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Oilers' Darnell Nurse to have hearing for hit on Kings' Quinton Byfield

NHL: Edmonton Oilers at Anaheim DucksApr 7, 2025; Anaheim, California, USA; Edmonton Oilers defenseman Darnell Nurse (25) shoots against the Anaheim Ducks during the first period at Honda Center. Mandatory Credit: Gary A. Vasquez-Imagn Images

Edmonton Oilers defenseman Darnell Nurse will have a hearing with the NHL Department of Player Safety on Tuesday, one day after his cross-check on Los Angeles Kings forward Quinton Byfield.

Nurse lowered the boom on Byfield with 5:24 remaining in the second period on Monday. The Kings went on to clinch the No. 2 seed in the Pacific Division with a 5-0 win against the Oilers at Rogers Place.

Nurse was whistled for a five-minute major penalty for cross-checking and a game misconduct for the hit on Byfield, who did not return to the contest.

“No update,” Kings coach Jim Hiller said of Byfield’s condition. “He wasn’t able to finish, that’s all. It doesn’t matter how I saw it.”

The Oilers and Kings are set to square off for the fourth consecutive season in the first round of the Western Conference playoffs.

Nurse, 30, has recorded 33 points (five goals, 28 assists) in 76 games this season.

Byfield, 22, scored a power-play goal in the first period to boost his point total to 54 (23 goals, 31 assists) in 80 games this season.

–Field Level Media

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Jaguars wunderkind GM punts scouting norms to find 'intangibly rich' prospects

Syndication: Florida Times-UnionJaguars GM James Gladstone, 34, is bringing a revolutionary draft approach to the downtrodden franchise. [Doug Engle/Florida Times-Union]2025

If you were looking for the new brass of the Jacksonville Jaguars at on-campus pro days or pondering which prospects came to town for “top 30” face-to-face visits, here’s the short answer to those questions: They weren’t there.

As a new direction takes shape in Jacksonville with first-timers in the general manager and head coach seats for the 2025 NFL Draft, most commonly held beliefs and traditional protocol for draft preparation and player acquisition won’t make the cut.

Very few have insight into where the surprising unique turns at the direction of James Gladstone, Jacksonville’s 34-year-old general manager hired to replace Trent Baalke, might lead in the draft or beyond.

“It’s still familiar territory. You’re talking football,” Gladstone said Tuesday. “My mind remains rooted in a lot of the same things it always has been — focusing with intention on intangibly rich human beings and allow that to be our north star.”

Gladstone and 39-year-old head coach Liam Coen, who was offensive coordinator the Tampa Bay Buccaneers last season, are charting their own decidedly new-school course to resurrect a franchise with 58 losses the past five seasons.

Gladstone, a member of the Rams’ front office and scouting staff the past nine years, has a degree in education and held sway in Los Angeles with a title of director of scouting strategy the past three years.

That strategy is unlike any other in the NFL.

He punted the in-person, on-site “top 30” visits with draft prospects, downplaying the importance stressed by other franchise scouting operations — additional face time with a player, private on-field workouts, follow-up or extension to conversations at the NFL Scouting Combine or Senior Bowl — with the belief the time is less vital than the biblical biography his scouting staff has on hundreds of players, literature and insight on each prospect gleaned over multiple years.

“There’s a lot of layers to not doing those facility visits,” Gladstone said. “That goes back awhile for me and my experience. Let’s take it this direction: the implicit bias that can come to life this late in the process. The last player you might sit down with and how that might differ from the first player you sit down with knowing that it’s closer to the decision that’s upcoming.”

Right down to the cadence of his speech and use of data as part of a brain-driven approach, Gladstone borrowed from the vocabulary and approach of his mentor, Rams GM Les Snead, in touching on reasoning for avoiding traditional draft preparation metrics and protocol to prepare and get to know prospects.

For example, the Jaguars use player-tracking data to determine on-field speed and all but dismiss coveted NFL Scouting Combine numbers like the 40-yard dash. Gladstone doesn’t attend pro days.

He’s willing to listen to input from scouts and coaches who have gleaned a scouting opinion from those workouts, but instead falls back on a more “global” collection of data and “sourced” information from a player’s peers, friends, family, teammates and coaches.

Gladstone admitted he embraces the reality that his first pick will send a message and “set the tone” for who the Jaguars want to be as a team.

He said the sourced intel his scouting staff gathered from “those who have lived with these individuals” is likely to be more accurate than any assessment he might be able to glean from a short visit. He also feels the inevitable leak of information identifying prospects who visit a team can often expose strategic plan and direction.

Coen said the Jaguars are definitely looking for pass rushers who can “burn an edge” but stressed adaptability as he becomes more acclimated in his new role.

“Just having a larger appreciation for every position on the grass,” Coen said. “That’s been excited to learn more about from James, from coaches, and seeing their vision for these players.”

–Field Level Media

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Dodgers' Clayton Kershaw set for Triple-A rehab start

MLB: Detroit Tigers at Los Angeles DodgersMar 28, 2025; Los Angeles, California, USA; Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Clayton Kershaw before the game against the Detroit Tigers at Dodger Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Kirby Lee-Imagn Images

For the first time since Aug. 30, Los Angeles Dodgers left-hander Clayton Kershaw will take the mound in a game Wednesday when he makes a rehab start with Triple-A Oklahoma City.

He will take on Tacoma, the Seattle Mariners’ affiliate, in Oklahoma City at 12:05 p.m. ET.

Kershaw, 37, is recovering from toe and left knee surgeries in November, the results of injuries that caused him to miss the Dodgers’ run to a World Series title. On Aug. 30 against the Arizona Diamondbacks, the three-time NL Cy Young Award winner and 2014 National League MVP left in the second inning with pain in his left big toe.

Entering his 18th season — all with the Dodgers — Kershaw is 32 whiffs shy of becoming the 20th member of the 3,000-strikeout club. He is on the 60-day injured list and is eligible to be activated on May 17.

Kershaw was limited to seven starts in 2024 coming off left shoulder surgery in the offseason.

He made his season debut on July 25 and pitched 30 innings before reporting damage to his toe, which turned out to be a ruptured plantar plate and arthritis in his left foot.

A 10-time All-Star, Kershaw has a career record of 212-94 with a 2.50 ERA in 432 games (429 starts). His 15 career shutouts are the most among active pitchers.

He is set to earn $7.5 million during the upcoming season with multiple roster and games-started bonuses that are worth an additional $8.5 million.

According to FanSided, Kershaw can receive $1 million bonuses for 13, 14, 15 and 16 starts, as well as 60 days and 90 days on the active roster. There is a $2.5 million bonus available for his first 30 days on the active roster.

–Field Level Media

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Reds activate three players from injured list

Syndication: The EnquirerCincinnati Reds pitcher Alexis Diaz (43) delivers the pitch in the ninth inning of the MLB game at Great American Ball Park in Cincinnati on Wednesday, Sept. 4, 2024. Cincinnati Reds defeated Houston Astros 1-0.

The Cincinnati Reds activated outfielder Austin Hays, second baseman Matt McLain and reliever Alexis Diaz from the injured list on Tuesday.

Hays (calf) and McLain (hamstring) were on the 10-day IL and Diaz (hamstring) was on the 15-day IL.

Hays, 29, has yet to make his Reds debut. The former All-Star split last season with the Baltimore Orioles and Philadelphia Phillies and signed a one-year, $5 million deal with the Reds in January.

McLain, 25, has appeared in eight games this season for Cincinnati, batting .214 with three homers and five RBIs.

Diaz, 28, has yet to play for the Reds this season after serving as their closer the past two years. The right-hander made the All-Star team and finished with 37 saves in 2023.

The Reds optioned outfielder Jacob Hurtubise and infielder Noelvi Marte to Triple-A Louisville in corresponding transactions.

–Field Level Media

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