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Photos of Lunar New Year celebrations for the Year of the Horse

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People around Asia celebrate the Lunar New Year on Tuesday, Feb. 17, the start of the Year of the Horse.

This is a photo gallery curated by AP photo editors.



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Indian Pueblo Cultural Center to expand hours starting in March

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ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (KRQE) – The Indian Pueblo Cultural Center (IPCC) will be expanding its hours at the IPCC main building, including the museum, the Indian Pueblo Store, and the Indian Pueblo Kitchen. The center said the main building will be open on Mondays starting on March 2. “This decision aligns with our ongoing commitment to grow, […]



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Jelly Roll Will Receive Country Radio’s Humanitarian Award

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Jelly Roll, who released the new song “Thorns” last week, will be honored for his achievements away from the stage when Country Radio Seminar gets underway in Nashville in March. The rapper-turned-country-star is the 2026 recipient of the Artist Humanitarian Award, an honor given each year by the Country Radio Broadcasters organization that recognizes the philanthropic contributions of country-radio stars.

Past recipients of the Artist Humanitarian Award include Carrie Underwood, Luke Bryan, Jason Aldean, Kane Brown, and Kenny Chesney. Last year’s award was given to two artists, Eric Church and Luke Combs, for their efforts in helping those affected by Hurricane Helene, particularly in the Western North Carolina region.

Since breaking out with his 2020 song “Save Me,” Jelly Roll has made his own personal tale of sin and redemption a cornerstone of his persona. He was a convicted felon who served time for robbery and drug possession and was also in juvenile detention. According to his wife, the media personality and author Bunnie XO, Jelly Roll will give one of the three Grammys he won at this year’s 68th annual Grammy Awards to the Davidson County Juvenile Detention in Nashville to put on display.

In 2024, he appeared on Capitol Hill to lobby lawmakers to pass legislation to stop the spread of fentanyl.

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“For better or worse, we are an accumulation of everything that ever happened to us, and I think that we have to wear that,” Jelly Roll told Rolling Stone in 2024, talking about his checkered past and how he’s evolved. “I’m 15 to 20 years removed from being a real criminal, and I don’t think like a criminal at all. It took a long time to quit thinking that way. I used to look at it like I wouldn’t wish jail on my worst enemy. Now, I’m like, ‘If that dude did that, and he got time, he deserved it.’ It’s such a paradigm shift on how I look at society as a whole.”

Jelly Roll will receive the award at a ceremony to be announced during Country Radio Seminar, running March 18 through 20, in Nashville. Bunnie XO will release her new memoir, Stripped Down: Unfiltered and Unapologetic, on Tuesday.



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Champions League: Can Mourinho do it again against Real Madrid?

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Europe’s best and brightest lay in wait, but for now, the Champions League is off on a little sojourn as the knockout play off round begins on Tuesday night. For those who missed the top eight, but not the 24, the next eight days offers a second chance to reach the round of 16, but with altogether less room for wobbles this time around.

It was at this stage last year that big names such as Juventus, Milan and Manchester City fell and there will be a few big names intent on avoiding such slip ups this time around. Meanwhile the likes of Qarabag and Bodo/Glimt ready themselves for a first shot at the knockout stages of Europe’s most prestigious competition.

Before we get to them though, well, there’s only one place you can begin. It’s Jose Mourinho against one of his former employers. At whatever stage of whatever competition, that’s pure box office.

1. Can Jose Mourinho deliver another upset?

Nothing can erase the thrills of goalkeeper Anatoliy Trubin rising highest at the death to deliver the header that Benfica had just discovered they needed if they were to avoid extend their participation in the Champions League. It was the sort of searing in or out drama that critics said the league phase’s final day of 18 different cogs in the machine could not deliver. There is no way of eradicating European football’s Jimmy Glass moment.

If there were to be one, though, it would probably involve Benfica discovering that the reward for their late win over Real Madrid was to be stomped into the dirt by Real Madrid a few weeks later. After all, Madrid are in so many ways the Michael Jordan of the soccer world. Something, anything happens and “they took that personally.” If you don’t think that the Real Madrid hierarchy, coaching staff and players saw the joyous scenes at the Estadio da Luz and asked how it affects themselves, the main characters of this universe, then you don’t know this club.

Before we get to the matter of whether Madrid can inflict payback on Benfica it’s probably worth asking what Mourinho can do to them. Let’s start by assuming that we are not going to see the same approach from his team that we did in that final league stage game. That was one Benfica had to win to give themselves the best chance of reaching the knockouts. This time, well we’ve seen enough Mourinho knockout football to know that his basic approach still starts with whoever has the ball is the one that can make the mistakes. “I’m very used to these kinds of ties,” he said on Monday. “I’ve been doing it all my life.”

There have been some signs in domestic football of Mourinho softening with age. His Benfica side average over two a goals a game in the Primeira Liga but like so much associated with his homeland — from Viktor Gyokeres’ scoring form to how good Porto were in early 2003 — it’s just very hard to realistically assess Mourinho’s team in a competition with three near equals and an extremely limited field. Maybe we’re better off looking at the limited data pool of the league phase. Looking at the chart below does at least give you a sense of what has been apparent to those who saw Benfica after Mourinho took charge on September 18. The trip to Newcastle aside this was a team who could at least stop the other team from really testing them, allowing only 10.1 non-penalty xG in their eight games. Given that, you’d be hard pressed to believe that Benfica are going to ride out to meet the team their manager calls the “kings of the Champions League” in single combat.


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The question then is whether Real Madrid can overwhelm the defenses. The answer is, yes, they probably can. It’s not hard to make the case that appointing Alvaro Arbeloa lowered the ceiling that Xabi Alonso had built for this team in his brief tenure, the press and possess system that asked so much of his forwards replaced with something a little more up and down with fewer demands placed on the star forwards. Then again when you allow Kylian Mbappe and Vinicius Junior to freelance the results can be pretty awe-inspiring, especially when it’s an in-form Trent Alexander-Arnold getting the ball to them.

The latter’s presence could be an extremely powerful weapon if Benfica do as expected and sit off Madrid. No one in the sport can slide a cross through a low block like Alexander-Arnold, typified in his stunning cross for Gonzalo Garcia’s opener in the 4-1 win over Real Sociedad. Even before his return to the team you could see that Madrid were on the upswing as an attacking force, a function of first Alonso abandoning his system amid player disgruntlement and his sacking effectively handing the reigns to the star players.


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Given that this Madrid team will have a point to prove and the attack to eventually hammer down Benfica’s defenses, you would be hard pressed to convince yourself of much Mourinho magic this time around. Then again, whoever would have seen Trubiin’s late heroics last month?

2. Are PSG able to peak at the right moment?

Twelve months ago, you could see the first signs that something special was bubbling at the Parc des Princes, Paris Saint-Germain coalescing in such a fashion that in a flash they had established themselves as quite clearly the best team on the planet, bound for that Champions League title they had long craved. The only question coming into this season was whether the past few months had been the birth of a dynasty or the sort of magical union of form and fitness that no team could realistically expect to hold up for several years in a row.

For most of 2025-26 it looks like the latter has been the more credible. Defeat at Rennes at the weekend saw the champions cede top spot in Ligue 1 to Lens. Meanwhile, two points from their final three league phase games saw Luis Enrique’s men fritter away a top eight berth and slide into a second successive play off against French opposition. As the xG charts below show (ignore that hot form early in 2024-25, we’re looking at a small data sample) there was a drop off at the start of this season, a serious upswing in the quality and quantity of shots being allowed resulting in a team that looked quite diminished compared to its all-conquering form.


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At least it was easy to explain why PSG had fallen off. After a gruelling summer of Club World Cup commitments, injuries hit hard. Joao Neves, Fabian Ruiz, Marquinhos, Achraf Hakimi and Nuno Mendes all missed time at the start of the season as did Ousmane Dembele. The Ballon d’Or winner, reinvented from mercurial winger into ferocious leader of the pressing pack, was no less critical to the defensive excellence of the Champions League winners than the actual aforementioned defenders. The dip in their attacking oomph was also sustained from the final games of last season, many of which were more nervy than that rout of Inter in the final.

It was not just injuries that held back PSG. Luis Enrique seemed to do the same and that is not a critique. The coaching triumph of 2024-25 had been guiding his squad so that their fitness levels collectively peaked when Arsenal and Inter were on their last legs. If a few games had to be thrown early in the season to give his guys a post-Club World Cup breather, surely that would pay dividends in the spring?

The signs are that that is indeed the case. Since the return of Dembele and Desire Doue, PSG’s offensive output has swung upwards. The defense too has benefitted from more consistently selecting last season’s back four. Strange results might still happen — the 3-1 loss at Rennes saw PSG put up 3.58 xG and allow 1.39 — but at full tilt this is still a team that should back itself to beat any in Europe.

At full tilt is far from given and will require more than just Fabian Ruiz completing his return from a knee issue. It means their star players being fit and settled enough to excel rather than Dembele limping out with 16 minutes to go of the fightback at Rennes, a reminder that fragility has been the default for PSG’s star attacker. It also means no more trading of barbs across post-match media from Dembele, who called on players to “play for the club instead of thinking about themselves,” and his seemingly less than impressed manager. Europe saw what this team looks like when tensions are frayed in the autumn of 2024. It certainly wasn’t a Champions League winner in waiting.

PSG can be that again and there are signs in the data to suggest they might be so soon. It may, however, require a level of collective fitness that, even with Luis Enrique’s careful management, is far from normal at the business end of a season.

3. Are Newcastle on upset watch?

A final league table that wasn’t a million miles away from a European football power rankings means that the playoff round has not thrown up any early showdowns between juggernauts, no re-run of last season’s meeting between Real Madrid and Manchester City. That might mean this round lacks something of the high stakes tension that is the Champions League’s stock trade in the spring months, but it does afford us the prospect of an upset or two.

Galatasaray’s meeting with Juventus might be one to keep an eye out on, though it is not entirely clear that any team that features Victor Osimhen and Leroy Sane should consider themselves long shots to win a two-legged tie early in this competition. The forecast in Bodo suggests that Inter will have even more to worry about than just Norway’s finest.

The more intriguing left-field option might however be Newcastle United’s trip to Azerbaijan. After all, Qarabag are seasoned veterans of two-legged European ties and have won eight of their last 10. Even when they haven’t emerged victorious they’ve pushed big beasts like near-invincible Bayer Leverkusen all the way. In this season’s league phase only Ajax departed Baku victorious and Chelsea were made to pay the price for Enzo Maresca’s rotation in a 2-2 draw where Qarabag might have hoped for more.


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There’ll be questions of rotation and resource allocation for Eddie Howe to consider on the 5,000 mile round trip to a city that is nearer to Delhi than Newcastle. That’s a long journey to recover from by 3 p.m. ET on Saturday, when Newcastle are due at Manchester City, trying to stay in the hunt for qualification to next year’s European competitions. Following the news that star player Bruno Guimaraes would miss up to two months with a hamstring injury, Sven Botman and Yoanne Wissa missed the FA Cup fourth round tie against Aston Villa, propelling the Magpies’ injury list to eight players. Now even without all those players they were able to win well at Villa Park and any team that rolls out the likes of Sandro Tonali and Anthony Gordon should be favorites against Qarabag. Still this might prove to be a fiddlier first leg than it looks, potentially setting the stage for a nerve-wracking night at St. James’ Park next week.





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Actor Robert Duvall dies at age 95

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Legendary actor Robert Duvall has passed away at the age of 95, his wife confirmed in a statement. NBC News’ Chloe Melas reports on Duvall’s seven-decade career, which earned multiple accolades, including the Academy Award for Best Actor in the movie “Tender Mercies.”

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Father-and-son surgeons bring alternative to open heart surgery

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A life-saving heart procedure offering an alternative to traditional open-heart surgery is now available to patients in Palm Beach County — and even more remarkably, the surgeons behind it are a father-and-son team. One local man says the innovative approach was nothing short of a game-changer.At 76 years old, staying active isn’t just a goal for John Zells — it’s his way of life. Whether he’s on the golf course or traveling with his wife, slowing down was never part of the plan.That is, until doctors discovered a major blockage in one of his arteries — the kind often referred to as the “widow maker.””They went in, they did a cath, and I wake up, he says, ‘You’ve got 90 to 95% blockage in your LAD, which is the widow maker. If that one blocks, you’re gone,'” Zells recalled. He had come dangerously close to suffering a massive heart attack.Traditionally, a blockage this severe would require open-heart surgery — a procedure that involves opening the chest, an extended hospital stay, and months of recovery.But Zells had another option. The McGinn technique. “Instead of opening the chest, surgeons access the heart through a small incision. The minimally invasive approach often results in less pain, fewer complications, and a significantly faster recovery,” said Dr. Joseph McGinn III, whose father pioneered the procedure.”John Zells is an excellent example of someone who received the appropriate treatment,” McGinn said. “Now he’s thriving. He’s pain-free, and I’m happy that I was able to provide that for him.”What makes the procedure even more notable is its rarity — only about 20 surgeons worldwide are trained to perform it.Two of them are right here in South Florida.Dr. McGinn Jr. now works alongside his son, Dr. Joseph McGinn III, who is continuing the legacy by performing the surgery at Boca Raton Regional Hospital and Bethesda Hospital East. “There’s only about 20 of us performing this procedure with any regularity around the world,” McGinn said. “We have physicians coming from across the globe to watch us operate. The learning curve is steep, but if you have the training and the patients, it truly benefits them.”The technique was even mentioned on the ABC hit medical drama “Grey’s Anatomy,” where a character references using the McGinn technique to access the chest with less invasiveness.Just three weeks after surgery, Zells was back on the golf course. Now, he’s preparing for a two-month cruise with his wife.”I’m very lucky that this was found,” he said.Zells hopes others facing bypass surgery will explore all their options.”If somebody is diagnosed with the need for a bypass,” he said, “I really think they owe it to themselves to go look at this procedure.”

A life-saving heart procedure offering an alternative to traditional open-heart surgery is now available to patients in Palm Beach County — and even more remarkably, the surgeons behind it are a father-and-son team. One local man says the innovative approach was nothing short of a game-changer.

At 76 years old, staying active isn’t just a goal for John Zells — it’s his way of life. Whether he’s on the golf course or traveling with his wife, slowing down was never part of the plan.

That is, until doctors discovered a major blockage in one of his arteries — the kind often referred to as the “widow maker.”

“They went in, they did a cath, and I wake up, he says, ‘You’ve got 90 to 95% blockage in your LAD, which is the widow maker. If that one blocks, you’re gone,'” Zells recalled.

He had come dangerously close to suffering a massive heart attack.

Traditionally, a blockage this severe would require open-heart surgery — a procedure that involves opening the chest, an extended hospital stay, and months of recovery.

But Zells had another option. The McGinn technique.

“Instead of opening the chest, surgeons access the heart through a small incision. The minimally invasive approach often results in less pain, fewer complications, and a significantly faster recovery,” said Dr. Joseph McGinn III, whose father pioneered the procedure.

“John Zells is an excellent example of someone who received the appropriate treatment,” McGinn said. “Now he’s thriving. He’s pain-free, and I’m happy that I was able to provide that for him.”

What makes the procedure even more notable is its rarity — only about 20 surgeons worldwide are trained to perform it.

Two of them are right here in South Florida.

Dr. McGinn Jr. now works alongside his son, Dr. Joseph McGinn III, who is continuing the legacy by performing the surgery at Boca Raton Regional Hospital and Bethesda Hospital East.

“There’s only about 20 of us performing this procedure with any regularity around the world,” McGinn said. “We have physicians coming from across the globe to watch us operate. The learning curve is steep, but if you have the training and the patients, it truly benefits them.”

The technique was even mentioned on the ABC hit medical drama “Grey’s Anatomy,” where a character references using the McGinn technique to access the chest with less invasiveness.

Just three weeks after surgery, Zells was back on the golf course. Now, he’s preparing for a two-month cruise with his wife.

“I’m very lucky that this was found,” he said.

Zells hopes others facing bypass surgery will explore all their options.

“If somebody is diagnosed with the need for a bypass,” he said, “I really think they owe it to themselves to go look at this procedure.”



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KORN May Be In The Studio Mixing New Music

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In a now-deleted photo on Instagram, Korn guitarist JamesMunkyShaffer was pictured with producer Nick Raskulinecz – known for his previous work with Korn on The Nothing in 2019 – and mixing engineer Chris LordAlge – known for his work with Green Day and My Chemical Romance – in a studio, with the caption, “What a blast with Nick Raskulinecz and Munkey mixing Korn!! Heavy badass rock!!!”

While the photo was originally uploaded to Lord-Alge‘s personal Instagram account, it has since been removed, presumably because according to BrianHeadWelch just last week when talking to Loudwire [as transcribed by thePRP], “We’re a fortunate band, we’ve been around for awhile and we’ve got an extensive catalogue with a lot of well-known songs. We’re focusing right now on our live show… it feels like we don’t even need a new album. Everything’s just going so well, but that’s not to say we’re not going to find some time to go in again. I feel like it’s not priority right now.”

Welch went as far to say, “I really love the fact that it’s taking a long time. I always told management that I wish that we would wait a little bit between albums. We’re just so addicted to the studio that we get in there and we’re putting albums out every two or three years, ever since I rejoined. And so, I love that there’s been delays.”

So, there’s really no telling what they were working on, if it was this album that Welch mentioned in his Loudwire interview, or something different entirely. Either way, Lord-Alge may have unknowingly broke the news of a new Korn record.

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The 500-Year-Old Beretta Gun Dynasty Is Betting Big on the U.S.

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The world’s oldest firearms business is taking aim at one of its biggest American rivals, amassing a 10% stake in rifle maker Ruger.



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Discipline, Perspective and Gratitude: A Veteran Athlete’s Edge

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“If I could go back and tell my younger self anything, it would be not to take anything for granted. It could all be over tomorrow. You just have to thank God for every opportunity,” said 10-time National Finals Rodeo qualifier Tilden Hooper.

At 20 years into his professional career, Hooper defines success differently than he once did.

The bareback rider, originally from Carthage, Texas, has built a decorated career spanning two decades. Hooper has earned more than $1.7 million and is entering his 20th season as a PRCA cardholder. He is now chasing his 11th NFR qualification — and his first gold buckle.

A dominant 92-point ride in the final round of the Fort Worth Stock Show and Rodeo secured Hooper the win and a $20,000 payday earlier this month. Currently ranked No. 5 in the world standings midway through the Texas Swing, he is positioning himself well for another strong year.

But for the veteran competitor, success is about more than scores and standings.

Hooper speaks often about gratitude — for his family, his faith and the perspective rodeo has given him through its inevitable highs and lows.

“Rodeo is such a roller coaster. You can be 90 one day and zero the next, and it’s easy to focus on the zero in the heat of competition. It’s easy to gloss over the good times,” Hooper said. “I’m very grateful I’ve been able to do this long enough to see it for what it is and know in my heart I didn’t take it for granted. My family was there with me in Fort Worth, and I got to high-five my kids in the front row.”

Moments like that, he said, are what matter most.

“It’s not that what I do doesn’t make me happy, but my happiness doesn’t come from the score they call out,” Hooper said. “It comes from the blessings God has given me — my family and friends. I’m always grateful when it all comes together and works out inside the arena.”

Throughout his 20-year professional career, highlighted by years of NFR qualifications and wins at nearly every major professional rodeo, like Fort Worth (2020, 2026), Reno Rodeo (2012, 2021), and the Pendleton Round Up (2019)– just to name a few; Hooper said gratitude has carried him through difficult seasons and kept him steady during winning streaks.

“Don’t get too high on the highs and too low on the lows,” said the proud husband and father.

The nature of professional rodeo, he added, demands both physical and mental resilience.

“The sport of rodeo is the only sport I’ve played professionally, but it has to be one of the most physically and mentally demanding,” Hooper said. “One day you’re qualifying for your 10th National Finals, and the next the NFR is over and you didn’t win a check. A few weeks later, you go to Fort Worth and win.”

As Hooper pursues his 11th NFR qualification, he will look to build on his early-season momentum through the remainder of the Texas Swing and into the spring and summer run of the PRCA season — grounded in discipline, guided by perspective and anchored in gratitude.





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Team USA headed to women’s hockey gold medal game, guaranteeing hardware for 8th straight Winter Olympics

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Aerin Frankel stopped 21 shots for her third shutout of the Olympic women’s hockey tournament and the favored United States advanced to the gold-medal game by defeating Sweden 5-0 at the Milan Cortina Games on Monday.

Abbey Murphy, Kendall Coyne Schofield and Hayley Scamurra scored on consecutive shots over a 2:47 late in the second period to blow the game open and put the Americans up 5-0. Cayla Barnes opened the scoring and Taylor Heise also scored.

The Americans continued their roll through the tournament by improving to 6-0, and outscoring their opponents by a combined 31-1. The U.S. has yet to trail or be tied after 0-0, and is in a position to become the third women’s team to do so over the entire tournament, joining Canada in 2006 and 2010.

The U.S. also extended its shutout streak to 331 minutes, 23 seconds, going back to Czechia’s Barbora Jurickova beating Frankel on a breakaway in the second period of a tournament-opening 5-1 win.

Monday’s match showed the U.S. dominance but also the team’s physicality, with several scuffles breaking out on the ice. 

The win over Sweden sets up what could well be a seventh gold-medal showdown against Canada on Thursday. The defending Olympic champion Canadians play Switzerland in the day’s other semifinal game. 

The U.S. already beat Canada 5-0 in a preliminary round game last week. The Americans won Olympic gold in 1998 and 2018, with Canada winning the other five tournaments.

Every Olympic gold medal match in women’s hockey, except one, has been U.S. versus Canada. 

This is Coyne Schofield’s fourth trip to the Olympics. She previously took home a gold and two silvers. This is Captain Hilary Knight’s fifth trip to the Olympics. She’s medaled four times, taking home a gold and three silvers. 

Knight, during a preliminary round game against Canada on Feb. 10, tied the all-time U.S. women’s hockey record for most Olympic points. The 5-0 game was the largest margin of victory ever in the U.S.-Canada Olympic hockey rivalry, according to Team USA.

Sweden will play for bronze on Thursday in an effort to medal for the third time in team history, and first since winning silver at the 2006 Turin Games after upsetting the U.S. in the semifinals.

Ebba Svensson Traff stopped 19 of 23 shots before she was pulled after Coyne Schofield tipped in Laila Edwards’ shot from the blue line with 3:50 left in the second period.

Ice Hockey Women

Team USA celebrates after beating Sweden in the women’s ice hockey semifinals at the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympic Games.

Mattia Martegani/NurPhoto via Getty Images


Emma Soderberg took over in goal and was beaten by Scamurra, who tapped in Britta Curl-Salemme’s centering pass 1:49 later. Soderberg finished with 10 saves.

Among those in attendance was former NFL center Jason Kelce, who was shown on the scoreboard applauding the goal initially credited to Edwards. Kelce is from Edwards’ hometown of Cleveland Heights, Ohio, and he and his brother, Kansas City Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce, contributed to a GoFundMe drive to help pay for Edwards’ family to attend the Milan Cortina Games.

Sweden enjoyed a break-through this year with a young, talented group that features seven players competing in the U.S. college ranks. Sweden went 4-0 to win Group B, and then upset Czechia 2-0 in the quarterfinals.

Though the Swedes kept the game close through 35 minutes, the Americans eventually wore them down.

And the U.S certainly didn’t resemble a team that didn’t want to play Sweden, as coach Ulf Lundberg suggested after the Swedes beat Czechia in the quarterfinals.

Though the Swedes kept the U.S. mostly to the perimeter in the opening period, they were still outshot 13-2.

Barnes scored with a snap shot from the top of the right circle and beat Svensson Traff high on the short side. Barnes’ goal was her first point of the tournament, leaving seventh defender Rory Guilday as the lone American skater to not yet register a point through six games.

Heise made it 2-0 at the 9:08 mark of the second period by one-timing in Hannah Bilka’s backhand pass through the middle. Svensson Traff got her glove on the shot, but the puck deflected across her body and into the net off the inside of her stick.



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