NYT Connections Sports Edition Today: Hints and Answers for Sunday, March 8, 2026

Get excited—there's another New York Times game to add to your daily routine! Those of us word game addicts who already playWordle,Connections,Strandsand theMini Crosswordnow haveConnections Sports Editionto add to the mix.So, if you're looking for some hints and answers for today's Connections Sports Edition onSunday, March 8, 2026, you've come to the right place.

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Today's NYT Connections: Sports Edition puzzle for Sunday, March 8, 2026 / The New York TimesThe New York Times

What Is Connections Sports Edition?

Connections Sports Edition is just like the regular Connections word puzzle, in that it's a game that resets at 12 a.m. EST each day and has 16 different words listed. It's up to you to figure out each group of four words that belong to a certain category, with four categories in total.

This new version is sports-specific, however, as a partnership between The New York Times and The Athletic.

As the NYT site instructs, for Connections Sports Edition, you "group sports terms that share a common thread."

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Related:The 26 Funniest NYT Connections Game Memes You'll Appreciate if You Do This Daily Word Puzzle

Hints for Today's Connections Sports Edition Categories on March 8, 2026

Here are some hints about the four categories to help you figure out the word groupings.

  • Yellow: What a racket!

  • Green: Soccer pros.

  • Blue: Top prospects.

  • Purple: Inspired a movie.

Here Are Today's Connections Sports Edition Categories

OK, time for a second hint…we'll give you the actual categories now. Spoilers below!

  • Yellow: WOMEN'S TENNIS GREATS

  • Green: NWSL TEAMS

  • Blue: WNBA DRAFT NO. 1 PICKS

  • Purple: TEAMS IN THE ALL-AMERICAN GIRLS PROFESSIONAL BASEBALL LEAGUE

If you're looking for the answers, no worries—we've got them below. So, don't scroll any further if you don't want to see the solutions!The answers to today'sConnections Sports Edition #531are coming up next.Related:15 Fun Games Like Connections to Play Every Day

What Are the Answers to Connections Sports Edition Today?

  • WOMEN'S TENNIS GREATS: GRAF, KING, NAVRATILOVA, WILLIAMS

  • NWSL TEAMS: COURAGE, DASH, LEGACY, THORNS

  • WNBA DRAFT NO. 1 PICKS: AUGUSTUS, BOSTON, PLUM, YOUNG

  • TEAMS IN THE ALL-AMERICAN GIRLS PROFESSIONAL BASEBALL LEAGUE: BELLES, BLUE SOX, COMETS, PEACHES

Don't worry if you didn't get them this time—we've all been there.

Up next,catch up on the answers to recent Wordle puzzles.

Related: These Ingenious Modern Storage Containers Are Made for the Organization Obsessed

This story was originally published byParadeon Mar 8, 2026, where it first appeared in theLifesection. Add Parade as aPreferred Source by clicking here.

NYT Connections Sports Edition Today: Hints and Answers for Sunday, March 8, 2026

Get excited—there's another New York Times game to add to your daily routine! Those of us word game addicts who alre...
A singing circle at Amsterdam's Concertgebouw offers support for people with dementia

AMSTERDAM (AP) — Megan Worthy still recalls singing in a choir in the Australian capital, Canberra, as she was growing up.

Associated Press People, many of them seniors with a form of dementia, join in the People many of them seniors with a form of dementia, join in the Neurobiologist Brankele Frank is interviewed before a session of the People many of them seniors with a form of dementia, join in the Megan Worthy, with glasses, right, and opera singer Maartje de Lint, left, and others, many of them seniors with a form of dementia, join in the

Netherlands Singing Circle

Now, as a rare form of early-onset dementia chips away at her vision and other brain functions, the 58-year-old is transported back to her musical youth as she and her daughter, Bronte, sing together with other people withneurological conditionsin an Amsterdam concert hall, the Concertgebouw.

"It's pretty brutal," Worthy said of her rare neurological condition. "I'm starting to lose everything, you know, and this is really rewarding and seeing all these people, yeah, it did make me have a lot of memories."

She was taking part in a so-called "singing circle" run by opera singer Maartje de Lint at the landmark concert venue for seniors with what she calls "vulnerable brains," many of whom have a form of dementia orParkinson's disease.

Millions of people have some form of dementia, a progressive loss of memory, reasoning, language skills and other cognitive functions. People can experience changes in personality, emotional control, even visual perception.Alzheimer'sis the most widely recognized type, but there are many others, with their own symptoms and underlying biology. Small strokes, for example, can impair blood flow to the brain and trigger what's called vascular dementia.

The singers in Amsterdam, who each pay 20 euros ($23.50) to attend, are arranged with their carers in a circle of chairs under a ceiling hung with 14 crystal chandeliers in the venue's ornate Mirror Hall.

"We always say, music is like vitamins," said Selien Kneppers, 78, who once managed a Dutch boogie woogie and blues band and now regularly attends the singing circle.

Roving around the middle, often dropping to one knee and reaching out her hands to connect with a singer, is De Lint. She and other singers in her organization crisscross the Netherlands and Europe, leading singing workshops.

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Singing, De Lint says, is a way of keeping the brain active and bringing family members and their loved ones closer together.

"So we give people perspective," she says before one of her singing sessions in Amsterdam. "It's like actually a training for the brain, for the body, to get more resilient and understand the perspective that you still have."

The hour-long session clearly has an emotional effect on the singers and their carers. Helpers regularly hand out paper tissues for people to dab away tears. One man tenderly reached out a hand to touch the face of the woman next to him as they sang songs ranging from Elvis Presley's "Love Me Tender" to Frank Sinatra's "Fly Me to the Moon" and "Amazing Grace."

Neurobiologist Brankele Frank, who is not connected to De Lint's project, agrees that singing can be beneficial to people with dementia or Alzheimer's or other kinds of neurodegenerative diseases.

Music "speaks to brain areas that haven't really been degenerated yet," she told The Associated Press. "So, for example, their verbal skills often are compromised, but music speaks to parts of the brain that don't necessarily need verbal skills. And so it taps into their emotion, their sense of self, their identity."

Scientists are studying the potentialbenefits of musicfor people with dementia, traumatic brain injuries, Parkinson's disease and stroke. Music lights up multiple regions of the brain, strengthening neural connections between areas that govern language, memories, emotions and movement.

Megan's daughter, Bronte Henfling, said that even getting her mother to a new environment that was not a medical appointment to discuss her posterior cortical atrophy felt good.

"Just hearing everyone come together and sing ... it reminds us that we're all human and there's a humanity out there which is really pleasing and nice to be a part of," she said.

A singing circle at Amsterdam's Concertgebouw offers support for people with dementia

AMSTERDAM (AP) — Megan Worthy still recalls singing in a choir in the Australian capital, Canberra, as she was growing u...
When the Lionel Messi circus comes to town, MLS teams need a bigger tent

BALTIMORE — Messi League Soccer — or Major League Soccer, as it shall again be known when the Argentine maestro heads home someday — barnstormed into a new big top Saturday.

Yahoo Sports

Inter Miami is Cirque de Soleil with a supernatural ringmaster sent to charm audiences outside the regular tour stops with unrivaled performance art.

Lionel Messi is MLS' — and the sport's — greatest attraction, and so this offseason it was off to Peru, Colombia and Ecuador for friendlies and, two weeks ago, a one-night stint inPuerto Rico marred by an invading fan and a security officer knocking down the superstar.

The season opener at Los Angeles FC was relocated from tidy BMO Stadium across the park to the vast Coliseum.

For a nervy 2-1 victory Saturday, Inter Miami hit Inner Harbor to play D.C. United, which sacrificed home-pitch advantage for an NFL stadium 37 miles north to sell 3 1/2 times more tickets than it would have at Audi Field.

Thousands of Messi gawkers among the announced sellout of 72,026 at M&T Bank Stadium — there were a few thousand empty seats — helped offset United's 2025 attendance plunge and underwhelming turnout for the 2026 home opener two weeks ago.

Moving to a larger location was good business — no argument there — but it also gave off carnival vibes. Three decades since its launch, MLS remains a thirsty operation reliant on Messi and other big names late in their careers for attention outside the league bubble. From a competitive standpoint, United wasn't doing its team any favors; it was all about revenue and marketing.

Miami welcomed the pink-clad support.

"It's definitely nice to be able to go to away stadiums and know you probably have more supporters than the actual home team sometimes," goalkeeper Dayne St. Clair said. "Obviously that won't be the case in every single stadium, but I think it was definitely the case tonight."

BALTIMORE, MARYLAND - MARCH 07: Lionel Messi #10 of Inter Miami CF celebrates after scoring the team's second goal during the MLS match between D.C. United and Inter Miami CF at M&T Bank Stadium on March 07, 2026 in Baltimore, Maryland. (Photo by Patrick Smith/Getty Images)

At the center of it was Messi, who goes where he is told, probably without the slightest idea where Baltimore is or why he's there.

He did know where he was Thursday:at the White House, at a time of war, shaking hands with the FIFA Peace Prize recipient, President Donald Trump, at a ceremony honoring the reigning MLS Cup champions.

By all accounts, Messi is not a political person, but he has stepped into sticky situations before as a well-paid Saudi tourism ambassador. The White House invitation was extended to Inter Miami, not Messi himself, but given Messi's outsized influence at the club and in the league, he and his handlers could've quietly discouraged it.

Messi is so popular and his brand so secure, though, the potential damage of appearing with a polarizing political figure probably won't amount to much before his expected World Cup farewell this summer across North America.

The White House visit wasn't without awkwardness. As Trump spoke about the bombing of Iran, Messi, standing to the president's right, shifted his weight back and forth, looked down and coughed nervously into his left hand.

Trump's comments about soccer brought a smile to Messi's face; he doesn't speak English but clearly understands some. Later, he presented Trump with a commemorative pink ball.

President Donald Trump receives a soccer ball trophy from Lionel Messi during an event to honor the 2025 Major League Soccer champions Inter Miami in the East Room of the White House, Thursday, March 5, 2026, in Washington. (AP Photo/Julia Demaree Nikhinson)

Asked in his video call with reporters Friday about the White House visit, coach Javier Mascherano said in Spanish, "I thought we were going to talk about soccer." He then explained the visit had been in place for a few months and followed protocol for a championship team.

St. Clair said Trump's political rhetoric in front of the team was "definitely a little bit awkward … and kind of threw a lot of guys off, because it was supposed to be about the team and winning last year. … It's something that's out of our control, and we didn't know that was going to be a part of it as well."

Last year, citing a scheduling conflict, Messi declined then-president Joe Biden's invitation to the White House to receive the Presidential Medal of Freedom.

D.C. United is not the first team to try maximizing the Messi spectacle, though other efforts have come with controversy. Last year, the Columbus Crew angered many loyal supporters by moving its home match against Miami 150 miles north to Cleveland's NFL stadium, where 60,614 tripled normal attendance. (The Haslem family owns both the Crew and Browns.)

"It was nice to have a game in front of so many spectators and in this beautiful stadium," D.C. coach René Weiler said Saturday. "We prefer to have a good result at the end, but it was a nice atmosphere."

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Two years ago, Miami's away match against Kansas City took place at Arrowhead Stadium (72,610), quadrupling Sporting Park's 18,457 capacity.

[Join or create a Yahoo Fantasy Baseball league for the 2026 MLB season]

Messi promotions have also backfired. Last year, MLS and the Whitecaps faced a class-action lawsuit after pumping up an appearance that never came to fruition. Fans received steep discounts for food and drinks, and last week the British Columbia Supreme Court approved a $329,000 settlement.

Two years ago, when Messi injured an ankle six weeks before a scheduled appearance at Soldier Field, the Chicago Fire scrambled by offering free tickets to a future game that season and discounted seats the following year, if he didn't play. (He didn't play.)

D.C. fans have never seen Messi at Audi Field. His 2023 MLS debut fell just after Miami's lone visit to Washington, and he was injured in subsequent years. In assembling this year's schedule, United not only passed over its own 20,000-capacity venue in the city, but Northwest Stadium, the unappealing home to the NFL's Washington Commanders, located a few miles east of the city.

The crowd of 75,673 at the Coliseum on Feb. 21 was the second largest for a standalone match in league history, behind the LAFC-L.A. Galaxy derby at the Rose Bowl (82,110) in 2023. Most fans this year supported the home team, not Miami.

Next month, Miami's match in Denver will take place at the NFL venue instead of the small MLS park.

In Baltimore, ticket prices were considerably higher than for a common match at Audi Field, and the cheapest seats on the resale market still available before kickoff started at $78.65 for the corner of the upper deck.

The crowd was a blend of those wanting to see Messi and Miami, those supporting D.C., and those interested in attending a big event. On a backdrop of the Ravens' purple seats, United's black and red mixed with Miami's pink.

The visiting team has been neither fazed nor emboldened by the larger-than-normal crowds.

"The people outside, they can make some noise," Mascherano said, "but they don't play."

Given the proximity to Washington, United should have enjoyed more support. But after years of D.C. ownership neglect and bad-to-bland performances, the stadium looked and sounded like a neutral venue.

Miami went ahead in the 17th minute, courtesy of a D.C. blunder. Lucas Bartlett coughed up possession at the end line to Germán Berterame, who supplied Telasco Segovia, who found Rodrigo De Paul for a neat, 12-yarder.

"It was a gift, the first goal," Weiler said. "That was not expected, but maybe [D.C. was] a little bit nervous because of the atmosphere, the spectators in the stadium and, of course, the opponent."

Ten minutes later, Messi timed his run behind Bartlett to latch onto Mateo Silvetti's lovely ball and one-time an 8-yarder past helpless goalkeeper Sean Johnson.

Aside from an overhead kick by D.C.'s Louis Munteanu that missed by a whisker, the second half trudged along without superlatives or suspense until the 75th minute.

Miami's sloppiness gifted a counterattack to United. St. Clair's diving save thwarted Jackson Hopkins, but Tai Baribo cleaned up the rebound.

United hummed with confidence, while Miami's suspect defense found itself under duress. Given the gap between the clubs, it was an unexpected development, indeed.

"The feeling of not controlling the game is unusual for us because we usually do," Mascherano said. "When we don't, you can see we're displeased."

De Paul squandered a golden opportunity to seal the outcome. Messi kept going until the final whistle. The star-struck portion of the audience seemed satisfied.

Miami's — and Messi's — work was done here, albeit with some discomfort. The show goes on.

When the Lionel Messi circus comes to town, MLS teams need a bigger tent

BALTIMORE — Messi League Soccer — or Major League Soccer, as it shall again be known when the Argentine maestro heads ho...
Khalil Mack, Chargers agree to new contract before NFL free agency

Return of the(Khalil) Mack.

USA TODAY Sports

Khalil Mack has agreed to a new contract with theLos Angeles Chargersto avoid free agency, according to multiple reports. He will sign a one-year deal worth $18 million that is fully guaranteed, as first reported byESPN's Jeremy Fowler.

The 35-year-old Mack was considered the 21st-best player in free agency this year, according toUSA TODAY Sports' Nate Davis. He ranked as the fourth-best outside linebacker and defensive end on the board, with teammateOdafe Owehalso on the list as a pending free agent.

Mack played the 2025 season with theChargers on a one-year deal worth $18 million. He appeared in only 12 games for L.A., thanks to a dislocated elbow that kept him out four games. Regardless, the pass-rusher still recorded 5.5 sacks and 11 quarterback hits to go along with 32 total tackles.

He is no longer at the height of his powers, but Mack can still strike fear into opposing quarterbacks. The Chargers' investment signals that they also agree.

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Here's a look at the contract details for Mack.

<p style=OT Tytus Howard: Traded to Cleveland Browns (previous team: Houston Texans)

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=CB Trent McDuffie: Traded to Los Angeles Rams (previous team: Kansas City Chiefs)

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=RB David Montgomery: Traded to Houston Texans (previous team: Detroit Lions)

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=WR DJ Moore: Traded to Buffalo Bills (previous team: Chicago Bears)

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2026 NFL offseason tracker: Player signings, trades

OT Tytus Howard:Traded to Cleveland Browns(previous team: Houston Texans)

Khalil Mack contract details

Mack inked a one-year, $18 million deal. Here's a look at the full terms, per multiple reports:

  • Term: 1 year

  • Total contract value: $18 million

  • Guaranteed money: $18 million

While the number jumps off the screen, Mack is only the 19th highest-paid at the position in terms of average annual value (AAV), according toOverTheCap.

The positional value has exploded in recent years as the likes ofMicah Parsons,Myles Garrettand others have pushed the market into the $40 million range.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Khalil Mack contract details: Chargers ink one-year deal with LB

Khalil Mack, Chargers agree to new contract before NFL free agency

Return of the(Khalil) Mack. Khalil Mack has agreed to a new contract with theLos Angeles Charger...

 

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