Local News
Ducks’ late rally falls 1 second short in loss to Blues

ANAHEIM — The Ducks were all smiles before the homecoming game of longtime mainstay Cam Fowler, but at the end of Friday night only he and his new club were grinning at Honda Center.
St. Louis prevailed, 4-3, despite a feverish push that saw the Ducks score twice late, including in the final minute, and come a sliver of a second from knotting the game at the buzzer.
This was effectively a four-point game in the wild-card race that moved the Blues into a points tie with the Calgary Flames for the final Western Conference postseason berth and dropped the Ducks seven points back of both teams.
Sam Colangelo, Frank Vatrano and Alex Killorn notched a goal apiece. Vatrano tacked on an assist and Terry contributed two. Lukáš Dostál had 18 saves in defeat.
Fowler, the Ducks’ all-time leader in games played by a defenseman, picked up two assists for St. Louis. Captain Brayden Schenn scored two goals, including an empty-netter. Alexey Toropchenko scored one goal and assisted on another by Zack Bolduc. Jordan Binnington turned away 20 shots.
The finale was electric, as the Ducks surged through the dying embers and appeared to have sent the game to overtime on Mason McTavish’s pop-in as the horn sounded. The goal was waved off initially and that decision was upheld upon video review, leaving the Ducks agonizingly close to a vital point and an opportunity at another.
Schenn’s empty-net goal with 1:47 to play was wedged between Vatrano’s 19th goal of the season with 3:02 remaining in regulation and Killorn’s tally, his 18th of 2024-25, with 43 seconds left.
Terry collected the primary assist on both goals, lofting a pass for Killorn in tight and making a brilliant play where he drove hard from the left-wing wall to the inner slot, drawing a crowd of four Blues defenders before his drop pass against the grain created Vatrano’s authoritative shot.
The Ducks completed an ignominious trifecta early in the third period. Having already allowed a soft goal and one off a turnover, they added a porous defensive play to the list at 5:21. Fowler feathered a lead pass for Bolduc, who had gained speed in the neutral zone and effortlessly split two Ducks defenders, Jacob Trouba and Pavel Mintyukov, to dart in on goal and bank the puck off Dostál and into the net.
After drawing two penalties in the first period and converting on one power play in the first period, the Ducks earned the only two man-advantage opportunities of the second period. It was St. Louis, however, that held a 2-1 edge through 40 minutes.
Jackson LaCombe’s pass for partner Radko Gudas eluded Gudas’ stick, setting up a dangerous three-on-two opportunity that turned lethal when Jordan Kyrou dished for Dylan Holloway, who found Schenn wide open for a rising shot and his 13th goal this season.
Out of the starting blocks, St. Louis had a faster start in terms of pace, shots, and the game’s first goal, but the Ducks picked up both steam and an equalizer as the period progressed.
They drew even with a power-play goal, 14:48 after the opening faceoff. LaCombe’s point shot glanced off Colangelo to keep both players hot. LaCombe has 10 points in his eight games and Colangelo extended his goal-scoring streak to three games.
The Blues had come out with greater gusto, punctuated by Toropchenko’s goal a mere 2:37 into the match. His ostensibly innocuous shot from well above the left circle clipped Dostál and then slipped through him to open the scoring.
Fowler, who was honored privately before the game as well as with a lengthy video tribute in the first period, assisted on Toropchenko’s goal.
More to come on this story.
Local News
Santa Anita horse racing consensus picks for Monday, March 17, 2025

The consensus box of Santa Anita horse racing picks comes from handicappers Bob Mieszerski, Eddie Wilson, Kevin Modesti and Mark Ratzky. Here are the picks for thoroughbred races on Monday, March 17, 2025.
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Local News
Ducks can’t overcome defensive blues in loss to St. Louis

ST. LOUIS — Brayden Schenn and Pavel Buchnevich each scored in the first 90 seconds, and the St. Louis Blues beat the Anaheim Ducks 7-2 on Sunday night.
Dylan Holloway and Jake Neighbours each had a goal and an assist, and Pavel Buchnevich, Radek Faksa, Mathieu Joseph and Oskar Sundqvist also scored for St. Louis. Jordan Kyrou had three assists, and Justin Faulk had two.
Jordan Binnington made 22 saves as the Blues won for the eighth time in 11 games (8-2-1) to pull into a tie with Vancouver for the second wild card in the Western Conference.
Cutter Gauthier had a goal and an assist, Nikita Nesterenko also scored and Mason McTavish had two assists for the Ducks, who lost for the fifth time in seven games. Lukas Dostal gave up five goals on 14 shots over the first two periods, and Ville Husso stopped 10 of the 12 shots he faced in the third.
Schenn scored his 16th goal of the season 41 seconds into the game, and Buchnevich added his 14th goal just 49 seconds later to give St. Louis an early 2-0 lead.
Schenn, honored by the Blues for playing in his 1,000th career game earlier this month, also fought Ducks defenseman Jacob Trouba late in the first, earning a major for fighting and a minor for unsportsmanlike conduct.
The start of the game was pushed back two hours after St. Louis was forced to spend Saturday night in St. Paul after playing Minnesota due to a mechanical issue with the team’s plane.
Takeaways
Ducks: Anaheim lost for the eighth time in 12 games (4-7-1) to fall eight points out of the second wild card in the Western Conference.
Blues: St. Louis attacked early and didn’t allow Anaheim to generate many scoring threats.
Key moment
Binnington stopped Trevor Zegras on a breakaway opportunity that would have cut Anaheim’s deficit to 3-2 in the second period 3:31 after Gauthier got the Ducks on the scoreboard.
Key stat
St. Louis went 3 for 4 on the power play, 3 for 3 on the penalty-kill and scored a short-handed goal.
Up next
Ducks visit Dallas on Tuesday, and Blues play at Nashville.
Local News
Swanson: USC women’s basketball nets disrespectful No. 1 seed

LOS ANGELES — It was as though the NCAA Women’s Basketball Selection Committee saw what USC planned to wear to Sunday’s Selection celebration at Galen Center – Nike T-shirts that read: “NOTHING EASY” – and took it literally.
Because when Trojans coach Lindsay Gottlieb saw what the committee drew up for her team, you better believe she took that personally.
JuJu Watkins and USC garnered a No. 1 seed, as everyone expected, starting in the first round Saturday with No. 16 UNC Greensboro and potentially bound for the Spokane Regional for the Sweet 16 and Elite Eight.
But what irked Gottlieb, and rightly so, was that out of the four No. 1 seeds, the Trojans fell to the fourth.
Ahead of them, No. 1 overall seed UCLA, “as they should be,” Gottlieb stressed.
But the Bruins were immediately followed by South Carolina and Texas, even though USC beat UCLA two of three times this season and South Carolina lost to the Bruins 77-62.
And even though South Carolina lost by 29 points to UConn, which USC beat in a non-conference showdown in Connecticut.
And even though Texas, like USC, lost to Notre Dame and also lost to South Carolina twice.
How USC slipped behind both of those teams is a mystery.
“I don’t understand people who make decisions in women’s basketball and why they do what they do, none of it makes sense to me,” said Gottlieb, who wasn’t just perplexed but admittedly and surprisingly agitated – and speaking for a whole lot of us.
Any of us who looked at the bracket and immediately saw, among whatever other bracket-building shenanigans got revealed, a particularly heinous affront to women’s basketball’s growing audience.
Sitting at No. 2 in USC’s corner of the bracket: UConn.
That means we’re going to lose either Watkins, everyone’s national player of the year, or Paige Bueckers, one of the game’s biggest and most-beloved stars and presumptive No. 1 pick in the next WNBA Draft, before the Final Four.
One of the two biggest stars in the game is guaranteed to go home before the college game’s grandest stage. Good people on the committee, what are you doing?!
And why? UConn is 31-3, and the Huskies’ only three losses came against USC (28-3), as well as championship contender Notre Dame and their historic rival, Tennessee. They don’t deserve possibly to be meeting the Trojans so early, either.
Women’s basketball’s decision-makers haven’t done something so dumb, well, since last year.
Remember when they slotted a potential rematch of the previous season’s historic national championship – Caitlin Clark and Iowa vs. Angel Reese and LSU – in the Elite Eight … and that was after LSU got past UCLA, then a dangerous No. 2 seed?
“That, Gottlieb said, “was a little wild too.”
Because, as she asked: “Wouldn’t you think they’d want the best television ratings in Tampa at the Final Four?”
It was a rhetorical question, but I’ll answer it anyway: Yes! Yes, we sure would! Especially when that’s what is merited.
“I never thought I’d be a one seed and feel disrespected, I just thought there would be very little chance that we’d be the No. 4 overall No. 1,” said Gottlieb, who didn’t hold back, wavering between peeved and diplomatic, the proverbial angel and devil on her shoulders going at it.
“This is not an arrogance of any kind, there’s a lot of really good teams,” she said, with a nod to a field that doesn’t feature a single undefeated or even a one-loss team for just the second time in 19 years. “And you have to play the first game in front of you and earn your way from there.”
But, really: “This was not on my bingo card.”
Will the draw fuel her team? Should we be pitying UNC Greensboro and probably whoever emerges from No. 8 Cal vs. No. 9 Mississippi State for the spite-sharpened USC buzzsaw they’re about to meet? “If there’s a little extra motivation for a team that’s already a No. 1 seed,” Gottlieb said, “we’re gonna have it.”
Or is could it cost the Trojans? Cut them down prematurely? Either in an Elite Eight game that should be a Final Four game, or earlier in the especially thorny thicket that’s facing them as the lowest top seed? Could just feeling slighted slice into their focus?
After all, as bracketologist Charlie Creme told ESPN’s audience Sunday: UConn will have an experience advantage if they do meet again: “If you’re USC, you’re still a little bit new to this game.”
That statement got the 1,000 fans who showed up at Galen Center on Sunday to cheer their Trojans booing.
And it drew a wry smile from Watkins, who, of course, chose to stay home in L.A. and come to USC to change the narrative around women’s basketball at the school.
I won’t try to predict the response from Gottlieb’s team, but it felt noteworthy that her players didn’t explode in cheers and dance the way most teams on the Selection Show broadcast did. Instead they registered their fate with business-like expressions, wearing game faces already, Mamba-like.
“People have their own opinions,” Watkins said. “We know what we’re capable of.”
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