Penguins acquire defenseman Ilya Solovyov from Avalanche in exchange for Valtteri Puustinen and a 2026 seventh-round draft pick

(Credit for Photo: Courtesy of the Associated Press: Caption for Photo: Colorado Avalanche defenseman Ilya Solovyov skates against the Columbus Blue Jackets during an NHL hockey game in Columbus, Ohio, Thursday, Oct. 16, 2025. The Avalanche won 4-1.)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Pittsburgh, PA) Pittsburgh Penguins President of Hockey Operations and General Manager Kyle Dubas announced yesterday that the Penguins have acquired defenseman Ilya Solovyov from the Colorado Avalanche in exchange for Valtteri Puustinen and a 2026 seventh-round draft pick. The twenty-five-year-old Solovyov has split the season between the Avalanche and their American Hockey League affiliate, the Colorado Eagles. Solovyov has one goal, two assists and three points in sixteen games with the Avalanche and he is now signed through the 2025-26 season. This carries an average annual value of $775,000 and he has played in three games with the Eagles this season. Solovyov was originally drafted in the seventh round of the 2020 NHL Draft at 205th overall by the Calgary Flames.

Steelers special teams coordinator Danny Smith gets hired for the same job with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers

(Credit for Photo: Courtesy of Matt Freed/Post Gazette, Caption for Photo: Pittsburgh Steelers special teams coordinator Danny Smith celebrates after defeating the Baltimore Ravens in an NFL football game, Sunday, Dec. 7, 2025, at M&T Bank Stadium in Baltimore.)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Pittsburgh, PA) NFL Network recently confirmed that the Tampa Bay Buccaneers have hired Pittsburgh Steelers special teams coordinator Danny Smith to be their special teams coordinator. This comes eight days after Mike Tomlin stepped down as the head coach of the Steelers after nineteen seasons with the team. The seventy-two-year-old Smith has been with the Steelers for thirteen years, has been coaching for fifty years, graduated from Central Catholic High School and is well known for chewing gum on the sidelines while coaching. 

Pittsburgh native Curt Cignetti coaches Indiana to 16-0 season and the 2026 College Football Playoff National Championship win

(File Photo: Source for Photo: Indiana head coach Curt Cignetti holds the trophy after their win against Miami in the College Football Playoff national championship game, Monday, Jan. 19, 2026, in Miami Gardens, Fla. (AP Photo/Lynne Sladky)

MIAMI GARDENS, Fla. (AP) — Fernando Mendoza lowered his pads into a defender, spun in a full circle, used his hand to keep his balance, then launched himself horizontally and reached the ball over the goal line — an Indiana touchdown and a ready-made poster pic for a title run straight from the movies.

Maybe they’ll call it “Hoosiers.”

The Heisman Trophy winner’s touchdown Monday night put an exclamation point on a 27-21 win over Miami that closed out an undefeated season and brought an improbable — maybe impossible? — national championship to a program that had known nothing but losing and indifference for almost 140 years.

“Let me tell you: We won the national championship at Indiana University. It can be done,” said coach Curt Cignetti, who took over a program with a nation-leading 713 losses and turned it into the game’s biggest winner in the span of two years.

Cignetti, the 64-year-old coaching lifer, started it. Mendoza helped get the Hoosiers over the line. He finished with 186 yards passing, but it was that tackle-breaking, sprawled-out 12-yard touchdown run on fourth-and-4 with 9:18 left that defined this game — and the Hoosiers’ season.

Indiana would not be denied.

“I had to go airborne,” said Mendoza, who had his lip split and his arm bloodied by a ferocious Miami defense that sacked him three times and hit him many more. “I would die for my team.”

Mendoza’s TD gave Indiana a 24-14 lead — barely enough breathing room to hold off a frenzied charge by the hard-hitting Hurricanes — a team that barely made the College Football Playoff and barely showed up in the first half of the final before coming to life behind 112 yards and two scores from Mark Fletcher.

“They’re the best thing that happened to the University of Miami in 25 years,” said coach Mario Cristobal, who was part of the title run that put this colorful program on the map in the 1980s and ’90s.

The CFP trophy now heads to the most unlikely of places: Bloomington, Indiana — home of the college that famously boasts the most living alumni (805,000), including billionaire Mark Cuban and several thousand of his closest friends who packed Miami’s home stadium and turned a title-game ticket into a $4,000-or-more splurge.

“It’s way up there, that’s for damn sure,” Cuban said when asked where this ranked among the out-of-nowhere success stories he helped bankroll on his reality show “Shark Tank.”

Indiana finished 16-0 — using the extra games afforded by the expanded 12-team playoff to match a perfect-season win total last compiled by Yale in 1894. President Donald Trump was in the stands for what he said “turned out to be a great game” after a slow start — Indiana led 10-0 at half.

In a fitting bit of symmetry, this undefeated title comes 50 years after Bob Knight’s basketball team went 32-0 to win it all in that state’s favorite sport.

That hasn’t happened since, and there’s already some thought that college football — in its evolving, money-soaked, name-image-likeness era — might not see a team like this again, either.

Players like Mendoza — a transfer from Cal who grew up just a few miles away from Miami’s campus, “The U” — certainly don’t come around often.

Two fourth-down gambles by Cignetti in the fourth quarter, after Fletcher’s second touchdown carved the Hurricanes’ deficit to 17-14, put the QB in position to shine.

The first was a 19-yard-completion to Charlie Becker on a back-shoulder fade those guys have been perfecting all season. Four plays later came a decision and play that wins championships.

Cignetti sent his kicker out on fourth-and-4 from the 12, but quickly called his second timeout. The team huddled on the field and the coach drew up a quarterback draw, hoping the Hurricanes would be in a defense they had shown before.

“We rolled the dice and said, ‘They’re going to be in it again and they were,’” Cignetti said. “We blocked it well, he broke a tackle or two and got in the end zone.”

Mendoza’s play could very well join John Elway’s “helicopter” run in Super Bowl 32 as one of the greatest examples of a quarterback willing to put everything on the line to win it all. Mendoza might soon have something else in common with Elway: This game did little to diminish his projection as the first pick in the upcoming NFL draft.

“Everyone on the team, including my coach, makes fun of my running style,” Mendoza said. “But it’s fourth down, so you’ve got to put it all on the line. Every player, if they had that opportunity, they’d put their body on the line, too.”

For Miami, it was a very close call.

A team listed 18th in the first CFP rankings moved to 10th and sneaked into the playoff, bringing as many questions about the process as the selection itself.

The Hurricanes proved they belonged all the way. Fletcher was a one-man force, hitting triple digits for the third time in four playoff games and turning a moribund offense into something much more.

His first touchdown run was a 57-yard burst through the right side that pulled Miami within 10-7 early in the third quarter.

But after Miami got the ball back and stalled deep in its own territory, Hoosiers lineman Mikail Kamara slid past the ’Canes’ punt protectors and blocked the kick. The ball ended up in the end zone and Isaiah Jones recovered to make it 17-7. Miami was in comeback mode the rest of the way.

It ended as a one-score game, and the ’Canes — the visiting team playing on their home field — moved into Indiana territory before Carson Beck’s heave got picked off by Jamari Sharpe, a Miami native who made sure the only miracle in this season would be Indiana’s.

How big a miracle?

This was a program that was so bad that coach Lee Corso stopped a game in 1976 to take a picture of a scoreboard when it read “Indiana 7, Ohio State 6.” Indiana lost 47-7.

There were hundreds of losses in front of half-empty stadiums between then and now.

But those days are over. The Hoosiers — yes, the Hoosiers — are national champions.

“I know nobody thought it was possible,” Cignetti said. “It probably is one of the greatest sports stories of all time.”

Esmark Expands Global Sports Commitment With Sponsorship of Slovakian Professional Hockey Team

(Photo Courtesy of the Associated Press and Business Wire)

SEWICKLEY, Pa.–(BUSINESS WIRE)–Jan 19, 2026– Esmark Sports Management and Entertainment, a wholly owned subsidiary of Esmark Inc., announced today it is the team sponsor and co-owner of a newly established professional hockey team in Košice, Slovakia. This partnership underscores Esmark’s commitment to supporting sports development and strengthening community connections through the unifying power of athletics.

This press release features multimedia. View the full release here: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20260119104207/en/

Esmark Sports Management and Entertainment, a wholly owned subsidiary of Esmark Inc., is the team sponsor and co-owner of a newly established professional hockey team in Košice, Slovakia.

The Hockey Club Esmark Košice team began competing in the 2HL division of professional ice hockey in Slovakia in the 2025-2026 season. The roster features players from Košice who have been competing for clubs across Slovakia.

“The creation of this team is more than just hockey. It’s about pride, opportunity and giving the people of Košice a team of their own to cheer for,” said Richard E. Bouchard, President of Esmark Sports Management and Entertainment. “We’re proud to help bring talented athletes back home to represent their city, and to create a foundation that will inspire the next generation of players.”

Jergus Spodniak, the team’s founder, co-owner and goaltender envisioned building a team that unites local talent living in Košice but previously lacked the opportunity to represent their hometown on the professional stage. According to Spodniak, Esmark’s sponsorship ensures the financial stability and professional resources needed for the team to establish itself in Slovakia’s hockey landscape. Beyond the immediate financial support, the partnership reflects a long-term vision of building both a competitive team and a lasting community institution.

“The HK Esmark Košice team will not only provide athletes with the chance to wear their hometown colors but also give fans a team that authentically represents the pride and spirit of their community,” said Spodniak.

By joining the Hockey Club Esmark Košice team, Esmark is building on its established track record in sports development. Esmark became a majority owner of the North American Hockey League (NAHL) Johnstown Tomahawks in 2012 and played a key role in guiding the team’s growth and success. Under Bouchard and Esmark’s leadership, the Tomahawks not only thrived on the ice, but also became a cornerstone of community engagement and youth hockey development.

“Jim [James Bouchard] and Esmark demonstrated an exceptional ability to build a program that was competitive, sustainable and community-focused,” said Mark Frankenfeld, Commissioner of NAHL. “Their work with the Johnstown Tomahawks had a lasting impact on the league, community and growth of the sport, and I’m excited to see that same passion and commitment brought to The Hockey Club Esmark Košice.”

“Esmark and the Bouchard family have a proven track record of investing in sports and enhancing communities. From their work with FC Pittsburgh, to the Esmark Stars and more, they not only invest financially, but also with heart and commitment. It’s really something special to watch and be a part of,” said Mario Lemieux, National Hockey League (NHL) Hall of Fame, former owner of the Pittsburgh Penguins, and arguably one of the greatest hockey players of all time.

Since its founding in 2003, Esmark Inc. has a longstanding history of dedication to athletic advancement. Jim Bouchard formerly co-owned the Johnstown Tomahawks, and the company now representing over 2,000 student athletes, including those affiliated with Esmark Stars, Esmark All-Americans, Quaker Valley Hockey, FC Pittsburgh and Esmark Youth Development.

Source: Steelers requested an interview with Pittsburgh native and NFL head coach Mike McCarthy

(File Photo: Source for Photo: Dallas Cowboys head coach Mike McCarthy walks on the field following an NFL football game against the Washington Commanders, Sunday, Jan. 5, 2025 in Arlington, Texas. The Commanders won 23-19. (AP Photo/Gareth Patterson)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Pittsburgh, PA) The Pittsburgh Steelers have reportedly requested an interview with a coach who is both a Super Bowl Champion and a Pittsburgh native. According to ESPN’s Adam Schefter, a source told him yesterday that the Steelers are expected to speak with Mike McCarthythe former head coach of both the Green Bay Packers and the Dallas Cowboys. McCarthy, a native of Greenfield, was the head coach for the Packers when Steelers quarterback Aaron Rodgers played for the Packers when they won Super Bowl 45 against the Steelers on February 6th2011 in Arlington, Texas. McCarthy was the head coach of the Packers from 2006-2018, and then after a hiatus in 2019, he was hired by the Cowboys and coached them from 2020-2024. The sixty-two-year-old McCarthy worked with Steelers general manager Omar Khan in New Orleans in 2000 but he did not coach in the NFL this season. McCarthy is the most notable candidate of the head coaching search for the Steelers, but he becomes the ninth candidate that the team has requested an interview with. The search for a new head coach for the Steelers continues since Mike Tomlin stepped down as their head coach on Tuesday.

Coyle scores shootout winner as Blue Jackets beat Penguins 4-3

 

(File Photo: Source for Photo: Columbus Blue Jackets goaltender Elvis Merzlikins reacts after giving up a goal to the Colorado Avalanche in the first period of an NHL hockey game Saturday, Jan. 10, 2026, in Denver. (AP Photo/David Zalubowski)

PITTSBURGH (AP) — Charlie Coyle scored the deciding goal in the shootout and the Columbus Blue Jackets beat the Pittsburgh Penguins 4-3 on Saturday night.

Kent Johnson also scored in the shootout for the Blue Jackets, who won their fourth straight game. It was the third consecutive win under new coach Rick Bowness. Bowness is the third coach in team history to win his first three games with the team.

Kirill Marchenko scored to continue a four-game point. Danton Heinen scored his first goal with Columbus since he was traded from Pittsburgh last month, and Zach Aston-Reese, another former Penguin, also scored.

Zach Werenski continued his four-game point streak with an assist.

Elvis Merzlikins made 29 saves for the Blue Jackets, who matched their longest winning streak of the season.

Sidney Crosby had a goal and an assist for the Penguins. He recorded his 511th multipoint game, tying Gordie Howe for fifth place in NHL history.

Connor Clifton and Rickard Rakell also scored for the Penguins.

Arturs Silovs stopped 22 shots for the Penguins, who have lost four of their last five.

Pittsburgh established a franchise record with a 19-game home-point streak against the Blue Jackets dating back to Dec. 21, 2015. It’s the longest home-point streak against a team in franchise history. Pittsburgh scored at least three goals in all but one of the 19 games.

All four games between Pittsburgh and Columbus this season were decided past regulation.

Crosby forced overtime with one minute left. He redirected Kris Letang’s point shot behind Merzlikins to even the score.

Up next

Blue Jackets: Host Ottawa on Tuesday.

Penguins: Open a four-game Western road trip Monday at Seattle.

 

Riverview High School head football coach Trevor George hired as the head coach for Blackhawk High School football

(File Photo of the Blackhawk Turf and Football Field)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Beaver Falls, PA) Riverview High School head football coach Trevor George was officially hired yesterday at the Blackhawk School District’s board meeting in Beaver Falls as their new head football coach for Blackhawk High School. George will try to improve on the record of 3-7 that the Cougars had after the 2025 high school football season ended. Riverview finished with a record of 4-6 in that same season and George was their head coach since the 2020 season. George is no stranger to coaching Beaver County football and coaching at Blackhawk, because he was a former assistant coach for the Cougars during the 2019 season and was a former offensive coordinator for Ambridge during the 2017 season. When George was an assistant coach for Blackhawk, the Cougars went 7-5 overall and 5-2 in Northwest Eight Conference play and made it the WPIAL semifinals before falling to the eventual state champ, Thomas Jefferson. George grew up in Hopewell but graduated from Carlynton High School.

Crosby helps Penguins power past Flyers 6-3

 

(File Photo: Source for Photo: Pittsburgh Penguins’ Sidney Crosby, left, celebrates his second goal of the first period with Rickard Rakell during an NHL hockey game against the Detroit Red Wings in Pittsburgh, Thursday, Jan. 1, 2026. (AP Photo/Gene J. Puskar)

PITTSBURGH (AP) — Sidney Crosby scored one of Pittsburgh’s three power-play goals and the Penguins beat the Philadelphia Flyers 6-3 on Thursday night.

Crosby also had an assist to become the eighth player in NHL history with at least 19 50-point seasons. Crosby, who reached 50 for the sixth consecutive season, has points in 29 of his last 34 games against the Flyers.

Justin Brazeau and Bryan Rust also scored power-play goals for Pittsburgh, which has nine with the man advantage in its last 12 games. Egor Chinakhov, Blake Lizotte and Connor Dewar scored for the Penguins, who snapped a three-game losing streak. Evgeni Malkin had two assists for Pittsburgh, which has won eight of its last 12 overall.

Stuart Skinner stopped 30 shots for his fourth win in five starts. He has allowed seven goals in his last five starts.

Rodrigo Abols, Nick Seeler and Matvei Michkov scored for the Flyers, who lost their fifth straight. Philadelphia has lost nine of 14 overall and allowed at least four goals in eight of its last nine losses.

Samuel Ersson allowed three goals on 14 shots. He was replaced by Aleksei Kolosov, who made 13 saves. Kolosov was recalled from the American Hockey League because of an injury to Dan Vladar.

Pittsburgh has points in 12 of its last 14 games against the Flyers. The Penguins also have points in 11 straight home games against Philadelphia dating to March 6, 2021.

Brazeau and Rust scored power-play goals for Pittsburgh in the first period. Crosby scored Pittsburgh’s third power-play goal at 3:10 of the third period to give Pittsburgh a 5-1 lead.

Chinakhov chased Ersson when he scored on a pass from Malkin at 1:16 of the second period. Chinakhov has three goals in eight games with Pittsburgh after recording six points in 29 games with Columbus.

Up next

Flyers: Host the New York Rangers on Saturday.

Penguins: Host Columbus on Saturday.

 

Pitt quarterback Mason Heintschel will return for sophomore season

(Credit for Photo and Caption for Photo: ATLANTA, GA – NOVEMBER 22: Pittsburgh quarterback Mason Heintschel (6) throws a pass during the college football game between the Pittsburgh Panthers and the Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets on November 22nd, 2025 at Bobby Dodd Stadium in Atlanta, GA. (Photo by Rich von Biberstein/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) SOURCE: Rich von Biberstein/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Pittsburgh, PA) Pitt quarterback Mason Heintschel announced on social media yesterday that he will return to Pitt for his sophomore season of college football. During the 2025 season, Heintschel passed for 2,354 yards and sixteen touchdowns with eight interceptions in ten games. Heintschel became a freshman phenomenon ever since head coach Pat Narduzzi benched quarterback Eli Holstein on October 4th, 2025 in their game that afternoon against Boston College and Heintschel led Pitt to a 48-7 victory. Holstein also announced recently that he will be transferring to the University of Virginia, one of Pitt’s rivals in the Atlantic Coast Conference. However, Pitt will not be playing Virginia in the 2026 college football season.

Prosecutors: Former NCAA players and fixers charged over rigged basketball games

(File Photo: Source for Photo: FILE – NCAA logo displayed on the fence before an NCAA softball game between Jacksonville and FGCU, March 24, 2024, in Jacksonville, Fla. (AP Photo/Gary McCullough, File)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Philadelphia, PA) Federal prosecutors are giving charges to twenty-six people, which included former college basketball players who allegedly as recently as last season tried to fix games, in what they call a scheme to rig NCAA and Chinese Basketball Association games. Fifteen people played basketball for Divison I NCAA schools as recently as the 2024-2025 season that were part of the defendants named in the indictment from today and five others were described as fixers by authorities. The charges were filed in federal court in Philadelphia and they include bribery, conspiracy and wire fraud. Authorities state that the fixers used “bribe payments” that were usually ranging from $10,000 to $30,000 per game to recruit the college basketball players. The indictment follows investigations from the NCAA that led to at least ten players receiving bans for the rest of their lives. Robert Morris University, which is located in Moon Township, was one of the seventeen schools that was named in the indictment. Markeese Hastings, a former men’s basketball player from Robert Morris University, was one of the people charged in relation to this scheme.