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Taylor beats Serrano for third time to remain undisputed 140-pound champion
Taylor beats Serrano for third time to remain undisputed 140-pound champion

Winnipeg Free Press

time12-07-2025

  • Sport
  • Winnipeg Free Press

Taylor beats Serrano for third time to remain undisputed 140-pound champion

NEW YORK (AP) — Katie Taylor beat Amanda Serrano for the third time, winning a majority decision on Friday night to remain the undisputed 140-pound champion. Taylor won by scores of 97-93 on two judges' cards, while the third had it even at 95-95. It was the third straight narrow decision between the two, after Taylor won a split decision in their first bout and a narrow unanimous decision in the rematch. Back in Madison Square Garden, site of their first bout, Taylor improved to 25-1 in a fight that perhaps wasn't as exciting as their first two, but once again was almost too close to call. Serrano (47-4-1) never really hurt Taylor this time, the expected final fight between the two, the way she did a couple times in the previous fights, and held her hands over her eyes when the first score announced was the even card, perhaps knowing already then she hadn't done enough to pull it out. The Associated Press scored it 95-95. It was the same festive atmosphere in front of another sold-out crowd split between Irish and Puerto Rican fans, just the way it was when they first fought here on April 30, 2022, in what was the first women's boxing match to headline the arena. This time, the arena hosted its first all-women's card, many of the fighters saying during the lead-up they owed their opportunity to the interest created by the Taylor-Serrano trilogy. In the opener, two-time Canadian Olympian Tamm Thibeault put herself in line for a shot at the vacant WBA middleweight title with a fifth-round TKO win over previously unbeaten Pittsburgh native Mary Casamassa. The WBA final eliminator was scheduled for eight three-minute rounds. In control from the start, Quebec's Thibeault dropped her foe in the opening round, and while Casamassa was game she was outgunned. The 2020 and '24 Olympian picked up the pace in the fourth, and it was a matter of time until the end came at 2:18 of Round 5, with referee Charlie Fitch stepping in after an unanswered barrage of punches from Thibeault. Thibeault moves to 3-0 with 2 KOs. Casamassa falls to 6-1 with 1 KO. Chantelle Cameron kept her hopes for a rubber match with Katie Taylor alive as she scored a clearcut 10-round unanimous decision over Jessica Camara of Montreal in defence of her interim WBC junior welterweight title. Scores were 99-91, 98-92, 99-91 for Northampton's Cameron. Camara (14-4-1, 3 KOs) took the fight to Cameron (21-1, 8 KOs) at the start and she refused to back down from any exchanges with the Brit. The unfortunate part for the Canadian was that Cameron was more than willing to brawl at close range, and what resulted was compelling — but one-sided — action throughout. The crisper punches continued coming from Cameron, and the pace of the fight began to take its toll on Camara, whose face showed the wear of battle. After the seventh round, Camara was on wobbly legs as she returned to the corner, prompting a visit from the ringside physician. Camara was cleared to continue, and she gamely fought on, but it was all Cameron down the stretch ___ AP boxing:

The Oilers' Skinner and Panthers' Bobrovsky have been solid, despite the scoreboard
The Oilers' Skinner and Panthers' Bobrovsky have been solid, despite the scoreboard

Calgary Herald

time08-06-2025

  • Sport
  • Calgary Herald

The Oilers' Skinner and Panthers' Bobrovsky have been solid, despite the scoreboard

Article content 'I was pushed (by Mattias Ekholm). I think the goalie kicked out my heel that made me fall,' said Bennett, who didn't have his hand on a bible as he took the stand, though. Article content The real heel in Oiler Nation is clearly Bennett, but we digress. Article content Maybe Kevin Bieksa put it best after the first 20 minutes. Article content 'There's an awful lot going on out there and not around the puck,' he said. Article content Like when Bennett casually kicked Ekholm's fallen stick away just as the Oiler defenceman was bending down to grab the twig, with Florida scoring on a power play in the first frame. Article content Article content Tracking a prospect Article content While the Oilers have rolled into the Cup final, London Knights' right-shot centre Sam O'Reilly, their first-round 2024 pick after they traded up with Philadelphia to take him at No. 32, was dynamite for the London Knights in their recent Memorial Cup victory. He had 71 points in 62 league games, 22 in 17 OHL playoff games and five points in five Memorial Cup games as the Knights won it all. He was fifth in Memorial Cup points. Article content Article content 'I really like Sam. He plays hard and he's smart. I think after one more year in junior, he could be ready (NHL),' said Craig Button, TSN's draft guru, who didn't dispute the idea that Sam O'Reilly plays a similar style to Ryan O'Reilly. The Oiler draft pick has third-line NHL centre written all over him. Article content Article content Florida's Gustav Forsling, Sweden's best D man heading into the Olympics, had a tremendous Game 2 with his skating and his terrific stick on Oiler rush chances, on top of his dives to block shots. Article content 'He's one of the elite skating defencemen in our league, and most of those elite guys have a completely offensive bent,' said Maurice. 'If you skate that well as a young man, you're put into offensive situations, like being a power play guy but he's taken that skill and applied it to the defensive side of the game.' Article content 'To fully appreciate it, you have to be down at ice-level to see how fast Connor McDavid is and Leon Draisaitl. The Oilers have a really fast team overall, and he (Forsling) excels at that game,' said Maurice. Article content Article content This 'n that: For all of Bennett's villainous behaviour, he's a heckuva player, and a surefire Canadian Olympian next February in Italy, unless he gets hurt. He leads the playoffs with 13 goals, 12 on the road in the Panthers' 12 away games. That's an NHL record for road goals in a playoff season. Thoughts of him getting, say, $9 million AAV for seven or eight years as a free-agent July 1 are probably misguided, though, because he's a No. 2 C, not a No. 1. The Panthers are most likely not paying him more than Sam Reinhart's $8.63m AAV… That Darnell Nurse-Brett Kulak second D pairing isn't working through the first two games, and they need a shake-up. Best idea: move lefty Jake Walman (plus 11), the Oilers second-best defenceman behind Bouchard, alongside Nurse and have the lefty-righty with Kulak and John Klingberg in the third pair, but off Sunday's practic,e Paul Coffey isn't listening. He threw all the pairs in a blender. Nurse with Bouchard, Walman with Kulak, Ekholm and Klingberg. On game day? Likely TBD… Connor Brown doesn't seem as energetic on the third line as he was before he took that hard hit from Alex Petrovic in the Dallas series and possibly suffered some concussion-type issues… Is it just me, or are we all waiting for Trent Frederic to show more, and wondering if that high ankle sprain is still compromising his play? One goal and four points and only 19 shots in 18 playoff games. He's a big body and the Oilers are likely trying to re-sign him before he hits free-agency July 1, but there aren't a lot of thumping hits… Reinhart, who took an open-ice hit from Carolina's Sebastian Aho in round 3, has been a shadow of his usual dangerous self through the first two games with no points and -3. He missed the net cleanly on an OT breakaway in Game 2, unlike him. It looked like he hurt his left hip or leg on the Aho smack. Florida captain Sasha Barkov, Reinhart's linemate, hasn't arrived in the series yet, either, but he's not hurt. He has zip for points and is -4… Sad news that former Oilers first-round pick winger Scott Metcalfe passed suddenly on Friday at 58. Metcalfe was the 20th overall pick in the '85 draft, but he had little chance of cracking the powerhouse Oilers in those days, and he only got into two Oiler games before they traded him to Buffalo for defenceman Steve Dykstra in 1988. Metcalfe played just 19 NHL games (17 for the Sabres), over 500 AHL games, and several years in Europe… Aaron Ekblad, who took a shot off the back of his left hand by Nurse in OT and looked in major distress as he tried to get off, is fine according to Maurice, but of course, we don't force coaches to take lie detector tests in the playoffs. The Panthers could have been called for too many men on the play because Ekblad was five feet from the bench when the defender jumped on for him and got in the way of Arvidsson along the boards, but the zebras took a pass on calling it… The Oilers signed Euro free-agent forward Viljami Marjala, who became a free agent June 1 when the Buffalo Sabres chose not to sign the drafted player in the two-year window after taking him from Quebec (junior) Remparts in 2023. He played junior for Patrick Roy with the Blues' Zach Bolduc as a teammate. He's small (176 pounds), but the LW/C did have 52 points for TPS Turku, 12th in scoring, no mean feat for a 22-year-old, who was going to play for Karpat in the Liiga until the Oilers came calling. He's a passer (44 assists, eight goals)… Oiler farmhand Drake Caggiula won't be back. Word is he is looking at Switzerland… Oilers didn't see enough upside in their draft D Luca Munzenberger over four years of college (Vermont), and he's likely signing in his home country, Germany.

The Oilers' Skinner and Panthers' Bobrovsky have been solid, despite the scoreboard
The Oilers' Skinner and Panthers' Bobrovsky have been solid, despite the scoreboard

Ottawa Citizen

time08-06-2025

  • Sport
  • Ottawa Citizen

The Oilers' Skinner and Panthers' Bobrovsky have been solid, despite the scoreboard

Article content 'I was pushed (by Mattias Ekholm). I think the goalie kicked out my heel that made me fall,' said Bennett, who didn't have his hand on a bible as he took the stand, though. Article content The real heel in Oiler Nation is clearly Bennett, but we digress. Article content Maybe Kevin Bieksa put it best after the first 20 minutes. Article content 'There's an awful lot going on out there and not around the puck,' he said. Article content Like when Bennett casually kicked Ekholm's fallen stick away just as the Oiler defenceman was bending down to grab the twig, with Florida scoring on a power play in the first frame. Article content Tracking a prospect Article content While the Oilers have rolled into the Cup final, London Knights' right-shot centre Sam O'Reilly, their first-round 2024 pick after they traded up with Philadelphia to take him at No. 32, was dynamite for the London Knights in their recent Memorial Cup victory. He had 71 points in 62 league games, 22 in 17 OHL playoff games and five points in five Memorial Cup games as the Knights won it all. He was fifth in Memorial Cup points. Article content Article content 'I really like Sam. He plays hard and he's smart. I think after one more year in junior, he could be ready (NHL),' said Craig Button, TSN's draft guru, who didn't dispute the idea that Sam O'Reilly plays a similar style to Ryan O'Reilly. The Oiler draft pick has third-line NHL centre written all over him. Article content Article content Get on your horse, Gus Article content Florida's Gustav Forsling, Sweden's best D man heading into the Olympics, had a tremendous Game 2 with his skating and his terrific stick on Oiler rush chances, on top of his dives to block shots. Article content 'He's one of the elite skating defencemen in our league, and most of those elite guys have a completely offensive bent,' said Maurice. 'If you skate that well as a young man, you're put into offensive situations, like being a power play guy but he's taken that skill and applied it to the defensive side of the game.' Article content 'To fully appreciate it, you have to be down at ice-level to see how fast Connor McDavid is and Leon Draisaitl. The Oilers have a really fast team overall, and he (Forsling) excels at that game,' said Maurice. Article content Article content This 'n that: For all of Bennett's villainous behaviour, he's a heckuva player, and a surefire Canadian Olympian next February in Italy, unless he gets hurt. He leads the playoffs with 13 goals, 12 on the road in the Panthers' 12 away games. That's an NHL record for road goals in a playoff season. Thoughts of him getting, say, $9 million AAV for seven or eight years as a free-agent July 1 are probably misguided, though, because he's a No. 2 C, not a No. 1. The Panthers are most likely not paying him more than Sam Reinhart's $8.63m AAV… That Darnell Nurse-Brett Kulak second D pairing isn't working through the first two games, and they need a shake-up. Best idea: move lefty Jake Walman (plus 11), the Oilers second-best defenceman behind Bouchard, alongside Nurse and have the lefty-righty with Kulak and John Klingberg in the third pair, but off Sunday's practic,e Paul Coffey isn't listening. He threw all the pairs in a blender. Nurse with Bouchard, Walman with Kulak, Ekholm and Klingberg. On game day? Likely TBD… Connor Brown doesn't seem as energetic on the third line as he was before he took that hard hit from Alex Petrovic in the Dallas series and possibly suffered some concussion-type issues… Is it just me, or are we all waiting for Trent Frederic to show more, and wondering if that high ankle sprain is still compromising his play? One goal and four points and only 19 shots in 18 playoff games. He's a big body and the Oilers are likely trying to re-sign him before he hits free-agency July 1, but there aren't a lot of thumping hits… Reinhart, who took an open-ice hit from Carolina's Sebastian Aho in round 3, has been a shadow of his usual dangerous self through the first two games with no points and -3. He missed the net cleanly on an OT breakaway in Game 2, unlike him. It looked like he hurt his left hip or leg on the Aho smack. Florida captain Sasha Barkov, Reinhart's linemate, hasn't arrived in the series yet, either, but he's not hurt. He has zip for points and is -4… Sad news that former Oilers first-round pick winger Scott Metcalfe passed suddenly on Friday at 58. Metcalfe was the 20th overall pick in the '85 draft, but he had little chance of cracking the powerhouse Oilers in those days, and he only got into two Oiler games before they traded him to Buffalo for defenceman Steve Dykstra in 1988. Metcalfe played just 19 NHL games (17 for the Sabres), over 500 AHL games, and several years in Europe… Aaron Ekblad, who took a shot off the back of his left hand by Nurse in OT and looked in major distress as he tried to get off, is fine according to Maurice, but of course, we don't force coaches to take lie detector tests in the playoffs. The Panthers could have been called for too many men on the play because Ekblad was five feet from the bench when the defender jumped on for him and got in the way of Arvidsson along the boards, but the zebras took a pass on calling it… The Oilers signed Euro free-agent forward Viljami Marjala, who became a free agent June 1 when the Buffalo Sabres chose not to sign the drafted player in the two-year window after taking him from Quebec (junior) Remparts in 2023. He played junior for Patrick Roy with the Blues' Zach Bolduc as a teammate. He's small (176 pounds), but the LW/C did have 52 points for TPS Turku, 12th in scoring, no mean feat for a 22-year-old, who was going to play for Karpat in the Liiga until the Oilers came calling. He's a passer (44 assists, eight goals)… Oiler farmhand Drake Caggiula won't be back. Word is he is looking at Switzerland… Oilers didn't see enough upside in their draft D Luca Munzenberger over four years of college (Vermont), and he's likely signing in his home country, Germany.

Canadian teen McIntosh shatters 400 metres freestyle record
Canadian teen McIntosh shatters 400 metres freestyle record

Straits Times

time08-06-2025

  • Sport
  • Straits Times

Canadian teen McIntosh shatters 400 metres freestyle record

FILE PHOTO: Aug 23, 2024; Toronto, Ontario, CAN; Multiple gold medal winning Canadian Olympian Summer McIntosh poses with her Olympic medals at the Rogers Centre. Mandatory Credit: John E. Sokolowski-USA TODAY Sports/File photo REUTERS Canadian three-times Olympic champion Summer McIntosh set a world record in the women's 400 metres freestyle at the Canadian Swimming Trials in Victoria, British Columbia, on Saturday. The 18-year-old clocked 3:54.18 to better Australian Ariarne Titmus' mark of 3:55.38 set at the 2023 World Championships in Fukuoka, Japan. "Going into tonight, I knew that my training has been really good these past few months, and I knew that I could do something special," McIntosh told public broadcaster CBC. "So being able to input my training in doing that - I didn't think my training would be 54.1 but I'm really happy with that." At the Paris Olympics, McIntosh became the first athlete from Canada to win three gold medals at a single Olympic Games. In Paris, the four-times World Aquatics champion won gold in the 400 metres individual medley, 200 butterfly and 200 individual medley, as well as taking silver in the 400 freestyle. But things felt different at the Canada trials. "I just felt so strong throughout, and that's never been the case in the 400 freestyle for me. That last 100, I'm always really, really hurting. "But I flipped at the 200 and I was just cruising, so I knew that I was having a strong swim. I could tell by the crowd and knew the way they were cheering that I was probably close to the world record. "So I really tried to push that last part for them." REUTERS Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.

Swimming-Canadian teen McIntosh shatters 400 metres freestyle record
Swimming-Canadian teen McIntosh shatters 400 metres freestyle record

The Star

time08-06-2025

  • Sport
  • The Star

Swimming-Canadian teen McIntosh shatters 400 metres freestyle record

FILE PHOTO: Aug 23, 2024; Toronto, Ontario, CAN; Multiple gold medal winning Canadian Olympian Summer McIntosh poses with her Olympic medals at the Rogers Centre. Mandatory Credit: John E. Sokolowski-USA TODAY Sports/File photo (Reuters) -Canadian three-times Olympic champion Summer McIntosh set a world record in the women's 400 metres freestyle at the Canadian Swimming Trials in Victoria, British Columbia, on Saturday. The 18-year-old clocked 3:54.18 to better Australian Ariarne Titmus' mark of 3:55.38 set at the 2023 World Championships in Fukuoka, Japan. "Going into tonight, I knew that my training has been really good these past few months, and I knew that I could do something special," McIntosh told public broadcaster CBC. "So being able to input my training in doing that - I didn't think my training would be 54.1 but I'm really happy with that." At the Paris Olympics, McIntosh became the first athlete from Canada to win three gold medals at a single Olympic Games. In Paris, the four-times World Aquatics champion won gold in the 400 metres individual medley, 200 butterfly and 200 individual medley, as well as taking silver in the 400 freestyle. But things felt different at the Canada trials. "I just felt so strong throughout, and that's never been the case in the 400 freestyle for me. That last 100, I'm always really, really hurting. "But I flipped at the 200 and I was just cruising, so I knew that I was having a strong swim. I could tell by the crowd and knew the way they were cheering that I was probably close to the world record. "So I really tried to push that last part for them." (Reporting by Pearl Josephine Nazare in Bengaluru; Editing by Tom Hogue)

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