Slugging 1B Nick Kurtz looks to build on AL Rookie of the Year award in 2nd season with Athletics

MESA, Ariz. (AP) — Aside from towering over most of hisAthleticsteammates at 6-foot-5, Nick Kurtz blends in at his locker in the middle of the clubhouse — and that's just the way he prefers it.

Associated Press Athletics first baseman Nick Kurtz works out during spring training baseball Monday, Feb. 16, 2026, in Mesa, Ariz. (AP Photo/Ross D. Franklin) Athletics' Nick Kurtz works out during spring training baseball Monday, Feb. 16, 2026, in Mesa, Ariz. (AP Photo/Ross D. Franklin)

Athletics Spring Baseball

Even now with the extra fanfare and attention on him this spring asreigning AL Rookie of the Yearat just 22. Kurtz stuck with his usual offseason routine of returning home to North Carolina, where he likes to "chill," play video games and watch movies when he's not busy training.

"First of all, I'm excited for Year 2. I kind of know what to expect and what it's like to play inthe big leagues," Kurtz said Sunday before his first Cactus League game, against Cleveland. "Am I embracing the spotlight? Not so much. I'm a guy who likes to be out there, but obviously there's a lot more eyes, a lot more expectations, which I'm all about. I use that as our team, we have higher expectations of ourselves and what we think that we can do, so it's a good thing."

A'smanager Mark Kotsaywill consider Kurtz for the leadoff spot — where he was hitting Sunday and went 0 for 3 with a strikeout in his team's 6-0 loss to the Guardians — to maximize the slugger's at-bats.

After such a special 2025, Kurtz continues to come to work and praise all of his teammates who helped him achieve the spectacular year he had, Kotsay said.

"The same way like he's 13 years old, he's never going to change," Kotsay said at Hohokam Stadium. "It's awesome to watch him in the clubhouse, on the back field, he comes in the same way, the same guy, just feels blessed to be here, and I don't think that's ever going to change for him."

Kurtz batted .290 with 36 home runs, 86 RBIs and a 1.002 OPS in 117 games and became the eighth rookie since 1901 to finish with an OPS over 1.000 while making at least 400 plate appearances. In July, he became the first major league rookieto hit four homersin a game, leading the A's to a 15-3 victory over the Houston Astros.

So, what's it like watching him day to day?

"It's extremely annoying, not fun, because I know whatever I do I can never hit it opposite field that far, so I would say annoying," joked locker mate Zack Gelof, a second baseman rehabbing from surgery last September on his left shoulder. "Not as fun."

The 22-year-old Kurtz is counting on the A's carrying their momentum from late last year in a 76-86 finish and having a faster start this season to become a contender again in the AL West. He loves the young core of this group — many of whom have been locked up on long-term contracts — and hopes to be part of turning the club into a winner ahead of its scheduled move to Las Vegas for the start of the 2028 campaign.

Advertisement

"My plan is to be here for as long as I can," Kurtz said. "I'll be here for the next six years, minimum, so it's really exciting to know that when we go to Vegas we have guys that we'll be super familiar with and some of my best friends I've made for life, so it's really fun."

Many of those very faces were all together on the island of Maui in Hawaii for left fielder Tyler Soderstrom's wedding in November when the AL Rookie of the Year award was announced, so they celebrated Kurtz's first shining moment of what is expected to just be the start of great things to come in his career.

Still, it wasn't anything outrageous by any means. That wouldn't be Kurtz's way.

"Not a whole lot, maybe a couple beers, just hanging out," he said.

The left-handed hitter then spent the winter focused on making sure he did everything necessary to keep his body strong and healthy for another full year in the major leagues — one he hopes ends with a playoff berth this time. He started swinging a little later, in December, and increased his workload in the weight room, but noted, "I'm not a big changing guy. If it worked last year let's do it again this year."

Center fielder Denzel Clarke appreciates how the understated Kurtz handles his business. The first baseman offered a quick greeting to Guardians catcher David Fry when he stepped into the batter's box in the first inning and grounded out to third on four pitches.

"I don't know how under the radar you can be at 6-5, but he's just a very calm, very chill guy who's going to go about his day-to-day life," Clarke said. "Nothing too crazy, nothing too flashy, he's just going to be him."

Selected No. 4 in the first round of the 2024 amateur draft out of Wake Forest, Kurtz impressed the A's with his maturity from the moment he arrived and made his debut last April. He will turn 23 on March 12.

"I think he learned it really quickly when he got to us, and he mentioned that," Kotsay said. "He did go through a little bit of failure but he found his routines and his processes pretty quickly and recognized you can't get caught in the results, you just get caught in your process, and I think for a young player to realize that as quickly as he did, it showed in the success that he had."

AP MLB:https://apnews.com/mlb

Slugging 1B Nick Kurtz looks to build on AL Rookie of the Year award in 2nd season with Athletics

MESA, Ariz. (AP) — Aside from towering over most of hisAthleticsteammates at 6-foot-5, Nick Kurtz blends in at his locke...
AC Milan loses at home and Loftus-Cheek hospitalized after collision with Parma goalkeeper

MILAN (AP) — AC Milan lost more ground to city rival Inter Milan after a 1-0 loss to Parma at home on Sunday in a match which saw Milan midfielder Ruben Loftus-Cheek hospitalized after a collision with the Parma goalkeeper.

Associated Press AC Milan's Ruben Loftus-Cheek, left, fights for the bass with Parma's Emanuele Valeri during the Italian Serie A soccer match between AC Milan and Parma in Milan, Italy, Sunday, Feb. 22 , 2025. (Spada/LaPresse via AP) Parma's Mariano Troilo celebrates scoring during the Italian Serie A soccer match between AC Milan and Parma in Milan, Italy, Sunday, Feb. 22 , 2025. (Spada/LaPresse via AP) AC Milan's Adrien Rabiot, left, fights for the bass with Parma's Emanuele Valeri during the Italian Serie A soccer match between AC Milan and Parma in Milan, Italy, Sunday, Feb. 22 , 2025. (Spada/LaPresse via AP) AC Milan's Christian Pulisic, right, in action during the Italian Serie A soccer match between AC Milan and Parma in Milan, Italy, Sunday, Feb. 22 , 2025. (Spada/LaPresse via AP) Parma's Mateo Pellegrino is challenged by AC Milan's Strahinja Pavlovic and Adrien Rabiot during the Italian Serie A soccer match between AC Milan and Parma in Milan, Italy, Sunday, Feb. 22 , 2025. (Spada/LaPresse via AP)

Italy Serie A Soccer

Loftus-Cheek was struck on the head after colliding with Edoardo Corvi after a cross into the area about 10 minutes into the match at San Siro.

The 30-year-old Loftus-Cheek had a bloodied face while being treated on the field. He was stretchered off with a neck and head brace, and later taken to hospital.

Italian media reports said the England international and former Chelsea player sustained broken teeth and was being examined for head trauma.

Advertisement

"Our thoughts are with him," Parma coach Carlos Cuesta said.

Mariano Troilo scored with a header off a corner in the 80th minute to give Parma the win. The goal was initially disallowed for a foul but the call was reversed after video review.

Milan had entered the match looking to cut its gap to Inter to seven points. Inter moved 10 points clear with a2-0 victory at Leccefor its seventh straight league win on Saturday.

Milan had already lost points at home in a 1-1 draw against Como on Wednesday.

It was the third win in a row for Parma, which is in 12th place.

Other results

Fourth-place Roma opened a four-point gap to fifth-place Juventus. Roma scored three second-half goals in a 3-0 home win against 16th-place Cremonese, which has lost 12 consecutive matches.Roma is tied on points with third-place Napoli.Seventh-place Atalanta scored two second-half goals to rally to a 2-1 win over third-place Napoli at home. It was Atalanta's third straight league win. Napoli hasn't won in three consecutive matches in all competitions.Genoa beat Torino 3-0 at home to end a three-game winless streak. Torino, which played the entire second half with 10 men, hasn't won in four straight matches in all tournaments.___AP soccer:https://apnews.com/hub/soccer

Fourth-place Roma opened a four-point gap to fifth-place Juventus. Roma scored three second-half goals in a 3-0 home win against 16th-place Cremonese, which has lost 12 consecutive matches.

Roma is tied on points with third-place Napoli.

Seventh-place Atalanta scored two second-half goals to rally to a 2-1 win over third-place Napoli at home. It was Atalanta's third straight league win. Napoli hasn't won in three consecutive matches in all competitions.

Genoa beat Torino 3-0 at home to end a three-game winless streak. Torino, which played the entire second half with 10 men, hasn't won in four straight matches in all tournaments.

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

AC Milan loses at home and Loftus-Cheek hospitalized after collision with Parma goalkeeper

MILAN (AP) — AC Milan lost more ground to city rival Inter Milan after a 1-0 loss to Parma at home on Sunday in a match ...
The moments that defined the Milan Cortina Winter Olympics

MILAN — TheseWinter Olympicswere the most spread-out in history, with four venues hosting speedskating, hockey and figure skating in the city's outskirts while the rest of the Games' 12 sports were scattered across difficult-to-reach mountain towns hours away.

NBC Universal

But those who made the effort to get to the Milan Cortina Winter Olympics witnessed a Games remembered for a "King," crashes, cheating scandals, drones, historic medal hauls and triumphs by the host nation.

U.S. earns record 12 gold medals

Those dozen golds marked the most ever won by the U.S. at a single Winter Olympics. First-time gold medalists included bobsledderElana Meyers Taylor,the 41-year-old who won the monobob by four-hundredths of a second;Jordan Stolz,who won gold medals in long-track speedskating's 500 and 1000 meters, and Alex Ferreira, the 31-year-old winner of freeski halfpipe.

U.S. hockey sweeps gold

With a sweep of the hockey gold medals, theU.S. men won an Olympic tournament for the first time since 1980, and the women for the first time since 2018.

Trailing archrival Canada, 1-0, with two minutes left in regulation, captain Hilary Knight, playing her fifth and final Olympics, sent the gold-medal game to overtime. Veteran Megan Keller then scored the golden goal in a stirring comeback to earn the U.S.women their third-ever Olympic gold and first since 2018. The win capped a roller-coaster two days for Knight, who had proposed to speedskater Brittany Bowe one day earlier.

The men's tournament, the first to feature NHL players since 2014, also came down to a Canada-U.S. final that ended with Jack Hughes' golden goal in overtime.

Stunning results for U.S. figure skating

After the U.S. won the team event — made up of men's singles, women's singles, pair skating and ice dance — it appeared the country was on the verge of a potential sweep in the individual performances. It didn't exactly end that way.

Ilia Malinin, the big gold-medal favorite in men's singles, entered the final with a lead but had multiple falls anddropped all the way to eighthfor arguably the biggest upset of the Games. He said thepressure got the best of him.

Madison Chock and Evan Bates, the favorite in pairs, had stellar performancesbut took silverafter Laurence Fournier Beaudry and Guillaume Cizeron of France(somewhat controversially) outscored them.

The highlight of the Olympics, however, may have been Alysa Liu. The 20-year-old, who retired from figure skating four years ago,put on a performance for the agesin the women's singles final and claimed gold while winning on her terms.

"That's what I'm f-----g talking about," Liu said as she skated off the ice following her gold-clinching performance.

Norway dominates the medal count

Despite having a population of just 5.6 million, the Nordic nation has long been a power in the Winter Olympics' endurance sports like cross-country skiing and biathlon.

But Norway's dominance grew to historic levels in Italy, where it led the medal count with 41, making it the first country to earn more than 40 medals at a single Winter Olympics. Six of itsgold medals were earned by cross-country skier Johannes Høsflot Klæbo, known as "King Klæbo," who became the first person ever to win that many at a Winter Games and only the fifth athlete to win six-plus golds at any Olympics, joining swimmers Mark Spitz (seven in 1972), Kristin Otto (six in 1988) and Michael Phelps (six each in 2004 and 2008) and gymnast Vitaly Scherbo (six in 1992).

Advertisement

Lindsey Vonn's comeback ends in a crash

Forced into retirement by injuries in 2019 before mounting a comeback in 2024, the American superstar skier, 41, entered the Olympics enjoying the healthiest season she could remember.

That changed less than a week before the women's downhill began, when she tore a knee ligament in a crash. Determined to compete in a brace despite the injury, Vonn qualified for the downhill final with one of the fastest times in the entire field. But only 13 seconds into her run, she hooked a gate with her right arm andwas sent spiraling, head-over-skis, into a crashthat left a Cortina d'Ampezzo crowd full of her friends and family silent. She has undergone five surgeries, andher father has saidhe does not want her to race again.

Johnson and Shiffrin win skiing gold

In the same downhill race where Vonn crashed, U.S. teammateBreezy Johnsonsliced down the treacherous Tofane course to join Vonn as the only other woman in U.S. history to win Olympic gold in the downhill. In Alpine skiing's team combined event, Johnson and teammate Mikaela Shiffrin finished fourth, while Americans Paula Moltzan and Jackie Wiles — less than a year removed from surviving a plane crash — earned bronze.

Johnson would end the Games on a happy note after herboyfriend proposedat the base of the giant slalom competition. Shiffrin, who hadn't earned an Olympic medal since 2018,had a cathartic end to the Games by dominating slalom for gold.

Ukrainian athlete barred from racing

Vladyslav Heraskevych planned to compete in skeleton while wearing a helmet featuring images of Ukrainian athletes who had been killed since Russia's invasion of the country in 2022. But the helmet did not comply with the International Olympic Committee's "athlete expression guidelines," the IOC said, and a jury of the International Bobsleigh and Skeleton Federation disqualified Heraskevych from competing. His refusal to wear another helmet stemmed from his belief that there are things"more important than medals," he said.

Trump calls U.S. athlete a 'loser'

Asked how he felt about representing the U.S., freeski athlete Hunter Hess responded that "just because I'm wearing the flag, doesn't mean I represent everything that's going on in the U.S." That quickly caught the attention of President Donald Trump, who took to social media to call Hess a "loser." The attention sparked by the comment was "challenging" to deal with, Hess later said, but he stood by his comment andeven flashed an "L" sign after finishing a run,a self-aware nod to Trump's comment.

"I love the United States of America," Hess said. "I cannot say that enough. My original statement, I felt like I said that, but apparently people didn't take it that way."

Italy enjoys its best ever Winter Olympics

Before these Games, the high-water mark for Italian success at a Winter Olympics came in 1994, when the Azzurri won 20 total medals, including seven golds.

On its home turf this month, the host nation smashed those marks, winning 30 medals, the third most of any country, and 10 golds. Speedskater Francesca Lollobrigida won the 3,000 meters in an Olympic record on her 35th birthday, then celebrated with her 2-year-old son. She added another gold later in the Games. A year after suffering a devastating leg injury, Federica Brignone won gold in giant slalom. And speedskater Arianna Fontana won her 14th career Olympic medal.

Cheating admissions and allegations

Norwegian cross-country skier Sturla Holm Lægreid's emotional admission in a postrace interview that he had cheated on his girlfriend and hoped to win her back quickly made him one of the most talked-about athletes at the Olympics. "I hope that committing social suicide [like this] might show her how much I love her,"he said.By the end of the Games he'd won five medals, but not his ex.

Lægreid wasn't the only athlete caught up in a cheating scandal, however. On the ice, Canada and Sweden got into a heated shouting match after the Swedes accused Canada's Marc Kennedy of an illegal double touch during a curling match.

Kennedy could be heard hurling swears at the Swedish team. When asked why he got so upset, Kennedy said: "He's still accusing us of cheating, and I didn't like it. So I told him where to stick it, because we're the wrong team to do that to."

You'd never seen an Olympics like these

For the first time, an athlete representing South America won a Winter Olympics medal. That was thanks toLucas Pinheiro Braathen, the Oslo-borngiant slalom racer who previously represented Norway, retired from the sport, then returned under the flag of Brazil, where his mother was raised.

Skiers like Pinheiro Braathen were captured throughout the Olympics fromnever-before-seen camera angles by small, agile dronesthat trailed athletes at speeds of up to 75 mph. The immersive views of athletes racing down slopes, sliding courses and speedskating tracks were a hit with viewers.

The moments that defined the Milan Cortina Winter Olympics

MILAN — TheseWinter Olympicswere the most spread-out in history, with four venues hosting speedskating, hockey and figur...

 

ONEEL JRNL © 2015 | Distributed By My Blogger Themes | Designed By Templateism.com