0 Comentários
0 Compartilhamentos
223 Visualizações
0 Anterior
Diretório
Conheça novas pessoas, crie conexões e faça novos amigos
-
Faça Login para curtir, compartilhar e comentar!
-
WWW.CBSSPORTS.COMUse DraftKings promo code for $200 in bonus bets by targeting 2026 World Cup, USA vs. TurkiyeDraftKings offers $200 in bonus bets instantly after your first $5 wager for 2026 World Cup betting0 Comentários 0 Compartilhamentos 225 Visualizações 0 Anterior -
SPORTS.YAHOO.COMCan Red Wings afford Larkin-Robertson deal?: OctoPulse podcastThree weeks ago, Red Wings captain Dylan Larkin requested a trade to one of three teams: Florida, Vegas and Minnesota.Florida acquired Senators captain Brady Tkachuk in a blockbuster deal but Vegas and Minnesota have yet to make a major move.Now, on the eve of the NHL Draft in Buffalo, the Red Wings are rumored to be in the running for former Little Caesars forward Jason Robertson.Robertson is a 45-goal scorer for the Dallas Stars, who weren't on Larkin's original list of teams but are perennial contenders.The big drawback?The Northville native is reportedly targeting a $14 million per year contract, equaling the deal by Edmonton Oilers forward Leon Draisaitl."He (Robertson) isn't a great skater but he has that Alex DeBrincat knack for scoring goals," Red Wings beat reporter Ted Kulfan said on The Detroit News' OctoPulse podcast. "He also plays with better talent and that always scares me when a guy like that comes to a lesser team. Sometimes that doesn't work out too well."I don't know if that's an exact fit. I think Dallas might want a little more than Dylan Larkin from what I've heard. Would Robertson be thrilled about coming to Detroit? I don't see Steve Yzerman paying $13 or $14 million dollars a year to a player. That seems a little far-fetched right now."Today's podcast, episode 147, also includes Tony Paul's interview with Hilary Knight, who signed a two-year contract extension on Thursday afternoon with Detroit's PWHL expansion team.Subscribe to Detroit News podcasts iTunes SpotifyPrevious OctoPulse podcasts Larkin trade could put Wings in draft lottery Should Red Wings trade Lucas Raymond? Red Wings endure staggering fall from grace Wings' McLellan pushes right buttons in Philly Faulk to make debut vs. Devils; Larkin sidelined USA Hockey 'on top of the mountain' with double gold medals Unlikely assist on Red Wings goal; playoff chances Edvinsson injury tests Wings' blueline depth Fedorov, Kane cap historic week in Red Wings' history Nate Danielson demoted; Dave Goricki tributeOctoPulse guests in alphabetical order A: Trey Augustine, Dave Andrews, Kenny Albert, Kashawn Aitcheson B: Riley Brengman, John Bacon, Red Berenson, Matt Beniers, Scotty Bowman, Joe Bowen, Cooper Black, Phil Bourque, Jason Bukala, Nick Bogas C: Steve Coates, Leo Carlsson, Mike Cammalleri, Logan Cooley, Caley Chelios, Cole Caufield, Mitchell Clinton, Mellissa Channell-Watkins D: Nate Danielson, Dave Drinkill, Jamie Drysdale, Ken Dryden, Jake Davis E: Cole Eiserman, Simon Edvinsson, Mike Emrick, Emerson Etem F: Jordan Forgione, Everett Fitzhugh, Jim Fox, John Forslund G: Cutter Gauthier, Dylan Guenther, Jerry Green, Stu Grimson, Gerard Gallant, Liam Greentree, Bruce Garrioch, John Garrett H: William Horcoff, Mark Howe, Cross Hanas, Luke Hughes, Murray Howe, Milan Hejduk, Brian Hayward, Brandon Hawkins I: Greg Innis J: Kent Johnson K: Joakim Kemell, Mark Kirton, Megan Keller, John Kelly, Mike Keenan, Emily Kaplan, Rich Kincaide, Alex Kannok Leipert, Ryan Kennedy, Hilary Knight L: Ryan Leonard, Nick Libett, Chaz Lucius, Brian Lawton, Pat Lafontaine, Nicklas Lidstrom, Craig Laughlin, Dave Legwand, Bill Lindsay M: Doug MacLean, Al Montoya, Tim Mayer, Wes McCauley, Dan Milstein, Max Namestnikov, Ken Morrow N: Ted Nolan, Frank Nazar, Dwayne Norris, Pat Nagle O: Mark O'Brien, Phil Osaer P: Madison Packer, Dave Poulin, Gabe Perreault, Jakub Petr, Doug Plagens, Cole Perfetti, Darren Pang, Zayne Parekh, Julie Petry, Chris Pronger R: Abby Roque, Jason Ross, Manon Rheaume, Lucas Raymond, Marco Rossi, Luc Robitaille, Marcus Ragnarsson, Sam Rosen, Daryl Reaugh S: Riley Sawchuk, Bob Stauffer, Will Smith, John Shannon, Paul Stewart, Moritz Seider, Tim Stutzle, Jake Sanderson, Craig Simpson, Kirsten Simms, Mats Sundin, Brad Stuart, Melissa Szkola, Callie Shanahan, Colin Stephenson T: Tripp Tracy, Bryan Trottier, Tim Taylor, Jacob Truscott, Amanda Thiele V: Rick Vaive W: Paul Woods, Shane Wright, Bob Wilkie Z: Rick Zombo, Trevor ZegrasWant to comment on this story? Become a subscriber today. Click here.This article originally appeared on The Detroit News: Jason Robertson, Stars sniper, could be on Red Wings' radar0 Comentários 0 Compartilhamentos 235 Visualizações 0 Anterior
-
Betterdrain Balcony Drain for Reliable Outdoor ArchitectureOutdoor construction and modern architectural design increasingly require reliable water management systems that can withstand changing weather conditions. A properly engineered balcony drain is essential for preventing water accumulation on elevated surfaces, while an efficient balcony drain also helps protect structural integrity, improve safety, and maintain the aesthetic quality of...0 Comentários 0 Compartilhamentos 176 Visualizações 0 Anterior
-
WWW.FOXSPORTS.COMBeware The Samurai Blue: 4 Takeaways From Japan-Sweden Draw At The World CupJapan came to Dallas needing a point and left with a place in the Round of 32 and the quiet satisfaction of a prediction starting to materialize. I wrote about Japan being dark horses before a ball was kicked. Three games in, nobody's laughing. Sweden got the draw they needed too, courtesy of a goal from the one man on the field who wasn't supposed to be the story. Here are my takeaways from Japan's 1-1 draw with Sweden: 1. The Dark Horses Are Real Second place, unbeaten, five points, and not a single opponent enjoyed the 90 minutes against them. That's Japan's group stage in a sentence. Hajime Moriyasu's side don't overwhelm you they suffocate you. They sit in a tidy, disciplined block, let you have the ball in the places that don't hurt, then break at a speed that does. Daizen Maeda's opener was the blueprint: win it back, three passes, finish. What makes them so hard to play is that there's no obvious area to attack. The spine does this every week in Europe, so the big moments don't rattle them. Feyenoord's Ayase Ueda's raw pace will pose a threat to any high line. Behind him, the guile of Maeda, the passing of Daichi Kamada, and the directness of Ritsu Doan mean the danger can come from anywhere. Three matches into their World Cup, it's clear they've been the toughest team in this group to beat, and nobody's calling that a reach anymore. 2. Sweden Will Go As Far As Two Men Carry Them Here's the honest truth about this Sweden side: the supporting cast is good enough. Most of the XI earn a living in Europe's top leagues no passengers, no obvious weak link. But their ceiling is set by two men. Alexander Isak and Viktor Gykeres are the difference between Sweden bothering a contender and packing early, and on form they can trouble anybody left in this field. Today was not their day. Gykeres was poor plenty of running, plenty of contact, no end product. He pinned Japan's center-backs without ever genuinely threatening Zion Suzuki. Isak flickered and faded. Sweden advanced anyway, which says something about the rest of the group, but the math from here is simple. They'll go exactly as far as those two strikers decide to carry them. No further. 3. Japan Didn't Just Stop Sweden's Strikers They Erased Them Gykeres wasn't poor by accident. Japan made him poor. Moriyasu's back line stayed narrow and deep, refused to be dragged out of shape, and never let the big man turn and run. Every time Sweden went long, two shirts arrived to meet him one in front, one wrestling behind. The cross-and-crash plan that bullies most defenses found nobody to bully. Isak got the same treatment, nudged onto his weaker side with the through-ball lanes quietly bolted shut. Sweden had the bodies and the space and still couldn't carve out a clean look until Anthony Elanga improvised one from distance. That's the blueprint in a sentence: you can have the ball, you can have the field, you just can't have the chance. It took a worldie to beat them and for 90 minutes, the group's two best strikers barely landed a glove. 4. Won't Get Easier Moving Forward Let's sort the group, then break the bad news. The Netherlands won it that 5-1 dismantling of Sweden in Houston was the statement of the round. Japan took second, Sweden squeezed through third as one of the best third-placed teams. Everybody who advanced earned it. Now the rewards, which are frankly cruel. Japan's prize for going unbeaten is Brazil, the Group C winners, on June 29 in Houston Vincius Junior flying, Neymar back in the picture. Sweden's reward for surviving is likely facing either Kylian Mbapp's France or Erling Haaland's Norway on June 30. The Dutch, for topping the group, draw tournament darling Morocco. So the dark horses meet the Seleo, and Sweden's strikers get to test themselves against France. If Japan is the real thing, we're about to find out in the loudest way imaginable. There's no bigger exam in the Round of 32.0 Comentários 0 Compartilhamentos 170 Visualizações 0 Anterior -
WWW.CBSSPORTS.COMWWE Night of Champions 2026 match predictions, expert picks for complete card on Saturday in Saudi ArabiaThree title matches are scheduled for Saturday night, plus the finals of the King and Queen of the Ring tournaments0 Comentários 0 Compartilhamentos 169 Visualizações 0 Anterior -
SPORTS.YAHOO.COMLangford hits 3-run homer, Burger and Pederson also connect as Rangers beat Blue Jays 6-5TORONTO (AP) Wyatt Langford hit a threerun home run, Jake Burger and Joc Pederson also went deep, and the Texas Rangers beat the Toronto Blue Jays 6-5 on Thursday night.Pederson went 2 for 3 with two walks and scored twice as Texas bounced back after losing the previous two.Toronto's Kazuma Okamoto cut the deficit to one with a two-run homer off Jacob Latz in the ninth, his 18th.Latz recovered by retiring Alejandro Kirk on a grounder and striking out pinch hitter Brandon Valenzuela for his 15th save in 17 chances.Rangers shortstop Corey Seager went 0 for 2 and walked twice after being activated off the concussion list. The two-time World Series MVP missed 12 games.Texas left-hander MacKenzie Gore (5-6) allowed three runs and four hits in seven innings, snapping a four-start winless streak.Pederson led off with his 12th homer, capping an 11-pitch at bat with a 402-foot drive into the second deck. He fouled off seven pitches before homering.Langford and Burger both connected in a five-run third. Langford, who also went deep in Wednesdays loss at Miami, hit his eighth homer. Seven have come in 19 games since he returned from the injured list June 5.Burgers two-run shot was his 14th.All three homers came off Kevin Gausman (4-6), who allowed six runs and 10 hits in six innings, his sixth straight winless outing.Gausman was hit hard by the Cubs in his previous start on June 19 when he gave up seven runs on seven hits in two innings.Toronto scored three in the fifth. Davis Schneider hit a bases-loaded sacrifice fly and Myles Straw followed with a two-run double. The Blue Jays are 10-17 in series openers.Up nextRangers RHP Nathan Eovaldi (7-7, 4.24 ERA) is scheduled to start Friday against Blue Jays LHP Patrick Corbin (2-3, 4.73).__AP MLB: https://apnews.com/hub/mlb0 Comentários 0 Compartilhamentos 178 Visualizações 0 Anterior
-
CHUANYABUILDING Chinese Roofing Materials Manufacturers for Modern ArchitectureThe global construction industry increasingly relies on durable, aesthetic, and weather-resistant roofing solutions to meet both functional and cultural requirements. In modern architecture, partnering with reliable Chinese Roofing Materials Manufacturers ensures consistent product quality and stable performance across diverse building environments, while experienced Chinese Roofing...0 Comentários 0 Compartilhamentos 145 Visualizações 0 Anterior
-
WWW.FOXSPORTS.COM4 Takeaways From Netherlands' Group-Clinching Win vs. Tunisia At The World CupThe Netherlands are the winners of Group F at the 2026 FIFA Mens World Cup following a methodical 3-1 win over Tunisia at a rainy Kansas City Stadium, combined with Japan and Sweden playing to a 1-1 draw. The Netherlands and Japan both began the day on four points. The two teams were also even in the next two tiebreakers: head-to-head, followed by goal difference. The Netherlands only had the edge in the third tiebreaker, which is goals scored. That made this game a race between the Netherlands and Japan to both win their respective games by as large a margin as possible. At one point during this game, the lead was up for grabs, as the Netherlands was only up 2-1 while Japan was up 1-0 on Sweden. But as the games progressed, the Dutch pulled away while Japan conceded an equalizer. In the end, Japan finished second, while Sweden finished third, with a record that likely has it among the top eight teams to still advance. Here are my takeaways: 1. The Netherlands Became Too Passive The start of the game could not have gone any better for the Netherlands, which was all over Tunisia in the early parts of the game. Right back Denzel Dumfries continued his strong start to the World Cup when, in the second minute, he drove a hard, low cross into the box that forced an own goal from Tunisia central defender Ellyes Skhiri. Then in the seventh minute, Tijjani Reijnders floated a free kick to the back post, which Virgil Van Dijk headed it back across the front of the goal. Brian Brobbey was then there to head it home from close range. It was the third goal of the tournament from Brobbey. At that point, the Netherlands should have been able to keep up its intensity on a demoralized opponent and find more goals. That did not happen, and the first half finished 2-0. In the first part of the second half, Tunisia even pulled one back due to poor set-piece defending from the Netherlands. It was only after Tunisia scored that the Netherlands was able to find another goal to get back onto the front foot again. This is a problem for head coach Ronald Koeman's team, which has elite talent and realistic ambitions to be a contender at this World Cup. Despite the teams offensive capabilities, the Netherlands has not kept a clean sheet in six straight games. The Netherlands seems to only raise its game when external events demand it. The Dutch needed to come out strong and did. When the team no longer needed to be intense, it wasnt. Then, after Tunisia scored again, the Netherlands raised its level again until it found another goal. Then the pace of the game slowed again. Against elite opponents, that can be the teams downfall. It needs to find a way to play strong on its own terms. 2. Tunisia Hits Rock Bottom Mercifully, the World Cup is over for Tunisia, which returns home as arguably the worst team in the tournament. Three games, three losses, all by multiple-goal margins, and all while being outscored 12-2. At a time when minnows such as Curaao and Cape Verde were able to find ways to compete and even secure a result, at no point in this tournament was Tunisia ever competitive. Even Haiti, which also lost all three of its games, showed more fight and competitiveness. Tunisia is not a minnow. This team defeated France at the 2022 World Cup (while France had a rotated squad in that game, Frances reserves still made for a great lineup). During World Cup qualifying, Tunisia did not concede a single goal in its group. While it was a weak group, Tunisia did not make a single costly defensive mistake. After the teams opening game, it fired its head coach, Sabri Lamouchi, and replaced him with Herv Renard. It was the first time in World Cup history that a team had ever fired a coach after the first game. That speaks to the underlying cause of what made this team such a mess at the World Cup. The federation has not provided stability. The national team has had seven coaches since the 2022 World Cup. That has made it impossible for this team to build chemistry, an identity, or a coherent style of play. Now moving into a new cycle with competitions like the African Cup of Nations and 2030 World Cup qualifying coming up, we will see if the federation opts to provide this stability, which can only help with results. 3. Brobbey, Reijnders And Malen impressed In terms of this game, the best players on the field were Brian Brobbey, Tijjani Reijnders, and Donyell Malen, who all did well executing Koemans plan. On the right wing, Malen was very difficult for Tunisian players to stop. While he did not factor into a goal contribution, Malen drew fouls, opened up space with his dribbling, and was effective in his passing. Brobbey entered this tournament having scored just one goal for the Netherlands in his career. At a time when most contenders have a dominant center forward, Brobbey does not have that resume. But he has been excellent in the group stage with three goals from two starts (he played just five minutes against Japan). Whether Brobbey can continue his form and lead the Dutch deep into the knockouts is another question. But he should be playing with a lot of confidence. Reijnders was also very effective against Tunisia, where he created several chances and had an assist. He had three shots and forced two big saves. 4. Morocco Next For The Netherlands Winning the group was not much of a prize for the Netherlands, which will now have to face Morocco in the round of 32. Morocco finished second in its group with a draw with Brazil, followed by wins over Scotland and Haiti. This is a matchup that could be very problematic for the Dutch, as Morocco was a semifinalist in 2022 and has only continued to play well over the ensuing four years. It will be the most difficult test for Koemans team, which will have to be sharp and focused for the full 90 minutes, not just in specific moments.0 Comentários 0 Compartilhamentos 170 Visualizações 0 Anterior -
WWW.CBSSPORTS.COM'A dream come true': Marina Mabrey ties WNBA single-game scoring record with 53 points as Tempo rout SparksMabrey shot 17 of 28 overall, including 9 of 18 from 3-point range, tying the single-game 3-point record as well0 Comentários 0 Compartilhamentos 175 Visualizações 0 Anterior