Latest news with #CoreFour


Perth Now
3 days ago
- Entertainment
- Perth Now
Scream 7 writer teases ‘really specific reason' for Neve Campbell's return as Sidney Prescott
'Scream 7' writer Guy Busick has teased there is a "really specific reason" why Neve Campbell's Sidney Prescott has returned. After sitting out 2023's 'Scream VI' due to a row over her salary, the 51-year-old actress has reprised her iconic scream-queen role, and 'Scream 7's writer Guy Busick has revealed there is a "really cool reason" why Sidney is back. In an interview with the scribe said: "I don't want to give anything away about the reason ['Scream 7'] had to be a Sidney movie because there's a really cool reason. "In all these movies, you have to ask, 'Why now? What is the thing 'Scream' is commenting on now?' 'Scream' is always in a conversation with the audience about the state of movies, the state of horror movies and in particular, franchises." Busick added he had first pitched the idea for Sidney's return to director Kevin Williamson, which he had come up with alongside his 'Scream' and 'Scream VI' co-writer James Vanderbilt. He explained: "There is a really specific reason why Sidney is in this movie. I will say there is a reason and we were happy with it when we cracked it. "We went to Neve Campbell and said, 'This is why. This is why Sidney now.' Neve was like, 'Oh, I get that.' I pitched Kevin this first, too. "He got it and then I pitched the studio. I came up with the story with my co-writer on 5 and 6, James Vanderbilt." As well as Campbell, 'Scream 7' will see the return of some other series icons, including Courteney Cox's Gale Weathers, Matthew Lillard's Stu Macher, David Arquette's Dewey Riley and Scott Foley's Roman Bridger. However, Busick admitted the original idea for 'Scream 7' 'was a completely different thing', as it would have focused on the 'Core Four' - the Meeks-Martin twins Chad (Mason Gooding) and Mindy (Jasmin Savoy Brown), and Carpenter sisters Tara (Jenna Ortega) and Sam (Melissa Barrera). However, after Ortega and Barrera exited the project - with the latter actress being dismissed by Spyglass Media Group following her controversial comments about the war in Gaza - the 'Scream 7' team "had to start from scratch". Busick explained: "We weren't able to use what we had in the previous iteration for this one. [We] just had to start from scratch, which was a bummer. "We were excited about what we had for that movie. We wanted to do one more 'Core Four' movie. We know the fans love those characters. We love those characters. We created those characters. I would love to see, in some universe, the continuation of their characters, in some way. But we weren't able to port over the stuff from the other story. "It was like, 'Okay, here is what the universe dealt us.' We always wanted to do a Sidney movie and so it was like, 'All right, let's get into it and why now and why this one?'"


New York Times
6 days ago
- Entertainment
- New York Times
Presenting the Yankees' All-Quarter Century Team, the Bronx Bombers' best since 2000
Editor's note: The Athletic is marking 2025 by naming an MLB All-Quarter Century Team, selected by Jayson Stark. We're inviting readers to take our survey and make their picks for the best players at each position since 2000, with the results announced in an upcoming story. Some of our beat writers are picking All-Quarter Century Teams for the teams they cover. Check this page to find all of our All-Quarter Century Team coverage. Advertisement You've seen our MLB All-Quarter Century Team. Now check out our Yankees All-Quarter Century Team. Most of the choices weren't all that hard to make. The Core Four is represented. I didn't shun those suspended for using performance-enhancing drugs — if MLB lets them put their uniforms back on, I'm not going to exclude them. But there are a few spots worthy of debate, and runners-up that were fun to remember. (Always love a reason to mention Ronald Torreyes.) Posada represents an easy choice to kick things off. He is the first member of the Core Four on this list, and it's a crime that he fell off the Hall of Fame ballot in 2017, receiving just 3.8 percent of the vote. Posada played almost triple the number of games (1,537) as any other Yankees catcher in the 2000s. Gary Sánchez was the next-closest at 538. Posada appeared in five All-Star games and won five Silver Slugger awards. The Yankees retired his No. 20 in 2015. The switch-hitter also had 438 postseason plate appearances, hitting .254 with eight homers. He retired in 2011 and had opportunities to play elsewhere, but said he didn't want to play for any team other than the Yankees. For a long time, Posada kept a picture of Thurman Munson in his locker. Sánchez had some highs, too, including his epic rookie run in 2016 and his two All-Star appearances. Brian McCann was beloved in the clubhouse. And anyone who covered Kyle Higashioka and Austin Romine knows how they worked hard to reach the majors and stay there, and how integral they were to their clubhouses. Texieira was part of the Yankees' rebuild in the 2008-2009 offseason that saw them transition from the old Yankee Stadium to where they play today. They didn't just give Texieira an eight-year, $180-million deal. As part of their splurge, they also brought in starting pitchers CC Sabathia (seven years, $161 million) and A.J. Burnett (five years, $82.5 million). Advertisement Texieira had his best season in pinstripes as they won the 2009 World Series. In 156 games, he hit .292, leading the league in home runs (39), RBIs (122) and total bases (344). It resulted in his first of two All-Star appearances with the Yankees, the second happening in 2015. He also finished second in the MVP race to the Minnesota Twins' Joe Mauer. The shift and injuries zapped Teixeira's effectiveness toward the end of his career. He tore a tendon sheath in his wrist playing for Team USA in the World Baseball Classic in 2013, and he had a deep bone bruise in his shin that was eventually determined to be a fracture in 2015, which helped usher in the Greg Bird era. I considered Tino Martinez, but his best years were from 1996-1999. Jason Giambi's case was compelling, too. (Long live the golden thong.) Imagine if Canó didn't leave? Would he have ended up as the best Yankees second baseman of all time? Would he have tested positive for PEDs? (OK, yeah, he probably would have. We have no way of knowing when he started doing what. We're not buying his stories, either.) But Canó was thrilling to watch. All his moves were so smooth. Everything looked so easy for him. Going to his right, turning and firing to first base all in one motion. That beautiful left-handed swing with loft and grace. Five All-Star Games. A World Series in 2009. Four top-10 finishes in the AL MVP race. The John Sterling home run call: 'Robinson Canó, oh, don't you know?' Then he bolted for 10 years and $240 million to the Seattle Mariners after 2013, leaving the Yankees scrambling to replace him. Aside from Canó, only Gleyber Torres and DJ LeMahieu warranted some consideration. Who else but The Captain? Of Jeter's 3,465 hits, 2,658 of them came in the 21st century. He hit .307 from 2000 until he retired in 2014. Who can forget his walk-off RBI single in his final at-bat at Yankee Stadium? Or that he fell one vote short of a unanimous election to the Hall of Fame in 2020? Advertisement This was a landslide victory. Didi Gregorius gets points for taking over for Jeter and becoming a fan-favorite. Torres gets points for suiting up every day at the position for a couple of years even though he had little business being there. Names you forgot played shortstop for the Yankees during this time: Troy Tulowitzki, Brendan Ryan and Ronald 'The Toe Night Show' Torreyes. Yes, A-Rod was twice suspended for PEDs. Yes, he looked foolish each time. Yes, he even sued the Yankees' doctor and Major League Baseball. But the Yankees wouldn't have won the 2009 World Series without Rodriguez, who hit .365 with six homers and 18 RBIs in those playoffs. He played 22 seasons and 12 of them were with the Yankees. He hit 351 of his 696 career home runs with New York. For all his drama, Rodriguez is one of the greatest right-handed hitters of all time and a slick defender. His decision to move to third base in deference to Jeter was the right move. Still, I don't blame the Yankees for not retiring his number or honoring him in Monument Park. It's hard to rebuild bridges you've burned, especially when the Yankees don't need him. There were no other options. Gio Urshela still gets loud applause when he walks to the plate at Yankee Stadium. Miguel Andujar provided a fun 2018 rookie season as a member of the Baby Bombers. Most Yankees fans never want to hear Josh Donaldson's name again. Gardner will go down as one of the most beloved Yankees players of the 2000s. By the end of his 14-year run, he was a de facto captain of the clubhouse alongside CC Sabathia. He was one of the early voices that helped mold Aaron Judge. And Gardner had more than his share of highs between the lines. A homegrown Yankee, Gardner played 108 games for the 2009 World Series team. He led the league in steals in 2011 and in triples in 2013. He was an All-Star in 2015 and a Gold Glover in 2016. He was the first (and I'm pretty sure only) player to jab his bat at the dugout ceiling when he got mad at calls. Advertisement The Yankees should invite him back for a Brett Gardner Day at Yankee Stadium. The sooner, the better. Another relatively easy choice. Williams' peak was from 1995-2002. Still, he was an All-Star in 2000 and 2001, and he put up a 4.5 WAR (Baseball Reference) in 2002. From 2003 until his final season in 2006, he posted a 100 OPS+. Williams attempted a brief comeback in 2009, working out at the team's player development complex during spring training. But it was over. Williams gets extra points for his occasional guitar solo national anthems at Yankee Stadium. It should have been the Core Five, with Williams included. Gardy could have fit here. Johnny Damon, too. Jacoby Ellsbury, anybody? Judge was the pick for the The Athletic's All-MLB Quarter-Century Team in right field. Stark wrote that he might be the best right-handed hitter of the modern era. So, of course, he's making this list. When you think about what Judge is doing, and you try to contextualize it, it's difficult. Everyone with similar production either played 100 years ago or has connections to PEDs. It's astonishing. Nick Swisher gets some love for hitting 29 homers on the 2009 team and for still being an influential voice in the organization. The last two seasons of Paul O'Neill's career were 2000 and 2001. And there was that one glorious season from Juan Soto. It's also easy to forget how solid Bobby Abreu was for the Yankees from 2006-2008 (7.0 bWAR, .843 OPS). Matsui seemed to become a Yankees legend as soon as he donned pinstripes for the first time in 2003. The fanfare around his arrival was incredible. He lived up to the hype. Godzilla was the 2009 World Series MVP, going 8-for-13 (.615) with three homers. He finished runner up to the Kansas City Royals' Angel Berroa (remember him?) in the 2004 AL Rookie of the Year race. Advertisement Look, I get it. Maybe Giambi deserved this spot instead in terms of pure offensive production. He was a three-time All-Star with the Yankees. Over his seven years in the Bronx, he hit .260 and averaged 30 homers and 86 RBIs. But Matsui just feels right. Giancarlo Stanton also has an argument, especially considering his incredible playoff hot stretches. Matt Carpenter's 2022 run was a lot of fun, too. It was hard to leave Masahiro Tanaka out of this group. Did Tanaka live up to his seven-year, $151 million deal? Probably. He wasn't the ace the Yankees hoped for, but he pitched virtually his whole tenure with a partial tear in his ulnar collateral ligament, his splitter was disgusting and he finished a fan-favorite. Sabathia and Cole were easy selections. Sabathia also made the most starts of any Yankees starting pitcher this century with 308 and was the workhorse for the 2009 team. Cole has his 2022 Cy Young Award and the Yankees are banking on him returning to dominance when he's back from Tommy John surgery next season. Both pitchers earn major marks for their clubhouse leadership. Mussina filled in a strange era for the Yankees. He arrived just after the 2000 World Series win. He retired just before the 2009 title. But he was nails, even finally posting his first 20-win season and leading the league in starts at age 39 in 2008, his final season. Clemens, who won six career Cy Young awards, nabbed No. 5 with the Yankees in 2001 and won a ring in 2000. He almost helped them to another ring in 2001, throwing six innings of one-run ball in Game 7 versus the Arizona Diamondbacks. And, of course, there's Pettitte. Like Posada, he deserves closer inspection for the Hall of Fame. According to FanGraphs, he posted the highest WAR (36.3) among Yankees pitchers this century. He also made 26 postseason starts for the Yankees with a 3.20 ERA, winning rings in 2000 and 2009. Our All-Quarter Century Team didn't name a set-up man. But this is my list, and I wanted to mention Betances. Advertisement His 2014-2018 run contained some of the most dominant pitching I can remember watching. FanGraphs rates his slider as the most dominant of its kind during that span (58.1 wSL), ahead of second-place Andrew Miller (55.6 wSL). Betances would just steamroll lineups, and it was a shame his shoulder started to go at age 31, just before his first foray into free agency. David Robertson also warrants a mention here. D-Rob had 30-plus holds each season from 2011-2013 and saved 39 games for the Yankees in 2014. The best to ever do it. Of Rivera's record 652 saves, 523 came in the 2000s. That total alone would place him third on the all-time list, behind Trevor Hoffman (601 saves) and ahead of Lee Smith (478). Rivera had a 2.05 ERA from 2000 until he retired after the 2013 season. He had an 0.86 ERA in 65 playoff appearances. His unanimous selection to the Hall of Fame in 2019 was deserved. Aroldis Chapman registered 153 saves during his time with the Yankees with a FIP (2.89) nearly identical to Rivera's (2.62) in the 2000s. (Top photo of Jorge Posada, Mariano Rivera, Derek Jeter and Andy Pettitte: Al Bello / Getty Images)


Global News
20-05-2025
- Sport
- Global News
Berube, Leafs players to speak after Panthers Game 7 blowout ends playoff run
Toronto Maple Leafs head coach Craig Berube and several players will speak to reporters Tuesday after their Stanley Cup quest was crushed Sunday by the Florida Panthers. The media availabilities for the coach and the players are scheduled to begin at 10:30 a.m. at the Ford Performance Centre in Etobicoke. The Leafs are nearly 48 hours removed from a crushing 6-1 Game 7 loss on home ice against the Panthers in their second-round playoff series Sunday night. That result, which saw boos ring out from the home crowd as well as jerseys being tossed on the ice, means the Leafs' 58-year-long Stanley Cup will continue yet again. Get daily National news Get the day's top news, political, economic, and current affairs headlines, delivered to your inbox once a day. Sign up for daily National newsletter Sign Up By providing your email address, you have read and agree to Global News' Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy An uncertain off-season now lies ahead as star forwards Mitch Marner and John Tavares will become unrestricted free agents on July 1. Those two players, along with captain Auston Matthews and forward William Nylander, have formed the 'Core Four' since 2018 as the highest-paid players on the team with the expectation of getting it to the promised land. Story continues below advertisement Leafs president Brendan Shanahan — an unwavering supporter of the club's Core Four— is also without a contract beyond this season. Toronto is now 0-7 in Game 7s, and 0-6 with Marner and Matthews dating back to 2018, in the NHL's salary cap era. The Core Four era has also seen the team advance to the second round of the NHL playoffs only twice. After Sunday's game, several Leafs players sought to explain what happened on the ice. Tavares told reporters the team is 'never going to quit.' 'We'd love another opportunity,' he added. Whether that will happen or not is unclear; it's also unclear if and when Leafs management will speak to reporters.

Edmonton Journal
19-05-2025
- Sport
- Edmonton Journal
Todd: The Leafs continue to tolerate mediocrity
Article content Do the ghosts in suits who run this organization still believe their vaunted Core Four can win a Cup? Or is it enough to go through the motions, to put up fat stats and sign even fatter contracts, so long as lobotomized fans are willing to shell out the Gross National Product of Burkina Faso for season tickets? What does it do to a team when your arena is a mausoleum for an elimination game and the only sign of life comes from toxic twerp Justin Bieber, dressed for Halloween and having a good giggle with his wife behind the Leafs bench in the midst of this embarrassment? Is it conceivable that the cheerleaders at Sportsnet and TSN will begin to hold this team accountable, the way the Canadiens are held accountable in Montreal? Is it acceptable to lose twice at home by 6-1 scores when you are meant to be a bona fide Stanley Cup contender? For the team captain to vanish as completely as Auston Matthews vanishes every spring?

Vancouver Sun
19-05-2025
- Sport
- Vancouver Sun
Todd: The Leafs continue to tolerate mediocrity
The Toronto Maple Leafs have been seeking the answer for so long now, they've forgotten the question. What is the purpose of this annual exercise in failure? What is the goal? To put on a show and get good comments in the handshake line? To be satisfied that you took the defending champions to a Game 7 that became an abject exercise in public humiliation? Or is it to win a Stanley Cup? You know, that bauble the Canadiens have won 10 times since the Leafs held their last parade. A team is an organism, not an assemblage of individual talents. Yet 'team' is exactly the element that is missing in any shot of the Leafs bench. Where the young and enthusiastic Canadiens exude encouragement and mutual support, the Leafs are a disparate group of young men, each alone on his separate island, thinking of contracts or tee times or who knows what. Do the ghosts in suits who run this organization still believe their vaunted Core Four can win a Cup? Or is it enough to go through the motions, to put up fat stats and sign even fatter contracts, so long as lobotomized fans are willing to shell out the Gross National Product of Burkina Faso for season tickets? Start your day with a roundup of B.C.-focused news and opinion. By signing up you consent to receive the above newsletter from Postmedia Network Inc. A welcome email is on its way. If you don't see it, please check your junk folder. The next issue of Sunrise will soon be in your inbox. Please try again Interested in more newsletters? Browse here. What does it do to a team when your arena is a mausoleum for an elimination game and the only sign of life comes from toxic twerp Justin Bieber, dressed for Halloween and having a good giggle with his wife behind the Leafs bench in the midst of this embarrassment? Is it conceivable that the cheerleaders at Sportsnet and TSN will begin to hold this team accountable, the way the Canadiens are held accountable in Montreal? Is it acceptable to lose twice at home by 6-1 scores when you are meant to be a bona fide Stanley Cup contender? For the team captain to vanish as completely as Auston Matthews vanishes every spring? Even the bellowing of the very scary Craig Berube was not enough to motivate this bunch. Instead, according to the anonymous gent who keeps track of these things, the Leafs have now gone 21,203 days without a Cup. Their failures are mythic. Yet the hype machine grinds on, oblivious to reality. Outside southern Ontario, Leafs Elimination Day is an unofficial annual holiday, more so when we can celebrate on the Journée nationale des patriotes et Reine Victoria. But for the national media in Toronto, the latest failure is the signal to crank the excuse machine into overdrive. It's unfair to the Leafs, goes the latest line, because they have to face so much pressure, the poor millionaire babies. It's clear that the Leafs need to blow it up and start over. But like the Blue Jays, the Leafs have a management team that cares more about performance in the boardroom than winning on the diamond or the ice. Don't expect it to change. This is what the Leafs are. It's in their DNA and no coach can change it. This team doesn't need a coach — it needs a psychiatrist. To Marner or not to Marner: In Montreal, meanwhile, the question is whether the Canadiens should pursue free agent Mitch Marner, fresh off a 102-point season. Marner's current cap hit is a shade below $11 million on a six-year deal. With the salary cap going up, he's going to command top dollar and term, even at age 28. Estimates of what Marner will get on an eight-year deal range from $13 million to $16 million per season. It's too much money for the wrong position, especially when Montreal will need to sign Lane Hutson and Ivan Demidov to long-term deals. The Canadiens need size, sandpaper and a second-line centreman and Marner doesn't meet any of those criteria. Besides, the Canadiens don't want to infect their room with Leaf Virus. Once that disease takes root, it's hard to eradicate. Meanwhile in Montreal: The Victoire would need another half-century of failures to approach the level attained by the Leafs, but after another short and sweet postseason ouster, they need to sort out their playoff woes. Through two seasons and two abbreviated semifinals, Montreal has won a single game and lost six. It's not as bad as it looks because all the games have been close, goaltending battles that could have gone either way. The PWHL is a goalie's league and the Victoire have now been goalied twice. The cockamamie rule that the team with the best record gets to pick its opponent doesn't help. It furnishes motivation to the opponent ('you wanted us!') and tension to the higher seed. But the rules are what they are and when you have the best female hockey player in the universe in Marie-Philip Poulin, more is expected. It's Montreal, not Toronto. Heroes: Charles Thiffault , Shai Gilgeous-Alexander , Jasmine Paolini , Carlos Alcaraz , Marie-Philip Poulin, Caitlin Clark , Brad Marchand , Seth Jones , Mikko Rantanen , Connor McDavid &&&& last but not least, a horse called Journalism . Zeros: Auston Matthews, Brendan Shanahan, Doug Cifu , Vincent Viola, Jon Rahm , Jose Alvarado , Wayne Gretzky , Bud Selig Jr., Claude Brochu, David Samson &&&& last but not least, Jeffrey Loria. Now and forever. @