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Tag: inside sports

  • Kings relish taking revenge on Warriors, pushing Golden State dynasty into uncertainty

    Kings relish taking revenge on Warriors, pushing Golden State dynasty into uncertainty

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    SACRAMENTO – Sacramento Kings coach Mike Brown wasn’t in a sentimental mood after his team routed Golden State 118-94 in a do-or-die play-in game on Tuesday night. 

    Sure, he spent six years as an assistant from 2016 to 2022 under Steve Kerr and helped the Warriors win three titles. 

    And yes, his former team faces a franchise-defining offseason as the dynastic trio of Stephen Curry, Draymond Green and Klay Thompson is in jeopardy of dissolving once Thompson reaches free agency.

    And of course those familiar players, who already looked awfully old and slow in the blowout, will only get older and slower as they approach the back half of their 30s. Even if they do come back, making the playoffs wouldn’t be easy. 

    So what did Brown think of his team possibly dealing the lethal blow to what was left of the famed “Death Lineup” he once coached?

    He had more important things to worry about.

    “The reality of it is, is that it’s not my problem, and it’s not my concern,” Brown said, more focused on planning for the Pelicans and the Kings’ second play-in game on Friday. “We’re getting ready for New Orleans.”

    He added that he thinks that the trio is still capable of playing great basketball: “Those three guys in my opinion are special, and I was a part of many championships and good memories with them. Whatever they decide to do at the end of the day, that’s what they decide to do.”

    The Kings players were happy with, but not overly celebratory, after dispatching the team that eliminated them in the first round last season. Keegan Murray scored a game-high 32 and hit a Splash Bros.-esque eight 3-pointers. 

    He said that the win wouldn’t take away the sting of last year’s gutting Game 7 defeat at home, but admitted that getting revenge didn’t hurt either.

    “It kind of peels the band-aid off a little bit,” Murray said. “They got us last year, and we got them this year under a different circumstance.”

    Brown, Murray and guard De’Aaron Fox all credited the team’s dedication to physicality as a key to their success on Tuesday. 

    One player they raved about was defensive savant Keon Ellis, who went from a fringe rotation player on a two-way contract to the defender who helped hold Thompson to zero points in what could be his Warriors finale. 

    Brown couldn’t help but compare the stellar stopper to Golden State’s own Draymond Green, a scrappy but unheralded defender who carved out an incredible career on high-flying offenses.  

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    Joseph Dycus

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  • Pac-12 finances: Athletic departments relied heavily on help from campus last year, but is that support misplaced or money well spent?

    Pac-12 finances: Athletic departments relied heavily on help from campus last year, but is that support misplaced or money well spent?

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    Athletic departments at the 10 public universities in the Pac-12 experienced an $81 million shortfall last year, with only five schools reporting an operating surplus.

    And that’s the good news on money matters across the conference. The situation gets much worse when university support is removed from the budgets.

    That support takes two primary forms in major college athletics: 1) direct transfers from central campus to athletic departments; and 2) money from student fees that’s allocated to athletics.

    In each case, the support is booked as revenue in accordance with the NCAA’s financial reporting rules.

    The 10 public schools in the Pac-12 closed out the 2022-23 fiscal year — the first without COVID policies for spectators — with $1.22 billion in revenue and $1.3 billion in expenses, according to financial documents obtained by the Hotline (Statements of revenues and expenses were due to the NCAA earlier this year.)

    Washington topped the list with $151.6 million in reported revenue, just $1 million more than Oregon, while Washington State was at the bottom with $79 million.

    But the revenue figure includes $138.2 million in campus support through direct transfers and student fees.

    Remove that support and the budget shortfall for the 10 public schools soars to $219.5 million.

    When Stanford’s data is added — the Cardinal was $33.3 million in the red without campus support — the total shortfall for 11 athletic departments climbs to $252.8 million.

    (The conference’s other private school, USC, did not make its athletic department budget for the 2023 fiscal year available.)

    What’s more, the $252.8 million shortfall without campus support does not include an internal loan of $31.6 million to Arizona athletics from the university that was booked as indirect, not direct, revenue.

    So the real deficit for the 11 athletic departments last year was close to $300 million.

    “Schools need to soberly address the role sports is intended to play on campus,” David Carter, an adjunct professor of sports business at USC and founder of the Sports Business Group, wrote in an email.

    Carter added that universities must “measure both the return on investment and the return on objective associated with funding athletic departments.”

    With any assessment of athletic department finances, context is critical:

    — Football and men’s basketball are typically the only sports programs in major college athletics that generate a profit. In the interest of offering broad-based opportunities, each Pac-12 school supports more than a dozen Olympics sports teams that lose money.

    — Support for athletics through direct transfers and student fees is common across major college athletics. The Pac-12’s public universities received an average of $13.8 million from central campus in the 2023 fiscal year, an amount roughly comparable to the support provided by many schools in the Power Five conferences.

    — Only a handful of athletic departments across the country generate an operating surplus without relying on any support from central campus. In the Pac-12, there is just one: Oregon, which produced a $3.8 million profit in 2023.

    Oregon’s situation stands in stark contrast to Arizona State, Cal, Colorado, Stanford and UCLA, which had deficits in excess of $30 million when campus transfers and student fees were removed from their revenue totals.

    In fact, only Washington experienced a shortfall of less than $10 million without direct support. The Huskies were just $8.7 million in the red during the 2022-23 fiscal year.

    So, how much campus support is too much?

    “That’s a complicated question,” said Andrew Zimbalist, a Smith College economics professor and author of the 2017 book Unwinding Madness: What Went Wrong with College Sports and How to Fix It.

    “Schools subsidize a lot of activities at universities. The question is whether the size is proportionate to the importance.”

    Athletic departments generally, and football teams specifically, are often the most visible arm of the 133 universities that participate in the Football Bowl Subdivision.

    There are myriad instances of success leading to increases in brand awareness, philanthropy and applications for admission, especially from out-of-state students required to pay higher tuition fees.

    Perhaps the best recent example was Colorado’s early season surge under new coach Deion Sanders last fall, which did wonders for the school’s visibility. The Buffaloes experienced a 20 percent increase in applications for enrollment in the 2024-25 school year, according to the Boulder Daily Camera.

    Was the increase entirely attributable to Sanders? Definitive conclusions are elusive, but an assistant vice chancellor told the Daily Camera that “the exposure that CU Boulder has received since Coach Prime was hired has been tremendous.”

    Because of the visibility it generates, college athletics is often described as the “front porch” for universities. Competitive success on the field and the court creates a more attractive porch.

    After all, political science lectures aren’t plastered across network television each week.

    “You could make the case that the transfers (from campus) are more of a marketing expense because athletic departments are major ambassadors for the universities,” Carter said.

    “Administrations don’t look at $25 million like it’s money specifically for branding, but they inherently believe that it’s important to have strong athletics.”

    The level of campus support across the Pac-12 ranges dramatically and skews the bottom lines in the financial data schools must report to the NCAA each winter.

    For example, Washington State reported the lowest total revenue, just $79 million, but the Cougars only received $6.8 million in direct campus support in 2023.

    Meanwhile, Colorado reported $127 million in revenue, but the figure included $29.4 million in direct transfers and student fees.

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    Jon Wilner

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  • Pelicans shoot down Warriors’ hopes of escaping lowest play-in round

    Pelicans shoot down Warriors’ hopes of escaping lowest play-in round

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    SAN FRANCISCO — Earlier this week, the Warriors shot an earth-shattering 63.4% from behind the arc to stun the Lakers.

    Now they know how it feels.

    Playing with a chance to climb up to the eighth seed in the West, the Warriors couldn’t find an answer to the Pelicans’ aerial assault. New Orleans shot 20-for-38 (52.6%). CJ McCollum alone went 8-for-13 from deep, pouring in 28 points. Draymond Green played stout individual defense on Zion Williamson, but the Pelicans star still finished with 26 points.

    The Pelicans held off a fourth-quarter push from Steph Curry and Golden State. Curry scored 16 of his 33 points in the fourth quarter, but committed seven turnovers in the game.

    Curry’s flurry came too late in a 114-109 loss. Because the Warriors (45-36) had to win both of their remaining games for a chance to advance up to eight place, they’re likely locked into the play-in round between the ninth and 10th seeded teams.

    It was a night of pandemonium in the Western Conference — both at the top and bottom. Denver blew a 23-point lead to the last-place Spurs, falling from first place to third. The Timberwolves survived a scare to Atlanta, as did the Lakers against a Grizzlies team with 13 inactive players.

    The Lakers’ win exerted pressure on both the Warriors and Kings to win; all three California teams are vying for the eighth seed.

    Golden State came out of the tunnel with life.Draymond Green stonewalled Zion Williamson inside before tossing an alley-oop off the glass to Trayce Jackson-Davis. Moments later, Steph Curry found Jackson-Davis for a dunk over Williamson.

    The Warriors opened on a 17-6 run. Both teams were on the second night of a back-to-back, but the older Warriors, at home, looked like they had more energy.

    But the younger Pelicans had fresh legs — they just needed some time to heat up. An 11-0 surge in the second quarter turned a double-digit Warriors lead into a Pelicans edge. When Steve Kerr re-inserted his starters into the game to quell the Pelicans’ run, things got even worse for Golden State.

    McCollum started raining 3s. Trey Murphy III joined him. Nobody on the Pelicans could miss, as they put up a 45-point second quarter.

    McCollum dropped 15 points in the period, each of which came from behind the arc. The Pelicans hit 10 of their 13 shots from deep as the Warriors helped too frequently off Pelicans shooters, particularly  in the corners.

    The Pelicans were taking advantage of a Warriors team often backpedaling on defense, as turnovers prevented them from getting set. Curry, a night after playing 36 minutes in Portland, committed four turnovers in the second quarter alone and five in the first half.

    Herb Jones, Jose Alvarado and Murphy blanketed him tightly, but several mistakes Curry made were unlike him. Kerr has said that an indicator of Curry being fatigued is his decision-making.

    At one point in New Orleans’ second quarter barrage, cameras caught McCollum jawing with Klay Thompson. Golden State’s sharpshooter didn’t have much of a leg to stand on in the moment, as the Pelicans won the frame by 23, taking a 62-48 lead into halftime.

    Thompson got the next word, though. His 3 in transition capped an 18-9 burst for the Warriors to open the second half. Andrew Wiggins spent more time guarding McCollum and was aggressive on the offensive end. The Warriors cut New Orleans’ lead to five and made it a game of runs.

    New Orleans had a counter. Triples from Jones, Murphy, McCollum and even Williamson quelled the Warriors’ momentum.

    The Warriors were getting crushed in the 3-point battle and in the turnover department. But they were tough on the glass, creating extra opportunities and getting to the free throw line. A Green offensive rebound created a Chris Paul 3-pointer, inching the Warriors within six early in the fourth. Then he found Thompson for another 3 on the wing.

    The Chase Center crowd erupted when Curry checked back in, his team down 92-89 with 7:57 left. Moments later, when Curry nailed a step-back 3 over Williamson, the building got all sorts of ideas.

    But Curry committed another turnover, Williamson went into freight train mode, and Murphy converted a tough 3 of his own. Just like that, New Orleans pushed its lead back up to nine. Then Jones found himself wide open in the corner for yet another 3.

    Curry drilled another step-back and sandwiched it with two layups. He certainly didn’t look tired anymore. Thompson stripped Williamson and Wiggins got to the line to bring the Warriors within three as the clock ticked under 90 seconds.

    The Chase Center crowd rose to its feet. McCollum sat them down right away with his eighth 3. Curry responded with his seventh. Back and forth. 112-109.

    The Warriors had a chance to tie the game with 20 seconds left, but Curry rushed a one-handed 3-pointer over two defenders. The Warriors had the last run, but it wasn’t big enough.

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    Danny Emerman

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  • Penguins’ Crosby is at his best right now. That’s bad news for the Sharks

    Penguins’ Crosby is at his best right now. That’s bad news for the Sharks

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    SAN JOSE – The San Jose Sharks have gained some ground on the Chicago Blackhawks in the NHL standings in recent days but are still on the verge of finishing last overall and clinching a 25.5 percent chance of winning the upcoming NHL Draft Lottery.

    On the other hand, this month hasn’t brought much good news to the Sharks (19-51-9) in terms of their two conditional draft picks, with Sidney Crosby making sure that at least one is diminishing in value.

    As part of last August’s Erik Karlsson trade, the Sharks hold Pittsburgh’s top-10 protected first-round draft pick this year. It looked like a Sharks coup on March 28, as the Penguins were seven points out of a playoff spot and in 22nd place in the league’s overall standings, or just outside the bottom 10.

    But since then, the Penguins have gone 5-0-2, and with their 6-5 overtime win over the Detroit Red Wings on Thursday, have moved into the second and final wild-card spot in the Eastern Conference.

    Starting on March 24, Crosby has led the NHL with 20 points in 10 games.

    Thursday, Crosby assisted on Karlsson’s overtime goal, giving him a goal and two assists for the game. That moved him into 10th place in the league’s all-time scoring list with 591 goals and 1,000 assists.

    “He plays his best when the stakes are high like all of the all-time greats that have played the game,” Pittsburgh coach Mike Sullivan said of Crosby. “He’s one of those guys.”

    The Penguins (37-30-12) are now 17th in the overall standings but can still finish as low as 21st. That’s only if they cool off over their last three games and the teams immediately below them – Washington, Detroit, Philadelphia, and Minnesota – string together some wins. Three points separate those five teams.

    Ideally, from a Sharks perspective, the Penguins would now land somewhere between 12th and 16th in the draft order. If the Penguins make the playoffs, that first-round pick the Sharks own could be anywhere from 17th to 32nd overall.

    That would be less than ideal for a Sharks team that wants to have as much choice and flexibility as possible with that second first-round pick.

    Per moneypuck.com, the Penguins now have a 57.2% chance of making the playoffs. They have games remaining against Boston, Nashville, and the New York Islanders.

    “He’s a big part of our game and he’s a big reason that we are in the situation we’re in,” Karlsson said of Crosby. “We’re going to need him playing like this down the stretch here to have a chance.”

    After their 3-1 win over the Seattle Kraken on Thursday, the Sharks moved to within four points of the Blackhawks for 31st place in the NHL’s overall standings. That’s down from being seven points back just four days ago. San Jose has three games left, and Chicago has four.

    On Friday, if the Blackhawks – now 16-19-4 at home – beat the Nashville Predators at United Center, then San Jose will be locked into 32nd place in the league standings, giving it a 25.5 percent chance of winning the draft lottery, a date for which has not been set.

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    Curtis Pashelka

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  • California bill could expose what Title IX lawsuit calls ‘shocking’ gender inequities in how college athletes are paid

    California bill could expose what Title IX lawsuit calls ‘shocking’ gender inequities in how college athletes are paid

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    While the biggest games of the Final Four will spotlight athletic prowess on the basketball court this weekend, it’s undeniable that the rising tide of players-turned-influencers inking brand deals and social media campaigns has helped pull even more eyes to the game.

    But even as women’s teams in basketball and beyond are relishing a recent surge in attention — at times outshining their male counterparts — it’s not exactly clear that compensation has been equitable across gender or sport.

    That’s why state Sen. Nancy Skinner, D-Oakland, has authored legislation that aims to increase transparency of the monetization of college athletes’ name, image and likeness (NIL) five years after her first-in-the-nation bill initially enshrined the right to get paid for their play in California and influenced states across the country to follow suit.

    In January, Skinner introduced SB 906 to “bring transparency to NIL deals in California college sports and raise awareness about gender equity” in those agreements.

    Rather than mandate any particular mechanism to ensure equal pay, the bill would require that the private, third-party companies that oftentimes manage a college’s NIL deals — dubbed “collectives,” which are outside the purview of any one school or organization — disclose more information about monetization. That data would include compensation totals, the value of goods and services given to the student-athlete and their immediate family, the sports teams involved, and players’ gender.

    Postsecondary institutions would then scrub any identifying information from that data and share it publicly, compiling full-team totals annually for each sport, broken down by gender.

    “We don’t have the information as to whether women are now getting a lot less of the pie, whether these collectives are primarily funding men, whether it’s disproportionate over the women athletes, and if it is creating a very un-level playing field,” Skinner said. “Will the information we get from my bill trigger Title IX or not? I don’t know, but until we have some information we’re not going to know.”

    This bill is an expansion of Skinner’s work in 2019 when Gov. Gavin Newsom signed SB 206, known as the Fair Pay to Play Act, which was the first time student-athletes were given the right to receive financial compensation for their involvement in sports. Additionally, these rights were expanded to community college athletes after SB 26 was enacted in 2021.

    Similar laws subsequently spread to other states, and NCAA officials allowed all of the organization’s athletes to take advantage of NIL contracts by July 2021.

    Prior to this rule change, the only way college athletes were compensated for their play was through scholarships doled out by individual schools and complied with Title IX regulations to ensure equitable application across gender.

    At least 250 collectives — financed through contributions from alumni, boosters, businesses and fans — have been formed nationwide. These organizations already have helped usher in millions of dollars in sponsorships for several female athletes.

    In NCAA women’s basketball, for example, Iowa star Caitlin Clark leads the roster with a $3.2 million valuation from NIL deals with Gatorade, Nike, State Farm, Xfinity and Buick, according to an analysis by college sports site On3.

    Meanwhile, LSU phenom Angel Reese, who recently announced her move to the WNBA next year, has amassed $1.8 million from NIL deals with companies such as Beats by Dre, Goldman Sachs, Tampax and Reebok, while UConn’s Paige Bueckers has earned $652,000 in NIL earnings from partners such as Dunkin’, Nike, Bose and Gatorade.

    For comparison, Sports World News reported that Bronny James, the son of Lebron James, was the top earning collegiate men’s basketball player this past season with a net worth of at least $5 million, with most of those earnings tied to NIL deals while playing for USC.

    However, those emerging stars are the exception rather than the rule for most student-athletes.

    Skinner said the rationale behind her current bill is to provide policymakers data to determine whether or not these ever-growing “collectives” are shortchanging other female athletes or women’s sports in general — the first step in ensuring that all student-athletes are on a level playing field.

    SB 906 is still working its way through the California Legislature, with the next hearing scheduled for April 16.

    If the bill is signed into law and subsequently reveals Title IX violations or other inequities in the coming years, more targeted laws may follow — an effort that other lawmakers will have to carry forward after Skinner terms out in 2024.

    There’s already evidence that pay isn’t equal for men and women student-athletes.

    In December, 32 female athletes playing for the University of Oregon’s beach volleyball and club rowing teams filed a Title IX lawsuit against the school. That complaint, pending in federal court, alleges that the Ducks’ administration treats “its varsity male student-athletes shockingly better than its varsity female student-athletes,” adding that the school has been “depriving them of equal treatment and benefits, equal athletic financial aid and equal opportunities to participate in violation of Title IX.”

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    Katie Lauer

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  • When will the San Jose Sharks-Los Angeles Kings be great again?

    When will the San Jose Sharks-Los Angeles Kings be great again?

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    SAN JOSE – A small but boisterous group of Los Angeles Kings fans took over a section in the upper deck of SAP Center. Their chants began before the game ever started, and only grew louder after their team scored a pair of first period goals against the San Jose Sharks 18 seconds apart.

    It was one of the few reminders Thursday of the once-great rivalry that existed between the Sharks and Kings, one that’s gone mostly dormant in recent years.

    The Sharks went on to lose 2-1 to the Kings on Thursday, marking their sixth loss in seven games to Los Angeles, which moved one step closer to clinching a playoff spot for the third straight season. The Sharks, meanwhile, moved one step closer to officially finishing in 32nd place in the NHL’s overall standings.

    Klim Kostin scored his eighth goal of the season with 1:52 left in the third period to cut the Kings’ lead to one. That drew a rise out of the announced crowd of 12,266, but the Sharks could get no closer, as they lost for the 11th time in the last 12 games.

    The Sharks and Kings met in the playoffs four times in six years between 2011 and 2016, paving the way for the geographical rivalry to become one of the most heated in the NHL. Full buildings, star players, deep teams, and all kinds of hate.

    It was hard, heavy hockey as both teams gave no quarter, and didn’t ask for any in return. Just great theatre.

    So, when will it happen again?

    When both teams are good at the same time, which might not be for a while.

    The Kings began their rebuild in 2018, turning over their roster as they began to refill the cupboard with prospects like Akil Thomas, who scored his first NHL goal Thursday, Arthur Kaliyev,
    Quinton Byfield (after winning a lottery), Alex Laferriere, and Brandt Clarke. They gave a big contract extension to Adrian Kempe, acquired Kevin Fiala via trade, and signed Phillip Danault as a free agent.

    The Sharks, for all intents and purposes, really didn’t start the rebuild until early 2022 when they cut ties with Evander Kane. Other veterans like Brent Burns, Timo Meier, Erik Karlsson and Tomas Hertl were all gone within two years.

    Really, the only Sharks remaining from the last playoff series with the Kings are Marc-Edouard Vlasic and Logan Couture.

    The Sharks are building around a core that doesn’t have much of a history with the Kings, outside of some of the battles the Barracuda and Ontario Reign had in recent years.

    It’s going to take time for the Sharks to become competitive again, and who knows when they’ll make the playoffs and meet in a playoff series.

    Most of the central figures in the hey day of the rivalry are long gone.

    Stars like Anze Kopitar and Drew Doughty, so instrumental to the rivalry, are still in Los Angeles. But Jonathan Quick was traded and Dustin Brown, who Sharks fans hated, retired.

    Conversely, players Kings fans did not like, such as Joe Thornton, Joe Pavelski and Burns, are no longer with the team.

    Do Kings fans really hate any of the new Sharks players? Do Sharks really loathe any of the new era Kings?

    We’ll see how good the Kings are once the Sharks’ window for being a competitive team opens up again.

    The game’s changed, too. There’s less fighting overall, and some of those heavy players have been replaced, smaller skilled players.

    Both home buildings used to be absolutely packed for games between the Sharks and Kings. Thursday’s game drew and it was that small section of Kings fans that made the most noise.

    Sharks fans chimed in with the occasional “Beat L.A.” But the home didn’t do much to stir up the home crowd, with just 14 shots on goal in three periods.

    Luke Kunin did fight Andreas Englund at the 12:32 mark of the second period, but the Sharks didn’t gain much momentum from that dust-up.

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    Curtis Pashelka

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  • Prep roundup: Acalanes’ Peter Thorn pitches no-hitter to beat rival Miramonte

    Prep roundup: Acalanes’ Peter Thorn pitches no-hitter to beat rival Miramonte

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    Baseball

    No. 3 Acalanes 1, Miramonte 0

    Hard to imagine a hotter pitcher than Acalanes senior Peter Thorn.

    The big fella — he’s listed as 6-foot-4, 260 pounds — was impressive before he stepped onto the mound Thursday and only enhanced his resume in a nonleague game against rival Miramonte.

    Thorn pitched a no-hitter with seven strikeouts and one walk as the Dons prevailed — barely — to improve to 11-0 on the season.

    Miramonte is 4-7.

    Acalanes scored its only run in the second inning as Mason Zirkel doubled, moved to third on a passed ball and crossed home plate on a wild pitch.

    Thorn took care of the rest, throwing 85 pitches, 53 for strikes, as he lowered ERA to 0.97.

    In 21 2/3 innings this season, Thorn has allowed three earned runs while striking out 17 and walking three.

    Acalanes plays host to Antioch on Saturday.

    Miramonte will be at home on Saturday to face San Leandro.

    No. 1 Granada 8, College Park 2

    Granada’s Parker Warner, shown here in a file photo, pitched six solid innings in a win over College Park on Thursday. (Ray Chavez/Bay Area News Group) 

    Primed for a letdown, or maybe an upset alert?

    Nope.

    It was more of the same for Granada as the Bay Area News Group’s top-ranked team improved to 12-0 with a nonleague victory at home over College Park, which had won in dramatic fashion on Wednesday against No. 10 Heritage.

    Granada scored a run in the third to pull even 2-2 and added four in the fifth to take command behind two hits and two RBIs from A.J. Martinez and six solid innings from ace Parker Warner.

    Vincent “Tino” Vasell homered for College Park, which fell to 4-5.

    No. 4 Valley Christian 7, Bishop Verot 2

    Valley Christian lost its first game this week at the Bishop Gorman tournament in Las Vegas, then won its next three, including Thursday’s finale over Bishop Verot of Fort Myers, Florida.

    The Warriors scored a run in the first and three in the third for a 4-0 lead. They added two in the fourth and one in the fifth to extend the cushion to 7-1.

    Tatum Marsh led the way with two triples and three RBIs and Hunter Fujimoto added two hits and one RBI as Valley improved to 13-2.

    Bishop Verot is 12-4.

    No. 5 De La Salle 9, St. Francis 4

    Two years ago, these teams met for the Northern California Division I championship, a game De La Salle rallied late to win.

    The Spartans had another comeback in this one as they bounced back from a tough league loss on Wednesday to Dougherty Valley to send struggling St. Francis to another defeat.

    De La Salle scored seven in the sixth to turn a 4-2 deficit into a five-run triumph.

    Alec Blair, making up for lost time after a knee injury during the basketball playoffs sidelined him for several weeks, went 3 for 4 with an RBI. The junior also scored a run.

    Hank Tripaldi tripled, knocked in two runs and scored twice and Ethan Sullivan had two hits and also scored two runs as De La Salle improved to 7-3.

    Gino Cappellazzo had a triple and drove in two for St. Francis, which dropped to 3-8-1.

    No. 6 Bellarmine 7, Oak Ridge 5

    Bellarmine rallied from a 5-3 deficit after three innings to close out the Boras Classic in Sacramento with a victory over Oak Ridge.

    The Bells went 2-2 in the tournament.

    Trailing by two, Bellarmine scored four in the fourth and shut out Oak Ridge over the final four frames.

    DJ Dunne went 2 for 4 with three RBIs and Sawyer Stout had a hit and two RBIs to help the Bells improve to 9-3.

    Oak Ridge is 5-7.

    No. 8 James Logan 2, Newark Memorial 0

    Westley Vega pitched a three-hitter with seven strikeouts to lead Logan to a victory at home over Newark Memorial in Mission Valley Athletic League play.

    The sophomore improved to 4-0 on the season with a 0.64 ERA.

    Benjamin Tower and Joshua Parras knocked in Logan’s runs as the Colts moved to 9-1 overall and 4-0 in the league.

    Newark Memorial is 6-5, 2-2.

    Pioneer 10, Branham 8

    Pioneer's Nate Tichy (14) celebrates scoring a run off of a hit by Pioneer's Noah Morales (15), to make the score 10-8, against Branham in the seventh inning at Branham High School in San Jose, Calif., on Thursday, March 28, 2024. Morales was thrown out at second. (Nhat V. Meyer/Bay Area News Group)
    Pioneer’s Nate Tichy celebrates scoring a run off of a hit by Noah Morales, which put the Mustangs in front 10-8 in the seventh inning on Thursday against Branham. (Nhat V. Meyer/Bay Area News Group) 

    Pioneer scored two in the top of the seventh to break a tie score as the Mustangs defeated host Branham in a Blossom Valley Athletic League Mt. Hamilton Division game.

    Noah Morales had three hits and three RBIs and Adam Larson and Andrew Watters each had two RBIs to lead Pioneer.

    Devin Gonzales went 4 for 4 with two doubles and scored two runs for Branham.

    Pioneer improved to 7-6, 4-2. Branham is 9-4, 3-3.

    Softball

    No. 1 St. Francis 7, Otay Ranch 2

    Otay Ranch of Chula Vista scored two in the top of the first inning. After that, it was all St. Francis as the Lancers cruised to a victory at the Michelle Carew Classic in Southern California.

    St. Francis scored two in the second to tie the score and five in the fourth to put the game away.

    Peyton Tsao, Shannon Keighran, Kate Munnerlyn and Hayden Hummel hit home runs for St. Francis, which improved to 8-0.

    Otay Ranch is 2-7.

    No. 1 St. Francis 2, Roosevelt-Eastvale 0

    Kate Munnerlyn pitched a two-hitter and Isabella Sandoval and Rebecca Quinn each drove in a run as St. Francis won its second game of the day at the Michelle Carew Classic.

    St. Francis is 9-0. Roosevelt is 8-7.

    Carondelet 7, No. 6 San Ramon Valley 4

    Angela Gates, a freshman, went 4 for 4 with two doubles and three RBIs and sophomore Anna Gustafson had three hits and scored a run as Carondelet rallied to turn back San Ramon Valley in EBAL play.

    Carondelet also got a home run, a double and three RBIs from Sydnie DeMartini.

    Sophia Jin, Brianna Schapiro and Addie Layous each had two hits for SRV, which fell to 7-4, 4-1.

    Carondelet is 5-4, 2-3.

    No. 10 Hillsdale 8, Woodside 0

    Claire Shelton had two hits, scored three runs and knocked in two and Alexis Kuka pitched five scoreless innings to lead Hillsdale past Woodside in a Peninsula Athletic League Bay Division game.

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    Darren Sabedra

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  • Bay Bridge series: Oakland A’s flop against SF Giants in return to Oakland

    Bay Bridge series: Oakland A’s flop against SF Giants in return to Oakland

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    OAKLAND –  The Oakland A’s fans who braved the blustery winds on Monday endured a dismal and all-too-familiar sight: their overmatched home team flailing at the plate and on the mound.

    In the team’s first, albeit preseason, game at the Coliseum of the year, the A’s were defeated by the San Francisco Giants 4-1 in the first of a two-game series between the Bay Area rivals. 

    A’s rookie outfielder Lawrence Butler broke up a no-hitter in the sixth inning with a single, and gave the fans something else to cheer about when he stole second on a flyball. 

    Abraham Toro’s RBI single drove in Butler and elicited the closest thing to a roar the Oakland portion of the reported 7,850 fans could muster during what could be the first home game of the team’s last season in Oakland. 

    Promising second-baseman Zack Gelof was 0-1 and drew a walk, while 2023 All-Star Brent Rooker struck out in two of his three at-bats. 

    Second-year righthander Mason Miller lit up the radar gun in the top of the ninth. The 25-year-old struck out the side using a fastball that touched 101 MPH.

    The A’s dropped to 13-14 in spring training, while the Giants improved to 14-11.

    The high-spending Giants are in many ways the anthesis of the A’s, and it was one of their high-profile additions that perplexed Oakland’s overmatched bunch of youngsters and low-cost veterans. 

    Ex-Cardinal Jordan Hicks, the recent recipient of a four-year, $44 million contract, struck out 10 A’s in five innings of hitless work. 

    JP Sears had a tougher time, allowing two home runs to Giants catcher Tom Wilson in 3.2 innings. The 28-year-old also walked and struck out three while throwing 70 pitches. 

    “I’m not super-thrilled with the results, but I feel good about my body and my workload, and how I feel going into Saturday,” Sears told media.

    Sears didn’t have his best stuff on Monday, but said he has both high standards and what he considered achievable goals going into the regular season. 

    “I’m going to keep it simple, which is trying to get to 30 starts and make it into the sixth or seventh inning every game,” Sears said. 

    After an Austin Slater sacrifice fly and Wilmer Flores belted a home run off A’s reliever Michael Kelly, the offense stayed dormant until Hicks exited in at the end of the sixth. 

    Oakland will take the trip across the Bay Bridge to Oracle Park for the San Francisco portion of the home-and-home series. 

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    Joseph Dycus

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  • San Jose Sharks collapse in historic fashion, lose in OT

    San Jose Sharks collapse in historic fashion, lose in OT

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    SAN JOSE – Devin Cooley nearly earned his first career NHL win for his hometown San Jose Sharks inside the arena he visited dozens of times as a kid.

    Of course, it couldn’t be that easy. Nothing has been for the Sharks this season.

    The Sharks took a four-goal lead early in the second period, frittered it all away, then saw Seth Jones score at the 18-second mark of overtime to give the Chicago Blackhawks a stunning 5-4 win on Saturday before a sellout crowd of 17,435 at SAP Center.

    In 2,749 games as a franchise, including playoffs, the Sharks’ loss on Saturday marked the first time in team history that they led by as many as four goals and still lost.

    In a season of excruciating lows for the Sharks (16-46-8), Saturday’s loss had to be the most gutting.

    “You can never take your foot off the pedal,” Sharks coach David Quinn said. “I don’t think we did it too much, but enough to get them back in the game.

    “Overall, I liked our game. They were opportunistic, and we got a little bit away from what we were doing early in the game to build the lead that we did. But they made plays when they needed to.”

    Thomas Bordeleau scored twice in the first period and Fabian Zetterlund had two goals and an assist, but the fragile Sharks’ losing streak now is at seven games as they fell five points back of the Blackhawks (20-46-5) for 31st place in the NHL standings.

    “Just need to play 60 minutes the same way, stay aggressive,” Bordeleau said. “We can’t be losing that game.”

    It first appeared that Saturday’s game become a rare laugher in the Sharks’ favor.

    But after Zetterlund scored his second goal of the game and his 20th of the season, firing a wrist shot past Chicago goalie Petr Mrazek to give San Jose a 4-0 lead at the 1:24 mark of the second period, the Blackhawks started to find their legs.

    Ex-Sharks winger Ryan Donato scored his 11th of the season at the 6:45 mark of the second period, and Tyler Johnson added his 16th of the season.

    Jones’ fifth goal of the season at the 6:20 mark of the third period cut San Jose’s lead to one — a shot that Cooley wanted back.

    “When I get really excited I start to sit back really low and that opens up holes underneath, and so every single day we’ve been working to be more upright and it seals the holes,” Cooley said. “I knew exactly what I needed to do and instead I sat back and it goes right through the arm.”

    Phillipp Kurashev then scored with 47 seconds left in the third period to tie the game 4-4, completely demoralizing the Sharks.

    No player felt worse about Saturday’s collapse than Cooley, the Los Gatos native who had about dozen family members in attendance.

    Cooley made nine saves in the first period but stopped just 17 of 21 shots in the second and third periods. Jones’ game-winner came on the first shot in overtime.

    “The team was dialed in. I thought they played amazing,” said Cooley, who was making his second career NHL start, “and I just couldn’t make the saves I needed to.”

    Cooley, 26, a Los Gatos native, became the first individual from Santa Clara County to play for the Sharks when he started for San Jose last Sunday in Chicago. He made 26 saves in what turned into a 5-2 Blackhawks win.

    After Saturday, his future with the Sharks is cloudy at best. The team, now with 12 games left, might also want to get a look at another goalie in the system, perhaps Eetu Makiniemi with the Barracuda to back up Mackenzie Blackwood, who will almost certainly start Tuesday’s home game against the Dallas Stars.

    Cooley needs a contract for next season, and it might not come from the Sharks who already have Blackwood, Vitek Vanacek, Magnus Chrona and Georgi Romanov locked up. Makiniemi, who came to San Jose in 2022 in the trade that saw Brent Burns go to the Carolina Hurricanes, is a restricted free agent.

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    Curtis Pashelka

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  • Prep roundup: Valley Christian baseball held to one hit, somehow wins 6-2

    Prep roundup: Valley Christian baseball held to one hit, somehow wins 6-2

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    Baseball

    Valley Christian 6, Sacred Heart Cathedral 2

    Hunter Fujimoto’s line drive into center wasn’t just a double that cleared the bases on Friday afternoon. 

    It was Valley Christian’s only hit of the day. 

    One hit was enough for the Bay Area News Group’s No. 1 team, which avenged its loss at Sacred Heart Cathedral earlier in the week with the team’s 10th victory in 11 games this season.

    Brock Ketelsen got plunked by a pitch with the bases loaded to get Valley Christian’s first run across in the fourth inning, and then Nathan Choi endured a similar fate to drive in a second run. 

    Luke Osuna-Summers took four consecutive out-of-the-zone pitches to walk in Valley’s third run, and then Fujimoto made it 6-1 with his double.

    Valley Christian drew seven walks and was hit by three pitches in its West Catholic Athletic League victory.

    Longtime Valley Christian coach John Diatte said that, while remarkable, this victory is not unprecedented. 

    “We have thrown a no-hitter and lost, and been no-hit and won,” Diatte told the Bay Area News Group via text. “Baseball is a crazy game.”

    Joey Valencia put SHC up 1-0 in the second inning, but the Fightin’ Irish got very little offense after that, one Aaron Louis home run notwithstanding. 

    Valley Christian pitcher Rohan Kasanagotu was a big reason why, pitching a complete game, striking out seven and walking none. 

    Sacred Heart Cathedral fell to 7-5, 1-3.

    No. 8 Serra 12, Archbishop Riordan 0

    Serra senior Ian Armstrong had a day to remember at the plate in the Padres’ rout of Archbishop Riordan. He hit two home runs and drove in five as Serra improved to 9-1.

    Ian Josephson had two RBIs, and Jake Downing scored three runs for the San Mateo program. Sam Kretsch pitched five innings and allowed just two hits while striking out six. 

    No. 6 Bellarmine 2, No. 9 Archbishop Mitty 1

    Sawyer Stout’s seventh-inning double gave Bellarmine a dramatic walk-off victory over its San Jose rival.

    Mitty took a 1-0 lead in the fourth inning when Makoa Sniffen doubled into right field. Bellarmine’s Nolan Randol answered in the bottom of the frame with a double to left. 

    Arkansas commit Wade Mountz pitched 2 2/3 innings of scoreless relief, striking out four and not allowing a hit for the Bells. On the other side, Mitty’s Lukas Pintar struck out six in five innings. 

    Bellarmine improved to 7-1, 3-1 and Mitty dropped to 6-5-1, 1-2-1. 

    No. 15 Amador Valley 1, Monte Vista 0

    Amador Valley pitchers Jason Alonso and Brennan Baptist won a pitching duel with Monte Vista’s Rohan French in a hard-fought East Bay Athletic League matchup. 

    Alonso and French combined to allow two hits and just three walks, while French gave up two hits and struck out five in a complete game. 

    Kyle Barbera scored the only run of the game when he reached home safely after a Monte Vista error on a ground ball. Amador Valley improved to 6-4, 2-2.

    Monte Vista fell to 4-5, 1-3. 

    Foothill 20, Dougherty Valley 4

    Foothill had as many hits as it did runs in a run-rule victory over EBAL opponent Dougherty Valley. Senior Nate Novitske hit a home run and had six RBIs for the Falcons, who also got home runs from Austin Harris and Tanner Tarpley. Foothill improved to 7-4, 3-1.

    Dougherty Valley dropped to 3-8, 1-3. 

    Irvington 5, American 2

    Brayden Jaksa was 3 for 3 with one walk and one RBI as the Vikings made it three wins in their last four games. Shortstop Ryan Johnson was 2 for 4 with two RBIs and Benjamin Walkup also had an RBI. Eric Keesis and Carson Rice each had two hits for American. 

    Silver Creek 4, Del Mar 3

    Giovanni Mejia and Michael Fonseca each drove in one run as Silver Creek slipped past Del Mar. Keith Truong and Iverson Alvernaz also had two hits apiece for the Raiders. Del Mar’s Kyle McClements went 2 for 3 with two RBIs. Silver Creek improved to 5-6 and Del Mar dropped to 2-5. 

    Softball

    Los Gatos 2, Mountain View 1

    Los Gatos rallied from an early deficit by pushing a run across the plate in the fourth and fifth innings to come through with the victory. 

    Mili Patel placed a single into right field to drive in Elia Grisanti and put Mountain View up 1-0 in the top of the third.

    Tessa Lilienstein took advantage of a dropped third strike and scored to tie the game for Los Gatos in the bottom of the fourth inning, and then Annika Norquist crushed a double into right to take the lead in the fifth. 

    Norquist, just a freshman, was exceptional in the circle. She pitched a complete game and allowed just four hits with zero walks. Los Gatos improved to 7-2 while Mountain View dropped to 4-5. 

    Leigh 4, Westmont 1

    Elliana Snyder was 2 for 3 with two RBIs and one double as Leigh took care of business against Westmont. Junior Sophia Gandara also had an RBI for the Longhorns improved to 5-4, and Camryn Manning-Alarcon swiped two of Leigh’s seven stolen bases. Gandara struck out 12 in a complete game as Westmont fell to 1-10. 

    Mt. Eden 15, Tennyson 0

    Jasmine Cruz was 3 for 3 with four runs scored and two RBIs as Mt. Eden run-ruled Tennyson. Teammate Andrea Toledo was 2 for 3 with three RBIs, and Kealani Temoche, Daniella Montes and Shelby Anne Newcomb all had two hits. Toledo struck out 10 and allowed just two hits. 

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    Joseph Dycus

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  • West Valley celebrates 33-0 state championship season, sets sights on future 

    West Valley celebrates 33-0 state championship season, sets sights on future 

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    SARATOGA – They’ve heard it from classmates, teachers and even counselors. 

    Sophomore Elijah Mahi says he and the rest of the West Valley College men’s basketball team has received plaudits from all sides after they powered the program to its first state championship last weekend.

    “We’ve been getting incredible praise from everybody around the school for finally winning,” Mahi said Wednesday. “It’s been amazing, even though it’s only been a few days so far. It’s been amazing love from the school and everybody.”

    Coach Danny Yoshikawa has also been swamped with congratulatory texts and emails from hundreds, including those from a slew of elated alums and former players, after the program’s 59-51 victory over College of the Sequoias on Sunday in Southern California. 

    “There’s been a lot of excitement,” Yoshikawa said. “When I woke up on Monday morning, there were like 500 text messages. It’s been insane.”

    The final steps of the journey to a 33-0 record and championship glory took the Vikings far from their pristine Saratoga campus. 

    West Valley finished its perfect season at Mt. San Antonio College in Walnut, where the Vikings defeated Cerro Coso of Ridgecrest in the quarterfinals on Friday and then got past Yuba College in the semifinals on Saturday. 

    In the Saratoga powerhouse’s sixth appearance in the championship game, its third under  Yoshikawa, the Vikings finally staked their claim as the state’s best.

    Mahi scored a game-high 30 points in his West Valley finale before moving on to Santa Clara University. 

    The Toronto native admitted that maintaining the perfect record wasn’t the reason the team felt extra pressure to win. 

    “Coach Yosh, he’s been at West Valley for years. We were really trying to win for Coach,” Mahi said.

    Yoshikawa had recently led the program to the 2022 state title game, a loss to City College of San Francisco. 

    He brought in key players such as Mahi and Clayton Valley Charter star Jeremiah Dargan that summer to form the nucleus of the championship team. 

    “This group of guys has been unreal,” the coach said. “They brought that championship approach every single night.”

    The team celebrated the championship by spraying water bottles everywhere, to the point that Mahi described the postgame locker room as a “swimming pool.” 

    That wasn’t the only reason the West Valley team’s eyes got a little watery.

    “I was crying tears of joy, and coach Yosh shed a couple, too,” Mahi said. “I think we all did.”

    Winning it all was cause for celebration, but it was not a stunning outcome for a program with a rich tradition of success dating to the 1980s under former coach Bob Burton.

    “That standard was set by coach Burton,” Yoshikawa said. “We’re just trying to carry on that tradition, a standard of excellence.”

    Mahi isn’t the only player who will move on this summer. Dargan will leave the Bay Area for the University of Montana, and Yoshikawa says 6-foot-11 big man Shakir Odunewu has offers from four-year colleges and is expected to move on after a great freshman season.

    “I’m meeting with my staff in 45 minutes to talk about the rebuild,” Yoshikawa said on Wednesday afternoon. “We’ve had our few days (to celebrate), but now we’re ready to move on.”

    That rebuild won’t start completely from scratch. 

    Las Lomas alum Jake Davis, Oakland Tech’s Robel Zemmo and Independence graduate Donavyn Washington are all expected to be back for their sophomore seasons. 

    Mahi, who now considers the South Bay his second home, believes Yoshikawa should have no problem getting talented newcomers to join the state champs. 

    “I’d hope that a lot of young players think about West Valley, now that we’ve done what we’ve done,” Mahi said.

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    Joseph Dycus

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  • ‘Unacceptable’ start dooms Sharks in loss to Columbus Blue Jackets

    ‘Unacceptable’ start dooms Sharks in loss to Columbus Blue Jackets

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    The San Jose Sharks came alive a little bit too late Saturday night.

    With the Sharks looking listless for most of the first two periods and trailing the Columbus Blue Jackets by two goals, defenseman Henry Thrun scored at the 11:42 mark of the third period to give his team a badly needed spark.

    But the Sharks could not find the equalizer as Columbus goalie Daniil Tarasov made 39 saves to help hand San Jose a 4-2 loss on Saturday at Nationwide Arena.

    After the Sharks pulled goalie Magnus Chrona for the extra attacker, Alex Nylander scored an empty net goal with 1:05 left in regulation time to seal the Blue Jackets victory.

    “Just really not engaged physically,” Sharks coach David Quinn said of the first period. “I thought we give them way too much room, way too much respect. It was easy for them, too easy.

    “But I thought as the game went on, we got more engaged, we were more physical when we needed to be.”

    The Sharks now continue their road trip Sunday in Chicago against Connor Bedard and the Blackhawks.

    “We’ve got to get ready from the start. Our first period is not acceptable,” said Sharks winger Fabian Zetterlund, who scored his 18th of the season in the second period, of Saturday’s loss. “We know that and we’ve got to get better for tomorrow’s game.”

    Chrona, making his fifth straight start for the Sharks with Mackenzie Blackwood still on injured reserve, finished with 16 saves as San Jose lost for the 12th time in 13 games.

    The Sharks were down 2-0 in the second period when Zetterlund scored at the 11:48 mark to cut the Blue Jackets’ lead to one.

    But Johnny Gaudreau scored the eventual game-winner just 3:15 later, collecting a loose puck off the end boards and beating Chrona to give Columbus its two-goal lead back.

    Nylander and Gaudreau each had three points and linemate Boone Jenner had a goal and an assist in the win.

    The Blue Jackets (23-33-11) have now beaten the Sharks (16-43-7) in five of their last six meetings dating back to the start of the 2021-2022 season.

    Mikael Granlund and Mario Ferraro assisted on Zetterlund’s goal, and Kevin Labanc assisted on Thrun’s goal for his first point in 10 games since Jan. 13 when he scored against the Ottawa Senators.

    The Sharks lost 4-3 to the Blue Jackets on Feb. 17 in San Jose, as Jenner scored with 13 seconds left in the third period to put Columbus ahead to stay.

    The loss was the first of nine straight for the Sharks, who entered Saturday in last place in the NHL’s overall standings. The Blackhawks (18-44-5) are the NHL’s 31st-place team.

    Chrona entered Saturday with a 1-3-1 record and a .897 save percentage in five games this month. He started the first two games of this road trip, losses to the Philadelphia Flyers and Pittsburgh Penguins, in which he stopped 63 of 71 shots for a .887 save percentage.

    INJURY UPDATE: Defenseman Jan Rutta and forward Mike Hoffman, both injured, sat out another game Saturday. Rutta has missed four straight games with a lower-body injury and it’s unclear if he’ll be available to play Sunday in Chicago or Tuesday in Nashville. Hoffman (mouth injury) missed his third straight game.

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    Curtis Pashelka

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  • How one Maverick could break a Wilt Chamberlain record vs. Warriors with Draymond out

    How one Maverick could break a Wilt Chamberlain record vs. Warriors with Draymond out

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    DALLAS — The Warriors could be on the wrong end of niche NBA history on Wednesday night in the American Airlines Center.

    Daniel Gafford, the Mavericks’ 7-foot center, entered the Warriors-Mavericks matchup having made 28 consecutive field goals. If he converts his first seven shots against Golden State, he’ll pass Wilt Chamberlain for the most consecutive made baskets ever — a record that’s stood for 57 years.

    Chamberlain set the record with 35 straight makes in a four-game span from Feb. 17 to Feb. 28 in 1967. Gafford, who came to the Mavericks from Washington, hasn’t missed in his past four games — a span in which he’s averaged 16.3 points and 7.8 rebounds.

    It’ll be easier for the rim-running Gafford to make history than it would normally be, as Draymond Green was scratched from Golden State’s lineup 45 minutes before tipoff. He was a late addition to the injury report with low back soreness, and was eventually downgraded to inactive.

    Asked about Gafford’s ongoing streak, Mavericks head coach Jason Kidd said the locker room hasn’t been mentioning Gafford’s delicate streak.

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    Danny Emerman

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  • High school roundup: Stanford baseball commit dominates again for Valley Christian

    High school roundup: Stanford baseball commit dominates again for Valley Christian

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    Baseball

    No. 2 Valley Christian 2, Archbishop Riordan 0

    In three previous games this season, Valley Christian pitcher Quinten Marsh had been about as dominant as it gets — 15 innings, 31 strikeouts, three walks, one run allowed.

    On Tuesday, he had no let up.

    In a West Catholic Athletic League opener on the road against Archbishop Riordan, the junior who has committed to Stanford fired a four-hit shutout with 10 strikeouts and one walk as Valley Christian stretched its season-opening winning streak to seven games.

    Ranked second behind De La Salle in the most recent Bay Area News Group Top 25, the San Jose powerhouse on pace to rise to No. 1 when the updated rankings are released next week.

    The shutout in San Francisco on Tuesday was Valley Christian’s fourth this season. The Warriors have given up just four runs while scoring 40 during their 7-0 start.

    They got all the offense Marsh needed in the first inning against Riordan when Jordan Ortiz’s sacrifice fly to right field knocked in Hunter Fujimoto, who opened the game with a single.

    Nathan Choi’s single in the third drove in Brock Ketelsen to complete the scoring.

    For Riordan, Nathan Zuromski had two hits, Logan Tuman doubled and Rhys Appleby pitched three scoreless innings in relief.

    The Crusaders fell to 3-4-2, 0-1.

    No. 15 Serra 9, Sacred Heart Cathedral 8

    Ian Josephson had himself a game Tuesday. He had three hits, including a home run and a double. He knocked in five runs. He scored twice.

    And Serra needed all of it and more to hold off visiting Sacred Heart Cathedral in a WCAL opener.

    The Padres built a 9-4 lead through innings, but the Irish scored four in the fifth on Tate Medicoff’s grand slam to center to turn the game into a nail-biter.

    Ian Armstrong, Jake Downing, Sammy Rivas and Lucas Schumaker each had two hits for Serra, which improved to 6-1, 1-0.

    SHC is 6-3, 0-1.

    No. 11 Archbishop Mitty 8, No. 10 St. Francis 3

    Trailing by two runs after six innings on the road against St. Francis, Mitty rallied for seven in the seventh to prevail in a WCAL opener.

    Andrew Sauceda had three RBIs and Makoa Sniffen drove in two runs as the Monarchs improved to 6-2, 1-0.

    Luke DeVine finished with two hits and Tanner Wall doubled and had an RBI for St. Francis, which dropped 3-4, 0-1.

    No. 8 Bellarmine 3, No 3 St. Ignatius 0

    Ishaan Khambal pitched six scoreless innings and Arkansas-bound Wade Mountz pitched the final inning for the save as Bellarmine opened WCAL play with a victory at home over St. Ignatius.

    Evan Tavarez, Calem Filipek and Ishaan Khambal each drove in a run for the Bells (5-0, 1-0).

    St. Ignatius fell to 5-2, 0-1.

    Berean Christian 2, Alhambra 1

    Berean Christian, playing on the road in Martinez, got RBIs from freshmen Ryder Walker and Colton Swift in the seventh inning to beat Alhambra in a Diablo Athletic League Valley Division opener.

    Alhambra scored its only run in the first inning on an RBI by Cameron Millar.

    Berean Christian improved to 5-0, 1-0. Alhambra slipped to 1-4, 0-1.

    Santa Teresa 5, Pioneer 4

    Jordan Jackson worked a walk with the bases loaded in the bottom of the sixth to break a 4-4 tie and lift Santa Teresa to a victory over Pioneer in a Blossom Valley Athletic League Mt. Hamilton Division opener.

    Joseph Tapia had two hits and scored a run for Santa Teresa (5-3-1, 0-1).

    Adam Larson singled and knocked in two for Pioneer (3-5, 0-1).

    Foothill 3, Northgate 2

    Take Sato-Kreis drove in two runs and Caden Roth allowed one earned run and struck out six in five innings to lead Foothill to a victory at home over Northgate in nonleague play.

    Foothill evened its record at 3-3.

    Jackson Huffman and Chris Flores each had two hits for Northgate, which dropped to 2-3.

    Softball

    No. 1 St. Francis 11, Carlmont 1

    Jaime Oakland went 3 for 4 with a double and three RBIs and Peyton Tsao homered and drove in three runs to power St. Francis to a six-inning mercy-rule win at Carlmont in nonleague play.

    Shannon Keighran didn’t allow an earned run and struck out 10. She scattered four hits.

    The Lancers scored seven runs in the first inning and added one in the third and three in the sixth to up its record to 4-0.

    Molly Brand had two hits, including a double, for Carlmont (0-3).

    Los Gatos 3, Valley Christian 2 (8 innings)

    Annika Norquist’s double in the bottom of the eighth drove in Alexa Musser with the winning run as Los Gatos won a thriller at home over Valley Christian in nonleague play.

    Musser scored all three of Los Gatos’ runs.

    Makenzie Leon and Talia Haskins each doubled and finished with two hits apiece for Valley Christian (4-4).

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    Darren Sabedra

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  • Warriors adjusting rotation with Steph Curry sidelined

    Warriors adjusting rotation with Steph Curry sidelined

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    SAN FRANCISCO — The Warriors have a new starting lineup, at least temporarily.

    With Steph Curry sidelined with a sprained right ankle, Golden State is turning the offense over to veteran point guard Chris Paul. In an additional wrinkle, the Warriors removed Andrew Wiggins from the starting lineup, replacing him with rookie center Trayce Jackson-Davis. That gives Golden State a starting-five of Paul, Jackson-Davis, Brandin Podziemski, Jonathan Kuminga and Draymond Green.

    “We’ll lean on certain actions that Chris likes to run,” Warriors coach Steve Kerr said. “Look at some different lineups as well. I’m kind of looking at is as: while Steph is out, we’ve got to figure out what do we have to do to win tonight? And we’ll worry about the next game then. But within that, we’ll have a lot of decisions to make. Who’s going to play off the bench — it’s hard to script it, because we don’t know how the game’s going to go. If we need some shooting, we’ll put our shooters out there. If we need more rim protection, we can go back to Loon. There’s minutes to be had, but it’s really dependent on how the game’s going.”

    Jackson-Davis sprained his ankle on Thursday night and was initially listed as questionable, but will play through the injury. He has impressed recently as a lob threat and rim protector. He and Paul have developed a strong rapport, with the point guard finding him either on alley-oop dishes or pocket passes when he rolls to the basket.

    Wiggins has started the past two games after returning from an absence caused by an unspecified personal matter, but only played 15 and 14 minutes. He’s averaging a career-low 12.5 points and 26.7 minutes per game in the first year of a 4-year, $109 million contract.

    The non-Curry starters should be an athletic, defensive-minded combination. Green, Kuminga, and Jackson-Davis are three of Golden State’s best and most switchable defenders. The question may be if the group can muster up enough outside shooting.

    The new starting five gives Golden State a bench unit of Wiggins, Klay Thompson, Moses Moody, Kevon Looney and Lester Quinones. Gary Payton II would normally slot into that group as well, but he’s out with general illness. Dario Saric, who’s been out of the rotation, could see more time. His minutes got trimmed because of a  brutal shooting slump, but chemistry with Paul could prove helpful.

    Golden State’s new rotation is subject to change and will naturally fluctuate. It also is probably ephemeral. Because the Warriors got good news on Curry’s MRI, he could return to the court as soon as Wednesday. If that’s the case, everything will probably revert back to normal, as that group has gone 14-5 since Jan. 30 — the best record in the NBA in that span.

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    Danny Emerman

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  • Sharks, Devils swap goalies; San Jose adds Los Gatos native in separate deal

    Sharks, Devils swap goalies; San Jose adds Los Gatos native in separate deal

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    SAN JOSE – The San Jose Sharks are trading another one of their pending unrestricted free agents, sending Kaapo Kahkonen to the New Jersey Devils for Vitek Vanecek in a swap of goalies.

    The Sharks are also getting a 2025 seventh-round draft in the trade.

    In another deal, the Sharks also acquired goalie Devin Cooley from the Buffalo Sabres for a 2025 seventh-round pick originally owned by the Washington Capitals. Cooley, 26, is a Los Gatos native and a former Jr. Shark who has spent all of his pro career in the minor leagues.

    Vanecek, 28, is signed for one more season with a cap hit of $3.4 million and is set to become an unrestricted free agent in 2025. He is on injured reserve with a lower-body injury. He is 17-9-3 this season with a .890 save percentage in 32 games.

    Kahkonen sat on the Sharks’ bench Thursday night as Magnus Chrona got the start in net and made 26 saves in a 7-2 loss to the New York Islanders. Quinn said he wanted to reward Chrona after he made 36 saves in the Sharks’ 3-2 shootout loss to the Dallas Stars on March 2.

    The 27-year-old Kahkonen, now in his fourth full NHL season, is 6-20-3 in 31 games this year with a .895 save percentage. He’s in the second and final season of a two-year, $5.5 million contract he signed with the Sharks in July 2022.

    Kahkonen came to San Jose in March 2022, as the Sharks acquired him and a 2022 fifth-round pick, which was used on defenseman Jake Furlong, for defenseman Jacob Middleton.

    Kahkonen was thought to be one of a handful of Sharks pending UFAs on the move before the NHL’s trade deadline today at noon (PST).

    On Thursday night, in their first significant move before the deadline, the Sharks sent forward Anthony Duclair and a 2025 seventh-round draft pick to the Tampa Bay Lightning for a 2024 third-round selection and minor league defenseman Jack Thompson.

    Please check back for updates to this story.

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    Curtis Pashelka

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  • Sharks trade Anthony Duclair to Tampa Bay Lightning for prospect, third-rounder

    Sharks trade Anthony Duclair to Tampa Bay Lightning for prospect, third-rounder

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    SAN JOSE — The San Jose Sharks on Thursday made their first significant move before the NHL trade deadline, dealing forward Anthony Duclair and a 2025 seventh-round draft pick to the Tampa Bay Lightning for a 2024 third-round selection and minor league defenseman Jack Thompson.

    Duclair was one of a handful of pending unrestricted free agents on the Sharks roster and figured to be one of general manager Mike Grier’s most attractive trade pieces.

    Duclair entered Thursday with 16 goals and 27 points in 56 games but had been playing his most productive hockey of the season over the last three-plus weeks since the Sharks returned from their bye week on Feb. 12.

    In the last 10 games before Thursday, Duclair led the Sharks with seven goals, 10 points, and 26 shots on net. With Tomas Hertl and Logan Couture both unavailable, Duclair has been playing mainly on a line with Mikael Granlund and Fabian Zetterlund.

    Those three combined for nine points, with Duclair collecting two goals and two assists, in the Sharks’ 7-6 overtime loss to the Dallas Stars on Tuesday. The Sharks led 6-3 before they allowed three third-period goals.

    Thompson, 21, has appeared in 46 American Hockey League games this season for the Syracuse Crunch, recording 32 points and 12 penalty minutes.

    Thompson will report to the San Jose Barracuda, the Sharks’ AHL affiliate, to start his tenure with the organization.

    Thompson was a third-round draft choice by the Lightning in 2020 and made his NHL debut with Tampa Bay earlier this year on Jan. 6 in his lone game for the team. He has one year left on his entry-level contract and is set to become a restricted free agent in 2025.

    Thompson ranked second on Syracuse’s in both points and assists, and led the team’s defensemen in both categories. Over two AHL seasons, he played in 118 games, scoring 56 points (13 goals, 43 assists).

    The NHL trade deadline is Friday at noon (PST), and a handful of other Sharks players could also be on the move to contending teams.

    Alexander Barabanov could be the next Sharks player to be traded, as he was set to be held out of Thursday’s game with the New York Islanders as a precaution against injury.

    Other Sharks’ pending unrestricted free agents include forwards Matt Hoffman, Kevin Labanc, Justin Bailey, Ryan Carpenter, Radim Simek and Oskar Lindblom. Simek and Lindblom were assigned to the Barracuda in October.

    Barabanov has spent the last three-plus seasons with the Sharks after he was acquired from the Toronto Maple Leafs in April 2021 for forward Antti Suomela.

    In his first two-plus seasons in San Jose, Barabanov had 93 points in 147 games as he played mostly in the Sharks’ top-six forward group.

    This season, though, Barabanov suffered a broken finger on Oct. 24 and missed just under six weeks, and has largely not been able to recapture that same scoring touch with just three goals and 10 points in 38 games.

    Barabanov is in the second year of a two-year, $5 million contract he signed with the Sharks in May 2022.

    Asked about a report that he would like to go to a contending team, Barabanov said, “Yeah, this I think is part of the business. I just work every day and we’ll see what happens.”

    The Sharks are on their way to missing the playoffs for a fifth straight season and entered Thursday in 31st place in the NHL’s overall standings with a 15-39-7 record.

    “It’s how it works, you know? I’m fine with it,” Barabanov said of players in his contractual position. I’m ready for any option.”

    Before Thursday’s trade, Duclair said he’d be open to signing with the rebuilding Sharks this offseason. On July 1, Duclair, or any UFA, can sign with any team.

    Duclair, who does not want to talk about a new contract until after the season, hasn’t ruled anything out.

    “I made it clear to (general manager Mike Grier) that I’ll keep the door open, keep my options open, and then we’ll see come July 1,” Duclair said. “I’m not counting out anybody or closing doors on anybody. I think that’d be stupid of me. But I’ve enjoyed my time here, I think everybody knows that I enjoyed the boys, enjoyed this organization, and would definitely be open to coming back.”

    A handful of former Sharks players still have homes in the area and are part of the organization, formally or informally. That appeals to Duclair, who would like to remain in a familiar area for some time after playing for seven teams in his first 10 NHL seasons.

    “It’s a nice tight-knit community, and the biggest thing I like is how ex-players come back and they’re part of the organization,” Duclair said. “You don’t see that on every team or every organization. Obviously, (the Sharks have) some legends sticking around and walking the hallways, so that’s some motivation.

    “You kind of see how (guys), even post-career, stick around and love the organization. That’s something that I’d like to be a part of.”

    Magnus Chrona started in net for the Sharks against the Islanders with Kaapo Kahkonen, another pending UFA who could be dealt before the deadline, backing up. Quinn said he wanted to reward Chrona after he made 36 saves in the Sharks’ 3-2 shootout loss to the Dallas Stars on March 2.

    The 27-year-old Kahkonen, now in his fourth full NHL season, is 6-20-3 in 31 games this year with a .895 save percentage. He’s in the second and final season of a two-year, $5.5 million contract he signed with the Sharks in 2022.

    Please check back for updates on this developing story.

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    Curtis Pashelka

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  • Warriors rise to the occasion with complete effort in convincing win over Bucks

    Warriors rise to the occasion with complete effort in convincing win over Bucks

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    SAN FRANCISCO — At full strength for the first time since finding their identity, the Warriors levied their full wrath.

    Against the caliber of team that has given the Warriors fits this year, Golden State put together its finest half of the season and avoided the type of second-half collapse that has spoiled so many of their games. They recorded a season-high 13 blocks, assisted on 37 of their 51 baskets, and tilted the game to their preferred pace.

    Steve Kerr had his full complement of options, and practically everyone in his 11-man rotation contributed to hand Milwaukee its first loss since the All-Star break. Steph Curry (29 points) and Jonathan Kuminga led the Warriors’ scoring effort. Rookie Trayce Jackson-Davis was a force on both ends and Chris Paul dished nine assists off the bench.

    The Warriors (33-28) delivered their most impressive win of the season, a 125-90 thumping. At least for one game, they were every bit as fearsome as the true title contender sharing the court with them.

    “I really didn’t see any bad shots tonight,” Kerr said postgame. “There were no agendas, it was just let’s go play basketball. Move the ball, throw it to the first guy who’s open, put a lot of pressure on the defense that way…I thought it was a great offensive performance, and it was really keyed by simple decision-making and passing.”

    The Bucks presented this year’s Warriors group the opportunity to prove something they haven’t yet: the ability to hang with the league’s elite teams.

    Milwaukee, who entered a perfect 6-0 since the All-Star break, are one of the league’s championship favorites even with Khris Middleton injured. Against the Bucks, Celtics, Timberwolves, Thunder and Nuggets — the NBA’s top five teams — Golden State was 2-11. The Warriors’ 13-25 record against winning teams was the worst among any team in the Western Conference playoff picture.

    On Wednesday, they made their track record against the game’s best irrelevant. The Warriors have accrued more championship DNA than any other team, but at some point this year, they’ll have to consistently rise to the occasion — like they did in Chase Center.

    The Warriors elevated their play in the first quarter, which began with a fast-paced, playoff-level intensity. Jonathan Kuminga hunted his mismatch — the bigger Brook Lopez — and the Warriors geared their defense to hounding ball-handlers other than Giannis Antetokounmpo and Damian Lillard. Curry hit Draymond Green with a hit-ahead pass for a transition bucket after a make and Brandin Podziemski was active on defense and pursuing loose balls. Amid the up-and-down action, Green picked up a technical foul.

    Curry began the game 4-for-4 with 10 points, sending the Bucks to a timeout by draining a pull-up jumper from 32 feet out. As the Bucks headed to their bench, Curry mimed a golf swing.

    Precise ball movement allowed the Warriors to shoot 65.4% from the floor in a 40-32 winning first quarter.

    Chris Paul led a second-unit surge, building an 18-point lead and maintaining a double-digit cushion — one that persisted through a standing ovation for Bob Myers, the former general manager back in Chase Center for the first time since leaving the organization.

    Green blocked a Bobby Portis corner 3, igniting a fast break that ended in one of several Kuminga dunks. Even Klay Thompson rose up for a transition jam.

    Golden State canned 12 of its first 19 3-pointers, earning their biggest halftime lead of the year. Three days after scoring 88 points in Boston, they dropped 78.

    Yet the Warriors followed up their sharpest half by getting stuck between gears. After everything for the Warriors fell, nothing did. After they took care of the ball, the Bucks’ ball pressure overwhelmed them.

    Golden State managed five points in the first six minutes of the third quarter, seeing their 20-point lead trimmed to six. But when all momentum flipped to the Bucks, Trayce Jackson-Davis came to the rescue. The rookie center blocked Antetokounmpo twice on the same possession, then finished an alley-oop from Curry on the other end. Moments later, Jackson-Davis swatted Antetokounmpo again before dunking off a gorgeous pocket pass from Paul.

    Golden State Warriors' Trayce Jackson-Davis (32) blocks a shot to Milwaukee Bucks' Giannis Antetokounmpo (34) in the fourth quarter of a NBA game at Chase Center in San Francisco, Calif., on Wednesday, March 6, 2024. (Ray Chavez/Bay Area News Group)
    Golden State Warriors’ Trayce Jackson-Davis (32) blocks a shot to Milwaukee Bucks’ Giannis Antetokounmpo (34) in the fourth quarter of a NBA game at Chase Center in San Francisco, Calif., on Wednesday, March 6, 2024. (Ray Chavez/Bay Area News Group) 

    Jackson-Davis had studied some of Blake Griffin’s battles against Antetokounmpo, taking note of how he sat on the two-time MVP’s spin move and otherwise giving him space. The homework paid off.

    “Never faced anyone like him before,” Jackson-Davis said postgame. “Have length like that, as fast as he is, as explosive.”

    The Warriors’ depth won out in the end. With Antetokounmpo resting for two minutes to start the final frame, Golden State stretched its lead back to 20. Moses Moody played tenacious on-ball defense on Lillard, freezing out Milwaukee’s offensive engine. Jackson-Davis slammed another putback dunk and Green sank back-to-back 3-pointers to ignite the Chase Center crowd.

    The 35-point win, Golden State’s largest margin of victory of the year, looked just like the type of Warriors victory Myers had seen hundreds of times. Like proof of the Warriors’ championship window stubbornly staying ajar.

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    Danny Emerman

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  • Minnesota Wild star scores late, hands Sharks frustrating loss

    Minnesota Wild star scores late, hands Sharks frustrating loss

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    The San Jose Sharks faced some headwinds in their game against the Minnesota Wild on Sunday night.

    The Sharks were playing their second game in as many nights — just like the Wild were — but were also dealing with an illness now running through the locker room, sapping some of the team’s energy.

    The biggest obstacle, though, was the play of Wild forward Kirill Kaprizov, who recorded his third hat trick of the season to help hand the Sharks a disappointing 4-3 loss at Xcel Energy Center.

    With the Sharks leading 3-2, Kaprizov scored at the 2:38 and 16:01 mark of the third period, with the second goal completing the hat trick and putting the Wild ahead to stay as San Jose was sent to its seventh straight loss.

    “When you don’t have it, you’ve got to find a way to hang around and I thought that’s what we did,” Sharks coach David Quinn said. “It was just unfortunate. They’ve got Kaprizov and we don’t.”

    Anthony Duclair, Mikael Granlund, and Nico Sturm all scored for the Sharks (15-39-6), who managed just 15 shots on net as they completed a two-game road trip with a 0-1-1 record.

    The Sharks led the Wild on two occasions Sunday, including in the third period as the two teams traded goals.

    After Duclair scored his 14th of the season 23 seconds in for a 3-2 Sharks lead, Kaprizov tied it, one-timing a pass from Matt Boldy past goalie Kaapo Kahkonen, who made 28 saves for the game.

    Kaprizov’s third goal of the game was also his 29th goal of the season, as he became the fifth-fastest active player to 300 career points. Having now played 258 games, he’s behind only Sidney Crosby (219), Alex Ovechkin (237), Connor McDavid (240) and Evgeni Malkin (240).

    “He’s a phenomenal player,” Sturm said of Kaprizov, his one-time Wild teammate. “That third goal, that’s him. He gets lost as the third guy high, there’s a puck battle, and he’s got the smarts to where he just waits for the puck to squirt out to him.”

    The Sharks now start a three-game homestand on Tuesday against the Dallas Stars.

    The Sharks were without center William Eklund, who came down with an illness Sunday. With Eklund unavailable, Kevin Labanc drew back into the lineup after he was a healthy scratch Saturday in Dallas and Luke Kunin moved into Eklund’s role as the Sharks’ second-line center.

    Eklund had goals in each of the last two Sharks’ games and for the season has 10 goals and 27 points in 58 games.

    Sunday’s game was Kahkonen’s first against his former team. He was drafted by the Wild in 2014 in the fourth round and played three-plus seasons in the organization before he was acquired by the Sharks two years ago for defenseman Jacob Middleton.

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    Curtis Pashelka

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  • NorCal upset: Palo Alto shooters light up Santa Teresa as Vikings topple top-seeded Saints

    NorCal upset: Palo Alto shooters light up Santa Teresa as Vikings topple top-seeded Saints

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    SAN JOSE –Santa Teresa has been one of the highest-scoring teams in the Central Coast Section this season. 

    But in an unpredictable post-season that tends to confound prognostication, it was Palo Alto who lit it up on offense Thursday in a 64-49 victory at Santa Teresa in the NorCal Division IV quarterfinals.

    No. 8 seed Palo Alto (20-8) moves on to play at No. 4 Union Mine on Saturday in the NorCal semifinals. Union Mine is located in El Dorado, just outside Placerville.

    “The guys were excited to still be playing, it’s an honor to play in the state playoffs,” Palo Alto coach Jeff LaMere said. “It’s a very close group. We have a tough, resilient, gritty group.”

    Palo Alto’s Jorell Clark (12) takes a shot against Santa Teresa in the first quarter for their CIF NorCal Division IV quarterfinal game at Santa Teresa High School in San Jose, Calif., on Thursday, Feb. 29, 2024. (Nhat V. Meyer/Bay Area News Group) 

    Palo Alto torched Santa Teresa’s zone defense in the first half, making 14 of 29 field-goal attempts and knocking down six 3-pointers in taking a 34-20 lead at the break.

    No. 1 seed Santa Teresa  (20-8) came out flying around in a fullcourt press in the third quarter and got the tempo going its way, cutting the Palo Alto lead to five on a couple of occasions. 

    But the Saints could get no closer. Palo Alto settled itself down in the fourth quarter, spreading the court and moving the ball quickly before double teams could arrive.

    “They handled our pressure well,” Santa Teresa coach Patrick Judge said. “We came out tight, Palo Alto came out loose. At the end we ran out of gas. They hit some big shots, run-stoppers late in the shot clock. Hats off to them, Palo Alto’s a great program, and that’s what we’re trying to build here.”

    Palo Alto's Jorell Clark (12) blocks a shot against Santa Teresa's Kenny Zuniga (22) in the second quarter for their CIF NorCal Division IV quarterfinal game at Santa Teresa High School in San Jose, Calif., on Thursday, Feb. 29, 2024. (Nhat V. Meyer/Bay Area News Group)
    Palo Alto’s Jorell Clark (12) blocks a shot against Santa Teresa’s Kenny Zuniga (22) in the second quarter for their CIF NorCal Division IV quarterfinal game at Santa Teresa High School in San Jose, Calif., on Thursday, Feb. 29, 2024. (Nhat V. Meyer/Bay Area News Group) 

    Santa Teresa scored 90 or more points in a game four times this season.

    “Our mental attitude coming into the game, we’re the 8 seed, they’re the 1 seed, but in state that doesn’t matter,” Palo Alto center Aiden Hangebrauck, aka Big Red, said. “Defense is what we do, defense is what we’re taught. That’s how we got ourselves here to the state tournament.”

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    Glenn Reeves

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