Sports
Why Man United fan’s viral haircut challenge might not end anytime soon
Manchester United players past and present were talking about fan Frank Ilett — known as “The United Strand” — and his viral haircut challenge ahead of their most recent Premier League clash, at West Ham United two weeks ago. It was journalists’ main line of questioning toward head coach Michael Carrick, and the most engaging prematch talking point for TV pundits.
“I don’t care about his haircut at all,” United midfielder Matheus Cunha said in the build-up to the game, while Old Trafford legend Paul Scholes said: “I just hope they win tomorrow night so that lad can get his haircut.”
Ilett’s challenge dominated the postmatch discourse, too, after United failed to register a fifth consecutive win which would have allowed Ilett to cut his hair for the first time in more than a year. Instead, they were held to a 1-1 draw which would have been a have been a defeat had Benjamin Sesko not scored with an exquisite flicked finish deep into added time.
The result meant that United remain in fourth place, that the club’s push to qualify for next season’s Champions League keeps momentum, and that Carrick maintained his unbeaten record. It also meant that Ilett’s challenge, which began in October 2024, would continue for a while longer.
Last week, Ilett marked Day 500, his mop of hair longer than ever. If United don’t manage to win five in a row in their remaining 12 games of this campaign, then the challenge will roll into next season, which begins in August. That’s six more months.
So, if it is to end before the 2025-26 season comes to an end, what’s the best chance of doing so?
Five-game win streaks aren’t that hard
In an interview with ESPN in October to mark the one-year anniversary of his challenge, Ilett admitted things hadn’t quite gone to plan. “I thought it would only go for a few months and be a bit of a laugh,” he said. “It was something to spread humour to Man United fans during a difficult period of time.
“It didn’t feel unrealistic then, because the season before, they had won five games in a row.”
Ilett began his challenge eight months after United’s most recent five-game win streak — which they completed between January and February 2024. You can forgive him for thinking it wouldn’t take long. There have been 333 five-game win streaks in all competitions in the Premier League era (since 1992-93). For their part, United completed 58 of them. It wouldn’t take that long… would it?
A total of 10 teams have won five consecutive games since United last did so. Those include Arsenal, Aston Villa, Brighton & Hove Albion, Chelsea, Crystal Palace, Liverpool, Manchester City, Newcastle United, Nottingham Forest and Tottenham Hotspur. Most of the time, it happens with little fanfare: The latest example came at the weekend when City edged Newcastle 2-1 for their fifth-straight win in all competitions.
Still, for a long time, United never got close to doing the same. Only once did United manage three straight wins under former manager Ruben Amorim — a brief stretch last January in which them beat Rangers and Fenerbahce in the Europa League as well as a league win over Fulham.
Ilett may have wanted to provide some “fun” for United fans during a tough period for the club, but that message hasn’t always landed.
“He is doing my head in,” United legend Wayne Rooney told the BBC’s No Tippy, No Tappy podcast before the draw to West Ham.
“We are talking about Michael Carrick and Man United trying to win their fifth game in a row and the whole thing is about this guy getting his haircut. I bet he is devastated if Man United win because he will be irrelevant.”
Predicting where the challenge could end
This is where math comes into play. United have only 12 games left of a 40-game season, thanks to the absence of European football as well as early exits from the Carabao Cup (vs. Grimsby Town) and FA Cup (vs. Brighton).
Admittedly, it is not the easiest stretch. Only five of their 12 games come against bottom-half opposition. However, three of them come in their final three matches. Using Opta’s latest power ranking data, as well as factoring in home advantage, United’s statistically most favourable run is their final five games.
There is an against-the-clock element here, too. If United don’t win five games in a row between now and the end of the season, then Ilett will have to wait until the next Premier League season kicks off on Aug. 22, at which point it will be Day 688 … and counting.
Sports
College baseball Week 2: Top 25 rankings, play of the week and what to watch
Kent State did the unthinkable this past week. After pushing LSU to the edge in Baton Rogue in a midweek matchup, the Golden Flashes took that momentum with them into Knoxville and won a road series against Tennessee. And as a result, the Vols took a big slide in this week’s rankings, dropping seven spots to No. 20.
How will the Vols respond? Well, they’re facing the top team in the country in UCLA on Friday, so they’ll have to bounce back fast. The Bruins, and the four teams behind them, held steady in the rankings after dominant performances, but after that there were more shakeups.
TCU had a rough week overall. After losing its midweek game to UT Arlington, it got swept by UCLA in Los Angeles, causing the Horned Frogs to drop 11 spots. The week’s biggest risers were Southern Miss and Oklahoma, which each climbed up eight spots. Louisville fell out of the rankings completely, paving the way for Ole Miss to break through at No. 25.
Here are how the entire top 25 rankings look as of Feb. 23, plus our favorite plays and what we’re watching in the week to come.
Top plays
Not that LSU needs anymore power than it already has, now it has Jake Brown launching home runs like this.
Jake Cannon Brown Everybody 💣@JakeBrown_14 | SECN + pic.twitter.com/WTy1th1r6v
— LSU Baseball (@LSUbaseball) February 17, 2026
And how about another home run? This one from UCLA’s Roch Cholowsky. He certainly is living up to all the hype he had before the season started.
Roch goes dead center 🤯
📺B1G+#GoBruins pic.twitter.com/zXXISgXcrM
— UCLA Baseball (@UCLABaseball) February 22, 2026
Player to watch
Jackson Flora, RHP, UCSB
Flora has been rising up draft boards, and for good reason. The junior, who Kiley McDaniel has at No. 4 in his MLB draft rankings, touched 100 MPH in his 2026 debut and he has kept up the heat since then. Does he have enough to over take Cholowsky for the No. 1 pick? We’ll just have to wait and see.
FLO-STATE 🌊
Back-to-back strikeouts for Flora as he escapes the bases loaded jam!
T2 | Pilots 0 – Gauchos 1
📺 ESPN+
🎧 https://t.co/TYosww6CZU#GoChos pic.twitter.com/HXE196J0xl— UC Santa Barbara Baseball (@UCSB_Baseball) February 21, 2026
Games to watch
No. 10 Florida at No. 17 Miami
Game 1: 7 p.m. on Friday (ACC Network Extra)
Game 2: 6 p.m. on Saturday (ACC Network Extra)
Game 3: 1 p.m. on Sunday (ACC Network Extra)
We can’t get enough of these early top-ranked series, and an in-state one makes this all the better. Miami has been solid to open the season, and though the Canes are ranked behind Florida, they do sport a perfect 7-0 record for the year, while the Gators have already dropped one game. Florida will have to be ready for Miami’s Alex Sosa, who has been dominant this season so far with five home runs and 17 RBIs. And if he wasn’t a tall enough task, there’s Daniel Cuvet right behind him with five homers himself to go along with 13 RBIs. It looks to be a high-scoring affair in Coral Gables this weekend.
Updated top 25
Here are D1baseball.com’s latest rankings, plus information on each team’s next game.
All times Eastern.
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1. UCLA Bruins
Previous rank: 1
Record: 6-1
Next game: vs. Tulane, 8 p.m. on Tuesday
2. LSU Tigers
Previous rank: 2
Record: 8-0
Next game: vs. McNeese, 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday (SEC Network+)
3. Texas Longhorns
Previous rank: 3
Record: 7-0
Next game: vs. UTRGV, 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday (SEC Network+)
4. Mississippi State Bulldogs
Previous rank: 4
Record: 8-0
Next game: vs. Austin Peay, 5 p.m. on Tuesday (SEC Network+)
5. Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets
Previous rank: 5
Record: 8-0
Next game: at Georgia State, 4 p.m. on Tuesday (ACC Network Extra)
6. Arkansas Razorbacks
Previous rank: 8
Record: 6-1
Next game: vs. Arkansas State, 4 p.m. on Monday (SEC Network+)
7. Auburn Tigers
Previous rank: 9
Record: 6-1
Next game: vs. West Georgia, 7 p.m. on Wednesday (SEC Network+)
8. North Carolina Tar Heels
Previous rank: 10
Record: 6-1-1
Next game: vs. NC A&T, 4 p.m. on Tuesday (ACC Network Extra)
9. Coastal Carolina Chanticleers
Previous rank: 6
Record: 5-2
Next game: vs. Campbell, 4 p.m. on Tuesday (ESPN+)
10. Florida Gators
Previous rank: 12
Record: 7-1
Next game: vs. FIU, 6:30 p.m. on Tuesday (ESPN+)
11. Georgia Bulldogs
Previous rank: 14
Record: 6-1
Next game: vs. Troy, 3 p.m. on Wednesday (SEC Network+)
12. Southern Miss Golden Eagles
Previous rank: 20
Record: 6-1
Next game: vs. Alabama, 7 p.m. on Tuesday (ESPN+)
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13. Oklahoma Sooners
Previous rank: 21
Record: 7-0
Next game: vs. Arizona State, 5 p.m. on Tuesday (SEC Network+)
14. NC State Wolfpack
Previous rank: 17
Record: 5-1
Next game: vs. Richmond, 3 p.m. on Tuesday
15. Clemson Tigers
Previous rank: 19
Record: 7-0
Next game: vs. Presbyterian, 4 p.m. on Tuesday (ACCNX)
16. Wake Forest Demon Deacons
Previous rank: 22
Record: 6-1
Next game: at UNCG, 5 p.m. on Tuesday (ESPN+)
17. Miami Hurricanes
Previous rank: 23
Record: 9-0
Next game: at FAU, 6:30 p.m. on Wednesday
18. TCU Horned Frogs
Previous rank: 7
Record: 2-5
Next game: at Loyola Marymount, 4 p.m. on Monday
19. Oregon State Beavers
Previous rank: 11
Record: 4-3
Next game: at Houston, 3 p.m. on Friday
20. Tennessee Volunteers
Previous rank: 13
Record: 5-2
Next game: vs. Bellarmine, 4 p.m. on Tuesday (SEC Network+)
21. Florida State Seminoles
Previous rank: 16
Record: 4-2
Next game: vs. North Florida, 5 p.m. on Wednesday (ESPN+)
22. Kentucky Wildcats
Previous rank: 18
Record: 5-2
Next game: vs. Western Kentucky, 4 p.m. on Tuesday (SEC Network+)
23. Texas A&M Aggies
Previous rank: 24
Record: 7-0
Next game: vs. Lamar, 7 p.m. on Tuesday (SEC Network+)
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24. West Virginia Mountaineers
Previous rank: 25
Record: 5-1
Next game: vs. Ohio, 1 p.m. on Wednesday (ESPN+)
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25. Ole Miss Rebels
Previous rank: NR
Record: 8-0
Next game: vs. Southeast Missouri State, 5 p.m. on Tuesday (SEC Network+)
Sports
How the question of Darryn Peterson’s availability is shaping Kansas’ season
LAWRENCE, KAN. — Bill Self isn’t the touchy-feely type. So when he bounced around the Allen Fieldhouse court after Kansas upset then-No. 1 Arizona on Feb. 9, embracing his players as if the clock had just struck midnight on New Year’s Eve, it shocked them.
“That’s three hugs in my career,” sophomore Flory Bidunga said after the game. “He’s giving hugs now? We’ve got to cut him off.”
Rare as it is, Self’s celebration matched the moment: The Jayhawks had just handed the 23-0 Wildcats their first loss of the season. And they did it without their biggest star, Darryn Peterson — the projected No. 1 pick in the 2026 NBA draft — who was a late scratch because of flu-like symptoms.
It was just the latest chapter in the most unpredictable season of Self’s career. A precautionary hospitalization that cost him the trip to Kansas’ Jan. 20 date at Colorado has been a secondary headline for a team that has dealt with the perpetual question of Peterson’s game-to-game availability. The freshman has sat out 11 of the Jayhawks’ 27 games and has played fewer than 25 minutes in seven of his 16 appearances as a result of hamstring and ankle injuries, including persistent cramping.
The saga took on a new life nine days after the win over Arizona, when Peterson benched himself in the second half last Wednesday in a victory at Oklahoma State, Self’s alma mater. It was Peterson’s shortest outing yet (18 minutes), sparking a cycle of national media criticism, including ESPN’s Stephen A. Smith even discouraging NBA teams from selecting the top prospect No. 1 in the upcoming draft.
“I thought we were past it, but obviously we’re not,” Self told reporters after the game in Stillwater. “It’s certainly a concern. You get into the NCAA tournament, you’re playing a team just as good as you and you need to have all your best players available, so to speak. All it takes is for one day like that to derail not only a game, but a season.”
It’s all out in the open now: Kansas has struggled to establish chemistry and rhythm while riding the will-he-won’t-he roller coaster of Peterson’s availability. That much was evident when the Jayhawks lost to a middling Cincinnati team on their home court Saturday, scoring only 68 points with Peterson playing 32 minutes compared to the 82 they scored without him against Arizona. Now with No. 2 Houston in town on Monday (9 p.m. ET, ESPN) — and less than a month until the NCAA tournament — the question becomes how this season has developed into a tale of two teams in Lawrence and what all of this means come March.
It’s complicated, even for Self.
By this point in most seasons, the 23-year Kansas coach is typically secure in his team’s potential. Without his best player on the court consistently this season, though, he’s uncertain. Two national championships and 644 wins with the Jayhawks make him an expert on what it takes to capitalize in the final month of the regular season to prepare for the grind of the NCAA tournament. Yet while he’s confident that this season’s team has the goods to chase a third title under him, he needs Peterson to be ready for the long haul. “The time is now,” Self told ESPN after the win over Arizona.
“He’s great, but I have told [Peterson], in all honesty, ‘Have I really had a chance to coach you yet?'” Self later added. “Have I had a chance to say, ‘Hey, this is totally unacceptable. This is how we’re doing it.’ Have I had a chance to really make points to him?”
TWO DAYS after he sat out his team’s biggest win of the season, Peterson walked into Allen Fieldhouse with his same neutral demeanor.
“On the court, no, I probably don’t smile,” he said. “I think I smile a good amount off the court.”
Jayhawks fans haven’t smiled much this season, either, as Peterson has been bombarded with criticism from fans and pundits alike. And he understands why. He wants to play more and get into a better rhythm with his teammates, acknowledging it has been difficult to achieve so far.
“Everybody’s got an opinion on it,” Peterson told ESPN between the Arizona and Oklahoma State games. “But basketball is my life. If I could have been out there every game this year, I would have. If you would have asked me last year, what were my goals for this year, I would never mention missing games. So all this stuff kind of just happened, but I’ve got to deal with it.”
Things haven’t gone according to plan for Peterson, either. Before the season, he told ESPN he believed he could lift the Jayhawks to another level.
“I think I bring a leader and a hard worker. I lead by example, trying to do all the right stuff both on and off the court,” he said at Big 12 media day in October. “I think that’s good for a team, to see a young guy coming in and doing that. Hopefully, I can try to bring those guys to a standard.”
Fast-forward four months, and Peterson’s 27.2 minutes per game are a stark contrast to his peers at the top of ESPN’s 2026 NBA draft big board, with BYU’s AJ Dybantsa and Duke’s Cameron Boozer each averaging north of 30. Boozer has played 34 or more minutes in 15 games — a mark that Peterson has reached only once. “If they need me to play 40 minutes, I’ll play 40 minutes,” Dybantsa told reporters after he played the entirety of the Cougars’ crucial win over Iowa State on Saturday.
If Peterson were to be picked No. 1, he would be only the third such player since 2000 to have sat out more than 10 college games, behind only Kenyon Martin (17 over multiple seasons) and Kyrie Irving (26 in his lone injury-riddled season), per ESPN Research. In addition to the 11 games missed, midgame cramping has forced Peterson to the bench multiple times, where he has been seen using a massage gun. He said he wishes he could play more but didn’t offer specifics regarding what is happening in those moments.
The narrative that Peterson is willingly sitting out games confuses him because it sounds like a critique of his work ethic, which he has never felt challenged on until now. His father would make him toss passes into garbage cans after school when he was a kid in their own spin on an all-star skills challenge in his hometown of Canton, Ohio. That was easy compared to the 108 steps at Monument Park he would have to run on weekends, even on the coldest days of the Midwest winter.
“That kind of stuff, I didn’t like,” Peterson said. “We probably ran up 20 times. Run up it, jump up it, spring up it. One foot hops up it. It always was crazy stuff.”
Peterson isn’t engaged on social media but can hear the chatter — chatter that challenges his integrity as a player and athlete — and that’s where he pushes back. He says he has never feared adversity. But the question remains: Can anyone predict if he’ll be available in March, when the games matter most?
“Let’s do it,” Peterson said when asked for the message he would give to Kansas fans who might worry about whether he’ll play in the NCAA tournament. “That’s the goal.”
In some ways, the question isn’t only about whether Peterson will be available in March. It’s also about whether he’ll be available enough to develop the chemistry needed when he’s on the court with a team that is 9-2 without him. That’s why the clock is ticking, Self acknowledges, for a Kansas squad with big dreams and an unpredictable roster.
Peterson is a scoring savant on a team that defers to him when he’s out there. The Jayhawks have more experience and thus chemistry together when he’s not. Self, with three weeks until Selection Sunday, is trying to merge the two versions — quickly.
“I think that it’s a two different teams mindset when Darryn has been healthy because the guys all want him to do well and the guys know he’s gifted, but still yet I think they take away some of their own personal aggressiveness when he’s out there,” Self told ESPN after the Arizona game. “We’ve got to find a way to where he’s aggressive, but he can make others better and the other guys can be aggressive, too.
“That’s why I’ve said many times that I don’t know that it’s two teams, but I don’t think that we’re close to being where we could potentially be if all things fell together.”
FOR 327 DAYS, Self did not win a game.
He was a first-year head coach at Oral Roberts during the 1993-94 season when his team lost 15 games in a row, a losing streak that bled into the first three games of the next season. On one trip, the coaches played the team in a scrimmage — and the coaches won. The stress piqued that season when Self was pulling all-nighters and a doctor told him he had to relax.
All wasn’t lost, though. That team’s spirits remained high and taught Self a lesson that he has applied to the 2025-26 season.
“It showed me a lot,” he said. “They just loved each other and played for each other. It was so much fun.”
Self said last season’s team liked but didn’t play for each other, playing a role in their first-round exit in the NCAA tournament last March. This season, he has trusted his emotional and competitive leaders, Bidunga and Melvin Council Jr., to help his team avoid a similar letdown.
“[Council] is so much fun because he doesn’t know what he doesn’t know and he just plays downhill and he’s fast,” Self said. “And he doesn’t know ‘up by four points under two minutes’ and maybe this needs to happen. He’s going to go one against three, he’s going to try to make a shot. But when he does that, it ends up benefiting you.
“I love his attitude.”
These players have weathered the adversity of the season by relying on one another and building a camaraderie that begins with Council, Bidunga and Bryson Tiller, a blossoming redshirt freshman who scored 16 of the Jayhawks’ first 22 points against Arizona. Self has described Council as “the most popular” player on campus while Bidunga is analytically the most important — Kansas has a plus-27.3 point differential per 100 possessions when Bidunga is on the court, per advanced analytics site EvanMiya.
“I’m telling you, bro, you need to pass the rock,” Bidunga joked to Council before the postgame news conference after the win over Arizona.
0:30
Flory Bidunga brings down the house with a filthy throwdown
Flory Bidunga rocks the rim on an alley-oop jam for Kansas.
Because they’ve played without Peterson nearly a dozen times this season, they do not fear that scenario. Nine of Bidunga’s 11 double-doubles have come in games in which Peterson hasn’t played (six) or has played fewer than 25 minutes (three). The Jayhawks won three games in the Players Era Festival without Peterson during Feast Week. Since then, the unknown has been the foundation for a stronger bond within a team that has jelled over Hibachi trips and bowling and tennis matches on Nintendo’s Wii U, which was released when most of Kansas’ players were in elementary school.
“I tell everybody, I feel like I’ve known these guys longer than how long I’ve been here,” said Council, a first-year transfer from St. Bonaventure. “Feels like I’ve known these guys for like four years. We just jelled together.”
But it’s not all fun for this crew.
After a recent loss to West Virginia, there was a players-only meeting to demand more of one another. That meeting led to more wins — and still did not solve the team’s most pressing issue.
“I feel like we really can be special,” Bidunga said. “We just have to find our identity.”
The national champions of the past? They all knew theirs by this point in the season, putting Kansas more than a few steps behind. The Jayhawks are also a top-10 defensive team and their offensive output is comparable with or without Peterson (KU is just plus-0.7 points better per 100 possessions when he’s on the court, per EvanMiya). The win over Arizona established that the Jayhawks can excel in March even with the questions surrounding Peterson’s availability.
“Guys, Kansas is a hell of a team,” Arizona coach Tommy Lloyd said after his team’s loss in Lawrence. “Let’s not make this about Darryn Peterson. He didn’t play because he was sick. They beat the No. 1 team in the country at home. They did a hell of a job, and their coach did a hell of a job. That should be the story.”
AFTER A SERIES of health concerns, Self said he’s no longer focused on the small stuff.
The past few years cost him some of his “joy,” made him feel as if he were just going through the motions while navigating a pair of tough seasons, on and off the court. Those hugs and smiles this season? They’ve come from a coach who has grappled with his own mortality over the past three years.
“I think I am stressing the little things a lot less for the most part,” he said. “But the big things, I still stress like I always have.”
At the top of that list of stressors is the lingering concern that Peterson continues to sit out games for myriad reasons, complicating Self’s ability to help his team grow together as Selection Sunday approaches. Against Arizona, Self didn’t even know Peterson was out until he exited the locker room before the announcement of starting lineups.
“I didn’t feel good really the whole day, but I was like, ‘I’m going to try to go out and warm up and see if I can — I don’t know, [I thought] the fans yelling or something would maybe give me a little extra boost or something,” Peterson said about sitting out the game. “But it just didn’t work [that night]. My legs were heavy and stuff and I was like, ‘Before I’m out here being a liability, I’d rather just let someone else [play] that can give it 100%.'”
Self has made the most of less talented teams a few times in his career, but he knows that a team can’t fake the continuity Kansas will need to make a run in March. He’s not sure it’s even possible unless he has his full roster going forward.
“You know what I worry about is, to me, with all the uncertainties of a season, primarily postseason, ‘Are you prepared for what can happen in the postseason?'” Self said. “Because you might as well expect the unexpected: foul problems, somebody gets hurt last second. There is no excuse. There is no tomorrow, so you’ve got to win that game. Can you just turn it on if you haven’t been together and gone through the stuff together?”
That’s the problem.
Just weeks before Selection Sunday, Kansas can’t be sure which version of the team Self will take into the NCAA tournament. “The best player” he has had is worth the chaos, Self said. Peterson has a usage rate that’s comparable to Stephen Curry’s this season — and he’s shooting better from the (albeit shorter) 3-point line than the NBA All-Star (43.1% for Peterson vs. 39.1% for Curry). Few players in recent college basketball history have matched Peterson’s on-court effectiveness. But consistently turning that talent into winning basketball is a work in progress.
“He could score 16 in a game and dominate, or he can get 30 in a game and dominate, but what’s best for us?” Self said. “And I think it’s got to be that happy medium because we’re going to need him to do it. In [postseason] games, you don’t score off your plays, you score off players. And it’s good to have that guy that can go get it.”
The second half of the win over Arizona highlighted the delicate path this group has walked with the drama around a likely No. 1 pick and their potential regardless of who is ready to play in March. Against the Wildcats, the Jayhawks had to figure it out without Peterson — again. And they did. Down 55-44 with 17:02 to play, a short-handed Kansas outscored an undefeated team 38-23 the rest of the way.
With the help of a crowd that was nearly as loud as a jet engine (128 decibels), the Jayhawks prevailed against the odds, becoming the first team in the past 30 seasons to beat a No. 1 team without a player who averages at least 20 points, according to ESPN Research.
When it was all over and Self had hugged folks he’d rarely hugged before, he walked through the tunnel in Allen Fieldhouse, slowly. As he approached the locker room, he stared at the ground and repeated “wow, wow, wow, wow, wow” while he shook his head and fans cheered around him.
It has been that kind of a season for Kansas, one full of letdowns, unlikely victories and surprises — and perhaps more unknowns ahead.
“We still have a job to do. We still have to compete,” Bidunga said after the game. “We’ve played some games without [Peterson]. And that made us strong. Even though he wasn’t there — I mean, we wish he was there for the game — but unfortunately, he wasn’t. But we still have a job to do, and we did pretty good.”
Sports
Team USA hockey stars keep America’s heroes top of mind after grabbing Olympic gold
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Team USA men’s hockey stars Matthew and Brady Tkachuk kept America’s heroes in mind as they celebrated their gold medal triumph over Canada at the Winter Olympics on Sunday.
The two players spoke to KSDK-TV with an American flag draped over each of their shoulders.
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United States’ Matthew Tkachuk, left, and Brady Tkachuk pose for the team picture after receiving their gold medals following an overtime win against Canada in the men’s ice hockey gold medal game at the 2026 Winter Olympics in Milan, Italy, Sunday, Feb. 22, 2026. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)
“I feel on top of the world. Just to do it while my brother’s here. There’s so many people that we can thank. Matthew said everybody in St. Louis, all the family and friends, even every first responder, everyone that protects and serves our country. This is for them. This is for every American,” Brady Tkachuk told the St. Louis station.
Matthew Tkachuk interjected, “All the military that put their life on the line for us.”
He also reflected on the win over Canada and said the brothers couldn’t have done it without a ton of support.

United States’ Brady Tkachuk (7) and Matthew Tkachuk (19) celebrate after the United States’ win over Canada in the men’s ice hockey gold medal game at the 2026 Winter Olympics in Milan, Italy, Sunday, Feb. 22, 2026. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)
“Hockey’s our game. It’s the United States of America’s game. It’s the greatest country in the world,” he said. “We have the best support ever – hundreds of millions of people back home, so many people in St. Louis, everyone in St. Louis.
“We could feel the support whether they’re hockey fans or not. Everyone’s watching. Everyone better be partying right now. Everyone better be wearing the red, white and blue for as long as they can. It should be a month mandate to wear the red, white and blue of the United States and celebrate us and the other Olympian gold medalists.”
It was Jack Hughes who gave Team USA the win in overtime against Canada.
The New Jersey Devils star was able to put the puck past Jordan Binnington for the win.

United States’ Jack Hughes (86) celebrates with United States’ Brady Tkachuk (7) after scoring the game-winning goal against Canada in sudden death overtime during the men’s ice hockey gold medal game at the 2026 Winter Olympics, in Milan, Italy, Sunday, Feb. 22, 2026. (AP Photo/Luca Bruno)
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“This is all about our country right now. I love the USA,” he said. “I love my teammates. It’s unbelievable. The U.S. are a hockey brotherhood. It’s so strong and we had so much support from ex-players. I’m so proud to be American today.”
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