Wild stave off elimination with 4-0 victory at Chicago

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Kirill Kaprizov became the first Wild player with three 40-goal seasons, and Jesper Wallstedt earned a shutout for his first NHL victory in net on Sunday as the Wild beat the Chicago Blackhawks, 4-0, at United Center.

Recalled from Iowa on Saturday, Wallstedt finished with 24 saves for the Wild, who also avoided being mathematically eliminated from postseason contention by earning two points.

Kaprizov scored on a one-timer from the right circle to give the Wild a 1-0 lead early in the second period, burying a cross-ice pass from Matt Boldy at 1:06, then beat Arvid Soderblom with a wrist shot midway through the third period to make it 4-0.

The young winger has scored four goals in back-to-back games and now has scored at least 41 goals in his three full NHL seasons after scoring 27 in his first, the 55-game COVID season in 2019-20.

He already was the only Wild player to score at least 30 goals in three consecutive seasons.

Marco Rossi and Freddy Gaudreau also scored goals for the Wild, who staved off elimination in their 77th game of the season. They’ll need to win their last five regular-season games, and need Nashville and Vegas to lose out.

The Predators were at New Jersey on Sunday night. The Knights’ next game is Monday at Vancouver. Both teams will have 94 points after their next regulation win, too many for the Wild to overcome.

Wallstedt, 21, met the team in Chicago on Saturday afternoon to make his second NHL start. The first didn’t go nearly as well, a 7-0 loss at Dallas on Jan. 10, when he was recalled because Filip Gustavsson was sidelined by a lower body injury.

Chicago was a much more favorable matchup for the rookie, and the Wild, than the Stars, who lead the Western Conference with 105 points.

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St. Paul police investigating after 9-year-old boy possibly injured by gunfire

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Police say a 9-year-old boy who suffered an injury to his ankle Saturday night at a St. Paul residence may have been hurt by shrapnel from gunshots fired inside the home.

St. Paul police Sgt. Mike Ernster provided the following details:

About 11 p.m. officers were called to a home in the 1400 block of Case Avenue East on reports that shots had been fired inside the home. When they arrived they found a 9-year-old boy with an ankle injury they think might have been caused by shrapnel from the gunshots. Police said the boy was walking and talking when they arrived. He was taken to Regions Hospital where he was treated and released shortly afterward.

Several shell casings from the shooting were found outside the home. The circumstances of the shooting and who is responsible for firing the shots remain under investigation.

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South Carolina finishes perfect season with NCAA championship, beating Clark and Iowa 87-75

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CLEVELAND — Dawn Staley and South Carolina completed their perfect season, ending Caitlin Clark’s historic college career with an 87-75 win over Iowa in the NCAA championship game Sunday.

With Staley directing a relentless attack from the sideline, the Gamecocks (38-0) became the 10th Division I team to go through a season without a loss. And they accomplished the feat after they lost all five starters from last season’s team that lost to Clark’s squad in the national semifinals.

“It doesn’t always end like you want it to end, much like last year. But my freshies are at the top of my heart because they wanted this. It’s awesome. …. It’s awesome. It’s awesome. It’s unbelievable,” Staley said. “When young people lock in and have a belief, and have a trust, and their parents have that same trust, this is what can happen. They made history. They etched their names in the history books.”

Clark did all she could to lead the Hawkeyes to their first championship. She scored 30 points, including a championship-record 18 in the first quarter. She will go down as one of the greatest players in NCAA history. She rewrote the record book at Iowa (34-5), finishing as the career leading scorer in NCAA Division I history with 3,951 career points.

She hopes her legacy isn’t defined by falling short in two NCAA championship games, but more by the millions of new fans she helped bring into the game and the countless young girls and boys that she inspired.

“I think the biggest thing is it’s really hard to win these things, I think I know that better than most people by now, to be so close twice really hurts,” Clark said.

As the final buzzer sounded, a stoic Clark walked off the court, through the confetti, and into the tunnel heading to the locker room.

“I personally want to thank Caitlin Clark for lifting up our sport. She carried a heavy load for our sport,” Staley said. “She’s going to lift that league (WNBA) up as well. Caitlin Clark if you’re out there you’re one of the GOATs of our game. We appreciate you.”

South Carolina has won three titles in the last eight years, including two of the past three, to lay claim to being the latest dynasty in women’s basketball. Staley became the fifth coach to win at least three national championships, joining Geno Auriemma, Pat Summitt, Kim Mulkey and Tara VanDerveer.

The Gamecocks, who have won 109 of their last 112 games, became the first team since UConn in 2016 to go undefeated. South Carolina had a couple scares throughout the season, but always found a way to win.

With most of the team returning next year — except for star center Kamilla Cardoso — Staley’s team is in a good position to keep this run going.

Tessa Johnson led South Carolina with 19 points. Cardoso, the NCAA tourney’s Most Outstanding Player, had 15 points and 17 rebounds.

“Kamilla Cardoso was not going to let us lose a game in the NCAA Tournament,” Staley said. “She played through an injury, she played like one of the top picks in the WNBA draft, and her teammates did something that no teammates have done for somebody who went to the WNBA in our program. They send her off as a national champion. So this is history for us.”

Led by the 6-foot-7 Cardoso and Ashlyn Watkins, South Carolina enjoyed a 51-29 rebounding advantage. It also finished with 30 second-chance points.

The Gamecocks also showed off their impressive depth. Johnson helped the team to a 37-0 difference in points by reserves.

South Carolina trailed 46-44 late in the second quarter before going on an 11-0 run spanning halftime to open a 55-46 advantage early in the third quarter. Clark finally ended the run with a layup.

The Hawkeyes closed to 59-55 and had a chance to get even closer, but Hannah Stuelke missed a wide-open layup on a brilliant pass from Clark.

South Carolina responded with the next eight points, including two 3-pointers. The Gamecocks, who were 4 for 20 from behind the 3-point line during last season’s Final Four loss to Iowa, went 8 for 19 from deep against the Hawkeyes this time around.

The Gamecocks were up 68-59 after the third. They led 76-64 early in the fourth before back-to-back 3s by Clark and Gabbie Marshall got Iowa within six.

Iowa was down 80-75 after a three-point play by Sydney Affolter with 4:12 left. That would be the last point the Hawkeyes would score as South Carolina got the last seven of the game.

Clark checked out with 20 seconds left when Iowa coach Lisa Bluder subbed in fellow senior Molly Davis, who hadn’t played since she got hurt in the regular-season finale against Ohio State.

Unlike the semifinals, when Clark struggled against UConn’s defense, she got going early against South Carolina. Clark scored 13 straight points for Iowa after the Hawkeyes jumped out to a 7-0 lead, including another logo 3-pointer, to help her school to a 20-9 advantage by the first media timeout.

South Carolina cut it to 22-20 with 1:30 left in the period before Clark scored the final five points, including a 3-pointer over Cardoso. Clark’s 18 points in the opening quarter set a championship game record, surpassing the 16 that Jasmine Carson of LSU had last year against the Hawkeyes.

She only had three points in the second quarter, hitting a 3-pointer with 1:53 left in the period. Meanwhile the Gamecocks used their depth and inside dominance to get back in the game. Cardoso had 11 points and seven rebounds in the opening 20 minutes.

The Gamecocks trailed 46-44 in the final minute when Te-Hina PaoPao hit a 3-pointer and Raven Johnson stole the ball from Clark near midcourt and went in for a layup. South Carolina led 49-46 at the half.

Twins-Guardians series finale washed out by rain

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The Twins-Guardians game scheduled for Sunday afternoon at Target Field was postponed hours before it was supposed to start due to the rainy forecast in the area.

The game will be made up on Aug. 9 when the Guardians return to town. It will be part of a split doubleheader, with the first game starting at 1:10 p.m. and that day’s regularly-scheduled game beginning at 7:10 p.m.

The Twins will push back their pitching rotation a day as a result. Bailey Ober was scheduled to start on Sunday but will now face the visiting Los Angeles Dodgers on Monday in the team’s first night game of the season.  Ober is looking for a bounce-back performance after the most difficult start of his career — he gave up eight earned runs in 1 1/3 innings in his first outing of the season last week against the Kansas City Royals.

Louie Varland and Chris Paddack will start the second and third games against the Dodgers, respectively, to cap the Twins’ homestand.

Fans who had tickets to Sunday’s game can use them for admission to the makeup game. Further information about ticket exchanges can be found on the Twins’ official website.

Varlands hope for matchup

Though there was no guarantee that both brothers would be in the major leagues, the upcoming Twins-Dodgers series this week has been circled on the Varland family’s calendar for months.

That, they hoped, would finally be when Louie and his older brother, Gus, faced off as big-leaguer pitchers. Making it even more special for the family would be the fact that the series is held at Target Field, not far away from where the brothers grew up — they both went to North St. Paul High School and then Concordia-St. Paul University — and much of the family still resides here.

Things seem to be lining up according to plan for the Varlands. Louie broke camp with the Twins, taking hold of a spot in the rotation, and Gus, a reliever, was recalled by the Dodgers on Friday from Triple-A.

“He called me before it was official just saying, ‘Hey, here’s the word. It’s not official yet. Don’t tell anybody, but I think I’m coming home,’” Louie Varland said of his brother.

While Gus has seen Louie pitch in person, Louie has yet to see his older brother on the field in person as a major leaguer. Gus debuted last season and has pitched for both the Brewers and Dodgers, meaning games against the Twins are few and far between.

Though the two are often quite competitive with each other, this being the first time they’re slated to meet as big leaguers on the same field means it’s just “love and super cool” for the brothers, Louie said.

Their parents, he said, were working on getting jerseys or shirts that are half Twins/half Dodgers, like they sported when the brothers faced off as minor leaguers.

“They’re loving it,” Louie said of his family. “We might have hundreds of people here. It’s going to be a party.”

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