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Bullseye! Maddison takes aim at Keane after goal

Published in Soccer
Monday, 17 February 2025 05:01

James Maddison aimed a dig at Roy Keane after scoring the winning goal in Tottenham Hotspur's 1-0 victory over Manchester United on Sunday.

Maddison's close-range finish on 13 minutes settled a low-quality contest in north London, which came at the end of a week in which former United midfielder Keane said: "Maddison isn't bad when he's not at the darts...but if you think he's going to come back and get Spurs top six, you're in cuckoo land."

Speaking to the Stick to Football podcast, Keane added: "He's a talented player, but if you're a player in the Spurs dressing room and he's back in the squad, you wouldn't be looking and going, 'James is back today -- we're going to be fine!'"

The 28-year-old marked his close-range finish by throwing an imaginary dart and then putting his finger to his lips in a silencing motion and afterwards, he told Sky Sports: "There was a little bit of outside noise this week.

"People will have their opinions. I wanted to do my talking on the pitch today so I hope there's a certain few that enjoyed me being the match-winner today.

"Nobody is more critical of myself than me. To be fair to the gaffer, he always talks about blocking out the outside noise, but sometimes it is difficult, it is constantly in your face.

"You can use it [as motivation], but I think the gaffer prefers it when we're just in our little bubble and just listening to him.

"But sometimes it is difficult because it is constantly in your face these days with social media, WhatsApp and people sending stuff. You do see it and it is there. Sometimes [it is fed through to my phone], especially when it is a big high-profile name. But listen, it is about responding in the right way and I did that today."

Spurs moved up to 12th place in the table with United languishing in 15th place and Tottenham boss Ange Postecoglou said of Maddison: "Everybody has mentioned his celebration, but I didn't see it so I can't comment on it, but it doesn't surprise me that Madders didn't accept what was being said about him and threw a shot back over the bow.

"It's just great to have him back. He is a quality player. If you just look at his goals return from midfield this year it's still right up there. He got frustrated when he got injured and to be honest we didn't think he would be back for a couple of weeks but he has worked awfully hard in training and done everything right to make sure he was available.

"I think that is the key thing for us and we have seen it with all our players, particularly in recent times. The injured lads are all desperate to contribute. They have seen what the other guys have gone through and are just pushing hard."

Postecoglou acknowledged the difficult situation Ruben Amorim is in at United, who were missing 12 players through injury and illness, but the Australian coach quickly added he wouldn't be sending any sympathy cards.

"If I check my office, I don't have any sympathy cards from other managers, so that hasn't happened," Postecoglou said. "There's definitely a few [injuries]. I could see Ruben there, players out of position, kids on the bench.

"Well, welcome to my world. But that's for one game. Now do that for two months. Do that for two months. Any club. Do that for two months. I thought Man United were good today, considering all that, and we had our days when we were good, we beat Liverpool in this spell."

Di María on Argentina loss: 'I'm still on meds'

Published in Soccer
Monday, 17 February 2025 05:01

Argentina great Ángel Di María has said he continues to take medication to cope with the disappointment and pressure of losing three straight finals with his national team.

While the Benfica winger won the 2022 World Cup and the 2024 Copa América at the end of his Argentina career, he had previously lost two Copa América finals and the 2014 FIFA World Cup in a three-year span.

"Because of that I'm still taking the meds," Di María told Infobae as reported in ESPN."I was able to reduce it [dosage]. I'm much better, but that's something a little addictive, too ... These are things that stay with you, that mark you."

Di María was one of the heroes after scoring the only goal against Brazil in the Copa América final in 2021 and the first one for his team in the win over France at the 2022 World Cup final.

He said he feels sorry for many of his former Argentina teammates that didn't experience title glory.

"Who remembers the boys that reached that World Cup final and didn't win?" he said. "Very few, it seems unfair to me. Who is talking about those kids? Nobody. Very few can tell you how they played. I said it a lot of times when we became world champions, when we won the Copa América, I always said that those trophies were also [thanks] to the previous generation."

Despite still playing at a competitive level, Di María, 37, retired from international duty last summer and has no regrets.

The former Real Madrid and Paris Saint-Germain player scored 31 goals in 145 appearances for the Albiceleste.

"I was there for 16 years [with the national team] and it is as if I had been in a club," Di María said. "It's difficult, but I think I made the right decision. It's obvious that it tempts me because it's the national team. I achieved everything I wanted to achieve. I left the way I wanted to leave ... "I hope one day I can be there again, in a different role."

Liverpool could move 10 points clear of Arsenal at the top of the Premier League if they beat Aston Villa in midweek, but if they lose then Arne Slot's team could travel to Manchester City on Sunday with their lead cut to four and the first signs of a title wobble developing.

Bigger leads than seven points have been lost in Premier League title races -- Manchester United threw away an eight-point lead with six games to go in 2011-12 -- so Liverpool will be entering hazardous territory if they start to let their foot off the gas.

It's difficult to gauge where Liverpool are at. With a gap at the top, they are seemingly on course for a first title since 2019-20, but recent results and performances have hinted that trouble could lie ahead and the prospect of a much closer title run-in than many had anticipated.

In isolation, their FA Cup fourth-round defeat at EFL Championship strugglers Plymouth Argyle could be dismissed as an outlier result suffered on a day when virtually all of Slot's regulars either watched from the bench or their sofas, having been given a day off. But losing to a team anchored to the foot of the Championship table at the time didn't reflect well on Slot's fringe players and their ability to step in if needed during the run-in now has a significant question mark hanging over it.

The Plymouth defeat was followed by a chaotic and dramatic Merseyside derby against Everton at Goodison Park, which ended in a 2-2 draw after James Tarkowski's 98th-minute equaliser for the home side. Then came the 2-1 home win against Wolves on Sunday which steadied the ship, put Liverpool back on a winning trajectory and restored their seven-point lead after Arsenal had briefly reduced it to four by winning at Leicester City 24 hours earlier.

Yet the Wolves win was edgy and unconvincing. It ended, according to Opta, with Liverpool failing to register a single shot in the second half of a Premier League game at Anfield for the first time since 2003-04.

There are two ways to assess the match: It was either a classic case of a title-winning team grinding out a victory while performing poorly, or it was a sign of things beginning to go awry.

Virgil van Dijk is one of only three outfield players -- alongside Fulham's Antonee Robinson and Brentford's Nathan Collins -- to have played every single minute of every Premier League game this season. Star forward Mohamed Salah has missed only 35 minutes of Premier League football this term, while midfielder Ryan Gravenberch has been absent for only 110 this season. Van Dijk (630), Salah (602) and Gravenberch (585) have also been Liverpool's most active players in their UEFA Champions League campaign this season.

Those numbers -- and similar workloads registered by Alexis Mac Allister, Ibrahima Konaté and Luis Díaz -- are why Slot rested so many players at Plymouth. The FA Cup exit will ease Liverpool's fixture list and give the squad some much-needed breathing space between now and the end of the season, but recent performances have suggested fatigue is already having an impact.

This is why the upcoming period is so crucial for Liverpool. Slot's side travel to face Aston Villa on Wednesday, City on Sunday, then face Newcastle at Anfield on Feb. 26. These are three huge Premier League games that could make or break their title challenge.

If Liverpool win all three, they can start to plan for a Premier League trophy parade, but any defeat would give Arsenal and third-placed Nottingham Forest, who meet at the City Ground on Feb. 26, the belief that the race is still on.

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Michallik: Liverpool 'took their eye off the ball' in nervy second half

Janusz Michallik says Liverpool allowed Wolves to turn what should've been an easy win for Arne Slot's men into a nervous finish.

And why shouldn't they still hold out hope of a late surge to the title? Arsenal were 12 points behind reigning champions Manchester United on March 1, 1998, but Arsene Wenger's team still ended the season as Premier League champions. Two years earlier, Kevin Keegan's Newcastle moved nine points clear of Sir Alex Ferguson's side -- having played one game fewer -- with a 2-1 win at Middlesbrough on Feb. 10, but United reeled Newcastle in and overtook them to win the title in the final week of the campaign.

Man United and Arsenal, in 1996 and 1998, sparked their title surge with a win away to Newcastle and United, respectively, during the run-in, but while Forest have already played Liverpool twice -- winning at Anfield and drawing at home -- Arsenal are due to travel to Anfield on May 10 on Matchday 36/38 in what could be a title decider if Liverpool lose momentum in the weeks ahead.

Although Liverpool led from the front to win the title under Jurgen Klopp in 2019-20 -- the club's first title since 1990 -- they have a poor record when it comes to holding their nerve in Premier League title races. Indeed, they have led the table on New Year's Day on seven occasions, but in five of the previous six, they have failed to finish on top.

Liverpool blew a nine-point lead in the 2018-19 season, so their seven-point advantage right now might just feel a little more vulnerable due to previous failures and the fixture list now looming.

This week will be a key moment in Liverpool's title challenge and the next few games could be the ones that make all difference.

Shorey and Malewar half-centuries keep Mumbai at bay

Published in Cricket
Monday, 17 February 2025 04:32

Vidarbha 308 for 5 (Malewar 79, Shorey 74, Rathod 47*, Dube 2-35, Mulani 2-44) vs Mumbai

Half-centuries from Dhruv Shorey and Danish Malewar helped Vidarbha set themselves a firm footing from where they could hope to cross the 400-run mark in the Ranji Trophy semi-final against defending champions Mumbai in Nagpur.
But Vidarbha will also rue missed opportunities after four of the top five wasted starts to give Mumbai a small opening courtesy left-arm spinner Shams Mulani and allrounder Shivam Dube, who picked up two wickets apiece.
At stumps, Yash Rathod, Vidarbha's highest run-getter this season, was unbeaten on 47 and Akshay Wadkar, the captain, was 13 not out. The pair saw off the last hour's play after Vidarbha lost the wickets of the set Karun Nair and Malewar in quick succession.
With bowling allrounder Harsh Dubey, who made twin half-centuries in the quarter-final yet to come, Vidarbha will quietly be optimistic of notching up a big first innings total, something they didn't do in last year's Ranji Trophy final and subsequently fell behind in the match.
The day began with Vidarbha electing to bat in what was only their second game at the VCA Stadium this season, where they played out a high-scoring draw against Gujarat in November last year. While the surface at the old stadium has tended to be a lot more lively for the seamers, this one stayed true for most parts, which is likely to make the first innings all the more crucial for both sides.

Atharva Taide was dismissed early after the openers saw off the first spell from Shardul Thakur and Mohit Avasthi. Royston Dias, coming off a maiden five-wicket haul in the quarterfinal, struck second ball when he had Taide with a lifter that he gloved behind to wicketkeeper Akash Anand. Taide was looking to defend but decided to suddenly drop his gloves and let the ball pass with the split-second's indecision proving costly.

Shorey got going with a succession of cover drives and ferocious cuts to help offset the early loss. He had a new No. 3 in Parth Rekhade for company, who was playing in only his second first-class game after Vidarbha decided to play an extra batter instead of an offspinner in Akshay Wakhare. The pair had put on 54 when Dube struck to send Rekhade back for 23.

Shorey and Malewar then put on 51, before Mulani had Shorey for his first wicket when he had him edging to Ajinkya Rahane off a deflection to slip for 74. In walked Nair at No. 5 as he slowly built the innings with Malewar, like he'd done in the quarter-final against Tamil Nadu.

Coming in on the back of two hundreds in two games, Nair offset the spin threat by sweeping and reverse sweeping Tanush Kotian, even as Malewar got into his groove to bring up a fifth first-class half-century. Malewar's picking of lengths and judgment to play and leave deliveries, especially off the fast bowlers in the final session, was impressive.

Nair fell against the run of play in the final session for 45 when he wafted at a harmless Dube delivery to give him a second wicket, and soon after Malewar fell just as he may have elicited thoughts of a second first-class century when he was out jabbing at a Mulani delivery, only to feather one to the wicketkeeper.

Rathod and Wadkar then steadily built further, their unbroken partnership worth 47 when play ended with Vidarbha reasonably in a strong position despite their batting lapses at different times.

Kerala 206 for 4 (Baby 69*, Saxena 30, Bishnoi 1-33, Jadeja 1-33) vs Gujarat

Kerala made slow progress on an attritional day in Ahmedabad, courtesy of captain Sachin Baby's unbeaten half-century. Kerala's approach may have stemmed from their first-innings collapses of late, most recently in the quarter-final against Jammu & Kashmir when they were reduced to 200 for 9, and needed a last-wicket stand of 81 to take the first-innings lead that proved decisive.
Openers Akshay Chandran and Rohan Kunnummal put on 60 in 20.4 overs before Kerala lost 3 for 26 inside 45 minutes. Chandran was run out for 30, while Kunnummal was out lbw as he played down the wrong line to a Ravi Bishnoi delivery that beat the inside edge to trap him plumb in front, also for 30.
Kerala brought in a new No. 3 in Varun Nayanar in place of Shoun Roger, and while he blunted the bowling for a better part of an hour to make 10, he couldn't capitalise as he was out caught behind off seamer Priyajitsing Jadeja, whose four-for had broken Saurashtra's back in the second innings of the quarter-final.
The post-lunch session was one of survival over run-scoring as Jalaj Saxena and Baby put on a 71-run stand that took 27.5 overs, before Arzan Nagwaswalla broke through. Saxena, who battled his way to 30, wherein he denied himself runs even at times off perfectly drivable deliveries, was bowled as left-arm seamer Arzan Nagwaswalla sneaked through his defence.

Baby, who had by then reached his first half-century since the Ranji Trophy's resumption for the second leg, buckled down further to grind the bowling in Mohammed Azharuddeen's company as the pair saw off the last hour and a bit without further damage.

Gujarat won't be too disappointed with their efforts on a day where the surface offered precious little for both fast bowlers and spinners. Bishnoi was comfortably the pick of the bowlers, his 15 overs bringing him 1 for 33, primarily because he was quicker through the air and was, at times, able to cause the batters to be indecisive in their footwork.

The rest of the bowlers, especially the faster ones, were largely accurate but didn't have the pace to trouble the batters.

This means the pre-existing playing condition, which states that the stumps are deemed to be broken when the bails light up, will not be applicable in WPL 2025 going forward. Appendix D of the tournament playing conditions, which was shared with teams in the lead-up to the season, states: "where LED wickets are used, the moment at which the wicket has been put down shall be deemed to be the first frame in which the LED lights are illuminated and subsequent frames show the bail permanently removed from the top of the stumps."

Gujarat Giants (GG) vs Mumbai Indians (MI)
Kotambi Stadium, Vadodara, February 18, 2025, 7.30pm IST

What to expect: GG look to break MI jinx

The last time MI and GG met, Harmanpreet Kaur cracked 95 off 48 balls as MI pulled off a heist and booked a playoffs spot last moment. That meant MI have a 4-0 record against GG so far.
But unlike the previous two seasons, GG have started WPL 2025 on a much stronger note. While it took them five attempts to win their first game in 2024, their first victory this time came in their second match, when they beat UP Warriorz (UPW) comfortably. But ineffective death bowling continues to be a concern for GG. RCB took them for 79 runs off the last 4.3 overs, while UPW smashed 26 runs off the final eight deliveries of their innings. With the bat, GG's captain Ashleigh Gardner will be looking for more support from the top order, as their top three tallied only 22 runs between them against UPW.
Meanwhile, MI started this season with a close loss against Delhi Capitals after three contentious run-out decisions. MI stuttered their way to 164 after Nat-Sciver Brunt (80*) and Harmanpreet (42) had given them a blazing start. Four of MI's remaining top-seven batters fell for single-figure scores, and MI will hope things change against GG.

GG have played the same XI in both matches so far after handing out four debuts in the opener against RCB. But Sayali Satghare's six overs across those two games cost 64 runs, and she struck only once. D Hemalatha, on the other hand, managed scores of only 4 and 0. So GG will hope they are back in form before it gets too late.

Gujarat Giants (probable): 1 Beth Mooney (wk), 2 Laura Wolvaardt, 3 D Hemalatha, 4 Ashleigh Gardner (capt), 5 Harleen Deol, 6 Deandra Dottin, 7 Simran Shaikh, 8 Tanuja Kanwar, 9 Sayali Satghare, 10 Priya Mishra, 11 Kashvee Gautam

MI have played only a solitary game so far this season, and are unlikely to panic despite their batters under-performing. But they will want Saika Ishaque, their second-highest wicket-taker in the WPL, to put behind a disappointing outing against RCB, as she leaked 43 runs in three overs.

Mumbai Indians (probable): 1 Hayley Matthews, 2 Yastika Bhatia (wk), 3 Nat Sciver-Brunt, 4 Harmanpreet Kaur (capt), 5 Amelia Kerr, 6 S Sajana, 7 Amanjot Kaur, 8 Sanskriti Gupta, 9 Jintimani Kalita, 10 Shabnim Ismail, 11 Saika Ishaque

Deandra Dottin made her WPL debut only this year, but has already left a mark. She walked out to bat in the 12th over in both matches, and struck at a rapid pace, scoring 25 off 13 while batting first against RCB, and then an unbeaten 33* off 18 in a tricky chase against UPW to ensure GG hunted down 144 with two overs to spare. GG will hope Dottin's run continues, and helps them break their MI jinx.
Nat-Sciver Brunt may not have scored a lot in the recent Ashes but she showed her class in MI's opening game. Batting at No.3, her 80 off 59 balls, which included 13 fours, formed the bedrock of MI's total. That is nearly half of the 172 runs she managed in nine innings last WPL, and her form will be a relief for MI, whose batting otherwise mainly rests on Harmanpreet's shoulders in the middle order.
In November last year Nabi, 40, said he would quit ODIs at the end of the Champions Trophy but is now "still thinking" about his future.

"These might not be my last ODIs, I will probably play less ODIs and give chances to the youngsters to build experience," Nabi told the ICC. "I've discussed with the senior players and in the high-level games, maybe or maybe not, we'll see. It will depend on my fitness."

Nabi's 18-year old son, Eisakhil, is a batter who represented Afghanistan at the Under-19 World Cup in 2024 and his father hopes they will play together for the country soon. "It's my dream. Hopefully we can do it. He is doing very well he is a hard worker and I'm also pushing him to do work.

"I want him to make his own goals, if you want to get to be a high-level cricketer, you have to work hard. It's not enough to make 50 or 60, you have to score 100-plus. He's listening and pushing all the time. When he can talk to me, I try to give him advice to give him confidence for the game."

Afghanistan are in Group B in the Champions Trophy along with England, Australia and South Africa. It is their first appearance in the tournament after finishing among the top-eight teams (sixth place) at the 2023 ODI World Cup. They were semi-finalists at the 2024 T20 World Cup too.

"The preparations for the Champions Trophy have been good," Nabi said. "I've been busy playing in the Bangladesh Premier League, was a champion over there. I did three sessions with the national team in Abu Dhabi so I'm in good shape.

"Winning the BPL gave me more confidence, from a tough position in the final. In the whole tournament, we did really well and my performances were good as well, bowling and also batting, I helped finish the job in four or five matches."

Afghanistan had to make one change to their 15-man squad for the tournament, replacing the injured AM Ghazanfar with left-arm spinner Nangeyalia Kharote. "He's a youngster, who has been doing really well over the last two years," Nabi said. "He's a very good spinner but he's a good fielder as well. He bowled really well against South Africa and Ireland in Sharjah."

Afghanistan begin their Champions Trophy campaign against South Africa in Karachi on February 21 before travelling to Lahore to play England and Australia on February 26 and 28.

Byron battles rain, wins 2nd Daytona 500 in row

Published in Breaking News
Monday, 17 February 2025 05:18

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. -- William Byron fortuitously missed the ferocious wrecks down the stretch at the Daytona 500 that knocked out contenders racing for the checkered flag and left him with a repeat victory in sight.

Still, sitting ninth with one lap left in an overtime finish, the odds seemed against the driver of the No. 24 Chevrolet to escape the rest of the race unscathed, or even have enough time to pull off the comeback win.

Thanks to one more crash, Byron used a clean ride on his final lap to escape the chaos and race to his second straight Daytona 500 victory. He dodged a string of late-race wreckage that knocked out a chunk of contenders and sent the Hendrick Motorsports driver into victory lane Sunday night at Daytona International Speedway.

"It's not all luck to win twice in a row," Byron said.

Maybe not. But Byron certainly was in the right place by racing near the outside wall in overtime to become the first back-to-back winner since Denny Hamlin in 2019-20.

Byron took advantage of another major mess on the final lap -- NASCAR did not drop the caution and let the field race to the finish -- and took another, familiar burnout in Daytona International Speedway.

"It's obviously really special," Byron said. "It's an amazing race, and obviously a lot of crazy racing out there tonight and just a lot of pushing and shoving."

The 27-year-old Byron held on to win after two weather delays totaling more than 3 hours, and with President Donald Trump set to watch the rest of the race in Florida, after he earlier led drivers on two laps around the track in his heavily armored presidential limousine known in Washington as "The Beast."

Hendrick Motorsports won its 10th Daytona 500 to break a tie with Petty Enterprises for the record.

"Just obviously fortunate it worked out in our favor," Byron said. "Crazy? Yeah. I can't honestly believe that but we're here."

Byron become the youngest driver to win multiple Daytona 500s, breaking the record held by Jeff Gordon, also in the No. 24. Gordon, a Hall of Famer and four-time NASCAR champion, is now Byron's boss as vice chairman of Hendrick Motorsports.

Gordon flashed a thumbs up when told Byron broke his record for youngest two-time winner by four months.

"I hope he breaks them all," Gordon said. "I'm in full support of that."

Austin Cindric held the lead headed to the white flag when he was wiped out in crash that took out a slew of drivers that included Chase Briscoe, Hamlin and Alex Bowman. It was sixth time in the last eight Daytona 500s the race spilled into overtime, setting up Byron to become the fifth driver to win it in consecutive years.

Byron won for the 14th time in his Cup career, and already set his sights on the championship race in Phoenix after finishing third in the standings in each of the last two years.

"We plan on trying to win a lot of races this year, so we're not going to stop here," Byron said. "We're going to continue to push forward and try to get to Phoenix.

It wouldn't be Daytona without all the flips, slams and skids down the stretch that inevitably send the race into overtime.

With four laps left, Ryan Preece turned upside-down and essentially did a wheelie in his No. 60 Ford. His car flipped onto its roof and turned back onto its tires before hitting the outside wall. Preece dropped his safety net to signal to crews he was OK.

Bubba Wallace, Kyle Larson, Daniel Suarez and Brad Keselowski all had their shots at victory lane spoiled, and the race was red-flagged, just 11 laps after another big one shuffled the field and knocked four former Cup Series champions out of contention.

Reigning NASCAR champion Joey Logano and Ricky Stenhouse started the multi-car melee when Logano moved to the middle and Stenhouse moved to block him. It stacked up Logano, and the accordion effect sent several cars -- including ones belonging to former Cup champs Kyle Busch, Ryan Blaney and Chase Elliott -- sliding in every direction.

Busch's car ended up on a wrecker, extending his skid to 0 for 20 in "The Great American Race."

"Looks like the fastest car got in a hurry to get to the wreck," Busch said. "Logano was by far the fastest car today. He could do about anything. The Penske cars were very strong. But we still had 20 laps to go, and he's trying to go through the middle and make a hole that isn't there. Just created chaos."

Tyler Reddick was second and two-time Daytona 500 champion Jimmie Johnson was third. Chase Briscoe was fourth and John Hunter Nemechek fifth.

Xfinity Series champion Justin Allgaier finished ninth driving for team owner and two-time Daytona 500 champion Dale Earnhardt Jr. in JR Motorsports' Cup debut.

Not bad. Not good enough to beat Byron.

Byron, a self-taught racer who used computer equipment to hone his skills, was left standing one more time as a Daytona winner. Gordon was a three-time Daytona 500 winner and noted he still had the edge over Byron.

"Until next year," Gordon said.

Leave a legacy

Johnson and Nemechek gave Legacy Motor Club two top-five finishes. A Hall of Fame driver and seven-time NASCAR champion, Johnson is now the majority owner under an offseason restructuring. It was his highest finish in the race since he won it in 2013.

"I have emotions that I didn't expect to have. I've never been in this position as an owner, and it's really opened up a different set of emotions," Johnson said after his highest finish in the race since winning in 2013.

Early exit

Four-time Indianapolis 500 winner Helio Castroneves and 2017 NASCAR champion Martin Truex Jr. were among the drivers whose race ended after they were collected in a wreck before the halfway point.

Castroneves made the Daytona 500 under a new rule that allows for a "world-class driver" to receive a provisional spot. He landed a NASCAR ride as part of Trackhouse's "Project 91," designed to give renowned racers from outside of the series a shot in a stock car.

Truex, who retired from full-time racing at the end of last season, failed to win the Daytona 500 in 21 tries.

Truex finished 38th and Castroneves 39th.

LeBron sits out All-Star Game, ending 20-year run

Published in Basketball
Monday, 17 February 2025 05:17

SAN FRANCISCO -- Los Angeles Lakers forward LeBron James sat out the NBA All-Star Game on Sunday night -- his first time missing the game in his career -- because of lingering discomfort in his left foot and ankle.

James, 40, sat out the Lakers' win over the Indiana Pacers last weekend because of the same injury.

"I was hoping it would feel a lot better this morning, but it was not where I wanted it to be," James said of his ankle.

The 22-year veteran skipped Saturday's ceremonial practice and media availability, keeping the same routine he kept for All-Star Weekend the past two seasons, with the NBA granting him the reprieve after two decades of service.

James added that he "hoped" he would be available Wednesday in the Lakers' first game after the All-Star break against the Charlotte Hornets.

The game was rescheduled to this week after the Lakers-Hornets game on Jan. 9 was postponed because of the Los Angeles wildfires. The rest of the league will not resume play until Thursday.

The Lakers (32-20) are No. 5 in the Western Conference after winning 12 of 15 games heading into the break.

"With 30 games left and us trying to make a playoff push in the wild, wild West, I felt like it was very important for me to kind of take care of myself and understand what's coming on [down the stretch]," James said.

It was the first All-Star Game that James has sat out in his career after being selected a starter for a record 21st straight year in 2025.

James announced his decision about two hours before tipoff Sunday, meaning there was no injury replacement named in his place. James' All-Star team, Team Shaq's OGs, won the title over Team Chuck.

James is averaging 24.3 points on 51.6% shooting (39.5% from 3), with 9.0 assists and 7.7 rebounds this season, appearing in 48 of L.A.'s 52 games.

Two of those games featured his new teammate, Luka Doncic. James was asked if playing with the 25-year-old Doncic has affected how long he planned to continue to play before retiring.

"I have not given it that type of thought," James said. "Just the excitement of being able to add a caliber player like that, a generational talent like that to our franchise, it's something that's given me energy. I'm looking forward to seeing what we can do. ... I think we could be really good going down the stretch. But we'll see what happens."

James touched on several other topics during his 15-minute news conference:

After Ja Morant, Giannis Antetokounmpo and Zach LaVine took to social media to express their interest in joining next year's dunk contest after Mac McClung won the event for the third straight time Saturday, James was asked if he regretted never participating in it.

"No, there's no part of me that has regrets about not doing it," James said. "Obviously, I had a couple moments where I wanted to do it, and it just never worked out that way."

He added it would be "pretty cool" to see established stars dunk in the contest.

"If those guys do do it, those are superstars in our league, and obviously we know the athleticism [they possess]," James said.

When asked about the current state of the NBA, after he lamented too many 3-pointers being taken across the league earlier this season, James endorsed the NBA product, pointing to its international appeal as a major draw.

"We love our game. The game of basketball is beautiful," James said. "[The NBA is] better from when I entered the league in 2003, and hopefully it continues to be even better when I'm done playing, as well."

James said he was "looking forward to seeing" the All-Star Game's revamped format, which featured three teams of eight NBA All-Stars and one team of eight first- and second-year Rising Stars players competing in a round-robin tournament.

James' team, coached by Shaquille O'Neal and featuring vets such as James, Stephen Curry and Kevin Durant on the roster, played the Rising Stars group, including rookies Stephon Castle of the San Antonio Spurs and Dalton Knecht of the Lakers.

"I know we've got a lot of great -- calling us the OGs, that's hilarious," James said. "I saw the quote the other day with DK [Knecht] say he was going to play against me. So I guess I'll see him in practice and we can go at it then."

Soccer

LAFC's Palencia faces probe over CCC incident

LAFC's Palencia faces probe over CCC incident

EmailPrintOpen Extended ReactionsConcacaf has launched an investigation into an incident that occurr...

Premier League live blog: Liverpool host Newcastle on vital day in title race

Premier League live blog: Liverpool host Newcastle on vital day in title race

EmailPrintOpen Extended ReactionsOn Wednesday, four Premier League matches could go some way to iron...

Slot given two-match ban after derby chaos

Slot given two-match ban after derby chaos

EmailPrintOpen Extended ReactionsLiverpool manager Arne Slot has been given a two-match touchline ba...

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UEFA

2024 PARIS OLYMPIC


Basketball

Wolves reach 2-yr. deal with Clark, to add Hyland

Wolves reach 2-yr. deal with Clark, to add Hyland

EmailPrintOpen Extended ReactionsThe Minnesota Timberwolves are shoring up their roster ahead of the...

Luka Dončić and a trade that could change NBA history

Luka Dončić and a trade that could change NBA history

EmailPrintOpen Extended ReactionsNICO HARRISON WORE the kind of suit no one could miss. Electric blu...

Baseball

Brewers' Bukauskas (lat) likely to miss season

Brewers' Bukauskas (lat) likely to miss season

EmailPrintOpen Extended ReactionsPHOENIX -- Milwaukee Brewers pitcher J.B. Bukauskas is expected to...

Astros' Altuve set for spring training debut in LF

Astros' Altuve set for spring training debut in LF

EmailPrintOpen Extended ReactionsHouston Astros star Jose Altuve will make his spring training debut...

Sports Leagues

  • FIFA

    Fédération Internationale de Football Association
  • NBA

    National Basketball Association
  • ATP

    Association of Tennis Professionals
  • MLB

    Major League Baseball
  • ITTF

    International Table Tennis Federation
  • NFL

    Nactional Football Leagues
  • FISB

    Federation Internationale de Speedball

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