Sports
USA hockey vs Canada: Everything to know about Olympic gold medal game, rivalry’s history
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Everyone got the matchup they wanted for the men’s hockey Olympic gold medal game.
Sunday, the 46th anniversary of the “Miracle on Ice,” will feature the United States against Canada, which is without a doubt the fiercest international rivalry in all of sports, going for all the marbles.
Unfortunately for Americans, Canada has owned this rivalry since day one.
This will be the eighth time the United States and Canada have played for Olympic gold, and the only time the Americans have won was back in 1960. They also faced off for gold in 1920, 1924, 1932, 1952, 2002 and 2010. In the best-on-best format, the U.S. is 5-15-1, and three of those victories came in the 1996 World Cup of Hockey.
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Canada’s Brandon Hagel, left, fights with United States’ Matthew Tkachuk during the first period of a 4 Nations Face-Off hockey game in Montreal on Saturday, Feb. 15, 2025. (Graham Hughes//The Canadian Press via AP)
The very first meeting between the two countries in a best-on-best format was back in the 1976 Canada Cup, which Team Canada won 4-2. The Americans did not earn their first win over their northern neighbors until 20 years later, after losing seven of their first eight meetings and tying in the other.
The U.S. won that year’s World Cup, taking home the best-of-three series against Canada, but since then, it’s mostly been Canadian dominance again.
Canada has gone 7-2 against the Americans since 1998, and four of those wins were absolute gut-punches to the United States. Canada took home the 2002 Olympic gold medal in Salt Lake City over the Americans, but more famously, Sidney Crosby’s golden goal eight years later also came at the expense of Team USA in front of a Vancouver crowd. Four years later, Canada again defeated the U.S. in the Olympic semifinals, and last year, Canada won the 4 Nations Face-Off with an overtime victory against the Stars and Stripes.

Matt Boldy of Team United States and Sidney Crosby of Team Canada shake hands after the 4 Nations Face-Off Championship game between Team Canada and Team United States at TD Garden on Feb. 20, 2025, in Boston, Massachusetts. (Chase Agnello-Dean/4NFO/World Cup of Hockey via Getty Images)
US SKIER’S QUEST FOR OLYMPIC GOLD COMES TO A CRUSHING HALT AFTER TERRIFYING CRASH
The United States’ only wins in the aforementioned span came during group play of both the 2010 Olympics and last year’s 4 Nations. So, it’s been quite a while since the Americans had true bragging rights. Overall, Canada leads the best-on-best series, 15-5-1.
These two teams are already very familiar with each other, as both rosters are largely composed of the same members as last year’s 4 Nations Face-Off, where three fights occurred in the first nine seconds in the countries’ first best-on-best game in nine years.
Tensions between both teams and the fans were sky-high in that tournament, as it was fresh off President Donald Trump‘s “51st state” comments and tariffs against the country.

Canada’s Sidney Crosby (87) is checked by United States’ Charlie McAvoy (25) as Vincent Trocheck (16) looks on during first period 4 Nations Face-Off hockey action in Montreal on Saturday, Feb. 15, 2025. (Christinne Muschi/The Canadian Press via AP)
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But this is the true big stage, with revenge, bragging rights and Olympic gold on the line.
The gold medal game will take place Sunday at 8:10 a.m. ET.
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Sports
Dickie V’s Dazzling Dozen: Players, performances, coaches that defined the season
Ohhhhhh BABY, buckle up, because the 2025-26 men’s college basketball season gave us more thrills than a roller coaster at peak speed. We’re talking Diaper Dandies, Prime-Time Performers, record-breakers and coaching legends showing they still have the magic touch.
Here are Dickie V’s Dazzling Dozen moments from a season that had it all.
1. The Prime-Time Player: Cameron Boozer
National Player of the Year. Consensus All-American. Tied the program record for most double-doubles by a Duke freshman (22). Became the first freshman or sophomore to average at least 20 points, 10 rebounds and four assists in a season since Larry Bird in 1976-77. Cameron Boozer was awesome, baby. A legit super stud who brought the goods every night — no off nights, no soft nights, just dominance.
2. The Night of the Triple Forty Phenoms
Three freshmen — three — drop 40-plus points on the same night?!
Diaper Dandies Keaton Wagler (46), AJ Dybantsa (43) and Kingston Flemings (42) were Diaper Dazzlers, putting on scoring displays that would make Pistol Pete Maravich smile from the heavens. Each one set freshman records for their schools. Awesome with a capital “A”!
3. The Year of the Diaper Dandies
Never — NEVER! — have we seen a freshman class like this one. Ten first-year phenoms projected in the top 10 of the NBA draft?! Dybantsa, Darryn Peterson, Boozer, Caleb Wilson, Wagler, Darius Acuff Jr., Flemings, Mikel Brown Jr., Nate Ament and Brayden Burries — a parade of Diaper Dandy delights. It was like watching an NBA lottery preview every night.
4. A Winner from Day One: Jon Scheyer’s Historic Start
Scheyer Dazzler! The Duke head man is rewriting the definition of early-career success: 124 wins in four seasons, including 25 against ranked teams. That’s winning with style, baby. The Brotherhood is alive and well in Durham.
5. Darius Acuff Jr. Goes for 49 in a 50-Minute Marathon
Double overtime at Alabama, the crowd going wild, and the kid delivers the most points (49) by a freshman against an AP ranked team. That’s not just a performance, that’s a “call the fire department” moment.
6. The Assist King: Braden Smith
Move over, Bobby Hurley! Smith is now the assists leader in Division I with 1,103 dimes. A beautiful passer, a floor general, a facilitator with flair — Smith was the ultimate team-first player.
7. Dylan Darling‘s Darling Game Winner
A buzzer-beating layup to send St. John’s to the Sweet 16 — and his first points of the game? Talk about drama, baby! Darling became the first player in NCAA tournament history to score his first points on a game-winning buzzer-beater. That’s March Magic.
0:49
St. John’s stuns Kansas at the buzzer to reach Sweet 16
Dylan Darling’s first basket of the game is a layup as time expires to win it for St. John’s in dramatic fashion.
8. Tom Izzo: Time Marches On, and So Does the Legend
He’s a PTP: Prime-Time Patriarch. Izzo reached the NCAA tournament for the 28th straight year, hit 700 wins at one school and passed Bobby Knight for the most Big Ten victories. That’s not longevity, that’s legendary.
9. Tarris Reed Jr. Makes March Madness History
Thirty-one points. Twenty-seven rebounds. Outrebounding Furman by himself. First 30-25 tournament game in 58 years. One of just three men ever to do it. Tarris Reed Jr.? More like Tarris Beast Jr. Put that in the record books with gold ink.
10. Kelvin Sampson Joins the 800 Win Club
This guy needs to be in the Hall of Fame. The Cougars keep clawing, keep winning, keep thriving — Sampson started the season with win No. 800 and added 29 more. Five straight 30-win seasons, tying Gonzaga’s record. He’s a maestro, a motivator, a master of March.
11. The Season of the 2K Kings
Seven players cracked the 2,000-point milestone, and that’s a testament to hard work, consistency and being a scoreboard-filling superstar. Tucker DeVries, Graham Ike, Nijel Pack, P.J. Haggerty, Jaron Pierre Jr., Bruce Thornton, Boopie Miller — each one a model of excellence.
12. Rick Barnes Keeps Rolling with Tennessee
Another bona fide Hall of Famer. What more does a guy have to do? Well, how about three straight Elite Eights? How about 861 wins? How about seven 25-win seasons in nine years? Rick Barnes doesn’t just coach, he delivers.
Bonus: Half a Hundred from Dennis Parker Jr.
Are you kidding me?! Fifty-three points. My guy Dennis Parker Jr. lit it up like Times Square on New Year’s Eve, going 19-for-24 from the field with 10 triples. A Radford and Big South record as well as the most points in a game this season. That’s what I call pure scorching supersensational supremacy.
Dickie V’s Final Take
From sizzling scorers to record-breaking rookies, from coaching titans to unbelievable tourney moments, the 2025-26 season had everything: drama, passion, performance and pride. College hoops was alive and electric, and the stars shined brighter than ever.
Bring on more hoops, baby! I love it!
Sports
Minnesota high school softball season faces strain of trans athlete conflict as Trump admin cracks down
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Minnesota’s high school softball season will be under a national spotlight for the second year in a row, and a hotter one than in 2025.
As the U.S. Department of Justice has launched a Title IX lawsuit against the state’s education agencies for letting biological male trans athletes play in girls’ sports, Champlin Park High School is set to be a political target.
The high school rosters a trans pitcher on its softball team, who emerged as a dominant force en route to a state championship last year.
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Transgender pitcher Marissa Rothenberger. (Amber Harding)
Now, that pitcher is playing for Champlin Park again this year while President Donald Trump’s administration tries to crack down.
The Anoka-Hennepin School District, which oversees Champlin Park, is standing by the athlete amid the renewed national scrutiny.
“The Champlin Park Softball team will compete in compliance with Minnesota State High School League rules and applicable Minnesota law this upcoming season. All participating student-athletes will meet the criteria for eligibility which aim to elevate standards of sportsmanship and encourage the growth of responsible citizenship for all involved. Because the school district is named in an active lawsuit involving last season, the District is limited in what additional information can be shared on this matter,” the district said in a statement to Fox News Digital.
A girls’ softball player, who is anonymously part of a lawsuit with Alliance Defending Freedom that challenges the state laws on trans athletes, shared her thoughts on the distracting political dynamic of this season with Fox News Digital.
“I just want a fair and competitive season. My hope for this season is that the focus stays on the game, while also making sure girls’ sports remain a place where female athletes have equal opportunities to compete and succeed,” she said.
Meanwhile, another anonymous plaintiff in that lawsuit shared gratitude for the DOJ’s intervention.
“Thank you, President Trump! I’m so grateful for the support towards girls in sports in Minnesota,” she said.
The lawsuit was originally struck down by a federal judge, but ADF has filed an appeal in appellate court and is awaiting a decision there.
CHAMPLIN PARK WINS MINNESOTA SOFTBALL STATE TITLE BEHIND TRANS PITCHER’S COMPLETE GAME SHUTOUT
Former Minnesota high school and current NCAA softball player Kendall Kotzmacher lost a 3-2 heartbreaker to Champlin Park last season, in what was her final high school game.
But Kozmacher’s younger sister, who lost with her in that game, is still set to play this season, and could be on a collision course with the trans pitcher again.
“My little sister, she played with me last year. She’s still playing, so it’s really hard,” Kotzmacher said. “I’m lucky enough that it’s not allowed at the NCAA level. But there’s all of these girls that I do not want them to ever have to go through the situations that I did, and I do not want my sister to have to deal with what I had to do and what she had to deal with last year again.”
Minnesota has faced its own internal conflict over the issue dating back to early 2025, when Democratic lawmakers in the state legislature struck down a bill that would have prevented biological males from competing in girls’ sports.
State Republicans renewed that effort in recent weeks amid the DOJ crackdown, but were once again unsuccessful due to Democrat control, as they failed to push a bill forward on the House Floor Tuesday.
“Protecting girls is not hate,” said state representative Krista Knudsen. “When biological males enter girls’ sports, girls lose. They lose medals, they lose roster spots, they lose college scholarships and they lose their safety.”
Democrat state representative Kelly Moller dismissed concerns over the issue.
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“My colleagues across the aisle say that you are bringing this to protect women and girls and that couldn’t be further from the truth. The real threat to women and girls is sexual assault and gender-based violence,” Moller said.
Meanwhile, 326 school board members in 125 school districts in the state signed a letter pleading with the state’s leadership to comply with Trump’s mandate to protect girls’ sports.
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Sports
2026 Masters: Experts’ picks and betting tips
AUGUSTA, Ga. — The first golf major of the year begins with the 2026 Masters Tournament from Thursday through Sunday at Augusta National in Georgia.
Rory McIlroy is the defending champion. Two-time winner Scottie Scheffler is the favorite, followed by Jon Rahm, Bryson DeChambeau and McIlroy.
Who do our golf experts think will win? What kind of betting advice does Pamela Maldonado have?
Jump ahead to: Pamela Maldonado’s betting and fantasy advice for the week
Experts’ picks
Matt Barrie
Jon Rahm: He has quietly been playing some of the best golf in the world this season. He’s in a great spot personally and professionally. And his recent form will awake the roars at Augusta National this week.
Tory Cabrera
Brooks Koepka: Is Brooks Koepka an obvious favorite? No. Is he still “Big-Game Brooks,” the man who once said he thinks the majors are “the easiest to win”? I’m banking on it … that and the fact he’s got some added financial incentive since the cost of rejoining the PGA Tour.
Jeff Darlington
Justin Rose: My head is telling me that Rahm is about to reemerge into the spotlight because I keep hearing he’s playing great golf. But my heart is saying Rose gets his moment. And when it comes to the Masters, I’m always inclined to go with the heart.
Michael Eaves
Bryson DeChambeau: In addition to winning his last two worldwide starts, he has finished T6 and T5 in his last two Masters appearances. And since 2023, he’s dropped two putts per round off his putting average at Augusta National. If he truly has the greens figured out, there’s no way he won’t be in contention come Sunday.
Peter Lawrence-Riddell
Xander Schauffele: He’s finished T-10 or better in five of past seven years, including T-8 last year and solo eighth in 2024. After a tough, injured-delayed season in 2025 he’s playing better this year, finishing T-7 or better in three of his last four starts, including solo third at the Players Championship.
Andy North
DeChambeau: He’s finally figured out this course the past couple of years. He’s playing well and winning. Distance is always such a big factor at Augusta National.
Laura Rutledge
Scottie Scheffler: He’s been working on his game at home, and I think he’ll be ready to go.
Mark Schlabach
Scheffler: I know his iron play hasn’t been as good, and he was fighting his driver during the Florida swing. Still, Scheffler is ranked No. 1 in the world for a reason, and nobody has been at Augusta National Golf Club over the past four years. Don’t overthink it: Scheffler rides a hot putter to a third green jacket.
Marty Smith
Rose: A three-time runner-up at Augusta — twice in a playoff! — this is the year Rose earns the green jacket. No one in Masters history has led more rounds without a win than Rose, and in 2026 he is playing consistent — often incredible — golf. He ranks 10th in strokes gained: approach this season — his best numbers in a decade. Sharp iron play is critical at Augusta. Already a winner this year following a record-breaking wire-to-wire performance at Torrey Pines, the ageless one wins his second major championship.
Curtis Strange
Schauffele: Playing well, good Masters record — five top 10s in seven years — very good striker of ball.
Paolo Uggetti
Ludvig Aberg: It’s not that I’m forgetting Aberg’s collapse at the Players last month; it’s that I think that it will help Aberg come this Sunday when he is in the hunt for his first green jacket. Aberg’s game fits this place so well, as evidenced by his two top-10 finishes in two starts, that contention feels like the minimum.
Scott Van Pelt
DeChambeau: I think Augusta National is, as much as anything, like a subject you study and learn over time. You can’t master the Masters without a bit of understanding. In the final pairing last year and in the top five at the end — that, and his recent form, lead me to say it’s his time.
Dan Wetzel
DeChambeau: A wiser and more patient DeChambeau feels inevitable at Augusta, so why not this year? He’s coming off his best finish here a year ago (T-5) and just outdueled Jon Rahm in a playoff in South Africa.
Pamela Maldonado’s picks and advice for the week
Odds by DraftKings Sportsbook and subject to change.
Welcome to Masters week. Augusta National finds you eventually: on the back nine on Sunday, at Amen Corner, on a slick downhill putt you didn’t see coming. It makes for an exciting week for bettors and viewers.
The players who contend here aren’t just talented — they’re specifically built for this place with elite iron play, creativity around the greens and the nerve to execute when the chance is right in front of them.
This week the conditions remove the chaos variable. Calm, warm, firm, no wind to create drama and no rain to level the field. What’s left is a pure talent contest on the most demanding stage in golf.
Here’s a look at betting options for the week.
My pick to win
Ludvig Åberg (+1700) fits Augusta exactly how you want a contender to fit. He’s first in strokes gained at this course, second in both strokes gained: total and tee-to-green and sixth in approach. At this point, it isn’t projection, as Aberg has proved it with back-to-back top seven finishes here.
The course rewards players who can control the ball off the tee and hit precise irons. That’s his game. He gains off the tee without losing accuracy, and his iron play gives him constant birdie looks. His recent form lines up too. Aberg finished in the top 5 at Bay Hill, The Players and Valero. Augusta is not the course to be searching for your game, so it helps that Aberg is already there.
Picking Aberg to win is betting on a player whose skill set, course history and current form all point in the same direction. Don’t overthink it.
My favorite bet to make the top 10
Xander Schauffele (+140 with ties) has a clean profile, fifth in approach, second in scrambling, eighth in strokes gained at Augusta, plus back-to-back top-10 finishes here. He knows how to play this course against an elite field and in big events.
There’s truly no real weakness in his game that this course can expose. If “solid overall” were a look, it’d be Xander. The form isn’t spiking as far as wins, finishing top seven in three of his past four events, but he’s around every week, which is the type of player you can trust to hang for a top-10 wager.
Firm conditions only make this better. Augusta puts pressure on your irons and your ability to recover. Xander does both at a high level, and if he does miss, he saves it. The price is fair for a guy who should be in the mix come Sunday.
My favorite Rory McIlroy bet
My favorite bet is no bet. Rory is a genuinely complicated profile to assess. Some odds available at the time of writing: End of Round 1 at -125, and +108 for a Top 10, plus +1150 to win. He won last year; it was glorious and one of the best sports stories of our generation. He knows how to close at Augusta now, so his pedigree is undeniable.
But the data going into this week is honest in a way the narrative isn’t. He withdrew from Bay Hill with back spasms. He played The Players through the injury and described his own form as unbelievably rusty, finishing T46. His strokes gained metrics aren’t aligned with a champion’s form; 12th total, 16th on approach and 46th in putting. Augusta demands full physical commitment across four days. Amen Corner alone will test a compromised back in a way that a flat course won’t. 2025 was unreal, but 2026 is a question mark.
The public will bet McIlroy, so let them. The pricing doesn’t reflect the actual risk.
Am I betting on Scottie Scheffler?
Also no. He’s healthy, which matters. But Scheffler did skip the Houston Open to be with his family after his wife gave birth to their second child, which means the Players was his most recent tournament in mid-March.
Taking time away from competitive golf before Augusta is a real preparation question. The exclamation point is his form with his irons: 35th in the field, neutral or losing strokes in nearly every event he’s played this year.
The approach numbers are concerning on a course where iron play is above everything else. Top five (+106) makes the most sense simply because his Augusta floor is elite: two consecutive top-4 finishes, including a win. If you need Scheffler on your card, that’s really the only way to go.
1:13
Scottie Scheffler feeling ‘ready to go’ at The Masters
Two-time Masters champion Scottie Scheffler speaks about what makes the tournament special.
My favorite long shot
Patrick Reed (+4400) has seven Masters appearances since winning in 2018 and five of those are top 12 finishes, including T4 in 2023 and third last year. This is a player with a documented, repeatable Augusta career built on what this course requires — elite scrambling, creative short game and nerves that don’t show up in the strokes gained spreadsheet.
The market is pricing Reed as a LIV afterthought. The data says that he has two wins in 2026 (Euro Tour), meaning that he’s showing up with a hot hand, not a cold form. Firm, quiet conditions this week should suit him. His August results span multiple setups and he’s produced in all of them. Reed has essentially been a very different and considerably more profitable player when in Georgia.
Other bets that stand out
Tommy Fleetwood top 10 (+168 with ties): First from tee-to-green and third around the green makes this intriguing for an article like this, where it’s about taking a higher risk. He’s hitting the double-digit mark for appearances, and it seems like in the past four, he’s figured it out. The 2024 T3 was a complete performance, elite from tee to green. Last year, he finished T21 with the same tee-to-green solid performance but lost nearly five strokes putting, his worst in all his Masters starts and still finished inside the Top 25. The market is giving you solid odds on the best tee-to-green player in the field at a course he knows well.
Patrick Reed top 20 (+126 with ties): His Augusta history is too consistent to be getting better than even money.
In five of his past seven appearances, his short game and scrambling numbers were positive. The two outlier weeks (2019 and 2022) are the exception. Repeatable patterns are what you want in betting. Playing LIV and Euro make it hard to benchmark him against the field, but Augusta itself becomes his comp course. Five top 20 finishes in those starts is its own data set.
With two 2026 wins on Euro Tour, Dubai Desert Classic and Qatar Masters, he’s in form. Reed’s pricing says the market hasn’t fully caught on to what this course specifically does for his game.
Ludvig Aberg top 10 (+154 with ties): His form is peaking into Masters week, three straight top five finishes coming in and four straight tournaments gaining strokes in every category. He’s trending in one direction at exactly the right moment where his style is built for this course.
The ties inclusion is simple: if he finishes 10th and three other players finish 10th alongside him, you still get paid. It’s more ways to win the same bet. At a course where Aberg has already finished top seven in back-to-back years, this is simply asking him to do that again.
Fantasy golf
Top three DFS plays
Matt Fitzpatrick $8,700: The form is coming in solid, T2 at the Players, then won Valspar, with approach play fourth best in the field. He’s underpriced relative to what he’s shown this season. Augusta history is the knock but the ball striking fits this course and firm conditions benefit precision iron play.
Min Woo Lee $7,700: The price alone intrigues. He’s third in strokes gained total and his distance is 11th, relevant on a firm August track where par 5s separate the field. Lee has elite season-long ball striking numbers at a salary that lets you spend elsewhere. DFS is as much about value as it is ceiling. Lee gives you both.
Sam Stevens $6,400: Let’s call him the dart of the lineup. He finished fifth in Houston, T6 at American Express, having gained strokes ballstriking in every tournament this season but one. At the minimum price, he frees up salary for the top of the card. The potential is real to justify the exposure, and his distance profile on firm fairways gives him a legit path to fantasy relevance.
Top three DFS fades
Two of these fades will look familiar. Both Schauffele $9,600 and Reed $9,000 are on my betting card this week. Fantasy is a different game with different rules. In betting, I want Reed’s Augusta floor and Xander’s consistency. In DFS, I need a ceiling, and more importantly, salary efficiency.
The same profile that makes a player a smart wager can also make them a poor fantasy play. That’s the case here. Bet them, but don’t roster them.
Casey Jarvis $6,600: Three wins on the Euro Tour makes him look really good at this value price. Three of those came on courses with no relevance to Augusta and his comp course sample is essentially nonexistent. Plus, it’s his first Augusta appearance. We essentially have no data to anchor his projection. His price gives you reliable upside but the price isn’t low enough to justify the unknown. — Pamela Maldonado
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