AP Source: NWSL may adopt policy allowing teams to sign select players above the salary cap

The National Women's Soccer League could soon adopt a roster mechanism that would allow teams to sign certain players over current salary cap rules, a person with knowledge of the proposal told The Associated Press.

The person spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not allowed to publicly disclose discussions, first reported by ESPN. Any policy change would have to be approved by the NWSL Players Association.

Details about the new mechanism were not available but it would help teams sign and retain top players while still maintaining the NWSL's salary cap.

The issue has attracted attention in the past two weeks as the Washington Spirit have sought to re-sign Trinity Rodman, one of the league's biggest stars.

The Spirit and Rodman struck a multiyear deal last week that was vetoed by the league. The NWSLPAfiled a grievancein response, maintaining that the denial violated Rodman's free agency rights.

On Tuesday the Spirit saidthey were continuing to workwith the NWSL and Rodman's representation to reach a resolution that would keep her with in the league. Rodman, who wona gold medalwith the United States at the Paris Olympics, has been drawing interest from European teams that don't have the same salary restrictions.

The NWSL's salary cap is $3.5 million for each team for the 2026 season, although it will rise each year until it hits$5.1 million in 2030.

The union did not provide specifics about the offer to Rodman, but said the compensation structure fit within the salary cap and was calculated to include team revenue share.

The league can raise the salary cap at any time, the union has maintained.

AP soccer:https://apnews.com/hub/soccer

AP Source: NWSL may adopt policy allowing teams to sign select players above the salary cap

The National Women's Soccer League could soon adopt a roster mechanism that would allow teams to sign certain players...
Jokic has 36 points and 12 boards as Nuggets rout Kings 136-105 for 11th straight road win

SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — Nikola Jokic had 36 points, 12 rebounds and eight assists as the Denver Nuggets breezed past the Sacramento Kings 136-105 on Thursday night for their franchise-record 11th straight road win.

Peyton Watson scored 21 points on 7-of-10 shooting for the Nuggets (18-6), who shot 59% from the field and completed a 4-0 trip. Cameron Johnson added 16 and Jonas Valanciunas had 15 points and six rebounds off the bench.

Jokic made 14 of 16 shots from the floor, including both his 3-pointers, and went 6 for 8 at the free-throw line. He did not play in the fourth quarter.

Jamal Murray and Tim Hardaway Jr. had 11 points apiece for Denver, which hasn't lost away from home since a 109-107 defeat at Portland on Oct. 31.

Malik Monk scored 18 points off the bench to pace the Kings (6-19), who have lost six of seven. Russell Westbrook had 17 and Maxime Raynaud finished with 15 points and nine rebounds.

The score was tied at 13 before the Nuggets went on a 24-6 run in the first quarter. Jokic shot 6 for 7 from the field and had 16 points in the first 12 minutes.

His 3-pointer with 32 seconds remaining in the second sent the Nuggets into halftime with their biggest lead to that point at 77-54. They started the third period on a 10-0 run, with eight points by Jokic, and led by 37 in the fourth.

Kings guard DeMar DeRozan moved into 23rd place on the NBA career scoring list with two free throws in the second quarter, passing Vince Carter (25,728 points).

Aaron Gordon (hamstring) sat out his ninth consecutive game for Denver, and Christian Braun (ankle sprain) missed his 13th straight.

Domantas Sabonis remained sidelined with a left knee injury for Sacramento, and Dennis Schroder sat out with left hip soreness, missing his seventh game in a row. Zach LaVine missed his third game this season with a sore right thumb.

Nuggets: Host the Houston Rockets on Monday.

Kings: At the Minnesota Timberwolves on Sunday.

AP NBA:https://apnews.com/hub/NBA

Jokic has 36 points and 12 boards as Nuggets rout Kings 136-105 for 11th straight road win

SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — Nikola Jokic had 36 points, 12 rebounds and eight assists as the Denver Nuggets breezed past th...
Poole returns with 22 as Pelicans top short-handed Blazers 143-120 to halt losing streak

NEW ORLEANS (AP) — Jordan Poole scored 22 points in his return from a left quadriceps injury that sidelined him for 18 games, and the New Orleans Pelicans snapped a seven-game losing streak with a 143-120 victory over the short-handed Portland Trail Blazers on Thursday night.

Trey Murphy III had 24 points and Bryce McGowens hit all five 3-pointers he took on his way to tying a career high with 23 points on 8-of-11 shooting for New Orleans.

The Pelicans won for just the second time since James Borrego took over as coach after Willie Green was fired on Nov. 15.

Shaedon Sharpe scored 21 points for Portland, which had just 10 players available and lost for the sixth time in seven games.

Six players scored 15 or more points for the Pelicans, including rookies Jeremiah Fears (19) and Derik Queen (17). New Orleans also set a franchise record with 86 points in the paint.

Sidy Cissoko scored 20 points for the Blazers, while Jerami Grant and Deni Avdija each had 16.

BUCKS 116, CELTICS 101

MILWAUKEE (AP) — Kyle Kuzma scored a season-high 31 points and Bobby Portis added 27 points and 10 rebounds as Milwaukee rallied in the second half to defeat Boston without injured star Giannis Antetokounmpo.

Portis hit a pair of 3-pointers from the left corner as Milwaukee opened the fourth quarter with an 8-2 run to go in front 95-82. Another 3 by Portis put the Bucks up 106-89 with 6:49 remaining.

Portis hit 11 of 13 shots, including 5 of 6 beyond the arc, in 26 minutes. Kevin Porter Jr. had 18 points, 10 rebounds and 13 assists.

Jaylen Brown scored 30 points and Jordan Walsh added 20 for the Celtics, whose five-game winning streak ended.

ROCKETS 115, CLIPPERS 113

HOUSTON (AP) — Amen Thompson's three-point play with 17.2 seconds left helped Houston to a win over Los Angeles.

Thompson tipped in Alperen Sengun's miss to break a 110-110 tie, was fouled by Kris Dunn and hit the and-1 free throw. The putback came off Houston's third offensive rebound of the possession and 21st of the night.

Thompson made 8 of 12 from the field and finished with 20 points, nine rebounds, and eight assists.

The Rockets (16-6) outrebounded the Clippers 51-28 and avoided losing back-to-back games for the first time since October 24.

Los Angeles had two possessions with a chance to tie the game, but Kawhi Leonard was called for an offensive foul, and Nicolas Batum committed a violation on an inbounds pass.

NUGGETS 136, KINGS 105

SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — Nikola Jokic had 36 points, 12 rebounds and eight assists as Denver cruised to a victory over Sacramento for their fourth straight victory.

Peyton Watson scored 21 points on 7-of-10 shooting for the Nuggets (18-6). Cameron Johnson added 16 and Jonas Valanciunas had 15 points and six rebounds off the bench.

Jokic made 14 of 16 shots from the field, including both his 3-pointers, and went 6 for 8 at the free-throw line. He did not play in the fourth quarter.

Jamal Murray and Tim Hardaway Jr. had 11 points apiece for Denver.

Poole returns with 22 as Pelicans top short-handed Blazers 143-120 to halt losing streak

NEW ORLEANS (AP) — Jordan Poole scored 22 points in his return from a left quadriceps injury that sidelined him for 18 ga...
Cut off by their banks and even iced out by Alexa, sanctioned ICC staffers remain resolute

THE HAGUE, Netherlands (AP) — Judges and prosecutors at the International Criminal Court are trying to live and work under the same U.S. financial and travel restrictions brought against Russian President Vladimir Putin and Osama bin Laden.

Nine staff members, includingsix judges and the ICC's chief prosecutor, have been sanctioned by U.S. President Donald Trump for pursuing investigations into officials from the U.S. and Israel, which aren't among The Hague court's 125 member states.

Typically reserved for autocrats, crime bosses and the like, thesanctions can be devastating. They prevent the ICC officials and their families from entering the United States, block their access to even basic financial services and extend to the minutiae of their everyday lives.

The court's top prosecutor, British national Karim Khan, had his bank accounts closed and his U.S. visa revoked, andMicrosofteven canceled his ICC email address. Canadian judge Kimberly Prost, who was named in thelatest round of sanctionsin August, immediately lost access to her credit cards, and Amazon's Alexa stopped responding to her.

"Your whole world is restricted," Prost told The Associated Press last week.

Prost had an inkling of what would happen when she made the list. Before joining the ICC in 2017, she worked on sanctions for the U.N. Security Council. She was targeted by the Trump administration forvoting to allow the court's investigationinto alleged war crimes and crimes against humanity committed in Afghanistan, including by American troops and intelligence operatives.

"I've worked all my life in criminal justice, and now I'm on a list with those implicated in terrorism and organized crime," she said.

How the sanctions work

The sanctionshave taken their tollon the court's work across a broad array of investigations at a time when the institution is juggling ever more demands on its resources and a leadership crisis centered on Khan. Earlier this year,he stepped asidepending the outcome of an investigation into allegations of sexual misconduct. He denies the allegations.

How companies comply with sanctions can be unpredictable. Businesses and individuals risk substantial U.S. fines and prison time if they provide sanctioned people with "financial, material, or technological support," forcing many to stop working with them.

The sanctions' effects can be sweeping and even surprising.

Shortly after she was listed, Prost bought an e-book, "The Queen's Necklace" by Antál Szerb, only to later find it had disappeared from her device.

"It's the uncertainty," she said. "They are small annoyances, but they accumulate."

Staff worry about their families

Luz del Carmen Ibáñez Carranza, a sanctioned Peruvian judge who was involved in the same Afghanistan decision as Prost, told the AP that the problems are "not only for me, but also for my daughters," who can no longer attend work conferences in the U.S.

Deputy prosecutor Nazhat Shameem Khan echoed her colleagues' concerns, saying "You're never quite sure when your card is not working somewhere, whether this is just a glitch or whether this is the sanction."

Meanwhile the staffers, some of whom also facearrest warrants in Russia,are worried that Washington might sanction the entire ICC, rendering it unable to pay employees, provide financial assistance to protected witnesses or even keep the lights on.

The ICC was established in 2002 as the world's permanent court of last resort to prosecute individuals responsible for the most heinous atrocities — war crimes, crimes against humanity, genocide and the crime of aggression. It only takes action when nations are unable or unwilling to prosecute those crimes on their territory.

The court has no police force and relies on member states to execute arrest warrants, making it very unlikely that any U.S. or Israeli official would end up in the dock. But those wanted by the court,like Putin, can risk arrest when traveling abroad or after leaving office — the ICCtook custody this yearof former Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte, who is accused of crimes against humanity for his deadly anti-drugs crackdowns.

The Trump administration's rationale

When explaining Trump's executive order sanctioning the ICC in February, the White Housesaid the move was in responseto the "illegitimate and baseless actions targeting America and our close ally Israel."

"The United States will not tolerate efforts to violate our sovereignty or to wrongfully subject U.S. or Israeli persons to the ICC's unjust jurisdiction," Tommy Pigott, a State Department spokesman, said in response to questions from the AP.

There is little the staff can do to get the sanctions lifted. Sanctions imposed during the first Trump administrationagainst the previous prosecutor, Fatou Bensouda, weren't removed until Joe Biden became president.

Ibáñez, a former prosecutor in Peru, vowed that the sanctions wouldn't have any impact on her judicial activities in The Hague. "In my country, I prosecuted terrorists and drug lords. I will continue my work," she said.

Prost, too, is defiant, saying the sanctioned staff "are absolutely undeterred and unfettered."

Cut off by their banks and even iced out by Alexa, sanctioned ICC staffers remain resolute

THE HAGUE, Netherlands (AP) — Judges and prosecutors at the International Criminal Court are trying to live and work unde...
Church nativity scenes add zip ties, gas masks and ICE to protest immigration raids

DEDHAM, Mass. (AP) — One baby Jesus lays in a manger in the snow, wrapped in a silver emergency blanket with his wrists zip-tied. Mary stands nearby outside the Lake Street Church in Evanston, Illinois, wearing a plastic gas mask and flanked by Roman soldiers in tactical vests labeled "ICE."

In another Chicago suburb, not far from an Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility that has drawn protests over detentions, a sign at the manger outside the Urban Village Church says "Due to ICE activity in our community the Holy Family is in hiding." And more than a thousand miles away, the Christ child went missing from a nativity scene at St. Susanna Parish in Dedham, Massachusetts, replaced by a hand-painted sign: "ICE was here."

These and other stark reimaginings of Christ's birth are drawing praise and outrage as churches turn the Christmas tableau into a commentary on federal immigration enforcement under the Trump administration. Their creators say they are placing the ancient story in a contemporary frame, portraying the Holy Family as refugees to reflect on the fear of separation and deportation that many families — including their own parishioners — are experiencing today.

Supporters of the displays say the Bible is on their side, but critics call the scenes sacrilegious and politically divisive, accusing the churches of abusing sacred imagery and some arguing they should lose their tax-exempt status. The archdiocese in Massachusetts ordered that the manger must be "restored to its proper sacred purpose."

The debate comes as immigration enforcement intensifies in states and cities whose leaders object to the immigration crackdown. In September alone, a combined total of at least 2,000 people were arrested in Illinois and Massachusetts, according to federal arrest figures released by immigration authorities.

'A grave scandal for Catholics'

For churches, Christmas is a time "when we have public art out on the lawn and we get an opportunity to say something," said Rev. Michael Woolf, senior minister at Lake Street. Another nativity scene created by the Baptist congregation one recent year showed Jesus in rubble — a "plea for peace" in Gaza, he said.

St. Susanna parishioners locked baby Jesus in a cage in 2018 to protest how President Donald Trump's first administration was separating families at the border. Another year, they depicted the infant floating in water polluted with plastic to highlight climate change.

Boston Archbishop Richard Henning ordered this year's display taken down. As of Thursday, Father Steve Josoma was seeking a meeting and had yet to comply.

"The people of God have the right to expect that, when they come to church, they will encounter genuine opportunities for prayer and Catholic worship — not divisive political messaging," a diocesan spokesperson said.

Some Catholic activists want the priest punished.

"This is really a grave scandal for Catholics, and I think he's playing with fire," said C.J. Doyle, director of the Catholic Action League of Massachusetts. "The archbishop can remove him as pastor, suspend him from active ministry — he can even close the parish and sell the property right out from under him."

The community's reality

Josoma said the display's purpose is to move "beyond static traditional figures and evoke emotion and dialogue" in response to the fear many parishioners face as federal forces arrest more than undocumented immigrants, sweeping up longtime legal residents and spreading anxiety.

In Illinois, the detention campaign has left bystanders choking on chemical sprays and children traumatized at the site of neighbors and teachers being taken away, prompting state and local investigations.

"We wanted to reflect sort of the reality that our community is experiencing," Jillian Westerfield, associate minister at the United Methodist church in Evanston.

After the figure of Joseph blew down and was damaged, leaving Mary alone with the baby, they put up an explanatory sign: "Joseph didn't make it. We hold this spaced to honor and remember all the victims of immigration enforcement terror."

Critics either don't fully understand the message or "find it really challenging to their conscience and are lashing out at the art rather than engaging with what the actual message is," Westerfield said.

'Not a stunt'

Phil Mandeville, who sits on St. Susanna's Parish Council and coordinates a multi-church refugee support committee, said long-standing relationships make the parish resolute about keeping the display.

The committee has worked with about ten refugee families since 2019, helping them find housing, enroll in school, learn English and secure work. Much of the effort is done in partnership with the federal government, which puts families through extensive vetting before they arrive, he said.

"Just to emphasize the reason for all of this — it's not a stunt," Mandeville said. "We work on a daily basis with refugees. But people get upset about a bit of plaster. I care more about individuals than I do a manger scene. I understand what it represents — I don't understand why no one cares about these human beings."

"Look at the Gospel just before Christ was executed — that was political," he added. "We were always taught: when you're unsure how to act, ask, 'What would Christ do?' Now we're doing that, and it doesn't seem to jibe."

Divided reaction

The controversy in Evanston drew volunteers from a nearby synagogue, who stood outside during Lake Street's services to help worshipers feel safe. Reactions outside the Dedham church ranged widely.

Walter Niland snapped a selfie and said he disagreed with the display. "I believe that the church enjoys a tax-exempt status," said Niland, a Catholic from a neighboring town. "We should speak to spiritual matters, not matters of political division."

Others came to challenge the parish directly — including one man who livestreamed his attempt to pull on locked church doors.

Steve Grieger, a former Catholic school teacher, drove an hour from Worcester to show his support.

"The Archdiocese says, 'Oh no, that goes against our tradition.' Well, we're living in times that are totally abnormal. We can't just proceed as normal," Grieger said. "If we're following the scriptures of Jesus, then we have to recognize that these ICE raids, and all of these terrible things going on, are totally against that."

Bargfeld reported from Evanston.

Church nativity scenes add zip ties, gas masks and ICE to protest immigration raids

DEDHAM, Mass. (AP) — One baby Jesus lays in a manger in the snow, wrapped in a silver emergency blanket with his wrists z...
Nicolas Maduro. (Juan Barreto / AFP - Getty Images file)

DORAL, Fla. — On a recent rainy afternoon near Miami, Maria Alejandra Barroso made her daily trek to Our Lady of Guadalupe Catholic Church before heading to work and prayed for the Trump administration to succeed in ousting Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro.

"Every day I pray for it to be peaceful and for innocent people to not get hurt," she said in an interview on Tuesday.

Barroso, 44, a server at a restaurant, emigrated from Venezuela in 2022 and has a pending asylum case. President Donald Trump's immigration policy changeshave stripped legal protections for hundreds of thousands of Venezuelan immigrantsand put more of themat risk of deportation. But Barroso said that ending Maduro's almost 13-year reign is far more important to her than any worries over possible deportation, since it would mean returning home.

Image: Maria Alejandra Barroso, outside Our Lady of Guadalupe Catholic Church (Carmen Sesin / NBC News)

"I'm not here because I want to be. It was necessary. I have friends in prison just for thinking differently," she said. "We want democracy and peace. I completely trust the actions of President Trump."

In Doral, a city in Miami-Dade County with the highest concentration of Venezuelans in the U.S., discussions revolve around whether Trump should get more involved in Venezuela and the controversy over the U.S. attacks on alleged drug boats. Talk about Trump's pressure campaign on Maduro is prevalent everywhere, and Venezuelans in the enclave are bubbling with hope for Maduro's ouster.

The Trump administration has taken a more antagonistic stance toward Venezuela recently.

The U.S. military has moved thousands of troops and a carrier strike group to the Caribbean Sea in recent months and conducted strikes on alleged drug boats in the Caribbean and eastern Pacific. Trump said in an interview with Politico on Tuesday that Maduro's "days are numbered" and refused to rule out a U.S. ground invasion. On Wednesday, the U.S.seized an oil tankeroff the coast of Venezuela.

Alejandro Márquez, 64, echoed the sentiment of Barroso outside the church, saying he would be on the first plane back to Venezuela despite being a U.S. citizen and living here since 2013.

"I'm focused on reconstructing Venezuela on the side of security," said Márquez, who is a former sub-secretary of defense and security in the northwestern state of Zulia.

Maria Alejandra Barroso and two other women pray in front of the altar outside Our Lady of Guadalupe Catholic Church on Tuesday.  (Carmen Sesin / NBC News)

Trump won over60% of Doralin the 2024 election. While some Venezuelans expressed skepticism about whether his pressure campaign will work, they're still checking their phones constantly to find news on social media or the latest information a friend forwarded on WhatsApp. Many Venezuelans in South Florida are using global flight tracking apps to monitor planes arriving and departing Venezuela, to try to glean whether there's any changes that may indicate some kind of activity.

A few miles from the church, at a popular cafeteria-style Venezuelan restaurant, El Arepazo, employee Rosangel Patiño said business is a little slower because people are afraid to go out amid Trump's immigration crackdown. But she said all the patrons that walk in are constantly talking about the situation in Venezuela and looking for the latest news.

"Everyone is glued to social media," Patiño said.

Victor Montero, a business owner who was having lunch at the restaurant, said when he gets home from work each day he scours YouTube for the latest information.

"I feel the same way as all Venezuelans. It gives me so much happiness to know that at any moment, it can all end," said Montero, who came to the U.S. from Venezuela 22 years ago. "The family in Venezuela is going through a very difficult time."

Trump has accused Maduro of being the leader of "a narcoterrorist organization" and of flooding the U.S. with drugs. Some experts say Trump's actions are aimed at regime change,a charge that Secretary of State Marco Rubio denied.

Whilesome experts have cautioned against the challenges of regime change in Venezuela, many Venezuelans, including Nobel Prize winner and opposition leader Maria Corina Machado,credit Trumpwith attempting to restore democracy in their country. In 2019, during his first term, Trump used a "maximum pressure" campaign against Maduro, including sanctions andrecognizing an opposition politicianas Venezuela's rightful leader.

"Venezuelans in Florida want Maduro gone. They want the situation in Venezuela resolved," said Eduardo Gamarra, a professor of politics and international relations at Florida International University.

"But a lot of them are concerned about what it means for them in terms of their situation with immigration," Gamarra added. For Venezuelans who don't have legal immigration status and who may be at risk of deportation, questions about how any conflict or change in Venezuela could affect them are top of mind, he said.

Gamarra, who does polling and focus groups, says he finds people are afraid to answer questions about immigration because they fear retaliation. "People are being very cautious when you ask them about Trump," he said, adding it makes it harder to do polling.

Venezuelans started coming to Florida in large numbers in the early 2000s after socialist Hugo Chávez rose to power. The first wave of Venezuelans were business-savvy, mid- to upper-class professionals. Some even owned second homes in Florida already.

But the situation deteriorated drastically when Maduro, a former bus driver and activist, took power in 2013 following the death of Chávez, his mentor. And that led toincreasingly desperateVenezuelans arriving in South Florida, many with little in their pockets. Under Maduro's rule the country's oil-driven economy has faced adecade-long collapsedue to mismanagement, corruption and sanctions. An estimated80% of residentslive in poverty. To solidify his iron grip, Maduro has usedrepression, arbitrary arrests, torture and disappearances. He eliminated independent media, criminalized civil society and banned opponents from public office. Around8 million Venezuelanshave fled under his rule.

Maduro drew worldwide scrutiny and condemnation last year following presidential elections in which he lost by 40%but ignored the resultsand stayed in power. The Biden administration and governments of other countries officiallyrecognized opposition leader Edmundo Gonzálezas the winner.

Outside El Arepazo, Rafael Landa, who came to the U.S. five years ago, questioned whether Trump's actions will lead to regime change in Venezuela.

"I don't think it's going to be as easy as people think," he said as he opened the restaurant door. "I'm not getting my hopes up."

In South Florida's Venezuelan enclave, big hopes that Trump’s pressure on Maduro succeeds

DORAL, Fla. — On a recent rainy afternoon near Miami, Maria Alejandra Barroso made her daily trek to Our Lady of Guadalupe Catholic Church ...
Johansson scores 2, Boldy has goal and assist in Wild's 5-2 win to snap Stars' 11-game point streak

ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP) — Marcus Johansson scored twice, Matt Boldy had a goal and two assists, and the Minnesota Wild beat Dallas 5-2 on Thursday night, ending the Stars' 11-game point streak.

Joel Eriksson Ek had a goal and an assist, Zach Bogosian also scored, and Vladimir Tarasenko had two assists as Minnesota won its second straight after a two-game skid that followed its 12-game point streak (10-0-2). Filip Gustavsson stopped 16 shots.

Miro Heiskanen had a goal and an assist, and Jason Robertson also scored for Dallas, which was 9-0-2 during its streak. Jake Oettinger finished with 27 saves.

Johansson gave the Wild a 3-2 lead at 8:40 of the third, beating Oettinger with a one-timer from the right circle.

Boldy had an empty-netter with 1:31 remaining for his 17th goal of the season, and Johansson added one for his 11th with 50 seconds to go.

Heiskanen put the Stars ahead 2-1 at 10:19 of the second with a short-handed score, coming on a one-timer off a pass from Esa Lindell off a faceoff in the left circle. It was the first short-handed goal by Dallas this season and the first allowed by Minnesota.

Bogosian tied it with 2:30 remaining in the middle period, firing a one-timer from beyond the left circle near the side board. It was his first goal of the season.

Robertson gave the Stars a 1-0 lead with a power-play goal 9:32 into the game. Robertson fired a shot from the top of the left circle that deflected off the stick of Wild defenseman Brock Faber and past a screened Gustavsson for his 20th.

Eriksson Ek tied it with 3:50 left in the opening period, scoring on the rebound of a shot by Boldy during a Wild rush.

Stars: Host Florida on Saturday night.

Wild: Host Ottawa on Saturday.

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

Johansson scores 2, Boldy has goal and assist in Wild's 5-2 win to snap Stars' 11-game point streak

ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP) — Marcus Johansson scored twice, Matt Boldy had a goal and two assists, and the Minnesota Wild beat ...

 

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