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Letters to Sports: Clayton Kershaw is back, and so is baseball

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Sure! Kershaw signed on for an additional 12 months. He needs to be, to paraphrase Plaschke, a lifer like Koufax and Drysdale. Amen. He’s earned it, the precise to receives a commission by the Dodgers for no matter any staff is prepared to pay. One uniform. One staff. The one and solely Los Angeles Dodgers.

Jeff Wooden
Newhall

::

The re-signing of Kershaw, man on and off the mound, nearly balances out the ridiculous and wasted signing of Trevor Bauer final season.

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Fred Wallin
Westlake Village

Labor strife

Precise baseball gamers ought to have the power to catch, throw and hit a baseball. That’s why a pitcher who can hit properly is extra helpful than one with lesser expertise. When a pitcher is coming to the plate can be a think about strategic selections.

The Nationwide League, in my view, was actual baseball.

In the event that they actually undertake designated hitters they’re simply as bogus because the American League.

Dave Thoma
Ventura

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::

I’ve been following the Dodgers and baseball since 1958 once I was 10. Koufax and Drysdale are nonetheless my heroes, nevertheless it has turn out to be a lot about cash. Pure greed. I could also be just one baseball fan, however attributable to latest occasions I’m a baseball fan not. I’ll spend the remaining years discovering a greater solution to spend time.

Brad Heald
Henderson, Nev.

::

I’ve been studying and having fun with the sports activities letters for years. Over time I’ve observed a recurring theme: At any time when there’s a participant/administration battle extreme sufficient to trigger cancellation of a number of the season, letter writers will assert that “sufficient is sufficient” and that followers ought to boycott attendance when the video games are resumed.

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Though my crystal ball is previous and a bit of cracked, I can let you know that the one place a fan boycott will happen is in your desires.

Ralph Martinez
Arcadia

::

I confess to being a strong Joe Kelly fan, however his surprisingly poignant and heartfelt channeling of his inside Jim Murray was simply what I, one other annoyed MLB fan, wanted proper now. Exasperated by lengthy struggling blackouts and scornful lockouts, Joe’s heat insights into the center and spirit of baseball from an MLB star is a refreshing reminder that the MLB gamers themselves (principally) love the sport as a lot or greater than we followers. As for the house owners … possibly not a lot.

Someplace, Joe’s essay has Tommy Lasorda and Jim Murray nodding and smiling and saying, “Effectively mentioned, Joe!”

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Patrick Leonard
La Quinta

::

Pricey Joe Kelly, I might always remember baseball. Thanks to your plea for persistence to all of us followers and to your homage to the sport we love. I agree with you that baseball is the “considering man’s sport.” Nonetheless, as a feminine who’s a lifelong Dodger fan, I counsel calling it a “considering FAN’S sport.” No laborious emotions, Joe. Can’t wait to see you again on the mound! Deliver your mariachi jacket.

Laura Owen
Pacific Palisades

Bauer debate

What a travesty Trevor Bauer has been put via for the previous 9 months. How laborious is it to “examine” a “he says, she says” sexual allegation? The D.A. gained’t prosecute as a result of there wasn’t sufficient proof, which must be adequate for MLB. Give the man his life again and bring to an end this stretched out farce of an “investigation” as he has already misplaced half a season, punishment sufficient for unhealthy judgment.

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Ken Blake
Brea

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I regularly see reporters from The Occasions strongly stating that Trevor Bauer have to be launched due to his horrible interplay with a feminine. Though I under no circumstances assist his actions it have to be remembered that his feminine associate was a prepared participant within the interplay and really returned to his dwelling for an additional sexual assembly. However what about Kobe Bryant? Was Kobe suspended by the NBA whereas sexual assault allegations have been investigated?? NO. Did the Lakers droop him? NO. Did The Occasions demand he be launched? NO NO NO. Did the followers activate him? NO. Kobe is an L.A. icon. That is an instance of a double normal at its most extreme state.

Bruce Olson
Upland

Lakers legacies

On Saturday, March 5, I made a decision to see how former Lakers gamers have been performing. What did I see? The kids are doing all proper. Listed below are their factors: Ingram 29, Caldwell-Pope 28, Randle 25 and Kuzma 22. Lakers followers can examine these numbers to our present staff gamers on their subsequent outing. It hurts this fan to observe this staff and its lack of effort and taking pictures expertise (except for LeBron James).

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Richard Leeds
Irvine

::

All of the noise (together with from The Occasions) about eliminating LeBron James is barely half proper. Watching him play each day on the degree he performs makes him a keeper. Alternatively, LeBron the Normal Supervisor ought to have been fired way back. In the long run the Lakers report reveals the value of the participant was far outweighed by the underperformance of his growing older buddies.

Robert Goldstone
Corona del Mar

::

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Effectively, now we all know the one time LeBron James will play to win is when a Rams participant is within the stands. I feel the entrance workplace ought to offer your entire Rams staff season tickets and make it possible for at the very least one in all them attends all remaining video games.

It’s apparent that he doesn’t care if the followers are completely happy, however is basically into exhibiting what he can do in entrance of a soccer celebrity.

Gail Winkles
Whittier

::

Invoice Plaschke by no means ceases to amaze. His newest overreaction to the Russell Westbrook scenario is simply one other instance of his foolish bandwagoning. In truth, Westbrook doesn’t deserve criticism and abuse of his household identify, neither by followers nor ill-informed journalists. The Lakers knew who they have been getting on this commerce. Criticism as an alternative must be levied on the GM tandem of LeBron James and Rob Pelinka.

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Axel Hubert
Santa Monica

::

Russell Westbrook, are you kidding me? You make hundreds of thousands and hundreds of thousands a 12 months, and also you’re complaining about heckling followers hurting your emotions?

Jack Wolf
Westwood

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The forged of “Successful Time” was offended by how the Lakers have been depicted of their sport towards the Rockets.

George Sands
Torrance

Coach Ok comparability

Congratulations to Coach Ok for a sterling teaching profession each on and off the court docket. However I’m sorry, ESPN and different East Coast mouthpieces are rewriting historical past by referring to him because the GOAT. That honor will all the time go to John Picket, along with his 10 nationwide championships in an period when the event contained no stiffs, however solely convention champions. Coach Ok merely had too many event disappointments to compete with the true GOAT.

Alan Abajian
Alta Loma

::

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Evaluating Coach Ok to Coach W is like evaluating Michael Jordan to Kobe. It might probably’t be executed. The one commonality is in the secret. The sport modified a lot, guidelines, techniques, and so on., that they have been one of the best at what they did in utterly totally different universes.

Tony Schaffer
Los Angeles

Not so regal protection

Whereas the millionaire baseball gamers are haggling with the billionaire house owners, the poor L.A. Occasions can’t afford a beat author to cowl the Related Press Kings.

Reggie Reginato
Santa Barbara

::

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The Los Angeles Occasions welcomes expressions of all views. Letters must be transient and turn out to be the property of The Occasions. They might be edited and republished in any format. Every should embrace a legitimate mailing deal with and phone quantity. Pseudonyms won’t be used.

E mail: sports activities@latimes.com

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Column: Baseball legend Willie Mays instrumental in California fight against housing discrimination

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Column: Baseball legend Willie Mays instrumental in California fight against housing discrimination

As a ballplayer, Willie Mays was arguably the greatest of all time — baseball’s GOAT. But he also starred in another endeavor — as an important California civil rights pioneer.

Mays never wanted to be an activist about anything off the baseball diamond. But the racism he encountered after moving to San Francisco stirred others to leap to his cause and ultimately helped motivate the city and state governments to outlaw housing discrimination.

His role began when Mays arrived in San Francisco from New York with the Giants baseball team in late 1957. Local folks in supposedly enlightened San Francisco welcomed the star outfielder by trying to bar him from a white neighborhood.

Mays downplayed it publicly, but his wife, Marghuerite Mays, spoke out to reporters: “Down in Alabama where we come from, you know your place. But up here, it’s all a lot of camouflage. They grin in your face and deceive you.”

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Willie Mays receives the Presidential Medal of Freedom from President Obama at the White House in 2015.

(Evan Vucci / Associated Press)

Never mind that Mays was en route to the baseball Hall of Fame as the best all-around ballplayer in history. Didn’t matter. If a Black man was allowed to buy a home in a desirable neighborhood — adjoining tony St. Francis Wood in the Sunset District — nearby property values would tumble. At least that’s what white neighbors openly feared.

“I happen to have a few pieces of property in the area, and I stand to lose a lot if colored people move in,” a nearby home builder told reporters.

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Yes, that was San Francisco — in fact, virtually all of California — until laws were passed in the 1960s to stop such discrimination. The change was aided significantly by Mays’ indirect help, according to another legendary Willie from San Francisco — former mayor and longtime state Assembly Speaker Willie Brown.

I called Brown, 90, after Mays died this week at age 93. Brown, a rare Black lawyer in late 1950s San Francisco, struck up an early friendship with Mays.

“He was a joy, frankly. A fun guy,” Brown says.

Brown credits the racial bias against Mays with galvanizing the city into adopting an ordinance forbidding housing discrimination.

“It started with Willie Mays,” Brown told me. “As a result of his being rejected, newspapers suddenly became aware of the racism in San Francisco.

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“San Francisco wasn’t racist like other parts of the country. People smiled.”

Brown continued: “The fair housing law of San Francisco was passed because Mays got denied the right of housing. That escalated the need to change. He was the most dramatic example of how discrimination was practiced on people of color.”

In 1963, spurred by Gov. Pat Brown and Bay Area lawmakers, the state Legislature passed a bill outlawing racial discrimination in the sale and rental of housing. It needed all the support it could muster and generated the biggest, bitterest political brawl I’ve ever witnessed in Sacramento.

California voters overwhelmingly repealed the law the next year. But the repeal was declared unconstitutional by both the state and U.S. supreme courts.

Mays didn’t participate personally in that fight, but Brown certainly did.

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A transplant from Jim Crow east Texas, Brown became a civil rights activist in San Francisco about the time Mays was arriving from New York. In fact, Brown was persistently snubbed by real estate agents when he tried to buy a house in 1961. He responded by leading a sit-in at a Realtor’s office.

The Mays incident occurred after he offered the asking price of $37,500 for a three-bedroom home in an upscale, tree-lined, all-white neighborhood. After he waited several days, his offer was turned down. The house remained on the market for the same price — but unavailable for the star ballplayer.

The San Francisco Chronicle got wind of the rejection and ran this banner at the top of Page 1: “WILLIE MAYS IS DENIED S.F. HOUSE–RACE ISSUE.” The headline on the story read: “Willie Mays is Refused S.F. House–Negro.”

“I didn’t figure I would have this much trouble trying to buy a place,” Mays told a TV reporter. “When I go looking for a house, I don’t worry about who’s living beside me.”

Unlike nervous white people of that era.

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San Francisco Giants' Willie Mays

Mays gets the 3,000th hit of his career, a single to left, at Candlestick Park in San Francisco in 1970.

(Robert H. Houston / Associated Press)

San Francisco Mayor George Christopher — a moderate Republican, back when such a breed existed — offered to let Mays and his wife live temporarily at his home.

Ultimately, the homeowner backed down, despite being berated by neighbors. Mays moved in. And almost immediately someone threw a brick through a window.

Mays kept his mind on baseball and eventually became the pride of San Francisco.

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As a bottom-tier sportswriter for United Press International, I was privileged to watch lots of Giants games at windy Candlestick Park in the early 1960s.

Mays’ statistics are phenomenal: a .301 career batting average, 660 home runs, 3,293 hits, 339 stolen bases, 12 Gold Glove awards in center field, 24 All-Star games.

In the 1961 All-Star Game at Candlestick that I helped cover, Mays doubled home the tying run in the 10th inning and then scored the winning run on a single by Pittsburgh’s Roberto Clemente as the National League edged the American League, 5-4.

But box scores and stats tell only part of the story of Mays’ greatness.

What I remember most about him was his playing with elation and exuberance — galloping around first base, always a threat to stretch a single into a double and a menace to steal second in any case. Full speed no matter the score. Cap flying.

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In his long post-career, Mays provided a comfortable nostalgic link back to baseball’s exciting heyday — before blah analytics and emphasis on astronomical free agent salaries.

America can’t afford to lose such people. He didn’t hate. He brought cheer.

And — while there’s no stats on it — he assisted in beating housing discrimination.

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NBA Player Tiers: Kevin Durant, Steph Curry hang on in Tier 1, but how much longer?

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NBA Player Tiers: Kevin Durant, Steph Curry hang on in Tier 1, but how much longer?

This is the fifth annual NBA Player Tiers project, in which Seth Partnow names the top 125 players in the league after each season and then separates them into five distinct categories of value, each with their sub-categories to further delineate them. These are not meant to be read as firm 1-125 player rankings. Rather, they’re meant to separate solid starters from the very best superstars, and every level in between. This is how NBA front offices assess player value across the league when building their teams.


NBA Player Tiers: ’20 | ’21 | ’22 | ‘23 | ’24 pre-playoffs | ’24: T5 | T4| T3 | T2


The NBA is undergoing a changing of the guard. While Tier 1 has been relatively stable during the five seasons I’ve done this exercise — only nine players have been in Tier 1 at least once, with the six below plus LeBron James, Kawhi Leonard and James Harden — many of the stalwarts are facing the ticking of the clock, while the next wave, such as Jayson Tatum, Anthony Edwards and, of course, Victor Wembanyama, are knocking on the door.

I could have gone several ways with this group, from having only a super select top three or four making up the entirety of the tier to rewarding some of those up-and-comers at the expense of the old warhorses, and I wouldn’t much argue with those who saw it that way.

But for now, here are the cream of the crop.

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Tier 1B (4-6)

Remarkably, a 62.6 true shooting percentage on 29.0 usage represents a down year for Kevin Durant, even compared to just the post-Achilles tear section of his career. The poorly constructed and extremely top-heavy Phoenix Suns roster did him few favors, which raises a question that has only factored tangentially into the tiers over the years: How much should player influence on roster decisions and coaching hires be factored in?

It’s a challenge to do so systematically. At least from the outside, who advocated for what move or how much weight an organization gives to a star’s wishes are difficult to determine. But the balance of reporting indicates that Brooklyn/Phoenix era Durant has demanded many things and received most of them, including the hiring and firing of coaches.

It is often said that coaches shouldn’t be GMs because there isn’t enough time in the day to do both jobs well. This holds even more true for players. But how much is it on the players when it happens? It’s a hard one to judge, but it’s something that likely needs to enter the calculus when considering later career superstars such as Durant, LeBron James or one or two others.

All of this is to note that Durant barely maintained his spot in Tier 1 this year and will need a strong performance — including the playoffs — in 2024-25 to be worthy of staying here.

Another former MVP somewhere on the back nine of his career is Stephen Curry. With the Golden State Warriors missing the playoffs, has Curry’s ability to drag indifferent teammates to success waned, or did Golden State find the bottom edge of overall roster ability at which he could do so? Or was it perhaps some combination of both?

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Make no mistake, Curry is still a great, great player. But there are subtle signs of decline. His rim-attempt rate was the lowest of his career by a decent margin. His ability to impact the game as a team defender has dropped off considerably — over the last two seasons, he has averaged 1.2 steals per 100 possessions, precisely half of the 2.4/100 he maintained over the first 13 years of his career.

For the first time other than 2019-20, when he appeared in only five games, 2023-24 was the first time the Warriors were superior in terms of net rating with Curry off the floor than on, with Golden State 0.6 points per 100 possessions better when Curry was on the bench, compared to 14.5 per 100 better with Curry on the floor from his first MVP season in 2014-15 through 2022-23. At 35, there is no shame in acknowledging that Curry is not quite the automatic driver of elite offense that he has been for most of his career, but that dip does move him down from 1A to 1B.

For Joel Embiid, it is seemingly always something: Bad health, be it either his health or his teammates’; a ball bouncing four times on the rim and then dropping to eliminate the Sixers from the playoffs; star players falling out with the organization, requiring trades or other reshuffling of the lineup. All of these and more have conspired to keep Embiid from ever reaching the conference finals, which is unfortunate because by several impact metrics, Embiid has been the second-most-effective regular-season player in the league across the last four seasons, behind only Nikola Jokić’s all-time great run.

This past season, you couldn’t have asked for more from Embiid himself, either in the regular season or in the Sixers’ short playoff run. But he still hasn’t truly stamped his authority on a postseason and has never consistently hit the same level of dominance. His playoff shortcomings have probably been overblown, with a career 58.0 percent true shooting on 31.6 percent usage. But ignoring his abbreviated rookie year, he has 61.6 percent true shooting on 35.5 percent usage. The latter is otherworldly, while the former is merely damn good.

There have been myriad reasons for the lack of extended playoff success, many of them completely outside Embiid’s control. But it has always been something, and that’s enough to keep him in Tier 1B for now.

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Tier 1A (1-3)

For all the complexity the NBA game offers, basketball can be pretty simple. Pair an offensive force with the size, vision and ability to draw extra defenders with a dynamic rim threat (or two!) and surround them with shooters, and that’s a hard formula to stop. While Luka Dončić was good all year, the midseason trades that brought in Daniel Gafford and P.J. Washington helped both Dončić and the Mavericks reach exit velocity and launch into orbit.

It wasn’t just a more favorable context. Dončić made some subtle but telling improvements, becoming a more active off-ball participant — a higher percentage of his made 3s were assisted than any season since his rookie year — while also upping his defensive contributions.

The defense was an unsung part of the Mavs’ run to the NBA Finals. While Dončić was rarely if ever tasked with the primary matchup against the opposition’s top weapons, he made more effective use of his size and game-reading ability, particularly against the Oklahoma City Thunder and Minnesota Timberwolves.

While our lasting memory might be the disappointment of Dallas losing the finals, that is as much an illustration of how even top superstars need a bit of good fortune to reach the pinnacle. Not only did the Celtics significantly out-talent Dallas top to bottom, but Boston was as well-equipped to deal with Dončić on its own defensive end while having the range and volume of on-ball creators to attack him in ways other teams couldn’t on defense.

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There is still some room for improvement, as Dončić’s conditioning could probably use an upgrade, while his penchant for engaging with officials — occasionally picking up some silly fouls such as in Game 3 of the finals series — could stand to be scaled back significantly. But using those quibbles to keep him out of Tier 1A would be setting a near impossible standard that few players in NBA history, let alone current day, could match.

Giannis Antetokounmpo is the only player who has resided in Tier 1A in every year-end edition of the Tiers. For the first time, I had some slight doubts putting him here. He has missed time in four of the last five postseasons, including the entirety of the Bucks’ stay this year. During that stretch, Milwaukee has lost its first-round series as a higher seed twice, something definitely held against other players, though, of course, his dominance through the 2021 playoffs has and will continue to buy Antetokounmpo good will on that front.

There is also worry about how robust his impact will be as he approaches 30, which he will reach in early December. Some of it was surely because of Milwaukee’s rather disheveled start to the season from a schematic and coaching standpoint, but Antetokounmpo’s struggle to find synergy with Damian Lillard could reflect a degree of inflexibility or stubbornness that could prove challenging as he begins to age and lose some of his athleticism.

There have been suggestions that the Bucks have been somewhat limited in their ability to be tactically versatile; considering how important adjusting and iterating has become in the postseason, limiting those options is a drawback. Antetokounmpo enters next season on the bubble for dropping out of Tier 1A for the first time.

Having gone through 124 players, we are left with the reigning (and should be four-time consecutive, but why relitigate that particularly noxious debate?) MVP Nikola Jokić at the top of the heap. Even though the Nuggets ultimately fell to Minnesota in seven games in what was the best series of this past postseason, Jokić left some indelible memories. His third quarter in Game 5 against the Wolves defies description, for example.

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During his three-in-four MVP run, Jokić has averaged a combined 26.1 points, 12.2 rebounds, 8.7 assists, 1.4 steals and 0.8 blocks per game. Even lowering those thresholds to 25/10/7.5/1/0.5, no other player has hit those heights even once.

And he has done it while scoring efficiently enough to lead the league twice and finish second twice in “TS Add” — a metric created by Basketball-Reference indicating the number of points above (or below) a player scores than he would have had he scored at league average on the same number of attempts.

To repeat one last time, these tiers are not rankings.

But if they were, the Joker would be No. 1.

NBA Player Tiers: ’20 | ’21 | ’22 | ‘23 | ’24 pre-playoffs | ’24: T5 | T4| T3 | T2

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(Illustration: Dan Goldfarb / The Athletic: Photos: Sean Gardner, Noah Graham / NBAE, Jesse D. Garrabrant / NBAE via Getty Images)

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Oilers fan who went viral for flashing crowd during game signs with Playboy

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Oilers fan who went viral for flashing crowd during game signs with Playboy

The Edmonton Oilers may have a fan to thank for coming back from their 3-0 deficit.

The Oilers forced a Game 7 on Friday night, becoming just the 10th team in NHL history to do so after trailing three games to none in a series.

That came mere hours after Playboy made an announcement regarding an Edmonton fan who had gone viral for an X-rated reason.

The Stanley Cup Final signage before Game Four of the 2024 Stanley Cup Final between the Florida Panthers and the Edmonton Oilers at Rogers Place on June 15, 2024, in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada.  (Andy Devlin/NHLI via Getty Images)

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During a playoff game against the Dallas Stars, a fan, who’s only known for now as “Kait,” lifted up her Oilers jersey and flashed her breasts to the raucous crowd.

It has since become a rallying cry for the fans, and she’s pretty unapologetic.

“I got drunk and whipped my t–s out at an Oilers game, and they went viral? F— you if you don’t like it. Woo! Go Oilers!” she told Barstool Sports earlier this week.

Well, she has since parlayed her internet fame to a deal with Playboy.

“Meet Kait, the Oilers good luck charm,” the magazine wrote in a post on Instagram, featuring their new model. “The [Oilers] might not have the Stanley Cup just yet, but with [Kait] cheering them on, they’re unstoppable.”

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Oilers fans

A general view of fans celebrating a first period goal from Mattias Janmark, #13 of the Edmonton Oilers, against the Florida Panthers in Game Four of the 2024 Stanley Cup Final at Rogers Place on June 15, 2024, in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada.  (Andy Devlin/NHLI via Getty Images)

OILERS JOIN RARE COMPANY BY FORCING GAME 7 IN STANLEY CUP FINAL AFTER TRAILING 3-0

The post features photos of Kait in ice skates, throwing up a double-bird, and other typical Playboy poses.

Kate said on the Barstool Sports podcast that she had about eight Truly hard seltzers and a handful of Cheezies before deciding to flash the crowd.

“It wasn’t planned or anything … and yeah, it just kind of happened,” she said.

This is just the third time that the Stanley Cup will see a seventh game after a team owned a 3-0 lead, and the first since 1945. The Toronto Maple Leafs won both of those instances, completing the comeback in 1942, and then saving themselves from embarrassment three years later.

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It’s the first 3-0 comeback in the league since the Los Angeles Kings did so in the first round of the 2014 playoffs. They won that Game 7, and eventually won the Cup, winning two more Game 7’s in the process.

This series’ Game 7 will be back in Sunrise, Florida, where just about everyone will be in full-blown panic on Monday night. 

With a win, it’ll be the Oilers’ first Cup since 1990, and Canada’s first since 1993. 

Oilers' first-period goal

Edmonton Oilers’ Ryan Nugent-Hopkins (93), Zach Hyman (18), Connor McDavid (97) and Evan Bouchard (2) celebrate after a goal against the Dallas Stars during first-period action in Game 6 of the Western Conference finals of the NHL Stanley Cup playoffs in Edmonton, Alberta, Sunday, June 2, 2024.  (Jason Franson/The Canadian Press via AP)

That would also mark the second year in a row that the Panthers would lose in the Final, having fallen to the Vegas Golden Knights last year.

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Fox News’ Ryan Gaydos contributed to this report.

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