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Dallas Stars not getting shut out on power play in this West final against Oilers

Dallas Stars not getting shut out on power play in this West final against Oilers

Washington Post22-05-2025

DALLAS — The Dallas Stars aren't getting shut out on the power play in the Western Conference final against Edmonton this time.
They took full advantage of their opportunities in the third period of Game 1 in this series, with three power-play goals in a game-turning 5:26 span on way to a 6-3 victory Wednesday night, a year after going 0 for 14 in six playoff games against the Oilers.

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2025 NWSL Championship to be played in San Jose at Bay FC's stadium
2025 NWSL Championship to be played in San Jose at Bay FC's stadium

New York Times

time29 minutes ago

  • New York Times

2025 NWSL Championship to be played in San Jose at Bay FC's stadium

The 2025 National Women's Soccer League (NWSL) Championship is heading to the Bay Area. San Jose's 18,000-seat PayPal Park, the home stadium of Bay FC and Major League Soccer's San Jose Earthquakes, will host this year's title match, the league announced Thursday. The championship will take place on Saturday, Nov. 22 with a 5 p.m. PT kickoff for the fourth straight year. It will be broadcast on CBS and stream on Paramount+. Advertisement 'We're thrilled to bring the NWSL Championship back to the West Coast and to a region with as rich a history in women's soccer as the Bay Area,' NWSL commissioner Jessica Berman said in a news release. 'This community's passion for the game, combined with the excitement surrounding one of our newest teams in Bay FC, makes it the perfect setting to celebrate the league's top talent and crown our next champion.' The Bay Area houses some of the top collegiate programs in the nation in Stanford, Santa Clara, and Cal. In 2010, the Bay Area-based FC Gold Pride claimed the title in the now-defunct Women's Professional Soccer league with a roster bursting with star players, including Marta, Christine Sinclair, Shannon Boxx and Camille Abily. 'The history of women's soccer runs deeply and strongly in the Bay Area,' said Bay FC co-founder and former USWNT player Brandi Chastain. 'From the roster of the national team players born and raised here to the first-ever professional domestic league champions coming from here, our community's fabric is woven with the greatest the game has to offer.' In its inaugural 2024 season, Bay FC averaged 13,000 fans at PayPal Park, the fifth-highest attendance in the league. It marks the second time in three years that the NWSL championship will take place on the West Coast, with its milder winters. Last year, the final between the Orlando Pride and Washington Spirit was held at CPKC Stadium in Kansas City, Mo. In 2023, San Diego's Snapdragon Stadium hosted the title match between Gotham FC and Seattle Reign, and in 2022, the title game took place at Audi Field in Washington, D.C. Like last year, eight of the 14 teams in the NWSL will make it to the postseason, playing in four quarterfinals between Nov. 7-9. Two will air on ESPN/ABC, while the other two will be split between CBS/Paramount+ and Prime Video. The semifinals will be held the weekend of Nov. 14-16 and will be shared by CBS/Paramount+ and ESPN/ABC. Tickets for the 2025 final go on sale in August. (Photo of the Orlando Pride celebrating the 2024 NWSL championship: Jamie Squire / Getty Images)

Phoebe Gates And Sophia Kianni Sit Down With Olympian Eileen Gu On The Burnouts
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Forbes

time32 minutes ago

  • Forbes

Phoebe Gates And Sophia Kianni Sit Down With Olympian Eileen Gu On The Burnouts

Filmed in New York City the week her Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Issue hit stands, champion freestyle skier, Gu, joined former Stanford peers Gates and Kianni for a candid conversation about cultural identity, belonging, and what it means to come of age in the public eye. Together, the three women explored the realities of life in their early 20s—navigating global visibility, solo travel, building businesses, and learning who they are through self-exploration. Gu reflected on her meteoric rise, including the surreal moment of waking up to hear Tucker Carlson speaking about her, the pressure of answering geopolitical questions moments after winning Olympic gold, and what it meant to take bold leaps with Victoria's Secret and Sports Illustrated. Her exchange with Phoebe and Sophia is a window into the nuance of female ambition—how culture, identity, and power shape the journey, but remain deeply personal and singular to each woman. Gu made history at the 2022 Winter Olympics, securing two golds and a silver medal, becoming the only action sports athlete to clinch three medals in a single Olympic event. At age 18, she set the record for the youngest freeski Olympic gold medalist. Gu's extraordinary feats extend beyond the Olympics; she's the first snowsport athlete to claim three medals at both the 2021 XGames and FIS World Championships and the inaugural female freeskier to execute a double cork 1440 and unnatural double cork 1620 in competition. Gu also currently holds the win record for any freeski athlete, male or female, with 18 FIS World Cup victories. When asked about the criticism she received for choosing to represent China instead of the U.S. in the Olympics, she explained that her focus was always on her passion for skiing rather than geopolitical issues, 'And so there was a press conference right after the Olympics, like literally right after I won the Olympics. I was taken into this press room by myself. No agent, no mom, no family, nothing. Totally vulnerable, just me and in front of me, there's a room of reporters. They asked, 'So what do you think about US-China geopolitics?' And I'm like, I just won the Olympics. Like you were asking me to solve problems. I'm just trying to focus on what is relevant to me, what I actually can have an impact on, and also what I'm passionate about.' She is not just a champion on the slopes but also a voice for young people, particularly girls. Her advocacy for female empowerment earned her the Vogue Aurora Award in 2019. Gu has also made her mark on the fashion world since the age of 15, including walking the runway for Louis Vuitton, closing the Brunello Cucinelli 2025 show, and opening and closing the Bosideng 2024 show at Milan Fashion Week. She was one of the Founding Collective members of Victoria's Secret, and has brand ambassadorships with brands like Louis Vuitton, Tiffany, IWC, and Porsche. She has been featured on covers of Vogue, Harper's Bazaar, V Magazine, L'Officiel and Marie Claire. For her Sports Illustrated Swimsuit cover Gu embodied her inner femininity, 'I wanted to embody strength. I wanted to embody femininity and the intersection of beauty and power.' She even wrote her college essay on this topic. With Gu only being 21, the conversation left you eager to see where you accomplishments take her next. The Burnouts recently launched this past April in partnership with Alex Cooper's Unwell Network and dives into the unfiltered reality of building a startup as two 20-something women in NYC. Season one guests have thus far included Kris Jenner, Sara Blakely, Whitney Wolfe Herd, and Chelsea Handler. Both Gates and Kianni are also co-founders of Phia, a viral venture-backed AI shopping tool that finds the best prices on fashion across 40,000+ retail and resale sites, coined as the Google Flights for fashion. Phia debuted at #21 in the App Store within 48 hours after launch, with over 100k+ downloads. Together, Phoebe and Sophia have 1.5M+ followers and 100M+ social impressions, and are quickly becoming the new faces within the zeitgeist of Gen Z entrepreneurship.

After another Stanley Cup Final goalie benching, NHL netminders discuss the dreaded yank: ‘A brutal feeling'
After another Stanley Cup Final goalie benching, NHL netminders discuss the dreaded yank: ‘A brutal feeling'

New York Times

time36 minutes ago

  • New York Times

After another Stanley Cup Final goalie benching, NHL netminders discuss the dreaded yank: ‘A brutal feeling'

The Edmonton Oilers' comeback in Game 4 of the Stanley Cup Final was electrifying. It was incredible for the Oilers, who looked headed for a 3-1 series hole after an abysmal first period and instead will return home for Game 5 with the series tied. It was incredible for Leon Draisaitl, who added to his legend by scoring his second overtime winner of this Cup Final alone, sending Edmonton to a 5-4 victory. It was incredible for the thousands of Oilers faithful back in Edmonton, who partied well into Thursday night outside of Rogers Place. Advertisement There is one player for whom it was less incredible, though. Goaltender Stuart Skinner was the biggest reason this miraculous comeback was even possible in the first place. He made several key saves in the first period while the Panthers dominated over the first 20 minutes. He was the Oilers' best player, standing tall in the crease to keep the deficit to only three goals. His reward? One of the most embarrassing moments any goalie will face: the dreaded yank. Oilers coach Kris Knoblauch spared Skinner the usual skate of shame, benching him for good during the second intermission after Skinner allowed three goals on 17 shots. It was the second straight game Knoblauch pulled Skinner from the net in favor of backup Calvin Pickard, and the third time he's done so this postseason. 'It's unfortunate for Stu to be pulled there,' Knoblauch said after the game. 'Our team was flat. We didn't give him any opportunities, again taking three penalties in the first period. Unfortunately we needed to change things up, and the change was great.' It's hard to lay much blame at Skinner's skates for the three goals he allowed (we'll go over that in more detail later). Rather, the decision was made to 'spark' a team that was getting thoroughly outplayed for the fourth straight period. It helps that the backup happens to be undefeated this posteason, and this time it seemed to work – to the tune of four unanswered Edmonton goals. Would the Oilers have re-focused after the intermission, and rallied for the win with Skinner still in net? We'll never know, but Pickard seems to think so. 'I felt for (Skinner) today,' Pickard said after the win. 'He came ready to play today and made some big saves early, we just didn't have it as a team early. I think (Knoblauch) just wanted to switch it up. If he was playing behind our team in the second, third and overtime he would've done what I did too.' Advertisement No goalie is immune to the yank, whether performance-related or not. Skinner hasn't played great this postseason with a .894 save percentage, but every netminder experiences it. Many times, it's through no fault of their own. It's a unique situation that unfairly punishes a player for the good of the team, but it's nothing new. Coaches have been doing it for decades, and likely will for decades to come. We thought it would be interesting to pick goalies' brains on the subject, so we asked a couple NHL netminders for their insight into the odd dynamic that has already unfolded multiple times in the Cup Final, and famously in the Western Conference Finals between Dallas and Edmonton. 'From a goalie perspective, the bottom line is you never want to get pulled,' Washington Capitals goalie Charlie Lindgren said. 'It's embarrassing. It's a brutal feeling. You always feel like you want to keep battling back.' Sometimes the pull comes because the goalie himself doesn't have his best that night, and the coach thinks a switch gives his team the best chance to get saves. That, along with giving Pickard a chance to knock some rust off after his injury, likely motivated Knoblauch to pull Skinner in Game 3. Sometimes, though, the yank is to simply send a message to the rest of the team. 'It's never easy to be the guy who's coming out of the net and the night's over with,' Lindgren said. 'That's not a fun thing to go through. Instinctually, especially for goalies at this level, there's so much heart, so much battle and so much compete. You always think that the next shot is going to be yours. You're going to find a way to keep your team in it.' Skinner was doing that on Thursday night: keeping his team in it. He made several great saves in the opening 20 minutes, and none of the goals he allowed were particularly soft. Advertisement The first was a screened shot by Florida's Matthew Tkachuk on a 5-on-3 power play from less than 20 feet away. Skinner wasn't able to see the release as he scrambled to look around two of his own players and Aleksander Barkov in front, and the save would've been tough even if he had. It's fair to criticize Skinner's rebound control on the second goal, as a shot spilled off his chest protector to Tkachuk's waiting stick in front of the net. But it was also a hard shot from point-blank range, and human reaction time has its limitations. I'd argue that on a shot from that spot, it's on the goalie to make the initial save and on the defenders to clean up the rebound, which Tkachuk instead netted for his second goal of the night. The third goal was a one-timer by Anton Lundell on the doorstep on a pass from behind the goal. There wasn't much Skinner could do on that other than what he did: gain depth, make himself big and seal any holes. Lundell placed the shot outside of Skinner's blocker and inside the left post. Having said all of that, the decision clearly worked. Pickard was good, as he's been all postseason, stopping 22 of the 23 shots he faced. He made a few timely saves — none bigger than a massive glove stop on Sam Bennett in overtime, clipping just enough of the puck to redirect the it into the crossbar moments before Draisaitl scored the winner. But Pickard wasn't the difference in the game after the goalie swap. The Oilers looked like a completely different team over the final 51 minutes. In the first period Florida held commanding edges shots (17-7), scoring chances (22-5) and high-danger chances (13-2) according to Natural Stat Trick. In the final 51 minutes Edmonton flipped that, outshooting the Panthers 28-23, and out-chancing them 20-10. 'We wanted to come out strong tonight, but they put us on our heels early and we were kind of lollygagging around a little bit,' Draisaitl said. Why professional players were 'lollygagging around' in the first period of a Stanley Cup Final game is an entirely different topic for another story. One thing is clear, though: Coaches believe benching their goalie sends a message to the team that can only be accomplished by such a drastic measure. The coach could easily sit the players in front of Skinner – the ones who were lollygagging – for a shift or two, but it doesn't have the same jarring effect. Advertisement 'When the goalie comes out, and he was the guy who started the game, and you're expecting to be a rock back there,' Lindgren explained. 'When he gets pulled it's a wake up call. You know your backup is going in. He's probably cold. He probably wasn't expecting to play. So it gives the players even more reason to sharpen up and better themselves.' Lindgren's goalie partner in Washington, Logan Thompson, agreed. 'You're sending a message,' Thompson said. '(The starter) has been your go-to guy and he's gotten you to this point. I think it's a 'holy s—' moment for the rest of the guys saying, 'He's not going to bail us out tonight. We need to change something about us. We're clearly not helping him out.' ' An NHL goalie typically knows when the pull is due to his own play. He is well aware of which goals he should've stopped, and which ones he did everything in his process correctly, but still gave up. 'As the game is going on you usually have an idea of how you're playing and the quality of goals you're giving up,' Lindgren said. Even with that understanding, goalies are hyper-competitive and hate being removed from the game in most cases. 'I think every goalie takes the blame when they get pulled, just knowing the nature of how competitive we are,' Thompson said. 'Most goalies always think they can do more or do better.' In the case of Thursday's Game 4 in Florida, the move worked to perfection. Pickard wasn't asked to do much for the majority of his 51 minutes in the crease, but he made timely saves and improved to 6-0 in the playoffs. There are plenty of cases in which it doesn't work. Look no further than Pete DeBoer's decision to pull Jake Oettinger from Game 5 of the Western Conference Final after allowing two goals that clearly weren't on him. Backup Casey DeSmith gave up another goal less than a minute after being thrown into the crease cold, and Dallas' season ended – as did DeBoer's tenure as their coach days later. Advertisement It's such an interesting concept. In the vast majority of cases, the coach is choosing to tab an inferior player at one of the most important positions in order to play a psychological trick on the rest of the team. Even the goalies – who are obviously more opposed to the idea than most – can see the potential merit. 'I think there is probably a time and place for it,' Lindgren said. 'If the team is playing lackadaisical and maybe the effort isn't there or they're hanging the goalie out to dry, then I could see (how) getting him out of there … would shake up and wake up the team a little bit. I've seen it happen. There are definitely times where that has worked.' There are also ways the process could be improved – namely involving the goalie coach, or even the goalie himself, more in the decision. Every situation is unique, but Thompson said he's never been consulted on a possible pull during the game. Some teams empower the goalie coach more than others, but there's no question they should have a say, considering the uniqueness of the position and the goalie coach's expertise. In the end, though, it's always the head coach's call. He assumes all of the risk, and the reward. Sometimes, as with DeBoer, it's the last big call he makes on that team's bench. Sometimes it sparks the team to a thrilling comeback to even the series in the Stanley Cup Final. (Photo of Pickard, left, and Skinner after Game 4: Steph Chambers / Getty Images)

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