Hockey: Hayley Wickenheiser was a lock to make the Hockey Hall of Fame in her first year of eligibility and is the headliner of the induction class of 2019. The Canadian hockey star was announced as part of the six-member class Tuesday that includes former NHL players Sergei Zubov and Guy Carbonneau, Czech hockey star Vaclav Nedomansky and sport builders Jim Rutherford and Jerry York. In 79 international games over 21 seasons, Wickenheiser recorded 58 goals and 88 assists for 146 points. She won four Olympic gold medals, seven world championship golds, one Olympic silver and six world championship silvers. ... The Blues signed coach Craig Berube to a three-year contract extension after he led St. Louis to its first Stanley Cup championship in his first season in charge. The Blues were in last place in January, but Berube led them on an 11-game winning streak to position them for their playoff run and the first championship in their 52-year history. ... Brooks Orpik called it a career after 15 bruising seasons in which he established himself as a big-hitting, shutdown defenseman and won the Stanley Cup twice. The 38-year-old played 1,171 regular-season and playoff games for the Penguins and Capitals. He won the Cup with Pittsburgh in 2009 and Washington in 2018. ...The Bruins signed defenseman Steven Kampfer to a two-year contract extension that will pay him $800,000 per season.

NFL: Bengals rookie offensive tackle Jonah Williams is expected to miss the season after surgery for a torn labrum in his left shoulder. The team said Williams is expected to make a full recovery. He was injured at a practice earlier this month. The Bengals drafted Williams at No. 11 overall in April, looking to upgrade an offensive line that has been a longstanding problem.

Track and field: The IAAF says it met a Swiss supreme court deadline to explain why rules limiting female runners’ testosterone levels should be re-imposed during Caster Semenya’s appeal. Track and field’s governing body had until Tuesday to respond to a judge’s grant of a special interim order this month that suspended the rules. The judge must now decide whether Semenya can continue competing over 800 meters without taking testosterone suppressing medication pending the full appeal. That final hearing with a panel of judges will likely take months, but the next ruling from the single judge could come within days. The South African is currently on track to defend her world title in September in Qatar.

— News services