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How to watch Canada vs. Honduras on June 17

How to watch Canada vs. Honduras on June 17

USA Today7 hours ago

How to watch Canada vs. Honduras on June 17 | 2025 Gold Cup
The 2025 Gold Cup matchup between Canada and Honduras is set for June 17 at 10:30 p.m. ET in Vancouver, British Columbia. Looking to watch live on TV? Details are below in this article.
Watch Canada vs. Honduras on Fubo!
How to watch Canada vs. Honduras soccer
Game day: Tuesday, June 17, 2025
Tuesday, June 17, 2025 Game time: 10:30 p.m. ET
10:30 p.m. ET Location: Vancouver, British Columbia
Vancouver, British Columbia Venue: BC Place
BC Place TV channel: TUDN, Fox Sports 1, UniMas, Fubo TV
TUDN, Fox Sports 1, UniMas, Fubo TV Live stream: Watch on Fubo
Watch on Fubo Tickets: Get tickets at StubHub
Watch Canada vs. Honduras on Fubo!
About the 2025 Gold Cup
The 2025 Concacaf Gold Cup tournament features 16 national teams, 15 qualifiers from the Concacaf region and Saudia Arabia, an invited guest team.
The 16-team group stage will feature round-robin play from June 14 to 24.
The four group winners and four runners-up will advance and compete in the single-elimination knockout stage starting on June 28.
The Gold Cup championship game is on Sunday, July 6.
Watch the entire 2025 Gold Cup on Fubo!

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J.J. Spaun rallies to win the 125th U.S. Open
J.J. Spaun rallies to win the 125th U.S. Open

Yahoo

time32 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

J.J. Spaun rallies to win the 125th U.S. Open

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2025 Terra Wortmann Open: Muller [40th] vs. Bublik [45th] Prediction, Odds and Match Preview
2025 Terra Wortmann Open: Muller [40th] vs. Bublik [45th] Prediction, Odds and Match Preview

USA Today

time40 minutes ago

  • USA Today

2025 Terra Wortmann Open: Muller [40th] vs. Bublik [45th] Prediction, Odds and Match Preview

2025 Terra Wortmann Open: Muller [40th] vs. Bublik [45th] Prediction, Odds and Match Preview In a match scheduled for Monday, Alexander Bublik (No. 45 in rankings) will face Alexandre Muller (No. 40) in the Round of 32 at the Terra Wortmann Open. Bublik has -300 odds to earn a spot in the Round of 16 with a win over Muller (+225). Tennis odds courtesy of BetMGM Sportsbook. Odds updated Monday at 6:35 AM ET. For a full list of sports betting odds, access USA TODAY Sports Betting Scores Odds Hub. Alexandre Muller vs. Alexander Bublik matchup info Tournament: Terra Wortmann Open Terra Wortmann Open Round: Round of 32 Round of 32 Date: Monday, June 16 Monday, June 16 Court Surface: Grass Watch the Tennis Channel and more sports on Fubo! Muller vs. Bublik Prediction Based on the implied probility from the moneyline, Muller has a 75.0% to win. Muller vs. Bublik Betting Odds Muller vs. Bublik matchup performance & stats

NHL free agency deep dive: Analyzing the top centers available
NHL free agency deep dive: Analyzing the top centers available

New York Times

timean hour ago

  • New York Times

NHL free agency deep dive: Analyzing the top centers available

With free-agency season approaching, the big question on everyone's mind comes down to cost: How much is each player worth? Pricing players can be an inexact science, but it is an extremely worthy exercise that can save future headaches. Last year, it could've saved a team from drastically overpaying each of the top centers available — Steven Stamkos, Elias Lindholm and Chandler Stephenson. Advertisement The same will likely be true this year with the salary cap rising quickly and teams trying to figure out the market's new normal. Sometimes teams have to take risks in the market to acquire players, even at uncomfortable prices, but it's still better to understand where that bar should be set. Our Chris Johnston has already delivered the top 50 players available. Now we're going to estimate how good they are and, perhaps more importantly, will be. That's based on each player's projected Net Rating over the duration of an expected contract that takes into account how the player likely ages and future cap growth. Net Rating isn't infallible, but it serves as a strong starting point for discussion. Here are the top centers available this summer. We already went over Tavares' next deal in depth below, so we won't go long here. The basic premise is that a contract close to Joe Pavelski's (2025 equivalent of $8.2 million per over three years) is similarly fair for Tavares: A still productive center whose high hockey IQ could mean he ages gracefully. Assuming Tavares sticks with the Leafs, it feels likely that Toronto will get a very nice hometown discount here. If the rumors of a cap hit starting with a four are true, it'll be impossible to find better value this summer. Sam Bennett-mania is in hyperdrive now and it's hard to blame anyone considering he had 14 goals through 21 playoff games this spring. Bennett is a consistent big-game player and he's timed his postseason magnum opus perfectly, just in time for a hefty raise. What that raise should be is tricky (an in-depth breakdown is below), given he's only a 50-point center during the regular season and he doesn't have the profile of a player who ages well. Still, Bennett is a player worth overpaying for, given his playoff pedigree and the potential that he can offer more value in a bigger role. But the ceiling for that should probably be $8 million, with a contract that starts with a seven being more acceptable. Anything more would probably be reckless. After a somewhat surprising buyout in 2023, Matt Duchene proved he still had a lot of offensive game left for the Dallas Stars. In 2023-24, he scored 25 goals and 65 points and in 2024-25, he upped the ante further with a 30-goal, point-per-game season. His work with the puck in all three zones was tremendous, where he looked like a legitimate offensive driver, powering the team's second line to incredible heights. According to data tracked by Corey Sznajder, Duchene was one of the league's top forwards in creating chances and entering the zone with control. Advertisement Duchene's resurgence was a big reason why the Stars were lauded as one of the league's deepest teams the last two seasons. Duchene is also a big reason why Dallas' vaunted offensive depth has completely fizzled out when it matters. In 2023-24, Duchene had six points in 19 playoff games. He followed it up with six points in 18 playoff games in 2024-25. Duchene appears to be the anti-Bennett: a fierce regular-season player who just hasn't shown much of any dawg in him. Perhaps that's just variance. Perhaps it's a Dallas-specific problem, given Duchene isn't the only one afflicted by decreased scoring. Still, it's worth noting as a potential risk factor for signing Duchene. Even if it's not to the degree observed over the last two seasons, there's probably something to Duchene's game — a rush-oriented one — not translating well to the playoffs. For teams not scared off by that, a three-year deal at $6.5 million per season is probably the fair price for Duchene. Even at 35, Duchene is still a 70-point threat for next season and could remain 2C-caliber for the entirety of a three-year deal. Anything more than that is probably pushing it given Duchene's lack of playoff pedigree, but in a thin center market, he may be the only top-six option even available (if Tavares and Bennett both re-sign as expected). That could push Duchene's price up to some uncomfortable places, with AFP Analytics forecasting an AAV north of $7 million. Two summers ago the Canucks struck gold at the bargain bin with Pius Suter (the current version of the model priced him at $2.3 million for what it's worth, a touch higher than his $1.6 million AAV). He's going to be a lot more expensive this time around. Over the last two seasons, Suter has established himself as a dependable middle-six center option for Vancouver. He's defensively responsible, kills penalties exceptionally well and is malleable to any role with serviceable scoring. Suter's ideal role in a contending lineup is as a shutdown 3C, but he can move up into the top six in a pinch when needed. He showed that for the Canucks last season and saw a jump in his production as a result. The Swiss center was a Swiss Army Knife for the Canucks, fitting well wherever needed. Suter's plus-1.7 Defensive Rating is the main draw here and is what teams will be paying for. But the price tag for his services does make Suter feel like a luxury, considering his ideal place in the lineup. While it's possible Suter can continue growing into a top-six role, I'm skeptical of whether or not he has the offensive chops for it. Advertisement Finding the right team fit is important here, one where Suter isn't tasked to do too much and can slot into the lineup appropriately. There may be some sticker shock with a potential $5 million price tag, but that's going to start being the new normal for players hovering around average value. As is the case with the best luxury goods, you're paying for quality and down the middle is generally the right place to invest. The Panthers are a strong example of that, paying Anton Lundell $5 million to be their 3C. While it's not an apples-to-apples comparison due to age, the two do have a similar profile as 40-point forwards with a Defensive Rating of around plus-2.0. If that's the blueprint, Suter checks a lot of the same boxes for his next club (Barkov, Tkachuk, Reinhart and Bennett sold separately). There was a time when Trent Frederic carried some solid potential for the Bruins. In 2022-23, he drove play fairly well in a depth role, while in the following year, he flashed some offense with a 40-point season. Frederic looked like a dependable middle-six forward. If that version of Frederic can be summoned, he has the potential to be a solid bet for a club at the $3.4 million price that AFP Analytics projects for him on a two-year deal. That's roughly where I would've priced Frederic at the end of last season. The current version, though, doesn't look quite as enticing at that cost. Frederic took a sizeable step back in 2024-25, namely on offense, scoring just 1.02 points-per-60 at five-on-five. That's down from 2.1 and 1.97 in the two years prior and ranked 344 out of 378 forwards to play 500 minutes. There's some bad luck there, sure, but that's a steep drop that can't be completely ignored. It's worth mentioning that his projected Defensive Rating also dropped by a goal. Frederic should bounce back from a trying year, and $3 million is probably fine in the grand scheme of things if he can be a dependable third-line player. He has the size that makes him useful in a playoff setting, too. But after a down season, I don't think there should be a rush to overpay him for his services. Right now, Frederic sits on the cusp of third-line caliber, and any further drop could make him a far too expensive fourth liner. There's one comp that's really intriguing and it happens to be Adam Gaudette's top one: Patrick Eaves. In 2012-13, Eaves showed flashes of goal-scoring upside, but rarely enough to make up for other deficiencies in his game. Two years later, Eaves finally made due on his potential and looked like a decent middle-six scorer for a few seasons, peaking with a 32-goal and 51-point season in 2016-17 at the age of 32. Better late than never. Advertisement I'm not saying Gaudette will follow that exact path; he very probably won't. For every Eaves (or even Tomas Kopecky, who also shows up as a great match), there are 25 other guys who didn't amount to much. But scoring 19 goals in a depth role last year is not nothing. Gaudette currently can't be trusted defensively, doesn't do much with the puck himself and probably won't shoot 21 percent again. But if it only costs $1 million, he seems like a worthwhile gamble. No one knows how good Jonathan Toews currently is. The 37-year-old hasn't played since 2022-23, and even then, things looked fairly grim. Toews was coming off two straight seasons under a 50-point pace and had just a 38 percent xG rate in his final season. Defensively, the Blackhawks allowed 3.44 xGA/60 with Toews on the ice, one of the absolute worst marks on the team. In Toews' defense, that team was an utter disaster, and he played fairly tough minutes. Still, any hope that Toews can be an above-average contributor two years removed from that is probably misguided. It's possible that two years away from hockey reignites Toews back to a high level, but the chances of that feel seriously slim. As a veteran presence in the bottom six, though? It might be worth a shot. While we have no Toews data to work with over the last two seasons, we can extrapolate an age curve from what he would've looked like going into the 2023-24 season. The end result: a minus-6.2 Net Rating and a market value of $1.4 million. That's 4C territory. For a team desperate for championship pedigree, Toews is probably worth trying in a depth role. Teams looking for a depth center could do worse than Christian Dvorak, who had a nice return to form last season playing on a line with Brendan Gallagher and Josh Anderson. Dvorak took a big defensive leap in a lesser role with the Canadiens, allowing 0.2 fewer xGA/60 with him on the ice. If Dvorak can repeat last year's efforts (where he had a plus-1.0 Defensive Rating), he could be an intriguing budget add as a poor man's Suter. Anything under $2 million is solid. In a similar vein, Nick Bjugstad checks a lot of boxes as a high-end 4C. The mammoth Mammoth center wasn't quite as effective as he was the year prior, but he can still provide decent value over an average 4C. There's not much separating Bjugstad and Dvorak on the ice, but the former is probably a safer bet given his recent track record. Whether that's worth the extra $500,000 that AFP Analytics is projecting is up for debate, though being 6-foot-6 every time he steps on the ice does help. Advertisement Rounding out the list is Radek Faksa, the purest defensive 4C in the league. Can he provide any semblance of offense? No, not really. But his ability to defend has been consistently strong — even after adjusting for role and pace (which does eliminate the defensive bias that skews toward depth forwards). Faksa's projected Defensive Rating has been above average in every year of his career and that looks unlikely to change next season. I'm not sure how many years Faksa has left, but if his projected cap hit is $1.3 million, that's a fine price to pay for what he offers. — Data via Evolving Hockey, Natural Stat Trick, Hockey Stat Cards, AFP Analytics and All Three Zones (Top photo of Sam Bennett and John Tavares: Dan Hamilton / USA Today)

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