Kraken sign captain Jordan Eberle to 2-year, $11M extension

Seattle Kraken captain Jordan Eberle agreed to a two-year, $11 million contract extension on Friday.

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The 35-year-old forward has tallied 42 points (22 goals, 20 assists) in 59 games in his fifth season with the Kraken. His 18:37 average ice time is his highest since the 2014-15 campaign.

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A two-time All-Star, Eberle has 770 points (330 goals, 440 assists) in 1,119 games across 16 NHL seasons with the Edmonton Oilers (2010-17), New York Islanders (2017-21) and Kraken.

The Saskatchewan native was named the Seattle franchise's second captain on Opening Day of the 2024-25 season. Eberle was in the final season of a two-year, $9.5 million contract.

--Field Level Media

Kraken sign captain Jordan Eberle to 2-year, $11M extension

Seattle Kraken captain Jordan Eberle agreed to a two-year, $11 million contract extension on Friday. ...
30 years and 1,000 games later, Beth Mowins and Debbie Antonelli define women's basketball

In March of 1995, as the women's NCAA Tournament was approaching, ESPN called Debbie Antonelli to offer her a job as a color analyst for the regional round of March Madness. They told her she was going to be partnering with Beth Mowins, who would handle play-by-play duties.

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Antonelli's first response was, "Who?"

"I had no idea," she recalls now. "I had never heard of her."

Antonelli declined that gig because she had just had a baby. But in the fall of 1996, she heard Mowins' name again, this time from a local TV station in Pennsylvania that wanted her to call Penn State women's basketball games. This time, she accepted.

On Tuesday, Nov. 26, 1996, Antonelli and Mowins were the voices on Penn State's 76-62 win over Seton Hall. Angie Potthoff scored 21 points in the victory for theNittany Lionsin what would be the first of countless women's college basketball games Antonelli and Mowins have called together.

This is the 30th season the duo has been telling the story of women's college basketball. At a time where the sport is growing by leaps and bounds in viewership and attendance, fans know when they see Antonelli and Mowins that they are tuning into an important game.

"They've been trailblazers as broadcasters," ACC Commissioner Jim Phillips told USA Today Sports. "It's hard for me to think of a better combination than Debbie and Beth and what they've meant. I just think they are the gold standard and it gives me great comfort when I watch a game they're on. I don't know if they have any peers that I'm aware of that have quite done what they've done."

Antonelli and Mowins went from not knowing each other to close friends. After traveling the country together for three decades, sketching out ideas on bar napkins after games and vacationing together with their families, they can finish each other's sentences. They have a routine that's second nature. Even while sitting in a green room in Colonial Life Arena in South Carolina, Antonelli sat on the left side of the couch while Mowins sat on the right — just as they would be if they were courtside at a broadcast table.

"She's a part of our family. She's watched my boys grow up," Antonelli said of Mowins. "I prep a certain way when I work with Beth, because I don't have to worry about the other things and that allows me to do what I really am good at, which is taking a deeper dive. We tell you the how and why."

'Wild wild west' of women's basketball

Antonelli's path to television began when she was 23-years-old. After playing basketball for the Hall of Fame coach Kay Yow at NC State — she was on a Wolfpack team that won the ACC regular season and tournament championships in 1986 — Antonelli went to work at the University of Kentucky as director of marketing for the athletic department. A local TV station approached the Wildcats with the idea of producing and televising some of their games. Antonelli not only convinced them to do women's basketball, but persuaded them to let her be on the broadcast as an analyst.

A few years later, Antonelli took a similar job at Ohio State and, again, struck up conversations with the local cable company. Antonelli soon became the voice of Buckeyes women's basketball games across Ohio.

"I was like, 'Wow, this is just like everything I thought coaching would be, except you don't deal with the players,'" Antonelli told USA Today Sports. "It had everything else. Watching film, prep, practice, you know, all the things that I love about the job. It ran parallel with my interest in growing the game."

ESPN broadcasters Debbie Antonelli, left, and Beth Mowins give the play by play during the game between the South Carolina Gamecocks and Mississippi Rebels at Colonial Life Arena.

Mowins' path was a bit more traditional. Her dad was a coach and she played college basketball at Lafayette College where she set program records for assists in a single season and career. She then went to Syracuse's Newhouse School and not long after graduating with her master's degree, became the play-by-play voice for a Big East women's basketball game of the week shown on six different cable outlets in the northeast in the early 1990s.

ESPN, which is based in Bristol, Connecticut, is nestled in the heart of the Big East footprint.

"The Big East Network saw me doing Syracuse games, and I started doing the Big East Game of the Week, and those were on in Connecticut, and ESPN saw me doing those. And then it just kind of grew from there," Mowins told USA Today Sports. "Back in those days, it was the wild wild west."

Mowins said when she and Antonelli first started working together, they would call several games a week in different time zones for multiple different networks. They were women's basketball broadcasting mercenaries. They might be at Michigan State working a CBS game on a Saturday, then fly to North Carolina for a Duke game on ESPN on Sunday, then to New York for a St. John's game for the Big East, then to Texas to do a broadcast for Fox Sports Southwest.

"Shoot, I'd be gone for three weeks at a time," Antonelli says. "It was a hustle."

"But we were young, we were hungry, we were working on our craft," Mowins says. "And probably staying out too late."

"We would meet the coaches after the game for a drink. We'd make them buy," Antonelli says. "We did all that before the internet, before phone cameras. … When it comes to making postgame arrangements, I make those."

"After carrying her for two hours, I'm exhausted," Mowins says with a laugh. "I don't want to have to make any decisions after that."

ESPN broadcasters Debbie Antonelli, left, and Beth Mowins give the play by play during the game between the South Carolina Gamecocks and Mississippi Rebels at Colonial Life Arena.

Antonelli was a freelancer for the first 28 years of her television career. These days, she's mainly calling games for ESPN and its partners on the ACC and SEC networks, typically working one men's game and two women's games a week. There are times where her schedule gets stacked up, like when she called nine games in a 14-day span earlier this season.

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Mowins stays busy as the college sports seasons cross over. In the fall she calls college football, and in the spring she's the play-by-play host of the Women's College World Series. Since joining ESPN in 1994, Mowins has called NCAA Championships in basketball, softball, soccer and volleyball. In 2017, she became the first woman to call a nationally televised NFL game when she did a Monday Night Football broadcast between the Chargers and Broncos.

For many young women in broadcasting Mowins isn't just a role model, she's the standard.

"She has always been someone to aspire to and learn from, but she's also someone who has given me hope in the incredibly wild world that is being a woman in sports," says Mia O'Brien, an ESPN Radio host based in Jacksonville, Florida. "As I've strived to grow as a play-by-play announcer, it's made me respect Beth tenfold. It's been difficult for me to find reps today in the 2020s, so I can't even begin to imagine what her road to national prominence entailed."

'I know nothing except for hoops'

Antonelli has one of the sharpest minds in basketball. Part of that could be due to the fact that basketball is all Antonelli consumes, which is why Mowins' pop culture references fly over her head.

"I know nothing except for hoops," Antonelli says. "I don't watch any shows. I watch basketball."

Mowins likens Antonelli's ability to dissect X's and O's to Tony Romo and Dan Orlovsky on NFL broadcasts, in that she can predict what is about to happen on the court.

"Very few people have that ability, to not only have it stored in there, but then to bring it out when it's appropriate. Debbie is in that group that is just extraordinary because of the way she prepares," Mowins says. "She has relationships with all of the coaches. One of the most significant things is, if Debbie calls somebody, they're going to pick up."

ESPN analyst Debbie Antonelli watches practice at Intrust Bank Arena on March 19, 2025 in Wichita, Kansas.

In addition to the thousands of women's basketball games that she's called on television, Antonelli has also been the radio analyst for Westwood One's broadcasts of the Final Four for 30 years. In 2022, Antonelli joined her college coach, Yow, in the Women's Basketball Hall of Fame.

Wherever she goes, the folks most proud of what Antonelli has accomplished in growing the game of women's basketball seem to be at her alma mater, NC State.

"She's one of the premier announcers, and I'm telling you, she works harder than anybody I know. She's got irons in a lot of fires," NC State head coach Wes Moore said of Antonelli. "She does her homework. She knows going into a game what she wants to talk about and cover."

'Like an old married couple'

Over three decades, Antonelli and Mowins estimate they've called around 30 games per year together. With that many to choose from, it's difficult for them to pinpoint the most memorable game.

The first that came to mind for Antonelli was during the COVID-impacted season of 2020-21. On Dec. 15, 2020, Antonelli and Mowins were two of the few people in the building when Stanford beat Pacific, pushing Tara VanDerveer ahead of Pat Summitt to become the all-time winningest women's college basketball coach.

For Mowins, a trip to North Carolina's Research Triangle sticks out, when on Feb. 1, 2003, No. 2 UConn upset No. 1 Duke in a sold-out Cameron Indoor Stadium.

"We hit the heyday of the ACC in the early 2000s. Every weekend was a top 20 matchup," Mowins says. "For years, those Triangle schools had tried to build up fanbases, and when UConn came to Cameron Indoor it was like a men's game. The students all turned out."

A photo from that game of Diana Taurasi preparing to throw an inbounds pass with Alana Beard defending her appeared in Sports Illustrated the next week. If you look closely at it and spot a woman wearing a red sweater, that's Mowins' mother sitting near Antonelli's parents.

ESPN analyst Beth Mowins during the game between the LA Clippers and the Sacramento Kings at the Crypto.com Arena on Feb. 25, 2024.

Three decades into broadcasting women's college basketball, Antonelli and Mowins still have a passion for the games, the players and the coaches.

And they show no signs of slowing down. This weekend they'll be calling games together in Duluth, Georgia, at the ACC Tournament and will be paired again during March Madness.

The duo has lost count of exactly how many games they've done together.

"I would certainly say it feels like it's been 1,000 games," Mowins says.

"And I would say one of us deserves a medal," Antonelli says. "The other one might need therapy."

"I think that's something that sort of sets our chemistry apart," Mowins says. "When we're working together, we're not afraid to pick at each other, you know, like an old married couple."

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:The voices behind the rise of women's college basketball

30 years and 1,000 games later, Beth Mowins and Debbie Antonelli define women's basketball

In March of 1995, as the women's NCAA Tournament was approaching, ESPN called Debbie Antonelli to offer her a job as...
MGK Reacts to Paparazzi Mistaking His 16-Year-Old Daughter Casie for Ex 'Megan' at Paris Fashion Week

MGK attended Paris Fashion Week with his 16-year-old daughter, Casie, who photographers referred to as 'Megan'

People Machine Gun Kelly responds to photographers calling his daughter 'Megan' at Paris Fashion WeekCredit: River Callaway/WWD via Getty; Presley Ann/Getty

NEED TO KNOW

  • A video shared on social media shows the musician responding to paparazzi calling Casie "Megan," which seemed to be in reference to his ex Megan Fox

  • The interaction occurred one day after MGK publicly commented on a series of risqué photos posted by Fox on Instagram

MGKwasn't afraid to let everyone know who his dateactuallywas at Paris Fashion Week.

The musician, who used to use the stage name Machine Gun Kelly,attended the Stella McCartney fashion showon March 4 alongside his 16-year-old daughterCasie, but when they arrived at the venue, some photographers mistakingly called his teen 'Megan' seemingly in reference to his exMegan Fox.

A video shared byParis Videostarsshows the Grammy nominee, 35, stepping out of a car after Casie, whom he shares with ex Emma Cannon. The two are met with paparazzi calling out his name and referring to Casie as "Megan," which he to corrects by saying with a smile, "That's my daughter." He continues posing for photos with Casie and by himself after the interaction.

Casie Colson Baker and MGK at the Fall 2026 Stella McCartney Fashion ShowCredit: Marc Piasecki/WireImage

For their outing, the father-daughter duo wore coordinating outfits. He opted for a low-scoop tank top with the word "hardcore" on it, as well jeans and a green jacket. She wore a heather gray collared minidress.

Later, MGK shared a roundup of photos of their fun time in Paris, writing onInstagram, "got mogged by my own flesh and blood."

MGK and Megan Fox at the 'Machine Gun Kelly's Life In Pink' premiere on June 27, 2022Credit: Jamie McCarthy/Getty

Fox may not have been at MGK's side overseas, but he still very much kept her in his thoughts, especially after shereturned to Instagramwith a series of sexy photos showing her in nothing but a T-shirt, thong, thigh-high socks and platform heels.

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In response to the actress' racy March 3 post, MGK made a move with a flirty response. "Stoked i have your phone number," he commented.

Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE's free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories.

His cheeky reaction came almost two months after a source revealed exclusively to PEOPLE exactlywhere the formerly engaged couple standsafter welcoming their daughter, Saga Blade, in March 2025. The insider revealed that the musician and actress  "haven't been togetherin a real way for a long time now and whatever they had romantically is done."

"Their relationship at this point is just about co-parenting," the insider adds. "Megan is focused on her kids and the baby and just getting settled into this new chapter. That's genuinely her priority." They continued of Fox's love life, "There's nothing serious romantically," adding, "but she's not closed of to it either. If something came along naturally and felt right, she'd be open to it. She's just not thinking about it or chasing anything."

AsPEOPLEreported in October 2025, theJennifer's Bodystar and the "cliché" singer had been acting like a couple again, but they never made things official. "He spends pretty much every night at her house with the baby, and they act like a couple, but they haven't put a label on it or made anything official," an insider shared at the time.

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MGK Reacts to Paparazzi Mistaking His 16-Year-Old Daughter Casie for Ex 'Megan' at Paris Fashion Week

MGK attended Paris Fashion Week with his 16-year-old daughter, Casie, who photographers referred to as 'Megan' ...
What Savannah Guthrie Told Her

PEOPLE has learned what Savannah told her colleagues when she returned to the Today set on March 5

People

NEED TO KNOW

  • This is the first time Savannah has been to set since her mom Nancy disappeared on Feb. 1

  • A Today spokesperson previously confirmed Savannah's visit in a statement

During her visit to theTodayshow set on March 5,Savannah Guthrieaddressed her colleagues as she reunited with the team for the first time since her momNancy Guthrie's disappearance.

PEOPLE has learned that Savannah thanked the entire staff and crew for all of their love, prayers and support and for "caring about my mom as much as I do."

Savannah said in part, "I wanted you to know that I'm still standing, and I still have hope, and I'm still me. And I don't know what version of me that will be, but it will be. I'm holding onto my faith. I still believe. And as my mom would say, 'where else would I go?'"

Savannah Guthrie on March 5Credit: Backgrid

Savannah added: "I have every intention of coming back. I don't know how to come back, but I don't know how not to. You're my family. And, I would like to try."

PEOPLE has also learned that Savannah's friend and colleagueDylan Dreyerthen led a "beautiful" group prayer for everyone, which began, "We're here holding hands as a family, in a place where we don't understand why this is happening.... It is not too bold to ask God for the biggest miracles every day."Before she left, Savannah hugged everyone in the studio.

Savannah Guthrie on March 5Credit: Backgrid

ATodayspokesperson previouslyconfirmed Savannah's visit to 1A, saying in a statement that the beloved anchor "stopped by the studio this morning to be with and thank herTodaycolleagues."

The spokesperson also noted thatSavannah "plans to return to the show on air,"though she currently "remains focused right now supporting her family and working to help bring Nancy home."

Shortly after the visit,Jenna Bush HagerandSheinelle Jonesbegan their fourth hour show,Today with Jenna & Sheinelle,and reflected on the emotional reunion.

Carson Daly, Craig Melvin, Savanah Guthrie, Hoda Kotb and Al Roker on Monday, June 3, 2024Credit: Nathan Congleton/NBC via Getty

"Let's just get right into it, full disclosure, we've had a powerful morning this morning," Jones shared with viewers.

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"Savannah has come back to her home here at 30 Rock in Studio 1A," Bush Hager said, getting audibly choked up. "We got to see her this morning and in her perfect way, she talked to all of us, hugged every single person in this room, the crew."

"She said that she has the intention to return to the show even though it feels like the hardest thing to do. It's also her home and where she feels so loved," Bush Hager added. "And she is beyond loved here. So we're happy she's home. I don't know when she's actually returning to the show. But she was here and that felt so good to get to hug her."

Peter Alexander, Al Roker, Dylan Dreyer, Hoda Kotb, Jenna Bush Hager, Savannah Guthrie, Carson Daly, Laura Jarrett and Willie Geist are seen at the NBC

Earlier in the week, Savannah visited Nancy's Tucson, Ariz. property alongside her sisterAnnie Guthrieand brother-in-law Tommaso Cioni on March 2. Ina video obtained by NewsNation, the three were seen hugging one another as they looked at atribute created near Nancy's mailboxand added yellow flowers to the display.

The same day, Savannah shared anew photo on social mediafeaturing the many bouquets of flowers around Nancy's mailbox, writing in her caption, "We feel the love and prayers from our neighbors, from the Tucson community and from around the country 💛 please don't stop praying and hoping with us. bring her home."

Savannah Guthrie and her mother, Nancy Guthrie, on the 'Today' set in 2023.Credit: Nathan Congleton/NBC via Getty

Never miss a story — sign up for PEOPLE'sfree daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories.

Nancy was last seengoing into her garage at 9:50 p.m. on Saturday, Jan. 31. She wasreported missing by her familyat 12:03 p.m. local time on Feb. 1 when she failed to join friends to watch a virtual church service.

On Tuesday, Feb. 24, Savannah announced thatthe family was offering a rewardof up to $1 million for any information leading to Nancy's recovery.The FBI's reward of $100,000also remains active.

Savannah also shared that the family donated $500,000 to theNational Center for Missing and Exploited Children.

Anyone with information about Nancy's disappearance is asked to please contact 1-800-CALL-FBI (1-800-225-5324) or the Pima County Sheriff's Department 520-351-4900.

Read the original article onPeople

What Savannah Guthrie Told Her “Today” Colleagues During Emotional Reunion

PEOPLE has learned what Savannah told her colleagues when she returned to the Today set on March 5 NEED TO K...

 

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