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  • When the Flyers were hopeless, Travis Konecny promised boss Dan Hilferty they’d make the playoffs

    When the Flyers were hopeless, Travis Konecny promised boss Dan Hilferty they’d make the playoffs

    Flyers chief Dan Hilferty and his wife, Joan, traveled to Italy during the Olympics to take in the Winter Games, especially the hockey games, since three Flyers and coach Rick Tocchet were involved. Star winger Travis Konecny did not make Team Canada, but he made the trip anyway. There, he ran into Hilferty.

    After a little small talk, as they ended their conversation, Konecny grabbed Hilferty by the arm. He looked him dead in the eye and, quietly, told his boss’s boss:

    “You better believe.” Pause. “You better believe.”

    At the time, the Flyers hadn’t made the playoffs in five years and, according to one prediction site, had just a 3.8% chance of making the postseason.

    Three months later, they had surged into the playoffs, then they had beaten their archrival, in overtime, at home. Yet neither of these was Hilferty’s favorite moment of the season.

    Hilferty stood on the heights of Citizens Bank Park, a spring wind ruffling the ever-immaculate lapels of his bespoke, dark-blue suit, strong and confident and, then, suddenly, verklempt at the memory of a moment shared with some of his favorite people, including his boss.

    He’d been asked for his most memorable moments of the season his Flyers had just completed. His response was unexpected: The moments just after the team lost its fourth straight game and was swept out of the Stanley Cup playoffs, an overtime defeat to the Carolina Hurricanes in front of the home crowd at Xfinity Mobile Arena.

    Flyers fans cheered their team’s effort even after the season had ended.

    This ignominious sweep, the first in 15 years — this was his finest moment?

    “Yes,” he said.

    Why?

    “I go to the locker room after every game, win or lose. So, boom, [the Hurricanes] score, and I get up, go to the elevator, get off the elevator on the event level,“ Hilferty said. ”And I just see a sea of fans. A sea of fans on their feet. And then they start chanting, ‘Let’s go, Flyers!’ And you could see the players, like — their reaction is unreal.”

    That’s where Hilferty’s voice breaks. He’s 69, and he’s been around, a Jersey Shore kid made good: CEO of two health benefits organizations, a midlevel cog in the Pennsylvania government, a candidate for governor in the 1994 Democratic primary, chief of the group that brought the World Cup to Philly, and, for the last three years, he’s held his dream job: governor of the Flyers.

    The new Ed Snider. Connected to the club. Living and dying with every shift. Desperate for his hires to work out. Eager to see validated his oft-questioned decisions, from team president to GM to coach.

    And so, just before 9 p.m. on May 9, Hilferty found validation with the only folks who mattered: Flyers fans. Folks like him.

    Dan Hilferty (right), with team president Keith Jones in September, is part of a decision-making group that has pushed the right buttons of late.

    The scene was as unreal as it was un-Philadelphian. After the teams exchanged handshakes, Flyers players remained on the ice to skate around and wave their appreciation to whoever remained. Usually, it’s a couple of thousand. That night, it was 10 times that much.

    “I just felt — well, I never needed to feel vindicated,” Hilferty insisted. “But I was just so happy for the organization, so happy for the team, for Comcast Spectacor and Comcast.”

    Spectacor is the sports wing of Comcast, and Hilferty is CEO of Spectacor. Brian Roberts is the CEO of it all, and, that night, he was at Hilferty’s elbow. They live and die with the Flyers.

    “I mean, we talk every day,” Hilferty said. “He runs a huge company. He’s a huge fan.”

    After six years of amorphous corporate management in the wake of Snider’s death in 2016, Hilferty’s hands-on approach during the past three seasons of a painful rebuild has borne fruit.

    When he hired an inexperienced GM, Danny Brière, and his nonexperienced president, Keith Jones, it felt like the Flyers were in line for another generation of the nearsighted nepotism that has so badly hindered it so often in the 50 years since its run to three straight Stanley Cup Finals. That sense only increased with the hiring of coach Rick Tocchet, who, like Brière and Jones, is a revered Flyers alum.

    Those decisions could hardly have looked worse as the Flyers entered the Olympic break in February. Tocchet and unmotivated second-year star Matvei Michkov had been feuding for months, and the team had won just three of its last 15 games.

    But, during the 20-day break, Michkov got into shape, Tocchet changed coaching tack, some veterans got healthy and started playing better, goalie Dan Vladař caught fire, and the club added rookie winger Porter Martone, fresh off helping Michigan State reach the NCAA tournament. Not only did the Flyers make the playoffs, they upset the rival Penguins with a six-game, first-round win, in overtime, the sudden-death score coming from Cam York but set up by Michkov.

    Flyers head coach Rick Tocchet (center) received up-and-down play from Matvei Michkov (right).

    And yet this was not Hilferty’s favorite moment. The love after the loss was.

    “I have to say, it was nice to have kind of a public showing of that positive feeling,” Hilferty said. “What I’ve learned, whether it was running a business or doing this now, is that nothing’s perfect, but when you put four people in the room and have a long-range vision of where you want to go — I feel validated in that we’re through a phase of this effort, and we feel like the pieces are starting to fall into place for a long-term sustainable period of excellence.”

    That begins with Tocchet, a hard-nosed coach obsessed with teaching and largely uninterested in your feelings.

    “I couldn’t be more thrilled about Rick Tocchet, the spirit he brings to it,” Hilferty said.

    Even with Michkov?

    “Matvei needed a message,” Hilferty said. “Look, we’re behind him, but it takes two to tango. Everybody’s got to lean in. And although that was uncomfortable for Rick, and maybe uncomfortable for Matvei, I think it paid off in the end.”

    Is this a sea change for a young player?

    “My hope, and real belief, is that Matvei will come back as a different player next year,” Hilferty said.

    Brière recently traded backup goalie Sam Ersson, smallish defenseman Emil Andrae, and a third-round pick to the Maple Leafs for backup goalie Joseph Woll and biggish defenseman Simon Benoît. The draft comes this weekend.

    Since the Flyers’ decline, the Eagles have reached two Super Bowls, the Phillies have reached a World Series, and the Sixers consistently have made the playoffs with Hall of Fame-caliber players and coaches.

    Now, however, there is a buzz in Philadelphia about the Flyers that has been absent for nearly half a decade. Hilferty feels it.

    “We feel relevant again,” Hilferty said. “We feel really excited to be part of the winning ways of the city, but we’re not finished. I mean, our vision is to get to the top. I’m not going to hide from that.”

  • ⚽ Weather the storm | Sports Daily Newsletter

    ⚽ Weather the storm | Sports Daily Newsletter

    Despite a lengthy weather delay during Philadelphia’s World Cup match between France and Iraq on Monday, that didn’t stop folks from soaking in the festivities — even if it meant riding out the storm for about two hours.

    And once the game resumed, the performance on the pitch didn’t disappoint. France dominated Iraq, 3-0, with French star Kylian Mbappé tallying two goals.

    French supporters filled the area. Even though the rain washed out the FIFA Fan Festival, fans of Les Bleus spread out to different corners of the city to watch their side. Before the storm, Gov. Josh Shapiro checked out the sights and sounds at Lemon Hill Park.

    The city has certainly become soccer-infused this summer.

    Center City bars were packed Monday afternoon hours before the game, banners hung from City Hall, and the Broad Street Line carried fans to Philadelphia Stadium (aka Lincoln Financial Field). But 50 years ago, soccer was still finding its footing in Philadelphia. Now, the city’s World Cup love affair shows how far we’ve come.

    — Isabella DiAmore, @phillysport, sports.daily@inquirer.com.

    If someone forwarded you this email, sign up for free here.

    ❓With the group stage wrapping up, what are your thoughts on the World Cup — and any early predictions? Email us back for a chance to be featured in the newsletter.

    Preparing for draft night

    Texas forward Dailyn Swain is among the long list of players who have worked out for the Sixers, who will select at No. 22 in the 2026 NBA draft.

    Tonight is the first round of the NBA draft, and this year’s class is packed with top-level talent — AJ Dybantsa, Darryn Peterson, and Cam Boozer are all worthy of the No. 1 pick — as well as depth throughout the first round.

    The Sixers will start the Mike Gansey era with the 22nd pick, and the new president of basketball operations plans to make their selection based on a combination of best player available and fit.

    Also, Pennsauken’s Yaxel Lendeborg will likely be a first-round selection. The Michigan star had one of the most improbable rises to the draft. If it wasn’t for his mom, Yissel, Lendeborg would have never played Division I basketball, much less become a potential lottery pick.

    What we’re …

    👀 Watching: The 14-year-old Phillies fan who grabbed a Mets home run ball on Sunday and went viral for making a crafty swap.

    🏒 Learning: The Flyers announced their 2026-27 preseason schedule. Let’s look at who they will play in the four-game slate.

    🍻 Cheering: Jason Kelce’s sixth annual celebrity bartending fundraiser is returning to Ocean Drive in Sea Isle City this week.

    📖 Reading: Alexander Command feels a connection with the Flyers. But will he be there at No. 21 on draft day?

    Following: The next big question for the USMNT: Managing yellow cards in the World Cup group stage finale.

    Assessing the NFC East

    Jaxson Dart (left) did some good things as a rookie. Is he ready to take the next step and lead the Giants to consistent winning?

    The Eagles have won two straight NFC East titles and five in the last 10 years. They have dominated the division in recent memory, and there’s no reason to think 2026 will be any different, right?

    But things feel a little different. The Eagles had a transformative offseason, with the biggest change being that they no longer have their No. 1 weapon in wide receiver A.J. Brown.

    All the while, almost all of their NFC East foes took steps forward, at least on paper.

    Working alongside his dad

    Phillies general manager Preston Mattingly signs autographs for fans before a spring training game in March.

    For years, Don and Preston Mattingly were “in the same industry, but you’re light years apart.”

    So, they need not be reminded, especially on Father’s Day weekend, of the uniqueness as the first father-son manager-GM combination in baseball history.

    Last week, Preston Mattingly joined Phillies Extra, The Inquirer’s baseball podcast, to discuss what it’s like to work with his dad, Andrew Painter’s demotion, the state of the Phillies’ farm system, and preparing for the trade deadline.

    Ahead of Monday’s game against the Nationals, the Phillies called up Alan Rangel from triple-A Lehigh Valley, as a way to address their fifth spot in the rotation for the time being.

    Save for Brandon Marsh’s solo home run, the Phillies’ offense struggled in a rain-delayed 4-1 loss to the Nationals in Monday’s series opener in Washington.

    Villanova’s roster rebuild

    Villanova coach Kevin Willard says this season’s roster will “have so much more flexibility.”

    Villanova’s offseason had a clear objective: “We wanted to make sure that we just didn’t get manhandled the way we got manhandled last year against the top teams,” said Kevin Willard.

    Now with the roster set, the second-year coach believes he’s done just that, and with the signing of 7-foot-3 center Luigi Suigo, it has done more than raise the program’s expectations in the 2026-27 season.

    🧠 Trivia time

    Which of these sporting events recorded the largest attendance at Lincoln Financial Field?

    A) Temple vs. Notre Dame on Oct. 31, 2015

    B) Flyers vs. Penguins on Feb. 23, 2019, in the NHL Stadium Series

    C) Mexico vs. Jamaica on July 26, 2015, in the CONCACAF Gold Cup final

    D) Brazil vs. Haiti on June 19, 2026, in the group stage of the World Cup

    What you’re saying about Bryce Harper

    Bryce Harper raises his fingers after hitting a solo homer against the Mets on Sunday.

    We asked: Where does Bryce Harper rank in your eyes among all-time Phillies players? Among your responses:

    Harper is probably still behind Schmidt, Carlton and Robin Roberts for me. Harper needs more consistency when counts, i.e. the playoffs. — Tom G.

    Behind Mike Schmidt, Steve Carlton and Rich Ashburn. — Jim G.

    I think Bryce ranks among the best Phillies of my time. Too bad he had to spend 7 years with Washington before joining the Phillies for the last 8 years. He came as a right fielder but then after suffering the arm injury he almost flawlessly moved to 1st base. He does not match up with Mike Schmidt stat wise nor have the power of Dick Allen or Ryan Howard but definitely one of our best ever. I have of course never been in the clubhouse with our guys, but I have a feeling that he is the Phillies leader who has that unique gift of leadership. Who can ever forget his “Lets give them something to remember” to Kevin Long and then went up and smashed a home run to beat the Padres that sent the Phils to the World Series. — Everett S.

    In my mind, Bryce Harper is close to the top of the all time Phillies players. He has a .279 lifetime batting average, will eventually hit over 500 home runs (most likely), and is a two time MVP, hall of fame credentials. He is currently the face of the franchise and will be for a few years to come. His #3 will no doubt be added to the Phillies wall of fame in the future. — Tom E.

    We compiled today’s newsletter using reporting from Ryan Novozinsky, Kerith Gabriel, Matt Breen, Gina Mizell, Jeff Neiburg, Ariel Simpson, Jackie Spiegel, Gabriela Carroll, Lochlahn March, Scott Lauber, Owen Hewitt, and Jonathan Tannenwald.

    By submitting your written, visual, and/or audio contributions, you agree to The Inquirer’s Terms of Use, including the grant of rights in Section 10.

    Thanks for reading! Have yourself a wonderful Tuesday. Kerith will be back in your inbox tomorrow. — Bella

  • The Sixers start the Mike Gansey era with the 22nd pick. Here’s where we stand hours before draft night.

    The Sixers start the Mike Gansey era with the 22nd pick. Here’s where we stand hours before draft night.

    NEW YORK — Dailyn Swain posted a photo of the Philly skyline on his Instagram story last week.

    The Texas wing was in town for a predraft workout with the Sixers and “the city was alive,” Swain recalled, because his visit coincided with Friday’s World Cup match between Brazil and Haiti at Lincoln Financial Field.

    Swain has since joined several fellow first-round prospects at a luxury New York City hotel for the final stretch before being selected Tuesday night at Barclays Center. He is still among the possibilities to be chosen by the Sixers, who enter Tuesday with the 22nd overall pick in a loaded draft and new president of basketball operations Mike Gansey at the helm.

    “I’m very emotional,” Swain said. “I know once I hear my name, it’s going to be a surreal feeling … I’m trying to enjoy the moment.”

    This draft class is packed with top-level talent — AJ Dybantsa, Darryn Peterson, and Cam Boozer are all worthy of the No. 1 pick, experts say — as well as depth throughout the first round. That means interesting options should be available, at all position groups, if the Sixers remain at 22.

    It is the first roster-building move for Gansey, whom the Sixers hired earlier this month to oversee daily front-office operations for a team that finished seventh in the Eastern Conference standings, stormed back to upset the Boston Celtics in the playoffs’ first round, then were swept by the eventual NBA champion New York Knicks.

    Though Gansey joined the Sixers’ draft preparation late, he ran that process in his previous job as general manager for a Cleveland Cavaliers franchise that was scouting for this year’s 29th pick. When asked during his introductory news conference about his overall draft philosophy, Gansey said the Sixers will make their selection based on a combination of best player available and fit.

    Mike Gansey will handle his first big decisions as Sixers president of basketball operations during Tuesday’s draft.

    The Sixers held in-person workouts in Philly last Tuesday and Friday. Versatile Santa Clara forward Allen Graves and Duke sharpshooter Isaiah Evans confirmed Monday that they were among the participants, while a source confirmed to The Inquirer that Houston big man Chris Cenac Jr., also was in attendance. Physical forwards Koa Peat of Arizona and Zuby Ejiofor of St. John’s also were reportedly part of those workouts. Iowa guard Bennett Stirtz said Monday that he has had two interviews with the Sixers.

    So Monday became a quest to mine the tiniest tidbits from those prospects in media scrums. Evans said his workout with the Sixers was with Swain, and that current Sixers VJ Edgecombe and Justin Edwards also were in the gym. Graves praised the Sixers’ “amazing” facilities in Camden. Stirtz said that, while watching the playoffs, he recognized how he could “release pressure” off standout guards Tyrese Maxey and Edgecombe with his outside shooting.

    “I create space out there on the floor,” said Stirtz, who is projected to go a bit higher than 22nd. “Every team needs another ballhandler and shooter.”

    Gansey kept some continuity within the Sixers’ front office — including the recently promoted Jameer Nelson — that has executed successful recent drafts. It picked Maxey 21st in 2020, and Jared McCain 16th and Adem Bona in the second round in 2024. Even Paul Reed, Isaiah Joe, and Julian Champagne, who have gone on to succeed with other playoff teams, were either selected in the second round or signed as an undrafted free agent. In 2023, the Sixers traded the 23rd overall pick to the Memphis Grizzlies for guard DeAnthony Melton, a key role player for two seasons when healthy.

    “I’m excited to learn from them,” Gansey said of the remaining front office, “and, obviously, put my vision and put my imprint on the draft. … and try to get the best person and player for the Sixers.”

    As of Monday night, the Sixers do not have a pick in Wednesday’s second round. Yet what they do Tuesday will help dictate how they approach free agency, which begins the evening of June 30. Starting wing Kelly Oubre Jr., sixth man Quentin Grimes, and reserve big man Andre Drummond are all unrestricted free agents. And the Sixers have limited financial flexibility with Maxey, Joel Embiid, and Paul George on max contracts for multiple seasons.

    Sixers guards Tyrese Maxey and VJ Edgecombe are among a long list of recent draft successes for a team that didn’t draft well historically.

    For the prospects assembled Monday in New York City, however, the wait for their NBA destination is almost over. Michigan forward Yaxel Lendeborg, who spent his teenage years in Pennsauken and is projected to go somewhere in the middle of the first round, half-jokingly called these final hours “really, really awful.”

    “I’m feeling emotion in the book,” he said Monday. “But I’m getting very impatient, in a way. I want to know where I’m going.”

    The same likely could be said for the Sixers, now beginning the Gansey era with the 22nd overall pick.

  • Philadelphia’s World Cup love affair shows just how far we’ve come

    Philadelphia’s World Cup love affair shows just how far we’ve come

    Karl Wallenda walked across Veterans Stadium on a tightrope, dazzling a nearly sold-out crowd when he stopped halfway to do a headstand and unfurl American flags from the ends of his balancing pole.

    It was exactly what the more than 50,000 fans came to see between games of a Phillies doubleheader on Memorial Day 1976. And the show across the street, a soccer game featuring Pelé and other all-time greats — didn’t stand a chance against The Great Wallenda.

    Philadelphia has become soccer-infused this summer with six games of the World Cup at the sports complex Center City bars were packed Monday afternoon hours before France and Iraq played, banners hung from City Hall, the Broad Street Line carried fans to Lincoln Financial Field, and even the mayor was spotted last week buying soccer jerseys.

    The games are so massive that the Phillies had a rare Friday off last week because Brazil and Haiti were playing at what is temporarily called Philadelphia Stadium.

    But 50 years ago, soccer was still finding its footing in Philadelphia. And that’s why the eyes of the city were fixated above Veterans Stadium while Pelé, Italian superstar Giorgio Chinaglia, and Bobby Moore — the captain of the last English team to win the World Cup — were in a match across the street.

    The soccer icons played for Team America in the Bicentennial Cup against the English National Team at JFK Stadium in front of just 16,000 fans and a lot of empty bleachers.

    Play during the Bicentennial Cup between Team America and England before a sparse crowd at JFK Stadium in South Philadelphia on May 31, 1976.

    Philadelphia now has a professional team with staying power, local players on the U.S. team that have people dreaming this summer, and a stadium full of crazed fans. That was hard to imagine 50 years ago, when the gods of soccer passed through without much notice.

    “Jeez, 50 years,” said Bob Smith, a Trenton native and member of the National Soccer Hall of Fame who played for Team America against the British. “There’s no comparison. The game just grew, and the community grew. The spread of the game is just unbelievable.”

    Gateway to soccer

    Smith learned to play the game as a 9-year-old when an Irish neighbor in Trenton organized a recreation league. He played four-on-four for hours with his buddies and organized games against kids from neighboring towns. Today, the sport is played everywhere, but it was concentrated in the 1960s to neighborhoods in Trenton, just like in Philadelphia.

    Soccer was huge to those who knew it.

    And a mystery to those who didn’t.

    “We’d go to our high school field on weekends to train and see like 2,000 people in our football stadium,” Smith said. “We were freshmen in high school, and we knew exactly where we fit in the spectrum of sports. ‘Who are these guys running around with shorts on?’ But we just fell in love with it.”

    Smith was plucked as a teenager by Manfred Schellscheidt, the legendary coach who assembled an All-Star team with the best players in New Jersey. Schellscheidt brought the Jersey boys to his German hometown, where they beat every team they played. It was an unbelievable experience, Smith said, and it gave him and his buddies the confidence that they could do it.

    “I was like ‘Damn, I can do that,’” Smith said. “We felt like ‘we’re OK here.’”

    Bob Smith (left), a Trenton native, shown with soccer star Pelé (center) and Bob Rigby on Jan. 6, 1976.

    Smith played at Rider University before turning pro with the Philadelphia Atoms and helping them win the North American Soccer League championship as a rookie. The league didn’t pay the players enough for soccer to be a full-time gig, so he worked as a laborer at a construction site during the day and practiced in South Philly at night. But he was still a professional soccer player.

    “A lot of guys were schoolteachers,” Smith said.

    This U.S. team started nine players in their World Cup opener who are on professional teams overseas. Smith, who had 18 games for the U.S. team, played overseas in 1975, with Dundalk F.C. in Ireland. Unlike today’s players, Smith and Dave D’Errico — his buddy from New Jersey — didn’t get paid much. No team was looking then for an American player, Smith said.

    “When we got off the plane, a guy picked us up at the airport in Dublin,” Smith said. “We signed this five-quid-a-week contract. We stayed over top [of] this garage, and I pumped gas at night, making a quid an hour.

    “But we were in Ireland playing soccer. What the heck? We didn’t care. You were broke your entire career playing soccer. I never cared about what I made because it was a thrill of a lifetime.”

    ‘It was just wild’

    The starving artist returned to the U.S. after a year abroad and joined the New York Cosmos, which had become America’s traveling band of soccer stars. They had Pelé and Franz Beckenbauer on the field and Mick Jagger and Henry Kissinger in the dressing room after games.

    “The Cosmos years were like a circus,” Smith said. “It was just wild.”

    The NASL brought Pelé out of retirement in 1975 with the hope that the all-time great could spread the gospel of soccer through the country. Every Cosmos game felt like the opponent’s biggest game of the season.

    “It was always a show,” Smith said. “The expression with us was always, ‘We’re with him.’ There was a lot going on in restaurants and clubs and all that. We went to Denver and they rode him on a horse. There was so much marketing stuff, and he got pulled into an awful lot of stuff.

    “I felt sometimes that he was being pushed to sell the game to this country, and I think that was difficult to him. He just wanted to get on the field and play with the guys. Off the field, it was crazy with the commitments he had to fulfill. But he did it 100% with a great attitude. But it was tiring.”

    Pelé playing for Team America against England in the American Bicentennial Cup in 1976, played at JFK Stadium, which is where Xfinity Mobile Arena now stands in the sports complex.

    The 1976 Bicentennial Cup was another attempt to grow the game as Brazil, England, and Italy came to America for tuneups before qualification began for the 1978 World Cup. They played in Washington, New York, and Seattle before finishing in Philadelphia.

    The organizers knew that the U.S. national team wouldn’t be able to keep pace with the world powers, so they filled Team America with the stars of the NASL. That’s how Smith and Delaware County’s Bobby Rigby got to play with a dream team. The stars of the soccer world came to South Philly.

    Philadelphia just wasn’t yet ready in 1976 to embrace what was happening. The city was too distracted by the guy walking in the sky.

    “It was such a thrill to play with those guys,” Smith said. “It was a great honor, and it was also a blur.”

  • Kevin Willard accomplished most of his goals in Villanova’s roster rebuild. Then came Luigi Suigo.

    Kevin Willard accomplished most of his goals in Villanova’s roster rebuild. Then came Luigi Suigo.

    Rumors of Villanova’s interest in 7-foot-3 Italian center Luigi Suigo already were swirling when assistant coach Ricky Harris posted a photo last month on his Instagram page from Milan, not far from Suigo’s hometown of Tradate. Villanova was trying to keep its pursuit of Suigo under the radar, but Harris’s post only fueled the speculation.

    Villanova is visiting Suigo in Milan! The staff is all-in on adding the future NBA center! Kevin Willard really wants the cherry on top for this roster rebuild!

    Let’s play a little game of Two Truths and a Lie.

    No, Villanova didn’t send Harris to Milan to visit its next center. The other things are true, though. And the lie is only a partial one. It wasn’t Harris visiting Suigo, it was Willard. Harris was just in Italy enjoying an offseason vacation, with the bulk of the roster overhaul already done. But it wasn’t Milan where Willard went, it was Belgrade, Serbia, where Suigo played this past season with Mega Basket of the Adriatic League.

    “Belgrade was beautiful,” Willard said Monday, nine days after Suigo announced he was leaving the NBA draft and signing with Villanova. “Food was great, people were awesome.”

    It was a short business trip, less than 48 hours. Willard had spent the past month reassembling the Wildcats’ roster. Only two players who dressed in a game from last season’s team, Tyler Perkins and Matt Hodge, returned. The staff surrounded them with plenty of talent, but still needed a true center to round out the roster. Any starting-caliber center would have been fine. The offseason had largely been a success even after losing a few top players like Acaden Lewis and Bryce Lindsay to the transfer portal.

    “We could have gone in a couple directions,” Willard said of the center spot. “For us, it was like, all right, how are we trying to win a championship here?”

    On film, Suigo looked the part of a player who could take the roster to the next level. The size component is obvious. But Suigo is a “really skilled center that can shoot it, that can pass at a high level,” Willard said. “I think one of his best attributes is that he’s extremely unselfish. He’s a great passer.”

    Willard wanted more than film studying, though, so he got on a plane and flew halfway across the world to watch Suigo practice in person, to meet with his coaches, to sit down with him for dinner.

    “Sometimes you can watch clips and you can get fooled,” Willard said. “When I went over there and talked to him in person, met him in person, and saw him play, it was like, yeah, this kid is the real deal.

    “He’s very professional. He knows what he wants. He knows how he wants to play. He knows where he needs to get better at.”

    In 26 games with Mega Basket, Suigo, 19, posted averages of 7.9 points, 5.1 rebounds, and 1 block in 18.8 minutes. He shot 64.9% on his 111 two-point shots, 27.1% on 48 three-point attempts, and 64.7% on 34 free throws.

    Draft evaluators had Suigo projected near the end of the first round or early in the second round. Luring a player out of that range surely was costly for Villanova. Willard declined to discuss financials with The Inquirer. But the region’s rich Italian-American culture and the timing of watching the Knicks on their championship run with Jalen Brunson, Mikal Bridges, and Josh Hart were added bonuses.

    Plus, Suigo was open about wanting to be a top-20 pick throughout the draft process.

    “I think he maybe would have gotten drafted late in the first round, but he doesn’t want that,” Willard said. “He wants to make sure when he gets drafted he’s going to play. The big thing is I think he needs to get Americanized a little bit, to American basketball. I think that’s why college will be really good for him. Get in shape a little bit, just kind of get used to American basketball. I think once he does, the sky is the limit for him.”

    Sky’s the limit for the team, too?

    The offseason had a clear objective.

    “We wanted to make sure that we just didn’t get manhandled the way we got manhandled last year against the top teams,” Willard said.

    He was talking about national champion Michigan and the two top Big East teams, Connecticut and St. John’s. Willard’s first season at Villanova was a success. A streak of three consecutive missed NCAA Tournaments was stopped, though Villanova lost as a No. 8 seed in the first round because it lacked experience and physicality against a veteran Utah State team.

    Tyler Perkins (left) and Matt Hodge (right) will be key contributors again for the Wildcats in 2026-27.

    The first additions of the offseason aimed to address that. Villanova signed Oregon’s Kwame Evans Jr. and Ohio State’s Devin Royal. Both players are incoming seniors who averaged more than 13 points in the Big Ten last season. Evans is 6-10 and Royal is 6-6 but is a physical player who averaged seven rebounds in 2024-25 and nearly six last season.

    With those two and Perkins and Hodge in the fold, the attention turned to the backcourt, specifically to the point guard spot. Willard said he watched more film to fill this spot than any other position during the offseason. Perhaps, then, he could ace a quiz on Illinois-Chicago hoops. Elijah Crawford scored 14 points and dished out five assists in 26 minutes per game last season. More importantly, his decision-making out of pick-and-roll stood out, as did his 75.3% rate from the free-throw line.

    Crawford is the likely starting point guard next to Perkins, with Royal, Evans, and Suigo rounding out the starting five.

    Backcourt depth was a problem at times last season. On paper, it won’t be in 2026-27. The Wildcats added Cornell shooting guard Jake Fiegen, who Willard said “analytically, was probably one of the highest-rated guys.” Fiegen shot 41.4% from three-point range on 5.5 attempts per game. He thrived in catch-and-shoot situations, of which he will have plenty with this Villanova roster.

    Then there’s St. Bonaventure transfer Buddy Simmons. Willard said the staff was actually watching another Atlantic 10 player when they became enamored with Simmons, a 5-11 guard who scored 16.4 points per game and shot 42.5% from deep. While Fiegen is more of a standstill shooter, Simmons produces off the dribble.

    Incoming freshman guard Adam Oumiddoch also is expected to contribute right away. He’ll add to a versatile bench that also includes Hodge, who Willard said is tracking toward being ready for the beginning of the season after undergoing surgery to repair a torn ACL in March.

    Evans could play some minutes at center, as could returning redshirt freshman Nico Onyekwere.

    Villanova hit the offseason trying to build a roster to compete with Dan Hurley’s UConn program.

    “We can play small or we can play really big,” Willard said. “That was my goal. Last year we were kind of hampered in how we could play. This year I think we have so much more flexibility.”

    Signing a 7-3 center helps.

    But Suigo’s signing should have done more than raise the expectations for the 2026-27 season. Sure, the Wildcats may get some preseason top 25 love. But they also showed they can compete financially with other programs.

    “From Father Peter to the board to our alumni and our donors, everyone understands how important Villanova basketball is,” Willard said. “We will never be the highest spender. That’s not in our DNA and it’s not what it is. But I will say that the university understands and financially has been extremely supportive of this program and the women’s program.”

    About those expectations …

    “I’m the head coach at Villanova,” Willard said. “The expectations are huge every year. I knew that when I took this job. I knew that when I took the Maryland job. It’s just part of the job. It’s what makes this job so great. You want those expectations.”

    It’s what you fly to Serbia for.

  • Who might threaten the Eagles’ NFC East three-peat? We assessed the state of the division.

    Who might threaten the Eagles’ NFC East three-peat? We assessed the state of the division.

    The Eagles have owned the NFC East in recent memory, winning two straight division titles and five in the last 10 years.

    There’s no reason to think 2026 will be any different, right? The Eagles are the favorite at +135 via FanDuel to win the division, after all.

    But things feel a little different this time. The Eagles had a transformative offseason, tinkering with their offensive strategy and adding on defense, but dealing away their No. 1 weapon in wide receiver A.J. Brown. All the while, almost all of their NFC East foes took steps forward, at least on paper.

    Let’s take a look at those steps. Are the Eagles destined to three-peat? Or will the revamped Giants, Cowboys or Commanders steal their crown?

    Can Dak Prescott (4) and the Cowboys make a realistic run at the NFC East in Year 2 under Brian Schottenheimer?

    Dallas Cowboys (7-9-1 in 2025)

    NFC East title odds (FanDuel): +200

    Last year’s results vs. Eagles: The Cowboys split their series with the Birds in 2025 in two heated installments that began with Jalen Carter spitting on quarterback Dak Prescott in the Eagles’ season-opening 24-20 win. Dallas won the return matchup, rallying for a 24-21 victory in Week 12.

    Scheduled 2026 meetings vs. Eagles:

    • Oct. 26 (Monday Night Football) at the Linc
    • Nov. 26 (Thanksgiving) at Dallas

    Biggest changes: The Cowboys can actually thank the Eagles for their biggest offseason change. In January, Dallas named lauded defensive mind — and former Eagles DBs coach/defensive pass game coordinator — Christian Parker its new coordinator for 2026. He’ll coach a promising defense that now has stud Ohio State safety Caleb Downs in the mix.

    Why the Cowboys are optimistic: Offense never seems to be a concern for the Cowboys, who ranked second in yards per game last season (391.9). Defense has been their Achilles’ heel in recent years. But with a promising mind like Parker’s in the building and some exciting new faces (plus the first full season of defensive tackle Quinnen Williams, who was obtained at the 2025 trade deadline), there’s reason to believe their defense could carry them in 2026.

    Why they shouldn’t be: The Cowboys just can’t help themselves when it comes to off-field distractions. The team still doesn’t have a contract resolution with wide receiver George Pickens, who ranked third in receiving yards last season (1,429).

    The Commanders figure to be tougher with a healthy Jayden Daniels.

    Washington Commanders (5-12 in 2025)

    NFC East title odds (FanDuel): +450

    Last year’s results vs. Eagles: The Commanders faced the Eagles twice in the final three weeks of 2025, with Washington already out of the playoff race. The Eagles took the first game on the road, 29-18, while Washington came to the Linc and won 24-17 in a regular season finale where the Eagles rested most of their starters.

    Scheduled 2026 meetings vs. Eagles:

    • Sept. 13 at the Linc
    • Nov. 1 (Sunday Night Football) at Washington

    Biggest changes: The Commanders front office somehow managed to underwhelm its fans more this offseason than in last year’s 5-12 campaign. The biggest change came in the coaching room, with the team firing defensive coordinator Joe Whitt Jr. and parting ways with offensive coordinator Kliff Kingsbury. First-time coordinators Daronte Jones and David Blough will take over as DC and OC, respectively.

    Why the Commanders are optimistic: Jayden Daniels is the only reason to be optimistic about the 2026 Commanders. He willed them to the NFC title game in 2024, so you can’t rule out the possibility of him doing it again. At the very least, if he can stay healthy, they’ll be competitive.

    Why they shouldn’t be: GM Adam Peters’ splashiest move of the spring was adding running back Rachaad White, who’s not exactly a headline grabber. They’re reportedly in on 49ers wide receiver Brandon Aiyuk, which might lead to more problems than solutions. Daniels might need another miracle season like his rookie campaign to help lift this group.

    John Harbaugh had a .614 winning percentage during the regular season in 18 seasons with the Ravens, which made him attractive to the struggling Giants.

    New York Giants (4-13 in 2025)

    NFC East title odds (FanDuel): +550

    Last year’s results vs. Eagles: The Giants split their 2025 series against the Eagles, securing a stunning 34-17 victory in a Week 6 coming out party for rookies Jaxson Dart and Cam Skattebo on Thursday Night Football. The Eagles rolled the Giants in the second matchup held 17 days later, 38-20.

    Scheduled 2026 meetings vs. Eagles:

    • Nov. 8 at the Linc
    • Jan. 10, 2027 at New York

    Biggest changes: It feels like everything changed for the Giants this offseason. The team made its splashiest head coaching hire since Tom Coughlin, bringing in John Harbaugh from the Ravens. They also had a headline-worthy draft, picking up Ohio State edge rusher Arvell Reese and Miami tackle Francis Mauigoa in the top 10, then bringing in linebacker Tremaine Edmunds in free agency.

    Why the Giants are optimistic: Harbaugh is the main reason for optimism in East Rutherford. The Giants have had talented rosters, but lackluster coaching has helped hold them back. If Dart progresses and wide receiver Malik Nabers returns to form, they should be one of the most improved teams in the NFL.

    Why they shouldn’t be: The Giants were a bad run defense with stalwart defensive tackle Dexter Lawrence, allowing a league-worst 5.3 yards per rush last season (the worst such mark in team history). How much worse will things get with Lawrence now traded to the Bengals? Let’s just say new defensive coordinator Dennard Wilson has his work cut out for him.

  • Letters to the Editor | June 23, 2026

    Letters to the Editor | June 23, 2026

    No auto bailouts

    No one is talking about bailing out Ford or General Motors today. But the conditions that led to the 2009 taxpayer rescue are quietly reassembling themselves — and Americans deserve to have this conversation before we are once again handed the bill.

    Both companies are struggling to keep pace with Tesla domestically and increasingly competitive Chinese automakers globally. Meanwhile, the federal government is rolling back electric vehicle mandates and weakening fuel economy standards at the urging of oil and gas lobbyists — policy shifts that artificially extend the relevance of internal combustion vehicles rather than forcing the adaptation these companies urgently need. This is not a free market. It is a system rigged to protect companies that have repeatedly failed to innovate, sustained by politicians whose campaigns are funded by the very industries they regulate.

    The jobs argument for protecting these companies is not without merit — but it cannot serve as a permanent shield against accountability. Bailouts do not save jobs forever. They delay the reckoning while burning public funds and rewarding poor decision-making. Companies like Tesla built a competitive EV business without that safety net. Penalizing them by rescuing their less disciplined competitors is neither fair nor good policy.

    The time to draw this line is now — before the lobbying intensifies, before the headlines turn dire, and before Congress is once again asked to choose between a bailout and a collapse. If Ford and General Motors cannot compete in a market they had every warning and resource to prepare for, the answer is accountability — not another taxpayer rescue.

    Kevin Ahern, Chalfont

    Cinder ball field

    Kudos to Matt Breen for his article on Fishtown’s “cinder soccer field.” It is a site that has legendary status in the history of local athletics — and not just in soccer. Lord knows where a softball would go when a line drive skidded on those loose cinders. And base runners would never slide into second base.

    The cinder field ranks right up there in Kensington lore with the softball fundraiser at Scanlon Recreation Center on Venango Street, where a New York Yankees outfielder named Babe Ruth once played for the Ascension Parish Catholic Youth Organization team. Keep the great stories coming, Matt.

    Gerard J. St. John, Drexel Hill

    Join the conversation: Send letters to letters@inquirer.com. Limit length to 150 words and include home address and day and evening phone number. Letters run in The Inquirer six days a week on the editorial pages and online.

  • Dear Abby | Worker feels targeted by colleague’s change in behavior

    DEAR ABBY: I’ve been employed at the same company for 17 years. I’m the youngest person in the department, and I love my job and the people I work with. One co-worker I used to be close to has a son the same age as mine, and they did sports together and went to each other’s birthday parties. I would invite her over to relax by the pool while our kids played.

    In recent years, that has changed. Her attitude toward me is different, and I don’t know why. Every chance she gets, she undermines me at work. She doesn’t communicate but rather makes assumptions and tattles to our supervisor and boss. She has purposely left me out in emails when we would chip in for a card and money for our supervisor’s gift for Christmas. Any mistake I make, she emails our boss and supervisor about it instead of coming to me.

    I’ve had a meeting with her and my supervisor and boss, but she used it to undermine me on other job duties she had no experience in. She has also said nasty things about me to her son, who repeated them to my son at school. I’m at my wits’ end here. Please tell me how to handle this.

    — DEFEATED CO-WORKER

    DEAR DEFEATED: It is one thing when a relationship is based on having kids the same age with similar interests. As the children grow older, the ties that bind those friendships can loosen. But what you have written to me is different. Your former friend seems to have it in for you — and appears determined to get you fired. This is why you should document every single dirty deed she has pulled, present it to your boss and tell him (or her) that this has been creating a hostile work environment, and you hope it can be stopped. (If it can’t be stopped, talk about this to an attorney.)

    ** ** **

    DEAR ABBY: I’m 23 and have been with my boyfriend for six years. We currently live with his parents. A year ago, I cheated on him, but I told him about it a few months ago. We’ve been trying to rebuild our relationship, but it’s hard. I have spent more than $1,000 on therapy, and I don’t know what else to do. He says he needs time to heal, but it has been six months, and he no longer even calls me “Love.” We have been going to church together, and he says he has hope for us.

    I don’t have any family where I live, and it’s too expensive to move out on my own and start over. I’m finishing school here. My goal is to move to North Carolina, but I don’t see that happening anytime soon, because he’s committed to staying here for law school. I love him, but I feel so alone and don’t know what to do. I want to get married and have kids soon, but I don’t want to start over or cause more hurt. What would you do?

    — CHEATER IN FLORIDA

    DEAR CHEATER: It’s time for you to move out so you can separate your feelings of dependence and affection. You wounded your boyfriend deeply, and that wound is not going to heal if you continue to pressure him. It’s up to him now to decide whether to forgive you, but you need to give him the space to make that decision. Because you want to have children “soon,” the reality is that you will have to “start over” either way, whether with him or someone else.

  • Horoscopes: Tuesday, June 23, 2026

    ARIES (March 21-April 19). Comfort can be indulgent, as in too much macaroni and cheese, or it can be productive, as in the way your favorite hoodie makes you feel calm and capable as you take on the day.

    TAURUS (April 20-May 20). When the director has a vision that the actor doesn’t share, there’s conflict on the set. Expect some version of this in a clash between two people, or an internal clash between two sides of yourself. Both sides have merit.

    GEMINI (May 21-June 21). Funny how one unanswered text can affect the mood of an entire afternoon. This semiotic experience will carry more emotional meaning than logic alone can explain. But you can’t assume a whole story from one tiny signal. There are still missing pieces.

    CANCER (June 22-July 22). Before you make things better, you’ll define what “better” looks and feels like for everyone involved. It will be much easier to create the result if you agree on what it is. Once you have a consensus, everything snaps together.

    LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). A circumstance used to frustrate you, and you reacted accordingly. Now you see the same scenario as a puzzle you can calmly solve, or even a game you can play for fun — a credit to your capacity for growth.

    VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). No matter how certain a person may be, opinions are often shaped by emotion, bias and selective experience rather than solid evidence. Today’s best decision-making comes from observation, direct experience and verifiable facts. What can actually be confirmed?

    LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). You’ll get a glimpse of who you are becoming over this blossoming season. The next iteration of yourself involves meeting new people, trying activities for the first time and participating in a different community.

    SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). Attraction thrives in mystery. Your imagination fills in the blanks. The collaboration with reality creates a compelling story. Enjoy the electricity without rushing to conclusions. Time will tell what’s real and what stays in the realm of fantasy.

    SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). You are studying someone like an astronomer tracking a newly discovered star. Curiosity becomes its own form of pleasure. Let the experience expand your understanding of desire rather than narrow your world around one person alone.

    CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). The heart will rehearse a relationship before it fully exists. You’ll imagine love’s future possibilities with stunning accuracy. Maybe it’s a case of self-fulfilling prophesy, so think the best! Your intuition is fully engaged.

    AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). There will be a lack of consensus among your group. This is an opportunity for you to delight in using your executive functioning to find points of agreement and figure out the best next steps forward.

    PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). A five-minute carnival ride can be a rush, but you’d rather have a whole day at the fair. So you pace your experiences, lending a slow and deliberate attention wherever possible. Sensory delights are to be savored.

    TODAY’S BIRTHDAY (June 23). You finally understand just how singular you are in this Year of Radiant Originality. You think deeply, ask different questions, have novel interactions and become known for the fun and interest you bring to groups. More highlights: Much teamwork and games, a substantial sale, and using your money so well that others will model and follow you. You’ll find closeness with sweet, complex and honest people. Leo and Capricorn adore you. Your lucky numbers are: 13, 2, 29, 5 and 18.

  • Giannis Antetokounmpo getting traded to Heat in blockbuster, AP source says

    Giannis Antetokounmpo getting traded to Heat in blockbuster, AP source says

    MIAMI — Giannis Antetokounmpo wants more championships. So do the Miami Heat.

    And the Heat finally have another superstar.

    Ending a marathon watch for the next great Miami get, the Heat landed Antetokounmpo — a two-time NBA MVP and 10-time All-Star — from the Milwaukee Bucks on Monday night in exchange for a massive haul of players and draft picks.

    The terms, according to a person who spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because the move has yet to receive the required league approval: Antetokounmpo and Bobby Portis are heading to Miami for Wisconsin native Tyler Herro, Jaime Jaquez Jr., Kel’el Ware and Kasparas Jakucionis. Milwaukee also gets at least four picks, including the No. 13 selection that will be made in Tuesday night’s NBA draft.

    Giannis Antetokounmpo was a two-time NBA MVP and 10-time All-Star with the Milwaukee Bucks.

    It ends a wild back-and-forth in the final days of the saga, with the Bucks considering offers from both Miami and Boston for Antetokounmpo — who led Milwaukee to the 2021 NBA title, was on the NBA’s 75th anniversary list of its greatest players ever, is a nine-time All-NBA selection and is coming off an injury-shortened season where he averaged 27.6 points per game.

    There has been no secret that this is what Miami has sought, because this is what Miami usually seeks. The Heat pulled off similar moves by landing Shaquille O’Neal in 2004 (helping lead to the 2006 NBA title) and by getting LeBron James and Chris Bosh to play alongside Dwyane Wade in 2010 (leading to four NBA Finals runs in four seasons together, along with the 2012 and 2013 NBA titles).

    Now, it’s Antetokounmpo’s turn. At 31, the Heat clearly believe he still has many good years left — and it’s generally presumed that by making this deal they’ll give the Greek superstar a massive extension later this year.