Connect with us

Sports

Jets, F Cole Perfetti avoid arbitration with 5-year, $30M deal

Apr 14, 2026; Salt Lake City, Utah, USA; Winnipeg Jets center Cole Perfetti (91) warms up before a game against the Utah Mammoth at Delta Center. Mandatory Credit: Rob Gray-Imagn ImagesApr 14, 2026; Salt Lake City, Utah, USA; Winnipeg Jets center Cole Perfetti (91) warms up before a game against the Utah Mammoth at Delta Center. Mandatory Credit: Rob Gray-Imagn Images

The Winnipeg Jets signed forward Cole Perfetti to a five-year, $30 million contract on Wednesday and avoided an arbitration hearing.

Perfetti, 24, filed for arbitration as a restricted free agent on July 5, with a hearing date to be announced.

Perfetti recorded 32 points (12 goals, 20 assists) with a minus-9 rating, 20 penalty minutes, 33 blocks and 54 hits in 68 games last season while dealing with a high ankle sprain.

For his career, Perfetti has 157 points (59 goals, 98 assists), a plus-29 rating, 68 penalty minutes, 125 blocks and 203 hits in 290 regular-season games since the 2021-22 season.

He also has six points (three goals, three assists) in 14 career playoff games.

Winnipeg selected Perfetti with the 10th overall pick in the 2020 NHL Draft.

–Field Level Media

source

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Sports

ATP roundup: Roman Andres Burruchaga stuns top-seeded Flavio Cobolli in Umag

Jun 30, 2026; London, United Kingdom; Roman Andres Burruchaga (ARG) hits a backhand against Alex de Minaur (AUS) (not pictured) on day two of The Championships Wimbledon 2026 at All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club. Mandatory Credit: Geoff Burke-Imagn ImagesJun 30, 2026; London, United Kingdom; Roman Andres Burruchaga (ARG) hits a backhand against Alex de Minaur (AUS) (not pictured) on day two of The Championships Wimbledon 2026 at All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club. Mandatory Credit: Geoff Burke-Imagn Images

World No. 9 and top-seeded Flavio Cobolli of Italy made an early exit from the Plava Laguna Croatia Open Umag after Roman Andres Burruchaga stunned him 6-2, 6-4 on Wednesday in the second round in Croatia.

The Argentine earned the first top-10 victory of his career by converting four of seven break points and winning 78.1% of his first-serve points. Cobolli was playing his first match since reaching the Wimbledon quarterfinals. Burruchaga will next face countryman Camilo Ugo Carabelli, the seventh seed who rallied past Spain’s Pablo Carreno Busta 3-6, 7-5, 7-5.

Spain’s Daniel Merida delivered another upset by eliminating No. 3 seed Tomas Martin Etcheverry of Argentina 7-5, 6-4. Second-seeded Alejandro Davidovich Fokina of Spain avoided a similar fate with a 6-4, 7-5 win over Argentina’s Marco Trungelliti, while No. 4 Matteo Arnaldi of Italy defeated Argentine qualifier Federico Agustin Gomez 6-3, 5-7, 6-3. Damir Dzumhur of Bosnia and Herzegovina, Alex Molcan of the Slovak Republic and France’s Titouan Droguet also advanced.

Nordea Open

Former champion Nuno Borges swept Bulgarian wild card Grigor Dimitrov 6-4, 6-2 to advance to the quarterfinals in Bastad, Sweden.

The fifth-seeded Portuguese needed just 65 minutes to move on. Borges, whose only ATP Tour title came by defeating Rafael Nadal at Bastad in 2024, will next face defending champion Luciano Darderi of Italy.

The second-seeded Darderi beat Germany’s Daniel Altmaier 6-4, 6-4. Two other seeds were eliminated, with fellow Italian Stefano Travaglia dispatching No. 4 Mariano Navone of Argentina 6-4, 6-2, and Paraguay’s Adolfo Daniel Vallejo rallying past sixth-seeded Botic van de Zandschulp of the Netherlands 4-6, 6-3, 7-6 (4). Vallejo became the first Paraguayan to reach a tour-level quarterfinal since Ramon Delgado in 2006.

EFG Swiss Open Gstaad

No. 4 seed Arthur Rinderknech of France saved two match points before outlasting qualifier Clement Tabur 6-7 (9), 7-6 (5), 7-5 in the second round at Gstaad, Switzerland.

Rinderknech needed 3 hours, 21 minutes to escape the all-French matchup, extending the match after Tabur moved within two points of victory in the second-set tiebreaker. Rinderknech finally secured the deciding break late in the third set to reach the quarterfinals.

Third-seeded Valentin Vacherot of Monaco made a successful return from a foot injury, recovering to beat Germany’s Yannick Hanfmann 4-6, 6-3, 6-4 in his first match since the French Open. No. 7 Raphael Collignon of Belgium defeated Italy’s Lorenzo Sonego 7-6 (2), 7-6 (5). The match between Stefanos Tsitsipas of Greece and Swiss wild card Jerome Kym was suspended because of darkness with the third set tied 5-5 after they split the first two sets.

–Field Level Media

source

Continue Reading

Sports

Reports: RB Alvin Kamara staying with Saints on reworked contract

Oct 26, 2025; New Orleans, Louisiana, USA; New Orleans Saints running back Alvin Kamara (41) warms up before a game against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers at Caesars Superdome. Mandatory Credit: Matthew Hinton-Imagn ImagesOct 26, 2025; New Orleans, Louisiana, USA; New Orleans Saints running back Alvin Kamara (41) warms up before a game against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers at Caesars Superdome. Mandatory Credit: Matthew Hinton-Imagn Images

Running back Alvin Kamara will stay with the New Orleans Saints after restructuring his contract for this season, his agent told NFL Network on Wednesday.

Financial terms were not disclosed for Kamara, who was to make up to $11.5 million in base salary in 2026. The Saints had renegotiated his deal in March for salary cap reasons. Kamara had $3 million of that figure guaranteed in 2025.

“Alvin’s goal, and the team’s goal, was for him to remain with the Saints and retire a Saint,” agent Brad Cicala told NFL Network.

The news was first reported on Wednesday by NewOrleans.Football on the podcast “The Set with Terron Armstead,” hosted by the former Saints offensive tackle.

Kamara played in only 11 games (all starts) last season because of knee and ankle injuries and had 131 carries for career lows of 471 yards and one touchdown. He also caught 33 passes on 39 targets for 186 yards and no touchdowns — all career lows.

The Saints had bolstered the running back room in March with the signing of former Jacksonville Jaguar Travis Etienne to a four-year contract worth more than $12 million annually in the first three years. That led to speculation that Kamara, who turns 31 on July 25, might be on his way out of New Orleans. He was entering the final year of a two-year, $24.5 million deal before it was revised.

ESPN reported that the Saints were spending a league-high $21 million in cap space to seven running backs on the roster before Kamara’s reworked contract terms.

Kamara has spent his entire career with the Saints since New Orleans selected him in the third round of the 2017 NFL Draft out of the University of Tennessee.

For his career, Kamara has 1,674 carries for 7,250 yards and 61 TDs as well as 606 receptions for 4,948 yards and 25 TDs in 126 regular-season games (95 starts).

He also has 93 rushing attempts for 357 yards and three TDS as well as 33 receptions for 274 yards and one score in seven playoff games (four starts).

He was selected to the Pro Bowl in his first five seasons and named the NFL Offensive Rookie of the Year in 2017.

–Field Level Media

source

Continue Reading

Sports

Messi leads Argentina rally, extends England's decades of disappointment

July 15, 2026; Atlanta, Georgia, U.S.; Argentina's Lionel Messi celebrates after the match.  Mandatory Credit: Brett Davis-Imagn Images July 15, 2026; Atlanta, Georgia, U.S.; Argentina’s Lionel Messi celebrates after the match. Mandatory Credit: Brett Davis-Imagn Images

ATLANTA — Five minutes from erasing decades of anguish, England turned passive. The painful result: two more assists for Lionel Messi, one more World Cup final for Argentina.

“We were so close,” England coach Thomas Tuchel said following the 2-1 defeat Wednesday at Atlanta Stadium during a dour postgame session rolling on as Argentina celebrated with song, dance and degrees of disbelief alongside home fans seated behind the winner’s goal. “But couldn’t keep the level after we scored. We deserved to be up 1-0. … we got passive.”

Defense dominated in the first World Cup semifinal without a shot in goal in the first half since 1966 as sparring — and a little extra — led to 19 total fouls.

Then the defending, three-time world champs blitzed England with goals in the 85th and 92nd minutes, sparking a party in Atlanta Stadium and advancing to the World Cup final on Sunday for the seventh time in the country’s history.

“Enjoy it,” Argentina coach Lionel Scaloni said. “Everybody should be thanking the players. This group is difficult to explain. Honestly. … I know that you recognize and acknowledge and are very well aware of how special this team is. This is all thanks to them. I want to thank them.”

Messi, 39, attempted only one shot in the match and spent most of the post-game, on-field party as a passive observer seated near the spot on the pitch where Enzo Fernandez changed England’s weekend plans a short time earlier.

Following Fernandez’s lead, Lautaro Martinez secured Argentina’s place in the World Cup final with the game-winning goal seven minutes later, in another dramatic comeback for a 2-1 victory on Wednesday afternoon.

Two possessions after he fired a rising missile deflected over the net by England keeper Jordan Pickford, Hernandez used a Lionel Messi assist for a replay of almost the same shot, but planted this one into the left corner of the net in the 85th minute. In the first two minutes of extra time, Martinez settled in front of Pickford at the left edge of the goal and headed a Messi pass by Pickford to cap a stirring rally.

“We conceded too many chances,” England’s 6-foot-7 supersub Dan Burn said. “When you get that close to the World Cup final after so many years, yeah, it hurts.”

Argentina will meet Spain on Sunday in East Rutherford, N.J., with a chance to claim a fourth title.

“It’s a dream to play in the World Cup final again,” Argentina midfielder Leandro Paredes said. “If this next game goes well, we’re going to be the champion of the Americas and champions of the world.”

Messi has eight goals and four assists in this World Cup and a tournament-record 12 career assists after two on Wednesday.

For more than 80 minutes, all signs were pointing to England getting its first World Cup championship bid in decades.

With Argentina’s defense backpedaling, Anthony Gordon broke the deadlock in the 55th minute. It was one of only five shots on goal Wednesday for England.

He tallied the game’s first goal on a brilliant assist from Morgan Rogers, who was fed by Declan Rice. Rogers recovered the ball outside the box right of the goal and found Gordon streaking ahead of defenders to deflect the pass with the side of his right foot for the score.

But England’s euphoria ended in familiar fashion.

“I wish I had the answer,” Pickford said. “Obviously very, very proud of what we’ve done in this tournament. But there’s very fine lines in this tournament.”

Moments later, England defender Djed Spence caught up to Giuliano Simeone, who had space and pace behind coverage on what would have been a clean shot from close range. The maligned Spence delivered one of the tackles of the tournament, covering significant distance to dislodge the ball inside the box.

Before a hydration break as the 70th minute approached, Pickford made his own bid for England’s gold star defensive play of the game. He got his right hand on a ball sailing for the right corner of the goal to make a deflection and diving save to his right, keeping the score 1-0. Only inches spared the Three Lions and Pickford from the equalizer courtesy of Alexis Mac Allister in the 76th minute when he met a cross from Rodrigo DePaul near the penalty spot but the shot cannoned off the right post.

La Scaloneta tested Pickford immediately out of the halftime break. Julian Alvarez ripped two shots approaching from Pickford’s left to spike the energy and decibel level in the dome, but missed both. The second sank into the outside of the net.

“I think this team plays the best when we are facing challenging situations, when we’re facing adversity,” Scaloni said. “We had a challenging game. A challenging situation. There was blood in the water and we went for it. That’s what I saw in the players as well.”

Messi and Argentina also threatened late in the first half, first when Messi danced free of Harry Kane near midfield and drew a yellow card on midfielder Elliot Anderson. The possession nearly ended in a goal by Fernandez, who tallied the decisive quarterfinal goal to eliminate Egypt last week in the round of 16. His clean strike from outside the box whizzed over the top right corner of the bar in the 39th minute and the first half ended in a 0-0 stalemate.

Kane paid homage to Messi’s role in directing Argentina’s rally and playing as you’d expect from “the greatest player of all-time.”

The second-half wizardry was no surprise in the winner’s locker room.

“They don’t feel the weight on their shoulders. Messi today, the last 15, 20, 25 minutes, anytime he could, he just got the ball,” Scaloni said. “When you see that kind of grit, that kind of show. They’re playing like their 7 or 8 year olds. They’re not thinking about if they miss. They’re not thinking about anything else. They’re thinking about football.”

Messi appeared to gain some extra motivation from a contentious war of words with England.

Referee Ismail Elfath helped separate England’s Jude Bellingham and Messi when the match opened with a no-call on a forearm from Fernandez to the back of Anderson’s head, one of multiple chest-thumping exchanges between the teams in the first half.

Bellingham also appeared to provoke Argentina at the end of the game as the team started celebrating near midfield, moving toward the group huddle and slapping Argentina defender Valentin Barco on the back of his head.

England missed three chances in the first half. The initial shot could’ve been confused for a pass. It came when right back Reece James one-touched a pass from Rogers and looked for his first score of the World Cup. His low, soft try from right of the penalty area was easily smothered at ankle height by Emiliano Martinez.

Before the late onslaught, Messi, playing in his sixth World Cup and 206th international match for Argentina, had a clean look outside the box in the 83rd minute but pushed it wide left.

Argentina finished with 15 attempts on goal to five for England, which squares off with France in the third-place match in Miami Gardens, Fla. on Saturday.

Spain can break a tie with Italy with a victory. La Roja carries a 37-match unbeaten streak — 30 wins, seven draws — into the championship match, vying to win the World Cup for the second time (2010).

–Jeff Reynolds, Field Level Media

source

Continue Reading