Sports
Reports: NHLPA wants investigation before Oilers hire Mike Babcock
Jul 1, 2023; Columbus, OH, USA; Columbus Blue Jackets introduce Mike Babcock as their new head coach during a press conference at Nationwide Arena. Mandatory Credit: Kyle Robertson-USA TODAY NETWORK The NHL Players’ Association has requested that the league conduct an investigation of coach Mike Babcock as the Edmonton Oilers move toward hiring him, TSN and The Athletic reported Tuesday.
Independent hockey insider Frank Seravalli added that the union specifically asked the NHL to step in and delay the Oilers’ hiring of Babcock until the league can complete an investigation into allegations stemming from his brief stint with the Columbus Blue Jackets.
In 2023, Babcock was hired to take over the Blue Jackets for what would have been his first NHL job since the Toronto Maple Leafs dismissed him in 2019. But that September, reports emerged that some players felt Babcock invaded their privacy by asking to see their cellphone camera rolls in one-on-one meetings.
Babcock resigned before the season began, so the NHL did not investigate the claims.
At the time, Blue Jackets captain Boone Jenner and the late Johnny Gaudreau confirmed Babcock asked to see photos on their phone, but they were not pressured to do so and understood it to be in the spirit of getting to know one another. Babcock reportedly also showed players photos from his phone.
However, younger players reportedly felt uncomfortable with Babcock’s approach, and he already had a reputation for controversial motivational tactics while with the Maple Leafs and Detroit Red Wings.
Per The Athletic, the NHL will only move forward with investigating Babcock once the Oilers confirm they are intent on hiring the 63-year-old.
Babcock has a 700-418-164 career record (19 ties) as the head coach of the then-Mighty Ducks of Anaheim (2002-04), Red Wings (2005-15) and Maple Leafs (2015-19). He led the Red Wings to the 2008 Stanley Cup title.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Ticket prices for Game 4 of NBA Finals at MSG plummet 70%
Jun 8, 2026; New York, New York, USA; General view before game three of the 2026 NBA Finals between the New York Knicks and the San Antonio Spurs at Madison Square Garden. Mandatory Credit: Wendell Cruz-Imagn Images The New York Knicks still hold a 2-1 lead and home-court advantage in the NBA Finals, but ticket prices for Game 4 on Wednesday night have plummeted 70% since they lost Game 3.
With the prospect the Knicks could close out their first championship in more than a half century, the get-in price for Game 4 had reached as high as around $13,500 and was still at $8,600 on Monday. However, the price fell to $4,025 by Tuesday afternoon — although that would still be more expensive than this year’s Super Bowl, according to ticket tracking service TicketData.com.
Following the Spurs’ win in Game 3, the soonest the Knicks can now clinch the series would be Game 5 back in San Antonio. However, the get-in price to even that potential closeout game has decreased by 40% over the past three days.
The only game to see an increase is a potential Game 7, which would also take place in San Antonio. The get-in price for a potentially decisive game either way has spiked 38%, in part due to the expectation that many New York fans would then seek to travel to San Antonio.
NBA FINALS GET-IN PRICES*
Game 4 — New York: $4,025 (Down 70% past three days)
Game 5 — San Antonio: $1,438 (Down 40%)
Game 6 — New York: $10,282 (Down 8%)
Game 7 — San Antonio: $5,181 (Up 38%)
*Source: TicketData
For comparison, the past two Super Bowls had day-of-game get-in prices of $2,002 in 2025 and $3,251 this year. The average Super Bowl get-in price since the end of the COVID-19 pandemic has been $3,914, according to TicketData.
Outside of the World Cup and the Stanley Cup Final, the next-most expensive sporting event through the end of the year currently is UFC 329. The card featuring the return of Conor McGregor against Max Holloway currently has a get-in price of $1,369 and is set for July 11 in Las Vegas.
The Knicks opened the series as significant underdogs, but flipped to -140 favorites at BetMGM following their Game 1 victory. Now ahead 2-1 with up to two more games at home, New York is still the -185 favorite compared to San Antonio at +155.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Knicks out to start new streak, while Spurs aim to knot series
Jun 8, 2026; New York, New York, USA; San Antonio Spurs forward Victor Wembanyama (1) shoots the ball against New York Knicks center Karl-Anthony Towns (32) during game three of the 2026 NBA Finals in the fourth quarter at Madison Square Garden. Mandatory Credit: Wendell Cruz-Imagn Images NEW YORK – Even as they authored the second-longest postseason winning streak in NBA history, the New York Knicks knew it wouldn’t be easy to win the franchise’s first championship since 1973.
Beginning Wednesday, they’ll find out just how arduous the rest of the path might become.
The Knicks will look to take a commanding 3-1 lead in the NBA Finals while the San Antonio Spurs will aim to knot the best-of-seven series when New York hosts San Antonio in Game 4 on Wednesday night.
The Spurs climbed back into the Finals Monday night, when Victor Wembanyama produced 32 points, eight rebounds, six assists and three blocks as San Antonio held off the Knicks for a 115-111 win.
The loss snapped a 13-game winning streak for the Knicks, who went 45 days without a defeat following a 109-108 setback against the Atlanta Hawks in Game 3 of an Eastern Conference first-round series on April 23.
New York fell two wins shy of matching the 2017 Golden State Warriors, who won their first 15 postseason games en route to the title.
“Every loss kind of hurts the same,” Knicks forward Josh Hart said Tuesday. “That’s a good team. We knew they weren’t just going to lay down and let us win four straight. We knew this was going to be a battle.”
The battle grew increasingly heated Monday.
Wembanyama was not charged with a foul after shoving Jalen Brunson to the floor with a little under five minutes left in the first quarter.
“He got away with one,” Knicks backup guard Jose Alvarado said Tuesday. “That’ll be the last one.”
Hart was whistled for a technical with 3:24 left in the first period when he shoved Luke Kornet after Kornet bumped into him following Hart’s coast-to-coast layup. In the third, Brunson’s foul of Julian Champagnie on a 3-point attempt was upgraded to a flagrant.
“The Knicks play super, super physical,” Champagnie said Tuesday. “That’s a part of their identity. We obviously have to do a good job of matching that and doing more of that. But I’m assuming it’s not going to get (any) easier.”
The Knicks also found it difficult Monday to overcome Brunson’s inefficiency and Karl-Anthony Towns’ fourth-quarter struggles.
Brunson scored a team-high 32 points Monday but on 11-of-25 shooting. He is shooting 37% from the field in the Finals after shooting 48.6% during the first three rounds.
Towns was scoreless in the final period for the third straight game. He has attempted just six field goals in the fourth quarter in the Finals.
“We have, what, 13 games in a row (and) 50 days of film to show what it looks like when we’re at our best?” Towns said. “We’ll get back to our fundamentals — what makes us great, what made us great — and get back to work tomorrow.”
The Spurs regained their winning formula Monday as Wembanyama produced his first 30-point effort since May 24, when he had 33 points in Game 4 of the Western Conference finals against the Oklahoma City Thunder.
The 7-foot-4 superstar scored the first four points of the game via dunks and was 9-of-14 from inside the arc after going 13-of-27 on traditional field goals in Games 1 and 2. Wembanyama was 2-of-4 from 3-point land Monday after going 4-of-15 from long distance during the first two tilts.
“The goal is always to go inside,” Wembanyama said. “The best shot in the game is an alley-oop — the most efficient shot.”
Wembanyama thriving inside opened up the most balanced offense of the series for the Spurs, who put five other players in double figures. That included Stephon Castle, who scored 18 of his 23 points in the first half before collecting five of San Antonio’s final seven points of the game.
The 115 points for the Spurs were their most since May 28, when San Antonio beat the Thunder 118-91 in Game 6 of the Western Conference finals
“What we’ve built with this team is we have an identity that makes everybody dangerous,” Wembanyama said. “Sometimes it will pay off over a season, over a playoff series.”
– Jerry Beach, Field Level Media
Sports
Matt Turner could go from '94 World Cup baby to U.S. starter in '26
June 9, 2026; Irvine, California, U.S.; Matt Turner of the U.S. during the press conference. Mandatory Credit: Kiyoshi Mio-Imagn Images IRVINE, Calif. — Regardless if he starts the United States men’s national team’s tournament-opening match Friday vs. Paraguay, goalkeeper Matt Turner embodies the importance of the 2026 FIFA World Cup to the host nation.
Turner was born on June 24, 1994, amid the last World Cup held in the United States and days between matches that exemplify the hope and frustration that have long loomed over the USMNT. On June 22 that summer — at Rose Bowl Stadium, not from this Friday’s opener at SoFi Stadium in Inglewood, Calif. — the American squad stunned tournament favorite Colombia, 2-1.
Four days later, USMNT dropped a 1-0 decision to Romania.
Such it has been every four years for the Americans, oscillating between optimism and futility. Turner’s own place within the national team is similar.
In 2022, the longtime netminder for Major League Soccer’s New England Revolution became the first American goalkeeper with two clean sheets in the same World Cup since 1930.
But in 2025, U.S. head coach Mauricio Pochettino moved Matt Freese into goal and Turner’s international appearances have been limited. With training ahead of the group stage doubling as competition, however, Turner and Freese are each vying to be in net for the World Cup.
“There’s a healthy, mutual respect there,” Turner said of the dynamic between Freese and himself. “And whatever the coach ultimately decides, we owe it to each other to respect that decision and support each other all the way till the end.”
“Freese has popped up over the last year and a half, and it’s been really pleasing to watch,” said midfielder Cristian Roldan. “But (Turner) has been incredibly supportive of Matt Freese and the team, putting the team first.”
Still, the opportunities for Turner to represent his nation beyond this summer’s tournament — and particularly on the premier stage of the World Cup — are finite. He turns 32 a day before the U.S. concludes its group-stage competition on June 25 against Turkey, while fellow keepers Freese and Chris Brady are 27 and 22, respectively.
That “the door is always cracked” for Turner, as he put it, is nevertheless a testament to how far the New Jersey native has come in his career to be in this position.
A product of small Jesuit school Fairfield University, Turner said he watched World Cups as recently as the 2014 edition in Brazil without even envisioning that he might one day don the Stars and Stripes.
“I wasn’t dreaming (of playing in a World Cup) when I was (college) age,” Turner said. “(What) fueled me was always my love and passion for the game, and my innate ability to believe in myself when others didn’t.”
Belief when others lack it just might the best descriptor of the USMNT’s ambitions as a team. The Americans have not advanced to a Cup quarterfinal since 2002, when it did so for the first and only time in the last nine tournaments.
Home Sweet Home
Playing the Cup on home soil for the first time in 32 years comes with added pressure, Roldan conceded, but he added that the expectations for the U.S. to have a strong showing at home “is translating into positive energy on the field.”
For Roldan, Friday’s match comes with home-field advantage in a most literal sense. He is a native of Artesia, Calif., a community tucked in southern Los Angeles County almost equidistant from SoFi Stadium and U.S. training grounds at Irvine’s Great Park.
“Being able to stay in my backyard is special to me,” Roldan said. “When you’re growing up thinking about (the future) you dream about moments like this. I’m soaking it all in.”
Meanwhile, between the two group-stage matches in SoFi Stadium against Paraguay and Turkey, Roldan enjoys another homecoming for the June 19 match vs. Australia. The Americans face the Aussies at Lumen Field in Seattle, Roldan’s home city for the last 13 years.
Roldan played collegiately at the University of Washington and has been with the Seattle Sounders since 2015.
“(I made) really good memories in these two cities,” Roldan said.
And for the next three weeks, he can make even more great memories in Los Angeles and Seattle alike.
–Kyle Kensing, Field Level Media
