Washington enters postseason with 30-1 record, No. 1 ranking and momentum
WASHINGTON, Ill. (WMBD/WYZZ) — Momentum can be a fleeting thing.
But it appears the Washington girls basketball team has it after beating Morton in the regular season finale to clinch the Mid-Illini Conference title on Tuesday.
'It's really momentum for us going into postseason with this Mid-Illini Conference championship,' said junior guard Avery Tibbs. 'It feels really good and it's a boost of momentum for us.'
Tibbs scored 19 points as Washington rallied from a six-point halftime deficit to shoot past the Potters, 67-50. The Panthers hit seven of their nine three-pointers in the second half against Bob Becker's Potters.
'I think this is a huge step in the right direction,' said Washington coach Kim Barth. 'Morton is a great program. I'll always give (Becker) credit. It's a well-coached, disciplined team. For us to make a run like that in the second half, means good things are coming.'
Washington (30-1, 13-1) avenged its loss of the season with the win. The Panthers are ranked No. 1 in the state in class 3A with the Illinois High School Association postseason starting this weekend.
'Obviously, it feels good but honestly now we are 0-0,' said junior Becca McDougall. 'On any day it be any (opponent's) game. We just have to keep being us. And do our thing.'
The Panthers host a regional next week and begin play on Monday.
'The next game is the next game. We are not going to focus on this game for our next one,' junior Dani Guedet said after scoring 16 points in the win at Morton. 'Our next game is a completely new (season).'
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New York Times
42 minutes ago
- New York Times
Why this Cup final is already different. Plus: The PWHL gets expansion right
Red Light newsletter 🏒 | This is The Athletic's hockey newsletter. Sign up here to receive Red Light directly in your inbox. Good morning to everyone except whoever keeps putting those multi-day gaps in the Stanley Cup Final schedule. The rematch between the Panthers and Oilers is finally underway — let's dig into it. Last night's Game 1 offered a few things we didn't get at all in last year's seven-game prequel. A Leon Draisaitl goal. Any Oilers goal at all in the opener. And most importantly: sudden-death overtime. Yes, we all got to ride our motorcycles out of the helicopter last night, something that hadn't happened in either of the conference finals. I won't keep you in suspense, here's how it ended: That's Draisaitl burying the winner on the power play off a pass from, who else, Connor McDavid. Yes, an overtime power play, which can only mean one thing: The dreaded puck-over-glass rule showed up, with Florida's Tomas Nosek making the mistake that ended up deciding the game. Draisaitl's goal was his second of the game, one year after he was held to just three assists in the final. Advertisement The loss hardly feels like a disaster for the Panthers; after all, we knew they weren't going to jump out to a 3-0 lead this time around (or did we?). They'll want to to respond tomorrow to avoid a 2-0 deficit, although even that wouldn't mean game over. For now, they can focus on the positive: They led for most of the game, they nearly stole a road win and they kept Connor McDavid from any highlight-reel miracles. For now, at least. (Speaking of highlights, did you know you can now get NHL highlights directly in The Athletic app? I would never lie to you about something this important.) Game 2 is tomorrow at 8 p.m. ET on TNT, truTV, MAX and Sportsnet. If it's as good as Game 1, we might be headed toward a classic. Are you tired of the Canada vs. USA discourse yet? I'm getting there. And I get it — we do this every time a Canadian team makes the final against an American opponent, and it's especially relevant given everything that's gone on this year, including the 4 Nations chaos. We got into the topic on yesterday's podcast. It's a thing. Your two favorite hockey newsletter writers even debated the whole 'Canada's Team' thing a few years ago, when the political climate was admittedly different. I won't relitigate it all here. But I do want to know what you think. So please take a minute to fill out my one-question survey, and I'll share the results in Monday's newsletter. Survey: Canada vs. USA — Who are you cheering for in the Stanley Cup Final, and why? (And if you're still trying to decide who to root for, I've got you covered with my annual rooting guide.) 🏒 We've got new coaches. Just this morning, the Bruins hired Marco Sturm as their new head coach. He's best known in Boston as Patrice Bergeron's former left wing, so he's instantly got more name recognition than the new head coach of the Penguins, Dan Muse. It's OK to admit you have no idea who that is. Josh Yohe brings you up to speed on a coach hired off the Rangers staff. Advertisement 🚨 Nikita Kucherov is your Ted Lindsay Award winner as most outstanding player, as voted on by his fellow players. Will he pair it with the Hart Trophy as MVP? We won't find out until a week from now, with a condensed one-hour version of the annual awards show hosted by that guy from that commercial from a decade ago. 📺 I don't want to burden you … But if you missed it, I teamed up with Other Sean for our annual exchange of the most annoying playoff ads of the year. 💲 The Avalanche have locked up deadline rental Brock Nelson, and he didn't come cheap. Dom Luszczyszyn's model sees trouble down the road. 🔥The start of the Stanley Cup Final means we get our annual 'State of the NHL' update from Gary Bettman and friends. This year's edition featured some news. This is how you do expansion 🔥 Pop quiz, hotshot: When was the last NHL expansion draft? There's a good chance you said 2021, or maybe 2017 if you're one of the increasing number of fans who occasionally forget the Kraken exist. And sure, according to the NHL, you'd be right. But were either of those events really drafts? I'd argue no, because a 'draft' implies more than one team taking turns with selections. The Kraken and Golden Knights both entered the league solo, meaning their expansion was less of a draft and more just a case of submitting a list. Which brings us to the PWHL, and what's happening over the next few days. Now this is an expansion draft. The league is adding two teams this summer, with Seattle and Vancouver joining the six existing clubs. The expansion rules were announced last month, and they'll be stunning to fans who are used to hearing NHL GMs cry about losing their ninth-best forward. PWHL teams can only protect three players on their initial lists, which has led to huge names like Hilary Knight and Sarah Nurse being made available. Vancouver and Seattle wasted little time utilizing their exclusive window to sign free agents — Knight signed in Seattle and Nurse in Vancouver — leading into Monday night's draft. Keep this link handy: We're tracking all the signings as they happen. Advertisement As always, Hailey Salvian has you covered, including with yesterday's mock draft with Shayna Goldman. We'll have more on how things have shaken out on Monday morning. 📺 I don't know … maybe basketball? I've heard some people like it. The NBA Finals start tonight (8:30 p.m. ET, ESPN), and yes, they do call it the 'finals,' plural. In hockey, it's the 'final,' which you know if you follow even one sportswriter on social media because we all become weird pedants about this stuff at this time of year. Can we not get the leadership from the two leagues together and reach a consensus on this? Final or finals — it doesn't matter, guys, just pick one and ride with it. Where was I? Oh right, basketball. We worked out a little exchange program between Red Light and our friends over at The Bounce, our NBA newsletter. As part of that, we asked Zach Harper what he found interesting about the Stanley Cup. His answer: They move around on knives! How does this not freak people out?! I also find it fascinating that we haven't had a Canadian team win a Stanley Cup title in over 30 years, and a team from Florida could block the Oilers two years in a row. Sorry Zach, the only correct answer for any basketball fan watching the NHL playoffs is: 'Wow, they shake hands after each series, what a magnanimous display of integrity that makes hockey players better than any other athletes. We bow before your sportsmanship and respect for tradition.' Although to be honest, the knives thing is a close second. You can read the full exchange over at The Pulse, because I am the *furiously googles 'good basketball player'* Nikola Jokić of newsletter cross-promotion. We believe that in hockey, as in life, there are no dumb questions. So if you have something you've always wondered about the sport, ask away by emailing us at redlight@ Why don't linesmen just drop the puck? Why do players get tossed out of faceoffs? I've been watching hockey for over 50 years and I've never heard anyone explain this. – Chris F. Advertisement The short answer: Because many linesmen didn't get enough attention as kids and are trying to make up for it now. The longer, and more accurate answer: There are a whole bunch of rules around how a faceoff is supposed to be done, taking up the better part of four full pages of the rulebook. Most of those are focused on the centers taking the draw, who have to have their shoulders square, their sticks down properly and their skates in the right place, and can't move until the puck does. Meanwhile, their teammates are supposed to stay out of the circle, and avoid contact. If the linesman feels like any of those rules are violated in a way that prevents a clean draw, he can kick the offending team's center out, to be replaced by a teammate. If the same team commits a second violation on the same draw, it's a minor penalty for delay of game. As most fans have noticed, some of these rules are enforced inconsistently. For example, the wingers infringe on the circle on just about every draw, and it's almost never called. Sometimes the linesman will issue a warning instead, at least for a first offense. You'll also get those frustrating plays where the linesman only decides the faceoff wasn't done properly after he drops the puck, and we have to start all over again. But in general, there's a ton of gamesmanship involved in every faceoff, and if a center gets tossed, it's because the linesman feels that he went too far. Believe it or not, the longest current drought for a regular-season division title is owned by none other than the Edmonton Oilers, who haven't finished first since 1987 despite appearing in five finals (and winning two) in that span. 📫 Love Red Light? Check out The Athletic's other newsletters.

2 hours ago
'Spectacular' Stanley Cup Final Game 1 shows this Panthers-Oilers rematch could be a classic series
EDMONTON, Alberta -- If the series opener of the Stanley Cup Final is a hint of things to come, the Edmonton Oilers and Florida Panthers are about to give everyone a memorable show. The two best teams in the NHL over the past couple of years traded hits, goals and saves through an instant-classic Game 1 that ended with Leon Draisaitl scoring 19-plus minutes into overtime. It was at the same time tight-checking and also wildly entertaining. Even Panthers coach Paul Maurice on the losing end could appreciate the value of must-see hockey. 'Its potential (is) just a spectacular seven-gamer,' Maurice said 'Up and down the ice, it's still fast. There isn't any casualness. ... It was honest, it was hard, it was fast and it was tight. It was an overtime game.' It had a little bit of everything, from Draisaitl scoring 66 seconds in to Oilers coach Kris Knoblauch unsuccessfully challenging Florida's tying goal by Sam Bennett only to watch Brad Marchand get a power-play goal less than two minutes later. Edmonton rallied from a two-goal deficit to tie it. And Sergei Bobrovsky and Stuart Skinner each made some stops on high-danger scoring chances along the way. 'It's my job to give us a chance to win,' Skinner said. 'I think you've got to give a lot of props to Bob over there, too. He made some fantastic saves, especially in overtime.' There were times the play bogged down, particularly late in regulation and in sudden death OT when two powerhouse teams minimized the risks they were taking. Even for long stretches when the Panthers had the lead, there was not much ice for the Oilers to get through — and they expect more of that moving forward. 'Tight checking," said Mattias Ekholm, who scored Edmonton's tying goal in the third period. 'I think that there's two very experienced lineups with a lot of playoff experience and have been in these situations. Everybody's pretty confident and comfortable in these. I think it's going to be a lot of the same.' Part of what made it masterpiece hockey was how good the Panthers and Oilers are when the pressure is on. Sure, mistakes were made that led to goals, including the puck over the glass penalty in OT, but much of the game was textbook fundamentals. 'The pucks go deep that are supposed to go deep,' Maurice said. 'I think we had one all night we didn't like, maybe two all night that we didn't like our decision of the line. They didn't fool around with it, either.' A year after the Panthers went up 3-0 in the series only to lose three in a row and then defeat the Oilers in a tight Game 7, it's clear these opponents are again evenly matched. That is a recipe for some fun times ahead, with Game 2 Friday night in Edmonton the next chapter of a growing rivalry. 'It's two great teams,' Ekholm said. 'The thing now, too, is we know exactly how they play, they know exactly how we play. It's those little, little details that are going to matter so much in the end. It's one lost coverage for a second here or there, or a penalty like you saw tonight, or whatever it is. It's teams that are also very comfortable in these moments and in these high stake games.'


CBS News
2 hours ago
- CBS News
"Spectacular" Stanley Cup Final Game 1 shows Florida Panthers-Edmonton Oilers rematch could be classic series
If the series opener of the Stanley Cup Final is a hint of things to come, the Edmonton Oilers and Florida Panthers are about to give everyone a memorable show. The two best teams in the NHL over the past couple of years traded hits, goals and saves through an instant-classic Game 1 that ended with Leon Draisaitl scoring 19-plus minutes into overtime. It was at the same time tight-checking and also wildly entertaining. Even Panthers coach Paul Maurice on the losing end could appreciate the value of must-see hockey. "Its potential [is] just a spectacular seven-gamer," Maurice said. "Up and down the ice, it's still fast. There isn't any casualness. ... It was honest, it was hard, it was fast, and it was tight. It was an overtime game." A Game 1 with a little bit of everything It had a little bit of everything, from Draisaitl scoring 66 seconds in to Oilers coach Kris Knoblauch unsuccessfully challenging Florida's tying goal by Sam Bennett, only to watch Brad Marchand get a power-play goal less than two minutes later. Edmonton Oilers' Leon Draisaitl (29) scores against Florida Panthers goalie Sergei Bobrovsky (72) as Aaron Ekblad (5) and Gustav Forsling (42) defend while Edmonton's Kasperi Kapanen (42) and Evander Kane (91) watch during the first overtime period in Game 1 of the NHL Stanley Cup Final, in Edmonton, Alberta, on Wednesday, June 4, 2025. (Darryl Dyck//The Canadian Press via AP) DARRYL DYCK / AP Edmonton rallied from a two-goal deficit to tie it. And Sergei Bobrovsky and Stuart Skinner each made some stops on high-danger scoring chances along the way. "It's my job to give us a chance to win," Skinner said. "I think you've got to give a lot of props to Bob over there, too. He made some fantastic saves, especially in overtime." There were times the play bogged down, particularly late in regulation and in sudden-death OT when two powerhouse teams minimized the risks they were taking. Even for long stretches when the Panthers had the lead, there was not much ice for the Oilers to get through — and they expect more of that moving forward. "Tight checking," said Mattias Ekholm, who scored Edmonton's tying goal in the third period. "I think that there's two very experienced lineups with a lot of playoff experience and have been in these situations. Everybody's pretty confident and comfortable in these. I think it's going to be a lot of the same." Hockey at its finest Part of what made it masterpiece hockey was how good the Panthers and Oilers are when the pressure is on. Sure, mistakes were made that led to goals, including the puck over the glass penalty in OT, but much of the game was textbook fundamentals. "The pucks go deep that are supposed to go deep," Maurice said. "I think we had one all night we didn't like, maybe two all night that we didn't like our decision of the line. They didn't fool around with it, either." A year after the Panthers went up 3-0 in the series only to lose three in a row and then defeat the Oilers in a tight Game 7, it's clear these opponents are again evenly matched. That is a recipe for some fun times ahead, with Game 2 Friday night in Edmonton the next chapter of a growing rivalry. "It's two great teams," Ekholm said. "The thing now, too, is we know exactly how they play, they know exactly how we play. It's those little, little details that are going to matter so much in the end. It's one lost coverage for a second here or there, or a penalty like you saw tonight, or whatever it is. It's teams that are also very comfortable in these moments and in these high-stakes games."