Sports
Oilers sign Cup-winning G Frederik Andersen to 1-year deal
Jun 20, 2026; Raleigh, North Carolina, USA; Carolina Hurricanes goaltender Frederik Andersen (31) holds up the Stanley Cup trophy during the Stanley Cup championship parade and rally at Raleigh. Mandatory Credit: James Guillory-Imagn Images Goaltender Frederik Andersen, who went 13-2 during the Carolina Hurricanes’ run to the Stanley Cup title last month, joined the Edmonton Oilers on a one-year, $2.8 million deal on Wednesday.
Andersen, 36, received an incentive-laden contract with Edmonton, which hopes the veteran backstop can bring stability between the pipes to the perennial Cup contender.
According to multiple media reports, his deal with the Oilers will carry only a $1 million salary cap hit in the 2026-27 season and includes a potential $1.8 million in bonuses, based on how many games he plays during the regular season and his postseason success rate.
Edmonton already has veteran goaltender Tristan Jarry, who had a tough regular season (.857 save percentage) after coming over in a Dec. 12 trade with the Pittsburgh Penguins. The Oilers picked up another goalie, 24-year-old Devon Levi, in a trade with the Buffalo Sabres on Tuesday.
Andersen, who posted a stellar 1.89 goals-against average with a .910 save percentage in 16 playoff games, revealed after the Stanley Cup Final victory over the Vegas Golden Knights that he had injured his knee earlier in the series. Rookie Brandon Bussi took over and was a major factor in the team’s first Cup title since 2006.
During the 2025-26 regular season, Andersen posted a 16-14-5 mark, a 3.05 GAA and an .874 save percentage in his fifth season with Carolina.
A 2012 third-round pick of the Anaheim Ducks, Andersen is 324-149-58 in 552 games (538 starts) in 13 seasons with the Ducks (2013-16), Toronto Maple Leafs (2016-21) and Carolina (2021-2026). Over his career, the Denmark native has a 2.59 GAA and a .913 save percentage.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Lionel Messi Has Won the Public Battle Against Cristiano Ronaldo
If you want to know just how much more popular Lionel Messi has become relative to Cristiano Ronaldo in the four years since Messi led Argentina to the 2022 World Cup title, just look at the discourse over two recent controversial VAR decisions.
First, there was Folarin Balogun’s replay-induced red card in the United States’ 2-0 victory over Bosnia and Herzegovina for his studs-exposed challenge on star Bosnian defender Tarik Muharemovic.
As Brazilian referee Raphael Claus reviewed the pitchside monitor and ultimately determined Balogun had met the standard for serious foul play, fans took note of Messi’s similar challenge in Argentina’s opener against Algeria.
Often, they did so in the context of arguing that Balogun shouldn’t be punished because Messi wasn’t, and thus clearly had done nothing wrong.
Fast forward almost exactly 24 hours, and fans were again crashing out over replay and computer chip technology pretty clearly showing Mario Pasalic was offside in the buildup to Croatia’s apparent miracle equalizer against Ronaldo’s Portugal.
Croatia have already defied all expectations by reaching two World Cup final fours and one final. Portugal hasn’t reached a semifinal since Ronaldo was 21. And yet the public was clearly on the Croats’ side.
There are very real reasons to be wary of technology-infused officiating at the World Cup. In particular, it can actually exacerbate inherent biases when officials use it unevenly, consciously or subconsciously, depending on the team it impacts. (See, for example, England vs. Ghana.)
But like everything else in sports, these gripes also expose our biases. And in 2026, our biases are unabashedly pro-Messi, anti-Ronaldo.
The question, then, is whether there’s anything left that could change the equation, or if this is just how it will be for the rest of history, similar to how Jordan eventually got the better of Thomas, or how Ali eventually conquered Frazier.
It certainly feels unlikely that this version of Ronaldo, now 41 and limited to a line-leading center forward role, can transform opinions with his play.
Yes, he scored the leveler from the penalty spot, and before that had a really classy potential equalizer disallowed for being fractionally offside. But he also finished the match with only one touch in the penalty area — his penalty conversion — and was pulled off in the 81st minute with Roberto Martinez seeking a winning goal.
Martinez’s bravery was then rewarded when Goncalo Ramos headed home four minutes into stoppage time, setting a dangerous precedent for Ronaldo’s influence in this World Cup.
Sure, there are up to four more games left for Portugal. Sure, Ronaldo could get on a heater and propel Portugal to its first-ever World Cup title.
There’s also no rule against Cape Verde going out and beating Argentina 3-0 on Friday evening. But I wouldn’t lay money down on it.
As for whether Messi could ever estrange the fans he’s won over? His quietness makes that pretty hard to imagine.
As a younger player, that soft-spoken nature annoyed fans who believed his lack of demonstrative leadership was keeping him from accomplishing goals, particularly with the Argentine national team. Now as a 39-year-old veteran, it’s the gift that keeps on giving, permitting fans to believe whatever they want about him. And most people want to believe he’s some sort of quasi-religious football deity.
Argentina may exit the World Cup earlier than we expect. Portugal may at last make a deep run or even win their first-ever title.
But the battle in fans’ hearts and minds feels complete. No VAR review is going to change that.
Sports
Why Tim Hardaway Sr. Refused to Unretire His No. 10 for His Son
Tim Hardaway finished his 13-season NBA career with 7,095 assists, nearly 5,000 more than Larry Nance collected over that span.
Nance still holds the head-to-head edge in unofficial, off-court helpers, however, and it isn’t close — although Hardaway and his son, Tim Jr., apparently remain so despite recent doings.
Faced with an opportunity to channel Nance and allow his child to unretire a number he once wore, “Tim Bug” essentially said “Humbug!” to the prospect of Hardaway Jr. donning No. 10 for the Miami Heat, with whom he signed Tuesday.
Is it unfair to cast the elder Hardaway in a Scrooge-like light, even facetiously? Probably. What it is, though, is interesting. Engaging. In other words, something the first few days of the free-agency carousel command.
We figure to learn where LeBron James lands soon enough. There looks to be a short list of viable suitors for the superstar, who is seeking to play a 24th NBA season after informing the Los Angeles Lakers he won’t be returning in purple and gold.
One oft-estimated spot for LBJ is Miami, which James helped to two championships and four Finals appearances from 2010-11 to 2013-14.
No Heat teammate wore No. 10 during James’ tenure in South Beach. In fact, no one has since Miami shipped the elder Hardaway to the Dallas Mavericks in 2001.
The Heat retired Hardaway’s No. 10 in October 2009, when Junior was preparing for a senior year at Miami’s Palmetto High that preceded a star turn at Michigan and a durable pro career that’s still going – 893 games with five teams.
Hardaway Jr. donned his dad’s number with the Wolverines and over parts of his 13 NBA seasons. But it’s no dice in Miami.
“My legacy is my legacy, and he’s doing it his way,” Hardaway Sr. told Miami’s WQAM radio on Wednesday. “Even though he likes to wear 10, he loves to wear 10, but that is not coming down from the rafters.”
It was nearly 8 ½ years ago when Larry Nance Jr. encountered far less resistance from his pops upon joining the Cleveland Cavaliers, for which Big Larry played power forward for parts of seven seasons, concluding in 1993-94.
Thanks to special permission from the NBA, Nance Jr. wore his dad’s No. 22 while the number remained in the Quicken Loans Arena rafters. He wore No. 24 for his first few games with the team before switching.
“My dad is a man of few words,” Nance Jr. said in February 2018, “so he kind of just let me know with a smile that he was excited.”
Nance Jr. also wore No. 22 in his second stint with the Cavs this season.
Hardaway Sr. ostensibly dipped into Nance Sr.’s grandstanding allotment when justifying his decision to WQAM, starting by doubling down on the notion that building a legacy that warrants a number retirement is “tough to do.”
“And when it’s up there, you want it to stay up there and you don’t want nobody to touch it,” he continued. “And you know, I love him. I love him to death. I’m happy for him. I’m living a life again watching him play, through college and the NBA. … So I’m happy that he’s doing it, but no, he can’t even wear No. 10.”
As the NBA world awaits James’ decision, one wonders what kind of perks package Bronny James might have to offer his dad to get the Lakers’ sure-to-be-retired No. 23.
Of course, LA could see this as opportunity to jettison the younger James, perhaps to LeBron’s next suitor once he finds one.
Until that shoe drops, let’s recognize Tim Hardaway Sr. — and his right to come down with both feet.
Sports
A's belt 3 home runs, salvage series finale against Dodgers
Jul 1, 2026; West Sacramento, California, USA; Los Angeles Dodgers first baseman Freddie Freeman (5) is greeted by left fielder Teoscar Hernández (37) )after hitting a one run home run during the third inning against the Athletics at Sutter Health Park. Mandatory Credit: Sergio Estrada-Imagn Images Jonah Heim, Shea Langeliers and Alika Williams hit homers and J.T. Ginn pitched six solid innings to help the Athletics cruise to a 7-1 victory over the Los Angeles Dodgers on Wednesday in West Sacramento, Calif.
Heim drove in two runs, and he, Langeliers, Nick Kurtz, Joshua Kuroda-Grauer and Henry Bolte each had two hits for the Athletics, who snapped a four-game losing streak.
Freddie Freeman homered and Miguel Rojas had two hits for the Dodgers, who finished a 7-2 road trip. Los Angeles had just five hits after totaling 18 runs and 31 hits while winning the first two games of the three-game series.
Ginn (7-4) gave up one run and three hits. He walked five and struck out four while winning for the fifth time in his past six decisions.
Shohei Ohtani went 0-for-5 with two strikeouts for the Dodgers. Freeman left the game before the bottom of the sixth inning.
Charlie Barnes (0-1) was the second pitcher for Los Angeles, and he gave up seven runs and 12 hits over seven innings. He struck out two and walked two.
Barnes entered in the second inning and Heim sent his first pitch, a fastball, 444 feet over the fence in center.
Los Angeles tied the game with one out in the third when Freeman smacked a 431-foot homer to right-center.
The Athletics moved ahead in the fourth after Heim walked to start the inning and Kuroda-Grauer doubled. Lawrence Butler’s infield out plated Heim, and Bolte followed with an RBI single for a 3-1 lead.
Langeliers led off the fifth by sending a 433-foot blast over the wall in left-center. Kurtz singled and Colby Thomas hit an RBI double to make it 5-1 before the latter came home on a single by Heim.
Williams homered with two outs in the eighth to finish the scoring.
Jack Dreyer served as the opener for the Dodgers and struck out the side in the first before giving way to Barnes.
The Athletics announced before the game that two-time All-Star Brent Rooker (left knee) would soon undergo season-ending surgery.
–Field Level Media
