Former NFL player Richard Sherman is the latest sports figure whose home has been burglarized.

The Super Bowl champion posted pictures and a video on social media asking if anyone recognized three armed intruders that broke into his house in Maple Valley, Washington last weekend.

Sherman, an Amazon Prime Video analyst, was a three-time All-Pro and five-time Pro Bowl defensive back from 2011 to 2021 with Seattle, San Francisco and Tampa Bay. He helped the Seahawks win the Super Bowl in 2014.

“House being robbed at gun point with my family in it isn’t what anyone wants for a birthday gift,” said Sherman, who turned 37 on Sunday. “Scary situation that my wife handled masterfully and kept my kids safe. If anyone has any info that can help find these people please reach out.”

A message seeking comment was left Tuesday with the King County Sheriff’s Office.

The FBI has warned leagues about crime organizations targeting professional athletes following a string of burglaries at the homes of prominent players. Leagues have issued security alerts to their players after the break-ins, some of which have come when players were away with their teams for road games.

Victims of home invasions include quarterbacks Patrick Mahomes of Kansas City and Joe Burrow of Cincinnati, Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce, NBA players Luka Doncic of the Los Angeles Lakers, Bobby Portis of Milwaukee, Mike Conley Jr. of Minnesota and Pittsburgh Penguins star Evgeni Malkin.

In February, seven men from Chile were charged in Florida federal court with orchestrating burglaries at the homes of prominent professional athletes around the country.

Campbell signs with Cardinals for 18th season >> Veteran defensive lineman Calais Campbell has agreed to a one-year contract with the Arizona Cardinals, returning to the franchise that drafted him for his 18th NFL season.

The six-time Pro Bowl selection played his first nine seasons in the league with the Cardinals and was a member of the team that made the Super Bowl in the 2008 season before losing to the Pittsburgh Steelers.

The 38-year-old Campbell started all 17 games for the Miami Dolphins last season and had 52 tackles, five sacks, 12 quarterback hits, 12 tackles for a loss, five passes defended and a forced fumble. He was an All-Pro for the Jacksonville in 2017 and has also played for Baltimore and Atlanta.

NHL

Ovechkin scores No. 891, now 3 shy of Gretzky >> Alex Ovechkin scored his 891st career goal, moving him four away from passing Wayne Gretzky’s NHL record, and Dylan Strome broke a third-period tie to lead the Washington Capitals to a 4-3 victory over the Bruins in Boston.

Nic Dowd and Tom Wilson also scored for Washington, helping the Eastern Conference-leading Caps snap a three-game losing streak.

David Pastrnak had two goals for Boston, which lost its ninth in a row.

Ovechkin gave the Capitals a 2-0 lead with about four minutes left in the first period, pushing a cross-crease pass from Strome into an open net. He has 12 goals in his last 18 games and eight games remaining this season to catch Gretzky. The 39-year-old Russian has 38 goals this season and is on track to reach 40 for a 14th time — also the most in league history — despite missing 16 games because of a broken left fibula.

WNBA

Portland hires first employee >> Portland’s WNBA team has hired its first employee, adding team president Inky Son to lead the front office.

The franchise, which will join the league in 2026, made the announcement.

“Inky will lay the groundwork for our future growth,” said Mike Whitehead, who is the managing director of the parent company that owns the team.

Son, who is from South Korea, was the chief administrative officer for the National Basketball Players Association. She left the fashion industry to start a career in sports in 2015 with the MLB Players Association.

The WNBA is expanding this season with Golden State and next year in Portland and Toronto. There are plans to add at least another team in 2028. Several cities, including Detroit and Philadelphia, have submitted bids.

Soccer

Experts testify about Maradona’s autopsy >> Experts involved in Diego Maradona’s autopsy testified at the trial of seven health professionals accused of negligent homicide that the Argentine soccer star had an abnormally large heart, suffered from cirrhosis, and showed no traces of alcohol or drugs at the time of is death.

Forensic expert Alejandro Ezequiel Vega told the court that Maradona’s heart was “enlarged” and weighed about 503 grams, when the average weight is between 250 and 300 grams.

Maradona, who led Argentina to the World Cup title in 1986, died on Nov. 25, 2020. He was 60.

Vega explained that the examination of Maradona’s heart showed that the former star suffered from “long-standing ischemia,” with “lack of blood flow and oxygen.”

The autopsy concluded that Maradona died of acute pulmonary edema secondary to congestive heart failure.

Maradona died in a house on the outskirts of Buenos Aires, days after undergoing surgery for a hematoma that formed between his skull and brain.