Cardinal Swarmed by the Ducks 76-61, inside the Shark Tank (San Jose Tip Off)

Stanford Cardinal forward Maxime Raynaud (42) drives on the Oregon Ducks forward Supreme Cook (left) in first half action at SAP Center in San Jose on Sat Dec 21, 2024 (AP News photo)

By Michael Roberson

SAN JOSE, Calif. — The Stanford Cardinal (9-3, 1-0 ACC) were bombarded by the Flying Oregon Ducks (11-1, 1-1 Big 10) 76-61, in the Capital City of the Silicon Valley.

Stanford went scoreless for nearly four minutes to start the game. During that time frame, Oregon had a 4-0 run for their points production.

When the drought finally ended (16:10), it was on a Maxime Raynaud Trey, he added a dunk later, to go on his own personal 5-0 run and give his team their first lead, 5-4. There were six lead changes in the first 20-minute stanza.

The Ducks performed an 8-0 run, as well as a 9-0 one. They led by as many as 17 points before intermission, At the midway point of the game, Oregon led by that same margin, 36-19. Stanford shot a putrid 24% from the field, and worse (18%) from beyond the arc.

Neither team had a player with double-digit scoring; however, Raynaud led the Card with nine points and seven rebounds, while senior center Nate Bittle topped the Ducks with seven points and five rebounds.

Stanford shot considerably better from both perspectives in the second half. However, their deficit was as large as 26 points, despite outscoring the Ducks 42-40. That was assisted by a 10-0 run late in the game, but not close enough to tie, and there were no lead changes during minutes 20:01 – 40:00.

At the final whistle of game one of the San Jose Tip-Off, Oregon defeated the Santa Clara County based Stanford Cardinal by 15 points in the county’s capital city. Final score inside SAP Center, Oregon 76, Stanford 61.

The Cardinal presented two players who reached the 10+ points plateau. Raynaud led all players with 20 points and he also grabbed 13 rebounds, garnering another double-double for the senior forward. Junior guard Benny Gealer added 10 points to the Cardinal total.

The Ducks also produced two players with the aforementioned tally. Sophomore forward Kwame Evans Jr, (13) and sophomore guard Jackson Shelstad (10), while their leader at the half, Bittle, was close, with 9 points and 9 rebounds. Ex-Cardinal Brandon Angel offered a modest 7 points against his former university.

Stanford will next be in action on New Year’s Day in South Carolina, to take on new ACC foe Clemson Tigers at 4:00 PM EST on the ACC Network. The Ducks fly North back to Eugene Sunday, December 29 to host Weber State at 2:00 PM PT on B!G+.

Headline Sports podcast with Charlie O: Rickey’s passing comes as a shock to sports world

Rickey Henderson of the Oakland A’s waves to the crowd at the Oakland Coliseum after he stole third base to break Ty Cobb’s stolen base record in the seventh inning at the Oakland Coliseum May 30, 1990 (AP file photo)

Headline Sports podcast with Charlie O:

#1 The passing of Rickey Henderson at age 65 comes as a shock. Rickey looked like a picture of health the last time he made two public appearances. The first one was at the A’s last home game ever in Oakland on Sep 26, 2024 and at the Reggie Jackson Classic one month later on Oct 27, 2024 all at the Coliseum.

#2 Rickey’s family made the sad announcement confirming Rickey’s former teammate Dave Winfield’s X tweet that announced Rickey’s passing on Friday night.

#3 Charlie, Rickey’s playing days he had that swagger once he came on the scene. Rickey even waved his glove at the fans in leftfield during his playing days.

#4 Rickey’s most famous moment came when he stole his 939th stolen base that broke Lou Brock’s stolen base record in 1991. Rickey holds the record for stolen bases in season at 130 and holds the record for the most bases stolen of all time at 1406.

#5 Charlie, I have to ask you in closing you and coachie had the opportunity to interview Rickey numerous times during his tenure with the A’s in Oakland. How special was that and what was that relationship like?

Charlie O does Headline Sports Sundays at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Barracuda swept by Condors getting outscored 6-2

SAN JOSE, CALIFORNIA – DECEMBER 21: The San Jose Barracuda host the Bakersfield Condors at Tech CU Arena on December 21, 2024 in San Jose, California. (Photo by Andreea Cardani/San Jose Barracuda)

By Madison Montez

SAN JOSE-After being shutout last night, the Barracuda fall to the Condors 4-2 and get swept for the first time this season by Bakersfield.

Bakersfield got started scoring early after being scoreless through 2 periods in last nights game. Cam Dineen netted his 2nd goal of the season assisted by Connor Carrick and Drake Caggiula. With 8 seconds left on a Donovan Houle hooking penalty, Matthew Savoie scored his 7th goal of the season assisted by Lane Pederson.

The Condors kept the pressure on in the 2nd scoring 41 seconds apart at 10:00 and 10:41. Matvey Petrov scored his 8th of the season assisted by Connor Carrick and Jacob Perreault. Matvey Petrov has now scored in back to back games. Ronnie Attard scored the second goal which was his first of the season, unassisted. Filip Bystedt cut into Bakerfield’s 4-0 lead at 12:18 assisted by Ethan Cardwell to bring the score to 4-1 and avoid another shutout.

At 16:04 of the third, Filip Bystedt struck again scoring his 2nd of the night assisted by Collin Graf and Danil Guschin to cut Bakerfield’s lead down by 2.

THREE STARS OF THE GAME:

  • 1. Matvey Petrov
  • 2. Filip Bystedt
  • 3. Connor Carrick

The Barracuda will be back in action on Saturday December 28th for a 2 game series against the Henderson Silver Knights. The last time these two teams faced off was on Friday October 25th when the Barracuda won 5-3. Jimmy Schuldt, Andrew Poturalski, Anthony Vincent, Ethan Cardwell, and Filip Bystedt all registering goals.

That’s Amaury News and Commentary: Rickey Henderson, Oakland A’s and MLB Hall of Fame, dead at 65

Rickey Henderson (left) poses with the author Amaury Pi Gonzalez (right) at the Oakland Coliseum (photo from Amaury Pi Gonzalez)

Rickey Henderson, Oakland A’s and MLB Hall of Fame, dead at 65

That’s Amaury News and Commentary

By Amaury Pi-González

Rickey Henderson began his Hall of Fame career with the Oakland Athletics in 1979 and died today of pneumonia, just six days short of his 66th birthday, December 25. I have covered Rickey Henderson since he arrived in Oakland in 1979 as a rookie.

He played for 25 years and holds the Major League Baseball record for career stolen bases with 1,406. One of the best leadoff hitters in baseball, Rickey always had a smile on his face, played with a lot of ‘gusto’, and enjoyed every minute.

The last time I spoke with Rickey, we discussed today’s game, where hitters’ average is in the low .200s, and nobody is close to challenging his record of stolen bases. He always called me “Chief. A broad smile and a physique were given to him by God.

In my opinion, he was the best player ever to wear an Oakland A’s uniform, which he wore four times throughout his career. He played for 25 years in the major leagues for nine (9) different teams from1979 to 2003; Athletics, Yankees, Blue Jays, Padres, Angels, Mets, Mariners, Red Sox and Dodgers.

Rickey Henderson was one-of-a-kind. Although he played for a quarter of a century with different teams in the American and National Leagues, he will always have a special place for Oakland A’s fans. Rest in Peace, Rickey.

Rickey Henderson Awards – From Baseball Reference:

1981 Gold Glove Award (American League Outfielder) 1981 The Silver Slugger Award (American League) 1982 Joe Cronin Award (Outstanding Achievement in an AL Season) 1985 MLB Player of the Month Award 1985 The Silver Slugger Award (American League) 1989 A.L.C.S. Most Valuable Player Award 1990 Most Valuable Player Award (BBWAA) 1990 The Silver Slugger Award (American League) 1999 The Sporting News Comeback Player of the Year Award 2002 Commissioner’s Historic Achievement Award 2009 National Baseball Hall of Fame

Amaury Pi Gonzalez called most of Rickey Henderson’s games through his career and does News and Commentary at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

No stopping LeBron has 32 points in Lakers 103-99 two game sweep over Kings

Los Angeles Lakers forward LeBron James (23) gets fouled by the Sacramento Kings DeMar DeRozan (left) in the first half at Golden 1 Center in Sacramento on Sat Dec 21, 2024 (AP News photo)

By Jeremiah Salmonson

SACRAMENTO–The Sacramento Kings were back in action on Saturday afternoon in Sacramento. The Kings and Lakers faced off in the second matchup in three days. The Kings lost the first game to the Lakers on Thursday, 113-100. On Saturday, the Kings lost to the Lakers, 103-99.

In the first quarter, the Lakers leaned heavily on the greatness of LeBron James. LeBron dominated in the paint and scored 12 points while helping build a lead for the Lakers. The Lakers outscored the Kings in the first quarter, 31-26, as they jumped out to an early lead against Sacramento. De’Aaron Fox did his best to keep the Kings close with nine first-quarter points of his own. Similarly to the first game of the set on Thursday, the Lakers’ physicality was proving too much for the Kings early on.

As the game progressed in the second quarter, the Kings seemed to get their legs under them a bit. The Lakers were still a lot to handle for the Kings, as LeBron James and Anthony Davis routinely got the Kings in rotation. D’Angelo Russell also put together a solid half of play as he hit his shots and played solid defense, sealing off the passing lanes.

However, the Kings outscored the Lakers in the second, 27-25, to shrink the lead to 56-53 going into halftime. De’Aaron Fox led the Kings with 17 points in the first half, while LeBron James added 23.

In the third quarter, the game didn’t see much movement. The Kings and Lakers traded baskets as the Lakers extended the lead to 81-77 after three quarters of action. The Lakers outscored the Kings 25-24 in the third, as De’Aaron Fox and LeBron James continued to lead their teams with 26 and 25 points, respectively.

In the fourth quarter, the Kings were able to keep things close and give themselves a chance to win. Unfortunately for Kings fans, it was all for nothing as they couldn’t close out the game. The Lakers went on to beat the Kings, 103-99. The ending of the Kings’ game was a microcosm of the whole season. The Kings committed a careless foul by Malik Monk on Anthony Davis and failed to secure the rebound after a missed AD free throw, sealing their fate. It was a disappointing loss for the Kings, who have now lost three in a row.

After the game, the media heard from Mike Brown, Keegan Murray, and De’Aaron Fox. The sentiment was largely the same from all three: the Kings still did not do the little things needed to win the game. The free-throw box-out at the end of the game was highest on that list. The pressure is mounting in Sacramento—it’s palpable. If the results on the court don’t improve, it is almost certain that some roster moves will be made.

Up Next: The Kings stay home to take on the Indiana Pacers on Sunday at 3 PM PST inside Golden 1 Center. Tyrese Haliburton will be in town and is sure to be ready to show the Kings organization why they shouldn’t have traded him.

Sharks Fall 3-2 in OT to Oilers, Give Up another Lead in the Third

Edmonton Oilers Connor Brown (28) scrambles for the puck against the San Jose Sharks Cody Ceci (4) in the second period at Rogers Place in Edmonton on Sat Dec 21, 2024 (Canadian Press via AP photo)

By Mary Walsh

The San Jose Sharks were defeated by the Edmonton Oilers 3-2 in overtime Saturday. Zach Hyman, Mattias Ekholm and Leon Draisaitl scored for the Oilers. Calvin Pickard made 20 saves for the win. Luke Kunin and Jan Rutta scored for the Sharks. Yaroslav Askarov made 39 saves in the loss. Askarov’s 23 saves in the second period were the most saves in one period by a Sharks goaltender since the 2015-16 season.

After the game, Sharks Head Coach Ryan Warsofsky said, of the goaltender: “He was outstanding. He’s the reason we got a point. He was seeing the puck really well, quick. He made some really big saves.”

The Sharks took the lead twice in the first period, then held it until the last minute of overtime. Warsofsky talked about how the game got away from the Sharks: “We got slow, we got put on our heels, we didn’t defend quick enough. We didn’t skate to make them move the puck a little quicker.”

Luke Kunin opened the scoring 3:23 into the game. Alexander Wennberg chased the puck all the way down the ice into the Oilers’ corner, then passed it back to the trailing Kunin for the shot. Assists went to Wennberg and Timothy Liljegren.

Zach Hyman tied the game at 7:07. Connor McDavid carriws the puck around behind the net and then sent a pass across the slot to Hyman. Assists went to McDavid and Evan Bouchard.

Jan Rutta gave the Sharks a 2-1 lead at 8:21. Jake Walman carried the puck through the neutral zone and down as far as the faceoff circle before making a pass back to Rutta at the top of the slot. Rutta scored with a snap shot down up the middle. Assists went to Walman and Macklin Celebrini.

The Sharks were outshot 9-7 in the first period, and then 23-7 in the scoreless second period. In the first period there was a single penalty called, and that was against Edmonton. In the second period, the Sharks took the only penalty.

At 19:42 of the third period, with their goaltender pulled, the Oilers tied the game. Skating down from the point, Mattias Ekholm caught a pass from Corey Perry and shot through traffic. Assists went to Perry and McDavid.

Leon Draisaitl scored gane overtime winner 18 seconds into overtime. Daraisaitl carried the puck into the zone and then passed it across the ice to Bouchard. Bouchard gave it to McDavid, who passed it back to Draisaitl for the shot.

The Sharks next play on Monday in Vancouver against the Canucks at 6:00 PM PT.

Stanford Women Looking To Diversify Their Ways After Rough Night in 84-59 Loss To No. 11 Ohio State

By Morris Phillips

SAN FRANCISCO–Kate Paye hasn’t spent two decades with the Stanford women’s basketball team without developing resilience. And that’s her makeup, not necessarily a characteristic she assumed from her mentor, legendary coach Tara VanDerveer. At this point, her Stanford experience is uniquely hers, for better or worse. And worse was Friday’s sobering loss to Ohio State at the Invisalign Bay Area Women’s Classic at Chase Center.

Paye’s response to a third, aggravating loss this month?

“I love coaching this team. There are three other teams that are here, I wouldn’t want to be in any other locker room. I love the women on our team. We have an incredible staff who work extremely hard. We have to learn from it. This is as our mindfulness coach would tell us, this is information, this is feedback. It doesn’t affect the players or the coaches that we are, the human beings that we are. We have to learn from it, and we have to work to improve,” she said.

Starting with the Cardinal’s fourth quarter defensive hiccup at LSU, Paye’s team has regressed defensively. The host Tigers shot 10 for 17 in that final period, which forced overtime and resulted in a 94-88 loss for Stanford. Rival California found the hot hand early and maintained it in an 83-63 decision that dropped Stanford to 0-1 in the ACC. The Bears set a school record with 18 made threes.

And Friday, Ohio State shot it so well that Stanford resorted to playing zone briefly to break the Buckeyes’ spell. That didn’t make a difference, nor did Stanford’s tardy and lethargic offensive attack.

“I just didn’t come out with the level of aggression I usually do,” said leading scorer Nunu Agara, who looked good in the box score with 17 points, 10 rebounds, but didn’t impress herself. “Just being mentally locked in, staying with things. I think I didn’t do that great of a job in the first half–honestly the first three quarters. I turned it up a little too late. As for our team, we were a little shell-shocked about their press.”

Paye acknowledged that her team’s success shooting the three in the season’s first five games told future opponents to emphasize shutting down Stanford’s perimeter attack. From her perspective, the response has to be to drive and attack the basket. As of yet, that counter hasn’t kicked in. The quality of the opponents hasn’t helped either. Ohio State’s hands-on press proved pesky, forcing 19 turnovers and scoring 17 points off those mistakes.

Stanford’s issues started offensively with just 19 points scored before halftime, then defensively, by allowing Ohio State 51 points after the break.

The Cardinal catch a break after Friday to be home for Christmas. After that, a winnable road trip to SMU and Clemson kicks off conference play. Paye’s mission and her team’s will be to recapture the magic and remember what makes them a formidable team.

San Jose Sharks podcast with Mary Lisa: Sharks could have their hands full with Oilers tonight at Rogers Place

Colorado Avalanche left winger Joel Kiviranta (94) congratulates goaltender MacKenzie Blackwood (39) after defeating the San Jose Sharks at Ball Arena in Denver on Fri Dec 19, 2024 (AP News photo)

On the San Jose Sharks podcast with Mary Lisa:

#1 Mary Lisa, knowing the San Jose Sharks playbook a little bit how much of advantage was it for former Colorado Avalanche goaltender MacKenzie Blackwood to defend against the Sharks on Thursday night for a 4-2 win.

#2 The Aves Joel Kiviranta scored twice in the third period as Colorado picked up three goals to erase the Sharks 2-1 lead.

#3 In your view Mary Lisa Sharks goaltender Alexander Georgiev just couldn’t stop the Aves attack but also was it the Sharks defense up front that let Georgiev down in that third period.

#4 The Sharks have given up multiple third period goals in their last five games and Sharks head coach Ryan Warsofsky said during Thursday’s morning skate that he’s disappointed the Sharks can’t close out their opponents.

#5 The Sharks battle the Edmonton Oilers at Rogers Place in Edmonton tonight. The Oilers could be a handful their in third place in the Pacific Division and are on a roll having won eight of their last ten games. They’re a loaded team.

Mary Lisa does the San Jose Sharks podcasts Saturdays at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

U Know Who It Is. UCLA!: No. 1 Bruins Win Convincingly Over Creighton At Chase Center

By Morris Phillips

SAN FRANCISCO–Coach Cori Close is greatly loved by her players, the young women she recruited to assume the quest of returning the Bruins to national prominence. Those players are likely well aware that Close hasn’t taken UCLA to the Final Four in her 13 years as head coach.

When you love your coach, and you want her to have the very best storylines, trailing an inferior opponent at halftime of a second round NCAA Tournament game is a nerve wracking situation. Compounding the scene for Kiki Rice, Angela Dugalic and the rest of the Bruins was a downcast Pauley Pavilion crowd that had experienced disappointment before.

The team’s play appeared tense, and their defense slipped. Creighton kept pushing, trying to put as many made baskets in their cookie jar as possible before the hosts snapped to. The Bluejays led 38-28 in the second quarter, and we’re still leading 44-34 in the third when Rice settled in.

“I just knew that I needed to do whatever I had to do to help my team win, whether that was feeding the ball to Lauren (Betts), scoring, doing whatever, and I think I was just focused on that,” Rice said.

Close’s tough love speech was all focus, and very little to do with her Final Four aspirations.

“At halftime, I really laid into them about the choices,” she said. “We don’t give up that many points in a half to anybody. So, we needed to just get back to doing things with our defense. I knew if we could get enough stops, we would score enough points.”

Sure enough, UCLA’s defensive intensity prevailed as Creighton scored just 21 points after the break while experiencing three lengthy droughts. The Bruins’ crowd exhaled, and the team advanced to the Sweet 16.

But they went no further, suffering a late game defeat to LSU in Albany the following week, and Close’s streak continued for another year.

“We didn’t get the shots that we wanted,” she said. “We did not execute the way that we needed to, and that’s one that’s going to sting for a really long time for me.”

A really long time wasn’t long at all for the hyper-motivated Close. Along with associate head coach Shannon LeBeauf and assistant Tony Newnan, who have been with Close since her beginning in Westwood, they hit the transfer portal with a mandate to add more of everything to put around Rice and Betts. Adding Janiah Barker from Alabama, Timea Gardiner from Oregon State, and Charlisse Leger-Walker from Washington State along with a group of highly-regarded freshman accomplished that. UCLA’s reload was simply loaded.

The Bruins opened the season running and took down reigning National Champion South Carolina in the process. A more diversified offense and relentless defense fueled an 11-0 start to the season and the Bruins ascent to No. 1 in the polls. Creighton was next on Friday at Chase Center, and the Bluejays immediately saw their opponent’s relentless ways.

“Seventy or 80 percent of it was them, but I thought we were tight and sped up offensively,” Creighton coach Jim Flanery said of UCLA’s flawless first quarter that ended with the Bruins leading 28-4.

Flanery acknowledged that the Bruins probably weren’t in the mindset of having another close call in the rematch, even if they had to play without Betts, who was out with a leg injury.

“The first quarter, I thought they played really fast and had us on our heels.”

The Bruins went on to win easily, 70-41. Their 12-0 start to the season includes just one win by fewer than 11 points. And now their first season in the Big Ten has arrived, along with two huge dates with crosstown irritant USC. A team this deep that wins with ease frequently needs an edge. Close has that covered as well.

“Nobody’s going to play perfect every single night. And bottom line is we have to have a selflessness that if it’s not my night, I’m going to celebrate it being someone else’s night,” she said.

What of the pressure of being the best team in the polls now but needing to break through in March?

“We have not arrived. And I think our ability to be relentlessly focused on being present and having a growth mindset. It is urgent that we improve today. It is urgent that I make a teammate better today.”

NHL podcast with Len Shapiro: Guenther scores twice to give Utah 2-1 win; Caps Lindgren stops 24 shots for 3-1 win over Wild; plus more NHL news

The Utah Hockey Club’s Dylan Guenther is congratulated from the Utah bench after scoring a goal in the first period against the Minnesota Wild at Xcel Energy Center in Minneapolis on Fri Dec 20, 2024 (AP News photo)

On the NHL podcast with Len Shapiro:

#1 The Utah Hockey Club’s Dylan Guenther scored twice and got a go ahead goal at 10:01 in the third period. Guenther extended his point streak to seven games in a 2-1 win over the Minnesota Wild at the Excel Energy Center in Minneapolis.

#2 The Washington Capitals goalie Charlie Lindgren stopped 24 shots and the Caps got a 3-1 win over the Carolina Hurricanes at the Capital One Center on Friday. The Capitals Connor McMichael, Aliaksei Protas, and Jakob Vranda all scored a goal and an assist.

#3 The Toronto Maple Leafs goaltender Matt Murray stopped 25 shots in his first NHL game back since Apr 2, 2023 getting the win over the Buffalo Sabres at Key Bank Center in Buffalo on Friday 6-3. it was also Murray’s first NHL win since March 23, 2023. Sabres have lost 12 straight games and have 0-9-3 during the losing streak and are 11-18-4 overall.

#4 The Montreal Canadiens Patrik Laine scored the go ahead goal at 7:58 to lead the Habs to a 4-3 win over the Detroit Red Wings at Little Caesars Pizza Arena in Detroit on Friday. Emil Heineman and Jake Evans each scored and got an assist for Montreal. Habs goaltender Cam Talbot save 24 shots.

#5 Aleksander Barkov scored with 17 seconds remaining in overtime that gave the Florida Panthers a 2-1 win over the the St Louis Blues at Amerant Bank Arena in Sunrise on Friday. Barkov got a wrist shot from the right circle during a power play right after he was sent to the penalty box for tripping the Blues Brayden Schenn at 4:17.

Len Shapiro does the NHL podcasts each Friday at http://www.sportsradioservice.com