Seattle, WA
Wild’s Kirill Kaprizov hits 100-point mark in rout of Seattle
An enthusiastic crowd of 19,047 available at Xcel Vitality Middle on Friday night time totally anticipating to see the Wild manhandle the lowly Seattle Kraken to achieve a team-record 50 wins on the season was not within the temper to cope with an early 2-0 Kraken lead.
By the point six minutes and 52 seconds had elapsed within the second interval, all had been forgiven.
That’s when Kirill Kaprizov redirected a move from Kevin Fiala into the again of the online for his forty fifth purpose of the season to provide the Wild a 3-2 lead. The mini-crisis had been averted, and the celebration was again on monitor.
The Wild then threw in a pair extra crew information for the followers’ troubles as they turned a five-goal second interval right into a head-spinning 6-3 victory.
Fiala adopted his two-goal sport on Thursday with a team-record 5 assists in opposition to the Kraken. And when Kaprizov assisted on Ryan Hartman’s purpose to provide the Wild a 4-2 lead he grew to become the primary participant in crew historical past to provide a 100-point season.
Extra importantly, the victory pushed the Wild two factors forward of the St. Louis Blues within the quest for home-ice benefit within the first spherical of the playoffs.
“It’s an enormous accomplishment,” Kaprizov mentioned by an interpreter of reaching 100 factors. An enormous thanks to the followers, my teammates, the group. Clearly, it’s an enormous accomplishment. I’m extraordinarily grateful and blissful. Clearly getting the crew win was tremendous vital and made the whole lot that rather more candy.”
The Wild scored three power-play targets, with Kaprizov and Fiala teaming up on performs that bordered on being magical.
“Typically you catch your self watching them,” mentioned Joel Eriksson Ek, who scored two targets and added an help. “Even on the bench, once you see Kevin play with this a lot confidence, when he doesn’t actually stress about issues, he’s so good. You watch him and go ‘Oh, my God. How can he try this?’
“It’s actually spectacular for him, when he has this confidence. He doesn’t actually drive performs, and that’s when he performs his finest.”
All on an evening that started off in a really surprising means.
Six minutes into the sport, goaltender Marc-Andre Fleury misplayed a dump-in, and Seattle’s Daniel Sprong was the beneficiary, sliding the puck right into a wide-open web off a centering feed.
A slick give-and-go passing play led to a purpose by Seattle’s Yanni Gourde and a 2-0 Kraken lead at 10:20 of the interval.
The Wild minimize the deficit in half earlier than the primary interval ended with a power-play purpose by Eriksson Ek, who scored from the slot after taking a contact move from Kaprizov. He added his second purpose of the sport two minutes into the second interval to drag the Wild even.
“We didn’t suppose we have been unhealthy within the first,” Wild coach Dean Evason mentioned. “We simply thought they have been actually good. However the group regrouped, and we have been in a position to come out with an actual good second interval.”
BRIEFLY
Mats Zuccarello left the sport with a decrease physique harm within the second interval. Evason mentioned it doesn’t look like critical, however Zuccarello is not going to journey with the crew to Nashville.
With the win, the Wild prolonged their factors streak to 9 video games and their dwelling factors streak to 13 video games.
Fiala prolonged his factors streak to 9 video games (9 targets, 12 assists).
Tyson Jost was again within the lineup for the Wild after lacking three video games as a consequence of a decrease physique harm. He centered the fourth line and picked up an help.
Seattle, WA
Fumes in cockpit forces Hawaiian-bound flight to return to Seattle
Fumes in the cockpit of a Hawaiian-bound flight forced the aircraft to return to the Seattle airport shortly after taking off Monday afternoon.
An airline spokesperson told FOX Business that Hawaiian Airlines flight HA21 returned to Seattle-Tacoma International Airport after departure due to fumes in the cabin. It was heading to Daniel K. Inouye International Airport in Honolulu.
The captain declared an emergency to obtain priority handling and the Airbus 330 landed at SEA without incident, the airline said.
Medical and fire personnel met the aircraft at the gate and all 273 passengers and 10 crewmembers deplaned safely.
AMERICAN AIRLINES LIFTS NATIONWIDE GROUNDSTOP DUE TO ‘TECHNICAL ISSUE’ ON CHRISTMAS EVE
Once the aircraft was cleared, the Port of Seattle Fire Department boarded to investigate and did not find any smoke or smell, airport spokesperson Perry Cooper told The Associated Press.
Flight 21 left Seattle on Tuesday morning in a new aircraft.
FOX Business has reached out to the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) for further details.
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Seattle, WA
Seattle to Hawaii flight turns back after fumes in cockpit
SEATTLE — A Hawaiian airlines flight bound for Honolulu was forced to return to the Seattle airport shortly after takeoff due to reports of fumes in the cockpit, according to the Federal Aviation Administration.
The agency previously said the crew reported smoke on the flight deck but later changed that to fumes.
Hawaiian Airlines Flight 21, an Airbus A330, took off at about 1 p.m. Monday from Seattle-Tacoma International Airport carrying 273 passengers and 10 crew members.
It was heading to Daniel K. Inouye International Airport in Honolulu when the crew reported the fumes, airline spokesperson Marissa Villegas told The Associated Press in an email.
“The captain declared an emergency to obtain priority handling and the Airbus A330 landed at SEA without incident,” Villegas said, and fire and medical personnel met the aircraft at the gate as a precaution and everyone onboard safely deplaned.
Once the aircraft was cleared, the Port of Seattle Fire Department boarded to investigate and did not find any smoke or smell, airport spokesperson Perry Cooper said via email.
Flight 21 left Seattle on Tuesday morning in a new aircraft, according to Villegas.
“Safety is our priority, and we sincerely apologize for this event,” she said.
The FAA is investigating.
Seattle, WA
Barely Relevant: Well, it’s over for this year’s Seahawks
Author’s note: This is the seventeenth installment of my weekly column, Barely Relevant.
Well, it’s over. And, for what it’s worth, the Seattle Seahawks had a pretty darn good year. Pretty darn good is a tough phrase to unpack, though, mostly because it doesn’t mean anything. How can something be pretty good? Something is either good or it isn’t. In that respect, anything under good is bad. Thus, pretty good = bad. Thus, the Seattle Seahawks’ 2024 season.
Yes, we’re guaranteed to finish with a winning record. No, we didn’t make the playoffs. Yes, we have a brand-new coaching staff. No, our preseason free-agent additions didn’t pan out like we had hoped they would. Yes, some people blame our quarterback. No, some other people don’t think it’s our quarterback. Yes, our offensive line was again one of the worst in the NFL. No, we didn’t run the ball like we’d wanted. Yes, we should keep DK Metcalf. No, we should not keep DK Metcalf.
The wild mood swings involved in being a Seahawks fan have a juxtaposing pendulum effect that bounces like a migraine between my two temples. What are the answers? Who the hell knows? Certainly not John Schneider. And certainly not me. All he can do is attempt to juggle Geno and DK contracts while continuing to try to bring in quality free agents, and all I can do is hang out on my couch and go “yes!” and “damn!” which are words that have zero currency or worth.
Because no matter what anyone (us included) says over the next nine months, nothing else matters except how the Seahawks play – on the field during the regular season – next year. Oh, we’ll speculate wildly. And we’ll throw numbers around and feign confidence about new free agent this and new draft pick that, but it doesn’t matter a hell of beans because it’s just mind football.
This, right now, is as far as you’ll be from a game that matters all year.
For some reason, though, it doesn’t feel all that bad. Am I alone here? I don’t know about you, but my expectations weren’t that high. And I kind of like mind football. Of course, it sucks we missed the playoffs – and it CERTAINLY sucks the way we missed the playoffs (f-ing helmet bounce [I’m deflecting blame here]), but, hell, our defense looks promising. Our new head coach seems to know what he’s doing, our running backs look like ballers (if we can find an offensive coordinator who knows how to utilize them), and our second-year wide receiver is ready for lift-off.
If we can manage to figure out our quarterback situation and pick up some offensive linemen, Seattle could be poised to make things interesting. For some reason, I’m already ready to talk all about it. And the draft! There’s no mourning period here. Let’s hurry up and end this season and get into it.
Of course, in the grand scheme of things, nothing is going to matter until we start playing games that count again. But who wants to wait nine months to play football? Not me. That’s why every sportswriter you know is going to begin playing mind football right now.
Join us.
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