Sports
Bruins search for breathing room in standings vs. scuffling Maple Leafs
Nov 11, 2025; Boston, Massachusetts, USA; Boston Bruins right wing David Pastrnak (88) celebrates with center Mark Kastelic (47) after scoring a goal against the Toronto Maple Leafs during the third period at the TD Garden. Mandatory Credit: Brian Fluharty-Imagn Images There is no such thing as breathing room in NHL playoff races this season, but the Boston Bruins look to ride the momentum of a major win into their return home for a Tuesday night matchup with the Toronto Maple Leafs.
Boston (39-23-8, 86 points) took over the top Eastern Conference wild-card position with a 4-2 Saturday win over the Detroit Red Wings, improving to 3-0-2 in its last five games and improving its playoff chances by 10.3% due to the win, according to MoneyPuck.com.
Three of the Bruins’ four goals came in the third period to erase a 2-1 deficit.
“We’ve been down in the third period a couple of times lately, but there’s no quitting in this team,” Bruins forward Elias Lindholm said. “We just stay with it and keep playing the same way, and we seem to find ways to win.”
Of course, there is no time for celebration yet, as the New York Islanders and Red Wings remain within two points in the standings.
Saturday’s win could stand tall if the Bruins are able to hold onto a playoff spot. A huge effort in the third period, including a game-winner from defenseman Nikita Zadorov and 22 of Jeremy Swayman’s 42 saves, proved to be the difference.
“That was the best I’ve seen (Swayman) play since I’ve been around,” Boston coach Marco Sturm said. “He was unbelievable and kept us in the game, won us the game.”
Swayman is 6-1-1 with a .934 save percentage in eight March outings.
David Pastrnak is looking to extend his point streak to 10 games (six goals, eight assists) after notching a goal and an assist in Detroit.
Unlike recent seasons of late, the Maple Leafs (29-29-13, 71 points) are looking far up at the Bruins in the standings as they have lost three straight games (0-2-1) and won just twice since the Olympic break (2-8-4). Only the New York Rangers sit below them in the conference standings.
Toronto, which lost both of its previous games vs. Boston this season, is coming off a 5-2 Saturday loss to the Ottawa Senators in which they were outshot for the eighth consecutive game — this time, by a whopping 44-14 margin.
Joseph Woll played both games of the team’s back-to-back in goal, making 39 saves against Ottawa after scheduled starter Anthony Stolarz took teammate William Nylander’s warmup shot to the throat and was taken to the hospital for testing. The Carolina Hurricanes put 36 shots on Woll in Toronto’s 4-3 overtime loss on Friday.
“I think he did a great job (preparing for another start), but the team’s got to respond better than that,” Leafs coach Craig Berube said after Saturday’s game.
Stolarz has since been deemed “good to go” after practicing Monday, though Berube did not name the starter for Tuesday’s game.
Outside of the net, 20-year-old Easton Cowan had a goal and an assist — his first career multi-point game — to help Toronto nearly climb out of a 3-0 deficit, and John Tavares also scored to hit the 25-goal plateau for the 14th time in his career. But it was not enough.
“It’s obviously difficult when we’re not playing the way we’re capable of and we’re in the position we’re in,” Tavares said. “But I just try to approach it one day at a time and appreciate the opportunity to play with the guys in the locker room.”
–Field Level Media
Sports
UFC Macau Best Bets and Fight Predictions for May 30
After a successful visit in November 2024 – which was their first in 10 years – the Octagon will land back in Macau, China, for UFC Macau on May 30.
The main event will feature a bantamweight battle between China’s Song Yadong and Deiveson Figueiredo.
Yadong has won three of his last five fights; however, he enters this bout off a loss to Sean O’Malley at UFC 324 in January. Figueiredo, meanwhile, is 4-3 since moving up to bantamweight. The former flyweight champion, however, has lost three of his last four, most recently falling to Umar Nurmagomedov at UFC 324.
The co-main event will feature Zhang Mingyang taking on Alonzo Menifield in light heavyweight action. Mingyang most recently fought in August at UFC Shanghai, losing to Johnny Walker. That loss was Mingyang’s first in the UFC and snapped a 12-fight win streak. Menifield has won five of his last eight but was most recently knocked out by Volkan Oezdemir at UFC Qatar in November.
The UFC Macau main card will also feature Sergei Pavlovich vs. Tallison Teixeira, Kai Asakura vs. Cameron Smotherman, Jake Matthews vs. Carlston Harris, and Alex Perez vs. Su Mudaerji.
SONG YADONG VS DEIVESON FIGUEIREDO
If there’s one thing to appreciate about Song Yadong, it’s his striking. With his Sanda foundation, Yadong has developed strong kickboxing skills, and he will look to use those to try and pressure Figueiredo into a war. Yadong has some strength to his strikes and has the cardio for a war; however, Figueiredo’s counterstriking can still be dangerous if he’s not careful.
Figueiredo’s grappling can be a problem for Yadong if he’s not careful. He’ll have to make use of his takedown defense abilities (a 73% takedown defense rate, per UFC Stats) to avoid giving positioning and control, as well as submission opportunities, to Figueiredo. This should be a fight that lasts either way.
BET: Yadong vs. Figueiredo to go the distance (Caesars: +100)
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ZHANG MINGYANG VS ALONZO MENIFIELD
August’s UFC Shanghai was supposed to be a coming-out party for Zhang Mingyang, who has proven himself to be a solid up-and-coming contender in the light heavyweight division. Mingyang, however, was finished solidly by Johnny Walker, halting Mingyang’s upward momentum. This fight gives Mingyang the chance to show he’s still got contender potential.
Mingyang is the master of the first-round finish. Simply put, if Alonzo Menifield can be defensive and wear Mingyang down over the first round, he’s in a much stronger position to win. At 38 years old, however, it’s hard to imagine Menifield going five full minutes without getting tagged. And it’s hard to imagine Mingyang dropping a pair of consecutive fights, especially if he slugs the way he wants to.
BET: Mingyang via KO/TKO in Round 1 (FanDuel: +160)
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KAI ASAKURA VS CAMERON SMOTHERMAN
There were interesting options for a third best bet. As we’ve seen though, however, heavyweight fights can be volatile to pick, and some of the underdog plays on this card are a little harder to read. So, let’s talk about Kai Asakura.
Asakura came into the UFC as a highly promoted talent and former RIZIN champion; however, he hasn’t lived up to the billing thus far. A loss to Alexandre Pantoja in a title fight in your UFC debut? Acceptable. Losing (with all due respect to him) to 39-year-old Tim Elliott in a fight Asaukra was a heavy favorite? Yikes. Now, Asakura moves up to bantamweight, hoping to show that a less drastic weight cut will do wonders for him – and he needs to hope this.
Asakura has more experience and a stronger resume than his 12-6 opponent, Cameron Smotherman, who is 1-2 in the UFC. Asakura is the better all-around fighter, so the fight falls on him. The more he avoids a brawl and the better he is defensively, the stronger the chance he goes home with a win. A loss here, however, and it smells like the end of an insanely disappointing UFC run.
BET: Asakura to win via KO/TKO OR decision (FanDuel: -240)
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Sports
Talor Gooch grabs lead in Korea with second-round 63
May 8, 2026; Sterling, Virginia, USA; Talor Gooch putts during the second round of LIV Golf Virginia golf tournament at Trump National Golf Club. Mandatory Credit: John (Jack) Power-Imagn Images Talor Gooch surged into the lead at LIV Golf Korea with a 7-under 63 in the second round Friday at Asiad Country Club in Busan, South Korea.
Gooch carded eight birdies — six on the front nine — and a lone bogey at the par-4 fifth hole to move to 8-under, one stroke ahead of Bryson DeChambeau. It is the eighth time the OKGC captain has shot 63 or better in LIV Golf and the seventh time he has held the 36-hole lead.
A four-time winner on the tour, Gooch chipped in for a birdie on his second hole, the par-4 ninth, and birdied six of his last eight holes.
“The game still doesn’t feel great, but we’re working hard, and we’re working in the right direction,” said Gooch, who entered the week ranked 29th in points but could climb to fifth with a win. “… Hopefully we can just kind of keep it going and get this train rolling.”
First-round co-leader DeChambeau is alone at 7-under after shooting 68 on Friday, finishing with three birdies and a bogey. The Crushers GC captain hit only eight of 14 fairways and 10 of 18 greens in regulation.
“My putting saved me today,” DeChambeau said. “I felt like I was hitting it really well yesterday, driving it well, and today just kind of went sideways.”
DeChambeau is looking for his third win of the LIV Golf season after missing the cut at the PGA Championship earlier this month. He is one of the few big hitters having a strong start at what Gooch called a “shot-maker’s course.”
“It’s a testament to how great of a golfer Bryson is to be able to play bomber’s paradises and then this course is a little bit more of a shot-maker’s course,” Gooch said. “It’s a fun course, and it’s just another example that a course doesn’t have to be 8,000 yards to be a good test.”
Five golfers are tied for third at 5-under, including Ripper GC Captain Cameron Smith of Australia (68 on Friday) and Torque GC captain Joaquin Niemann (69) of Chile. Belgium’s Thomas Pieters (69), Zimbabwe’s Scott Vincent (70) and Charles Howell III (70) also are in that group.
Korean GC’s Doyeob Mun (68) is tied for eighth place at 4-under with Fireballs GC captain Sergio Garcia (69) of Spain.
Gooch’s OKGC leads the team standings at 14-under, one shot ahead of DeChambeau’s Crushers and three clear of Ripper GC.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Report: Knicks C Mitchell Robinson to play with broken pinky
May 19, 2026; New York, New York, USA; New York Knicks center Mitchell Robinson (23) reacts to missing a free throw against the Cleveland Cavaliers during the third quarter of game one of the eastern conference finals during the 2026 NBA playoffs at Madison Square Garden. Mandatory Credit: Brad Penner-Imagn Images New York Knicks center Mitchell Robinson plans to play in Game 1 of the NBA Finals with a broken right pinky finger, ESPN reported Friday.
Robinson, 28, has undergone surgery to repair the fracture and will wear a brace on his hand, per the report.
Video from Monday’s Eastern Conference finals-clinching win at Cleveland shows Robinson grabbing his right hand following a rebound attempt with 5:35 left in the third quarter. He continued to play until midway through the fourth quarter of the 130-93 Game 4 rout of the Cavaliers.
Game 1 of the Knicks’ first Finals appearance since 1999 will be Wednesday night against the winner of Saturday’s Game 7 between the San Antonio Spurs and Oklahoma City Thunder in the Western Conference finals.
Robinson tallied eight points and 10 rebounds in 18 minutes Monday as the Knicks completed their sweep and won their 11th consecutive game.
The backup to six-time All-Star Karl-Anthony Towns, Robinson is averaging 5.3 points, 5.5 rebounds and 14.2 minutes per game while shooting a league-leading 73.7% from the field (28 of 38) in 13 playoff games as a reserve. He has made only 13 of 43 free-throw attempts (30.2%).
During the regular season, Robinson averaged 5.7 points, 8.8 rebounds, 1.2 blocks and 19.6 minutes in 60 games (16 starts) and finished eighth in voting for NBA Sixth Man of the Year.
For his career, Robinson has averaged 7.5 points, 8.0 boards, 1.7 blocks and 23.4 minutes in 397 regular-season games (215 starts) with New York. The Knicks’ longest-tenured Knicks player was selected in the second round of the 2018 NBA Draft out of Western Kentucky.
–Field Level Media
