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FRISCO, Texas -- Dallas Stars defenseman Miro Heiskanen is week-to-week with a lower-body injury sustained on a big hit from Vegas captain Mark Stone, and the standout from Finland won't play in next month's 4 Nations Face-Off tournament.
Stars coach Pete DeBoer said Thursday that Heiskanen had an MRI and was planning to see a specialist for more information on the prognosis.
Heiskanen was ruled out of the 4 Nations after Finland general manager Jere Lehtinen, a former Dallas player, contacted the Stars and Heiskanen.
"This is really sad news, first and foremost for Miro himself, but of course also for the Finnish 4 Nations Face-Off team and Dallas," Finland coach Antti Pennanen said. "We don't know the details of the injury yet, but we hope that Miro will be back in playing condition as soon as possible."
Heiskanen's absence means a new player will be selected to the Finnish team. Lehtinen didn't say when that would be.
Heiskanen was injured in the third period of the Stars' 4-3 overtime victory over Vegas on Tuesday after taking the hit from Stone, who fell toward Heiskanen's left knee and thigh after getting tripped. Stone hasn't been fined or suspended.
Stone, who was penalized for tripping, said he wasn't trying to injure Heiskanen. DeBoer, who coached Stone in Vegas, said he didn't think Stone was a dirty player but questioned why officials didn't review the play for a five-minute major penalty. There was a brief clash between the teams while Heiskanen was sprawled on the ice.
The 4 Nations runs Feb. 12-20 in Montreal and Boston. It's the first international tournament featuring the NHL's best players in nearly a decade.
A lengthy absence for Heiskanen will be a setback for the Stars, who have reached the Western Conference Final each of the past two seasons. Dallas is second in the Central Division, with Colorado and Minnesota close behind.
Heiskanen has been a top defenseman for the Stars since making his debut as a 19-year-old in 2018. Dallas drafted him third overall in 2017.

Auston Matthews will serve as captain for the United States in the upcoming 4 Nations Face-Off as captains for the U.S., Canada, Sweden and Finland were named on Thursday.
Canada, which will have Sidney Crosby as captain for another international tournament, must choose a replacement for two-time Stanley Cup champion and 2014 Olympic gold medalist Alex Pietrangelo.
Victor Hedman will captain Sweden, which already selected an injury replacement in goal and might need two more for skaters.
And Aleksander Barkov will be the captain for Finland, which will not have top defenseman Miro Heiskanen after he was injured earlier this week.
United States
Matthews as captain felt automatic, especially after he was given that role with the Toronto Maple Leafs prior to this season.
Matthew Tkachuk, who won the Cup with Barkov and the Florida Panthers last year, and Boston's Charlie McAvoy are the alternates.
U.S. general manager Bill Guerin said, "They all bring leadership skills in different ways and together represent the drive, desire and passion we need in not only representing our country but in helping achieve our ultimate goal."
The previous time the U.S. won an international competition featuring the best players in the world was the 2004 World Cup of Hockey.
Canada
Crosby was captain when Canada won Olympic gold in 2010 and '14, and then the 2016 World Cup of Hockey. Even Connor McDavid, who has surpassed the Pittsburgh Penguins center as the best player in the league, has said that job should still belong to Crosby.
McDavid, Edmonton's captain, and Colorado's Cale Makar will be the alternate captains.
"Sidney, Connor and Cale all possess exceptional leadership qualities, a determination to be the best and a burning desire to win," coach Jon Cooper said. "We are fortunate to have incredible leadership on our team. These players will lead Canada with pride as we set out to accomplish our goal of winning."
That took a shot when Pietrangelo withdrew "to tend to an ailment and prepare for the remainder of the regular season with Vegas," the Golden Knights said.
Among the options to replace him is Los Angeles Kings defenseman Drew Doughty, who on Wednesday made his season debut after breaking his left ankle during an exhibition game in September. Doughty was teammates with Crosby in '10, '14 and '16.
Sweden
Like Matthews, Hedman is new to being a captain in the NHL, succeeding Steven Stamkos in the role with the Tampa Bay Lightning for this season. This is a different kind of challenge for the 2021 playoff MVP, who mystifyingly left Sweden's roster for the Sochi Olympics 11 years ago.
"This is obviously a short tournament, so you've got to hit the ground running from the start, and it's not just going to be the guys wearing the letters," Hedman said. "It's going to be on the whole team to get together right away and try and find our identity as a team. We're just fortunate to have a lot of great leaders and great hockey players, and we are super excited to get together and get this thing going."
Sweden on Wednesday selected Philadelphia's Sam Ersson as the replacement for injured New Jersey goaltender Jacob Markstrom. General manager Josef Boumedienne and coach Sam Hallam might also need to get another forward if Vegas' William Karlsson can't play and another defenseman if Minnesota's Jonas Brodin is unavailable.
A night after scouting Ersson during a Flyers game earlier this month, they were in Washington and spoke with Capitals defenseman Rasmus Sandin afterward. It's unclear how far down the list of possibilities Sandin might be.
Finland
The Finnish Ice Hockey Association announced Heiskanen is out after getting injured in the game between Dallas and Vegas earlier this week. That decision was made after GM Jere Lehtinen spoke with Stars management and Heiskanen.
"This is really sad news, first and foremost for Miro himself, but of course also for the Finnish 4 Nations Face-Off team and Dallas," Finland coach Antti Pennanen said. "We don't know the details of the injury yet, but we hope that Miro will be back in playing condition as soon as possible."
Lehtinen said a replacement for Heiskanen, one of the sport's top players at the position, will be announced before the team gathers in Montreal and practices for the first time on Feb. 10.
"He's that type of player that any team in the world would love to have," Barkov said. "He is a leader defensively and really good offensively, so he's a huge part of Team Finland's success. ... All the best and try and get back as soon as possible and as healthy as possible. Health is the most important thing."
Information from The Associated Press was used in this report.

The Utah Hockey Club has removed "Utah Wasatch" from consideration for a new team name, replacing it with "Utah Outlaws" in fan voting.
On Wednesday, the first-year NHL team announced it would no longer move forward with "Yeti" or "Yetis" as its official nickname due to what the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office called the "likelihood of confusion" for consumers to other companies and brands that use the name. Utah HC unsuccessfully tried to broker a "coexistence agreement" with Yeti Coolers LLC to use the name.
The team instead asked fans to vote on three different name options: Utah Hockey Club, Utah Mammoth and Utah Wasatch.
While Mammoth made the final four in the initial fan vote last year, Wasatch was a new option that referenced a local mountain range and would allow the team to use a "mythical snow hill creature in the form of a Yeti" as its mascot, according to Mike Maughan of Smith Entertainment Group, who added that mascot will also be used if the team keeps Utah Hockey Club as its name.
Wednesday night's game against the Pittsburgh Penguins was the first of four home games where fans would vote on the three options using tablets stationed around Delta Center. The early returns from that vote helped convince the team to drop Wasatch in favor of Outlaws, seeing little support for the former.
"We listened to your feedback and dug into all the Qualtrics data from last night's survey," the team said in a statement Thursday. "For the team name, it's clear that Outlaws should be in the mix instead of Wasatch, so we're swapping it out."
The survey will continue at the arena Friday, Sunday and Tuesday.
Outlaws was among the initial 20 names presented to fans in a survey last year and was among six finalists after the vote was completed.
Maughan said the team is confident that whatever name wins the fan vote should clear the patent and trademark process.
"We have an incredible team, and we are very confident we have a clear path to each of those names," Maughan said. "We have strategies to approach each of them and feel that we're on very solid ground as we continue forward."
Utah Hockey Club is in its first season playing in Salt Lake City. The Arizona Coyotes' franchise was sold to Utah Jazz owners Smith Entertainment Group in April 2024. SEG acquired the franchise, its players and its hockey operations department in the sale, although the team is considered a new franchise rather than an extension of the Coyotes' legacy.

Former National Women's Soccer League Rookie of the Year Jenna Nighswonger has joined Arsenal, the club announced on Thursday.
Nighswonger will join Arsenal fpr undisclosed fee. She was on the United States squad that won the gold medal at the Paris Olympics last summer. She joins fellow compatriot Emily Fox.
"I've always wanted to play in England and joining such a historic football club is a dream come true," Nighswonger said in a statement.
"I want to win trophies with this club and help the team in any way possible. It's an incredible feeling to be able to call myself an Arsenal player and I can't wait to get started."
Nighswonger, who played on Florida State's 2021 national championship team, was the fourth overall pick in the 2023 NWSL draft. She appeared in 51 matches for Gotham, which won the 2023 league championship.
At the international level, Nighswonger has played in 18 matches for the United States, scoring a pair of goals.
"Jenna has had a great trajectory in the game and we're delighted to bring her to Arsenal. Despite being only 24, she plays with great maturity and presence and knows what it takes to compete to win on the biggest stages at both domestic and national team level," Slegers said.
Nighswonger is the latest NWSL player to head to Europe, following fellow national team defender Naomi Girma, who joined Chelsea from the San Diego Wave for a $1.1 million transfer fee.
Brazilian forward Kerolin, the 2023 NWSL MVP, recently signed as a free agent with Manchester City after three seasons with the North Carolina Courage.

PSV Eindhoven and United States men's national team striker Ricardo Pepi could be looking at an extended spell on the sidelines after injuring his knee Wednesday in a Champions League match against Liverpool, a source with knowledge of the situation confirmed to ESPN.
Eindhovens Dagblad was the first to report the news.
Pepi scored the eventual game-winning goal in the 3-2 victory over Liverpool, a result that guaranteed PSV finished in the top 16 of the league phase, but he was forced to exit the match in the 76th minute after being treated for the knee injury.
The source indicated that Pepi is undergoing additional tests to ascertain the exact severity of the injury, but indicated that Pepi didn't tear his ACL.
The early prognosis is that the player could be out anywhere from 1-3 months.
The injury comes at an especially inopportune time for Pepi. The El Paso, Texas native has excelled with PSV this season with 18 goals in 25 league and cup appearances, though that has often been in a substitute's role in support of usual starter Luuk de Jong.
Pepi was also the subject of a $25 million transfer bid by Premier League side West Ham United, though that was rejected by PSV.
Pepi has been in excellent form at international level as well, scoring in both legs of the Concacaf Nations League quarterfinal matchup against Jamaica.
Now Pepi is in danger of missing the semifinal against Panama schedule for March 20 and possibly the final three days later.
Pepi's injury leaves U.S. manager Mauricio Pochettino with the challenge of looking for a replacement ahead of the Nations League. He has 13 goals in 33 games for the USMNT, where he has been a regular fixture ahead of the 2026 World Cup.
AS Monaco's Folarin Balogun is expected to miss another three months after undergoing shoulder surgery in December.
Coventry City's Haji Wright is just making his way back from an ankle injury, though Norwich City's Josh Sargent recently returned to the field for the Canaries, and scored twice in a 5-1 win over Swansea City last weekend.
Amorim after UEL win: Man Utd must target trophy

Ruben Amorim insisted that despite his difficult start as Manchester United manager, his side must target winning the Europa League after booking their round-of-16 spot with a 2-0 victory at Steaua Bucharest on Thursday.
Amorim became the first United manager to lose five of his first 10 games in all competitions since Walter Crickmer in 1932, but a recent improvement has helped him settle into life in Manchester.
The Portuguese admitted after Sunday's victory at Fulham that he feels 10 years older having succeeded Erik ten Hag in November.
"I don't see a big difference in the way we play, but today we had more time to think and now you can see some movements, the idea is there because we have more time to play and understand the game," Amorim told reporters.
"I think we can go game by game and we can win it. Then you have the responsibility, no matter the context, you are in Manchester United so you must fight for winning trophies.
"When you get to this stage of any competition, anything is possible and they can prove they can win against anybody."
United's third-placed finish in the Europa League first phase ensured they avoided a two-legged playoff to reach the round of 16.
"That is really important for us, to have time to train, create connection between everyone, the staff, everyone there in training, go to the pitch, know each other in the right environment," Amorim added.
"Then we have one week to prepare a game, the beginning of the week you can work your idea and then have time to prepare the game and focus on the opponent. I can understand better my players."
Champions League recap, projections: Who will win it all, Best XI so far, more

The payoff was worth it, right? When the UEFA Champions League's first-ever league phase began this season -- with an expanded field, no groups and just one giant, 36-team table -- it was a little bit difficult to work our way into the tournament. It was hard to tell what early wins and losses actually meant and the consequences of a slump felt pretty low, even for Europe's powerhouse clubs.
But then Paris Saint-Germain entered the penultimate matchday outside the bubble, needing a pair of good results to actually qualify for the knockout rounds. Then Manchester City waited until the last 30 minutes to actually secure a spot during an absolutely chaotic, 64-goal, 18-matches-all-at-once final matchday.
In the end, almost nothing was decided until the final day, and of Wednesday's 18 matches, only about six had no real stakes.
How decisive was that final day? Of the top 16 teams in the final league phase table, 12 won on Wednesday, and one of only two losses was suffered by a Liverpool team that had already clinched a spot in the top two. The team that finished in sixth place (Bayer Leverkusen) finished with only six more points than the team that finished 26th (Stuttgart). This thing was an absolute what-if machine, and it almost snagged a couple of the sport's heavyweights.
The new format drew plenty of skepticism early on, and that's somewhat justifiable -- if only because at first glance it just seemed like a way for UEFA to coax more matches and more money out of its signature club event (and because, at first, two of the four extra bids were intended to go to big, successful clubs that hadn't otherwise qualified for the Champions League). But once the extra bids were made a bit more democratic -- in the end, the final two bids went to the highest-placed teams in the countries that had the most success in UEFA tournaments the year before -- there was a lot to like here.
Teams were exposed to more opponents and got a bit more time to find their footing. Dinamo Zagreb nearly advanced despite losing 9-2 to Bayern Munich on Matchday 1. (In fact, if they'd only lost 6-2, they'd have made it.) Celtic fans got to celebrate three home wins as the tournament's more middleweight clubs actually got to duke it out with other middleweights. Only two of 36 teams went winless, and only two had clinched a top-eight spot heading into the final matchday.
There were more fun moments for home crowds, and there was more limbo at the end. It's hard to ask for much more than that, right?
So, as we prepare for Friday's round-of-24 draw, let's take a quick look back at Matchday 8, the best players of the league phase overall and the teams most well-positioned for a title run.
Most impactful games of Matchday 8
There weren't many genuinely meaningless matches in the final matchday, but a few still stood out from the pack.
MANCHESTER CITY 3, CLUB BRUGGE 1
On Nov. 6, after a 4-1 loss to Sporting CP, Manchester City's odds of advancing to the knockout rounds, per Opta's power ratings, were still 99.4%. Three weeks later, after an equally disappointing 3-3 draw with Feyenoord (they led 3-0 in the 75th minute), their odds held at 97.2%. Hell, after a 2-0 loss to Juventus in December, they were still at 90.8%.
They had so many opportunities to right the ship in peaceful fashion but refused, collapsing late against PSG last week and finding themselves down 1-0 at halftime against Club Brugge on Wednesday. Then, in the 62nd minute, with an unfortunate own goal off of Joel Ordóñez, City finally saved themselves.
Manchester City complete the comeback pic.twitter.com/dwWRb2WbFq
CBS Sports Golazo (@CBSSportsGolazo) January 29, 2025
Savinho put the match away in the 77th minute, and City were officially safe.
After each of City's first two goals, Brugge took control of the pitch for a moment, and City looked wobbly. This is, after all, still a flawed squad that, in its most important match of the season, started a center back at left back (Josko Gvardiol, who has put in a lot of time on the left this season) and a one-time attacking midfielder at right back (Matheus Nunes, who is not a right back).
It worked well enough to fend off Belgium's second-best club at home, but Pep Guardiola has only a couple of weeks to work a few new signings into the mix and establish a level well enough to test either Real Madrid or Bayern Munich in what will be the headline pairing of the knockout playoff round.
VFB STUTTGART 1, PARIS SAINT-GERMAIN 4
The biggest do-or-die match of the day became one-sided in a hurry. PSG, who trailed Manchester City 2-0 last week before ripping off four second-half goals, scored another three in the first 35 minutes at VfB Stuttgart. Speedy Bradley Barcola scored once, then assisted the first of three Ousmane Dembélé goals, and PSG, 25th heading into Matchday 7, rolled all the way up to 15th.
Ousmane Dembélé hatty! pic.twitter.com/KR9kOujb8t
CBS Sports Golazo (@CBSSportsGolazo) January 29, 2025
This was obviously a pretty disappointing way for Stuttgart's campaign to end. Sebastian Hoeness' squad was all over the map in this competition, fighting well but losing 3-1 to Real Madrid in Matchday 1, stumbling onto their back foot for much of a 1-1 draw with Sparta Prague and getting absolutely stomped 5-1 at Red Star Belgrade in Matchday 5, but showing well against Real Madrid in an eventual loss at the Bernabeu and scoring a memorable 1-0 win at Juventus. They would have advanced with a draw, but that possibility vanished within about 20 minutes.
DINAMO ZAGREB 2, AC MILAN 1
SPORTING CP 1, BOLOGNA 1
AC Milan entered the final matchday sitting sixth in the giant Champions League table, while Dinamo Zagreb were 26th. A lovely early counterattacking display produced a goal for Dinamo's 21-year old Martin Baturina, and when Christian Pulisic tied the match for 10-man Milan early in the second half, Dinamo quickly responded via Marko Pjaca.
The loss was enough to drop Milan all the way to 13th in the table -- they'll face either Feyenoord or Juventus in the knockout playoff round -- and it sure seemed like it would be enough to push Dinamo into the knockouts as well. All they needed was for an inspired (and eliminated) Bologna to hold onto a late 1-0 lead in Lisbon against Sporting. Alas, 19-year-old Conrad Harder's 77th minute tap-in salvaged a draw and allowed Sporting to steal Dinamo's spot.
Conrad Harder's strike secures Sporting's playoff spot pic.twitter.com/3HszPW4nW2
CBS Sports Golazo (@CBSSportsGolazo) January 29, 2025
LILLE 6, FEYENOORD 1
ASTON VILLA 4, CELTIC 2
The battle for the final spots in the top eight were absolutely fierce. Here are the teams that finished sixth through 12th.
Borussia Dortmund, Real Madrid and Bayern Munich all won comfortably and were positioning themselves to take advantage of a slip from either Lille or Aston Villa. (Bayer Leverkusen was comfortably favored against Sparta Prague and won comfortably.) But after watching a 2-0 lead disappear in three minutes thanks to a pair of Adam Idah goals for Celtic, Villa responded with methodical domination. Celtic managed only two shot attempts in the final 50 minutes, while Villa attempted 13 second-half shots, went ahead in the 60th minute thanks to Ollie Watkins, and then put the match away with Morgan Rogers' third goal of the evening.
There was no slip-up in Birmingham, and there was really no stumble in Lille. After Lille and Feyenoord traded goals in the opening 15 minutes, Lille laid the hammer down with a combination of brilliant finishes and Feyenoord miscues. Four different Lille players scored, including Jonathan David, and they got a pair of own goals from Gernot Trauner as well.
The final score was rather misleading -- Lille attempted 14 shots worth 1.2 xG, and pulling six goals from that was highly improbable. But they have ruthlessly exploited opponents' mistakes this whole tournament. They earned their bye, and they landed in what might be the friendliest portion of the draw.
BARCELONA 2, ATALANTA 2
This one was almost impactful. A Barca win would have clinched the top spot in the table -- it wouldn't have benefited them in any way as far as the draw is concerned, but would have felt like a pretty symbolic victory after recent seasons' struggles in the Champions League. Meanwhile, an Atalanta win would have salvaged a top-eight spot for a team with absolute top-eight upside.
In the end, we got one of the only draws of the day.
Barca seized control twice, Atalanta responded twice with vigor, and Barca couldn't find a late winner despite creating some decent chances. Fun match.
Best XI of the league phase
With new January registrations on the way following the end of the winter transfer window, some of the teams in the knockout playoff round could look pretty different moving forward (hello, Manchester City), but let's quickly commemorate the best players of this strange league phase journey.
Bayern and PSG were each a bit disappointing, but both had multiple starters on the league phase XI. Liverpool was comfortably the best team, but really only had one player for the list. (Oh, and because history belongs to the victors, we'll list only players from teams that made the knockout playoff round.)
GK: EMI MARTINEZ, ASTON VILLA. The ever-quirky 32-year-old was second among goalkeepers with 4.4 goals prevented (calculated by comparing the postshot xG value of opponents' shots on goal to actual goals allowed), and he was one of the better ball progressors among Champions League goalkeepers too, leading the field with 58 progressive carries and ranking second with 380 overall touches.
Backup: Lucas Chevalier, Lille
RB: ACHRAF HAKIMI, PSG. He's just the best right back in the world, and he proves it pretty frequently. There were more successful right backs than left backs in this competition, and it didn't matter -- name the statistical category, and Hakimi probably ranked first in it: assists (3), chances created (21), shots on goal (8), pass attempts (578) and completions (510), touches (836), progressive carries (91), progressive passes (57), even successful 1v1s in the box (4). He's basically a full-fledged right winger in possession ... but he also ranked second among right backs in defensive interventions (91). A fire starter and fire fighter.
Backup: Marcos Llorente, Atletico Madrid
CB: OLIVIER BOSCAGLI, PSV EINDHOVEN; STEFAN DE VRIJ, INTER. Considering PSV allowed at least two goals in four of their eight matches, we're not really putting Boscagli on here for his defensive work. We're putting him on here because defenders are also the first prong of the attack, and no center back was better in that role: He created seven chances (first among CBs), attempted seven shots (third), and completed 111 progressive passes (third) and 96 progressive carries (fourth). The plus-1.4 expected point value added (xPVA) from his on-ball actions was first as well.
De Vrij? He's on here because of his defensive work -- more specifically, his team's defensive work. Inter allowed one goal -- one goal! -- in eight matches, easily leading the league phase in both that category and xG allowed per shot. Goalkeeper Yann Sommer did excellent work between the posts, but Inter were also collectively brilliant at preventing good opportunities.
(Red denotes no goal, green denotes goal)
Even when opponents worked the ball into the box, there was almost always a body between the ball and the goal, and xG figures (represented by the size of the circles above) remained low. Each of the trio of De Vrij, Alessandro Bastoni and Benjamin Pavard were sound, but we'll give De Vrij the nod because he also ranked first on the team in defensive interventions and second in combined progressive carries and passes (behind only Bastoni).
Backups: Brendan Chardonnet, Brest; Nicolás Otamendi, Benfica
LB: NUNO MENDES, PSG. There haven't been many genuine standout leftbacks in this competition -- even stalwarts like Bayern's Alphonso Davies and AC Milan's Theo Hernández didn't really light the world afire. But Mendes was steady and strong on both ends, scoring once and ranking fifth among left backs with 82 defensive interventions, and no left back in the world progresses the ball better: He was first in progressive carries (79 -- only Davies also had more than 62) and first in progressive passes (158 -- only Davies and City's Josko Gvardiol also had more than 100).
Backups: Alphonso Davies, Bayern Munich
DM: JOSHUA KIMMICH, BAYERN MUNICH. His future at Bayern appears uncertain at the moment, but the 29-year-old remains one hell of a metronome. No one in the league phase had the ball at his feet more than Kimmich, who led the competition in touches (895), pass attempts (748) and pass completions (689), and he was also fifth in progressive passes (109) and, for good measure, second in ball recoveries (48). Pitching in three assists (seventh) from 22 chances created (third) was just showing off.
Backup: Youri Tielemans, Aston Villa
Gab Marcotti and Julien Laurens debate whether the new Champions League format has improved the competition.
CM: MALIK TILLMAN, PSV EINDHOVEN. The 22-year-old American has been one of the breakout stars of the competition. He combined three goals -- including two during a mad, late (and vital) comeback against Shakhtar Donetsk -- with two assists from 21 chances created, and he would have also been on a Try Stuff XI list. He won 64% of his one-on-ones, while drawing five fouls in the attacking third. After a slow start, PSV advanced with four wins from their past five matches, and Tillman was a major catalyst in that.
Backup: Davide Zappacosta, Atalanta (more of a left midfielder, but still)
AM: JAMAL MUSIALA, BAYERN MUNICH. As I was putting this list together, I started to think American Christian Pulisic (AC Milan) might also make the team alongside Tillman. Then I compared his stats to Musiala. Both had five combined goals and assists -- Pulisic had four and one respectively, while Musiala had two and three -- but like Hakimi, Musiala is almost too statistically dominant to have any competition at this position. He matched Pulisic's goal creation prowess while playing a far greater role in buildup play: He had 66 progressive carries to Pulisic's 45, 16 successful one-on-ones to Pulisic's seven and even 50 defensive interventions to Pulisic's 24. Musiala is just incredible. And he hasn't turned 22 yet.
Backup: Christian Pulisic, AC Milan
RW: MOHAMED SALAH, LIVERPOOL. Liverpool's league phase story was one of controlled brilliance. They were clearly the best team in this phase, outscoring opponents 15-2 with seven wins in their first seven matches before giving backups a run on Wednesday (and damn near taking a point against PSV while doing so). Fourteen different Reds contributed at least one goal or assist over eight matches, but no one does controlled brilliance like Salah, who, even while sitting during the last match and playing only 602 of 720 minutes, led all Champions League right wingers with seven combined goals and assists. Among all positions, only Atalanta's Charles De Ketelaere topped Salah's four assists, and he could have done even more had his teammates not been contributing so dang much, too!
Backup: Michael Olise, Bayern Munich
CF: SERHOU GUIRASSY, BORUSSIA DORTMUND. So much of being a great striker boils down to (A) finding good opportunities and (B) putting those opportunities in the net. We overvalue (B) as compared to (A) at times, but both are vitally important, and no one has done a better job of both (A) and (B) than Guirassy thus far. Including four penalty attempts, he created (or had created for him) eight shots worth more than 0.3 xG during BVB's run to 10th place. He put seven of them in the net, including all four pens, and of his 23 total shot attempts in the league phase, he put 15 of them on goal and six in the net.
ELEVEN(!) #UCL goal contributions for Serhou Guirassy so far this season pic.twitter.com/i34NqSZxXO
CBS Sports Golazo (@CBSSportsGolazo) January 29, 2025
Barca's Robert Lewandowski was equally lethal in this department, but I'm giving the edge to Guirassy both because he also contributed a bit more in the ball progression department and because he didn't have Raphinha and Yamal on either side of him.
Backup: Robert Lewandowski, Barcelona
Left winger: Raphinha, Barcelona. He honestly might be the MVP of the competition thus far. Raphinha led the league phase with 12 combined goals and assists; he had eight of the former (including a hat trick in a huge 4-1 win over Bayern) and four of the latter (including two against Atalanta on Wednesday). He was the best left winger of the league phase -- despite pretty stiff competition from Vinícius Júnior and Florian Wirtz -- and against Young Boys, he switched to more of a central role and came up with a goal and assist from there.
Barça's overall form has teetered a bit in all competitions as the patented Hansi Flick high defensive line has grown a bit more easy to exploit, but even if a game turns into an all-attack track meet, Barca can still win quite a few more matches in this competition thanks to the exploits of Raphinha, Lamine Yamal and Robert Lewandowski.
Backup: Vinicius Junior, Real Madrid or Florian Wirtz, Bayer Leverkusen
So who wins this thing?
This year's knockout rounds are an interesting combination of American-style seeding with European-style random draws. In a strictly-seeded 24-team, for instance, the No. 1 seed would play the winner of No. 16 vs. No. 17 in the round of 16, while No. 8 plays the winner of No. 9 vs. No. 24.
To blur the picture a bit, soccer-style, Nos. 1/2, 3/4, 5/6, et cetera, are interchangeable. The bracket will clear itself up a bit after Friday's knockout playoff round draw, but at this exact moment, all we know is the batches of potential opponents.
Regardless, this is already a potentially fascinating draw. We know that Manchester City will play either Bayern or Real Madrid in the first round -- put another way, one of Real Madrid or Bayern will play City while the other plays Celtic -- and at most, only two of those three royal teams will advance to the round of 16. Meanwhile, we also know that two teams from a fun batch of Atalanta, Aston Villa, Borussia Dortmund, Club Brugge, Lille and Sporting CP will make the quarterfinals.
Obviously, City vs. Bayern/Real Madrid will be the headliner of the first knockout round, but there are some potentially fun intraleague matchups such as Milan vs. Juventus, Feyenoord vs. PSV and PSG vs. either Monaco or Brest on the board.
PSG's recent knockout round history suggests it would be rather apt if they were upset early on, but a win and a round-of-16 matchup against Liverpool or (especially) Barcelona would be dynamite as well. And I'm going to lap up nearly any combination of matchups from the Lille/Villa sections of the draw: the home crowds will be absolutely rocking for any of Villa, BVB, Lille, Sporting or Atalanta, especially with their clubs facing major opportunities for a big run.
That's enough chit chat, though. Who's actually going to win this thing?
According to ESPN BET, we basically have five primary favorites: Liverpool, Barcelona, Arsenal and whoever doesn't draw Manchester City in the knockout playoff round.
The odds for Real Madrid and Bayern should shift a bit after Friday's draw tells us which will face City, though Real Madrid's current torrid form should make them a solid favorite regardless. If they avoid an upset, PSG loom as a potential bracket landmine for either Liverpool or Barca, too, though we won't know which until the draw before the round of 16.
The main story at this stage is, even with Liverpool's incredible current form, no one is really a favorite just yet. But just for grins, here's how I predict things would play out if I were given complete control over who draws who in the bracket.
KNOCKOUT PLAYOFF ROUND PICKS
Benfica over Brest
Borussia Dortmund over Club Brugge
Bayern Munich over Celtic
PSV Eindhoven over Feyenoord
AC Milan over Juventus
Real Madrid over Manchester City
Atalanta over Sporting CP
PSG over Monaco
ROUND OF 16 PICKS
Liverpool over Benfica
Aston Villa over Borussia Dortmund
Bayer Leverkusen over Bayern Munich
Inter Milan over PSV Eindhoven
Arsenal over AC Milan
Real Madrid over Atletico Madrid
Atalanta over Lille
PSG over Barcelona
QUARTERFINAL PICKS
Liverpool over Aston Villa
Bayer Leverkusen over Inter Milan
Real Madrid over Arsenal
Atalanta over PSG
SEMIFINAL PICKS
Liverpool over Bayer Leverkusen
Real Madrid over Atalanta
FINAL PICK
Liverpool over Real Madrid
Bask in these perfect predictions until Friday's draw messes up all the matchups.
Inglis soaks in dream debut as Australia's batting options blossom

On day two of the series opener against Sri Lanka, Inglis became the first Australian in a decade to score a century on Test debut, his 102 from 94 balls helping Australia to an imperious 654 for 6 declared.
It had been a tremendous debut years in the making for Inglis, a 55-time white-ball international routinely stuck behind wicketkeeper Alex Carey for Test opportunities.
But a strong start to the Sheffield Shield summer increased the 29-year-old's chances of being called up as a specialist batter for the two-match series in Galle. When he heard a knock on his hotel room earlier this week, Inglis knew the wait was finally over.
"I thought, 'This could be 'Dod' [selector Tony Dodemaide], I think the cleaners have already been'," he explained at stumps on Thursday. "[Partner] Megan was in the room with [son] Oscar and I went out into the hallway and he told me. I ran in like a kid on Christmas morning to Megan and told her the good news. It was nice."
Walking down the wicket, Inglis embraced batting partner Carey, who has had a box seat to the West Australian's long journey for a first cap. "It was nice to share that moment with him," Inglis said.
A member of the ODI team that won the 2023 World Cup in India, Inglis looked comfortable in the conditions from the outset. He notably struck Jeffrey Vandersay for four to mid-on on the first ball he faced, unfazed that the legspinner had trapped legendary Steven Smith (141) lbw the previous delivery.
"I just tried to be really proactive and put the bowlers under pressure when I could and tried to get down the other end," Inglis said.
His promotion to the XI had not been without controversy, given it came at the expense of star teenager Konstas - dropped to allow Travis Head to move to the top of the order. But Inglis has now given selectors a headache, with Head likely to slot back to No. 5 in home conditions and Konstas vying for a recall at the top.
For now, he just seems content to take the moment in. "I'm just really happy, it probably hasn't sunk in yet," he said.
BBL watches Hundred sales process amid 'shifting' landscape

Australian cricket is watching the ECB's introduction of private investment into the Hundred with interest as the Big Bash League looks to "stay ahead of the game" following a successful 2024/25 season.
"The BBL has been successful almost from the very beginning," Dobson said. "It has been able to deliver a really strong product and return to Australian cricket, which has meant that the model we have has been really successful - hence why there has been limited momentum in changing that model historically, because it's been so strong.
"The world's shifting, and we're always looking at other leagues and other models around the world to make sure we still have the right one for us Every part of the global game is evolving really quickly and we learn bits from everyone. The process that the ECB is going through with the Hundred looks like an interesting one - it'll be fascinating to see how that unfolds."
Dobson travelled to the UK to watch several games of the Hundred's 2023 season and has kept close tabs on the competition's first four seasons. "We can and do learn from the Hundred around continuing to innovate, in the way that the Hundred was prepared to try something different," he said. "We have plenty to learn from each other.
"Both leagues have that philosophy of continuing to be fan-first. From the outside looking in, it appears that they've taken a lot of the BBL's DNA - the colour, fun, new audiences, new brands - and have created a product that seems to have connected quite strongly with the fanbase, and is bringing new fans into the game."
CA's decision to expand the BBL from 43 games to 59 (and later 61) from 2018/19 until 2022/23 brought several challenges, with attendances and TV viewership suffering. But since returning to a shorter window last season - squeezing into the school holidays - it has managed to hold its own through a "quality over quantity" approach, despite clashes with the ILT20 and SA20.
"For the past three or four years, we've been building the competition back after some challenging years through Covid and otherwise," Dobson said. "It's not until the last 12 months where we've had the momentum to be able to look at the future I wouldn't comment on any specific opportunities, but the world's moving pretty fast and it's important that we stay ahead of the game."
The availability of the world's best players - both from Australia and elsewhere - remains a sticking point for the BBL, with only three out of six overseas spots filled in Monday's final and Test series against India and Sri Lanka at either end of the season. But Dobson believes that the player pool remains healthy, with competitive top-end salaries of AUD$420,000.
"The global landscape is moving really fast," he said. "We hear a lot from players that playing in front of big crowds in iconic stadiums with great wickets and facilities is still really important, so we feel like we're in a good position on that front The other leagues around our window have created some interesting challenges, we feel like we are in pretty good shape.
"Guys like Chris Jordan for the Hurricanes and Sam Billings for the [Sydney] Thunder have become really engaged in their clubs. Combining that with the iconic players in our competition - whether that's Glenn Maxwell, or increasingly Mitch Owen - and then when we get a glimpse of Steve Smith, or David Warner our strength is the mix of all those player groups."
"It's a great story for us," Dobson said. "I mean that not just individually for Mitch and the Hurricanes, but also, it's a really strong signpost for us on the maturity and evolution of our competition, where we now have kids that have grown up supporting their BBL team, and we're old enough for those kids to see their way through to play - and win - for that team.
"We see it in other codes around the world - whether that's football or other sports - where you want to play for the team you grew up supporting Once you get through 14 seasons, you start to get kids coming through who grew up barracking for and supporting their BBL team, evolving from young fans into opening batters. That's a really cool place for us to be."
The BBL will again overlap with a major series next summer, with Australia's Test players unlikely to be available until the second half of the season following the Ashes. And while the majority of boards now reserve a space for their short-form leagues in their international calendar, Dobson insisted that the BBL works best when it operates "in harmony" with headline Test series, allowing cricket to capitalise on its window in the Australian sporting calendar.
"Test cricket is still the pinnacle for our fans and our players," he said. "For the BBL to run alongside that with its own offering and its own strengths is still the right model for us There's always talk about whether the BBL and the Test season should be separated to allow more player availability, but there's also an element where those two things can work in harmony to create a really strong offering."
Matt Roller is an assistant editor at ESPNcricinfo. @mroller98
Owen earns SA20 deal on the back of BBL heroics

Owen's pressure-laden performance was widely expected to pique the interest of T20 clubs around the world, including the IPL. The 23-year-old will have to wait longer to find out if he will pocket a life-changing sum as a late call-up for the IPL.
League leaders Paarl and second-placed MI Cape Town, who have Kagiso Rabada, Trent Boult and Rashid Khan in their squad, will square off in next week's qualifier final.
Ricky Ponting was among the good judges to lavish Owen with praise after his eye-catching knock in the BBL final. "There's not many players in the world that can do that," Ponting told AAP.
Ponting noted discussion of Owen representing Australia in next year's T20 World Cup was "inevitable".
Matthew Wade said Owen "can be anything", adding "no stage really worries him too much".