ReportWire

Tag: santa clara county

  • New Museum Los Gatos to hold newspaper history tour on Jan. 16

    [ad_1]

    Newspaper tour

    Follow the local newspapers of Los Gatos through the years with the New Museum Los Gatos on Jan. 16.

    [ad_2]

    Nollyanne Delacruz

    Source link

  • Acalanes’ Joel Isaac is Bay Area News Group’s prep football coach of year

    [ad_1]

    Joel Isaac navigated Acalanes through off-season tragedy, led Dons to undefeated regular season and berth in NCS’s top playoff division.


    This article is only available to subscribers

    Offer valid for non-subscribers only

    [ad_2]

    Nathan Canilao

    Source link

  • Inman: 10 things that caught my eye in 49ers’ 13-3 loss to Seahawks

    [ad_1]

    SANTA CLARA – Two partially smoked cigars rested on a table in Levi’s Stadium’s visitors locker room, an hour after the Seattle Seahawks’ 13-3 humbling of the 49ers in Saturday night’s battle for the NFC’s top seed and the NFC West crown.

    To the victor went the spoils of loud music, commemorative swag, and Don Thomas Clasico Robusto cigars.

    Yeah, that tops the Seahawks eating turkey legs on Levi’s Stadium’s field on Thanksgiving 2024. Tight end George Kittle didn’t take offense, however.

    “I would do the same (expletive),” Kittle said. “They won the division, the (No.) 1 seed, in a rival stadium. Good for them.”

    He and the 49ers actually accomplished the same in 2019 in Seattle en route to the Super Bowl. Perhaps the Seahawks plan to come back to Levi’s Stadium to finish those cigars in five weeks after Super Bowl LX.

    That is not the 49ers’ immediate concern. They haven’t lost back-to-back games all season and now must win as a wild card on the road, as they did in 2021 as a sixth seed at Dallas and Green Bay before succumbing to the eventual champion Rams.

    Here are 10 things that caught my eye as the 49ers faceplanted in the biggest regular-season game of Levi’s Stadium’s 12-year history:

    1. PRECIOUS PURDY

    Less than two minutes remained in a sure-fire defeat when Brock Purdy got drilled in the back by a 260-pound linebacker, then crunched from the front by 310-pound Leonard Williams. Purdy, remarkably, lived to talk about what he “thinks” was only a left-shoulder nerve stinger that temporarily floored him before he walked off after that fourth-down incompletion. His right thumb appeared bloodied by impacting Williams’ hand, too.

    “I got hit and the left shoulder sort of lit up,” Purdy said. “I feel good right now. We’ll see how I feel (Sunday).”

    Last time he faced the Seahawks, he reported a turf-toe injury the next day, an injury that would shelve him for a total of eight games. Then came a scintillating resurgence over a six-game win streak – against inferior foes – before the Seahawks creamed him with a season-high three sacks and eight hits.

    Yes, Mac Jones rescued the 49ers through the season’s first half. But the 49ers are paying Purdy to lead them through what is now a tough but not unconquerable playoff path.

    2. TRENT WILLIAMS FACTOR

    Coach Kyle Shanahan said it was “too risky” to play left tackle Trent Williams (hamstring) and wide receiver Ricky Pearsall (knee, ankle). Saving them for the playoffs seems smart, for here comes the elimination round. Both players certainly could have helped an offense that matched Shanahan’s lowest-scoring output since his 23-3 debut in 2017 against Carolina.

    The 49ers are 4-13 without Williams in the starting lineup since 2020.

    Austen Pleasants made his first career start in Williams’ place, and right tackle Colton McKivitiz said Williams’ absence didn’t prompt changes to the Seahawks’ scheme, which uses a lot of inside twists.

    3. WAIT AND SEE

    Kittle campaigned for the Arizona Cardinals (3-13) to upset the Los Angeles Rams (11-5) so the 49ers could climb up to the No. 5 seed and open against the NFC South’s champion, either Carolina or Tampa Bay.

    After spending his bye weekend streaming NFL games while duck hunting, McKivitz won’t be doing that Sunday as he instead recovers from Saturday’s workload.

    “Why not have it hard and go win three road games? That’s just the road we’re going to be on, and why not?” McKivitz said. “It’s basically playoff football. That is what it was today. At least we get to play another and we’re not going home today.”

    If the 49ers stay the No. 6 seed, they’ll open at either the Chicago Bears or the defending Super Bowl-champion Philadelphia Eagles. The wild-card round is next Saturday through Monday.

    4. COSTLY INTERCEPTION

    Christian McCaffrey scolded himself for having a Purdy pass, tipped as it were, to ricochet off his hands and into those of Drake Thomas for a comeback-killing interception at the Seattle 3-yard line with 12:21 left.

    McCaffrey vowed to learn from it. Purdy defended him, saying the ball “came out weird” after the tip Purdy blamed on himself. “But Christian’s a baller. He’s going to live to play the next play and he’s a Hall of Fame running back. So, dude should walk out with his head up.”

    5. McCAFFREY’S TOTALS

    That dude McCaffrey walked up to the starting lineup all 17 games, ran for 1,202 yards and had a team-high 102 receptions for 924 yards, leaving him 76 receiving yards shy of a 1K/1K season.  He’s the 49ers’ first player with 100 receptions since Terrell Owens in 2002.

    He set the 49ers’ record with 413 touches this season, and his 2,126 scrimmage yards are second-most. He also scored 17 touchdowns. But his average of 3.9 yards per carry was his lowest since his 2017 rookie year (3.7).

    6. COSTLY FUMBLE MISS

    The 49ers trailed only 10-3 when a golden opportunity presented itself: Sam Darnold, after having his foot stepped on by his center, fumbled an exchange with running back Zach Charbonnet. Defensive lineman Yetur Gross-Matos dove for the ball, only for it to end up in Charbonnet’s hands for a 3-yard loss at the Seattle 25.

    “The ball just bounced,” said Gross-Matos, who helped secure last Sunday’s 42-38 win over the Bears by hitting Caleb Williams on a final throw that bounced incomplete in the end zone.

    7. THIRD-DOWN WOES

    Two plays after that fumble, the Seahawks converted a third-and-17 play, not via a Darnold pass but rather a Kenneth Walker run for 19 yards through an onlooking defense. Consider it an ugly stepchild to the third-and-15 that ignited the 2019 Niners’ Super Bowl loss to Kansas City City.

    Why did the 49ers miss so many tackles, not just on that play but throughout the evening (16 per Pro Football Focus)? Linebacker Tatum Bethune cited how the 49ers were just playing aggressively, but they still have to make tackles. The Seahawks converted 6-of-13 third-down plays.

    8. OFFENSIVE ISSUES

    The 49ers were just 2-of-9 on third-down plays, which went against their NFL-best conversion rate (51%) but was fitting against Seattle’s NFL-leading third-down defense (32.4%).

    What perhaps stung most was a fourth-and-1 play that backfired into Purdy getting pressured into an incompletion toward Kyle Juszczyk from the Seattle 39 with 9 ½ minutes until halftime.

    Afterward on the sideline, Purdy’s film review revealed he could have hit Kittle: “I didn’t have a clear picture, but we got back to the sideline and it was like, ‘Dang, he was there.’”

    9. LINEBACKER DEPTH

    The exits of Bethune (groin) and Dee Winters (ankle) prompt serious concerns about who’ll man that unit in the playoffs. Eric Kendricks got called up from the practice squad a third straight game and has the veteran experience to play the “Mike” role and relay Robert Saleh’s calls, and so does Curtis Robinson, who started three games before being deactivated the past three. There’s also Luke Gifford, and a Garrett Wallow who fans discovered after his costly facemask penalty in punt coverage Saturday.

    Fred Warner? He hasn’t practiced or even been seen conditioning on a side field since his Oct. 14 ankle repair, although he has certainly pushing hard behind the scenes. Any heroic comeback doesn’t figure to happen until later in the playoffs.

    Rookie Nick Martin went on Injured Reserve two weeks ago from a concussion. The 49ers’ leading tacklers this game: cornerback Renardo Green and safety Ji’Ayir Brown, each with eight.

    10. SUPER SEAHAWKS

    The Seahawks set a franchise record with their 14th win, and they remarkably improved to 15-2 on the road in two seasons under coach Mike Macdonald, topped only by George Seifert’s 16-0 road start in his first two seasons with the 1899-90 49ers.

    “I mean, they’ve been showing that they’re one of the best teams in this league all year,” Shanahan said. “That didn’t feel much different than the team we played in Week 1 (a 17-13 49ers comeback win). I thought the game was a little bit similar in terms of the battle on both sides, just to get in the end zone. But, they’ve earned the No. 1 seed. They played like that throughout the whole year and we’re going to have to earn the chance to get to play them again.”

    [ad_2]

    Cam Inman

    Source link

  • Letters: Fix Our Forests disguises logging as fire safety

    [ad_1]

    Submit your letter to the editor via this form. Read more Letters to the Editor.

    Fix Our Forests offers
    logging as fire safety

    Re: “Legislation would worsen California wildfire threat” (Page A8, Dec. 28).

    The Fix Our Forests Act isn’t about environmental safety; rather, it is a blatant attempt at expanding the logging industry under the cover of wildfire prevention. Congress is rushing to pass a bill that dramatically expands backcountry logging while weakening environmental review and public input, allowing projects up to 15 square miles to bypass the National Environmental Policy Act.

    [ad_2]

    Letters To The Editor

    Source link

  • Bay Area News Group boys athlete of the week: Isaiah Clendinen, Moreau Catholic

    [ad_1]

    Moreau Catholic’s Isaiah Clendinen leads his team to a victory over Madison-San Diego.


    This article is only available to subscribers

    Offer valid for non-subscribers only

    [ad_2]

    Darren Sabedra

    Source link

  • Crews battle fire at San Jose apartment complex on New Year’s Eve

    [ad_1]

    SAN JOSE – Firefighters on New Year’s Eve battled a blaze at an apartment complex in San Jose, according to authorities.

    [ad_2]

    Jason Green

    Source link

  • Wind-battered Lick Observatory rushes to shield historic telescope after dome damage

    [ad_1]

    Winds exceeding 110 mph that tore across the top of Mount Hamilton early Christmas morning blasted a massive steel protective door off the iconic white dome at Lick Observatory.

    Now, with back-to-back rainstorms bearing down on the Bay Area, officials this week are racing to seal the gaping hole and protect the historic Great Lick Refractor telescope beneath it.

    “I’ve never seen or even heard of damage like this to a dome,” said Lick Observatory site superintendent Jamey Eriksen.

    The Christmas Day storm that brought winds of 110 mph to the top of Mt Hamilton where the James Lick Observatory sits brought down the 60-foot crescent steel door that once covered half the dome’s vertical opening. The door landed onto an adjoining building where it broke windows and splintered attic beams. (Photo by Jamey Eriksen/UCSC Lick Observatory) 

    The damage threatens one of the Bay Area’s most significant scientific landmarks — a telescope that helped shape modern astronomy and still draws thousands of visitors each year to the mountaintop east of San Jose.

    From the Bay Area below, the dome sheltering the Great Refractor still appears intact. Up close, the damage is stark: a multi-ton, 60-foot crescent of steel that once covered half the dome’s vertical opening is gone. It was one of two giant doors that slid open to reveal the night sky, then closed again to protect the telescope from the elements. Now it lies on the pavement beside the dome.

    Inside, an all-hands scramble by a skeleton holiday-season crew helped avert worse damage. Beneath the dome, the 57-foot-long Great Refractor telescope is wrapped in black plastic tarps from eyepiece to lens assembly. Above it, the fallen door has left a gap in the steel dome roughly 4 feet wide and 10 feet tall, with a larger opening below it covered only by a fabric windscreen.

    The Christmas Day storm that brought winds of 110 mph to the top of Mt Hamilton where the James Lick Observatory sits brought down the 60-foot crescent steel door that once covered half the dome's vertical opening. The door landed onto an adjoining building where it broke windows and splintered attic beams.  (Photo by Jamey Eriksen/UCSC Lick Observatory)
    The Christmas Day storm that brought winds of 110 mph to the top of Mt Hamilton where the James Lick Observatory sits brought down the 60-foot crescent steel door that once covered half the dome’s vertical opening. The door landed onto an adjoining building where it broke windows and splintered attic beams. (Photo by Jamey Eriksen/UCSC Lick Observatory) 

    [ad_2]

    Ethan Baron

    Source link

  • San Jose bakery seeks public help following attack

    [ad_1]

    SAN JOSE — Peters’ Bakery, the 90-year-old San Jose institution, is hoping the public can help them identify the person who caused chaos in the shop this December.

    [ad_2]

    Sierra Lopez

    Source link

  • Registration is open for El Camino Health’s heart forum

    [ad_1]

    Heart forum

    Registration is open for El Camino Health’s 15th Annual Heart Forum.

    [ad_2]

    Anne Gelhaus

    Source link

  • Filipino engineer and entrepreneur dies at 79

    [ad_1]

    Filipino tech entrepreneur Diosdado “Dado” Banatao died at the age of 79.

    Banatao is known for pioneering the technology that made personal computers possible, thus putting Silicon Valley on the map. He also co-founded three technology companies and started a nonprofit to help support Filipinos in STEM fields.

    “Rising from humble beginnings in Cagayan, he went on to co-found transformative technology companies and played a pivotal role in advancing the global semiconductor and graphics industries,” said the National Federation of Filipino American Associations on LinkedIn in honor of Banatao’s passing. “Just as importantly, he invested deeply in people opening doors, mentoring founders and strengthening communities.”

    According to a post on his website by his family, Banatao passed away peacefully on Christmas Day, surrounded by family and friends. His family said he “succumbed to complications from a neurological disorder that hit him late in his life.” He would have been 80 in May.

    His family wrote, “We are mourning his loss, but take comfort from the time spent with him during this Christmas season, and that his fight with this disease is over.”

    Banatao was born to a rice farmer and housekeeper in Iguig, Cagayan, according to ABS-CBN. According to his 2015 documentary, he didn’t have access to electricity growing up and was taught math using bamboo sticks. He said it was typical for his classmates to stop going to school after sixth grade to help their parents work in the fields, but his father told him to continue studying.

    He developed a love for engineering and graduated with a degree in electric engineering from Mapua Institute of Technology, a private research university in Manila. He said in his documentary that there were no design jobs for engineers in the Philippines, so he moved to the U.S. and pursued a master’s degree in electrical engineering and computer science at Stanford University. He graduated in 1972.

    Soon after college, Banatao worked as a design engineering at Boeing. ABS-CBN reported that he then went on to work for other technology companies, like National Semiconductor and Intersil. While at Commodore International, he designed the first single chip, 16-bit microprocessor-based calculator.

    He is credited with developing the first 10-Mbit ethernet CMOS chip in 1981 while working at Seeq Technology. He also developed the first system logic chipset for IBM’s PC-XT and PC-AT and one of the first graphics accelerators for personal computers. These inventions allowed for faster computer performance, according to Inquirer.net. The Harvard Club of Southern California credited Banatao for bringing GPS technology to consumers.

    “Dado is the man who invented a graphical chipset that took us from black screens with green writing to the dynamic displays we have today,” the club wrote for a description of a lecture he gave in 2017 for the Harvard Business School Association of Orange County.

    [ad_2]

    Nollyanne Delacruz

    Source link

  • The Bay Area’s week of stormy weather is nearly over. Here’s when the skies should fully clear

    [ad_1]

    The end to a wild week of whipsawing weather across Northern California is at hand.

    Sunny skies, calmer winds and cooler temperatures are forecast to return to the Bay Area on Saturday and linger into early next week, offering a respite from a weeklong parade of storms that felled trees, flooded roadways and caused power outages affecting thousands of people.

    [ad_2]

    Jakob Rodgers

    Source link

  • 49ers’ George Kittle misses practice again as status for Bears game Sunday remains uncertain

    [ad_1]

    George Kittle’s injured ankle forced him to miss practice again on Thursday, leaving the 49ers’ Pro Bowl tight end’s status for Sunday night’s game against the Chicago Bears in question.

    Coach Kyle Shanahan said on Wednesday that Kittle still has “a chance” to face the Bears as long as he was able to heal quick enough from his injury during Monday night’s win over Indianapolis.

    San Francisco (11-4) has clinched a playoff spot and can earn the top seed in the NFC by beating the Bears (11-4) and Seattle (12-3) in the final two games of the season.

    But losing Kittle would be a big blow to a San Francisco offense that has been operating at a high level during a five-game winning streak. The Niners have gone back-to-back games without having to punt for the first time in franchise history.
    Kittle is a key part of both the run and pass game for the 49ers. The Niners’ running game has improved since Kittle returned after missing five games early this season with a hamstring injury.

    [ad_2]

    Wire reports

    Source link

  • One Bay Area city tried an innovative program to deal with its abandoned shopping cart problem. Here’s what happened.

    [ad_1]

    Earlier this year, San Jose politicians announced they were targeting the thousands of abandoned shopping carts clogging creeks and blighting streets. Now the first data on a pilot program aimed at curbing the problem is in, and the city must decide whether the results justify the financial cost of expanding it.

    [ad_2]

    Devan Patel

    Source link

  • SJPD veteran tapped as Watsonville’s next top cop

    [ad_1]

    WATSONVILLE – A San Jose police veteran is leaving the South Bay to take the reins as Watsonville’s next top cop.

    [ad_2]

    Jason Green

    Source link

  • Stanford, Cal anchor Pac-12 reunion as old rivals meet again

    [ad_1]

    Cal, Stanford welcome back former Pac-12 foes Oregon and USC at Invisalign Bay Area Women’s Classic at Chase Center on Sunday afternoon


    This article is only available to subscribers

    Offer valid for non-subscribers only

    [ad_2]

    Nathan Canilao

    Source link

  • Cal hangs tough, but can’t stop Jazzy Davidson in close loss to No. 19 USC

    [ad_1]

    SAN FRANCISCO — The future of women’s basketball was on full display at Chase Center on Sunday night. 

    And Cal had no answer for her. 

    Despite a valiant effort, Cal couldn’t stop Freshman sensation Jazzy Davidson as she scored 24 points in a 61-57 win for USC. 

    Sakima Walker finished with 13 points and 10 rebounds for Cal. Taylor Barnes also had 13 points and Lulu Twidale added 11 points. 

    Cal did just enough to trail by just three points at halftime. 

    But Cal quickly took back the momentum coming out of the halftime break. The Bears scored seven unanswered points to start the third quarter to take a three-point lead and force USC coach Lindsay Gottlieb to call a timeout. 

    After scoring 14 points in the first half, Cal held Davidson to just three points in the third quarter.

    Cal’s lead ballooned to as large as nine in the third quarter, but USC ended the quarter on a 10-3 run to come within two points of Cal’s lead heading into the fourth quarter.

    USC took a four-point lead with under 90 seconds left on a jumper from Kara Dunn. Two free throws from Gisella Maul cut the Trojans’ lead to just two at the 1:15 mark. 

    But a costly turnover down two and a missed free throw trailing by Walker was the difference late as USC hit every clutch shot at the line to seal the win. 

    Despite a hot-scoring start from Davidson, Cal kept up with the high-powered USC offense. 

    [ad_2]

    Nathan Canilao

    Source link

  • Campbell toy store helps Brownie troop with giving tree

    [ad_1]

    Elves in training

    Members of Brownie Troop 60125 volunteered at the Family Giving Tree warehouse in Sunnyvale on Dec. 7, sorting, wrapping and organizing gifts and getting them ready for bagging for the nonprofit’s Holiday Wish Drive. The troop also hosted a Virtual Giving Tree along with Junior Troop 60174, adopting 25 wish cards, and used cookie sale proceeds to shop for gifts at Pennyland Toys in Campbell, which offered the troops a discount. Donations to the Virtual Giving Trees can be made until 9 p.m. on Jan. 15, 2026, at https://wishdrive.org/girlscouttroop60125

    Founded in Milpitas and now located in Santa Clara, Family Giving Tree has already collected more than 24,000 gifts this season and is working toward helping 50,000 children and families across the Bay Area, according to Evelyn Huynh, director of community resource development.

    Peninsula Symphony concert

    Grammy-nominated pianist Joyce Yang will perform with the Peninsula Symphony Jan. 17, 2026, in a program balancing the First Concerto of Beethoven with three orchestral visions of the story of “Romeo and Juliet.” Works by Strauss, Prokofiev and Diamond complete this program, to be performed at Campbell’s Heritage Theatre, located at 1 W Campbell Ave.

    The concert starts at 7:30 p.m. Tickets are $35-$50 at https://peninsulasymphony.my.salesforce-sites.com/ticket. Children and students are admitted for free.

    [ad_2]

    Anne Gelhaus

    Source link

  • How Collin Graf, the undrafted son of engineers, became a top-line goal-scorer on a resurgent Sharks squad

    [ad_1]

    SAN JOSE — Collin Graf may have been born to play hockey. He certainly didn’t know it at the time. 

    But these days, Graf is making headlines on the ice. Most recently, the second-year Sharks forward scored two goals Thursday night in a 5-3 loss to the Dallas Stars, notching the first multi-goal game of his career. 

    Playing on San Jose’s top line with Macklin Celebrini and rookie Igor Chernyshov, Graf finished off a pass from Celebrini in the crease and potted another net-front pass from Chernyshov. 

    This season has been Graf’s NHL breakout. He stuck on the Sharks’ roster out of training camp and has played in 34 of 35 games, accumulating 18 points. 

    San Jose Sharks’ Collin Graf (51) celebrates his goal against the Dallas Stars in the second period at the SAP Center in San Jose, Calif., on Thursday, Dec. 18, 2025. (Nhat V. Meyer/Bay Area News Group) 

    “He’s put in a lot of work,” Sharks coach Ryan Warsofsky said. “When he first came in, in the NHL, the pace is extremely high. So he went in after the summer, put a lot of work in last year to get the pace up. And now his details, his hockey sense is really what sticks out the most. He’s a smart individual. And now he’s added another layer to his game with the checking component.”

    Graf, 23, grew up as the son of engineers Robert and Theresa in Lincoln, Massachusetts, and his initial foray onto the ice came for a different reason. 

    “My mom just wanted me to learn how to skate,” Graf said. “And then when I was skating, there were hockey players on the other side of the ice, and I guess I told my mom that I wanted to do that. 

    “So then it took me like two years to get good enough at skating to become a hockey player. And ever since, I’ve been a hockey player.”

    San Jose Sharks' Igor Chernyshov (92) chats with San Jose Sharks' Collin Graf (51) during their game against the Calgary Flames in the third period at the SAP Center in San Jose, Calif., on Tuesday, Dec. 16, 2025. (Nhat V. Meyer/Bay Area News Group)
    San Jose Sharks’ Igor Chernyshov (92) chats with San Jose Sharks’ Collin Graf (51) during their game against the Calgary Flames in the third period at the SAP Center in San Jose, Calif., on Tuesday, Dec. 16, 2025. (Nhat V. Meyer/Bay Area News Group) 

    A hockey player, but not one who was ticketed to be a professional from the beginning. Graf was undersized and undrafted coming out of juniors at 5-foot-8 and 145 pounds. He didn’t play for a Canadian major junior team or in the American junior leagues, instead staying within the Boston Bruins’ junior development program. 

    He signed with Union College in 2021, scoring 11 goals and 22 points in his freshman season. Then he transferred to Quinnipiac, where he led the Bobcats with 58 points as they won the national championship. 

    He thought then about turning pro then but opted to return for one more year.

    “I met with teams, and I definitely considered it,” Graf said. “My linemates, we all ended up signing the next year. We talked about it, and we wanted to come back. We had a good group of guys. They’re my buddies. My best friends are still from college to this day. It was a great decision on my part, just in terms of getting bigger, stronger, becoming more mature as a human.”

    San Jose Sharks forward Collin Graf (51) shoots the puck while being defended by Utah Mammoth's Mikhail Sergachev (98) during the first period of their game on Monday, Dec.1, 2025, in San Jose, Calif. (Aric Crabb/Bay Area News Group)
    San Jose Sharks forward Collin Graf (51) shoots the puck while being defended by Utah Mammoth’s Mikhail Sergachev (98) during the first period of their game on Monday, Dec.1, 2025, in San Jose, Calif. (Aric Crabb/Bay Area News Group) 

    Graf continued to develop his all-around game and signed with San Jose after Quinnipiac’s season ended in April 2024. He played immediately, recording a point in his second career game and finishing with two in seven games played as the Sharks wrapped up the last-place season that landed them Celebrini with the No. 1 overall pick. 

    The next season wasn’t always glamorous for Graf. Though he joined Celebrini for 33 games with the Sharks and compiled 11 points, he spent most of the year in the AHL with the Barracuda, putting up 35 points in 40 games. 

    It’s uncertain how long he’ll stay on the Sharks’ top line this year. Will Smith is due back before long from an upper-body injury, and Warsofsky said he may shuffle San Jose’s lines before Saturday’s game against Seattle. 

    But after adjusting to the pace of the game, Graf has made enough headway that he is quickly becoming a part of the Sharks’ long-term plans.

    Toronto Maple Leafs goaltender Dennis Hildeby (35) makes a save as San Jose Sharks' Collin Graf (51) looks for the rebound during second period NHL hockey action in Toronto on Thursday, Dec. 11, 2025. (Frank Gunn/The Canadian Press via AP)
    Toronto Maple Leafs goaltender Dennis Hildeby (35) makes a save as San Jose Sharks’ Collin Graf (51) looks for the rebound during second period NHL hockey action in Toronto on Thursday, Dec. 11, 2025. (Frank Gunn/The Canadian Press via AP) 

    “He’s transformed his game from what he was in college,” Warsofsky said. “He’s getting to the point where he’s accepting that more and more. There’s another level we continue to push and get to, but he’s done a really good job. He’s here late in the facility. You can tell he really wants it, and that’s an important piece of the whole thing.”

    For Celebrini, who jumped into the NHL minted as a franchise star from the get-go, Graf’s intelligence is a separator that has emerged as he’s grinded his way to the highest level. 

    “He’s one of the smarter players on the ice, and he’s always in the right spot with a great stick,” Celebrini said. “That’s why he’s been so great on our PK as well, his ability to disrupt plays and read plays before they happen. It helps when you’re playing with him and trying to create offense. He’s seeing the same things as I am.”

    San Jose Sharks' Collin Graf (51) celebrates his goal with San Jose Sharks' William Eklund (72) and San Jose Sharks' Macklin Celebrini (71) against the Boston Bruins in the third period at the SAP Center in San Jose, Calif., on Sunday, Nov. 23, 2025. (Nhat V. Meyer/Bay Area News Group)
    San Jose Sharks’ Collin Graf (51) celebrates his goal with San Jose Sharks’ William Eklund (72) and San Jose Sharks’ Macklin Celebrini (71) against the Boston Bruins in the third period at the SAP Center in San Jose, Calif., on Sunday, Nov. 23, 2025. (Nhat V. Meyer/Bay Area News Group) 

    [ad_2]

    Christian Babcock

    Source link

  • San Jose’s Christmas in the Park has a busy weekend ahead

    [ad_1]

    It’s going to be a busy weekend at San Jose’s Christmas in the Park.

    [ad_2]

    Sal Pizarro

    Source link

  • Five in a row: Pittsburg crushes Cardinal Newman to claim latest NCS D1 crown

    [ad_1]

    Pittsburg demolishes Cardinal Newman to cruise to fifth straight NCS Division I championship.

    Offer valid for non-subscribers only

    [ad_2]

    Nathan Canilao

    Source link