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Transfer rumors, news on deadline day: Man United eye Bailey

Manchester United are looking for reinforcements before the transfer window closes following another home defeat on Sunday, with Leon Bailey among their targets. Join us for the latest transfer news, rumors and gossip on deadline day from around the globe.
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Window closes: Premier League, LaLiga (11 p.m. GM/6 p.m. ET), Ligue 1 (10 p.m. GMT/5 p.m. ET), Serie A (7 p.m. GMT/2 p.m. ET), Bundesliga: (5 p.m. GMT/noon ET)
TOP STORIES
- Rashford joins Aston Villa on loan from Man United
- Henderson snaps at Monaco transfer 'lies' after Ajax win
- Sources: Man United want Tel, Nkunku on deadline day
TRENDING RUMORS
- Aston Villa winger Leon Bailey is a target for Manchester United, according to The Athletic. United have already added Patrick Dorgu and Ayden Heaven to their squad and, with their move for Mathys Tel from Bayern Munich reportedly stumbling, Bailey has emerged as the next priority. The Jamaica international has made 29 appearances for Villa this season, starting 13 Premier League matches and five times in the UEFA Champions League. However, he has not been at his best, scoring just once and adding three assists. Any deal for the 27-year-old would sit outside of the now-confirmed deal that has seen striker Marcus Rashford join Villa on loan until the end of the season. The Manchester Evening News believes that despite Sunday's setback in the hunt for Tel, he remains United's priority, with Chelsea's Christopher Nkunku another possible target.
- Ben Chilwell is expected to have a medical on Monday morning ahead of a loan move to Crystal Palace from Chelsea until the end of the season, according to The Telegraph. Chilwell, 28, has been out of favour under Blues boss Enzo Maresca and has played just 45 minutes this season, in a Carabao Cup match against Barrow. Eagles boss Oliver Glasner is hoping Chilwell can provide some depth in the left-back position.
- Chelsea midfielder Carney Chukwuemeka is on his way to Germany to join Borussia Dortmund on loan until the end of the season, according to Sky Sports Germany. The 21-year-old will undergo a medical first thing on Monday, and Dortmund are expected to cover his full salary. Chukwuemeka has made just four appearances this season.
- Tottenham Hotspur are looking to add to their signing of Kevin Danso from Lens with a move for Axel Disasi from Chelsea, according to the Mirror. Spurs have been rocked by an injury to Radu Dragusin, and they're pushing to land the 26-year-old Frenchman to provide further defensive cover. Aston Villa also hope to sign Disasi.
- Former Real Madrid defender Sergio Ramos will join Mexican club Monterrey on a free transfer, according to Fabrizio Romano. The 38-year-old is due to undergo a medical on Monday having been without a club following the end of his contract at boyhood club Sevilla. Ramos joins two other Spanish players in the squad alongside Oliver Torres and Sergio Canales.
LIVE BLOG
Gambhir on India's approach: 'We want to try and get to 250-260 regularly'

"That's the kind of T20 cricket we want to play. We don't want to fear losing a game of cricket," Gambhir told the host broadcaster. "We want to play high-risk, high-reward cricket. And these guys have adopted that ideology, that policy really well. And I think the ideology of this T20 team is based on selflessness and fearlessness. And I think in the last six months, these guys have done it day in, day out.
"We want to try and get to 250-260 regularly. And in trying to do that, there'll be games where we'll get bundled out for 120-130. And that is what T20 cricket is all about. And unless and until you don't play that high-risk cricket, you won't get those big rewards as well. Most importantly, I think we're on the right track. Come those big tournaments, we want to still continue playing this way and we don't want to fear losing anything."
"I mean, this is what we've sat down and spoken about, what brand of cricket we want to play and we're just sticking to it irrespective of what's going to happen," Suryakumar said at the post-match presentation. "And it is a high-risk, high-reward game. But at the end of the day, what's working for us, we'll be doing that."
"I think his transformation from IPL to international T20 cricket has been phenomenal," Gambhir said of Varun. "And this series was probably the benchmark as well because England is a high-quality side. They've got some really quality cricketers and the kind of surfaces we've played on - I think they were fantastic batting wickets and the way he's bowled those tough overs has been phenomenal."
Suryakumar was also impressed with Varun's fielding. In Mumbai, he took two catches, including a tumbling grab running in from deep square leg to send back Harry Brook for two off four balls.
"I mean, he's one guy who's been relentlessly working hard with our fielding coach [T] Dilip sir," Suryakumar said. "And anywhere he gets an opportunity, he uses that time on the field during practice sessions. And it was good to see him putting his hand up and telling that 'I want to field in the outfield today'. And you saw the results. That's amazing."
Another major talking point in this series was India leaning heavily on spin and picking just one frontline fast bowler in each of the five T20Is. Gambhir explained that the team management wanted to pair Varun up with Ravi Bishnoi, to give themselves a stronger chance of striking in the middle overs, without compromising on batting depth.
"I think having Bishnoi and Varun bowling in tandem was very important, especially in the middle phase," Gambhir said. "We always knew that the kind of batting line-up England has, they will always come hard at us in the first six overs. But it's that phase between seven and 15. Can we have those two wicket-taking options in the middle?
"More importantly, we always wanted to have that No. 8 batter, even if he doesn't face too many balls, just because of the kind of cricket we are playing. We want to try and go as hard as possible. Sometimes that cushion of having that No. 8 [batter] allows the top seven to go out there and play even more freely."
Jos Buttler hails Abhishek's ball-striking as England succumb to record loss

Abhishek's stunning innings of 135 from 54 balls, the highest score ever made by an Indian batter in T20Is, proved to be 38 more runs than England's entire line-up could muster in reply, as they were routed for 97 in 10.3 overs, to succumb to a 4-1 series loss.
England's eventual 150-run defeat was their biggest in the format, and a crushing end to an intermittently competitive series. Though Buttler acknowledged his team had had their chances to turn the campaign in their favour, he was happy to bow down to one of the mightiest batting displays imaginable.
"We're obviously disappointed," Buttler said. "I've played quite a lot of cricket, and credit to Abhishek Sharma. That's as clean a ball-striking as I've seen. He played fantastically well. We always sit down and think what more could we have done. But some days, you have to give a lot of credit to the opposition. I thought he played brilliantly well."
Buttler said that Abhishek's display was a continuation of the full-blooded form he showed alongside Travis Head for Sunrisers Hyderabad in last year's IPL. In such run-laden displays, he added, contests tend to go one of two ways.
"I've played in a few games like this," he said. "You either get somewhere near, or you fall in a heap, and today was that day. It can be difficult when a player gets on a roll, and plays as well as he did. Credit to us for sticking in there and fighting back, and keeping them down to 240, after the start they got."
England's reply got off to a misleadingly flying start, with Phil Salt cracking 17 runs off Mohammad Shami's first over, en route to a 21-ball fifty. But his was a lone hand as wickets continued to tumble at the other end, with the entire team being bowled out just after the halfway mark of their chase.
"The way Phil Salt went out there and struck the ball, it was obviously a really good wicket," Buttler said. "He needed someone to go with him, and for one or two guys to catch fire. That's the way you're going to chase that down. You either get quite close in games like this and surprise yourselves, or it doesn't work.
"But we certainly won't change the way we want to play. We need to keep backing that, and be even more committed."
The final match got underway just 48 hours after the controversy at Pune, where fast bowler Harshit Rana stepped in as a concussion sub after a blow to the helmet for Shivam Dube. Dube declared himself "good to go" before the toss in Mumbai, despite the ICC's protocols stating that a seven-day lay-off should be mandatory in such situations, and Buttler hinted at his continued annoyance by describing his four non-selected players as "impact subs".
Speaking after the defeat, however, he struck a more conciliatory tone. "He's pulled up pretty well from a nasty blow on the head, hopefully he's okay," Buttler said, after Dube had scored 30 from 13 balls and claimed 2 for 11 in his two overs. "I'm sure he must have been happy with the risk he took or their medical staff were. Maybe a question for them."
Legspinner Varun Chakravarthy also played a key role in derailing England's chase with figures of 2 for 25, and was named player of the series for his 14 wickets at 9.85. England's struggles against spin have been a feature of all five matches, but Buttler said his players would be stronger for the experience.
"Playing against India, you know you're going to be faced with a lot of spin, but I'm not worried," Buttler said. "There's some really good players there and some guys having their first experiences in these conditions. Every day, you're learning, improving, working things out as you go along and gaining more experience and trying to accelerate that process.
"We certainly won't change the way we want to play, we need to keep backing that, be even more committed and be desperate to do well and execute that," he added. "If we're going to fall, I'd rather fall on the proactive side. Hopefully, over time you get more comfortable with that and play better."
The finisher: ODI icon Bevan elevated to Hall of Fame

Bevan, who featured in both the 1999 and 2003 World Cup wins, has been eligible for elevation for 15 years. But, until last month, the Hall of Fame's rules penalised him for a relatively-modest Test career that spanned 18 matches.
"It was Michael's exceptional playing record and public standing that pushed the Australian Cricket Hall of Fame Committee to review its selection criteria," Hall of Fame chairman Peter King explained.
"To ensure players who excelled in one-day or Twenty20 Internationals were equally recognised as those who shone in the Test format. Michael without a doubt revolutionised white-ball cricket and became a household name for his masterful batting, amazing athleticism and ability to chase down runs."
Cricket Australia chief executive Nick Hockley described Bevan as an "icon and a pioneer".
"He was a favourite among fans with his incredible temperament and ability to deliver in pressure situations," Hockley said. He is a two-time World Cup winner and finished his career with one of best records in 50-over cricket. He was also one of the most prolific run-scorers in the Sheffield Shield during what was one of the strongest eras in Australian cricket."
Representing Australia, New South Wales, Tasmania, South Australia, Yorkshire, Sussex, Leicestershire and Kent, Bevan played 237 first-class matches making 19,147 runs at 57.32 including 68 centuries and 81 half centuries with a top score of 216.
Bevan follows this season's previous inductees, Michael Clarke and Christina Matthews.
'In the zone' Abhishek salutes seniors for guiding him to century

"I was in a zone where I was going to react to the ball. I didn't even know my score," Abhishek said after the match. "I just asked Surya [Suryakumar] paaji' what do you think?'. He said 'since a wicket has fallen you can take your time, take a couple of balls.' That really helped me, because of him only I would say the hundred happened and my highest score happened. At that time, I didn't realise I was going to hit the fastest hundred [second-fastest for India]."
Abhishek got off to a swift start and crossed fifty in just 17 balls. He was on 94 off 32 balls after nine overs and had the Indian record for the fastest T20I century - off 35 balls by Rohit Sharma - in sights. He finished with a 54-ball 135, the highest individual score for India in men's T20Is.
"It never crossed my mind that I should play till the end," he said. "I react to the ball based on the team situation. Luckily today, when I was in the 80s or 90s, Surya paaji came in and said you've played well so far, worked hard, so you can take two-three balls. When the captain is [batting] with you and tells you something, I felt I should bat carefully. When Hardik [Pandya] came in, he said, 'since wickets are falling you have to play according to the situation and bat till the end since you are hitting the ball well'. Then Axar came in these three are senior players and have played well for India, so no better players to listen to in that situation."
Given India do not play a T20I any time soon, it was a timely knock from Abhishek, who could jostle for spots in the team once Yashasvi Jaiswal and Shubman Gill return. But he insisted none of that played on his mind.
"I had met Jassu [Jaiswal] and Shubman yesterday [at the BCCI awards]. There has never been a competition among us - we are playing together since Under-16. There was just one dream - to play for India. The three of us are playing now, so there is no better feeling."
Abhishek has been one of the flag-bearers of India's high-intent batting template. Since the start of the Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy (SMAT) 2023-24, he has scored 1893 runs in T20 cricket. Only five batters across the world have more runs than that, none of them at a faster rate than Abhishek's 199.47. He was the Player of the Tournament in that SMAT which his domestic team, Punjab, won. His fast starts even helped runners-up Sunrisers Hyderabad in IPL 2024. How did the transformation happen?
"I worked hard [to bat in a certain way] ahead of that season and when I saw the results, I thought I should back myself and express myself," Abhishek said. "I practiced a lot of match scenarios in open nets. Brian Lara had told me one thing - just play your shots but make sure that you don't get out. So that is what I had in my mind. That helped me and I felt I could hit shots off the first or second ball as well.
"When you are young, you don't explore much, but I did that and realised I could play with more intent and help the team. When you do well, you get the support of your team. So I thought that when it is my day, I have to play this way - whether for Punjab or my franchise. Obviously when it comes to India, it's a special and a big moment. I felt if I have the ability, I should nourish it. There are ups and downs, but you need to be clear about playing this way."
"Yuvi paaji was always there for me and put all these things in my mind and believed in me. When Yuvraj Singh tells you that you are going to play for the country and win games, you also try to believe in yourself and give your best. I talk to him after every game, he is the one I listen to. He knows me better than me.
When your captain and coach tell you that you have to play like this and we are backing you, we'll be there for you always, that is the biggest motivation for a young player in the team. In South Africa I remember Hardik paaji and Suryapaaji telling me, you are100% going to make some runs, just believe in yourself'. In this series Gauti [head coach Gautam Gambhir] paaji came back and I feel grateful that they believe in me, that's not normal and is the biggest motivation for any player."
S Sudarshanan is a sub-editor at ESPNcricinfo. @Sudarshanan7
NFC tops AFC for three-peat in Pro Bowl Games

ORLANDO, Fla. -- The past three Pro Bowl Games have made one thing unmistakably clear: The NFC has a knack for flag football.
One week before the AFC's Kansas City Chiefs attempt a Super Bowl three-peat, the NFC completed a three-peat of its own in the 2025 Pro Bowl Games, topping the AFC 76-63 after the completion of all events, including a 56-50 win in Sunday's flag football game.
The NFC has won all three years in the flag football format that began with the February 2023 event.
On Sunday, Detroit Lions quarterback Jared Goff -- who started the game -- won offensive MVP after completing 10 of 11 pass attempts for 126 yards and three touchdowns, getting the AFC off to a fast start.
Minnesota Vikings cornerback Byron Murphy Jr., playing in his first Pro Bowl, was named defensive MVP after he picked off New England Patriots quarterback Drake Maye and scored on an 8-yard return.
The flag format has seemingly increased the competitiveness of the event, seeing as how players harbor fewer fears about sustaining injuries than they did under the longtime tackle football version of the Pro Bowl.
But not to be overlooked was a particular incentive.
"We were trying to win," Atlanta Falcons running back Bijan Robinson said. "They told us what the prize was, and I was like, 'We might need to do a little bit more.' So, that's what we did."
Robinson was referring to the $92,000 in prize money awarded to each member of the winning conference team. Members of the losing team receive $46,000.
After years of uncertainty about the game's future because of the lack of intensity in the tackle format, the Pro Bowl seems to have found a viable path forward, according to league officials. Players also support moving forward with the flag football approach.
Arizona Cardinals safety Budda Baker, who has played both tackle and flag football in the Pro Bowl, was clear which he prefers.
"I like this more just because it gives the fans a chance to see our faces and just kind of see who we are off the field," he said. "And we compete, but we keep it very civil."
Said Vikings quarterback Sam Darnold: "I think [flag] is really fun, especially after the season when guys have been kind of chilling for three weeks. It's good to just ease into a game of flag football."
In Sunday's skills events -- a continuation of Thursday night's skills show -- the NFC won the relay race and tug of war competitions, while the AFC won the "punt perfect" event.
Sources: Kelly leaving Ohio St. to be Raiders' OC

HENDERSON, Nev. -- Chip Kelly is returning to the NFL to become the Las Vegas Raiders' offensive coordinator under new head coach Pete Carroll, sources told ESPN's Adam Schefter and Pete Thamel on Sunday.
Kelly, 61, spent the past seven years in college football, including last season as the offensive coordinator and quarterback coach for national champion Ohio State, which averaged 35.7 points in going 14-2, including a 34-23 defeat of Notre Dame for the national title.
Previously, Kelly was head coach at UCLA for six seasons, going 35-34 with the Bruins.
Kelly last coached in the NFL in 2016, when he was the San Francisco 49ers head coach for one season, with the Niners going 2-14.
He had also been head coach of the Philadelphia Eagles from 2013-15 and went 26-21 with one playoff appearance.
The addition of Kelly completes the coordinator staff for Carroll, who retained defensive coordinator Patrick Graham and special teams coordinator Tom McMahon.
Carroll said he was hoping for a "combination" of coaches to fill out his staff when he was introduced last Monday.
"I'm really looking for people that have been with me, that understand the philosophy to some extent," Carroll said at the time. "I [also] want guys that have never been around me before so they have to learn what we're all about and we can watch the process of them learning what we're all about and what we expect. And then I'm hoping that we can maintain some of the terrific coaches that are on the staff, too, so we can have the benefit of the insights that they bring and the continuity that they can generate for us.
"We want ball people. We want guys that love the game...also, it's important to find people that can help us grow and challenge us and -- I know in my history -- I need people to keep me on track. As you can tell, I get pretty juiced up and I'm going to get going. I need people to keep me balanced."
Carroll, as coach of the Seattle Seahawks, went 3-0 in head-to-head matchups against Kelly's Eagles and Niners teams.
They met once in college, Kelly's Oregon Ducks beating Carroll's USC Trojans in 2009. Kelly went 46-7 over four seasons at Oregon, which included an appearance in the national title game, two Rose Bowl appearances and a Fiesta Bowl win.
Kelly becomes the third key assistant to leave the Buckeyes this offseason. Defensive coordinator Jim Knowles left Ohio State for the same role with Penn State and offensive line coach Justin Frye left for the same role with the Arizona Cardinals.
Carroll, meanwhile, is returning to the NFL after a one-year hiatus. The former Seahawks, New England Patriots and New York Jets head coach was hired in January to replace Antonio Pierce, who was fired following a 4-13 season.
In Las Vegas, Kelly will find a first-team All-Pro tight end in Brock Bowers, who was the No. 7 pick of the 2024 draft, and a receiver who just recorded his first career 1,000-yard receiving season in Jakobi Meyers.
The Raiders, though, have needs at running back and quarterback and hold the No. 6 overall draft pick, as well as an extra third-round draft pick from the Davante Adams trade to the New York Jets and more than $108 million in salary cap space as well as a new general manager in John Spytek.
Kelly has long been regarded as a gifted playcaller, having served as a longtime offensive coordinator and innovator at New Hampshire and Oregon. As Kelly moved on to become the head coach at Oregon (2009-12) and then in the NFL, he remained the play-caller, and along the way his offenses shifted from breakneck tempo to a more deliberate NFL style.
Wanting to be more football-focused and not have his time occupied by the myriad off-field responsibilities of a college head coach, Kelly left UCLA for Ohio State last year.
Kelly finished with a flourish as the Buckeyes averaged 36.3 points per game in the College Football Playoff in four games against Top 10 teams. His play-calling salvo came in the title game, when the Buckeyes called a go-route to freshman Jeremiah Smith on a third-and-11 late in the game that essentially sealed the game for Ohio State. The play hit for 56 yards and will be long remembered in Ohio State history.
Kelly's arrival came at a pivotal time for Ohio State as head coach Ryan Day played for Kelly in college at New Hampshire and the two are close friends. Day give up offensive play-calling and become more ingrained in the macro day-to-day running of the program.
Early in his career, Kelly had one of the most successful and transformative runs of a college coach this generation. His Oregon teams utilized a devastating tempo, that led to a cutting-edge strategic advantage that defined his time there.
ESPN's Pete Thamel contributed to this report.
Raptors, Canucks fans latest to boo U.S. anthem

TORONTO -- Fans at a Toronto Raptors game continued an emerging trend Sunday of booing the American national anthem at pro sporting events in Canada.
Fans of the NBA's lone Canadian franchise booed the anthem after similar reactions broke out Saturday night at NHL games in Ottawa, Ontario, and Calgary, Alberta, hours after U.S. President Donald Trump made his threat of import tariffs on America's northern neighbor a reality.
After initially cheering for the 15-year-old female singer, fans booed throughout "The Star-Spangled Banner" performance. At the end, mixed boos and cheers could be heard before the crowd erupted in applause for the Canadian anthem, "O Canada."
Fans also booed Sunday night when Agasha Mutesasira began her performance of the American national anthem in Vancouver, British Columbia, where the NHL's Canucks hosted the Detroit Red Wings.
Raptors forward Chris Boucher, a Canadian citizen, was asked after his team's win over the LA Clippers whether he'd ever experienced something like that.
"No, no, no," he said. "But have you ever seen us getting taxed like that?"
Trump declared an economic emergency Saturday in order to place taxes of 25% on imports from Canada and Mexico and 10% on imports from China. Energy imported from Canada, including oil, natural gas and electricity, would be taxed at a 10% rate.
Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum ordered retaliatory tariffs on goods from America in response.
Joseph Chua, a Toronto resident who was at the game, said he's going to be feeling the tariffs "pretty directly" in his work as an importer.
Still, he said he doesn't think booing is "the right thing to do in this situation." He chose to stay seated instead.
"I have a bunch of American family, friends that live in the states that are Americans, we travel to America all the time, but I thought chanting, 'Canada,' would be a more appropriate stance," said Chua, who was deliberately wearing his red Canada Basketball cap. "Usually I will stand. I've always stood during both anthems. I've taken my hat off to show respect to the American national anthem, but today we're feeling a little bitter about things.
"We were already talking about what businesses are Canadian, specifically, what are American, specifically, what to avoid. When I go grocery shopping, I will definitely be trying to avoid American products and groceries."
U.S. national anthem boos in Canada are rare but not unheard of, especially when tied to world events. In the early 2000s, fans at games in Canada booed to show their disapproval of the U.S.-led war against Iraq.
Clippers star Kawhi Leonard, who won an NBA championship with the Raptors in 2019, and coach Tyronn Lue declined to comment on the booing.
Lue, however, sang along to "O Canada." He said he just likes the song.
"I heard it a lot of times being in the playoffs here, so I know it by heart," he said.
Celtics rally from 26-point deficit to defeat 76ers

PHILADELPHIA -- As the 76ers -- minus four of their top eight rotation players, including stars Joel Embiid and Paul George -- opened up a 90-64 lead over the Boston Celtics with 2:56 to go in the third quarter, it looked like another rough loss was on the way for the defending champions.
But Celtics coach Joe Mazzulla kept watching his team's body language, judging when it might be time to pull the plug with a significant game on the way Tuesday in Cleveland against the East-leading Celtics.
"I was kind of studying their body language and it looked like they really, really wanted to do what it took to win," Mazzulla would say after the game. "So I kind of stuck with them."
Mazzulla's belief turned out to be warranted. Boston, after Ricky Council scored to give Philadelphia that 90-64 lead, completely turned the game on its head, closing it out with a 54-20 obliteration of the 76ers -- including going 12-for-16 from 3-point range over the final 15 minutes of game action -- to emerge with a 118-110 victory here at Wells Fargo Center.
"We just had to be honest with ourselves at halftime," Celtics star Jayson Tatum, who had 25 of his 35 points after halftime, said. "They had 20 points in transition. Our competitive spirit wasn't where it needed to be. Joe was like, 'Yo if you're tired, then just tell me. I'll sit you guys down, let the stay ready group play.' And we just had a choice to make.
"It was a long third quarter, it didn't go our way right away and we just had to keep fighting. But it brought the best out of us, it brought -- that's how we're supposed to play. It took a little bit from everybody. Our competitive joy was there on both ends. And it was just fun to be a part of."
Before Derrick White drained a 3-pointer with 2:42 to go in the third off a Tatum assist -- one of his 11 on the night, 8 of which came after halftime -- the Celtics had gone 9-for-33 from 3-point range. But then the Celtics rattled off four straight to end the third -- two from White, another from Sam Hauser and one from Tatum -- as part of a 16-4 run that cut Boston's deficit down to 14 points to start the fourth quarter.
From that point on, the Celtics felt confident that if they stuck to their game plan, things would eventually break right for them.
And, once Tatum hit back-to-back 3-pointers to put Boston into the lead at 101-100 midway through the fourth quarter, he blocked a Tyrese Maxey 3-pointer to lead to a Luke Kornet fastbreak dunk and a Philadelphia timeout.
All told, the Celtics ripped off a 41-10 run over exactly an 8-minute span to flip the game around, and come away with a third straight victory for the first time in a month.
"I think so," said Jaylen Brown, when asked if it felt like a special game for Boston to pull off such a big comeback. "Just how easy it is to just call it a night and just throw the subs in and just come up with some type of excuse to give the media or whatever.
"We rallied back, we put the effort in, we turned it up, we stayed together and we persevered through a win even though we probably shouldn't have been down that much in the first place, but I think it's a credit to us that we was able to get it back on track in a hostile environment."
For Philadelphia, it briefly looked like the 76ers would be able to pull off a fifth win in six games -- none of which have come with Embiid on the court -- before the second half collapse. The question now, though, is whether Embiid and George could come back sometime this week.
Sixers coach Nick Nurse said before Sunday's game that both Embiid, who has missed 15 straight games with knee swelling and a foot sprain, and George, who has missed the past four with a finger injury, could play sometime this week.
Philadelphia plays at home Tuesday against the Dallas Mavericks -- in what could be the first game for Anthony Davis following Saturday night's shocking trade -- and Wednesday against the Miami Heat before playing Friday in Detroit and Sunday in Milwaukee.
Source: LeBron to stay with L.A. beyond deadline

LeBron James intends to stay with the Los Angeles Lakers beyond Thursday's NBA trade deadline, a source familiar with his plans confirmed to ESPN, setting up the four-time MVP with Luka Doncic to form the latest superstar tandem of his career.
James, 40, signed a two-year contract extension with the Lakers in the offseason, a deal that included a de facto no-trade clause.
Before the no-trade clause was in place, the Golden State Warriors inquired about trading for James at the deadline in February 2024. The initial conversation between Warriors governor Joe Lacob and Lakers governor Jeanie Buss was directed by Buss to James' representative, Rich Paul of Klutch Sports, who informed Lacob his client was not interested.
A few days later, during All-Star Weekend in Indianapolis, James stated his desire to finish his career with the Lakers.
"I am a Laker, and I'm happy and been very happy being a Laker the last six years and hopefully it stays that way," James said at the time. "But I don't have the answer to how long it is or which uniform I'll be in. Hopefully [it] is with the Lakers. It's a great organization, so many greats. But we'll see."
James has a player option for 2025-26, which would mark a record-setting 23rd season in the NBA for the four-time champion.
Doncic was dealt to Los Angeles in a stunning three-team trade Sunday that sent Anthony Davis to the Dallas Mavericks.
James learned of the blockbuster trade while he was out to dinner with family after Saturday's win against the Knicks in New York, sources close to player told ESPN. James was surprised by the news, according to sources.
Doncic, who turns 26 later this month, has referred to James as his "idol." Doncic and James are two of the only three players in NBA history with career averages of at least 25 points, seven rebounds and seven assists per game. The other is Oscar Robertson.
Veteran NBA journalist Chris Haynes first reported James' plans to remain in Los Angeles past the deadline.