TUSCALOOSA, Ala. — Before he ever played a game under Alabama‘s new coaching regime, Jalen Milroe said this preseason that he felt as relaxed, prepared and empowered as he has as a quarterback.
“Even going back to high school. I feel free to be me out there,” Milroe told ESPN.
It’s one thing to make such a proclamation. It’s another to deliver, and Milroe has done that repeatedly for the Crimson Tide through four games, most recently with a dazzling performance Saturday night in a thrilling 41-34 win over then-No. 2 Georgia to vault Alabama to No. 1 in the latest AP poll.
Milroe passed for 374 yards and two touchdowns, including the game-winning 75-yard toss to Ryan Williams, and rushed for 117 yards and two more touchdowns. In all four games this season, he has passed for at least two touchdowns and rushed for at least two touchdowns. He has completed 72.9% of his passes with just one interception and is second nationally with a 204.7 passer rating.
“He was, I think, exceptional,” Alabama coach Kalen DeBoer said of his redshirt junior quarterback. “I didn’t want to jump the gun, but I just really felt like that the last couple of weeks, and it started with the Wisconsin game, where he got into a little bit of rhythm and made those plays. … It doesn’t mean he’s perfect, but man, he’s a weapon out there and he’s doing it both through the air and with his feet.”
DeBoer isn’t the only one who feels that way.
Milroe is quickly moving up NFL teams’ draft boards, and while the calendar is just now flipping to October, he has also placed himself at the forefront of the Heisman Trophy conversation.
“He’s always been a dynamic athlete, but he’s grown as a quarterback under this staff,” one NFL scout told ESPN. “He looks more comfortable and connected. Last year, he was a great athlete running around and making plays at quarterback. Now he looks a lot more like a quarterback who happens to be a great athlete and is still making winning plays.”
Milroe isn’t one to boast that he called his shot, but he did. He saw this coming after working all offseason with DeBoer and offensive coordinator Nick Sheridan, who calls the plays for the Tide, and hasn’t been shy about what it has meant to him to play for coaches “who truly believe in me.”
He said that’s not a dig at former coach Nick Saban, who benched Milroe last season in Week 3 against South Florida after a two-interception performance in a home loss to Texas. Rather, Milroe said it’s an endorsement of the current coaches and the way they’ve given him the reins to go play his way while continuing to polish his game.
“I have a great coaching staff that believes in me,” Milroe said. “I have teammates that believe in me, and that’s all that matters.”
The Milroe-to-Williams connection has been electric for the Crimson Tide, and Williams said all he has had to do is follow Milroe’s lead.
“He’s a tremendous player. He gets better every single day,” Williams said of his quarterback. “I can’t stress it enough. He literally gets better every single day, and that’s everybody because we have that type of environment where if you ain’t getting better, you ain’t looking at the person next to you.”
Milroe finished sixth in the Heisman Trophy voting a year ago, and Saban said his transformation the last part of the season was the key to Alabama’s march to the College Football Playoff.
But with 18 total touchdowns through four games, Milroe has made strides in areas a quarterback needs to in order to go from being very good to being elite, such as accuracy, trusting his receivers and knowing when to run and when to hang in the pocket and throw. Plus, the plan Sheridan had for Milroe against Georgia was about as good as it gets. Alabama scored touchdowns on its first four possessions. Milroe completed his first 11 passes and carved apart the Bulldogs on the edge with his speed.
“We took the next step,” said DeBoer, whose quarterback last season at Washington, Michael Penix, led the country with 4,903 passing yards and had 36 touchdown passes. “Guys don’t always have to be wide open right now. You saw [Milroe] throwing to guys that were open and the receivers anticipating that, ‘Hey, I’m going to get the ball,’ and that’s progress in our passing game, and if we can keep doing those things, we’ll be tough to defend.”
Georgia coach Kirby Smart said the 6-foot-2, 225-pound Milroe “could be the best running back in the country … and he throws the ball.”
It’s a combination that gives opposing defensive coordinators fits.
“You have to pick your poison,” Smart said. “Do you want the guy to take off and beat you running? Do you want to play loose coverage and try to keep eyes on him so he doesn’t take off?”
Georgia’s plan was to make Milroe throw the ball once Alabama moved into the red zone.
“We didn’t have to. He ran around us,” Smart lamented.
No play exemplified Milroe’s explosiveness more than his 36-yard run around the right side, beating Georgia’s Malaki Starks to the edge, that gave Alabama a 28-0 lead early in the second quarter.
“We had our best player on him on fourth-and-1, and he outran him to the sideline and then turned it up and scored,” Smart said. “If you could just stop him and not worry about him throwing it, I think you could do it. But when he’s throwing it well and they’re catching it well, it’s really hard to stop.”
Milroe’s poise and humility in talking to the media late Saturday night didn’t go unnoticed by anybody in the Alabama football complex, coaches and players alike. DeBoer said Milroe’s growth as a leader — and not being up and down with his emotions — has only strengthened the bonds in Alabama’s locker room.
Milroe was sporting a Jalen Hurts’ shirt after the game. Their stories are similar in that they were both benched at one point during their Alabama careers. Milroe nodded reverently when asked about the former Tide quarterback, who finished his college career at Oklahoma.
Hurts, now the Philadelphia Eagles’ quarterback, remains extremely popular among the Alabama fans. He was replaced at halftime of the 2017 national championship game by Tua Tagovailoa after the offense stalled in the first half, and Tagovailoa threw the game-winning touchdown pass in the final seconds to beat Georgia. Hurts elected to return to Alabama for the 2018 season, and when Tagovailoa was injured in the SEC championship game, Hurts came off the bench to rally Alabama to a dramatic 35-28 win over the Bulldogs.
“Jalen Hurts is a great person to look at when it comes to handling adversity, when it comes to playing the position,” Milroe said. “I’m a Texas kid. He was a Texas kid, and he was one of the reasons I came to the University of Alabama. If we look back when Alabama played Georgia [in 2018], Jalen Hurts stepped in at the end of the game, so I wanted to represent him today.”
Milroe then looked at the cameras and saluted.
“He’s out there watching. Hey, Jalen Hurts,” Milroe said. “But, nah, I love Jalen Hurts. I think he’s a great quarterback and I just wanted to represent him.”
If Milroe keeps this up, he’ll do more than just represent him. He’ll soon join him in the NFL.
Kristen Shilton is a national NHL reporter for ESPN.
Jun 13, 2025, 12:15 AM ET
South Florida is the sort of place where bizarre doesn’t just live, it thrives. Jake Walman, who was fined for squirting water in Game 3, scored what appeared to be the game-winning goal for the Edmonton Oilers in the third period … only for Sam Reinhart to score for the Florida Panthers with 20 seconds left in regulation … before Leon Draisaitl scored the actual game winner in overtime to give Edmonton a 5-4 win and tie the Stanley Cup Final at 2-2.
Game 4 was so erratic that even Florida Man likely thought it was too much. Exactly how hectic are we talking? How about the Panthers opening with a 3-0 lead in the first period, only to see the Oilers pull Stuart Skinner, replace him with Calvin Pickard and then score three goals of their own in the second period.
That set the stage for a defensive deadlock in the third that appeared to first be broken when Walman scored with 6:24 left, only to have Florida even the score. Draisaitl finished the job for Edmonton in overtime.
At this point, you know the drill. Ryan S. Clark and Kristen Shilton take a look at what worked and what didn’t for each team, while identifying which players to watch in Game 5 and pondering the big questions for the Oilers and the Panthers come Saturday.
Is the conversation after Game 4 more about the comeback — or what forced the Oilers to need to come back in the first place?
After the Oilers allowed two goals in each period of Game 3, they allowed three in the first period of Game 4. In total, the first period marked the sixth time in the first 10 periods of this series that the Panthers have come away with multiple goals. That’s what forced Oilers coach Kris Knoblauch and his staff to make a quick adjustment to avoid a disaster similar to Game 3.
Knoblauch’s decision to remove Skinner to start the second led to Pickard stopping all 10 shots he faced in the frame. It helped that the Oilers went from a 38.4% shot share in the first to a 55.6% shot share in the second, resulting in three goals. It was just their second multigoal period during the Cup Final.
Everything was going so well in the third. Their defensive structure allowed eight combined high-danger scoring chances in the second and third period, a contrast from the seven they allowed in the first alone. To be 20 seconds away from tying the series all while the Panthers had a shot share that was greater than 60%? That’s what made Reinhart’s goal so disheartening.
But in the end, Draisaitl’s game winner drew the Oilers level entering Game 5 on Saturday. — Clark
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Leon Draisaitl scores OT winner for Oilers in Game 4
Leon Draisaitl notches the game-winning goal with this one-handed effort in a pulsating Game 4 that levels the series for Oilers.
The Panthers tried to call game in the first period. And, briefly, it looked like they succeeded. They pounced early with a pair of Matthew Tkachuk power-play goals (his first points of the Cup Final), and Anton Lundell added insult to Oilers’ injury by extending Florida’s lead to three with just 41 seconds left in the first period — a 20-minute frame where the Panthers outshot Edmonton 17-7 and outchanced them 21-5. Florida’s furious forecheck once again appeared to flummox the Oilers.
But Edmonton made a goalie change to start the second, and their karma shifted along with it. Ryan Nugent-Hopkins (on the power play), Darnell Nurse and Vasily Podkolzin erased all of Florida’s first-period work and put the Panthers on their heels.
And Pickard had Florida’s number in net, keeping the Panthers’ deep well of offensive threats from finding an equalizer until 20 seconds were left in regulation and Reinhart found an opening.
Florida’s eventual loss in extra time felt stunning. The Panthers’ uncharacteristic mistakes — players caught below the goal line, losing track of assignments, turnovers — ultimately doomed them in a game they were on track to win handily. Now all that matters is how they rebound in the quick turnaround to Game 5. — Shilton
Arda Öcal’s Three Stars of Game 4
Draisaitl set the record for most overtime goals in a single postseason, with four — after setting the record for most overtime goals in the regular season. He is the third player in Stanley Cup Final history with multiple OT goals in a single series — along with Don Raleigh in 1950 with the New York Rangers vs. the Detroit Red Wings and John LeClair in 1993 with the Montreal Canadiens vs. the Los Angeles Kings.
After coming in to relieve Skinner, Pickard proceeded to make 22 saves on 23 shots (the lone goal coming in the final minute of regulation with Florida’s net empty). Pickard is the first goaltender to win a Stanley Cup Final game in relief since 2015, when Andrei Vasilevskiy played 9:13 in relief of injured Ben Bishop. Pickard is also the fourth goalie to win seven straight decisions in the playoffs who didn’t start his team’s first game of the postseason, joining Chris Osgood (2008), Jacques Plante (1969) and Cam Ward (2006).
Tkachuk scored his first two goals of the Cup Final to open the game up quickly for Florida. This was also the first time Tkachuk has scored two goals in a Cup Final game. His fifth career playoff power-play goal set a franchise record.
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Matthew Tkachuk scores again to make it 2-0 Panthers
Matthew Tkachuk doubles the Panthers’ lead, again scoring on the power play against the Oilers in Game 4.
Honorable mention: This series!
This Cup Final has been incredibly entertaining. Between two overtime games, a blowout and dueling three-goal periods in Game 4, there has been no shortage of drama and intrigue in this Cup Final rematch. This series is the third in NHL history to see at least seven total goals in the first four games (1980 and 1918 were the others) and, at 32 goals, is tied for the fourth most goals in Cup Final history through four games. Bring on Game 5!
Players to watch in Game 5
Pickard’s work in relief of Skinner has become rather instrumental in the Oilers establishing some sense of consistency. The strongest example of that came in their first-round series against the Los Angeles Kings, when Pickard was named the starter in Game 3 and would win four straight to advance Edmonton to the second round. He won the first two games of the second round against the Vegas Golden Knights before an injury prompted the Oilers to return to Skinner.
Pickard was perfect in the second period of Game 4 and was nearly flawless until Reinhart’s goal late in the third. But when it reached overtime? Pickard stopped every shot — with some help from the crossbar — to finish the evening stopping 22 of 23 for a .957 save percentage over 51:18. And that was with the Panthers having a shot share greater than 57% over the final two periods. — Clark
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Calvin Pickard’s outrageous save keeps Oilers in game
Calvin Pickard’s incredible tip-save onto the crossbar stops Panthers from notching an overtime game-winner.
The Panthers’ leading scorer in the playoffs wasn’t at his best in Game 4 — and Florida will need a return to form Saturday. Bennett took a second period infraction that led to Edmonton’s first goal off a power-play marker by Nugent-Hopkins, and he was tagged again in the third period for tripping right when Florida had found its lost momentum.
Add to that Bennett collected just a single assist on a night where the Panthers struggled for offense after an explosive first period. That’s not the sort of impact Florida requires from Bennett — and all eyes will be on how he rebounds in Game 5.
It was a positive for Florida to see Tkachuk get rolling Thursday, but the Panthers’ offense has so often run through Bennett. (His breakaway goal in Game 3 was particularly nice.) Florida will be right to expect Bennett to step it up when the series shifts back to Edmonton. And if any player can turn things around in a hurry, it’s Bennett, who was the Conn Smythe Trophy favorite ahead of Game 4 for a reason. — Shilton
Big questions for Game 5
Did the Oilers’ comeback potentially unlock a new way to defend the Panthers?
The Oilers have had troubles with preventing breakaways. They’ve struggled with giving up the big period on more than one occasion. In fact, that was the narrative of a Game 3 that might have been their worst performance of the postseason.
The first period of Game 4 seemed to point to another defensive challenge for the Oilers — only for them to walk away with a win and the belief that they might have found a solution for their aforementioned issues.
In Game 4, the Oilers:
Found ways to take away the passing lanes, which is why they went from allowing 17 shots in the first period to 23 shots for the entire rest of the game.
Blocked 28 shots.
Significantly prevented the Panthers from having high-danger chances despite the possession numbers. In fact, the Panthers finished with one high-danger scoring chance in overtime while having a 57.14% shot share.
Even with Reinhart’s late goal, the overall structure the Oilers used for the rest of Game 4 — coupled with Pickard’s performance — had them looking like the team that has led Connor McDavid to repeatedly state that they can play defense. But can they harness what they did in Game 4 for Game 5 and beyond? And if so, will that be the key to the rest of the series? — Clark
Can Florida rattle Pickard?
The Panthers had Skinner’s number in this series, scoring eight goals on the netminder through Game 3 and the first period of Game 4. Pickard, on the other hand, was excellent in relief of Skinner on Thursday, making 18 consecutive saves before allowing Reinhart’s goal late in the third.
It’s not as if Pickard wasn’t challenged. He made several terrific stops on the Panthers’ top scorers and proved he was still in peak form despite not starting a game in weeks.
That doesn’t bode well for Florida. Even though Reinhart did get one past Pickard late, it didn’t seem to shake Pickard’s confidence. He was terrific in extra time, doing more than enough to keep pace with Sergei Bobrovsky at the other end, and ultimately securing the victory for Edmonton.
So what sort of challenge will a goaltending switch present for Florida in Game 5? Pickard was a sensational 6-0 in the postseason before getting hurt in the second round. If Pickard can be that game-changing presence in the crease that the Oilers are looking for, what will it take for the Panthers to respond and recapture an offensive edge? — Shilton
SUNRISE, Fla. — The Edmonton Oilers didn’t just win Game 4 of the Stanley Cup Final to even their series with the Florida Panthers at 2-2. They accomplished something the NHL hasn’t seen in 106 years.
With their 5-4 overtime win on Thursday night, Edmonton became the first road team in Stanley Cup Final history to rally from a deficit of at least three goals and win since the Montreal Canadiens rallied to defeat the Seattle Metropolitans in overtime in 1919.
Leon Draisaitl‘s 11th goal of the playoffs ended Game 4 in extra time for the Oilers. Home teams with at least a three-goal lead in the Stanley Cup Final were 158-1 before Thursday night.
“I think that once again it shows you that our group never quits,” Draisaitl said. “I think we believe that no matter how bad it is, if we get over that hump of adversity we’re going to keep pushing, we’re going to keep coming, and eventually it’ll break.”
Draisaitl made NHL history of his own in the victory. This was his NHL record fourth overtime game-winning goal in the 2025 postseason, the most ever in the Stanley Cup Playoffs. He also set the regular-season record with six this season.
Draisaitl’s dramatic goal Thursday night came in a game in which the Oilers trailed 3-0 after the first period.
“We sat back too much,” defenseman Jake Walman said. “We watched a little too much. We didn’t get to our game at all in that first period. That’s pretty much the thing we talked about in the intermission — get to our game and see what happens.”
That sentiment was conveyed in an impactful intermission speech by forward Corey Perry, the 40-year-old in his 20th NHL season, whose words inspired and refocused the Oilers for a second period that saw them tie the score at 3-3.
“I’m not going to share exactly what he said, but the message was that he’s been in these moments,” Draisaitl said. “He’s not a guy that speaks up or yells at guys all the time. That’s not his character. So you know when a guy like that — with that many games, that much experience, he’s won everything there is to win, he knows how to win — when he speaks up, you listen. It grabs your attention.”
The Oilers didn’t have that attention at the start.
Edmonton was trying to rebound from a devastating 6-1 loss in Game 3. Goaltender Stuart Skinner, who was pulled from that loss, got the start Thursday night because of his ability to bounce back after defeats along with his 6-0 record in Game 4s in his career.
But Skinner’s night would end early, as he was replaced by goalie Calvin Pickard in the second period. Pickard made 18 straight saves before Florida’s Sam Reinhart sent the game to overtime with a goal at 19:40 the third period, scoring with goalie Sergei Bobrovsky on the bench for an extra skater.
“It’s hard to describe the situation that he gets put in,” Draisaitl said of Pickard. “We’re down 3-0. He’s coming in. He’s cold. It’s not easy, and he makes those stops at the key moments when we really need them. He’s one of the best in the league at making the right save at the right time. He’s been nothing but spectacular for us.”
Pickard took over the Oilers’ crease for an ineffective Skinner in the first round against the Los Angeles Kings, going 6-0 for Edmonton. But an injury in their second-round series against Vegas gave Skinner the starting job again through the next two rounds.
Pickard came up with some clutch stops throughout his 22-save effort in Game 4, none bigger than a glove save on Florida’s Sam Bennett that sent the puck behind him off the crossbar and out of trouble in overtime.
“I read it pretty well,” Pickard said. “I looked in my glove and it wasn’t in there. I heard the crowd ‘ooh’ and ‘ahh’ and I got a good bounce.”
Pickard became the sixth goaltender to win a Stanley Cup Final game in relief.
The Oilers started Game 4 allowing a barrage of shots to the Panthers and once again parading to the penalty box. Matthew Tkachuk scored to make it 1-0 on a 5-on-3 power player with Evander Kane in the penalty box for high-sticking and Darnell Nurse in there for tripping. Tkachuk scored again 5:16 later on a power-play goal after Mattias Ekholm went off for high-sticking Brad Marchand. Center Anton Lundell made it 3-0 with 42 seconds left in the first period.
Skinner gave up three goals on 17 shots on Thursday, struggling again after lasting 43:27 in the Oilers’ loss in Game 3, in which he gave up five goals on 23 shots. Pickard entered on Monday night and stopped seven of eight shots.
With Pickard between the pipes, the Oilers began their comeback. Ryan Nugent-Hopkins converted on the power play — on one of three penalties the Panthers took in the period — from McDavid and Draisaitl. Nurse snuck one past Bobrovsky at 12:47 to cut the Florida advantage to one goal.
Just 10 seconds after Nurse scored, Florida captain Aleksander Barkov took a delay of game penalty. It was the moment the Oilers were waiting for: the best defensive forward in the NHL in the penalty box and a chance for their offensive stars to tie the score. But Bobrovsky was all the penalty kill needed, making five saves, including two on McDavid on the same scoring chance.
Undaunted, the Oilers kept fighting and tied the score with 4:55 left in the second period. Nurse set up forward Vasily Podkolzin for his second of the playoffs, knotting it at 3-3.
It remained that way until 6:24 of the third period when a great Oilers forecheck pinned the Panthers’ top line in their zone before Walman blasted the puck for the 4-3 lead. But the Oilers couldn’t hold it, as Florida knotted the score on Reinhart’s late goal.
After an overtime that saw both teams get their chances, it was Draisaitl who ended it at 11:18. After a great pass by Podkolzin to set him up, Draisaitl pushed the puck toward the Florida net and it deflected off defenseman Niko Mikkola and past Bobrovsky (30 saves).
Draisaitl is now tied with McDavid with 32 points in the playoffs. He is the fifth player in NHL history with at least 30 points in consecutive postseasons and is tied with McDavid and Mark Messier for second all-time with three 30-point postseasons in total; Wayne Gretzky did it six times.
“He’s as clutch as it gets,” Pickard said of Draisaitl. “He’s been playing great. Always scoring big goals at big times, and now we’re going home with momentum.”
For Florida, it was a squandered opportunity to move one win away from hoisting the Stanley Cup for the second straight season.
“It’s the best of three,” Tkachuk said. “With losing this one tonight, we’ve got to go in there and win one eventually. So hopefully you can do it in Game 5.”
LOS ANGELES — Cincinnati Reds left-hander Wade Miley is accused in court documents of providing drugs to the late Tyler Skaggs, the Los Angeles Angels pitcher who died of an accidental overdose in 2019.
Skaggs’ former agent, Ryan Hamill, said in a deposition that Skaggs told him he was using pain pills containing oxycodone that were provided by Miley.
The deposition is part of a wrongful death lawsuit filed by Skaggs’ family against the Angels in California. A former publicist for the Angels, Eric Kay, was convicted in Texas of providing the fentanyl-laced pills that an autopsy found contributed to Skaggs’ death. Kay was sentenced to 22 years in federal prison.
Skaggs died in the team hotel in a Dallas suburb. His body was found hours before what was supposed to be the start of a series between the Angels and Texas Rangers.
Miley, 38, is not facing criminal charges, and it’s not the first time his name has come up in relation to Skaggs’ death. During the sentencing phase of Kay’s case, prosecutors used a recording of a conversation between Kay and his mother in which Kay said Miley was one of Skaggs’ drug suppliers.
The Reds had no comment Thursday, and Miley wasn’t immediately available for comment.
Matt Harvey, now a retired major league pitcher, testified during Kay’s trial that he provided drugs to Skaggs. Harvey was later suspended for 60 days for violating MLB’s drug policy. He didn’t pitch in the major leagues again. Harvey and three other players also testified they received pills from Skaggs and described the recreational drug use they witnessed while with the Angels.
Harvey and Skaggs were teammates with the Angels in 2019. Skaggs and Miley were teammates with the Arizona Diamondbacks in 2012 and 2013.
Hamill said the conversation in which Skaggs implicated Miley took place in 2013. Hamill had expressed concern to Skaggs’ parents about what he said was erratic behavior from the pitcher in a phone conversation. Hamill said he and Skaggs’ parents confronted Skaggs at home, leading to Skaggs’ admission that he was using drugs and the accusation that Miley was supplying them.
Miley signed a one-year contract with the Reds on June 4 and has made two starts this season. He had Tommy John surgery on his left elbow in May 2024 and signed a minor league deal with Cincinnati in February.
Miley had an opt-out clause if he didn’t reach the big leagues by June 1. The 14-year veteran executed that clause but remained with Cincinnati while he pursued potential deals with other clubs before re-signing with the Reds.