College basketball poll: Michigan still No. 1, Duke tumbles in Top 25 rankings

Michigan stretched its lead a bit over Arizona in this week's voting forthe USA TODAY Sports men's basketball coaches poll, and a previously unbeaten team taking its first loss shuffled the top five.

The Wolverines received 20 of 31 first-place votes and are 10 poll points ahead of the Wildcats. Arizona claimed all 11 of the remaining top votes, with a single second-place nod going to No. 3 Iowa State. Connecticut and Purdue each move up a spot to round out the top five asDuke slips from third to sixthfollowing its loss to No. 16 Texas Tech.

TOP 25:Complete USA TODAY Sports men's basketball poll

The rest of the top 10 is unchanged as Gonzaga, Houston, Michigan State and Brigham Young stay put in positions 7 through 10. Vanderbilt, the still unbeaten and the highest ranked squad from the SEC, moves up a notch to No. 11 as Louisville slips three places to No. 14.

Georgia makes its first appearance in the rankings this season at No. 24, and Southern California also enters at No. 25. St. John's and Auburn are the week's dropouts.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:College basketball rankings: Michigan leads, Duke falls in Top 25 poll

College basketball poll: Michigan still No. 1, Duke tumbles in Top 25 rankings

Michigan stretched its lead a bit over Arizona in this week's voting forthe USA TODAY Sports men's basketball coa...
NBA power rankings: 76ers surge behind Tyrese Maxey, Rockets tumble

As the five-game Christmas Day slate nears, the NBA has turned the page from the focus on the NBA Cup.

And though theOklahoma City Thunderhave dropped two of their last three games, it still may be too early to say that the team has long-term vulnerabilities, especially since those losses came against excellent Western Conference teams in theSan Antonio SpursandMinnesota Timberwolves.

Out East, things are a little more wide open, where it looks like there are a handful of teams that can compete for a conference title.

Here areUSA TODAY Sports' NBA power rankings after Week 8 of the 2025-26 regular season:

USA TODAY Sports NBA power rankings

Note: Records and stats through Dec. 21. Parentheses show movement fromlast week's rankings

Oct. 26: The Dallas Mavericks' Cooper Flagg dunks the ball past the Toronto Raptors' Sandro Mamukelashvili at the American Airlines Center. Oct. 26: The Washington Wizards' Cam Whitmore dunks the ball against the Charlotte Hornets at Capital One Arena. <p style=Oct. 26: The Brooklyn Nets' Michael Porter Jr. dunks in front of the San Antonio Spurs' Victor Wembanyama at Frost Bank Center.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> Oct. 25: The Denver Nuggets' Christian Braun dunks the ball against the Phoenix Suns' Grayson Allen at Ball Arena. Oct. 24: The Memphis Grizzlies' Jaren Jackson Jr. dunks against the Miami Heat at FedExForum. Oct. 24: The Miami Heat's Bam Adebayo dunks over the Memphis Grizzlies' Jaren Jackson Jr. at FedExForum. Oct. 22: The New York Knicks' OG Anunoby goes up for a reverse dunk against the Cleveland Cavaliers at Madison Square Garden. Oct. 22: The Utah Jazz's Lauri Markkanen dunks against the Los Angeles Clippers at Delta Center.

Dribble into this collection of dunk photos as NBA stars posterize opponents

NBA Week 9 power rankings: Top 5

1.Oklahoma City Thunder, 25-3 (—)

2.Detroit Pistons, 22-6 (—)

3.San Antonio Spurs, 21-7 (—)

4.New York Knicks, 20-8 (+1)

5.Denver Nuggets, 20-7 (-1)

Atop the list there's a relative lack of movement, but the interesting development is whether Oklahoma City is merely hitting a speedbump, or whether there are significant holes. The Spurs, however, look like a team that can compete regularly with the Thunder, given their size and defensive capability and their speed at guard. The Knicks, fresh off their NBA Cup championship, have won 12 of their last 14 games.

NBA Week 9 power rankings: Nos. 6-10

6.Los Angeles Lakers, 19-8 (+1)

7.Minnesota Timberwolves, 19-10 (+1)

8.Houston Rockets, 17-9 (-2)

9.Boston Celtics, 17-11 (—)

10.Philadelphia 76ers, 16-11 (+5)

The Rockets have taken a bit of a tumble, losing four of their last six, and the quality of some of those defeats are concerning; losses against the Kings and Pelicans shouldn't be happening. Anthony Edwards splashed his game-winning 3 over the Thunder, and the Timberwolves and their sixth-ranked defensive rating (112.3) suddenly have some swagger. And Tyrese Maxey, who is third in the NBA in scoring at 31.7 points per game, has the 76ers soaring.

NBA Week 9 power rankings: Nos. 11-15

11.Orlando Magic, 16-12 (-1)

12.Phoenix Suns, 15-13 (-1)

13.Toronto Raptors, 17-13 (-1)

14.Cleveland Cavaliers, 15-14 (+2)

15.Atlanta Hawks, 15-15 (-1)

The Magic have sputtered a bit recently, losing four of their last seven games, though there is a caveat here: those losses have come against the Spurs, Knicks (twice) and Nuggets, who have a combined winning percentage of .730. The Cavaliers need to confront their roster and whether they should be aggressive at the trading deadline.

NBA Week 9 power rankings: Nos. 16-20

16.Chicago Bulls, 13-15 (+4)

17.Memphis Grizzlies, 13-15 (+1)

18.Miami Heat, 15-14 (-5)

19.Golden State Warriors, 14-15 (-2)

20.Dallas Mavericks, 11-18 (-1)

The Bulls have won three consecutive and second-year forward Matas Buzelis has dropped 52 points on 73.1% shooting over his last two games. With Tyler Herro (toe) missing time, the Heat have won just two of their last 10 as their shooting has dipped in the last month. At this point, it's clear the Warriors need to tweak the construction of their roster to give Stephen Curry (28.8 points per game; ninth in the NBA) some more help.

NBA Week 9 power rankings: Nos. 21-25

21.Portland Trail Blazers, 12-16 (+1)

22.Utah Jazz, 10-17 (+2)

23.Milwaukee Bucks, 11-18 (-2)

24.Charlotte Hornets, 9-19 (-1)

25.Brooklyn Nets, 8-19 (—)

Despite ranking 11th in the Eastern Conference, the Bucks somehow have the NBA's second-best effective field goal percentage (57.4%), which adjusts for 3-point shots. Utah ranks seventh in the NBA in points per game (119.9) and sixth in rebounds per game (45.7). The Nets have won five of their last eight, as Michael Porter Jr. (25.6 points per game) has started to carry the offense for Brooklyn.

NBA Week 9 power rankings: Nos. 26-30

26.New Orleans Pelicans, 7-22 (+3)

27.Indiana Pacers, 6-22 (-1)

28.Los Angeles Clippers, 7-21 (-1)

29.Sacramento Kings, 7-22 (-1)

30.Washington Wizards, 5-22 (—)

New Orleans has gotten a massive boost in Zion Williamson's return, even though he has come off the bench in his three games back. Nonetheless, the Pelicans have won four consecutive. No team has been worse at possessing the ball than the Clippers, who rank dead last in turnover percentage (16.6%). And Washington's defensive rating of 122.7 is nearly 20 points lower than the league's top team, the Thunder (103.2).

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:NBA power rankings: 76ers rise, Rockets drop

NBA power rankings: 76ers surge behind Tyrese Maxey, Rockets tumble

As the five-game Christmas Day slate nears, the NBA has turned the page from the focus on the NBA Cup. And thoug...
A crowd watches as organizers reveal a new name and logo — Utah 2034 — at Salt Lake City International Airport, as they count down les than 3,000 days until the Olympic Winter Games return to Utah.     - Francisco Kjolseth // The Salt Lake Tribune

Utah's 2034 Olympics has a new — and controversial — logo

On a Monday, Gov. Spencer Cox stood in front of a crowd at the Salt Lake International Airport as Olympic officials unveiled both theofficial name and the transitional logo for the 2034 Winter Games. By Tuesday morning, the governor was standing in front of a room full of reporters and joking that the Utah 2034 logo had already fulfilled its purpose.

"It's really brought people together," he said, "because everyone seems to not like it."

The logo has been controversial at best, widely panned at worst. It's designed with a blocky font that mimics shapes found in Utah's landscape — the most obvious of which is the "A" that replicates the contour of Delicate Arch. Commenters on social media sites and news articles have quipped it's the same font used in CAPTCHAs or their fourth-grade book reports. Others complain it's ugly or simply difficult to read.

To which its designers say: Try looking at it through a different pair of eyes.

The creators of the Utah 2034 transitional logo conferred with athletes with vision disabilities to, they say, make it as impactful as possible for as many people as possible in as many places as possible. They've created a piece that they say reflects the local Olympic and Paralympic committee's whole-state approach to the 2034 Winter Games. And, they've done it all while working within the strict parameters set by the International Olympic Committee for transitional logos — which, in and of themselves, are fairly new.

Plus, noted Nate Morley, the lead designer, it's art. It's meant to be provocative.

"Art is subjective. And some people like things, and some people don't like things. And that's totally to be expected, and we certainly appreciate that," Morley, a Utahn whose company, Works Collective, also designed the LA28 Olympic logo, toldThe Salt Lake Tribune. "I think the intent is to learn kind of why the logo looks the way it looks — what it's meant to represent — and build that."

The shape inside the zero, for instance, is evocative of a pictograph, according to a website local Olympic organizers launched toexplain the controversial wordmark. The curves of the number two mimic those of a winding mountain road. When stacked, its letters and numbers form a checkerboard pattern reminiscent of Utah's street grids.

Yet the design goes even deeper than that, said Danelle Umstead, an athlete with low vision.

"Every Olympic logo gets backlash," Umstead, a four-time Paralympian, said in a text. "People forget that logos aren't created to be trendy — they're designed to be recognizable for decades, across stadiums, uniforms, merchandise, tiny smartphone screens, and global broadcasts.

"A lot of the early criticism focused on aesthetics alone, without understanding that accessibility was part of the design story."

And that is a process into which Umstead has special insight.

Meant to be seen

As a decorated Paralympic skier, Umstead has sat through more than a few logo reveals. They can be more difficult for the Park City athlete to navigate than the alpine ski courses she races with the guidance of her husband. While the crowd around her cheers, she said she's often scrambling to pull segments of a logo up on her phone using "extreme zoom technology."

"The world is celebrating, and I'm thinking, 'Hang on — give me five more seconds so I can see it, too,'" Umstead said.

That's why she said it meant so much to her when Creative Director Molly Mazzolini consulted with Umstead and four other athletes with vision disabilities on the design.

Umstead, who also competed on "Dancing with the Stars," is legally blind from retinitis pigmentosa. Though she does have some sight, she said most logos, with their thin swoops or indeterminate colors, are lost on her.

"I ski 70 mph down a mountain, no problem," she said. "But if you put a low-contrast logo on a website, that's where I wipe out."

Conversely, a unique logo with thick lines, a sans-serif font and high-contrast colors stands out. That's not the case just for people like her, Umstead said, but for everyone.

"If I don't have to squint, zoom, and pray to read your logo," she said, "that's good design."

Mazzolini and local Olympic organizers introduced the new logo in black and white — which has the highest contrast — as a nod to the Paralympians. She noted, however, that colors can and will be added to the design, depending on where and how it will be used.

In some instances, the name of the host city — Provo or Salt Lake City, for example — will appear beneath the wordmark as well. Mazzolini said she can also see the design of the characters morphing to fit a certain sport or locale.

Cookies in the shape of Utah decorated with icing, the Utah 2034 logo and Olympic rings are displayed in a bowl.     - Francisco Kjolseth // The Salt Lake Tribune

"I think it's something that is all a possibility, because this transition logo process is so new within the Olympic space," said Mazzolini, the founder of the Utah design firm Infinite Scale. "And I think we also need to think about it from the perspective of, it has a lot of growing to do."

That growth will be closely regulated by the IOC.

Staying within the guidelines

It's not like Mazzolini and her design team had a blank canvas when, last December, they began to imagine the kind of logo they would want to stand as the symbol of the Utah 2034 Olympics at least until 2029. (After which, Utah will have permission to begin soliciting sponsors and will be able to reveal its official mascots, symbols and logo).

The IOC had set strict parameters for the transitional logo — or, more accurately, the wordmark. Per the IOC guidelines, "These official marks are limited to typography — without symbols or icons — reserving the full creative expression for the official Games emblem released closer to the Games."

But the restrictions don't end there.

The logo had to be rectangular and match the height and width of the Olympic rings. It could be a maximum of two lines, but the IOC prefers it be one. When the Olympic rings and the Paralympic Ajitos are used, the IOC has dictated that the size of the rings must be "no larger than [one-third] of Y where Y is the total surface defined by drawing a rectangle around the Olympic rings, the Games signature, the designation and the Agitos (excluding the divider lines)."

It's no wonder that the two other Games that have adopted transitional logos — The French Alps 2030 and Brisbane 2032 — went with a simple, bolded font.

"They just communicate a place. They're not trying to evoke any story or emotion," Morley said. "So I just give a lot of credit to the organization for looking for ways to sort of tap into the passion of the people of Utah and their excitement for the games."

With that as his charge, Morley found some inspiration, and some wiggle room, within those restrictions.

Picking a font

The IOC guidelines may not allow the use of symbols in transitional logos, but they do explicitly permit the host to choose the font. So he began playing with creating a font that evoked landscapes found in Utah, from tip to tail.

Delicate Arch as the "A" was an easy choice. For other characters, he drew inspiration from a collection of photographs, from city streets to the bobsled track to mountain peaks. Some were aerial views, others were closely cropped to focus on a particular bend or squiggle.

"The intent was not to necessarily represent any one feature literally in the letter forms," Morley said, "but to have the totality of the letter forms feel like they were evocative of the totality of all the topography and all the features of the state."

Morley said he submitted several options to the Utah 2034 design team. The one picked was no doubt among the most audacious. So it was no surprise to him that it also provoked a strong response.

"People care a lot about their community. They care a lot about the culture that they're part of. They care a lot about sports. They care a lot about the Olympics, whether it's far away or whether it's in their hometown," he said. "A brand like this sits at sort of the epicenter of all those things coming together."

Letting 2002's logo 'live within itself'

The same can be said for the 2002 Winter Games. That logo, a stylized, colorful snowflake dubbed the "Crystal," is beloved by many Utahns but more widely is generally considered simply serviceable. Milton Glaser, the designer of the I (heart) NY logo, in 2022rated it a 70 out of 100— far from the highest among Olympic logos but tied for best for all of the Winter Games since.

Mazzolini worked in design during the 2002 Olympics, helping sponsors use that logo and the Olympic rings in their ad campaigns. For the 2034 Games, she said, the design team wanted to give a nod to the 2002 brand while allowing it to "live within itself."

The transitional logo does that, she said.

"That bold choice does provide a strong legacy for us," she said, "as well as gives us the runway to continue to tell the story."

As for the backlash — which included members of the public posting their own, often AI-generated, alternatives — she said that's a common part of the design process. And while she didn't go so far as to say there is no such thing as bad publicity, she did note that the logo was viewed more than 600,000 times between Facebook and Instagram in the first 48 hours after its airport unveiling.

Members of the Utah 2034 executive committee also stood by their choice, for now.

During a media scrum last week, following the monthly steering committee meeting, Utah 2034 CEO Brad Wilson and president Fraser Bullock said they don't expect the logo to change much in the next three or four years. After that, though, they aren't making any guarantees.

Next time a Utah governor unveils an Olympic logo, it just might be a little less bold.

"2029 or 2030 will be a different process," Wilson said. "And this will be a good platform for us to move from and work from and learn from."

This storywas produced byThe Salt Lake Tribuneand reviewed and distributed byStacker.

Utah's 2034 Olympics has a new — and controversial — logo

Utah's 2034 Olympics has a new — and controversial — logo On a Monday, Gov. Spencer Cox stood in front of a crowd at the Salt Lake Int...
NBA fines Nuggets coach David Adelman $35K for erupting at officials, leading to ejection in loss to Rockets

Denver Nuggets head coach David Adelman's ejection Saturday is going to cost him.

The NBA fined Adelman $35,000 for directing inappropriate language at game officials and for failing to leave the court in a timely manner after he was ejected in his team's 115-101 loss to the Houston Rockets, the league announced Sunday. The ejection was the first of Adelman's career.

Adelman, who drew a technical foul in the first half at Ball Arena on Saturday, was arguing with officials in the fourth quarter over two questionable foul calls on Nikola Jokić. Then suddenly, after Jokić was smacked on the arm and lost the ball, Adelman erupted and sprinted at the official.

"You are f***ing terrible, man!" Adelman screamed at the official loud enough to get picked up on the broadcast. Adelman continued to follow the official, and had to be held back by his assistants. The official immediately hit Adelman with a second technical foul, which led to his automatic ejection.

David Adelman fined $35K for directing inappropriate language toward game officials and failing to leave the court in a timely manner following his ejection.pic.twitter.com/AATBFi0IHO

— Underdog NBA (@UnderdogNBA)December 21, 2025

Adelman said after the game that he was "confused," and was "just looking for answers."

"It seemed like [the official] just kept walking away farther and farther," he said, viaThe Associated Press. "I thought we would talk, and it turns out they told me I had to leave. So yeah, it was a tough night for us for sure."

Adelman is in his first full season leading the Nuggets. He took over on an interim basis at the end of last season after the franchise split with head coach Michael Malone, and was then promoted to the top job this past offseason. The 44-year-old has been on staff in Denver since the 2017-18 season.

The Rockets led the entire second half and rolled to the win Saturday, thanks to a 31-point night from Kevin Durant. That snapped a six-game win streak for the Nuggets, who now hold a 20-7 record. Jokić had a team-high 25 points with seven rebounds and five assists. The Nuggets shot just 8-of-29 from the 3-point line.

Denver will be back in action Monday night against the Utah Jazz.

NBA fines Nuggets coach David Adelman $35K for erupting at officials, leading to ejection in loss to Rockets

Denver Nuggets head coach David Adelman's ejection Saturday is going to cost him. The NBA fined Adelman $35,...
No. 2 Michigan smashes La Salle for 11th straight win

Five players scored in double figures Sunday and No. 2 Michigan cruised to its 11th straight win to start the season, routing visiting La Salle 102-50 in Ann Arbor.

Freshman Trey McKenney came off the bench to score a game-high 17 points, canning three of the Wolverines' 14 3-pointers. Aday Mara had 14 points and 10 rebounds and Eliot Cadeau also had 14 points, while L.J. Cason tallied 13 points and Morez Johnson Jr. contributed 10 points.

Michigan, which hasn't been pushed in most of its games, simply buried the Explorers with its variety of strengths. It converted 54.8% of its field-goal attempts, including 14 of 29 3-pointers, and drew 25 assists on 34 made buckets.

Defensively, the Wolverines guarded a guardable team well, limiting La Salle (4-9) to 17 of 61 shooting (27.9%) from the field and 2 of 21 from the 3-point line. They also forced 19 turnovers that they cashed in for 28 points.

Jaeden Marshall led the Explorers with 15 points, going 10 of 11 at the foul line. La Salle did manage to outrebound Michigan 19-13 in the first half, although the Wolverines ended the day with a 40-35 advantage.

The storyline coming into the game was if Michigan would overlook a lightly regarded Atlantic 10 opponent in its final contest before Christmas. After a relatively slow start that saw it trail 10-9 just over five minutes into the game, the Wolverines completely dominated the game's remainder.

Beginning with Cason's 3-pointer at the 14:07 mark, Michigan rattled off 11 straight points and never looked back. The margin stayed in double figures for the last 31:49, climbing to 54-33 at the half when Roddy Gayle Jr. made a foul shot with two seconds left.

The Wolverines' depth and clear physical advantages made the second half even longer for La Salle. The margin increased as high as 56 points when Howard Eisley Jr. drilled a 3-pointer with 1:28 left for a 102-46 advantage.

It marked the sixth time in 11 games that Michigan scored at least 100 points.

--Field Level Media

No. 2 Michigan smashes La Salle for 11th straight win

Five players scored in double figures Sunday and No. 2 Michigan cruised to its 11th straight win to start the season, ...
No. 20 Tennessee dominates inside, crushes Gardner-Webb

Amaree Abram scored 15 points on 6-of-7 shooting from the field as No. 20 Tennessee shrugged off a slow start and ran away from Gardner-Webb 94-52 on Sunday afternoon in Knoxville, Tenn.

Following their best win this season when they beat No. 11 Louisville 83-62 on Tuesday, the Volunteers (9-3) saw leading scorer Ja'Kobi Gillespie reach double figures for the 11th straight time with 15 points and nine assists.

Jaylen Carey posted 12 points and six rebounds, while fellow big man J.P. Estrella had 10 points and seven boards. DeWayne Brown II notched six points and 14 rebounds as Tennessee posted a 50-25 rebounding advantage.

The Volunteers shot 53.5% from the floor and were 10 of 31 (32.3%) from 3-point range.

Curtis Williams III scored 14 points and had four rebounds and D.J. Jefferson scored 13 for the Runnin' Bulldogs (2-13), who made 20 of 58 shots (34.5%) from the field and 7 of 30 (23.3%) from beyond the arc.

Tennessee improved to 7-0 at home, while Gardner-Webb remained winless through eight road games.

The Big South team started better than the Volunteers, forging a 5-0 lead three minutes into the matchup behind a 3-pointer from Williams and two free throws by Jacob Hogarth.

However, the Volunteers came to life and raced off on a 24-2 run over a span of 7:25 before Jefferson, a former Volunteers player, sank a 25-foot 3-pointer at 9:17 to leave the home side up 24-10.

To cap the half, Brown had a putback bucket in the final seconds as Tennessee went on a 14-2 run over the last four minutes.

The Volunteers led 52-19 behind Estrella's 10 points and six rebounds as they shot 57.9% (22 of 38) from the floor and dominated in the lane with nine offensive rebounds and a 34-8 advantage in points in the paint.

Williams had eight points and made three of Gardner-Webb's seven successful field goals (7 of 28, 25%). The team was 3 of 16 (19%) from long range.

Tennessee kept it up in the second half by outscoring the Runnin' Bulldogs 42-33 on the way to its second straight win following a three-game losing streak.

--Field Level Media

No. 20 Tennessee dominates inside, crushes Gardner-Webb

Amaree Abram scored 15 points on 6-of-7 shooting from the field as No. 20 Tennessee shrugged off a slow start and ran ...
Crosby breaks Lemieux's scoring record, Penguins beat Canadiens 4-3 in shootout to end 8-game skid

PITTSBURGH (AP) — Sidney Crosby broke Mario Lemieux's franchise scoring record and Rickard Rakell had the deciding goal in the shootout as the Pittsburgh Penguins beat the Montreal Canadiens 4-3 on Sunday night to snap an eight-game losing streak.

Crosby, who began the night one point behind Lemieux,broke the mark in the first periodwith a goal and an assist and now has 645 goals and 1,079 assists for 1,724 points in 1,387 games. He also moved past Lemieux for the eighth-most points in NHL history.

Crosby, who has 20 goals this season, achieved his 18th 20-goal season. Only six players in NHL history have more.

Rakell had a goal and an assist in regulation and Noel Acciari also scored for the Penguins. Arturs Silovs had 23 saves for his first win since Nov. 6 against Washington.

Oliver Kapanen, Ivan Demidov and Noah Dobson scored for the Canadiens, who saw a brief two-game win streak end. Montreal is 4-1-2 since a 6-1 loss against Tampa Bay on Dec. 9. Jakub Dobes had 28 saves.

Kevin Hayes also scored for the Penguins in the shootout and Cole Caulfield tallied for the Canadiens. After Rakell gave Pittsburgh the lead in the third round, Silovs denied Nick Suzuki on Montreal's last attempt.

Pittsburgh, which is 1-4-4 in its last nine games, rebounded from consecutive shutout losses at Ottawa on Thursday and Montreal on Saturday. The Penguins won their first shootout this season.

Phillip Danault, who was traded to Montreal from Los Angeles on Friday, didn't play on Sunday and is expected to play on Tuesday at Boston.

Pittsburgh led 3-2 entering the third period, but Dobson tied it with a backhand from the slot.

Crosby tipped Erik Karlsson's point shot at 7:58 of the first period for a goal to tie the game and the record. Crosby then broke the mark with 7:20 left in the period when his shot on a power play hit Bryan Rust and Rakell tapped the rebound behind Dobes.

Crosby also passed Phil Esposito 449 for sole possession of the ninth-most even-strength goals in NHL history. He also tied Adam Oates for the eighth-most assists in NHL history in the first period.

Canadiens: Continue a seven-game road trip at Boston on Tuesday.

Penguins: Visit Toronto on Tuesday.

AP NHL: https://apnews.com/hub/nhl

Crosby breaks Lemieux's scoring record, Penguins beat Canadiens 4-3 in shootout to end 8-game skid

PITTSBURGH (AP) — Sidney Crosby broke Mario Lemieux's franchise scoring record and Rickard Rakell had the deciding go...

 

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