAA bid, which only intensified after the RedHawks were promptly upset in the MAC quarterfinals.

When the selection show came around Sunday, college basketball journalist Seth Davis declared on CBS that “Miami (Ohio) was the last at-large team selected. They were one spot away from not being in this tournament.” And the accompanying graphic showed the “Last Four In” to be NC State, Texas, SMU and Miami (Ohio). It’s widely understood through the prevalence of pop bracketology that those lists are in a sequential order, and being last on said list signifies you were the last team into the field.

Cut to Gill’s interview on CBS, as well as further damage control on other networks, as he swore up and down it was not the case.

“Miami (Ohio) was not the last team selected into the field,” Gill said. “They came in before NC State, Texas, and SMU. And when we did our scrubbing process, those teams scrubbed above (Miami) relative to the predictive metrics and also the difference in the quality of the wins.”

So CBS’s “Last Four In” graphic ordered the at-large teams by overall seed — which had Miami (Ohio) last, even if the committee wrote their name down before Texas a few minutes prior, which does feel like splitting hairs. On the NCAA’s overall seed list, Miami is 44th and VCU is 45th; Gill made sure to explain that if VCU hadn’t won its conference tournament, it wouldn’t have been an at-large.

Got all that? I never thought I’d hear the word “scrubbing” so much on a selection show. I’ve watched these all my life, and I’ve never felt less like I understand the process that’s going on behind those doors.

If Seth Davis looks at a list and understands Miami (Ohio) to be the last team in the field, the general populace who only watch college basketball four weeks a year will be inclined to believe the same.

Miami was 31-0, friends. The point is that the RedHawks should have been safely in the field, not teetering on the bubble. I’m sure they don’t terribly mind going to Dayton, an hour away to campus, for a veritable home game against SMU. But it reflects poorly on the committee and CBS alike that 

1.) This came so close to being screwed up and 2.) The messaging about how a team ended up where it did is a Gordian knot to be untangled across multiple interviews.

There wasn’t much else to critique this year, as the four No. 1 seeds were fairly obvious, but let me lodge two more complaints:

St. John’s won 19 of its last 20 games, captured the Big East regular-season and tournament titles and is… a five seed.

UConn, with a nearly identical overall record, is a two seed. Purdue had an abysmal end of the regular season, swept the Big Ten tournament and was boosted to a two seed. “But it really it is a full body of work,” Gill later said. “One of the things I would say about St. John’s is their results in the nonconference did not have the same depth and quality as some of the folks that are ahead of them.” OK, then maybe the proper point of comparison is No. 1 Florida. Both teams started sluggishly and took four losses against similar nonconference strengths of schedule, but the Gators sure weren’t held back for that reason.

Just admit you’re doing an eye test thing about the strength of the Big East. I’ll tell you right now, St. John’s will demolish No. 4 seed Kansas if it comes to that in the second round.

I’d be furious this morning if I rooted for Miami. The real Miami this time, Florida, The U. That’s because the Hurricanes are the No. 7 seed in their region but must play No. 10 Missouri in St. Louis of all places. Why should the lower seed get a home-court advantage that blatant?

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NHL Storylines to Watch: Sabres Run, McDavid’s Criticism, and Stars Streak

One month remains in the NHL’s regular season. The race is on for the 16 berths to chase the Stanley Cup.

With the playoffs on the horizon, however, there are more than just posts to be decided. 

There are plenty of intriguing issues to digest. Here are a few worth noting as we ready for the final push in the regular season.

CLEAN THE GARAGE

This harkens back to Mario Lemieux’s comment in 1992 about all of the hooking and holding that was stifling talent. Sadly, it took more than a decade — and a lost season due to a lockout — for the NHL to react and begin enforcing the rules.

Fast forward to today and the league’s most talented player made his point about the department of player safety’s lack of consistency regarding punishment for nefarious plays.

Edmonton Oilers star Connor McDavid took a rare step to voicing his opinion last week when he said the process needs to find a way to ensure the frustrations are reduced from both the perpetrators and the victims.

This came to a head when Anaheim Ducks defenseman Radko Gudas was handed a five-game suspension for a predatory knee-on-knee hit on Auston Matthews, which ended the season for the Toronto Maple Leafs captain.

While the Ducks, who are in the fight for top spot in the Pacific Division, felt the banishment was too much, the Maple Leafs felt it was too soft considering they were without a standout player while they are hoping to make a push for a playoff spot.

McDavid, who should be voicing his opinion more, is correct. The league must find a more consistent standard for suspensions. Hopefully the NHL does not wait a decade to heed his words.

SABRES ARE RATTLING

There are a few surprises to be found by looking at the standings — the Ducks atop the weakest-link division, the Pittsburgh Penguins in a playoff spot while the Florida Panthers are destined to miss the playoffs — but the biggest must be the Buffalo Sabres leading the Atlantic Division and within a couple of points of the Carolina Hurricanes for top spot in the Eastern Conference.

Go back to Dec. 8, and the Sabres sat last in the East, 30th overall in the league and about to fire GM Kevyn Adams while readying to miss the playoffs for a NHL record 15th consecutive season.

Thanks to an incredible 30-6-2 run sparked by a 10-game winning streak, they have a chance to be the East’s top seed. It is not smoke and mirrors, either.

Starting with a 4-3 overtime win over the Edmonton Oilers on Dec. 9, a game in which the Sabres surrendered a three-goal lead in the third period before recovering, Buffalo has been the league’s best team in goals for, save percentage and goal-differential.

Will it mean a the first Stanley Cup title in franchise history? Make that bet at your peril, but it is a great story for a long-suffering fanbase that deserves a winner.

ICE CHIPS

A streak being overlooked right now is the Dallas Stars on a 14-0-1 run headed into Monday’s clash with the Utah Mammoth. 

Dallas is vying for the longest points streak in franchise history … As the Panthers head toward missing the playoffs, they will join a small list of clubs that failed to reach the Stanley Cup tournament one season after winning the title. That last club to suffer that indignity was the Los Angeles Kings of 2014-15 … What is a bigger surprise: Cole Caufield of the Montreal Canadiens second in the league with 39 goals or tied for third with 38 tallies are a pair of skaters from the Minnesota Wild, Kirill Kaprizov and Matt Boldy?

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Six-time Pro Bowl CB Darius Slay announces retirement

Syndication: Detroit Free PressDarius Slay: Cornerback | Years with Detroit: 2013–2019. He was a three-time Pro Bowler while with the Lions (2017–2019) and earned First-Team All-Pro honors in 2017 when he tied for the NFL lead with 8 interceptions and defended 26 passes. Known for his quickness, ball-hawking instincts and leadership in Detroit’s secondary, Slay became one of the most impactful defensive backs of his era for the franchise.

Former Detroit Lions and Philadelphia Eagles cornerback Darius Slay Jr. announced his retirement in a social media post Monday.

The former second-round pick in 2013 was a six-time Pro Bowl selection in 13 NFL seasons.

“Dear football, I wanna thank you for all you’ve done for me,” Slay said in the caption of his announcement video on Instagram. “I’ve been blessed to play the game I loved since I was 5yrs old for an amazing 13yrs at the highest level. Football was my peace, my joy, my everything.

“This game put me in a position to help take care of my family and loved ones and I’m forever grateful. It’s hard to say goodbye, but God has a new chapter for me and I’m ready to turn the page and start my new journey.”

Slay, 35, made three Pro Bowls with both Detroit (2013-19) and Philadelphia (2021-24). The Eagles released him last March and he signed with the Pittsburgh Steelers, playing 10 games (nine starts) in 2025 before he was placed on waivers in early December.

The Buffalo Bills claimed Slay, but he elected to not report and instead sat out the remainder of the season.

In a clip he reposted on social media before announcing his retirement, Slay made it clear he only has one team he would consider playing for in 2026.

“No team can call me but Eagles. No team can call me, everybody knows,” Slay said.

Slay, a first-team All-Pro cornerback in 2017, finishes his professional career with 655 tackles, 28 interceptions (three he returned for touchdowns), 17 tackles for loss, 163 pass breakups, two forced fumbles and six fumble recoveries (two for touchdowns) in 187 games (176 starts).

–Field Level Media

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