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2025 Memorial Cup Final Live Blog

2025 Memorial Cup Final Live Blog

Yahoo4 days ago

'I Do Wonder if Anaheim Takes a Shot at This': How the Anaheim Ducks Fit as a Possible Destination for Jonathan Toews Comeback
It has been reported this week that two-time World Junior gold medal champion, two-time Olympic gold medal champion, Conne Smyth Trophy winner, Selke Trophy winner, three-time Stanley Cup champion, and long-tenured captain of the Chicago Blackhawks Jonathan Toews will be attempting a return to the NHL for the 2025-26 season.

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UFC 316 results: Kayla Harrison finishes Julianna Peña, squares off with Amanda Nunes
UFC 316 results: Kayla Harrison finishes Julianna Peña, squares off with Amanda Nunes

USA Today

time27 minutes ago

  • USA Today

UFC 316 results: Kayla Harrison finishes Julianna Peña, squares off with Amanda Nunes

UFC 316 results: Kayla Harrison finishes Julianna Peña, squares off with Amanda Nunes NEWARK, N.J. – First, an Olympic gold medalist. Then, a PFL champion. Now, a UFC champion. Kayla Harrison has a new trophy for the case. In the UFC 316 co-main event Saturday at Prudential Center, Harrison (19-1 MMA, 3-0 UFC) earned gold in emphatic fashion as she submitted Julianna Peña with a kimura at 4:55 of Round 2. The first round was all Harrison, as she dragged Peña (13-6 MMA, 8-4 UFC) to the canvas with relative ease. Though the moment proved not to matter in the end, referee Vitor Ribeiro deducted a point from Peña for multiple illegal upkicks to the grounded Harrison. Early in Round 2, Harrison dragged the fight back to the canvas, where she grabbed hold of Peña's arm and torqued until the submission came. After the fight, Harrison called former teammate and UFC champion Amanda Nunes into the cage. The two squared off in a faceoff, of what will be one of the biggest women's fights in mixed martial arts history. Nunes has not competed since June 2023 when she defeated Irene Aldana and retired inside the cage. After nearly two years of spending more time as a mother, Nunes indicated her return to the cage was coming – and made it official at a fan Q&A on Friday. With the victory, Harrison keeps her perfect UFC record alive. Her lone career loss came to Larissa Pacheco in PFL in 2022. Peña loses the title and her second reign comes to an end. She was not able to pocket a title defense in her first stint, either. Up-to-the-minute UFC 316 results:

‘Absolutely insane' Merab Dvalishvili using social media presence to connect with fans
‘Absolutely insane' Merab Dvalishvili using social media presence to connect with fans

New York Post

timean hour ago

  • New York Post

‘Absolutely insane' Merab Dvalishvili using social media presence to connect with fans

They call Merab Dvalishvili 'The Machine' for his relentless cardio. Make no mistake: Not only is the Georgian — who was slated to defend his bantamweight crown in the UFC 316 main event against Sean O'Malley — an animal, he's more than happy to eat food meant for the animals. Advertisement Kayla Harrison, the challenger to Julianna Peña's women's bantamweight crown Saturday night at Prudential Center, witnessed firsthand during a UFC remote filming session last year in Point Pleasant, N.J., the time the affable Dvalishvili ate a fish — not an order of salmon, but a whole fish meant to be fed to the penguins at Jenkinson's Aquarium. 'He's absolutely insane,' Harrison told The Post during the lead-up to the event in Newark. 'He was eating the sardines, or the fish that we were feeding the penguins. He literally ate one. I was like, 'You're an animal.' ' 3 Merab Dvalishvili is pictured before his fight June 7. Zuffa LLC Advertisement Dvalishvili, despite English not being his first language, has found a way to connect with fans thanks to his friendly demeanor and his humbleness — not to mention the silly social-media videos he frequently produces, a staple of the lead-up to his capture of O'Malley's UFC gold last September that returned ahead of their rematch. Those clips generally are planned and canned, but the 34-year-old may be even funnier in moments of spontaneity. 3 Merab Dvalishvili and Sean O'Malley are pictured June 6. Noah K. Murray for the NY Post In the case of sampling the penguins' snack, the former New York construction worker, who still owns homes in Long Island and Nevada, says he was just 'a little bit hungry.' Advertisement 'I guess these penguins [were] full, and they [were] not hungry. The food we [were] giving, it was small fish — washed, clean,' Dvalishvili recalled to The Post earlier this week. 'I was a little bit hungry, you know. They [were] not hungry. I was hungry, and I ate healthy food, which was the fish.' Dvalishvili and Harrison — who were joined that day at Jenkinson's Boardwalk by former two-division champion Alex Pereira and Hall of Famer Robbie Lawler — bumped into one another again between Post interviews in Morristown, N.J., and posed for a photo, with Harrison locking in a rear-naked choke grip on the champ. The moment was a callback to when they first met at a 2016 judo event in New York. 3 Merab Dvalishvili is pictured at his weigh-in June 6. Zuffa LLC Advertisement They've come a long way since Dvalishvili's own fledgling mixed martial arts career was off to a rocky 2-2 start and Harrison hadn't even transitioned from the realm of Olympic-level judo to MMA. Now, they're UFC stars sharing the same stage on pay-per-view. 'So many things change in nine years,' says Dvalishvili, whose first martial art was judo, 'and we are in here now.'

'Is a Canadian team even allowed to win me anymore?' The imagined thoughts of the Stanley Cup
'Is a Canadian team even allowed to win me anymore?' The imagined thoughts of the Stanley Cup

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

'Is a Canadian team even allowed to win me anymore?' The imagined thoughts of the Stanley Cup

This week saw the beginning of the Stanley Cup finals, which sees the Edmonton Oilers in contention to potentially become the first Canadian team since 1993 to win the NHL championship trophy. In Dear Diary, the National Post satirically re-imagines a week in the life of a newsmaker. This week, Tristin Hopper takes a journey inside the thoughts of the Dominion Hockey Challenge Cup. Or, as its more commonly known, the Stanley Cup. Life comes at you fast. One minute you're a donated silver cup being fought over by toothless Canadian amateurs fresh from a shift at the dockyards. The next, you're a heavily trademarked corporate laurel that spends most of its time around American millionaires. I've been to the White House so often I've got my own Secret Service code name. I've been filled with hot wings and Kristall liqueur more times than I can count. There are times I catch myself spelling 'colour' without the 'u.' I stared in the mirror for several minutes at the Dominion Hockey Challenge Cup inscription on my bowl. How often do I forget it's even there. I'll be frank; I didn't know Canadian teams were still technically able to win me. I figured Canada had lost a war or something, and as a condition of the surrender they had to forsake access to their most treasured cultural object. That's how these things usually go, right? That's why the Mona Lisa, an Italian cultural treasure, is in France. It's why Egypt's Rosetta Stone is in the U.K. So to learn that the Oilers merely have to win some hockey games to get me back is quite surprising. I thought my return to Canadian soil could come only at the conclusion of some devastating internecine conflagration. People ask me if I still keep in touch with the other Governor General sports trophies: the Grey Cup, the Minto Cup, the Jeanne Sauvé Ringette Cup. The answer is, no. The last I heard from any of them was when the Roland Michener Tuna Fishing Trophy tried to borrow money. Do I think I'm better than them? Yes. As much as I respect the emerging sport of Dragon Boat racing, I would controversially contend that the Ramon John Hnatyshyn Dragon Boating Cup doesn't inspire the heart of young athletes in quite the same way as I do. Nevertheless, there are still times I think wistfully of the simple yet satisfying life of the Grey Cup. Does Tom Cruise envy his humble siblings who never left upstate New York? I would remind people that I continue to spend a disproportionate amount of time with Canadians. It's just that these particular Canadians live in the United States, work for U.S. companies, are paid in U.S. dollars and have married Americans (blondes, mostly). Is it not fitting that these ambiguous Canadians should be rewarded with me, the very icon of shifting and ambiguous identity. How much of me is really the 'original' Stanley Cup. At what point, when so many of my parts have been stripped off and moved to a museum somewhere, do I cease being what I once was? Do I fear what would occur were I to once again be in the possession of a Canadian team? I have so often been in the hands of cities who were immune to my powers. Where the Stanley Cup parade has been little more than an ill-attended circling of the arena parking lot. What happens when this spell is broken? Like any major trophy, I know I hold immense power and influence. Cities have burned on my account. Fortunes have been lost. Tears have been shed. TVs punched. A people has been bound in the darkness for a generation. What happens when they see light for the first time? Dear Diary: Inside the thoughts of Canada Post workers considering a strike Dear Diary: The imagined thoughts of Justin Trudeau

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