Panthers spoil the Wild’s Hockey Day fun in overtime

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Brad Marchand scored in overtime as the Florida Panthers mounted a dramatic rally on Saturday, overcoming a third period deficit to beat the Minnesota Wild 4-3 at Grand Casino Arena.

Minnesota got power play goals from Kirill Kaprizov and Joel Eriksson Ek and s shorthanded goal from Matt Boldy, but was stifled defensively much of the night, most notably at even strength. Filip Gustavsson had 30 saves for the Wild in the loss.

Boldy snapped a 2-2 tie in the third, scoring on a shorthanded breakaway to give the Wild their first lead, only to see Florida tie it back up on the same power play.

Florida, making its only visit to St. Paul this season, got 18 saves from Sergei Bobrovsky in the win.

After Minnesota killed an early Florida power play, the Panthers got a picture-perfect rebound to take the first lead. Gustavsson made the initial save on a long-range shot, but the puck caromed to the top of the crease where leading scorer Sam Reinhart was waiting to pop it in.

The Wild answered quickly, converting on their first power play when Kaprizov scored for the third time in the past two games.

Both teams got notably healthier before the game, with Minnesota activated Boldy off of injured reserve after he had missed four games with a lower body injury. Florida had been without its second-leading scorer, Marchand, for seven games due to an undisclosed injury, but he returned to the lineup to face the Wild.

Both made a first period impact, with Boldy assisting on Minnesota’s goal, and Marchand scoring on the power play late in the first to give the visitors a 2-1 lead after one.

After killing a penalty early in the middle frame, Minnesota pulled even with another man-advantage goal when Joel Eriksson Ek snapped in the rebound of a Kaprizov shot. It was the 12th goal of the season for Eriksson Ek and his first since returning from a six-game injury absence.

The bulk of the game was played with a three-person officiating crew, after linesman Steve Barton was injured and left the game in the first period. While trying to avoid a check in front of the home bench, Barton was knocked over the boards and appeared to hit his head.

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Hockey Day Minnesota bound for Maple Grove in 2028

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Hockey Day Minnesota, the annual celebration of the state’s official sport, will come to the Twin Cities suburbs for the third time in four years, it was announced on Saturday. Central Park in Maple Grove will host the 2028 event.

Officials from the Minnesota Wild unveiled the future site at center ice on the rink in Hastings, at the conclusion of the 2026 event, which was played before decent crowds despite the dangerously cold weather. It was previously announced that Hockey Day Minnesota 2027 will be held at Brainerd International Raceway in central Minnesota.

“We’re incredibly excited to be selected as the host site for Hockey Day Minnesota 2028,” said Experience Maple Grove executive director Greg Anzelc, in a statement released by the Wild. “We look forward to building on our strong hockey legacy and showcasing the great city of Maple Grove, our business community, and the awesome Hockey Day Minnesota venue at Central Park.”

The 2025 event was held at Valleyfair theme park in Shakopee. Dates and matchups for the 2027 and 2028 events will be announced once the NHL schedules for those seasons are announced, as a Wild home game is traditionally the final event of the night.

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Videos show deadly Minneapolis shooting and political leaders reach different conclusions

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Videos quickly emerged Saturday showing the fatal shooting of a Minneapolis protester by a Border Patrol agent, with Democratic leaders in Minnesota saying the footage showed the deadly encounter was the result of untrained federal officers overreacting and the Trump administration saying the man provoked the violence.

It was the second fatal shooting in Minneapolis by federal immigration authorities this month. The first, on Jan. 7, involved Renee Good. It also was captured on videos and produced a similar schism among political leaders.

On Saturday, at around 9 a.m., a Border Patrol agent shot and killed 37-year-old Alex Pretti after a roughly 30-second scuffle. The Trump administration said shots were fired “defensively” against Pretti, who federal authorities said had a semiautomatic handgun and was “violently” resisting officers.

Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey, who said he watched one of several videos, said he saw “more than six masked agents pummeling one of our constituents, shooting him to death.” Frey has said Minneapolis and St. Paul are being “invaded” by the administration’s largest immigration crackdown, dubbed Operation Metro Surge.

Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said Pretti attacked officers, and Customs and Border Patrol Commander Gregory Bovino said he wanted to do “maximum damage and massacre law enforcement.” In posts on X, President Donald Trump’s deputy chief of staff Stephen Miller called Pretti “a would-be assassin.”

The shooting Saturday occurred when officers were pursuing a man in the country illegally wanted for domestic assault, Bovino said. Protesters routinely try to disrupt such operations, and they sounded their high-pitched whistles, honked horns and yelled out at the officers.

Among them was Pretti. At one point, in a video obtained by The Associated Press, Pretti is standing in the street and holding up his phone. He is face-to-face with an officer in a tactical vest, who places his hand on Pretti and pushes him toward the sidewalk.

Pretti is talking to the officer, though it is not clear what he is saying.

The video shows protesters wandering in and out of the street as officers persist in trying to talk them back. One protester is put in handcuffs. Some officers are carrying pepper spray canisters.

Pretti comes in again when the video shows an officer wearing tactical gear shoving a protester. The protester, who is wearing a skirt over black tights and holding a water bottle, reaches out for Pretti.

The same officer shoves Pretti in his chest, leading Pretti and the other protester to stumble backward.

A different video then shows Pretti moving toward another protester, who falls over after being shoved by the same officer. Pretti moves between the protester and the officer, reaching his arms out toward the officer. The officer deploys pepper spray, and Pretti raises his hand and turns his face. The officer grabs Pretti’s hand to bring it behind his back, and deploys the pepper spray canister again and then pushes Pretti away.

Seconds later, at least a half-dozen federal officers surround Pretti, who is wrestled to the ground and hit several times. Several agents try to bring Pretti’s arms behind his back, and he struggles.

Videos show an officer, who is hovering over the scuffle with his right hand on Pretti’s back, backs away from the group with what appears to be a gun in his right hand just before the first shot.

Someone shouts “gun, gun.” It is not clear if that’s a reference to the weapon authorities say Pretti had.

And then the first shot is heard.

Videos do not clearly show who fired the first shot. In one video, seconds before the first shot, one officer reaches for his belt and appears to draw his gun. That same officer is seen with a gun to Pretti’s back as three more shots ring out. Pretti slumps to the ground. Videos show the officers backing away, some with guns drawn. More shots are fired.

The Department of Homeland Security said Pretti was shot after he “approached” Border Patrol officers with a 9 mm semiautomatic handgun. Officials did not say if Pretti, who is licensed to carry a concealed weapon, brandished the gun or kept it hidden.

An agency statement said officers fired “defensive shots” after Pretti “violently resisted” officers tried to disarm him.

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Walz expressed dismay at the characterization.

“I’ve seen the videos, from several angles, and it’s sickening,” he said.

President Donald Trump weighed in on social media by lashing out Walz and Frey. Trump shared images of the gun that immigration officials said was recovered from Pretti and said “What is that all about? Where are the local Police? Why weren’t they allowed to protect ICE Officers?”

Paul Allen, radio voice of the Vikings, mocks Minnesota protestors

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Before tens of thousands of protesters marched in Minneapolis on Friday to demand Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents leave Minnesota, they were mocked by the voice of the Minnesota Vikings.

The protestors marched from Commons Park at the edge of downtown to a rally at Target Center in temperatures that hovered around 10-degrees below zero.

While discussing the cold with former Vikings linebacker Chad Greenway, Allen said, “In conditions like this, do paid protesters get hazard pay? Those are the things that I’ve been thinking about this morning.”

The moment was saved by awfulannouncing.com and can be heard here.

“I’m not touching that one,” Greenway said, according to an audio clip posted by the web site awfulannouncing.com.

Allen continued. “Everyone’s catching strays this week,” he said, citing NFL quarterback Baker Mayfield and former NFL QB Charlie Batch. “They’re just all over. Protestors caught one this morning.”

The remark, which pushes the false narrative that protesters are paid by left-wing groups, is commonly made to undermine the importance of social protest. It drew immediate ire on social media.

Minnesotans have been protesting an immigration enforcement campaign in the Twin Cities that the Department of Homeland Security is calling “Operation Metro Surge.” Since it began in December, federal agents have shot and killed two Minneapolis residents, Renee Macklin Good on Jan. 7 and Alex Pretti on Saturday. Both were 37 and U.S. citizens.

On the department’s web site, DHS director Kristi Noem said, “In the last 6 weeks, our brave DHS law enforcement have arrested 3,000 criminal illegal aliens.”

A message left on Allen’s phone went unanswered on Saturday, and the show’s producer, Eric Nordquist, declined to comment.

An email to the Vikings received no response.

At 1:30 p.m. Saturday, Allen made a post on X.com that seemed to be a response to many posts — some angry, some supportive — made to his account.

“I have to stop watching all this for a little bit. I’m so sad this terror is happening all around us here in MN,” he wrote. “I just prayed to God’s will for it to somehow stop and now and (sic) started crying.

“I truly am sorry for all hurting like me through this, and I just want us to be a Love Covenant again. Truly. Let’s all pray this stops somehow because it’s awful. And no more cheap one-liners from me.”

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