Sidney Crosby, Penguins top Flyers, stay alive in playoff series

Sidney Crosby had a goal and an assist Saturday as the visiting Pittsburgh Penguins stayed alive with a 4-2 victory over the Philadelphia Flyers in Game 4 of their Eastern Conference first-round playoff series.

Field Level Media

Rickard Rakell also scored a goal and set up another for Pittsburgh, which had been outscored 11-4 while dropping the first three games of the series. Penguins coach Dan Muse opted to start Arturs Silovs in net instead of Stuart Skinner, and Silovs responded with 28 saves in a crisp performance.

"I thought he played great. Big saves," Muse said of Silovs. " ... I've got a lot of confidence in both guys. I'm really happy for him. ... He made sure that he was prepared. When his name was called, he was ready. Great by him."

Denver Barkey and Travis Konecny scored for Philadelphia, which will have another chance to win the best-of-seven series Monday when the teams reconvene for Game 5 in Pittsburgh. Dan Vladar, playing with a right arm injury, turned aside 17 shots for the Flyers.

"Nothing's changing for us. Still being positive," Vladar said. "They're a really good team. It's not easy to win four in a row against a team like that. We've got to fight here."

Pittsburgh opened the scoring with 5:36 left in the first period on a creative setup by Erik Karlsson. Five seconds into a power play, Karlsson's feed from behind set up Crosby's smooth one-timer that skimmed off Vladar and into the net for a 1-0 advantage.

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Crosby's 72nd career postseason goal was the only tally of the first period, but the Penguins made it 2-0 just 1:03 into the second. Vladar turned it over behind the net to Rakell, who dove into the crease to swat the puck in before the Flyers' netminder could recover.

Philadelphia got on the board with 4:20 left in the second period on Barkey's first career playoff goal. The 20-year-old got position on Karlsson in the crease and Trevor Zegras put it right on his stick for a tap-in tally.

Travis Sanheim hit the post shortly thereafter, leaving Philadelphia facing a 2-1 deficit heading into the third.

The Penguins extended their lead to 3-1 on Kris Letang's goal 4:27 into the final session. Crosby won a battle along the boards and kicked the puck to his longtime teammate, who skated in with plenty of room and blasted a slap shot past Vladar.

The Flyers got back within a goal on Konecny's one-timer with 12:57 left, but Connor Dewar's empty-netter with just under a minute remaining ended the hosts' late comeback hopes.

Silovs' best saves included a clutch stop on Zegras near the end of the first period and a pad save on Tyson Foerster's partial breakaway with about six minutes left in the second.

--Field Level Media

Sidney Crosby, Penguins top Flyers, stay alive in playoff series

Sidney Crosby had a goal and an assist Saturday as the visiting Pittsburgh Penguins stayed alive with a 4-2 victory over the Philadelph...
Shreveport has a message for America: Don't look away

SHREVEPORT — The Rev. James Green was in the middle of delivering a sermon at Union Mission Baptist Church No. 1 in Shreveport when he learned the unthinkable had happened.

USA TODAY

That morning, a National Guard veteran shot two women and killed seven of his kids and one of their cousins. The gunman died after a police chase.

All of this unfolded on April 19 not far from Green’s church in Shreveport, a city of nearly 180,000 people near the Texas border in northwest Louisiana.

“It was worse than a kick in the gut," recalled Green, also a Shreveport city councilman. “It was like the wind being snatched out of me.”

As his community grappled with the aftermath of the shootings, Green spearheaded a domestic violence summit and hosted community vigils. The nation, he insisted, needs to “zoom in on domestic violence, because it happens every minute – every hour – of our lives.”

But some Americans, already beset with traumatic news amid deep political divisions at home and the wars in Iran and Ukraine, might choose to look away, partly to protect their own mental health.

“We’ve been talking about this in psychology for years, not just with mass shootings, but other incidents of trauma that are replayed over and over again, that we do have to take a healthy level of self-care,” said Apryl Alexander, director of theUniversity of North Carolina Charlotte Violence Prevention Center.

At the same time, Alexander said domestic violence should not be ignored.

“I’m hoping that people are not becoming numb or immune to this,” she said. “In order for us to think about solutions, we all have to be invested in really examining the underlying factors behind these incidents.”

Shreveport shooting is shocking but 'not an outlier'

Police have identified the gunman as 31-year-old Shamar Elkins, who served in the Louisiana Army National Guard from 2013 to 2020 as a signal system specialist and a fire support specialist.

Before the shootings, he told his stepfather on Easter Sunday that he wanted to take his own life and that he was dealing with “dark thoughts,” the New York Times reported. At the time, he was reportedly struggling with a looming separation from his wife, who was gravely injured in the shooting. The other injured woman had previously sued him for child support and was granted joint custody of their child, Sariahh, in 2017, court records show.

Sariahh was among those killed in the shooting. The other victims were identified as: Jayla Elkins, 3; Shayla Elkins, 5; Kayla Pugh, 6; Layla Pugh, 7; Markaydon Pugh, 10; Khedarrion Snow, 6; and Braylon Snow, 5.

Their deaths are part of a particularly horrific phenomenon called “family annihilation” in which people kill many relatives, sometimes an entire family. Between 2020 and 2023, such killings happened once every five days on average nationwide, according toan investigation by the Indianapolis Star,which is part of the USA TODAY network. Several high-profile cases have captured national attention, including those involvingAlex Murdaugh,Andrea YatesandElizabeth Diane Downs.

The attack in Shreveport was among the deadliest mass shootings since January 2024. In some ways, it was "not an outlier," said Walter Dekeseredy, who teaches sociology at West Virginia University and directs its Research Center on Violence.

“Good criminological research shows that it’s typically a man killing his wife or ex-wife and his children,” he said. “That’s the most common form of mass killing.”

Elkins' motives are not entirely clear, but Dekeseredy said leaving an abusive relationship can be the most dangerous time for a partner being abused. Black women are killed by intimate partnersat significantly higher rates than any other group.

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The shootings in Shreveport left some people wondering what support was missing for the family.

“What were the dynamics at this time for a person to escalate, obtain a firearm — and then again for these women to not be protected?” Alexander asked.

Awareness is crucial, but news can take a toll

Meanwhile, a growing number of people worldwide are turning away from the news, partly because they find it negative and depressing, according a 2025reportby the Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism and the University of Oxford.

The more people follow news about violence and mass tragedies, the more likely they are to experience distress, according to E. Alison Holman, a professor in the school of nursing and department of psychological science at the University of California, Irvine.

Holman has found, for example, that people who followed the highest amounts of news media coverage of the 2013 Boston Marathon bombing reported higher acute stress than people who were directly exposed to the bombing. This stress, she said, can be compounded because Americans are exposed to a barrage of difficult news, such as therising death toll of the war in Iranand America'scost-of-living crisis.

“We call it cascading collective stress or trauma,” Holman said.

People who can identify with the victims are more likely to follow news about them, and that can set off a cycle of distress.

“It’s very important that people know what’s going on in the world around them, but don’t over-immerse yourself in that,” she said. “Don’t keep going back and looking at it over and over because that’s not good for your mental health and not good for your physical health, too.”

News coverage about the shootings in Shreveport could traumatize viewers, particularly those impacted by domestic abuse, Dekeseredy and Alexander said. But they also said it is crucial for people to understand the broader societal forces that fuel such violence.

“The rates of violence against women are so high in this country," Dekeseredy said, “that it tells you something about the way our society is organized.”

‘Why don't you lift Shreveport?’

On April 26, the choir at Green’s church in Shreveport performed “I Sing Praises to Your Name” as parishioners filed inside the sanctuary, umbrellas in hand. Eventually, they approached the altar, raising their hands.

"Why don't you lift Shreveport?” Green asked his flock. “Why don't you lift your neighborhood? Why don't you lift the Elkins family, the Snow family, the Pugh family? Why don't you lift your family and other families to the Lord?"

He cited Psalm 13, which encourages people to grieve but also to trust in God.

“No matter where you are in life,” Green said, “once you have an audience with the Lord, once you come into his presence, he will lift that burden.”

His parishioners immediately erupted in applause. Their hope was palpable as they hugged. Before they departed, they were given Amaryllis plants featuring red, trumpet-shaped flowers. Because they bloom in winter months, they can symbolize resilience and determination. The parishioners took them home so they could plant them as a way to memorialize Shreveport’s victims.

If you or someone you know could be a victim of domestic violence, call the National Domestic Violence Hotline at 800-799-7233 or text "START" to 88788. The Suicide and Crisis Lifeline is available at 988.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Shreveport has a message for America: Don't look away

Shreveport has a message for America: Don't look away

SHREVEPORT — The Rev. James Green was in the middle of delivering a sermon at Union Mission Baptist Church No. 1 in Shreveport when he ...
Pentagon can require reporters to be escorted during appeal process, judges rule

WASHINGTON (AP) — TheDefense Departmentcan require journalists to be escorted on Pentagon grounds while the Trump administration appeals a judge's decision to block its enforcement of a press access policy challenged by The New York Times, an appeals courtruled Monday.

Associated Press

The ruling by a divided three-judge panel from the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit isn't the final decision inthe newspaper's lawsuitover a new Pentagon press credential policy. But the panel's majority opinion said the administration is likely to succeed in showing that the policy's escort requirement is legally valid.

The panel granted the government's request to suspend anApril 9 decision by U.S. District Judge Paul Friedman, who ruled that the Defense Department was violating his earlier order to restore access to the Pentagon for reporters.

Circuit Judges Justin Walker, J. Michelle Childs and Bradley Garcia heard the case, with Childs dissenting from the 2-1 majority.

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“Reporters can hardly verify sources, gather information, or speak candidly with Department personnel with an escort looming over their shoulders,” Childs wrote.

Friedman found that the Pentagon’s new credential policy violated journalists’ constitutional rights to free speech and due process. He said Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth’s team had tried to evade his March 20 ruling by putting in new rules that expel all reporters from the building unless guided by escorts.

Defense Department spokesperson Sean Parnell said it welcomes the panel's decision and looks forward to arguing the merits of its “full case” before the same panel. In a statement posted on social media, Parnell said unescorted access to the Pentagon has led to the “regular unauthorized disclosure of sensitive and classified national defense information.”

“Since implementing the current access policy, the Department has seen a meaningful reduction in these unauthorized disclosures, which when they occur can endanger the lives of service members, intelligence personnel, and our allies,” he wrote.

President Donald Trump, a Republican, nominated Walker. President Joe Biden, a Democrat, nominated Garcia and Childs. Friedman was nominated by Democratic President Bill Clinton.

Pentagon can require reporters to be escorted during appeal process, judges rule

WASHINGTON (AP) — TheDefense Departmentcan require journalists to be escorted on Pentagon grounds while the Trump administration appeal...
Kevin Durant reportedly expected to miss Lakers-Rockets Game 4

Houston Rockets All-Star Kevin Durant is expected to miss Sunday’s Game 4 against the Los Angeles Lakers with a bone bruise in his sprained left ankle,ESPN’s Shams Charania reports.

Yahoo Sports

If confirmed, Durant will miss his third game of the series. He missed Game 1 with a knee injury, then missed Game 3 with his sprained ankle.

Per the report, the bone bruise is an injury that would typically sideline a player 2-3 weeks during the regular season, putting Durant’s availability in question moving forward if the Rockets manage to extend the series Sunday night. The Lakers have a 3-0 series lead and can close it out with a win in Game 4.

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The Rockets have struggled with and without Durant on the floor during this series and are now faced with becoming the first NBA team to ever rally from a 3-0 deficit to win a series or face elimination in the first round. Playing without Durant in Game 4, obviously, makes their task that much tougher.

Durant scored 20 points in the first half of Game 2. But the Lakers limited him to three points after halftime en route to a 101-94 win. The Rockets then blew a six-point lead in the final 30 seconds of Game 3 before going on to lose in overtime Friday night.

The Lakers have built their 3-0 lead despite playing without their top two scorers, Luka Dončić and Austin Reaves. LeBron James has led the Lakers’ effort while Los Angeles’ role players have stepped up in Reaves’ and Dončić’s absence.

Kevin Durant reportedly expected to miss Lakers-Rockets Game 4

Houston Rockets All-Star Kevin Durant is expected to miss Sunday’s Game 4 against the Los Angeles Lakers with a bone bruise in his spra...
Deadly Severe Weather Outbreak Continues For Plains, Midwest; Strong Tornadoes And Large Hail Likely

A dangerous weather weekend and start to the upcoming week continues across the Plains and Midwest that has already claimed two lives. Significant threats of tornadoes, hail and damaging winds extend through Tuesday.

The Weather Channel

Here is our latest forecast for each day of this latest siege of severe weather.

(MORE:Severe Weather Safety Tips)

Happening Now

Very large hail, a few tornadoes, damaging winds and some flooding are possible across the Plains. There was a damage report in Edgerton, Kansas, stating that a barn had been destroyed. There was also a report of trees and powerlines down in Adrian, Missouri.

Any active tornado watches are red polygons, while any severe thunderstorm watches will be yellow polygons. Below is the latest radar.

Asevere thunderstorm watch:valid until 7 P.M. CDT for parts of eastern Kansas and western Missouri. Kansas City is the main population in the watch.

Atornado watch: valid until 11 P.M. CDT for parts of southeastern Kansas and western and southern Missouri. Springfield, Missouri is the main population in the watch.

Atornado watch: valid until 11 P.M CDT for parts of southern Oklahoma and western North Texas.

Atornado watch: valid until midnight CDT for parts of northeastern Oklahoma and northwestern Arkansas. Tulsa, Oklahoma is the main population in the watch.

Sunday

The threat of supercell thunderstorms is in play in the Central and Southern Plains, especially in parts of Kansas, Nebraska and Missouri.

With enough warm, humid air and strong wind shear in place, these supercells could spawn strong tornadoes, in addition to very large hail and damaging wind gusts. Cities like Kansas City and Oklahoma City need to be on alert.

A lower severe storm threat could impact cities like Dallas, San Antonio and Austin with large hail and damaging winds.

Monday

On Monday, this higher severe threat could spread to the Mississippi Valley and lower Ohio Valley. Another day of supercells could spawn strong tornadoes for parts of Iowa, Missouri and Illinois. A few long-track, particularly dangerous, tornadoes are possible.

Places like St. Louis, Kansas City, Little Rock, Nashville, Indianapolis, Chicago and Des Moines should all be on alert.

Tuesday

While it is still far out, the lingering frontal boundary can bring some severe storms across some of the Gulf Coast states into Tuesday. The greatest threat stretches from northeastern Texas to Kentucky. Cities like Memphis, Little Rock, Shreveport and Huntsville need to be watching the weather carefully.

Flood Threat

This stormy pattern will bring more periods of rain to parts of the western Great Lakes either still experiencing flooding or where ground is already saturated fromthe deluges both last week and earlier this spring.

While we don't anticipate the magnitude of rainfall we saw last week, over an inch of additional rain is a good bet in much of the Midwest through Monday. That could lead to at least isolated additional flash flooding and could slow the fall ofrivers still in flood.

Locally flooding rain is also possible through Monday from parts of Missouri and Kansas into Arkansas and the mid-South region, even though some of these areas are in extreme drought.

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Beware of flooded roads, especially at night when you may not recognize them as fast. Never attempt to drive through a flooded road. Turn around, instead.

(MORE:Flash Flood Safety Tips)

Recap

Thursday brought over 20 tornado reports from Oklahoma to Iowa, as well as over 160 damaging wind and hail reports combined.

On Thursday evening, a rare tornado emergency was issued for the storm that tore throughEnid, Oklahomaand the nearby Vance Air Force Base, warning of catastrophic damage and threat to life. The resulting tornado was rated EF4 with winds of 170-175 mph. It was the first EF4 in Garfield County, Oklahoma, since April 26, 1991. There were 10 injuries from this tornado.

There were five other tornadoes reported from the National Weather Service in Norman, Oklahoma.

The NWS office in Norman noted it was only the ninth time the office has issued a tornado emergency.

(MORE:Different Types Of Tornado Warnings)

There was also a gust of 107 mph at Vance Air Force Base, Oklahoma. The most impressive hail report was a report of 4 inches in diameter, or softball-sized hail, in Marion, Kansas.

As forecasted, Friday was less impactful. There was only one tornado report in Kiowa, Oklahoma. There was more than 75 damaging wind and large hail reports combined. Below is the storm reports of the latest event.

Saturday brought more intense storms, and roughly a dozen tornado reports, mainly across Texas and Oklahoma. In Alpine, Arkansas, there was a hail stone recovered that was between 4-5 inches in diameter. Other reports of hail the size of tennis balls and hen eggs were reported across Kansas and Texas.

As storms continued through Texas early Sunday morning, two people were killed. One person in Wise County and another person in Parker County.

Last Week's Siege

The early-week breather was certainly welcomed after abusy stretch last week. Notice a lot of similarities to the reports from the April 13 - 17 map below to the map above with the latest storm reports.

Last Friday alone, there were 96 tornado reports among the over 500 severe weather reports.

(MORE:How April's Severe Weather Has Been Weird)

severe weather reports mid april 2026

In all, there were over 1,300 reports of severe weather in the U.S. from last Monday through last Friday, including 154 reports of tornadoes, 532 reports of hail and 642 reports of thunderstorm wind damage or high wind gusts.

As you can see, some of the same areas that are under the risk of severe weather ahead are areas that have already been hit hard by severe weather last week.

Make sure you havemultiple ways to receive alerts, should severe weather strike.

Jennifer Grayis a weather and climate writer for weather.com. She has been covering some of the world's biggest weather and climate stories for the last two decades.

Deadly Severe Weather Outbreak Continues For Plains, Midwest; Strong Tornadoes And Large Hail Likely

A dangerous weather weekend and start to the upcoming week continues across the Plains and Midwest that has already claimed two lives. ...

 

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