Follow live: Hurricanes look to close out Canadien...
Related Stories
Brits urged to sprinkle baking soda on their beds this week
Brits urged to sprinkle baking soda on their beds this week As temperatures soar towards the weekend, an expert has shared how baking soda can come in very handy. Brits could be on course for another heatwave by the weekend, with temperatures of up to 28C forecast. As the mercury climbs across the UK, many people are likely to sweat more in bed than they would during the winter months, with much of that moisture ending up absorbed by their mattress.
French government seeks to defuse crisis after girl's killing exposes judicial failings
A snowballing political crisis over the judiciary's handling of child sexual violence cases erupted in France after the killing of an 11-year-old girl known only as Lyhanna, who went missing in the town of Fleurance on May 29 after leaving school. Attention focused on the justice system after prosecutors said the main suspect had been accused of raping a minor in an investigation opened following a complaint filed in August 2025, but was not questioned until his arrest over Lyhanna's...
How undrafted players became so vital to teams' su...
Carolina Hurricanes defenseman Jalen Chatfield never got the chance to hear his name called at the NHL draft. It's been more than a decade since every team passed him by when he was eligible, and during that time, he found a way to make an impression. He went to three different development and rookie camps across the league before eventually playing his first NHL game in January 2021 with the Vancouver Canucks.
The strongest El Nino in more than a century may be coming
The strongest El Nino in more than a century may be coming June 10, 2026A potentially powerful El Nino developing in the Pacific Ocean could reshape weather patterns around the world in the coming weeks. Forecasters that warn this could be among the strongest El Nino events on record. There’s "real potential for the strongest El Nino event in 140 years," said Paul Roundy, a professor of atmospheric and environmental sciences at the State University of New York at Albany.