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Ansu Fati da buenas noticias al Mónaco — and more

Ansu Fati da buenas noticias al Mónaco

Ansu Fati está de vuelta. El delantero del Mónaco, cedido por el FC Barcelona hasta el 30 de junio, fue baja el martes en el partido de ida del playoff de Champions League que el equipo del Principado perdió en el estadio Louis I ante el PSG de Luis Enrique (2-3), pero hoy ha entrado en la convocatoria de Sébastien Pocognoli de cara al encuentro de la Ligue 1 de mañana frente al líder Lens.

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Canada men's hockey to play for Olympics gold, beats Finland in semifinal

MILAN — The Canadians had their eyes on the gold medal game when the 2026 Winter Olympics began, and getting there took on extra meaning with their captain on the sidelines.

For a second consecutive game, they had to rally, doing so in thrilling fashion Friday, Feb. 20, overcoming a two-goal deficit to Finland in the men's tournament to win 3-2, netting the winner with 36.2 seconds left in regulation at Milano Santagiulia Ice Hockey Arena. Sidney Crosby was unavailable because of an injury to his right leg suffered during the quaterfinal, and by winning, the Canadians bought him an extra day off before Sunday's finale.

"You want to win for Sid," Canadian defenseman Cale Makar said. "You don't want that to be his last game here in Milan and for us. You definitely play for a guy like that and you play for all the Canadians out there that watch us every single day. We just want to make them proud. But for a guy like Sid, our captain, we go out there and try and do everything we can for him."

Canada is seeking its first Olympic gold since 2014, and will take on the winner of the USA vs. Slovakia semifinal later Friday.

Feb 20, 2026; Milan, Italy; Cale Makar (8) of Canada celebrates with Nathan MacKinnon (29) of Canada and Sam Reinhart (13) of Canada after assisting a goal during the second period against Finland in a men's ice hockey semifinal during the Milano Cortina 2026 Olympic Winter Games at Milano Santagiulia Ice Hockey Arena. Mandatory Credit: James Lang-Imagn Images

For the Finns, the final score tore at their hearts. They scored first, they scored second, they basically had three skaters playing back on the defense to keep Canada out. But sitting back so much after the first period — the Finns had four shots on net from the start of the second period until the middle of the third period, and were outshot 31-9 the last 40 minutes — was not a sound strategy against a team as talented as Canada.

"We played the best team in the world," said Erik Haula, who scored a shorthanded goal early in the second period. "Took it to them. We kept talking about how we can just defend. They're a good team. That's the truth. We talked about it between the second and third. We've got to push for that next one."

Instead, it was Canada doing what Canada does: Win. The Canadians pressed more and more, harder and harder, and Shea Theodore tied the game at 10:34 of the third period on a long-range slap shot off while Brad Marchand created havoc around Juuse Saros' crease.

Canada avoided going to overtime for a second straight game thanks to a fantastic shift from Nathan MacKinnon. He drew a high-sticking call on Nikko Mikkola, then converted a one-timer from the left side set up by Connor McDavid to put Canada up within half a minute of winning. Desperate, Finnish coach Antti Pennanen challenged Macklin Celebrini was offside, to no avail.

McDavid, wearing the "C" in lieu of Crosby (in international hockey, there has to be a player serving as captain), had two assists, setting a record with 13 points in Olympics with NHL participation.

"Just keeping the seat warm for Sid," McDavid said. "Hopefully we can see him here on Sunday. I’m sure it wasn’t easy for him to miss tonight. I’m sure it was a long game to watch. I know that for a fact. It means a lot to represent our country here as a team int he sport we love. That’s what it’s all about."

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Canada men's hockey beats Finland to play for Olympics gold

UFC Houston preview and predictions: Can Sean Strickland make another title push?

Everything's bigger in Texas — except for UFC Houston. But the event's middleweight headliner between Sean Strickland and Anthony Hernandez still carries stakes into the Toyota Center on Saturday, Feb. 21.

The UFC's new Paramount audience is set to get its first introduction to Strickland, which could be cause for concern anytime the former middleweight champion gets hold of a microphone. But Strickland's primary concern this week is the man known as "Fluffy." It's been a full year since Strickland lost his title rematch with then-champion Dricus du Plessis; in his rebound effort, Strickland will have to halt a surging contender and snap Hernandez's eight-fight win streak. This could be the former champ's last chance, while simultaneously acting as Hernandez's potential launchpad to stardom and a title tilt.

Aside from the main event, UFC Houston may sprinkle in some other name value across the board. For the most part, however, it's a one-fight card.

👑 UFC Houston lineup Crown grade: C- 👑

Betting odds via BetMGM.


LAS VEGAS, NEVADA - AUGUST 09: Anthony Hernandez reacts after a submission victory against Roman Dolidze of Georgia in a middleweight fight during the UFC Fight Night event at UFC APEX on August 09, 2025 in Las Vegas, Nevada.  (Photo by Jeff Bottari/Zuffa LLC)
Anthony Hernandez is the real deal.
Jeff Bottari via Getty Images

There are tons of questions around Strickland after his last appearance in the Octagon. Clearly, the former champ needed to make some changes, and hopefully, he did that during his unpredictable — but on-brand — suspension.

One thing is guaranteed: Strickland will bring his patented, plodding, defensive, jab-and-teep-heavy striking approach to the matchup. Hernandez is no slouch on the feet, but should be outmatched by Strickland's technical prowess. Ultimately, there's little reason to think it'll matter though — Hernandez is an absolute shark, dragging nearly every opponent he gets his hands onto into his deep-water grappling.

Strickland has historically displayed pretty serviceable takedown defense, despite getting taken down numerous times by the quirky du Plessis. The problem against Hernandez is that Strickland hasn't fought this relentless of a wrestling force since arguably his welterweight clash with Kamaru Usman all the way back in 2017. In pre-fight interviews, Strickland has shown respect to Hernandez, touting him as the best wrestler in the division — high praise, and subtle shade to the champion Khamzat Chimaev.

Extended layoffs haven't been an issue for Strickland in the past, and his cardio has always been a strong point. Hernandez is simply going to make him work more to escape positions, preventing Strickland from getting off much offense. This matchup really could look like du Plessis vs. Chimaev lite, meaning a shining showing from Hernandez.

Pick: Hernandez


File this one under: “Oh … we’re doing this, huh?”

Geoff Neal is a ranked welterweight who’s gone rounds with killers. Uroš Medić is a chaos engine who fights like the building is on fire. Somehow, the UFC looked at that dynamic and said, “Yes. Perfect.”

I'm here for that. It just wasn't expected.

Neal is the far cleaner technician — sharp counter left, composed footwork and enough patience to let reckless opponents self-destruct. The issue is that he occasionally fights like he’s waiting for a dinner reservation instead of a brawl. Against Medić, that’s risky. The Serbian doesn’t believe in easing into fights. He sprints out of the gate, throwing heat and daring you to survive it.

If Neal keeps it long and disciplined, this could look like a veteran calmly putting out a brush fire. But if Medić clips him early and turns it into a bar fight? Suddenly, a “why was this booked?” matchup gets very interesting.

On paper, Neal’s experience and polish should carry him. He's fought the more established competition, and I'm not sold on his chin being cracked off a single — yet spectacular — knockout loss.

Pick: Neal


Dan Ige is going to have to change that "50K" nickname in the Paramount era.

Ige is the definition of dependable, both inside and outside of the Octagon — just ask Diego Lopes. He’s compact, powerful and durable enough to hang in the pocket longer than most featherweights should. The issue is consistency. He’ll have moments of brilliance, then give away minutes waiting for the perfect exchange.

Costa, meanwhile, is the kind of aggressive technician the UFC likes to fast-track, and the dude has been on fire in his past five wins. He's become a surprise personal favorite on this run. Costa throws in volume, mixes levels well and doesn’t seem particularly interested in fighting at a slow pace. If he can keep Ige backing up and force extended combinations, he could rack up rounds before Ige ever really settles in. Overall, he'll have a speed and pace advantage.

The difference here is experience. Ige has shared the cage with elite competition and knows how to adjust mid-fight. Costa’s upside is real, but this is a significant step up in composure and durability.

Ige will need to keep it tight, pressure at the right moments and land the heavier shots. He can remind everyone why he’s still hovering around the rankings. But for my money, Costa is moving and grooving. His output will steal it and earn him a spot in the rankings.

Pick: Costa


PARIS, FRANCE - SEPTEMBER 06: (L-R) Ante Delija of Croatia punches Marcin Tybura of Poland in their heavyweight fight during the UFC Fight Night event at The Accor Arena on September 06, 2025 in Paris, France. (Photo by Jeff Bottari/Zuffa LLC)
Ante Delija still has hope to become a notable name at heavyweight in the UFC.
Jeff Bottari via Getty Images

I know the topic is being beaten to death, but that's because it's so true. It's practically impossible to care about heavyweight in 2026.

Serghei Spivac does his best work once he gets his hands on you — clinch, trip, suffocate. It’s not pretty, but it’s effective for a heavyweight. The concern is surviving the opening exchanges long enough to start that grind.

Ante Delija brings real power and forward pressure — and at heavyweight, that’s always live. If he keeps it standing early, Spivac could have problems. This matchup should lack the sloppiness seen in recent weeks, but don't put anything past these boys. That's admittedly asking a lot.

In terms of natural talent, there's more to like about Delija, barring any eye-poke tomfoolery.

Pick: Delija


11-0 on each side? You just have to love an undefeated mirror matchup.

Despite the fun stats, Jacobe Smith is the slicker, more composed striker. Patient, sharp and comfortable fighting at range, he'll show Josiah Harrell who's progressed at a faster rate.

The fight likely hinges on who dictates tempo. Expect Smith to keep it clean and technical, controlling the exchanges. If Harrell closes the distance and forces scrambles, it gets a lot less predictable, but I'm not sold he'll be much better off in that department either.

Pick: Smith


Michel Pereira's career remains one of the strangest of the past decade. Had his October 2024 fight against Saturday's main-eventer, Hernandez, gone differently, perhaps it's him headlining UFC Houston against Strickland. Instead, the man has floundered since that fateful, soul-snatching defeat.

At his best, Pereira has been the ultimate unpredictable showman. So much so that adding more discipline lately has arguably cost him. When he fights within himself, he’s a terrifying blend of athleticism and opportunistic grappling. When he doesn’t … well, you remember the backflips. But we love the backflips. Can we get some more backflips?

Zachary Reese is tall, dangerous and carries real finishing upside, especially early. But he can be hittable. The gap in experience between the two is vast, and Reese's style is poised to give Pereira space to explode, which is usually a bad long-term plan.

Betting on Pereira right now feels admittedly dumb. He's no longer reliable in any facet, but this is an absolute make-or-break weekend with a potential fourth straight loss staring him in the face.

Pick: Pereira


LAS VEGAS, NEVADA - OCTOBER 04: Punahele Soriano reacts to his win in a welterweight fight during the UFC 320 event at T-Mobile Arena on October 04, 2025 in Las Vegas, Nevada. (Photo by Jeff Bottari/Zuffa LLC)
Welterweight Puna has looked pretty sharp. (Photo by Jeff Bottari/Zuffa LLC)
Jeff Bottari via Getty Images

Punahele Soriano has turned over somewhat of a new leaf at welterweight. Undefeated in his first three fights, the Hawaiian has been a model of consistency. It's been a pleasant surprise and much-needed shift after closing out his middleweight run with a 1-4 record in a five-fight stretch. That being said, Ramiz Brahimaj poses a real threat to halt his momentum in what could be the most fun and competitive fight on the card's first half.

Carlos Leal vs. Chidi Njokuani also presents similar potential, but outside of that, don't expect to miss much until UFC Houston's main card begins.

Quick picks:

  • Carlos Leal Miranda (-125) def. Chidi Njokuani (+105)

  • Alibi Idiris (-135) def. Ode' Osbourne (+110)

  • Alden Coria (-275) def. Luis Gurule (+225)

  • Joselyne Edwards (-300) def. Nora Cornolle (+240)

  • Punahele Soriano (+110) def. Ramiz Brahimaj (-135)

  • Jean-Paul Lebosnoyani (-210) def. Philip Rowe (+170)

  • Jordan Leavitt (+320) def. Yadier del Valle (-425)

  • Carli Judice (-800) def. Juliana Miller (+550)

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