Giants v Coventry postponed after flight cancellation
Wednesday's Challenge Cup semi-final second leg between the Belfast Giants and Coventry Blaze has been postponed after the away side encountered travel disruption.
The game, which was set to get under way at 19:00 GMT at Belfast's SSE Arena, was called off due to Coventry's flight from Birmingham to Belfast being cancelled.
Posting on X, the Giants said a rescheduled date for the fixture will be announced "in due course".
Coventry have a 3-2 lead over the holders from last week's first-leg victory.
Euro club battle Arsenal and Spurs to sign 48-goal midfielder next summer
Leon Goretzka will leave Bayern Munich in the summer as a free agent, and he has no shortage of suitors.
There is strong interest from north London, with both Arsenal and Tottenham Hotspur are keen to sign the former Schalke midfielder.
The two Premier League clubs could face competition from German giants Bayer Leverkusen.
Arsenal battle two clubs for Goretzka?
(Photo by Alexander Hassenstein/Getty Images)
The Gunners made an enquiry during the January transfer window after Bayern confirmed that Goretzka would be leaving in the summer.
However, the north London club were too late by that time, as the 67-time capped German international confirmed to Bayern that he will stay for the rest of the season.
Christian Falk told CFBayern that Arsenal are considering making a move for the 31-year-old midfielder next summer when he will become a free agent.
Tottenham Hotspur are also interested in signing Goretzka, but a lot could depend on where they finish this season.
Christian Falk has now confirmed to CFBayern that Bayer Leverkusen are also keen to sign the midfielder in the summer, as they see him as a potential replacement for Granit Xhaka.
Goretzka has scored 48 goals and registered 48 assists for Bayern in his career. He has started in 16 starts in the Bundesliga, and has made three further appearances from the bench.
Arsenal hold advantage in the race to sign Leon Goretzka?
The Gunners may have an advantage in the race to land the midfielder, although he could be tempted to stay in the Bundesliga.
Goretzka apparently wants to play in the Premier League, and therefore, he might consider a move to Arsenal if they make an offer.
The north London club can offer him Champions League football next season, which Spurs may not be able to do. Even Leverkusen may struggle to do so, which gives Arsenal an advantage in the race to sign him.
Shiffrin Reclaims Sochi Gold in Slalom
Mikaela Shiffrin captured gold in the slalom, matching her 2014 Sochi Olympic triumph.
She had struggled earlier in the championships, failing to finish the combined and giant slalom events.
Winter Olympics 2026: How one ice skating cameraman is delivering the Games’ best images
MILAN — Quick, name the skater who’s been on the ice more than anyone this Olympics. No, it’s not Alysa Liu or Ilia Malinin. The skater who’s spent more time on the ice than any Olympian won’t medal at these Games, but he’s nonetheless opening up the image of skating in an entirely new way.
After every skater finishes their routine, Jordan Cowan steps onto the ice to accompany them to the kiss and cry couch. He circles them, capturing their emotions while deftly skating backward to accompany them off the ice. There are plenty of jobs that one can step into with no experience, but “skating cameraman” most definitely is not one of them.
Cowan grew up in Los Angeles, but fell in love with ice dancing and moved to Ann Arbor, Michigan, to train. He was good, too, joining Team USA as an ice dancer; alongside partner Anastasia Olson, he finished 7th in the U.S. national championships in 2012.
All the while, though, he was working with video, making funny clips and enjoying himself. A child of Los Angeles, his first love was film. After he retired from skating, he observed how cameras in ballroom dancing were revolutionizing the viewing experience. Steadicams can move with the dancers, bringing a new dimension of intimacy to shows like “Dancing with the Stars” and “So You Think You Can Dance.”
And then an idea hit him: What if a camera could move with skaters?
Cowan is a freelance videographer, working in Madison Square Garden filming the Knicks and Rangers. But he knew there was an untapped opportunity for on-ice filming, so he began developing his own Steadicam rig, a hybrid of various systems and equipment tailored specifically to his needs. He founded On Ice Perspectives to provide skating camerawork for TV and national competitions. He’s filmed three U.S. championships, including breakout moments with stars like Amber Glenn:
The Olympics represent a new level of fame and responsibility. “This is a very traditional kind of sport, filmed mostly the same way for the last 50 years,” Cowan says. “Fans love the tradition of ice skating. So having a camera on the ice is a very important privilege. I respect it a lot.”
In these Olympics in Milan, Cowan enters the rink after the skaters have finished their routines, giving a sweeping, cinematic view of their faces in joy or devastation. He skates in slow, sweeping arcs around them, carrying a camera — he says it weighs about as much as a heavy bag of groceries — out in front of his chest, capturing the spectrum of emotion on skaters’ faces.
“I recognize and respect their emotional privacy,” he says. “I’m trying to bring the audience closer to the story, getting the audience to empathize. The skaters understand that I’m not there to put a camera in their face, but to show them in the best light possible.”
He also tries to remain unobtrusive. Two skaters he’s filmed before — Great Britain’s Lewis Gibson and Canada’s Paul Poirer — were excited to see he was on the ice … but only when they saw him filming other skaters. They hadn’t even noticed him while he was on the ice in front of him.
“That’s the best feedback I can get,” Cowan says. “I’m not taking anything away from the skaters on the ice.”
That’s in part because he blends into the ice. Cowan sports a sharp custom-made white suit, a tribute, he says, to the fashionable host city of Milan.
“Sometimes I’m caught in a wide shot,” he says, “so instead of trying to make a feeble attempt to hide myself, I tried to match the mood of skaters in expensive designer costumes.”
Saturday night will bring the famed skater’s gala, an exhibition of the figure skating medalists and special invitees where Cowan will get the opportunity to shine. “That’s my specialty. I love filming live shows,” he says. “It’s a celebration, a performance to please the crowd.” Freed of the concerns about competition, both Cowan and the skaters will be able to cut loose, enjoy the pleasure of performing, and bring the audience along for the skate.
“Being on ice, getting to film skaters during their tricks, having people at home watch it live and behind the scenes,” he says, “it’s even better than a front-row seat.”