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LAS VEGAS — UNLV senior offensive lineman Ben Christman, who transferred after last season from Kentucky, has died, the university announced. He was 21.

Christman was found dead in an off-campus apartment Tuesday morning. The university said it didn’t have other details and that a cause of death would be determined by the Clark County Coroner’s Office.

UNLV said Christman’s family and the team have been informed and that counseling services would be provided.

“Our team’s heart is broken to hear of Ben’s passing,” UNLV coach Dan Mullen said in a statement. “Since the day Ben set foot on our campus a month ago, he made the Rebels a better program.

“Ben was an easy choice for our leadership committee as he had earned the immediate respect, admiration and friendship of all his teammates. Our prayers go out to his family and all who knew him. Ben made the world a better place and he will be missed.”

Christman began his college career at Ohio State as a highly ranked prospect in the 2021 recruiting class. He redshirted that season and played in one game in 2022 before transferring to Kentucky. Christman did not play in 2023 because of a knee injury, but he appeared in all 12 games last season on special teams before transferring to UNLV.

“There is little that can be said to lessen the pain of suddenly losing a member of our university family at such a young age, and my heart breaks for all who knew and loved him,” UNLV president Keith Whitfield said in a statement.

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What we learned in Canada’s thrilling win over Sweden in 4 Nations Face-Off opener

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What we learned in Canada's thrilling win over Sweden in 4 Nations Face-Off opener

The opening game of the 2025 4 Nations Face-Off was quite a bit closer than the Canadian fans in Montreal might have liked, but their side earned a victory over Sweden, 4-3 in overtime.

A victorious Canada earns two points in the standings for the OT win, while the Swedes get one. Sweden’s next matchup is against Finland on Saturday (1 p.m. ET, ABC/ESPN+), while Canada will next play Saturday against the United States (8 p.m., ABC/ESPN+/Disney+).

But before closing the books on this contest, let’s grade both teams, identify our biggest takeaways, and look ahead to the key players to watch and biggest questions for each team’s next game.


Grading the teams

Canada: B

It’s hard to give Canada anything less than a ‘B’ grade here, even if they might have earned something lower. Squandering a 2-0 first-period lead and a 3-1 third-period lead to wind up in overtime meant Canada couldn’t earn a 3-point regulation win over Sweden. But they did earn two points for an overtime win thanks to Mitch Marner‘s heroics at 6:06 of a frantic extra session — cashing in on Sidney Crosby‘s third primary assist of the game.

So it’s a ‘B’ on a curve. They won the game. They did so playing five defensemen for over two periods, thanks to an injury to Shea Theodore. At times they looked like an unstoppable hockey machine that could score at will and limit an opponent’s chances to nil. At other times, they looked like a group of star players who had limited practice time together and occasionally tried to do too much on their own.

But victory was theirs, heading into Saturday night’s showdown with the Americans. The sweetest part: That Sidney Crosby, whose status for the tournament was up in the air after missing the Penguins’ last two games, was the best player on the ice. (With Mario Lemieux in the house watching, no less.) — Greg Wyshynski

Sweden: B-

Was the takeaway from Sweden’s first game the fact it fell behind by two goals before the first period ended? Or is it more about the fact that it overcame a two-goal deficit to send the game to OT — and nearly win it on a few chances?

The first period deficit was somewhat rectified by a far more cohesive second period that saw Sweden cut the lead to 2-1. But that’s when Sweden relied on its collective. There was Rasmus Dahlin clearing the puck out of the crease. Victor Hedman was among those actively using their sticks in the passing lane, while others such as Viktor Arvidsson were delivering checks. Joel Erikkson Ek was nearly the hero, scoring the game-tying goal while drawing Sweden’s first penalty.

It was the sort of overall performance that reinforces why Sweden could be a problem in this tourney. But falling behind early also spoke to how Sweden’s opening game could have been different if those problems could have been avoided. — Ryan S. Clark


What we learned

Canada’s PP1 is the scariest thing in hockey

While the 4 Nations Face-Off replaced the NHL All-Star Game this season, Canada’s top power-play unit is a suitable stand-in for superstars making magic together.

Sidney Crosby, Connor McDavid, Nathan MacKinnon, Cale Makar, Sam Reinhart … that’s like a human cheat code. They were as unstoppable as advertised in the first minute of the tournament, after William Nylander took a high-sticking penalty at 44 seconds. Makar kept the puck at the blue line, leading to McDavid and Crosby briefly playing catch near the boards. Sid sent a blistering backhand pass across the crease to an open MacKinnon who buried his chance for the 1-0 lead.

When asked how he’d stop that quintet, Brad Marchand joked: “I would probably put three goalies in the net and just let them try to do the job.” Not even that trio would have prevented this goal. — Wyshynski

What if Sweden didn’t have a slow start?

Instead of losing in overtime, perhaps Sweden is the one walking away winning its opening game of the tournament. Either way, it’s one of the questions that the Tre kronor will be left ruminating about entering its Saturday showdown against Finland.

But think back to how this game started: It’s one thing to take a penalty within the first minute. But surrendering a goal within the first 20 seconds of the power play — then giving up a second goal before you can even get off your first shot? And not getting off your first shot until 4:45 remaining in the first period? This was far from the start Sweden sought. In fact, Canada had a 60% shot share in the first period, reinforcing how much it controlled possession.

Falling into that two-goal deficit also underscored why Sweden needed to rely on its collective, which it did. Sweden had three different goal scorers, while Filip Gustavsson kept extending the game until Marner’s overtime winner. But there were still challenges — such as how Sweden had a hard time consistently generating high-danger scoring chances, or how it didn’t draw a penalty until the third period.

Sweden showed it can come back after falling behind. But how will that work if it falls into another early hole Saturday versus Finland? Can it find a breakthrough against Juuse Saros? And what would that look like against the United States on Monday knowing Sweden would be trying to find an opening against reigning Vezina Trophy winner Connor Hellebuyck? — Clark

Is there a Canadian goalie controversy?

Canada coach Jon Cooper anointed St. Louis Blues goalie Jordan Binnington as his opening game starter over Adin Hill (Vegas) and Sam Montembeault (Montreal), and watched him give up three goals on 23 shots with varying degrees of fault.

Sweden’s first goal wasn’t completely on Binnington, as Jonas Brodin scored on a moving screen by Rickard Rakell. Adrian Kempe‘s goal was a manageable shot from the slot. Joel Eriksson Ek‘s goal was the product of a great Jesper Bratt pass, but Binnington did him a favor by swimming in his crease. Binnington’s best period was overtime, with a couple of game-saving stops before Marner’s goal.

“This kid has played in some huge moments, some big games, he’s a competitor,” Cooper said when he named Binnington the starter. “These other guys will be ready to go if anything happens.”

So did enough happen against Sweden for Cooper to give the crease to Hill — a Stanley Cup winner for the Golden Knights — or Montembeault on Saturday night against Team USA? That’s a mystery. What’s clear is that concerns about goaltending being the formidable Team Canada’s Achilles heel have not been assuaged. — Wyshynski

Sweden’s third goal could unlock something

Getting a game-tying goal was clearly crucial. But the way Lukas Raymond and Jesper Bratt combined to set up Eriksson Ek’s tally in the third period was unlike any other goal that Sweden scored to that point.

Canada’s defensive structure was predicated on forcing Sweden into taking longer-distance shots as a way to make it easier for Jordan Binnington to track the puck. And while Sweden scored two goals from distance thanks to Jonas Brodin and Adrian Kempe, it struggled to find high-danger scoring chances at the net front that Canada created at various points throughout the game.

Eriksson Ek won the faceoff in Canada’s zone and then had the wherewithal to get to the net front that allowed him a chance to either screen Binnington or have what would be one of the easier scoring chances of the evening. He found the latter and it gave Sweden a path toward finding more of those opportunities. This tactic could prove useful over the next several days. — Clark


Players to watch

The most talented player in the world had a secondary assist on MacKinnon’s power-play goal, but nothing else to speak of against Sweden. He had one shot on goal in the game and didn’t generate any in overtime, where MacKinnon (four shots) seemed to do what McDavid usually does.

Since entering the NHL, McDavid is tied with Crosby for the third-most 3-on-3 overtime goals during that span. Canada obviously won’t mind if McDavid needed a game to get his bearings before unleashing the fury on Team USA. Maybe he was like the rest of us and was too memorized by a 37-year-old Sidney Crosby dominating the game to focus on himself. — Wyshynski

There’s an argument to be had for Eriksson Ek considering he scored the game-tying goal and drew Sweden’s lone penalty. But what Gustavsson did in regulation allowed Sweden to survive giving up high-danger scoring chances at a rate of 2-to-1, according to Natural Stat Trick.

But where it became even more evident was how the Minnesota Wild goaltender repeatedly stopped shots from some of the game’s most dangerous players — such as stopping Nathan MacKinnon on multiple occasions in overtime — before Marner’s game-winning goal. — Clark


Big questions for the next game

What will Canada do without Shea Theodore?

Becoming well-versed in 4 Nations injury replacement policy was the last thing Canadian fans wanted to do during the tournament opener. But now they know there’s no reinforcements other than who’s already on the roster with defenseman Shea Theodore out for the rest of the event, according to Jon Cooper.

The Vegas Golden Knights defender injured his hand while bracing himself on a hit by Sweden’s Adrian Kempe. He left during the second period and did not return for the third. Philadelphia Flyers defenseman Travis Sanheim is the only blue-line reserve for Team Canada.

Tournament rules state that a team has to fall below 18 healthy skaters in order to bring in one not currently on the roster as a replacement. So it’ll be Sanheim on Saturday night vs. Team USA. And if they lose another defenseman … well, might want to keep the phone near you on the beach, snubbed Canadians. — Wyshynski

Which version of Sweden will show up against Finland?

Will we see the version of Sweden that fell into an early deficit and had to slowly piece its way back into tying the game? Or will it see the version that found ways to control possession and score goals despite playing against a defensive structure that was designed to force shots from distance?

Take away Mark Stone‘s goal, and the way Sweden performed in that middle frame provides insight on why this is an intriguing team in this event. Relying on its two-way ability to support Gustavsson — with the premise it could lead to goals — played into the strategy on how Sweden could win games.

Overcoming that two-goal deficit and forcing overtime against what’s considered to be the tournament favorite further proves that Sweden is dangerous, and could end up hurting someone’s feelings. But that’s only if Sweden can find a way to replicate what it did from the second period on against two teams in Finland and the U.S. who have two of the premier goalies in the world. — Clark

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Ex-Buckeyes coach Tressel now Ohio lt. governor

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Ex-Buckeyes coach Tressel now Ohio lt. governor

COLUMBUS, Ohio — Former Ohio State Buckeyes football coach Jim Tressel was confirmed Wednesday as Ohio’s next lieutenant governor.

State senators and representatives affirmed Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine’s Monday nomination of Tressel in separate floor votes Wednesday: 31-1 in the Senate, 68-27 in the House.

Tressel, 72, succeeds Republican Jon Husted, who was appointed last month to the U.S. Senate seat formerly held by Vice President JD Vance.

Tressel retired in 2023 as president of Youngstown State University, a position he had held since 2014. He previously spent nearly a decade as head coach of Ohio State University’s football team, leading the Buckeyes to a national championship in 2002 and six Big Ten championships.

He was pressured to resign in May 2011 after a memorabilia-for-cash scandal rocked the team.

After Tressel left Ohio State, he served as executive vice president for student success at the University of Akron before returning to Youngstown State as president.

DeWine has said that Tressel will remain involved in education and workforce development as lieutenant governor.

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Sources: Ex-NFL coach Patricia to be OSU’s DC

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Sources: Ex-NFL coach Patricia to be OSU's DC

Ohio State is finalizing a deal to make veteran NFL coach Matt Patricia the school’s new defensive coordinator, sources told ESPN on Wednesday.

The move to bring in Patricia comes with the corresponding internal promotion of secondary coach Tim Walton to the co-defensive coordinator role, sources said. Ohio State will also be promoting safeties coach Matt Guerrieri to pass-game coordinator, per sources.

Patricia comes to Ohio State to replace Jim Knowles, who left for Penn State‘s defensive coordinator job in the wake of the Buckeyes’ 2024 national title.

In Patricia, the Buckeyes get a veteran defensive playcaller who worked as the New England Patriots‘ defensive coordinator for six seasons from 2012 to 2017. He began calling defensive plays without the official title in 2010, which was a device Bill Belichick used to break in new coordinators and keep pressure off them.

He was the defensive coordinator for two of New England’s Super Bowl wins and was on staff as an offensive assistant for the Patriots’ 2004 Super Bowl title.

Patricia spent three seasons as the head coach of the Detroit Lions from 2018 to 2020, getting fired with a 13-29-1 record in his third season there.

Walton’s promotion comes after coming to Ohio State in 2022 from the NFL, where he coached for four teams from 2009 to 2021. That included a job as the Rams‘ defensive coordinator in 2013.

His new title is a nod to the strong secondary play at Ohio State under his watch, as the Buckeyes finished No. 3 in the country in passing yards allowed in 2024 and No. 1 in that category in 2023.

Guerrieri is a former co-defensive coordinator at Duke from 2018 to 2021 and was the co-defensive coordinator at Indiana in 2023.

They will all be charged with taking over an Ohio State defense that returns just three starters from a unit that finished No. 1 nationally in total defense and scoring defense. The eight departing starters, including the entire defensive line, project to get picked in the NFL draft this spring.

Ohio State does return high-end talent, including safety Caleb Downs, who projects as one of the top players in college football next year. Junior linebacker Sonny Styles will be another top prospect, and senior cornerback Davison Igbinosun earned honorable mention All-Big Ten honors.

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