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Third baseman Max Muncy smashed a key two-run home run in his first game back to the lineup, and the Los Angeles Dodgers beat the Seattle Mariners 3-0 on Monday night.

Muncy’s 400-foot blast off reliever Yimi Garcia capped a three-run seventh inning. It was his third at-bat since being activated from the injured list before the game and his first homer since May 7. Muncy came off the injured list Monday after being out since May 17 with an oblique strain, batting seventh and manning third base against the Mariners.

“It’s just a relentless lineup,” Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said. “When you got Max Muncy hitting seventh, that’s saying something. For Max to come up in a big spot and homer gave us some breathing room.”

Muncy, 33, was batting .223 with nine home runs and 28 RBIs through 40 games before his injury.

“It’s a little bit of a relief,” Muncy said. “The mechanics feel really good. Obviously the timing isn’t where I want it to be.”

Muncy endured a couple months where his injury couldn’t be pinpointed. He got numerous chiropractic adjustments, as well as scans, MRIs and an injection.

“Once we finally got it fixed, it felt like I wasn’t even injured,” he said.

Infielder/outfielder Tommy Edman, meanwhile, made his season debut in Monday’s game after being activated prior to the three-game series opener against visiting Seattle, batting ninth and going 1-for-3 with a single.

In related roster moves before the game, the Dodgers designated infielder Nick Ahmed for assignment, optioned outfielder Andy Pages to Triple-A Oklahoma City, placed catcher Austin Barnes on the 15-day IL with a fractured big toe and recalled catcher Hunter Feduccia from Triple-A.

Roberts also revealed that first baseman Freddie Freeman was diagnosed with a hairline fracture in his right middle finger but will continue to play. Freeman was in the lineup on Monday night and went 0-for-4.

The Dodgers acquired Edman, 29, from the St. Louis Cardinals in a three-team trade involving the Chicago White Sox last month. Edman had been on the 60-day IL due to both wrist surgery and an ankle sprain.

In his first five major league seasons, spent entirely with St. Louis, Edman batted .265 with 53 home runs, 222 RBIs and 106 stolen bases in 596 games.

Ahmed, 34, signed with Los Angeles as a free agent last month and got into 17 games, hitting .229 with one homer and two RBIs.

Pages, 23, made his major league debut in April and played in 98 games for Los Angeles. He batted .246 with nine homers and 36 RBIs.

Barnes, 34, was hitting .241 with one home run and eight RBIs through his 44 appearances this year. He has spent his entire 10-year big league career with the Dodgers, a lifetime .221 hitter with 35 homers and 157 RBIs in 589 games.

Feduccia, 27, made his first and only major league appearance on July 31 in a pinch-hitting situation in a loss to the San Diego Padres. He went 0-for-1 that day but is batting .282 with six homers and 46 RBIs across 73 games for Oklahoma City.

The Associated Press and Field Level Media contributed to this report.

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U.S. hockey names first 6 players for ’26 Olympics

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U.S. hockey names first 6 players for '26 Olympics

FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. — The U.S. named Matthew and Brady Tkachuk, Auston Matthews, Jack Eichel, Quinn Hughes and Charlie McAvoy as its first six players for the 2026 Olympics, avoiding goaltenders on the initial roster unveiled Monday.

Some assortment of Connor Hellebuyck, Jake Oettinger, Jeremy Swayman and Thatcher Demko figure to make the team when full rosters are submitted in early January.

“Our goalies played well for us, great seasons: Connor just got the Vezina and Hart, which is incredible,” U.S. general manager Bill Guerin said on a video call with reporters. “It was just kind of the thing we talked that about before we did it for 4 Nations: Do we add a goalie, do we not add a goalie? I felt it was best we stay consistent and just let the goalies play it out during the season.”

All 12 teams that qualified — with France replacing Russia because of the International Olympic Committee’s ban on that country for team sports over the war in Ukraine — announced the start of their groups set to take part in Milan. This tournament marks the return of NHL participation and what should be the first Olympics for Canada’s Connor McDavid and many other top players who have not yet gotten that opportunity.

“Incredibly honored to represent my country at the biggest sporting event in the world,” McDavid said after he and the Edmonton Oilers practiced during the Stanley Cup Final. “You think of the Canadian players that can be named to that team and to be selected again, it means a lot.”

McDavid would have been there had the NHL not pulled out of the 2022 Beijing Games because of pandemic-related scheduling issues. Along with McDavid, Canada picked Sidney Crosby, Nathan MacKinnon, Cale Makar, Brayden Point and Sam Reinhart, the latter of whom is also in the final with the defending champion Florida Panthers.

“When you’re growing up when you’re watching as a kid, it’s Stanley Cup Finals and it’s Team Canada,” Reinhart said. “Those are the two things that you dream about playing for. To have that opportunity is pretty exciting.”

Three other Panthers players — Aleksander Barkov for Finland, Nico Sturm for Germany and Uvis Balinskis for Latvia — are penciled in for Milan. Edmonton’s Leon Draisaitl headlines the list for Germany, which reached the final in 2018 when the NHL skipped the Olympics.

“There’s not a lot of elite centermen in the league: I think Leon is in that category, Sasha [Barkov is] in that category,” Sturm said. “Big left-handed centermen that you can model your game after. He’s definitely somebody that I look up to a lot and try to learn from.”

Obviously, much can change over the next eight months, from injuries to performance, and this process with the IOC and International Ice Hockey Federation follows what the U.S., Canada, Sweden and Finland did in naming six initial players last summer for the 4 Nations Face-Off that was a massive success in February.

“I understand it from a marketing perspective to get things up and running,” Canada GM Doug Armstrong said. “We probably had a wide berth of players we could have named, but it is what it is. I think it’s consistent with the 4 Nations and the event before, so we’re OK doing. As I said to someone: ‘I think the easy part’s behind us, these six. Now it gets interesting as we fill out that roster.'”

Sweden chose forwards Gabriel Landeskog, Lucas Raymond, William Nylander and Adrian Kempe and defensemen Victor Hedman and Rasmus Dahlin. Finland picked Barkov, fellow skaters Mikko Rantanen, Sebastian Aho, Miro Heiskanen and Esa Lindell and goaltender Juuse Saros.

This is Barkov’s second Olympics after being in Sochi in 2014. That was as a young, part-time player.

“That was my dream as a kid to be there, and I got to experience that for a little bit for two games,” Barkov said. “Now, to be named again is a huge honor. I’m really, really happy and honored and thankful for that opportunity.”

Much of the reaction to the roster release on social media had to do with Russia not taking part. That means all-time leading goal scorer Alex Ovechkin, MVP finalist Nikita Kucherov and two-time Cup-winning goaltender Andrei Vasilevskiy will not get the chance to go to Milan.

“It’s disappointing that they’re not in this event, but it’s certainly nothing that the participants in the event can control,” Armstrong said. “You have to play the teams that are on your schedule, and unfortunately this time around the Russians won’t be there.”

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Seattle signs 2 ahead of inaugural PWHL season

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Seattle signs 2 ahead of inaugural PWHL season

SEATTLE — Seattle signed defender Mariah Keopple to a one-year contract and forward Lexie Adzija to a two-year deal, the PWHL expansion team said Tuesday.

The 24-year-old Keopple spent the past two seasons with the Montreal Victoire, appearing in 53 regular-season games and finishing with three goals and four assists. Prior to playing professionally, Keopple skated for the Princeton Tigers in four NCAA seasons. She had 12 goals and 40 assists in 126 games for Princeton, and served as its alternate captain in her senior year.

“I am so beyond excited to get started with PWHL Seattle in its inaugural season, and I’m so grateful for such an amazing opportunity to bring this incredible game to Seattle,” Keopple said in a statement.

Adzija joins Seattle from the Fleet in Boston, where she competed last season following her acquisition from Ottawa via trade. The 24-year-old forward has appeared in 53 regular-season PWHL games, racking up 17 points on eight goals and nine assists. Adzija played college hockey at Quinnipiac University, where she was co-captain during the 2022-23 season.

“I’m incredibly excited and grateful to be joining PWHL Seattle and to be part of building something special in a city that was so eager to have us,” Adzija said in a statement.

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Olympic slate set; U.S. opens Feb. 12 vs. Latvia

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Olympic slate set; U.S. opens Feb. 12 vs. Latvia

The International Ice Hockey Federation unveiled the schedule Tuesday for the men’s and women’s tournaments at the 2026 Olympics in Milan and Cortina.

Women’s hockey starts on Feb. 5 with the U.S. against Czechia and Canada versus Finland among the opening games. The U.S. and Canada renew their rivalry in the preliminary round on Feb. 10, and the gold-medal game is set for Feb. 19.

Men’s hockey, with the return of NHL players, opens the following day with Finland facing Slovakia and host Italy against Sweden. Without Russia in the 12-team field, the U.S. is grouped with Germany, Latvia and Denmark and will play each of them in a round robin.

The U.S. opens Feb. 12 against Latvia, the same day Canada faces Czechia. The NHL’s best are participating for the first time since 2014 in Sochi.

“It’s great that the NHL players are back in the Olympics,” U.S. general manager Bill Guerin said. “Obviously it’s the biggest sports stage in the world, and we’re all happy we’re back involved.”

No teams are eliminated from group play on the men’s side. The top four advance to the quarterfinals, with the remaining eight taking part in a qualification round.

Games will take place on NHL-sized rinks at Milano Santagiulia and Milano Rho arenas. The final is scheduled for Feb. 22 as the last event of the Olympics before the closing ceremony.

The schedule release came a day after the federations involved announced the first six players named to their respective rosters. The U.S. picked all skaters: forwards Matthew and Brady Tkachuk, Auston Matthews and Jack Eichel and defensemen Quinn Hughes and Charlie McAvoy.

Finland is the defending Olympic champion from the Beijing bubble in 2022, when the NHL pulled out because of pandemic-related scheduling issues, and the Russians won in 2018. Canada has won the past two involving NHL players, and GM Doug Armstrong hopes for a third.

“I’m excited about our group,” Armstrong said. “I know our group wants to go there and wants to put their best foot forward. There’s no guarantees in this sport, but I know we’re going to go with the right attitude.”

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