logo
Connections: Sports Edition hints for June 12, 2025, puzzle No. 262

Connections: Sports Edition hints for June 12, 2025, puzzle No. 262

Need help with today's Connections: Sports Edition puzzle? You've come to the right place.
Welcome to Connections: Sports Edition Coach — a spot to gather clues and discuss (and share) scores.
A quick public service announcement before we continue: The bottom of this article includes one answer in each of the four categories. So if you want to solve the board hint-free, we recommend you play before continuing.
Advertisement
You can access Thursday's game here.
Game No. 262's difficulty: 3 out of 5
Scroll below for one answer in each of the four categories.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
Yellow: BREAK
Green: BLACKJACK
Blue: ACES
Purple: NAPS
The next puzzle will be available at midnight in your time zone. Thanks for playing — and share your scores in the comments!
(Illustration: John Bradford / The Athletic)

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Tigers ace Tarik Skubal jokes about huge contract offer that ‘sounds good' to him
Tigers ace Tarik Skubal jokes about huge contract offer that ‘sounds good' to him

New York Times

time17 minutes ago

  • New York Times

Tigers ace Tarik Skubal jokes about huge contract offer that ‘sounds good' to him

Tigers ace Tarik Skubal joined Barstool Sports podcast 'Pardon My Take' on Wednesday and the show included a playful moment in which the ace jokingly agreed to a very large and very hypothetical new contract from Detroit. The podcast hosts pretended to represent Skubal in contract negotiations, essentially asking what it would take to sign him. Their proposed asking price? A jaw-dropping 10-year deal for $425 million. Advertisement 'That sounds good,' Skubal said with a laugh. The interaction was clearly tongue-in-cheek, but it spotlighted the inevitable: an upcoming contract negotiation for a star who is set to become a free agent after the 2026 season. On the podcast, Skubal acknowledged that the Tigers' success has helped quiet contract noise. 'When our team is doing what we're doing … the whole contract and money stuff kind of goes to the side because we're winning so much,' he said. 'It makes it easier in that aspect.' The Tigers' ace is raising the bar a year after he won the American League Cy Young and Pitching Triple Crown (leading the AL in wins, strikeouts and earned run average). Entering Thursday, Skubal was posting a 2.16 ERA with 105 strikeouts and just seven walks across 83 ⅓ innings, leading all pitchers in FanGraphs' wins above replacement (3.4) while helping the Tigers to MLB's best record at 44-24. On Thursday night, Skubal threw seven shutout innings in a 4-1 win over the Orioles, allowing three hits and two walks while striking out six batters. His performance helped Detroit secure an MLB-leading 45th win (tied with the Mets) while bringing his ERA down to 1.99 on the season. Four straight games with 7+ innings pitched for @TarikSkubal 🔥 #RepDetroit — Detroit Tigers (@tigers) June 13, 2025 Despite Skubal's greatness, a 10-year, $425 million deal is likely no more than a podcast fantasy. It would shatter records, surpassing Yoshinobu Yamamoto's 12-year, $325 million contract with the Los Angeles Dodgers and Zack Wheeler's current deal in average annual value ($42 million). Detroit's president of baseball operations, Scott Harris, has remained diplomatically non-committal about extension talks. During an interview with The New York Post in May, Harris said, 'I think it's a little premature and probably a little unfair to talk about it publicly. … It takes two parties and some understanding of the parameters of a deal, and it takes a willingness on both sides to actually do it.' While Skubal won't become a free agent until after the 2026 season, his performance has already sparked speculation about a potential extension. The 28-year-old left-hander signed a one-year, $10.15 million contract in January to avoid arbitration. In March, The Athletic's Tim Britton predicted Skubal's extension would come in at around seven years, $200 million. He foresaw an offer that included $16 million in 2026 (which would establish a new record in arbitration for a non-Super Two pitcher), and five free-agent years 'at about $35 million apiece. Advertisement 'The average annual values (in today's money) for Jacob deGrom ($29 million) and Felix Hernández ($37.5 million) create reasonable bookends for Skubal,' he wrote. Whether that massive contract comes from Detroit remains the million-dollar question. For now, Skubal seems content letting his pitching do the talking and, maybe even, the negotiating.

Oilers beat Panthers 5-4 in OT in Game 4 to tie Stanley Cup Final
Oilers beat Panthers 5-4 in OT in Game 4 to tie Stanley Cup Final

CBS News

time23 minutes ago

  • CBS News

Oilers beat Panthers 5-4 in OT in Game 4 to tie Stanley Cup Final

Game 4 of the Stanley Cup Final between the Florida Panthers and Edmonton Oilers went to overtime tied at 4 on Thursday night, the third time in the series play has extended beyond regulation. Sam Reinhart scored with 19.5 seconds left to tie it for the defending champion Panthers after they fell behind a few minutes earlier on Jake Walman's goal. Edmonton had erased a three-goal deficit to get to that point. The Panthers - up 2-1 in the series - led 3-0 after the first on two goals from Matthew Tkachuk and another with 41.7 seconds left before intermission, outshooting Edmonton 17-7 and taking advantage of their penalty trouble that put them on the power play. Oilers coach Kris Knoblauch replaced goaltender Stuart Skinner with backup Calvin Pickard to start the second. Allowing three goals, Skinner was pulled for a second consecutive start after giving up five in a 6-1 loss in Game 3 on Monday night. Ryan Nugent-Hopkins, Darnell Nurse and Vasily Podkolzin all beat Sergei Bobrovsky to make it 3-3. Edmonton's Evan Bouchard left the bench after taking a hit from behind from Carter Verhaeghe late in the period that went unpenalized. Florida has never blown a 3-0 lead in franchise postseason history. Despite Walman's goal with 6:24 left in the third, that remains in tact after Reinhart slid the puck in past Pickard to send the crowd into a frenzy.

Georgia women take the team lead at the outdoor track and field championships
Georgia women take the team lead at the outdoor track and field championships

Associated Press

time28 minutes ago

  • Associated Press

Georgia women take the team lead at the outdoor track and field championships

EUGENE, Ore. (AP) — Stephanie Ratcliffe captured Georgia's first hammer throw title since 2010, and the Bulldogs took the team lead at the women's outdoor track and field championships Thursday. Ratcliffe, who also won the hammer title in 2023 while at Harvard, had a national-leading toss of 234 feet, two inches in the fourth round. Georgia leads the team standings with 26 points, followed by Illinois with 16.5 and Washington at 16. The Huskies got a boost when Hana Moll won the pole vault with a collegiate-record toss of 15-8 1/2. Moll, who also won the 2024 indoor title, broke the outdoor record held by her twin sister Amanda. Freshman Pamela Kosgei continued New Mexico's dominance in the 10,000 meters with a meet-record time of 31 minutes, 17.02 seconds. The Lobo men had a 1-2 finish on Wednesday. Mya Lesnar won the shot put with a first-round toss of 62-4 1/2 to become the first Colorado State athlete to win an outdoor event title since Loree Smith in 2005. Lesnar, the sixth Ram to win outdoor gold overall, also won the indoor shot put national title in 2024. Valentina Barrios Bornacelli secured Missouri's first individual javelin national title with a person-best throw of 203-5 to leap from fourth place to first on her final throw. Georgia freshman Manuela Rotundo finished second. Louisville's Synclair Savage took the long jump title on her final attempt with a school-record leap of 22-0.75 to move up from fourth. On the men's side, Mississippi State's Peyton Bair followed up his 2025 indoor heptathlon title with a commanding win in the decathlon, scoring a personal-best 8,323 points and winning both the 100- and 400-meter races outright. It was the 14th highest score in collegiate history. ___ AP sports:

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store