Sports
Predators stumble into Minnesota after shutout loss
Dec 30, 2024; Winnipeg, Manitoba, CAN; Nashville Predators defenseman Roman Josi (59) skates after the puck against the Winnipeg Jets during the second period at Canada Life Centre. Mandatory Credit: Terrence Lee-Imagn Images If their first matchup is any indication, the second meeting of the season between the Minnesota Wild and Nashville Predators could come down to a fortunate bounce here or a well-placed deflection there.
Minnesota earned a 3-2 overtime win the first time it faced Nashville, on Nov. 30. The Wild will try to find a way to escape with another home-ice victory when the teams meet on Tuesday evening in Saint Paul, Minn.
A month ago, the Wild scored first before the Predators responded with two goals. Minnesota pulled level in the second period, and captain Jared Spurgeon delivered the winner one minute into overtime.
Minnesota coach John Hynes wants to see his team focus on fundamentals in its final game of the calendar year. Hynes was less than happy after the Wild fell 3-1 at home against the Ottawa Senators on Sunday night in their most recent game.
“When we’re playing a detailed, smart game, you give yourself the best chance to win,” Hynes said. “We want to pride ourselves on being smart. We want that as a competitive advantage to our team.”
Nobody on the Wild seemed irked by Hynes’ comments. If anything, the players agreed.
“We have to get on the forecheck,” forward Mats Zuccarello said. “We also have to make plays. We’ve got to make the plays that need to be made.
“Sometimes, it’s chip-ins. Sometimes, it’s weak-side ‘D’ joining. Sometimes, it’s carrying the puck in, creating like that. Sometimes, we don’t make those plays when we have to.”
Nashville also is eager to show improvement. The Predators will play on short rest against the Wild after they lost 3-0 on the road against the Winnipeg Jets on Monday night.
It was the second loss in a row for Nashville, which is 4-7-1 in 12 games since the last time it faced Minnesota.
The Predators hope the addition of forward Vinnie Hinostroza can help. He made his NHL season debut Monday and did not record a point in 11:27 of ice time.
The 30-year-old veteran has appeared in 375 career NHL games, and Nashville is his sixth team. He led the American Hockey League with 33 points and 22 points through 26 games when the Predators promoted him over the weekend.
“It feels great,” Hinostroza said. “The guys here are great. (I experienced) that in training camp, so it’s easier to walk in the locker room when you know all the guys are approachable and nice to be around.”
The Wild will turn to either Filip Gustavsson or Marc-Andre Fleury in net. Gustavsson is 16-6-3 with a 2.25 goals-against average and a .923 save percentage after stopping 34 of 36 shots vs. the Senators. Fleury is 6-3-1 with a 2.81 GAA and an .898 save percentage.
Nashville could give the start to backup Justus Annunen one night after No. 1 goalie Juuse Saros yielded three goals on 28 shots against Winnipeg.
Annunen is 8-5-0 with a 2.83 GAA and an .894 save percentage this season, 2-1-0 with a 1.80 GAA and a .941 save percentage since he was acquired by Nashville from Colorado in a Nov. 30 trade. The 24-year-old from Finland has faced Minnesota once in his career, earning a win for the Avalanche last season by stopping 44 of 46 shots.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Jon Rahm overcomes rocky start to take LIV Golf Mexico City lead
[US, Mexico & Canada customers only] Feb 6, 2026; Riyadh, SAUDI ARABIA; Jon Rahm in action during the third round of play at LIV Golf Riyadh at the Riyadh Golf Club. Mandatory Credit: Hamad I Mohammed/Reuters via Imagn Images Jon Rahm used a strong back nine during Friday’s second round to take a narrow lead at the halfway point of LIV Golf Mexico City in Naucalpan, Mexico.
Rahm — who backdoored his way into a top-40 finish last week at the Masters by shooting 4 under in the final round to finish at 1 over — overcame a rocky front nine to shoot 4 under on the back nine, post 67 at Club de Golf Chapultepec and sit at 10-under-par 132.
The Spaniard was in second place after the opening round at 6 under. He’s now one stroke clear of Matthew Wolff, Tom McKibbin of Northern Ireland and Harold Varner III, who are all tied at 9 under.
“I was even par on that 9th tee, and I thought, ‘Well, if I hit a good tee shot on 9, I’m going to give myself a birdie chance,'” Rahm said after the round. “If I keep hitting good drives like I’ve been doing so far, I was going to give myself really good chances at 10, 11 and 12, so I think I told (caddie) Adam (Hayes), ‘If we can get one or two before we get to the par-5s, I think we’re in a good spot,’ and kind of took it that way.”
Rahm, who started on the first tee at the shotgun-start event, opened with a bogey, which set the tone for an even-par front nine with three birdies and three bogeys. That included a ball into the water at No. 8, which led to a second consecutive bogey.
He changed the tune by starting his back nine with a birdie on the par-4 10th hole, kicking off a bogey-free final half of his round. Rahm racked up four birdies to put himself in pole position as he seeks his second 2026 win and sixth straight top-five finish to begin the season.
Wolff, McKibbin and Luis Masaveu of Spain (who is in fifth place at 8 under) each shot 6-under 65 to shoot up the leaderboard.
Wolff navigated a number of tough situations with par saves to come away with a bogey-free round.
“I was a bit all over the place, to be honest. I told my caddie after I finished up, I said, ‘I would have never guessed that that round would be bogey-free.’ I feel really good with the putter, so I think that helped a lot,” Wolff said. “… Overall, obviously I’m really happy, but definitely would like to tighten the ball-striking up a little bit. But it’s day by day. Hopefully I can leave that bad ball-striking behind and hit it good the next few days.”
Australia’s Marc Leishman had the low round of the day, posting a 7-under 64 to move past his 3-over opening round to move into a tie for 11th at 4 under. He eagled Nos. 7 and 12, finishing 5 under at the three par-5 holes during his Friday round.
First-round leader Victor Perez of France followed up his career-best 9-under 62 by shooting 2 over on Friday. He’s tied for sixth at 7 under along with Canada’s Richard T. Lee and England’s Tyrrell Hatton.
Bryson DeChambeau, aiming to become the first player in LIV Golf history to win three straight individual events, posted his second straight even-par 71 and is in a tie for 31st.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Scott Hend, Brian Gay share lead at Senior PGA Championship
Scott Hend from Australia watches his tee shot on the 10th hole. The first round of the 2026 Senior PGA Championship was held Thursday, April 16, 2026 at The Concession Golf Club in Bradenton, Florida. Scott Hend has won everywhere from Asia to Canada to his native Australia in his long, workmanlike golf career. Now he is in position to contend for his first major championship.
Hend posted a 7-under-par 65 on Friday, the lowest round through two days of the Senior PGA Championship, to share the 36-hole lead with Brian Gay at Concession Golf Club in Bradenton, Fla.
Hend was 2 under for his day when he made the turn, but climbed the leaderboard quickly when he got birdies to fall at Nos. 11, 12 and 13. Hend added back-to-back birdies at Nos. 16-17 to shoot 5-under 31 coming in.
He and Gay sit at 10-under 134 at Concession — the new host of the major through 2028 – though both believed they could have been even better.
“I was disappointed in yesterday’s two double bogeys on the back nine, so I wanted to play that nine a bit smarter and a bit better today,” Gay said. “So I didn’t short-side myself as much as what I did yesterday, and it seemed to work out quite well.”
Hend has traveled Asia, collecting 10 wins on the Asian Tour from 2008-19. He has won three times since joining the European Senior Tour. He knows that the leaderboard is packed with challengers who have experience under the brightest lights.
“I haven’t got any majors in my back pockets, so the guys who have majors should be the ones that are favorites,” Hend said.
That includes Stewart Cink and South Africa’s Retief Goosen, who share third place at 8 under par with Ben Crane. Cink shot a 67 Friday while Crane and Goosen posted 69s.
Cink made an impressive eagle at the par-5 17th on a long, uphill putt. That pushed him to 9 under, but he bogeyed his final hole.
“Two bogeys today. You know, obviously you’d like to clean those up,” said Cink, who has won six times since joining the PGA Tour Champions and twice this year but is searching for his first senior major.
“But you know, all in all it was pretty good golf, and I would take days like today pretty much every day for the rest of my career and be happy, because there’s going to be some days that yield some low scores on days like this, and there’s not going to be too many over-par rounds.”
As for Gay, he is in the same bucket as Hend, seeking his first career major of any kind. An eagle at the par-5 seventh was counteracted by his double-bogey 7 at the 17th.
“Another pretty good day. A little volatile. Pretty similar to yesterday, except I butchered a couple of par-5s. Two of them with one bad tee ball, two good tee balls, but other than that, I putted well again.”
Argentina’s Angel Cabrera, the defending champion, went 9 over through 36 holes and missed the cut by seven strokes.
–Field Level Media
Sports
D.C. United's Tai Baribo (thigh) questionable for Philly return
Apr 4, 2026; Washington, District of Columbia, USA; D.C. United forward Tai Baribo (9) races past FC Dallas defender Osaze Urhoghide (3) during the first half at Audi Field. Mandatory Credit: Daniel Kucin Jr.-Imagn Images Striker Tai Baribo’s return to Philadelphia may be delayed beyond D.C. United’s scheduled visit to the Union on Saturday night.
The Israeli international led Philadelphia with 16 MLS goals in 2025. After joining D.C. (2-4-1, 7 points) from Philadelphia (1-6-0, 3 points) in a $4 million cash trade during the offseason, Baribo owns three of the four league goals scored by D.C. this season.
That includes the only tally in D.C.’s 1-0 home win against the Union to open the season.
But a thigh injury has kept Baribo out of the Black-and-Red’s last two matches — a 1-0 league loss last weekend at the New England Revolution and a defeat on penalties to One Knoxville following a 3-3 draw in the U.S. Open Cup Round of 32 on Wednesday night.
D.C. manager Rene Weiler said Baribo is questionable for Saturday.
“He trained for himself, so we have to check it tomorrow,” Weiler said Thursday. “I hope he will be with the team. And it would push the team, of course. I’m not sure if he (will be) ready for the game on Saturday, but we will check it out (Friday).”
With Baribo and a few other regulars who departed in the offseason, Philadelphia earned the 2025 Supporters’ Shield awarded to the best regular-season finisher.
Without him, the Union have endured a miserable start to 2026. They finally earned their first league win last Saturday with a 2-1 decision over a Montreal side that also only has one MLS victory on the year.
Philadelphia awaits its first multi-goal scorer of the season after Japhet Sery Larsen and Jesus Bueno each contributed their first goals to lead its second-half rally in Canada.
Meanwhile, manager Bradley Carnell admitted the uncertainty over arguably D.C.’s most important player have made preparations a bit more difficult.
“We always want to face the best opponents, and a D.C. United with Tai Baribo is certainly a force to be reckoned with,” Carnell said Thursday. “We are preparing and planning accordingly, but we cannot control what we cannot control. Whether he’s in the building, traveling or not, that’s a narrative we cannot drive and control, so we’re only focused on us and the team that we think will play.”
–Field Level Media
