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New Chelsea signing Christian Pulisic has said he wants to fill the void left by Eden Hazard should the Belgian leave for Real Madrid this summer.
Chelsea signed Pulisic for £58 million (€64m) from Borussia Dortmund in January, a record fee for a U.S. player, although he remained in the Bundesliga for the rest of the 2018-19 season.
Pulisic could be the only new face to arrive at Stamford Bridge this summer with the prospect of a two-window transfer ban hanging over the club, while sources have told ESPN FC that Hazard wants to complete a move to Real as soon as possible, with the winger's final game for Chelsea likely to be against Arsenal in the Europa League final on May 29.
But Pulisic, 20, has said he is ready to replace Hazard should he exit Stamford Bridge this summer and has set his sights on emulating the Belgian, who has lit up the Premier League since his arrival in 2012.
"It is incredible to see what Eden can do. He is a guy to look up to and what I would love to become," Pulisic told BBC Sport.
"It is definitely a goal. Any player would be dumb not to want to be in the same team as him."
Hazard led Chelsea in both goals and assists as the club finished third in their first season under Maurizio Sarri, scoring 16 Premier League goals while setting up another 15. Pulisic, meanwhile, scored on the final day of the Bundesliga campaign to take his season tally to four, although the forward was hit by injuries during the year.
During his time in Germany, Pulisic became the youngest non-German to score a Bundesliga goal and the youngest player to play for Dortmund in the Champions League. He is also the youngest player to captain the U.S. men's national team, but says he is motivated to set new records now he has arrived in the Premier League.
"I don't want to be looked at as someone who is the youngest to do this or that," Pulisic said. "I just want to be an established player and someone people respect, who is successful in this league.
"It is completely new to me and something not a lot of American players have experienced. It is a blessing to be in this position, so I can inspire American kids, to show them we can do it too."
Pulisic also wants to help Chelsea close the gap on Manchester City and Liverpool, who finished 26 and 25 points ahead of the Blues last season respectively.
"Liverpool and City are two great teams who had great seasons but I have seen Chelsea compete against big teams and do well against them this season," he said.
"We want to go in with a winning mentality and compete with them right away."
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LIVE Transfer Talk: United ready raid for Barca's Rakitic
Published in
Soccer
Tuesday, 21 May 2019 16:39

The Premier League transfer window is open. You can click here to review all the latest transfers and keep up to date with all the latest gossip below.
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TOP STORY: Man United ready Rakitic raid
The Daily Record reports that Manchester United are working on a deal to bring Barcelona midfielder Ivan Rakitic to Old Trafford.
The Croatian's future in Spain has come under question following Barca's signing of young Ajax midfielder Frenkie de Jong, and the Catalan club now needs to raise funds to balance the books and help finance further summer purchases.
World Cup finalist Rakitic has been identified by Camp Nou officials as an expendable asset, with the La Liga champions looking for around €55 million for the 31-year-old.
United, however, are keen to drastically lower that fee, but are willing to pay upward of €35m for the former Sevilla man. There are no concerns regarding the player's fitness, despite hitting the wrong side of 30, with Rakitic missing only nine matches through injury or illness during his five-year spell with Ernesto Valverde's side.
LIVE BLOG
09.51 BST: Juventus will be forced to pay up if they want to make Maurizio Sarri their next coach with Chelsea not minded to sack the Italian regardless of whether or not he wins the Europa League final, sources have told ESPN FC.
Sarri's future remains far from certain despite fulfilling his primary objective of securing Champions League qualification for Chelsea, and Roma have also been linked with a move to bring the former Napoli boss back to Serie A.
Sources have told ESPN FC that while Chelsea are prepared to negotiate a compensation package with any interested club if Sarri makes it clear that he wants to leave, they have no plans to dismiss him even if he fails to win a first piece of major silverware at Arsenal's expense in Baku.
09.32 BST: Radio Galega report that Barcelona have bid €25m for Celta Vigo's Maxi Gomez. With the 22-year-old striker also linked to Tottenham, we'd be surprised if Vigo even considered this one given he has a release clause of £43m.
08.55 BST: Portuguese outlet Record reports that Benfica are on the verge of signing Barcelona goalkeeper Jasper Cillessen.
Barca reportedly turned down Benfica's initial offer of €12m for the keeper. According to Record, Benfica executives will travel to Barcelona to have a meeting with their Barca counterparts to seal the deal that will be worth €20m. Benfica will pay €12m and include their 18-year-old right-back Joao Ferreira in the deal.
Cillessen, 30, is also a reported target of Porto and Valencia. The Netherlands international joined Barca from Ajax in 2016 as a replacement for Claudio Bravo but has primarily been used as a back-up to Marc-Andre ter Stegen. Cillessen has made two league appearances for Barca this season and is tied to the Catalan giants until June 2021.
08.25 BST: Tottenham is interested in signing Real Madrid midfielder Dani Ceballos, according to AS. Spurs coach Mauricio Pochettino considers Ceballos as an ideal replacement for Christian Eriksen, who is reported to be a target for Real Madrid and is yet to sign a new contract with his current deal expiring in 2020.
Ceballos has made 34 appearances for Madrid this season, just 19 as a starter. He is tied to Madrid until June 2023. The Spain international is reportedly keen to leave Madrid this summer in search of more playing time.
Real Madrid coach Zinedine Zidane recently suggested players that know they will not feature regularly next season would be better served leaving the club. Ceballos, who signed for Real Madrid in the summer of 2017 from Real Betis for €17m, is reportedly among the players told by Zidane that he is surplus to requirements.
According to AS, Madrid don't want to sell Ceballos this summer and will only consider the player leaving on loan, but would be willing to include a purchase option in the deal.
08.00 BST: Manchester United will have to pay as much as £50m if they want to sign Crystal Palace right-back Aaron Wan-Bissaka, according to the Daily Mirror.
The 21-year-old had a breakout season in 2018-19, making 39 appearances for the Eagles as they finished comfortably in mid-table in the Premier League, 15 points above relegation. He won more tackles, made more interceptions and completed more successful duels than any other defender in the league this season, o so it was no surprise he won the club's Player of the Year award.
Wan-Bissaka, whose contract at Selhurst Park runs until June 2022, told the Evening Standard earlier this month: "The situation just shows that my performances don't go unnoticed. But I am with Crystal Palace at the moment. That is where my contract is and that is where I will be next season.
"I have got three years left on my contract. It says I am going to be there, so that is all I can focus on now."
But if United were to make a big bid, could Palace refuse?
1:42
Is Pogba bound for Real Madrid? Will Mbappe leave PSG?
ESPN FC's Alejandro Moreno assesses the big summer transfer rumours, including Paul Pogba joining Zinedine Zidane and Leroy Sane parting ways with Pep Guardiola.
PAPER TALK (by James Capps)
Juve picture Milinkovic-Savic in new-look midfield
Gazetta dello Sport writes that Juventus are set to reignite their interest in Lazio midfielder Sergej Milinkovic-Savic this summer.
The Serbian has had a modest season in Italy, notching five goals and a further four assists in Serie A, but Juventus reportedly are keen to reshape their midfield with more physicality and bite, with Milinkovic-Savic seemingly fitting the bill.
The 24-year-old has been linked with a string of elite European clubs for more than a year, with Juventus and Manchester United heading the potential suitors at the turn of 2018, but it now appears that the Serbia international could be part of a new-look trident in the Juve midfield, moving to Turin alongside free agent Aaron Ramsey.
News of Milinkovic-Savic's potential move to the Bianconeri could also add further fuel to speculation linking Lazio boss Simone Inzaghi with the managerial vacancy at the Serie A champions.
Kroos contract puts Pogba deal in doubt
The news of Toni Kroos' new contract at Real Madrid has placed a move for Manchester United midfielder Paul Pogba into serious doubt, according to AS.
The new deal for Germany international Kroos includes a significant pay rise, and when added to Los Blancos' considerable transfer plans, it is believed that the Madrid hierarchy are targeting prudency over big-money signings this summer.
Zinedine Zidane's other main targets are Eden Hazard and Christian Eriksen, and the precarious contract situations at the two players' respective clubs places Real in a great negotiating position when it comes to thrashing out modest deals.
Pogba, meanwhile, has a contract until 2021, with United having the option of a further year, meaning that Real might need to bide their time before being able to make a move for the World Cup winner.
Tap-ins
- Newcastle boss Rafa Benitez is plotting an ambitious move for outgoing Manchester United midfielder Juan Mata -- assuming Benitez remains at St. James' Park -- according to the Sun. Thirty-one-year-old Mata's deal is set to expire at Old Trafford, but Benitez has contractual issues of his own on Tyneside.
- Wolves and West Ham are set to do battle over the signing of Real Betis midfielder Victor Camarasa, reports the Mail. The 24-year-old enjoyed a successful loan spell at Cardiff City, and the English clubs are keen to extend the Spaniard's spell in the Premier League following the Bluebirds' relegation from the top flight.
- The Sun writes that Watford have seen a £7m bid rejected by Reims for French striker Remi Oudin. Newcastle are also interested in the player dubbed "the next Robin van Persie" following the 22-year-old's goal-scoring exploits in Ligue 1 this season, with his 10 goals guiding Reims to ninth place.
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David Hussey replaces Stephen Fleming as Melbourne Stars coach
Published in
Cricket
Wednesday, 22 May 2019 00:13

David Hussey, the former Australia batsman, is the new coach of Melbourne Stars for next summer's Big Bash League, after winning a duel with ex-Victoria coach David Saker for the role to replace the outgoing Stephen Fleming.
ESPNcricinfo has learnt that, after having served in various assistant coaching roles since his retirement as a player, Hussey was ultimately considered the best choice by the Stars' management and board to maintain the steady improvement of the men's team in the 2018-19 BBL, where the club rose from its lowest-ever finish the previous season to be narrowly defeated by Melbourne Renegades in the competition final.
Formerly the captain of the Stars, Hussey has strong relationships with Fleming and also the Stars chief executive Clint Cooper, making for a more seamless transition from one coach to another than may have been the case if Saker had taken the job. Hussey was also named as a Cricket Victoria Board director in October 2018.
Hussey and Saker are believed to have interviewed for the job last week, with Hussey offered the role on Friday.
After working successfully as England's bowling coach, Saker was named as the coach of Victoria and also Melbourne Renegades for 2015-16, before he was recruited by Cricket Australia as assistant coach to Darren Lehmann. He left that role in February following the conclusion of the home Test season, amid differences with Lehmann's successor Justin Langer.
"Under Boof [Lehmann] particularly, we won an Ashes and had some really good series wins, so that was good. There were obviously some frustrating times after South Africa," Saker said earlier this month. "New coach came in, things changed quite a bit, and I probably wasn't as passionate as I was before that.
"On reflection, it's probably a good thing that I got out, just refreshed myself. As I said, I'm ready to go again. I enjoyed my time with the Australian cricket team but I think it was time for me to move on."
Fleming, also coach of Chennai Super Kings in the IPL, has remained a part of the Stars set-up as an international talent advisor despite electing, after reaching two BBL finals in four seasons, to exit the role. "I feel the time is right for me to step down and allow someone else to take the reins and the club forward," he said when announcing his departure.
"The club is in very good shape having rebounded from last in BBL07 to grand finalist this season. Whilst we didn't get the ultimate prize I'm confident that the group of players we have assembled will be motivated to go one further next season."
The Stars, captained by Glenn Maxwell, appeared on course to win the BBL final comfortably at Docklands Stadium in February, before crumbling in their chase to hand the title to the Renegades.
"This will probably drive us next year, we'll use it as motivation to go one step further," Maxwell said at the time. "We were so close. With eight overs to go, we probably looked like we were winners. To fall that short is disappointing. It's hard to take right now, but once the dust settles, we'll get back into it next year."
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Dimuth Karunaratne eases self-doubts with composed knock
Published in
Cricket
Tuesday, 21 May 2019 22:38

Sri Lanka's less-heralded players helped ease through the side's first test in the UK, as they beat Scotland by 35 runs via the DLS method.
Opener Avishka Fernando, who had had a poor tour of South Africa earlier this year, produced 74 off 78 balls, while Dimuth Karunaratne, on ODI captaincy debut, made 77 off 88. The pair put on 123 runs for the first wicket. Kusal Mendis also contributed 66 off 56 balls through the middle overs, but it was bowler Nuwan Pradeep who impressed most of all, taking 4 for 34 in the rain-shortened second innings.
For Karunaratne, the match was not only a test of his leadership, but also an examination of his batting. Having not played ODIs since the 2015 World Cup, there have been doubts over whether he could score quickly enough in this format. He was dropped twice before eventually being caught at long-on, but in making a half-century, and providing the middle order with a good platform, Karunaratne suggested he was not completely out of place in ODIs.
"Playing an international one-dayer after such a long time is not easy," Karunaratne said afterwards. "I was under pressure early on and was struggling a little bit. But once I got set and thought about how to play - which bowlers I should target - I felt better. Fortunately, I got a couple of chances. But thanks to the runs I got, I got some confidence.
"Avishka was excellent as well. We know how capable he is. He can hit hard and rotate the strike as well. We talked to him about what we needed from him. Unfortunately, he couldn't get a hundred, but I think he can get a big hundred in the World Cup."
Sri Lanka made 322 for 8 in their 50 overs, but had seemed set for a score of over 350 at one point, before they experienced a serious middle-overs stutter. Having been 203 for 1 at the end of the 33rd over, Sri Lanka mustered only 19 more runs in the next seven overs, as they lost three quick wickets. While that slowdown was not ideal, it was important that Mendis and Lahiru Thirimanne stabilise the innings at that stage, Karunaratne said. Sri Lanka later made 99 runs in the final ten overs.
"We planned to bat out 50 overs, so when we were struggling in the 33rd over - we had lost a couple of wickets, in Angelo Mathews and Thisara Perera - we were trying to make sure we batted long. Kusal Mendis was playing well, and Lahiru Thirimanne went in and did a good job. When you have wickets in hand, you can go for it at the end. We were struggling through that period, but we rotated the strike, and in the last ten overs we went for our big shots."
Although they had a substantial score to defend, the arrival of rain partway through Scotland's innings had complicated the task of Sri Lanka's bowlers, who were visibly struggling to grip the ball. Pradeep, though, was able to maintain excellent control, and was rewarded with the Player of the Match award for his returns.
"When Scotland were going quite well, I spoke to Nuwan Pradeep and asked him to try a couple of bouncers," Karunaratne said. "He did that really well and we were able to squeeze them through that middle period. It's not easy to bowl yorkers, especially with the ball getting wet because of the rain. If you don't execute it well it will go for a six. But Pradeep knows how he has to bowl, and he went for the straight yorker. I hope he takes that confidence into the World Cup."
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Opponents still scared, but 'it's not as easy as it was' - Chris Gayle
Published in
Cricket
Wednesday, 22 May 2019 01:44

Chris Gayle believes opponents are still scared of him, but the 39-year-old West Indian opening batsman admits that it's no longer as easy playing against youngsters as it used to be. Gayle, who is set to play his fifth - and last - World Cup, has been a part of the tournament each time it has been held since his ODI debut in September 1999.
"Youngsters coming at my head - it's not as easy as it was like one time before," Gayle told cricket.com.au on the eve of West Indies' unofficial warm-up match against Australia. "I was quicker then. But they'll be wary. They know what the Universe Boss is capable of. I'm sure they will have it in the back of their mind, 'Hey, this is the most dangerous batsman they've ever seen in cricket'.
"Go ask them on camera. They're going to say, no, they're not scared. But you ask them off the camera, they going to say, 'Yeah, he's the man. He's the man'. They're going to say, 'he's the man'.
"But I'm enjoying it. I'm always enjoying the battle against fast bowlers, it's good. Sometimes those things actually give you extra drive as a batter. When you have a battle, I like those challenges."
"I just have to monitor it as much as possible and just get the mindset right"
Gayle hinted at 'unretirement' just ten days after he had announced his retirement following his strong form in the home series against England earlier this year. He had blasted 424 runs at an average of 106, including 39 sixes, in four matches and also brought up his second-highest ODI score, on the way to leading West Indies to their highest total in the format.
Prior to that, he had not played an ODI for 30 months after West Indies' quarter-final exit from the 2015 World Cup, and while it seemed like his ODI career was heading towards an end, he returned to the West Indies squad in September 2017 ahead of the 2018 World Cup qualifiers. With qualification sealed, he featured regularly in the format and has been in great form since then, making 930 runs in 19 innings. He is also by far the most experienced player in West Indies' World Cup squad, and has 10,151 runs from 289 ODIs.
He believes that it's his passion and that of his fans that has been driving him to deliver.
"It's the love for the game," he said at a press interaction. "But sometimes sportsmen don't know when to walk away. You might think you're still at your peak but eventually, you have to leave the game at some point. But enjoying is important. I'm enjoying it and having fun. Especially with a great group of guys.
"All this is going to play a key part for me as an individual. These guys spur you on and the fans are always asking you for sixes and those sort of things give you the extra drive. There's nothing to go and prove."
Coming off an average run of form in the IPL, where he made 490 runs in 13 matches for Kings XI Punjab, Gayle stressed on the importance of game-time and a positive mindset ahead of the big tournament.
"I am still in good nick," he said. "I had a not-so-bad IPL, coming after the home series against England. The good thing about it is I've been playing cricket. It's important for me to keep playing and get some games under my belt and come here to the UK and start with a few warm-up games to see where you are at.
"It's a long tournament. For me, personally, I just have to monitor it as much as possible and just get the mindset right."
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'Resilient' Blues savor improbable run to Cup Final
Published in
Breaking News
Tuesday, 21 May 2019 23:20

ST. LOUIS -- The streamers fell from the ceiling and the fans sang along with "Gloria," the 1980s pop classic repurposed as the St. Louis Blues' official victory song, as it blared from the speakers in Enterprise Center.
The Blues' 5-1 victory Tuesday night in Game 6 of the Western Conference finals to eliminate the San Jose Sharks felt as inevitable as it felt improbable just over five months ago, when St. Louis had the fewest points in the standings of any team in the NHL.
Now, the Blues are four wins away from hoisting the first Stanley Cup in franchise history.
"I don't understand yet," winger Vladimir Tarasenko said after the win, which sent the Blues to face the Boston Bruins in the first Stanley Cup Final for St. Louis since 1970. "It feels a little weird. It seems like this year took forever. A lot of emotions. Negative from the start, positive in the end. I'm proud of every person here for what we achieved today."
As late as Jan. 2, the Blues were in last place overall in the NHL. They had fired their coach, Mike Yeo, elevating AHL coach Craig Berube to the job on an interim basis. Adversity had struck. The Blues chose the right path to respond, building their trust and chemistry until the victories started to arrive in bunches, including an 11-game winning streak that got them back into playoff contention.
Only four teams in the expansion era have reached the Final after ranking among the bottom three in the standings at any point following their 20th game: the 1967-68 Montreal Canadiens, 1967-68 Blues, 1990-91 Minnesota North Stars and 2009-10 Philadelphia Flyers. The Canadiens, it should be said, are the only one of those clubs to win the Stanley Cup.
"We stuck together, we kept believing in each other," Blues captain Alex Pietrangelo said after eliminating the Sharks. "We had some good, hard, honest conversations, and we all knew we needed to be better from top down. We looked each other in the eye, we looked in the mirror and we did that. A lot of people doubted us this year, but this group was resilient; and I really am proud of the guys because as hard as it is, it's been fun to look back and see where we are now."
Where the Blues are now, frankly, wouldn't have been attainable without the remarkable play of their rookie goaltender, Jordan Binnington, who allowed only two goals to the Sharks in the final three games of their series. The 25-year-old is a finalist for the Calder Trophy for rookie of the year, and he backstopped the Blues to the Final.
"We're confident in him, but he's confident in himself. That's what we want. We wouldn't be in this position if it wasn't for him," St. Louis center Ryan O'Reilly said.
Was Game 6 lost for the Sharks before it even started? They entered their most important game of the season with Tomas Hertl and Erik Karlsson back in San Jose, California, nursing injuries after leaving Game 5 following the second period. Captain Joe Pavelski skated one shift in the third period of that game before leaving as well. Pavelski traveled with the Sharks and was a game-time decision for Game 6, but it ultimately was decided he was too injured to play.
All of this proved insurmountable against a Blues team that was peaking.
The final turning point in Game 6 came when San Jose's Logan Couture, the playoffs' leading scorer, had a chance to tie the game with a loose puck in Binnington's crease. But Colton Parayko saved a goal by blocking a tip-in and sweeping it out of danger. Just 31 second later, Sharks defenseman Justin Braun went to the penalty box for hooking. One minute, 50 seconds after that, Brayden Schenn scored the Blues' second power-play goal for a 3-1 lead.
The dagger arrived from St. Louis center Tyler Bozak, whose shot deflected off of Gustav Nyquist and behind Martin Jones for a 4-1 lead with just under seven minutes remaining.
Which is to say that the Blues closed out the game. This was the lesson learned from their most recent battle with adversity: Game 3 of these conference finals, when a hand pass missed by all four officials led to a winning goal by Karlsson.
"I'll go back to that Game 3. We should've closed that game out. And it should've never gotten to that point. But things happen, and that's a good hockey team over there. They battled, and we stayed with it. And we played some really good hockey after that," Berube said.
It was the same crossroads they stared at back in January: Either feel sorry about your lot in life or do something positive about it.
"My feeling was that if we were going to win the next game, we were going to win the series," Blues forward David Perron said of Game 3, "because we took [the high] road. I'm just glad we approached it that way. I think we reacted different to that, and that's how we found success at the end."
It's not quite the end. The Bruins -- and former Blues captain David Backes, for added drama -- are next. It'll be a physical series. It'll be an intense series.
Game 1 is Monday night in Boston.
"I'm really proud of the team and how far we go, but there's still one more opponent to beat," Tarasenko said, before considering the moment again. "It feels unbelievable. I'm not going to lie."
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TORONTO -- Fred VanVleet broke out in a huge way Tuesday night, scoring 13 points off the bench to help lead a balanced scoring attack for the Toronto Raptors, as they blew out the Milwaukee Bucks 120-102 in Game 4 of the Eastern Conference finals.
The performance, which helped even the best-of-seven series at 2-2, continued a week full of highs for VanVleet.
On Sunday, he helped the Raptors survive a double-overtime thriller to beat the Bucks in Game 3.
On Monday, VanVleet found himself flying to his hometown of Rockford, Illinois, for the birth of his second child, Fred Jr.
While he was flying back to Toronto again Tuesday morning to play in Game 4, he had time to reflect on being in the midst of the worst shooting slump of his playoff career.
"It makes you tired," VanVleet, smiling, said of welcoming a second child. "It gives you a little perspective, I guess, on life. I had a lot of time to think. Had to sit at the hospital all day, had a lot of time to think, obviously a plane ride back.
"It just changes the way you're looking at things. You are not so down on yourself about everything."
As it turned out, for both VanVleet and the Raptors, that time alone with his thoughts was just what the doctor ordered.
VanVleet had struggled since the start of the Eastern Conference semifinals against the Philadelphia 76ers, shooting 7-of-44 overall and 3-of-25 from 3-point range entering Tuesday.
On Tuesday night, he shot 5-of-6 from the field and 3-for-3 from deep -- including, somehow, banking one in.
"I think he needed it," Raptors guard Kyle Lowry said. "I think those type of things kind of relaxed him a little bit.
"He needed one of those games. You know what he needed? That banked 3 to go in. Stuff like that. Just get in some type of rhythm. He played well and made some great plays tonight.
"Sometimes it's just one or two shots where something happens. It's all mental sometimes."
The same could be said for the Raptors as a whole throughout these playoffs. VanVleet's struggles might have been the most notable, but he was far from the only one who couldn't buy a basket for much of the past two series.
Tuesday night, though, the dam finally broke.
After being bludgeoned by Milwaukee's bench for most of the first three games, Toronto's bench trio of VanVleet, Norman Powell and Serge Ibaka combined to score 48 points and shoot 18-for-36 from the floor. Milwaukee's main bench players -- George Hill, Ersan Ilyasova, Malcolm Brogdon and Pat Connaughton -- combined to go 7-for-22 overall and 2-for-8 from 3.
The Raptors couldn't have asked for a better time for this kind of game to happen, either, with the two players who expended the most energy in Sunday's double-overtime win, Kawhi Leonard and Pascal Siakam, both looking worse for the wear because of it.
"It was big time," Leonard said of the balanced production across the roster. "Everybody contributed tonight, knocking down shots, playing great defense."
For a second consecutive game, much attention was paid to Leonard occasionally coming up limping throughout the proceedings. After looking hobbled early in Game 3 yet finding a way to gut himself through 52 grueling minutes, the most obvious moment in Game 4 came when Leonard completed a dunk and was fouled by Giannis Antetokounmpo in the third quarter.
Leonard came down with his full weight on his right leg and looked to be in pain. But, like in Game 3, he stayed in the game and refused afterward to say he was in pain.
"Feel good," said Leonard, who finished with 19 points on 6-for-13 shooting in 34 minutes. "Keep going, keep fighting. We have a chance to make history."
Asked if the minutes from Game 3 caught up with him in Game 4, Leonard passed on answering.
"There's no excuses," he said. "You're playing basketball. We got a win tonight."
For so much of these playoffs, the Raptors have been getting wins because of Leonard's heroics. That was the case in both of the previous two games Toronto had played here at Scotiabank Arena -- in Game 7 against the Sixers, in which he hit a classic game winner, and in Sunday's Game 3, when he played through those career-high 52 minutes.
This time, though, the Raptors picked things up on his behalf. And, because they did, this series heads back to Milwaukee as a toss-up.
"We know," VanVleet said. "We know we have to be better. We see all the stuff. We understand what the narrative has turned into, that it is kind of 'Kawhi Leonard and The Backup Singers.'
"We understand that. Sometimes it has been like that, and there's other stuff that goes into that. There's give and take there. But we have to do the same s--- today again in Game 5."
If they do, the next time the Raptors play in this arena, in Game 6 on Saturday night, they could have a chance to make the NBA Finals for the first time in franchise history.
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TORONTO -- The extra shots were supposed to help.
Giannis Antetokounmpo, Eric Bledsoe and Khris Middleton were the last people on the Scotiabank Arena court at morning shootaround Tuesday. The trio evaded the throng of journalists that had descended at center court, and instead shot extra free throws and put up a few more 3-pointers.
After shooting a combined 23 percent in Game 3, the three players were determined to play better than they had Sunday, and that meant squeezing in some extra repetitions.
Some improvements were made -- Antetokounmpo finished with 25 points, 13 more than he had in Game 3 -- but it wasn't enough. The Milwaukee Bucks dropped Game 4 of the Eastern Conference finals to the Toronto Raptors 120-102, only the second time this season they have lost back-to-back games.
The series now heads back to Milwaukee tied at two games apiece.
"We just came out flat in the third quarter," Antetokounmpo said. "It's something we can get better at -- something we can fix."
The Bucks were down by just one point at the half, but then the game quickly unraveled for Milwaukee.
The shooting issues that have plagued Bledsoe all postseason continued in Game 4. Through the first two rounds of the playoffs this year, Bledsoe averaged 16 points. Against the Raptors in the conference finals, though, he is averaging 8.3 points.
"For Bled, it's just making sure he understands we wouldn't be here without him," Pat Connaughton told ESPN. "Everybody gets frustrated with themselves when they are not playing well because they feel like they are letting the team down. He wants to play well for his teammates."
Bledsoe finished with only five points on 2-of-7 shooting. He was 0-for-2 from 3-point range and played only 20 minutes, five less than any other starter. He hustled out of the locker room before most of his teammates had even begun showering. On his way to the bus, he shrugged off questions and assured bystanders he would be all right.
The Bucks' system is built to withstand an individual player's shooting slump, but Bledsoe is frustrated with just how long he has struggled to find the basket. According to Second Spectrum tracking, Bledsoe is shooting just 27 percent on his jump shots this postseason, the worst among all players with at least 50 attempts.
"I tell him just forget about it," Middleton told ESPN. "That's the only way you can play better, is if you stop thinking about it so much."
Malcolm Brogdon wobbled, too. He shot just 2-of-11 and finished with four points. Before Tuesday, Brogdon hadn't scored fewer than 14 points all series.
"A plethora of things went wrong," Connaughton said. "We weren't able to withstand adversity the way we normally do."
The Bucks' locker room after the game was eerily silent. Players didn't speak to one another -- not even in a whisper. The loudest sound was the whirring ceiling fan and Antetokounmpo's cellphone alarm notifying him it was time to take off his ice bags.
"The series is two to two," Middleton said. "It's not the end of the world. I know Game 5 is going to be a dog fight."
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'It's the Kawhi effect': The impact of having a transcendent star
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Basketball
Wednesday, 22 May 2019 00:18

TORONTO -- In the parlance of the Toronto Raptors, it's called "Drive-Kick-Swing." Though it's a mainstay in the Raptors' playlist of practice drills, Drive-Kick-Swing was on full display under the bright lights of Scotiabank Arena in Game 4 of the Eastern Conference finals on Tuesday night.
In the third quarter, Kawhi Leonard was at the controls, the "Drive" in Drive-Kick-Swing. Leonard was being influenced to drive left -- as he has been all series by Milwaukee Bucks defenders -- by guard Malcolm Brogdon. Leonard obliged and, as has also been the case this series, encountered two additional defenders as he reached the paint.
Hounded by multiple bodies after picking up his dribble, here comes the "Kick": Leonard passed the ball out to Fred VanVleet out on the left wing beyond the arc. With so many defensive resources committed to Leonard, Bucks guard George Hill had to account on the left side of the floor for both VanVleet and his teammate, Norman Powell, alone in the corner.
Finally, the "Swing." As Hill closed on VanVleet, the Raptors' backup point guard dished the ball to Powell. Of Powell's team-leading 18 field goal attempts in Game 4, this shot was the most delectable -- open corner 3-pointers are the mother's milk of NBA basketball in 2019. Powell drained it to put the Raptors up 10 points.
The lead would never again narrow to single digits, as the Raptors received massive contributions from their full complement of players to pull away to a 120-102 victory, and even the series at 2-2.
"Kawhi is going to get attention all the time, no matter what," Raptors point guard Kyle Lowry told ESPN. "It's the Kawhi effect."
The privilege of having a transcendent superstar like Leonard isn't just the gift of the singular performance that wins a game, though Leonard has done plenty of that over the past six weeks of the postseason. The team also enjoys the ability to leverage a defense like Milwaukee's that devotes its full weight and diligence to stopping Leonard.
"He's going to carry us some games -- he's a superstar," Lowry said. "But then you have nights like tonight when he just let everyone else do their thing and he doesn't have to carry as much. In the first quarter, he didn't touch the ball all that much. But we attacked and moved the ball off the attention he attracted."
Easing Leonard's load was imperative for Toronto because the three-time All-Star came in still gassed from Game 3. Though there has been no specific diagnosis and Leonard insists he feels good, Raptors coach Nick Nurse characterized his best player as "tired," and Lowry said he was "a little bit limited." Leonard's 19 points were his lowest output since Game 3 of the Raptors' first-round series against Orlando, a night he was under the weather.
The Bucks' top-ranked defense has established and refined its principles over the course of the regular season and playoffs. While Milwaukee has introduced a tweak or two against specific matchups, its broad strategy hasn't changed. The Bucks are fully committed to packing the paint to ward off penetration and prevent easy shots inside. Help will be dispatched from marginal and even some average shooters, which will leave some open shots on the perimeter. So long as the integrity of the interior defense isn't compromised, this is a trade-off Milwaukee is content to live with.
Accordingly, Raptors center Marc Gasol shot the ball from beyond the arc six times in Game 4 (converting three), and Powell attempted 13 3-pointers. In total, the Raptors have attempted 40 uncontested shots over the past two games, according to Second Spectrum tracking, and converted them at an effective field goal percentage of 61.3. Over the first two games in Milwaukee, they also found 40 uncontested shots -- but hit them at an effective field goal rate of only 47.5 percent.
"With Kawhi having the ball, he draws so much attention," Powell said. "So it's opening up a lot for us on the weak side. We're just trying to play through him a little bit, play through Marc. I think Marc did a phenomenal job of breaking down the defenses when he had the ball up top on cuts, on screens. I think we're just playing for one another. Everybody is talking on what we see and how we can get better looks and try to get a shot up every time. We're staying confident in one another."
Gasol led the team in assists Tuesday night, an important indicator the Raptors have reclaimed their identity as a high-IQ outfit that can generate shots creatively at multiple spots on the floor. Gasol was a master at the top of the floor, leading Leonard into the lane with a little drop pass for an easy bucket after Khris Middleton denied the pass out on the perimeter. Gasol and Leonard paired up again about a minute later with a heady backdoor sequence when Middelton again got caught on the high side.
When the Raptors fail to hit open shots as they've done so frequently over the past few weeks against Philadelphia and Milwaukee, it's easy to forget about the collective intelligence of the outfit. But Leonard, Gasol and Lowry conducted an honors class in basketball IQ in Game 4. Lowry led the team with 25 points, including a 10-for-10 night at the free throw line, the product of some heavy manufacturing -- turning broken possessions into meaningful points by simply drawing contact against a destabilized defense.
Both VanVleet and Serge Ibaka have struggled through long stretches of the postseason, but each thrived in his role in Game 4. VanVleet posted a perfect 3-for-3 from long range to score 13 points and dished out six assists in 25 minutes. Meanwhile, Nurse gave his backup big man Ibaka a directive to go out and wield his athleticism as a blunt object. Ibaka responded by helping Toronto accomplish something it rarely has in the playoffs: control the glass. Through three quarters, the Raptors collected 31 percent of their misses, a big number that helped them control possession and wear down Milwaukee.
For the Bucks, the bludgeoning at the hands of the Raptors was a stark reminder that good opponents have problem-solving capacity. While the Bucks' defensive schemes are certainly well-drawn, they have to be executed with more precision and greater discernment. Not all help is created equal -- it must be prompt and occasionally selective.
As dynamic as the Bucks are offensively, they can ill-afford to squander possessions on the road with poor decisions against a strong defensive team. Whether it's Middleton fouling 75 feet away from the basket with less than three seconds left before halftime in a heave situation, or Giannis Antetokounmpo launching off-the-dribble jumpers from 21 feet out of sheer impulse, the Bucks don't have half-dozen possessions to spare, not on a night when Brogdon couldn't find his shot, when Eric Bledsoe was again an offensive cipher.
Yet the Bucks are resolute. They believe in their schemes, their mode of preparation and the philosophy that guides their systems. After the game, Antetokounmpo rejected the notion the Bucks' failures in Games 3 and 4 demanded adjustments.
"We're just going to keep doing the same thing," Antetokounmpo said. "We want the other guys to take shots. We've got to keep being aggressive defensively on Kawhi, try to limit his shots. But at the end of the day, if guys come off the bench and they knock down shots, we've got to live with it, we're doing our job."
The Raptors clawed back into the series on faith in probabilities and personnel. Milwaukee will be equally steadfast in its belief. Such is the NBA's deep postseason, when elite teams know and like who they are, and are willing live and die on those identities.
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DETROIT -- Ron Gardenhire was ejected from the Detroit Tigers' game against the Miami Marlins on Tuesday night after the Tigers' manager came out to argue following a replay reversal in the bottom of the ninth inning.
With men on first and third and one out, Detroit's Ronny Rodriguez lifted a fly ball to deep left field. Harold Ramirez appeared to drop it, and a run came home, tying the score at 4-4. But replays showed Ramirez had the ball briefly in his glove before losing control as he tried to transfer it to his throwing hand.
The call was overturned and the batter was ruled out -- although the run still counted. Gardenhire came out to argue with third base umpire Fieldin Culbreth, and although Culbreth didn't make a demonstrative ejection motion, Gardenhire disappeared from view in the dugout, and the Tigers eventually confirmed he'd been tossed.
"Obviously the umpire didn't think he had control. Then we go out and they appealed it, and New York said that somehow he did have control,'' Detroit bench coach Steve Liddle said. "I think that's one of those instances where slow motion can hurt you a little bit, and it looked like it came back to bite us there.''
The Marlins won 5-4 in 11 innings.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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