Sports
Bruins chase 14th straight home win against Macklin Celebrini, Sharks
Mar 10, 2026; Boston, Massachusetts, USA; Boston Bruins center Fraser Minten (93) reacts after defeating the Los Angeles Kings in overtime at TD Garden. Mandatory Credit: Bob DeChiara-Imagn Images The Boston Bruins go for their 14th straight home win when they host the San Jose Sharks — led by sophomore sensation and former Boston University star Macklin Celebrini — for a crucial Thursday night game amidst a playoff race for both teams.
Boston earned a 2-1 overtime victory over the Los Angeles Kings on Tuesday to maintain a two-point lead for the second and final Eastern Conference wild-card spot, while San Jose has used a recent 3-1-2 stretch to move within a point of the West’s playoff cutoff line.
With just over a month remaining in the regular season, the games are heating up and the points are at a premium.
“That was pretty close to a playoff-style game. Not much out there,” Bruins defenseman Mason Lohrei said of Tuesday’s battle with the Kings. “At the end of the day, it’s tight and it’s nice to come out on top.”
Bruins coach Marco Sturm has expressed the same point.
“For us, the playoffs already started a long time ago,” he said. “It’s helping us move forward in playing those types of games. It’s not just us. It’s a one-goal game most of the time.”
On Tuesday, the Bruins emerged thanks to Charlie McAvoy’s overtime winner. The game was scoreless after two periods until Lohrei scored 8:22 into the third and the Kings responded with six minutes left in regulation.
McAvoy finished as a hero after taking a hit into the boards from Los Angeles’ Samuel Helenius in the second period. He still needed more dental work postgame but avoided serious injury with his return.
“I wish the hits would stop coming, honestly. It’s tiring,” McAvoy said. “I just need to get some rest and I’ll be better on Thursday. We’ve just got to keep this thing going.”
The Sharks earned points in their first four March games before a 6-3 Tuesday loss to the Buffalo Sabres in their opener of a five-game road trip.
Celebrini scored for a fourth straight game and now has points in six straight (five goals, four assists), while Alexander Wennberg had a goal and an assist. But the Sabres — who have now banked multiple eight-game win streaks this season — proved to be too much.
Finding more scoring will be key down the stretch for San Jose.
Before Wennberg’s power-play goal in the third period in Buffalo, the Sharks had gone over eight periods without a player other than Celebrini or Kiefer Sherwood scoring a goal.
“We’ve got to play inside, get to the net, put pucks to the net. We’ve gotta get more people at the net,” Sharks coach Ryan Warsofsky said. “That’s how you score this time of year. We’ve talked about it enough.”
Of course, San Jose wouldn’t be where it is in the race without Celebrini, who is just two years removed from a Hobey Baker Award-winning college season in Boston.
Celebrini’s goal Tuesday was his 90th point this season, a mark which only Sidney Crosby and Wayne Gretzky have reached faster in a single season as a teenager in NHL history. The 19-year-old has 33 goals and ranks fifth in the league in points.
“Obviously, we know the skill of Mack, then (Sherwood) comes in (from the Vancouver Canucks), but it’s got to be a team effort,” Wennberg said. “It’s up to everyone on the team. We can’t just rely on those guys to score.”
–Field Level Media
Sports
Quadir Copeland, NC State too strong for Pitt
Mar 11, 2026; Charlotte, NC, USA; NC State Wolfpack guard Quadir Copeland (11) reacts after scoring in the second half at Spectrum Center. Mandatory Credit: Bob Donnan-Imagn Images CHARLOTTE — Quadir Copeland collected 24 points and eight assists in North Carolina State’s 98-88 victory over Pitt in the second round of the Atlantic Coast Conference tournament on Wednesday afternoon.
Ven-Allen Lubin racked up 18 points, Paul McNeil Jr. had 15, Tre Holloman notched 14 and Darrion Williams and Matt Able both scored 12 as the Wolfpack shot 60.8% from the field. NC State made 13 of 23 shots from 3-point range.
Seventh-seeded NC State (20-12), which won for only the second time in eight games, will meet No. 10-ranked and second-seeded Virginia in Thursday’s first quarterfinal.
Cameron Corhen poured in 27 points on 9-for-12 shooting for No. 15 seed Pitt (13-20), which had won four of its previous six games. Nojus Indrusaitis, who hit five 3-point shots, and Omari Witherspoon each scored 19 points and Barry Dunning Jr. added 11 points, but the Panthers’ 57.1% shooting wasn’t enough.
The Wolfpack scored 22 of the first 30 points of the second half to create a 73-58 lead on a Pitt team that pulled off an upset of Stanford a day earlier on a last-second shot off a rebound.
Pitt used an 11-3 run to close the gap and later trailed 78-72 with more than 10 minutes to play before Terrance Arceneaux’s 3-point shot resulted in his only basket of the game.
By the game’s eight-minute mark, NC State had five players with double-figure point totals and soon after Williams joined them by bagging his fourth 3-pointer on four attempts. Later, Copeland made a nifty move to the lane to score and expand on NC State’s 88-83 edge.
Both teams shot over 61% in the first half, which ended with NC State holding a 51-50 edge. The teams combined to make 16 of 25 shots from 3-point range prior to the break.
As a result of the shooting success, there were only three offensive rebounds in the opening half. NC State held a 16-7 scoring edge from the free-throw line.
Pitt made 12 of its first 18 shots from the field, including 8-for-12 on 3s, and led 34-25. But the Wolfpack got rolling, with McNeil’s three 3-pointers contributing to a surge of less than four minutes that produced a 10-0 run on the way to a 43-40 lead.
–Bob Sutton, Field Level Media
Sports
Reports: Tisch family seeking to transfer Giants ownership to children
Jan 9, 2020; East Rutherford, New Jersey, USA; New York Giants co-owner Steve Tisch talks to reporters after the press conference introducing new head coach Joe Judge (not pictured) at MetLife Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Danielle Parhizkaran-Imagn Images New York Giants co-owners Steve, Jonathan and Laurie Tisch have requested to transfer their ownership stakes in the franchise to their children’s trust, according to multiple reports on Wednesday.
The move by the siblings comes less than two months since Steve Tisch’s name appeared approximately 440 times in the Epstein Files. The trio own 23.1% of the team but would no longer have any interest if the transfer is approved, according to a memo dated March 11 that was obtained by both ESPN and The Athletic.
“Prior transfers to these Trusts were completed pursuant to 2023 and 2024 Finance Committee approvals,” the memo states. “The Sellers now propose to transfer their entire remaining interests, totaling 23.1% of the Club, to the Trusts. … Following the transactions, the Sellers will no longer own any interest in the Club.”
The Giants told ESPN on Wednesday that they had “nothing to add” in response to the proposal.
Steve Tisch came under heavy scrutiny when documents released by the U.S. Department of Justice displayed numerous emails between Tisch and Jeffrey Epstein, who was arrested in 2019 on federal sex trafficking charges. Epstein was found dead in his jail cell in August of that year and his death was ruled a suicide.’
Epstein was charged with soliciting a minor for prostitution in Florida in 2008 and became a register sex offender. A heavy amount of Tisch’s interactions with Epstein came in 2013, according to documents.
Tisch and Epstein often conversed about different women with Tisch expressing interest in meeting some of them.
Tisch released a statement in January admitting he corresponded with Epstein but said he never went to the “Epstein Island” location in the Caribbean.
“We had a brief association where we exchanged emails about adult women, and in addition, we discussed movies, philanthropy and investments,” Tisch said. “I did not take him up on any of his invitations and never went to his island. As we all know now, he was a terrible person and someone I deeply regret associating with.”
The late Preston Robert Tisch purchased 50% of the franchise in 1991 to co-own the team with the Mara family.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Iowa State runs roughshod over Arizona State in Big 12 tourney
Mar 11, 2026; Kansas City, MO, USA; Iowa State Cyclones forward Joshua Jefferson (5) protects the ball during the first half against the Arizona State Sun Devils at T-Mobile Center. Mandatory Credit: William Purnell-Imagn Images Milan Momcilovic scored 21 points and Joshua Jefferson added 20 points and 12 rebounds as No. 7 Iowa State walloped Arizona State 91-42 on Wednesday in a Big 12 Conference tournament second-round game in Kansas City, Mo.
The fifth-seeded Cyclones (26-6) advance to play fourth-seeded Texas Tech, No. 16 in the latest AP poll, in the quarterfinal round on Thursday afternoon.
Iowa State led by as many as 33 points in the first half and by 29 at halftime as it held the 12th-seeded Sun Devils to 31.8% shooing from the floor while forcing 15 turnovers that led to 18 points for the Cyclones.
The second half was not much better for Arizona State, as Iowa State eventually expanded the margin to 49 points, with the margin of victory the largest in Big 12 tournament history.
Blake Buchanan added 17 points for the Cyclones, while Tamin Lipsey scored 11.
Santiago Trouet led Arizona State (17-16) with 13 points and was the only Sun Devil in double figures. Maurice Odem, who came into this tournament averaging more than 17 points per game, scored just two on Wednesday after producing nine in a win over Baylor on Tuesday.
The Sun Devils lost to Iowa State twice in the past five days by a combined total of 70 points.
Iowa State set the table early on, scoring the game’s first seven points before going upon 13-2 on a layup by Momcilovic at the 13:28 mark of the first half. Lipsey’s 3-pointer with 9:20 to go in the half stoked the margin to 14 points. A jumper from beyond the arc by Jamarion Batemon on the break after a steal by Lipsey put Iowa State ahead 27-10 with 7:51 left.
The Cyclones continued to expand on the lead as Momcilovic hit a free throw and then a 3-pointer, the latter with 4:03 still to play before halftime, to go up 33-10. Iowa State’s run eventually reached 16 consecutive points and built the lead to 40-10 before a jumper by Massamba Diop ended a six-minute scoreless stretch for the Sun Devils.
Bryce Ford’s jumper with 1 second left cut Arizona State’s deficit to 45-16 at the break.
Momcilovic led Iowa State’s attack with 12 points while Buchanan and Bateman added nine each before halftime. No player had more than four points for the Sun Devils in the first half as they shot just 7 of 22 from the field and missed all 10 of their 3-point attempts.
–Field Level Media
