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The Toronto Maple Leafs and Boston Bruins are headlining an exciting weekend of NHL action. With the league’s third week of the regular season concluding, this season has already been full of twists, turns, and tons of surprises. With a full slate of games scheduled for the weekend, let’s dive into the top three can’t miss matchups.
The Maple Leafs and Bruins always make for instant classics, and with these teams meeting for the first time since their epic playoff series, this should be another one. The Bruins are having early issues, and their 3-4-1 record isn’t helping anything.
The Leafs are coming off back-to-back big losses to the Columbus Blue Jackets and St. Louis Blues, and both games were absolute stinkers from Toronto. They will enter this game with a similar intensity of the Bruins, and that should make for a head-on collision on the ice.
The defending champion Florida Panthers take on the New York Islanders, and ordinarily that wouldn’t generate tremendous excitement. But the difference for this matchup is that the Panthers are expecting their captain Aleksander Barkov to return to their lineup. Getting Barkov back will be a huge boost for the Cats, who have mustered a 5-3-1 record without him in the lineup.
The Islanders are 2-2-2 and will be playing the second of back-to-back games against the Panthers. Their star goaltender, Ilya Sorokin, is looking in peak condition after rehabing an injury all summer and preseason. He’s a difference maker and if he’s in net, he could steal the game for the Isles.
Who would’ve picked the Winnipeg Jets and Calgary Flames as the top two teams in the NHL through the first three weeks? Not many aside from the Alberta faithful, but here we are. The undefeated Jets take on the 5-1-1 Flames in a battle of Western Conference giants.
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Boston Marathon
In our “Why I’m Running” series, Boston Marathon athletes share what’s inspiring them to make the 26.2-mile trek from Hopkinton to Boston. Looking for more race day content? Sign up for Boston.com’s pop-up Boston Marathon newsletter.
Name: Abigail Zerbey
Age: 24
City: North Andover
I am honored and excited to be running the 2026 Boston Marathon in memory of my grandfather and in support of Massachusetts General Hospital — a place that means the world to me. MGH is where my grandfather received amazing care during his fight with pancreatic cancer, and it’s also where I’ve recently begun my career as a registered nurse on Bigelow 7.
After my grandfather’s diagnosis, our family made countless trips to MGH for chemotherapy and other treatments. Though I was young at the time, I vividly remember the compassion, dedication, and strength shown by his care team. The nurses didn’t just care for my grandfather — they supported our entire family with empathy and hope, never giving up even during the hardest moments.
Now, as a new registered nurse at MGH, I strive every day to provide that same level of care to my patients and their loved ones. Running these 26.2 miles is my way of saying thank you to the medical team who cared for my grandfather, and to the hospital that has become such a meaningful part of my life.
I am raising money to support the exceptional care MGH provides to patients around the world, as well as pediatric cancer research and the home base program. Through these 26.2 miles, I hope to honor my grandfather’s memory and help ensure a future where fewer families must face this devastating disease.
Editor’s note: This entry may have been lightly edited for clarity or grammar.
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“We didn’t do that,” Mazzulla said. “We kept fighting for good looks, the next best look, and I thought that kept the momentum going.”
When the dust settled after this historic opening quarter, the Celtics had scored a franchise-record 53 points and raced to a 20-point lead behind a startling display of shot making. Their defense afterward was imperfect, but it did not matter in this 147-129 win in front of an audience that included Tom Brady.
“That first quarter,” Hauser said, “was unbelievable.”
The Celtics’ first-quarter point total and their 11-of-15 3-point shooting were franchise records. Jaylen Brown (20) and Hauser (17) became the first Celtics teammates in the play-by-play era (since the 1996-97 season) to score at least 17 points apiece in the same quarter.
Boston actually trailed Miami by 1 point with just over four minutes left in the first before closing the period with a loud and masterful 24-3 run.
Brown put another notch in his MVP-caliber season by pouring in 43 points on 17-of-29 shooting. He was disheartened by a rare off night in Monday’s loss to the Hawks, but confident it would not be repeated.
“I didn’t like how that game went,” Brown said, “so I wanted to come out with an aggressive mind-set tonight and make up for that last game.”
Jayson Tatum registered his first triple-double of the season, with 25 points, 18 rebounds, and 11 assists. Despite the impressive stat line in yet another Celtics win, Tatum stressed that he is still working to regain his All-Star form after missing the first 62 games because of last May’s Achilles injury.
When asked after Wednesday’s win how close he is to truly being back, he said he could not attach a figure to his recovery. But he said he feels the progress that has also been quite visible.
“It sounds cliché, but I feel a little bit better every game,” he said. “I don’t know how long it’ll take to get back to what I was, or hopefully better, but the goal is to continue to stack days.”
The Celtics shot 58.3 percent from the field and made 21 of 44 3-pointers. Miami actually outshot Boston from beyond the arc by making 24 of 47 (51.1 percent). The Heat hit 11 in the third quarter, matching the Celtics’ franchise-record total from the first. But it was not enough.
Still, Miami’s response allowed the Celtics to extract some teaching moments from an otherwise feel-good night.
“The sign of a great team is even after a great quarter you come back and do it again,” Brown said. “I thought in the second quarter we allowed some slippage and they took advantage. So, still some stuff to clean up.”
Brown scored the Celtics’ first 11 points, and they opened the game by making 10 of 12 shots and 5 of 6 3-pointers. Despite this initial surge, though, they trailed, 30-29 with 4:15 left.
Then Boston uncorked one of the most dominant stretches of this season. Hauser, who was 5 for 5 from the arc in the quarter, drilled four over the final 4:14.
Baylor Scheierman came up with a steal and flipped the ball over his shoulder to Brown for a reverse dunk. The dam was opened.
Hauser’s fifth 3-pointer, with 32 seconds left, set up a two-for-one chance. Tatum air-balled a 3-pointer on the final play, but Payton Pritchard slid in for the putback to make it 53-33.
“Just high-level shot-making on both ends,” Tatum said.
The second quarter was more, well, normal, with Tatum leading the way after having his first quarter disrupted by foul trouble. The forward had 10 points and eight rebounds and Boston outscored Miami, 27-24.
At the end of the second, Derrick White lofted an alley-oop to Brown, who converted the layup with 1.5 seconds left. White then noticed Heat guard Pelle Larsson roaming free at the other end, so he broke into a full sprint and got there in time to disrupt his last-second attempt. The Celtics went to the break with an 80-57 lead.
Boston led, 104-80, with four minutes left in the third, but Miami punched back with three 3-pointers over the final 65 seconds, with a buzzer-beater by Davion Mitchell pulling the host within 112-102 after its 45-point period. The Heat sliced the deficit to 9 early in the fourth, but a pair of mid-range jumpers by Hauser and a Tatum 3-pointer ensured there would be no collapse.
Adam Himmelsbach can be reached at adam.himmelsbach@globe.com. Follow him @adamhimmelsbach.
© Eric Canha-Imagn Images
This week’s Anatomy of a Goal is a historical one! We’re breaking down Boston Legacy FC’s first-ever goal.
Before we get into that, though, let’s do a quick Legacy heat check. I won’t dice words here: this team is struggling. It’s taken them three games to score a single goal, and they’ve conceded six. Boston has also been averaging the second-lowest expected goals per game thus far (0.60 xG, American Soccer Analysis), though it’s worth mentioning that we’re only three games into the season.
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