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Hockey Boy Wants His Hockey Puck

2026-03-19 22:10:42

Whose puck is it? Jack Hughes's overtime goal to win Olympic gold is hockey history, maybe the single most important physical object in American hockey history. You could make the case for some Miracle equipment which surely smells awful by now, but that wasn't even the gold-medal game. The Hughes puck is a pure distillation, the sudden-death difference between defeat and world-champ status in one small, black disc of vulcanized rubber and entrance-fee bait. Any player would want it. Any collector would want it. Any hall of fame would want it. I wouldn't say no, if they'd like to give it to me. But who should have it? (I vote me.)

Well, start with who does have it. Possession is nine-tenths of the law, they say, so barring a daring Hughes Brothers midnight raid on the Hockey Hall of Fame, it's in Toronto and staying in Toronto. Jack, when asked about this on Wednesday, stirred the perfect silly 12-hour news cycle for a bored NHL limping to the end of its regular season.

"I'm trying to get it," Hughes told ESPN's Greg Wyshynski. "Like, that's bullshit that the Hockey Hall of Fame has it, in my opinion. Why would they have that puck?"

There Is No Resting State Of March Madness

2026-03-19 21:29:53

You can tell a lot about a college basketball fan by what they miss. Cut me open and the concentric rings of idle sentiment that have accrued over a lifetime spent caring about this stuff will date me to my precise moment of conversion, on a well-timed sick day back in middle school; it remains the first and only legit sick day among the many I've called in during the first days of the NCAA Tournament in the years since. It will date me in general, too, not just in terms of the players and teams I remember best but for how different the shape and context of those moments were.

When the NCAA Tournament starts in earnest, the basketball will be more efficient and polished and beautiful than the stuff that hooked me decades ago, as befits the fact that players are now getting paid for their labor in ways that can finally be acknowledged officially. If there is something unsettled and unsettling about the contemporary college game, it comes down to watching it become optimized in the same degrading contempo-style free-market ways that you'll recognize from every other corner of public life. Again, you have to know what you're actually missing, and that all this novel fuckery is leveling and bleaching something that was once scuzzier, jankier, and less finished is regrettable in some ways without actually being bad and only tenuously qualifying as "new."

College basketball is driven by a vigorous gray market in teenage wing players; that market is overseen to no great effect by an irredeemable, corrupt, and badly diminished regulatory authority, and dictated from one moment to the next by the whims of sour monied alumni and local car dealership types and sneaker companies. That has been true for more or less my whole life, and what feels new amounts to an increasing refinement and liberation of that old pursuit. What's uncanny about it comes from watching as college basketball crafts itself into a tiered independent minor-league enterprise more or less from first principles. Liberalized transfer rules allow players to seek out the best pay and developmental situations they can find, and they do; a market proliferates around this as reliably as mushrooms after rain, with brokers and technologies making it possible for schools at every level to participate in this marketplace. How much you spend, here as everywhere else, dictates how much you will get. Every year, now, college basketball is made over by those forces.

March Madness’s Phony Rules Were Made To Be Broken

2026-03-19 20:58:56

I’m a sucker for contrarian tournament picks. Sure, I could spend some time telling you why a one-seed is going to win the title, but who really finds joy in touting the favorite? You’d have to be a heartless sociopath to do that, whereas I am a normal man who spends a lot of his time assessing the relative quality of every college basketball team in Division I. So please indulge me while I tell you why Purdue is going to win the title this year.

Let’s start our journey with a fun fact. If you care about filling out a bracket, this is the time of year when you get inundated with fun facts by engagement farmers. They generally go something like this: “Only these teams can win a title based upon [a very specific set of qualifications], which are [cherry-picked with curiously arbitrary cutoffs]”. For instance you may hear that, based on history, a team’s offensive rating has to be in the top 31 to win a title. As if a team ranked 32 has no chance.

The term for this is data dredging. And while it’s a pretty terrible practice if you’re trying to find a cure for cancer, it’s honestly not that big of a deal if you just want to get a few extra eyeballs on your reddit post. These nuggets of trivia often make use of my own ratings. I disavow all such efforts, but there’s only so much one can do.

Howard’s First NCAA Tournament Win Was A Long Time Coming

2026-03-19 04:35:15

March came in like a lion last night. An off-balance three-pointer from UMBC at the buzzer caromed off the backboard, allowing Howard University to survive a crazy and clutch comeback and advance to the main pool of the NCAA men's tournament. 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rAA5nqPsH-w

Howard’s win, which was in a “first four” play-in game but is being accepted as the first March Madness win in school history, made me really happy. Like all of D.C., I need bread and circuses out the wazoo these days. But there’s more to it here. Howard University’s sports have been a punchline or worse my whole life, and since before I was even around, and that's a mighty long time. 

The WNBA And Players’ Union Have A Verbal Agreement On A New CBA

2026-03-19 04:17:12

The WNBA and the league’s players’ union have reached a verbal agreement on a new collective bargaining agreement, they announced early Wednesday morning. According to ESPN’s Shams Charania, the new CBA will include maximum salaries over $1 million, minimum salaries over $300,000, and a starting team salary cap of $7.5 million. Those figures represent a dramatic increase in player pay: Under the previous CBA, which players opted out of in October 2024, the 2026 salary cap would have been $1.55 million. As WNBA cap expert Richard Cohen pointed out, the new minimum salary of $300,000 is more than what Kelsey Mitchell, the league’s highest-paid player, earned last year.

Since opting out of the 2020 CBA at the end of the 2024 season, players have spoken about their wish for a “transformational” deal, one that would allow them to share in the rapid financial growth of the WNBA. “For the first time, player salaries are tied to a truly meaningful share of league revenue, driving exponential growth in the salary cap,” union president Nneka Ogwumike said in a statement Wednesday afternoon. Her statement also mentioned gains on ancillary issues the two sides had been discussing, including facilities standards, housing, retirement, and expanded family planning benefits.

The two sides met for more than 100 hours in marathon bargaining sessions over the last week, much of that time spent trying to agree on a framework for revenue sharing. Player proposals sought a percentage of gross revenue, while the league’s proposals reportedly only offered them a percentage of net revenue. The exact details of the revenue sharing system in the new CBA haven’t yet been made public—a term sheet is yet to be formalized, WNBA commissioner Cathy Engelbert said, and the agreement will need to be ratified by players—but Charania reports that players will receive an average of nearly 20 percent of gross revenue over the life of the deal. Before last week, the union was reportedly seeking 26 percent of gross revenue, down from an initial ask of 40 percent. The league had previously offered players a percentage of net revenue that the union estimated would amount to less than 15 percent of gross revenue. 

Good Riddance To Red Asses

2026-03-19 01:53:24

As Bryce Harper rounded the bases on his game-tying two-run homer in the eighth inning of Tuesday night's World Baseball Classic final, he exchanged a salute with his commanding officer, third base coach Dino Ebel, then moved to point at the American flag patch on his uniform. He looked at the wrong arm at first, mixing up the Stars and Stripes with the slightly larger Capital One patch on his other sleeve.

That was a fairly representative moment of how unpleasant it was to watch Team USA in this tournament, and why it was a small mercy to watch them lose to Venezuela, 3-2. With all due respect to Comrade Ratto, the nationalistic pride on display by the Americans carried a different tenor than the WBC's other contenders. Of course it would. This game featured a nation that had recently bombed and invaded its opponents'. Rather than making an effort to keep that association at arm's length, Team USA embraced it. They saw what the U.S. men's hockey team did at the Olympics and thought to follow that but have even less fun in the process.

What did that look like in practice? The Budweiser Clydesdales have stolen less valor than these flag-humping runners-up. It began well before Harper's salute to imaginary service. Inviting the looniest former Navy SEAL around to deliver a pregame speech for the team was one lowlight. Another was Cal Raleigh wearing a "Front Toward Enemy" T-shirt and being a jackass toward his actual Seattle Mariners teammate, whom he is scheduled to see every day for the next six months or so. As other squads like Italy showed it was possible to be American-born and still have fun at an exhibition baseball tournament, Team USA was gripping the bat too tightly, metaphorically and then literally in the final.