Canucks rally to end 11-game losing streak with 4-3 win over Capitals

VANCOUVER, British Columbia (AP) — Brock Boeser had a goal and an assist as the Vancouver Canucks erased an early-two goal deficit and held on to end their 11-game losing streak with a 4-3 win over the Washington Capitals on Wednesday night.

Drew O'Connor, Evander Kane and Filip Hronek also scored goals while Jake DeBrusk and David Kampf added two assists each for the Canucks, who won for the first time since Dec. 29 and won at home for the first time since Dec. 6.

Kevin Lankinen made 29 stops.

Dylan Strome and Justin Sourdif scored power-play goals a little over a minute apart in the first period to give Washington a 2-0 lead. But Boeser and Kane knotted it at 2 after one.

Strome scored his second of the game with 3:23 to play to make it 4-3. He and Sourdif also had assists while Logan Thompson had 21 saves for the Capitals, who have lost four games in a row and five of their last six.

O'Connor and Hronek scored in the second period as Vancouver scored four unanswered.

Capitals: Are at Calgary on Friday night.

Canucks: Host New Jersey on Friday night.

AP NHL:https://apnews.com/hub/nhl

Canucks rally to end 11-game losing streak with 4-3 win over Capitals

VANCOUVER, British Columbia (AP) — Brock Boeser had a goal and an assist as the Vancouver Canucks erased an early-two goa...
Former No. 1 Plíšková faces stumbling block in comeback: Australian Open champion Keys

Karolína Plíšková is making a comeback, and the tennis world's former No. 1-ranked woman is at the Australian Open and doing it the hard way.

Plíšková is coming off surgery on her left ankle following an injury, played only three matches last year after much longer than expected recovery, and now she's preparing for a third-round match against defending Australian Open championMadison Keys.

She defeated another American, 2017 U.S. Open winner Sloane Stephens, in the first round. Then she got by 23-year-old Indonesian Janice Tjen 6-4, 6-4 on Thursday to set up the match with Keys.

"It wasn't easy," Plíšková said of the victory playing an opponent she had not faced before.

Now comes the defending champion.

"I mean, looking forward to that," said Plíšková, who is into the third round of a major for the first time since the 2023 Australian Open. She recalled facing Keys a few years ago at a smaller tournament in Australia.

"So of course, a lot of things have changed," she said. "She won the Australian Open here last year. I was away for some time."

Plíšková was the world's No. 1 ranked player in 2017, and was the losing finalist at Wimbledon in 2021 and at the U.S. Open in 2016. She also reached two other Grand Slam semifinals — the French Open in 2017 and Australia in 2019.

Surgery following the 2024 U.S. Open has slowed her career. Now it's about rebuilding confidence and getting competition. Her ranking plummetted to 1,057 because of all the missed tournaments, and she's competing at Melbourne Park on a protected ranking.

"After such a long injury, you just hope to have some matches," she said. "Sometimes you just don't know. You can come to a big tournament and you can have one of the top seeds in the first round."

"It helped," she added, "that I didn't have any of that. ... I think matches always help, just the confidence of playing matches and making the decisions."

The resume is there. But now her tennis must be ready for Keys, who defeated fellow American Ashlyn Krueger 6-1, 7-5 on Thursday.

"I will face the top seed now," Plíšková said, "but that's just like any third round. There is nobody really easy. ... She's going to be the favorite here. So I can only surprise, but let's see. I have my weapons and I think it can be a good match."

More AP tennis:https://apnews.com/hub/tennis

Former No. 1 Plíšková faces stumbling block in comeback: Australian Open champion Keys

Karolína Plíšková is making a comeback, and the tennis world's former No. 1-ranked woman is at the Australian Open an...
Premier League: Man City spends $500M in a year but flaws remain in bid to be best in England

Manchester City has spent more than $500 million over the past 12 months to overhaul an aging squad in a bid to regain the team's status as the best in England.

Associated Press Manchester City's head coach Pep Guardiola attends a press conference in Bodo, Norway, Monday, Jan. 19, 2025, ahead the Champions League soccer match against Bodø/Glimt on Tuesday. (Fredrik Varfjell/NTB Scanpix via AP) Manchester City's Erling Haaland reacts during the English Premier League soccer match between Manchester United and Manchester City in Manchester, England, Saturday, Jan. 17, 2026. (AP Photo/Dave Thompson) Chelsea's Enzo Fernandez, left, and Aston Villa's Boubacar Kamara in action during the English Premier League soccer match between Chelsea and Aston Villa in London, Saturday Dec. 27, 2025. (Adam Davy/PA via AP) Everton's Jack Grealish celebrates after the English Premier League soccer match between Aston Villa and Everton in Birmingham, Sunday, Jan. 18, 2026.(AP Photo/Dave Shopland)

Norway Champions League Soccer

On current evidence, it won't be a quick fix.

A2-0 derby loss at Manchester Unitedon Saturday was followed by a surprising3-1 defeat at Bodø/Glimtin the Champions League on Tuesday. Both matches exposed the deficiencies in City's squad despite the club's remarkable spending spree that has continued in January with the arrival ofAntoine SemenyoandMarc Guehi.

Sure, injuries aren't helping. Pep Guardiola has, for example, been robbed of his entire first-choice defense, with center backs Ruben Dias, Josko Gvardiol and John Stones currently injured.

Yet, there are still flaws.

There's still no real backup to striker Erling Haaland, who might be showing the effects of barely missing a game. He has scored one goal in his last eight matches — and that was a penalty.

Despite all the arrivals, City hasn't signed a right back to replace Kyle Walker so has been relying on midfielder Matheus Nunes to fill in there. Nunes has done a good job — he is one of City's most improved players — but is unlikely to be the long-term solution.

Guardiola's decision to play virtually the same team for the final weeks of 2025 also highlighted his lack of faith in his back-ups, some of whom — like Omar Marmoush and Rayan Ait-Nouri, for example — were bought as part of the expensive rebuild.

It all means City's home match against a last-place Wolverhampton team with just one win all season in the Premier League is no longer a gimme. How could it be given City's performances over the last week that might rank as among the worst in Guardiola's decade at the club?

While City has won just two of its last seven matches in all competitions, Wolves is improving and unbeaten in its last five matches.

City starts the league's 23rd round of games in second place and seven points behind Arsenal, which — in drawing its last two league games against Liverpool and Nottingham Forest — has failed to take full advantage of City's recent issues.

Key matchups

On Sunday, Arsenal hosts Manchester United, which will look to back up its impressive performance against City and is again likely to play on the counterattack at Emirates Stadium.

Third-place Aston Villa, which is level on points with Man City, travels to Newcastle.

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Liverpool is seven points behind City and Villa in fourth place ahead of a trip to Bournemouth.

Players to watch

Because of Man City's defensive crisis, Marc Guehi is set to be selected for his debut against Wolves. Max Alleyne, a 20-year-old center back brought back from a loan spell at second-tier Watford, should make way.

Arsenal manager Mikel Arteta must decide who to play up front out of fit-again Gabriel Jesus and summer signing Viktor Gyokeres, who has been the starting striker so far this season, against United. Both scored inthe Champions League win over Inter Milanon Tuesday.

Out of action

Aston Villa's unlikely title ambitions — or even its attempts to qualify for the Champions League — have been hit by a knee injury to Boubacar Kamara that could keep the defensive midfielder out for the rest of the season.

The France international is an unsung star for Villa, which badly missed Kamara when he tore his ACL in February 2024, keeping him out for eight months and forcing him to miss the European Championship.

Everton wingerJack Grealishis being assessed because of a foot injury that could reportedly keep him out for three months, which would be a blow to his hopes of getting back in the England squad ahead of theWorld Cup.

Off the field

There was somerespite for Tottenham manager Thomas Frankthis week with a win over Borussia Dortmund in the Champions League.

Before that, fans had expressed their unhappiness with Frank by taunting him with songs calling for his departure during a 2-1 loss to West Ham in the league last weekend.

Losing at next-to-last Burnley on Saturday would likely revive complaints about the Danish coach, who has only been in charge for seven months but has been criticized for his pragmatic tactics.

AP soccer:https://apnews.com/hub/soccer

Premier League: Man City spends $500M in a year but flaws remain in bid to be best in England

Manchester City has spent more than $500 million over the past 12 months to overhaul an aging squad in a bid to regain th...
Sundance first look: Chris Pine and Jenny Slate in the delicate romantic drama 'Carousel'

PARK CITY, Utah (AP) —Chris Pinegets a lot of scripts sent his way, but when Rachel Lambert's "Carousel" landed on his proverbial desk it was like he'd stumbled on something from a different filmmaking era. In Lambert's lyrical prose was a story that, to him, feltvery Robert Redford,very "Ordinary People."

"My favorite word for this film is quotidian," Pine said in a recent interview with The Associated Press. "It's a film in which nothing happens and yet everything happens."

It's fitting then that "Carousel" is having its world premiere Thursday at theSundance Film Festival,where it is seeking distribution. The film is a story about love in all its messy incarnations, centered on a single father in Cleveland, Ohio, whose small medical practice is struggling, whose divorce is complicated and whose teenage daughter (Abby Ryder Fortson) is slipping into depression when his high school girlfriend (Jenny Slate) comes back to town and they start up again.

Pine felt himself leaning into the script, wanting to know more about the characters and the filmmaker behind it. After watching Lambert's previous film, "Sometimes I Think About Dying," he saw a filmmaker whose cinematic vision was so unique, so distinctly her own that he joined "Carousel" not just as the star but a producer as well.

A homegrown movie, shot on film

Lambert had admired Pine from afar for years, for his intelligence and sensitivity on screen, and saw potential for him in the part of Noah.

"There's a rareness to him that I don't see very often in performers," Lambert said. "He reminds me of Jimmy Stewart or Cary Grant, these sort of towers of performers."

The actual experience of it turned out to be more special than she could have dreamed. Yes, he showed up as an actor, generous and receptive, but he also became a protector of sorts as well. Knowing how much Lambert wanted to shoot both in America and on film, two relatively expensive dreams for an indie, he made his own participation contingent on celluloid.

"It's an enormous act that I think about a lot," Lambert said. "There are very few films shot in America and there are very few films shot on film … it lends a kind of extra emotional layer to the viewing experience."

For Lambert, shooting on film was an act of preservation. This was a story that she dreamed up during COVID lockdowns at her childhood home, a location she also used in "Carousel." The homespun feeling of it added a texture and intimacy to the environment, whether it was using her mom's frozen fruit as a prop or literally chopping down a tree in the backyard, as Slate's character Rebecca does at one point.

"You just plunk right into whatever that closeness or intimacy is," Slate said.

A very good (second) first kiss

Chemistry is always a gamble, especially in indies where there's never enough time or money, but Lambert was blown away by just how well Pine and Slate worked out as these two characters attempting to start up again after many years apart.

"We just had an immediate affinity for one another," Pine said. "Jenny is so smart, and I'm sort of a lover of smart people, so immediately she had me. And she likes to laugh and she makes me giggle. So we just had a really, really easy time getting to know one another."

While actors can wax poetic about how much they like and respect one another, ultimately it's what's on screen that counts. Lambert remembered getting chills (the good kind) when shooting Rebecca and Noah's second first kiss.

"Isn't it so good to have kissing on screen," Slate said. "Shooting that scene felt to me like it was in slow motion. It felt like such a beautiful thing to enact, really. But I mean, also that's something that you get with another actor who's really, really focused on landing it just right."

Making a film about love, and America

Of course, love is never as simple as it is in the movies, and Lambert wanted to reflect that in "Carousel." At its heart there is a central romantic love story, but there are other love stories refracted throughout, through their families and professions. None are obstacles that need to be overcome exactly, but they're part of the fabric of a life.

"There's this mantra I have already: 'Have you ever wanted something so much in life you do all you could not to get it? That's what Noah is going through," Lambert said. "He wants so much to love this person, Rebecca, to feel love, to feel renewed. But there's all these other repairs he must attend to and all these fears he must attend to. I wanted to take that seriously."

Lambert is hesitant to prescribe what an audience might feel when watching her film. For her actors, though, it meant one of the richer creative experiences of their careers, getting to hone their craft in a way that might really resonate with audiences and speak to the human experience.

"There's an earnest, heartfelt, non-jaded, non-cool investigation of the deepest fundamentals of what we humans do on the planet, which is, you know, how do we love?" Pine said. "There's no gimmick here. There's no hold up, no spaceship, no great effects. The metronome to this film is very paced and deliberate and it requires a patience to allow yourself to be drawn into the spectacle of human beings."

For Lambert, Sundance is a homecoming and the only place she'd have wanted it. "Carousel" is a proudly independent American film made on location, and Sundance is, whether inColoradoor Utah, the quintessential independent American film festival.

"What better platform does America provide for cinematic artists?" Lambert said. "This film is American and, quietly, has a lot to say about America right now, and where we're going."

For more coverage of the 2026 Sundance Film Festival, visit:https://apnews.com/hub/sundance-film-festival

Sundance first look: Chris Pine and Jenny Slate in the delicate romantic drama 'Carousel'

PARK CITY, Utah (AP) —Chris Pinegets a lot of scripts sent his way, but when Rachel Lambert's "Carousel" la...
backgrid Will Smith and Jada Pinkett Smith in Paris on Jan. 21, 2026.

NEED TO KNOW

  • Will Smith and Jada Pinkett Smith attended the debut of their son Jaden's menswear collection with Christian Louboutin at Paris Fashion Week

  • The proud parents were photographed together in matching monochromatic looks

  • Their appearance comes four months after they were photographed together twice in Los Angeles

Will SmithandJada Pinkett Smithare spending time together in the City of Lights.

On Wednesday, Jan. 21, Will, 57, and Jada, 54, were seen supporting their son,Jaden, at Men's Fall/Winter 2026 Paris Fashion Week. The 27-year-old actor made his debut with Christian Louboutin as thebrand's first men's creative director. Jaden's collection will be in stores in May 2026.

At the event, the Oscar winner andRed Table Talkhost coordinated in matching monochromatic black looks. TheKing Richardstar wore a thick black coat and a matching sweater, tucked into his black-and-gray tweed plaid trousers, and accessorized with black boots and light-lens sunglasses.

Meanwhile, theGirls Tripstar opted for a bolder look. She wore an oversized floor-length fur coat atop a studded black blouse and leather pants. Like Will, Jada wore a pair of sunglasses and also accessorized with silver hoop earrings and layered two silver necklaces.

In support of the fashion house's event, both wore Christian Louboutin shoes; Jada wore black Clou Noeud Spikes 150 Platform Slingback Peep Toe Pumps with silver studs, while Will wore black patent leather boots.

backgrid Will Smith and Jada Pinkett Smith

The parents have been spotted out together multiple times in recent months. For Jada's 54th birthday in September, theycelebratedover dinner in Beverly Hills. Weeks prior, the two actors were seenspending time together in Malibu.

They werelast seen together nearly a year earlier, in November 2024, after Jada and their children joined Will at theLos Angeles May 2024 premiereofBad Boys: Ride or Die.

Will and Jada met in 1994 on the set ofThe Fresh Prince of Bel-Air. They married in December 1997, and a year later, in July 1998, they welcomed their sonJaden Smith. They welcomed their daughter,Willow Smith, in October 2000. Will also shares son,Trey, 33, with his ex-wife,Sheree Zampino.

In 2023, Jada revealed theyseparated in 2016. Before Jada shared their relationship status, Will detailed in his 2021 eponymous memoir that there were moments in their marriage when they were "both miserable and clearly something had to change."

Jada told PEOPLE in October 2023, while she was promoting her memoir,Worthy, that they were "still figuring it out."

"We've been doing some really heavy-duty work together. We just got deep love for each other and we are going to figure out what that looks like for us," she added. "I'm going to be by his side … but also allow him to have to figure this out for himself."

MICHAEL TRAN/AFP via Getty Will Smith and Jada Pinkett Smith in Westwood, California, on November 30, 2022.

MICHAEL TRAN/AFP via Getty

That same month, sherevealedon Jay Shetty's podcast,On Purpose,that over the course of their marriage, "there have been several breakups."

In January 2025, a source close to the stars told PEOPLE that they "haven't completely severed ties," but thatthey are "living their own lives."

Another source said they "are still together," but as far as living together, they "have had separate homes for years."

Read the original article onPeople

Will Smith and Jada Pinkett Smith Step Out Together at Paris Fashion Week

NEED TO KNOW Will Smith and Jada Pinkett Smith attended the debut of their son Jaden's menswear collection with Christian Louboutin at...
Sundance kicks off in Utah with powerful premieres and emotional tributes to Robert Redford

PARK CITY, Utah (AP) —Robert Redfordliked to say that everybody has a story. He's not the only person who said it, but he is one of the few who did something to celebrate it, his daughter, Amy Redford, said Wednesday evening ahead of the Sundance Film Festival's opening day.

Thanks to her father's vision, the Sundance Institute he founded and its year-round programs have helped shape and nurture American independent film for the past 40 years. This year'sSundance Film Festivalis a grand goodbye party: It's the first without Redford following his death in September, and the last in Utah before the festivalrelocates to Boulder, Colorado.

"This is a festival of new beginnings and endings," his daughter said in an interview with The Associated Press. "I'm going to look around and drink it up and enjoy it and just not take anything for granted."

Robert Redford's legacy and Sundance's decades-long history in Utah are key themes of the 2026 festival, whichofficially begins Thursday morningwith over a dozen films premiering throughout the day.

By the time the dust has settled fromOscar nominations, the festival will already be in full swing with the world premieres of Amir Bar-Lev's documentary "The Last First: Winter K2" about the changing culture of extreme mountain climbing, Rachel Lambert's tender drama "Carousel," starring Chris Pine and Jenny Slate, and Judd Apatow's portrait of comedian Maria Bamford's mental health journey on the opening day list.

Also upcoming is David Alvarado's "American Pachuco: The Legend of Luis Valdez" about the legacy of the playwright and director, and Joanna Natasegara's "The Disciple," which delves into the stranger-than-fiction story of how Dutch-Moroccan record producer Cilvaringz found his way into the inner circle of the Wu-Tang Clan. "Too Many Cooks" creator Casper Kelly will also debut his midnight movie "Buddy," starring Cristin Milioti, about escaping a children's television show.

The Sundance Film Festival runs through Feb. 1.

For more coverage of the 2026 Sundance Film Festival, visit:https://apnews.com/hub/sundance-film-festival

Sundance kicks off in Utah with powerful premieres and emotional tributes to Robert Redford

PARK CITY, Utah (AP) —Robert Redfordliked to say that everybody has a story. He's not the only person who said it, bu...
North Carolina teen pleads guilty to killing 5 in 2022 shooting spree

A North Carolina teenager who killed five people, including his older brother and a police officer, in a2022 mass shootingin the state's capital pleaded guilty on Jan. 21 to murder and other charges.

Austin David Thompson, now 18, pleaded guilty to five counts of first-degree murder, two counts of attempted first-degree murder, two counts of assault with a deadly weapon, and one count of assault of an officer with a gun, court records show. The guilty plea came a day after Thompson's attorneys filed a written notice of intent in Wake County court.

"After lengthy discussions with his attorneys about how a trial would proceed, he has decided he wishes to save the community and the victims from as much additional infliction of trauma as possible," attorneys Kellie Mannette and Deonte' Thomas wrote in the notice.

In October 2022, Thompson went on a shooting spree in a residential neighborhood of Raleigh, North Carolina, before opening fire again along a walking trail, authorities said.Five people were killed, and two others were injured in the attack.

Thompson had been scheduled to go to trial for the murders in February. A judge set a sentencing hearing, which is expected to take several days, on Feb. 2, according to court records.

Since Thompson was 15 years old at the time of the shooting, he is not eligible for the death penalty. He faces a maximum sentence of life in prison without parole.

Uvalde shooting:Police officer acquitted in deadly 2022 Texas school shooting

What happened in the 2022 Raleigh shooting?

The hourslong shooting unfolded on Oct. 13, 2022, in a residential area northeast of downtown Raleigh, according to authorities. The shooting began at around 5 p.m. local time near the Neuse River Greenway Trail, a trail that runs through part of the city.

Thompson first fatally shot and stabbed his brother in their home before shooting four other people on the streets of Raleigh's Hedingham neighborhood, authorities said. He then fled toward a nearby walking trail, where he shot at two more people.

Thompson eluded law enforcement for hours — setting off a manhunt across a crime scene that stretched for 2 miles — before he was cornered in a shed, according to authorities. After a standoff, authorities said Thompson was taken into custody with what appeared to be a self-inflicted shot to the head and was in critical condition.

What we know:An Indiana judge and his wife were shot in their home.

"While the serious brain injury he suffered has made it such that Austin cannot explain why he committed this shooting, he has always accepted that he did this," Thompson's attorneys wrote in his notice of intent. "He recognizes the deep pain he has caused the victims' families as well as his own family."

The victims killed were identified as Thompson's brother, James Roger Thompson, 16; Raleigh police Officer Gabriel Torres, 29; Nicole Connors, 52; Mary Marshall, 34; and Susan Karnatz, 49. Torres was heading to work when the shooting occurred, authorities said.

Two people were injured, including another police officer and a 59-year-old woman, according to authorities.

In 2024, Thompson's father pleaded guilty to improperly storing a handgun that authorities said Thompson used in the shootings,CBS 17andABC 11reported at the time. He received a suspended sentence and probation.

Contributing: Jeanine Santucci and Claire Thornton, USA TODAY

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:North Carolina teen pleads guilty to killing 5 in 2022 shooting spree

North Carolina teen pleads guilty to killing 5 in 2022 shooting spree

A North Carolina teenager who killed five people, including his older brother and a police officer, in a2022 mass shootin...

 

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