London Knights beat Medicine Hat Tigers 4-1 for 3rd Memorial Cup titleNew Foto - London Knights beat Medicine Hat Tigers 4-1 for 3rd Memorial Cup title

RIMOUSKI, Quebec (AP) — Philadelphia Flyers prospect Denver Barkey scored twice in the second period and the London Knights beat the Medicine Hat Tigers 4-1 on Saturday night for their third Memorial Cup title. Jacob Julien and Easton Cowan also scored and Austin Elliott made 31 saves to help the Ontario Hockey League champion Knights win the junior hockey championship a year after losing in the final to host Saginaw. After a 3-1 loss to Western Hockey League champion Medicine Hat on Tuesday night in round-robin play, London beat Moncton 5-2 on Friday night in the semifinal game to set up the rematch with the Tigers. London also won the Memorial Cup in 2005 and 2016. The Knights are owned by former NHL players Dale and Mark Hunter and Basil McRea, with Dale Hunter serving as president and coach and Mark Hunter as general manager. Dale Hunter won his third title to match former Kamloops and Vancouver coach Don Hay's record. Medicine Hat star Gavin McKenna spoiled Elliott's shutout bid early in the third period, and Harrison Meneghin stopped 20 shots for the Tigers. They won the Memorial Cup in 1987 and 1988. Julien opened the scoring midway through the first period. Cowan, a first-round pick by Toronto, and Barkey scored in a 1:40 span early in the second and Barkey made it 4-0 on a power play with 7:52 left in the period. ___ AP sports:https://apnews.com/sports

London Knights beat Medicine Hat Tigers 4-1 for 3rd Memorial Cup title

London Knights beat Medicine Hat Tigers 4-1 for 3rd Memorial Cup title RIMOUSKI, Quebec (AP) — Philadelphia Flyers prospect Denver Barkey sc...
Mets get homers from Alonso, Lindor and Soto to finish 3-game sweep with 5-3 win over RockiesNew Foto - Mets get homers from Alonso, Lindor and Soto to finish 3-game sweep with 5-3 win over Rockies

NEW YORK (AP) — Francisco Lindor once again homered in a victory and Clay Holmes threw a career-high seven innings Sunday as the New York Mets completed a three-game sweep of the Colorado Rockies with a 5-3 win. Pete Alonso hit a three-run shot and Juan Soto also went deep as the Mets won for the seventh time in eight games to finish a 7-2 homestand. They regained sole possession of first place in the NL East, moving a game ahead of Philadelphia. The Rockies lost their eighth straight and fell to 9-50, the worst record through 59 games of any major league team in the modern era (since 1901). They have been swept 10 times in 20 series — tied for the most sweeps through 20 series with the 1962 Mets, the 1970 Milwaukee Brewers and the 1994 Oakland Athletics. Alonso homered in the fourth before Lindor snapped a 3-all tie an inning later. The Mets have won the last 26 games in which Lindor has homered, the second-longest streak in big league history behind the 29-game run authored by Carl Furillo and the Brooklyn Dodgers from 1951-53. Soto connected in the eighth to make it 5-3. Holmes (5-3) gave up three hits — including Orlando Arcia's first-inning solo homer and Tyler Freeman's two-run shot in the fifth. He struck out three and walked none. The right-hander, who entered this season with 300 consecutive relief appearances dating to 2019, has lasted at least six innings in six of his last eight starts. Reed Garrett and Edwin Díaz tossed a scoreless inning apiece, with Díaz earning his 13th save. Rockies rookie Carson Palmquist (0-3) gave up four runs in 4 2/3 innings but struck out eight — two more than he'd fanned in his first three starts combined. Key moment Lindor's homer came just after Freeman's tying shot in the fifth. Key stat The Rockies haven't held a lead at the end of consecutive innings since they led for the final four innings of their most recent win, a 3-2 victory over the New York Yankees on May 23. Up next Rockies RHP Germán Márquez (1-7, 7.13 ERA) starts Monday in Miami against RHP Max Meyer (3-4, 4.53). Mets RHP Paul Blackburn is scheduled to make his season debut Monday night at Dodger Stadium in the opener of a four-game series. Blackburn has been rehabbing from right knee inflammation. ___ AP MLB:https://apnews.com/hub/mlb

Mets get homers from Alonso, Lindor and Soto to finish 3-game sweep with 5-3 win over Rockies

Mets get homers from Alonso, Lindor and Soto to finish 3-game sweep with 5-3 win over Rockies NEW YORK (AP) — Francisco Lindor once again ho...
2 fans dead, hundreds arrested after celebrations in France from PSG's Champions League winNew Foto - 2 fans dead, hundreds arrested after celebrations in France from PSG's Champions League win

A pair of fans died, a police officer is in a coma and hundreds of people were arrested following massive celebrations throughout France afterParis-Saint-Germain's Champions League victory, officials said Sunday. A 17-year-old boy was stabbed in the city of Dax — which sits south of Bordeaux in southwestern France — during a PSG street party on Saturday night. A second man in his 20s was killed in Paris when his scooter was hit by a car during similar celebrations, according toThe Associated Press. Both instances are being investigated, though officials believe the deaths were linked to the celebrations. The driver in the second death was detained. A police officer in Coutance — which is in northwest France — was accidentally hit by a firework. He was placed into a coma due to "grave eye injuries," per the report. Nearly 200 people were injured around the capital, four seriously, and nearly 300 people had been arrested by 2 a.m. Sunday. "These isolated acts are contrary to the clubs' values, and don't at all represent the immense majority of our fans," the team said in a statement. The celebrations and chaos came shortly after PSG clinched its first Champions League title Saturday. The club rolled over Inter Milan to a 5-0 win at Allianz Arena in Germany. An official celebration took place Sunday afternoon, when more than 100,000 people were expected to attend the parade in Paris and a subsequent celebration at Parc des Princes stadium. The team rode an open-air bus with the trophy throughout the parade route, and then they arrived at their stadium for a concert and celebration seemingly without much issue. Moments de partage entre Ousmane et les supporters 🫶pic.twitter.com/zP9eg2Xb3t — Paris Saint-Germain (@PSG_inside)June 1, 2025 The violence is the second of its kind in recent weeks in Europe following a soccer championship. Atleast 50 fans were injured after a man drove his carinto a crowd at a parade celebrating Liverpool's Premier League title. "I am angry today, like many French people. ... When parents panic because their child has gone out to celebrate a major sports victory, that's unbearable," French interior minister Bruno Retailleausaid.

2 fans dead, hundreds arrested after celebrations in France from PSG's Champions League win

2 fans dead, hundreds arrested after celebrations in France from PSG's Champions League win A pair of fans died, a police officer is in ...
Meet the candidates who hope to become South Korea's presidentNew Foto - Meet the candidates who hope to become South Korea's president

SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — Months of a political drama in South Korea is drawing to a close with the country poised to elect a new president this week to succeedYoon Suk Yeol, a conservative leader who was toppled over his ill-fated imposition ofmartial law. Surveys show liberalLee Jae-myungmaintaining a solid lead over his main conservative rivalKim Moon Soo, who wants an upset victory. Whoever wins, the new president will forgo the usual two-month transition and serve one full, five-year term at a time when South Korea faces crucial challenges including a severe left-right political divide, the Trump administration's tariff policy andNorth Korea'sexpanding military partnership with Russia. Here is a look at the two main candidates standing for the June 3 election: LEE JAE-MYUNG Lee, 60, the Democratic Party candidate, was the driving force behind an opposition-led campaign tooust Yoon, whoseDec. 3 marital lawdecree plunged South Korea into turmoil. Lee said he initially thought Yoon's late-night televised marital law announcement was a digital deepfake when his wife told him of the news. Afterrealizing it was real, Lee, then the party's chairman, ordered all his party lawmakers to rush to the National Assembly to vote down Yoon's decree. He then livestreamed his moves to the assembly, urging the public to gather there to protest Yoon's action. Enough lawmakers ultimately managed to enter an assembly hall to overturn Yoon's decree, with troops sent by Yoon apparently mostly reluctant to use physical force to seal the assembly building. Lee later led an assembly vote toimpeach Yoonbefore the Constitutional Court formally threw him out of office in early April. "The rebellion was subdued, and Yoon Suk Yeol was dismissed. The long, severe winter has passed, and spring has come again. The people have finally made it," Lee said in a book published in mid-April. This is Lee's third run for presidency.In 2022, he lost the election to Yoon in the closet-ever margin recorded in South Korea's presidential elections. Lee previously served as governor of South Korea's most populous Gyeonggi province and mayor of Seongnam city, near Seoul. He has portrayed himself as "an able captain" who can revitalize the economy, heal a worsened domestic division and bring back peace with North Korea. "If you give me a chance to work as president, I will clearly prove how big change one official — the person in charge — can bring," Lee told a crowd in his first official campaign speech on May 12. Once a political outsider,Lee rose sharplyin politics from his position as mayor after fiery speeches critical of conservative PresidentPark Geun-hyeover a 2016-17 corruption scandal that went viral. Supporting his popularity was his self-built success story: Poverty forced him to quit school and work as a child laborer at factories where he suffered injuries that left him with an arm disability. He later passed the country's highly exhaustive bar exam and became a human rights lawyer. Lee has since tried to establish an image as someone who can fix deep-rooted inequality and corruption. But many conservative critics view him as a dangerous populist who intensifies divisions for political gains and backpedals on promises too easily. With the assembly under his party's control, some experts worry Lee would have excessive, unchecked power. But others say Lee is unlikely to unilaterally pursue overly drastic policies because he cannot maintain a stable leadership without the support of moderates. He faces fivecriminal trialsfor corruption and other charges, although the proceedings will likely end if he wins because a sitting South Korean president has immunity from most criminal prosecutions. KIM MOON SOO Kim, 73, a hardline conservative who served as Yoon's labor minister, initially was considered past his political prime. He suddenly emerged as a potential standard-bearer of the embattled South Korean conservatives after he solely defied a request by a Democratic Party lawmaker for all Cabinet members to stand and bow at the assembly in a gesture of apology over Yoon's decree. Kim won the People Power Party's nomination in early May. He quickly faced an attempt by party leaders to replace him withHan Duck-soo, a former prime minister and independent who was more popular in polls. In a dramatic shift, Kim eventuallyretained his candidacyafter party members voted in his favor. In a televised party meeting afterward, Kim knelt, apologized for the infighting and vowed to promote internal unity. "From today, we are one team. Let's fight together and win together," he said. Kim has said he would build a greater missile defense system and win a stronger U.S. security commitment to cope with North Korea's evolving nuclear threats. He vowed to reform anti-business regulations and reduce corporate and inheritance taxes. Kim was a prominent labor and pro-democracy activist in the 1970 and '80s, when South Korea was ruled by military-backed leaders. He was expelled from Seoul National University, the country's top school, worked at factories to promote labor rights and spent 2 1/2 years in prison for his anti-government activities. Kim switched his ideology in 1994 and joined a conservative party, drawing rebukes from fellow activists who denounced him as a traitor. Kim has said he abandoned his dream to become "a revolutionist" after observing the collapses of communist states. He served as Gyeonggi province governor for eight years and a member of the National Assembly for three terms. His political career suffered major setbacks when he successively lost parliamentary and Seoul mayoral elections to the liberals. He was named labor minister in 2024. In a recent campaign appearance, Kim lauded late authoritarian President Park Chung-hee, father of Park Geun-hye, as a great leader who lifted the country out of poverty and apologized for his past fight against him. Park is a divisive figure because he engineered the country's past rapid economic rise but suppressed dissidents. "When I was young, I opposed President Park Chung-hee. But now, I've realized I did something wrong," Kim said. "I spat at his grave but now I offer flowers before it."

Meet the candidates who hope to become South Korea's president

Meet the candidates who hope to become South Korea's president SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — Months of a political drama in South Korea is d...
'It's completely unsustainable': Republican lawmaker doubles down, knocks Trump tax billNew Foto - 'It's completely unsustainable': Republican lawmaker doubles down, knocks Trump tax bill

Sen. Ron Johnson, R-Wisconsin, is doubling downon his concernsabout a bill that would make sweeping changes to taxes,Medicaid,food stampsand more after it was passed last month in the Republican-led House at the urging of PresidentDonald Trump. The more-than-1,000-page bill narrowly cleared the lower chamber on May 22. Now, it faces an uncertain future in the Senate, where some conservatives have raised concerns about the legislation's cost. "It's completely unsustainable," Johnson said in an interview on Fox's "Sunday Morning Futures." The bill is expected to add somewherearound $3 trillionto the deficit over the next 10 years and swell the federal government's debt. Still, the legislation would enact Trump'smajor campaign promiseslike eliminating taxes on workers' tips and overtime. It's likely to be one of the most significant pieces of legislation that will be passed during his second term in the Oval Office. Bartiromo on June 1 pressed Johnson on whether he was prepared to "blow up President Trump's agenda." "I want to see him succeed," Johnson said in response. "But again, my loyalty is to the American people, to my kids and grandkids. We cannot continue to mortgage their future." Johnson has repeatedly called for the federal government to return to pre-pandemic levels of spending and said he was disappointed the House bill didn't go further in reducing the government's debt. Asked what the solution is, Johnson told Fox, "DOGE showed us how to do it. Contract by contract, line by line." Trump's billionaire former adviserElon Muskrecentlyended his tenureleading the Department of Government Efficiency. While the department has played a major role cutting into the federal bureaucracy, a longtime priority for the president, it hasn't come up with the bulk of the $2 trillion savings Musk hadpromised to deliverwhile on the campaign trail. Musk saidin a May 27 interview with CBS he was "disappointed" by the Trump-led tax bill. "I think a bill can be big or it can be beautiful, but I don't know if it can be both. My personal opinion," Musk said. Johnson's comments to Fox echo what he said a week earlier in an interview with CNN. The Wisconsin senator told anchor Jake Tapper he believed there were enough Senate Republicans who opposed the bill to hold up any potential vote. "I think we have enough to stop the process until the president gets serious about the spending reduction and reducing the deficit," Johnson said May 25. Contributing: Riley Beggin This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:GOP senator bashes Trump tax bill: 'Completely unsustainable'

'It's completely unsustainable': Republican lawmaker doubles down, knocks Trump tax bill

'It's completely unsustainable': Republican lawmaker doubles down, knocks Trump tax bill Sen. Ron Johnson, R-Wisconsin, is doubl...

 

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