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The Islanders Swap Coaches With Four Games Left In A Playoff Chase

2026-04-07 00:55:00

In December of 1995, Patrick Roy let in nine goals in half a game at home against the Detroit Red Wings. With the crowd getting on his case, and the team already in a spiral, Roy exited the ice and promptly told Canadiens brass that he would not be suiting up for Montreal again. A few days later, Roy got his wish with a trade to the Avalanche, who would go on to win the Stanley Cup that very season. Mario Tremblay's choice to leave Roy in net until he was soundly humiliated remains, over 30 years later, one of the most memorably consequential coaching decisions in NHL history.

https://youtu.be/M9jApHWpKkk?si=sW1yDTDH6IglmTpH&t=636

Roy has had messier breakups than this weekend's, is what I'm saying. But Sunday's firing as head coach by the Islanders is still not how anyone wants to go out. With four games remaining in the regular season, and his team just a few inches out of the last wild card spot in the East, New York announced that they're taking Roy off the bench after a little over two years and replacing him with Pete DeBoer. Why would the club make such a drastic change with just a week's worth of high-stakes games left to play? The answer is more straightforward than it might initially appear.

A Vengeful Deity Is Smiting The Lakers

2026-04-07 00:34:33

Sometimes circumstances force you to conclude that God bets. And while you may choose to question the existence of a deity, or more specifically wonder who or what it is that would book those bets, the evidence is still the evidence.

So, let us walk you over to the Los Angeles Lakers, who spent the weekend getting worked over by the cosmos and its principal guide. First, Luka Doncic, in the midst of a late-season run to become the new heart and lungs of the team and a burgeoning MVP candidate, blows a hamstring bad enough that he will seek treatment in Europe in an attempt to shorten the expected six weeks' recovery time. Seemingly mere moments later, Austin Reaves succumbs to an oblique injury that the team announced on Saturday will also take him offline for a month and change. It is not relevant, or anyway we cannot prove that it is relevant, that all this happened after Reaves enjoyed this friendly exchange with a sympathetic Oklahoma City fan who may or may not have been a terrestrial representative of The Big Oom.

Under normal circumstances, we would simply note this as weirdly bad luck for a team that had lately emerged as a solid second-tier contender, if one a tick below true championship pedigree of the Oklahoma City Thunder, San Antonio Spurs, Boston Celtics, or, lately at least, the Atlanta Hawks. Doncic in particular had been ungodly before his injury, scoring a laughably absurd 600 points in the month of March, an average of 35.3 points per game. The Lakers won 15 of 17 games during that stretch, and had become worrisome to the general populace.

Polymarket Apologizes For Taking Bets On American Pilots Downed Over Iran

2026-04-07 00:14:02

Less than one month after Kalshi got into a legal whoopsie over whether or not they should pay out bettors who wagered on the death of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei in the early days of the U.S.'s disastrous war with Iran, the don't-call-us-a-gambling-site's biggest competitor, Polymarket, another gambling site, is facing a similar problem. An F-15 Strike Eagle was shot down on Friday over the southwestern Kohgiluyeh and Boyer-Ahmad province, which prompted the U.S. military to spring into action to stage a rescue mission to retrieve the jet's two-person crew. Polymarket then posted what they call a "market" on when the rescue mission would be complete.

Users who paged over to Polymarket's Iran tab would have scrolled by "Kharg Island no longer under Iranian control by...?" and "Hezbollah military action against Israel on...?" to get to "US confirms pilots rescued by...?" People got mad at Polymarket pretty quickly, because unlike other betting markets on how many people Donald Trump will deport or whether or not Jeffrey Epstein is confirmed to be Satoshi Nakamoto by the end of 2026, this involves members of the U.S. military. Polymarket removed the wager and said in a statement, "We took this market down immediately as it does not meet our integrity standards. It should not have been posted, and we are investigating how this slipped through our internal safeguards."

U.S. Rep. and Marine Corps veteran Seth Moulton called it "DISGUSTING," and later told CNBC, "Polymarket didn’t take that market down because it violated their standards. They took it down because we called them out." He's right. The whole value proposition of prediction markets is that users can bet on anything.

The Crossword, April 6: Hit Parade

2026-04-06 22:58:38

Have a go at our Monday crossword. This week's puzzle was constructed by Faren Roth, and edited by Hoang-Kim Vu. Faren is a soon-to-be Ph.D. student in speech, language, and hearing sciences who lives in Madison, Wis. She discovered the world of crossword construction six months ago, and she's been a bit obsessed ever since! She hopes her first puzzle with Defector is a hit.

Defector crosswords, launched in partnership with our friends at AVCX, run every Monday. If you’re interested in submitting a puzzle to us, you can read our guidelines HERE. Please note that submissions will be closed from April 1 to May 1. 

Cori Close And UCLA Won At Their Own Speed

2026-04-06 21:50:06

There was a moment early in the third quarter of Sunday’s national championship game when you could see exactly how UCLA was going to win and why. The South Carolina Gamecocks, desperate for offense, had taken to gambling now: sending bold passes through traffic, pawing for steals, taking shots early in the clock. They needed something—anything—and in the absence of a real halfcourt method, the only option left for them was madness. South Carolina point guard Raven Johnson tried to push the pace, lobbing a pass overhead to a streaking teammate in transition. But into the air leapt Kiki Rice to intercept it. The camera lurched and slowly panned back the other way; the other Gamecocks went flying out of the picture. Rice considered her next steps and kicked the ball over to the corner for Charlisse Leger-Walker, who knocked down a three. In UCLA’s hands, the game calmed down.

Slow and steady, the race was won. The Bruins defeated South Carolina, 79-51, Sunday afternoon to bring home the program’s first NCAA championship and its first national championship since the AIAW tournament in 1978.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X57QWx6lQMw

Jo Adell Stole Three Homers And A Win From The Mariners

2026-04-06 05:01:16

If Jo Adell hadn't been so precocious, his arrival as a big leaguer would seem right on time. The Angels made him the 10th overall pick of the 2017 MLB Draft, and the breadth and voltage of his talent quickly made him one of the top prospects in the sport, even before that collection of tools became something more comprehensive. There were extenuating circumstances, as there always are—the Angels' singular dedication to moving its top prospects through the minors at peak speed and the fragrant fug of low-intensity mediocrity sitting over everything they do, the disruption of baseball's Covid hiatus, and how hard baseball is at the highest level even for those with superhuman skills.

But the results were what they were. Adell debuted in the Majors as a 21-year-old in 2020 and mostly looked overmatched in the parts of the four subsequent seasons that he spent at the level. Over these big league stints of 38, 35, 88, and 17 games, Adell was mostly unable to reach those tools and pretty comprehensively unable to use them; back at Triple-A, he still looked more or less like Jo Adell when healthy enough to do so, but in the Majors he mostly looked like he belonged back in Triple-A. What separates bad organizations from good ones is how quickly and how well they can straighten out the kinks that introduce themselves into seemingly sure-shot baseball careers like Adell's. The Angels, pardon the jargon, are not a good baseball organization, and so there was some reason to think that Adell might not figure it out there, or at all.

And, the Angels being the Angels, it was easy to miss it when Adell started to figure it out in 2024. His defense in right field improved enough to make him playable there, he got to his over-the-fence power in big-league games in a way that he previously hadn't, and the Angels were lousy enough and Adell healthy enough that he finally spent something like a full season in the bigs. It wasn't the outcome that anyone had in mind during his years as one of the game's best-regarded offensive prospects—"you wouldn't exactly feel awful batting him ninth," raved his entry in the 2025 Baseball Prospectus Annual—but very little about becoming a big leaguer is linear even for players as talented as Adell.