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I Dig Sports
Pakistan vs New Zealand in a title clash and a dress rehearsal
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Big picture - Pakistan vs New Zealand is the ideal final match-up
It's rare for a tournament final to be a dry run, but that's almost what this Pakistan vs New Zealand game will be. There's a trophy on the line in Karachi, five days before another Pakistan vs New Zealand game in Karachi - that is the big one, the opening game of the Champions Trophy. In that sense, when this tri-series was planned, this was the final that would have made the most sense, if you'd asked anyone bar, perhaps, South Africa.
It is a game with silverware up for grabs, and the group-stage rubber between the two next week inflates its importance rather than diminishing it.
Form guide
Pakistan WLWWW (last five completed matches, most recent first)
New Zealand WWLWW
In the spotlight: Fakhar Zaman and Kane Williamson
Team news: Rachin Ravindra won't be rushed back
With Haris Rauf unavailable, Pakistan are unlikely to tinker with the side that got them to the final barring injuries.
Pakistan (likely): 1 Fakhar Zaman, 2 Babar Azam, 3 Saud Shakeel, 4 Mohammad Rizwan (capt, wk), 5 Salman Agha, 6 Tayyab Tahir, 7 Khushdil Shah, 8 Shaheen Afridi, 9 Naseem Shah, 10 Mohammad Hasnain, 11 Abrar Ahmed
*New Zealand coach Gary Stead said that Rachin Ravindra had experienced headaches after the blow to his head in the tri-series opening and though that has subsided, they don't intend to rush him back into action, especially with his replacement Devon Conway filling in with aplomb. Fast bowler Lockie Ferguson, who had sustained a hamstring injury in the ILT20, has resumed training and is building up his intensity, with Stead saying that the team management will "look to have him playing in one of the next two games."
New Zealand (probable): 1 Devon Conway, 2 Will Young, 3 Kane Williamson, 4 Daryl Mitchell, 5 Tom Latham/Mark Chapman, 6 Glenn Phillips, 7 Michael Bracewell, 8 Mitchell Santner (capt), 9 Ben Sears/Lockie Ferguson, 10 Matt Henry, 11 Will O'Rourke
Pitch and conditions
Karachi proved just as flat as Lahore on Wednesday, and the outfield was lightning quick, playing its part in the highest-scoring ODI in the previous game. It will be a warm, sunny day, with temperatures hitting up to 30 degrees.
Stats and trivia
- Fakhar has scored 57, 114, 91, 55* and 0 in the five semi-final/final games he has played in white-ball international cricket. The first three went towards wins. Pakistan lost the other two.
- Williamson became the fifth New Zealand batter to reach 7000 ODI runs on Monday, and is on the cusp of more run-scoring history: he is 148 away from becoming the first New Zealander to 19,000 international runs.
- New Zealand have been in 12 finals of multi-team white-ball tournaments since 2000. Of these, they have won four and lost eight. What's worrying is that the last of those wins came way back in 2005.
*5.10pm: The preview was updated after Gary Stead provided updates on the injuries of Rachin Ravindra and Lockie Ferguson
Danyal Rasool is ESPNcricinfo's Pakistan correspondent. @Danny61000
Jets splitting from Rodgers, wish him success
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FLORHAM PARK, N.J. -- Now it's official: The Aaron Rodgers era with the New York Jets is over.
Nearly two years after welcoming him with a large-scale news conference, the Jets said goodbye to Rodgers on Thursday with a news release that included statements of gratitude from team officials.
The Jets didn't give a reason for the decision, saying only they met last week with Rodgers and "shared that our intention was to move in a different direction at quarterback," coach Aaron Glenn and general manager Darren Mougey said in a joint statement.
"It was important to have this discussion now to provide clarity and enable each of us the proper time to plan for our respective futures," they said. "We want to thank him for the leadership, passion, and dedication he brought to the organization and wish him success moving forward."
There was no statement from Rodgers in the news release.
Rodgers, 41, flew from California to New Jersey last week for a face-to-face meeting with Glenn and Mougey, both of whom were introduced at a Jan. 27 news conference. Glenn was noncommittal on Rodgers' status in the news conference, reinforcing the belief that the new regime was going to part with Rodgers, who has one year left on his contract.
On Sunday, Fox Sports reported that Rodgers had been informed of his ouster. The Jets declined to comment at the time.
Owner Woody Johnson thanked Rodgers for his two seasons in New York, saying in a statement, "His arrival in 2023 was met with unbridled excitement and I will forever be grateful that he chose to join us to continue his Hall of Fame career.
"From day one, he embodied all that it meant to be a New York Jet, embraced our fans, and immersed himself in our city. That is what I will remember most when I look back at his time here. He will always be welcome, and I wish him only the best in whatever he chooses to do next."
Rodgers' tenure produced little on-field success. He won only six of his 18 starts, and the Jets sputtered to a 5-12 record in 2024. Coach Robert Saleh and GM Joe Douglas, who were instrumental in luring Rodgers to the Jets in 2023, were fired during the season.
The Jets are likely to release Rodgers with a post-June 1 designation. To do that, they must carry him on the roster until March 12, the start of the league year. At that point, they can release him, which will allow them to split the remaining cap charges ($49 million) over two years -- $14 million in 2025, $35 million in 2026.
In this scenario, his current cap number ($23.5 million) will be on their books until June 2 and then it drops to $14 million -- a net savings of $9.5 million. In the meantime, he will be free to sign elsewhere on March 13. He doesn't have to wait until then to speak with teams; he can do so immediately.
The other option would've been to release him immediately, but that would've meant absorbing the $49 million this year. The same accounting applies to a trade, which seems unlikely.
It's unclear if Rodgers will continue his legendary career. He said at the end of the season that he needed some time to decide on whether to play a 21st season.
His departure leaves a gaping hole at quarterback. Still under contract are veteran backup Tyrod Taylor, 35, and 2024 fifth-round draft pick Jordan Travis, who sat out last season as he recovered from a gruesome leg injury at Florida State.
The Jets are expected to pursue a veteran, either in trade or in free agency. Kirk Cousins and Justin Fields are possible options as the Jets look to rebuild the position.
The trade for Rodgers in April, 2023 will be remembered as one of the most disappointing moves in franchise history. His first season ended quickly, as he tore his left Achilles on the fourth snap of the first game. He started every game in 2024, but the Jets, who began the year with Super Bowl aspirations, were a nonfactor most of the season.
Rodgers threw for 3,897 yards and 28 touchdowns, both third on the Jets' single-season list, but it was an uneven performance. He finished 25th in Total QBR, 30th in completion percentage and 28th in yards per attempt among qualified passers. The Jets finished 3-7 in one-score games, with Rodgers failing in a few of them to pull out wins on his final possession.
The four-time MVP endeared himself to the organization in 2023, when he took a voluntary $35 million pay cut to help provide cap relief. His teammates voted him the most inspirational player in 2023, when he tried to return from Achilles surgery late in the season. Ultimately, his comeback bid came up short.
Rodgers sparked controversy off the field, most notably when he skipped a mandatory minicamp in June 2024 to vacation in Egypt. It was deemed an unexcused absence, and he was fined approximately $100,000 by the team.
Love, Abby: The forever friendship between the UConn Huskies and one magical fan
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ONE SATURDAY AFTERNOON last April, a group of UConn women's basketball players texted back and forth about that evening's party: what time they were leaving, what to wear, what the feel of the night would be. There was a spirited discussion about shoes. Few of them had ever been to a bat mitzvah before.
Dressed and ready, they caravaned out of campus with Paige Bueckers' car leading the way. When they arrived at the Jewish Community Center of West Hartford, Connecticut, about 40 minutes down the road, the festivities were in full swing. The Mexican food station was delectable. The centerpieces were brilliant. The line for the photo booth, where you could pose with assorted masks, feather boas and tiaras, was buzzing.
Even though UConn players are royalty in Connecticut -- Bueckers is arguably the most famous athlete in the state -- there was little fanfare. The bat mitzvah girl, Abby Zittoun, ran up to them with happiness and hugs, but also apologetically informed them she had to keep bouncing around so she could spend time with aunts and uncles and cousins and classmates and her other friends who had come that night, too.
The players nodded enthusiastically. They understood. This wasn't an appearance or community event. There were no coaches present, no administrators from the UConn athletic department. There was no PR person or team photographer telling them they should play with the kids now. They were, like everyone else, simply there to celebrate someone special. They were guests. (Really, really tall guests.)
So, they played cornhole. They ate tacos. They barraged the photo booth and filled their Instagram stories. They cheered during musical chairs and the scavenger hunt. Azzi Fudd sat at a table with the grandparents and heard old family stories. When the DJ played the "Cha Cha Slide," Bueckers hopped into the middle of a group stomping and kicking and laughing and shrieking. The "Cupid Shuffle" brought even bigger shouts. Abby's mom, Gwen, whirled and spun. Even Caroline Ducharme, famously averse to dancing, joined in. You could hear Abby's giggles in the parking lot.
No one talked about UConn's brutal loss in the Final Four a week earlier. No one talked about the upcoming season or injury rehabs or pains from the past or challenges that might still be in front of them. For the players, for the Zittouns, for everyone at the party, it was that rarest of gifts: a night of joy, of glee, of bliss. A night when the delight of the moment is so pure that, just for a split second, it covers over everything else that makes life hard.
"We were there," Bueckers says, "for Abby."
WHAT CAN YOU SAY about a little girl who died young? That she had a smile for all time. That she cherished her family. And her dog. And musicals. That she built Legos to the ceiling. That she loved her friends fiercely. That they somehow loved her back even more.
Abby first connected with UConn through Evina Westbrook, a guard from Oregon who came to Connecticut via Tennessee. They met in February 2022, five years after Abby's cancer diagnosis, during a post-practice event where the players spent time with patients from Connecticut Children's Medical Center. It was sweet and meaningful -- everyone took pictures and shot baskets, and a few of the kids perched on the players' shoulders to get a little closer to the rim. It could have ended there -- an inspiring afternoon and a great memory.
Except "Momma E," as the team called Westbrook, wanted to know more about this girl in her group who had a "spicy" attitude. This girl with the beanie who was impossible to miss. Most kids the players met were big basketball fans who revered the Huskies and were sometimes shy or intimidated. But while Abby liked basketball and UConn just fine, she wasn't the type to stand in awe.
"Let me teach you this dance," said Abby, who was 10 at the time, and suddenly she and Westbrook were going through steps on the gym floor. They bantered about a shared love for Iron Man. They cackled. Abby had an affection for dad jokes that occasionally bordered on pun-comfortable, and while Westbrook can't remember the exact joke Abby told her that day, one of her well-worn favorites -- What is the leading cause of dry skin? Towels! -- is "definitely possible."
At one point, as Abby dribbled with one of the other players, Westbrook went over to Abby's dad, Dan, who was standing on the side. Dan grew up in Connecticut, went to UConn in the 1990s and had a work-study job in UConn's athletic department. He still remembers the laundry routine -- take a jock strap, socks, shorts and a T-shirt, wrap it in a white towel, put it in a locker, then repeat for every single locker every single day -- so just getting to see his daughter running around Gampel Pavilion was plenty. But then Westbrook, who was a senior, told him her family couldn't come to many games because they were on the West Coast, so she'd be happy to give the Zittouns her allotted tickets some time. She said, "Abby is amazing."
And then she asked, a little bit slower and a little bit more hesitantly, "So ... what is she dealing with?"
DAN AND GWEN always wanted kids. They talked about it. They met in 2003, fell hard for each other, broke up because a long-distance relationship got tricky, then reconnected and fell all the way. One evening, when Gwen came into Dan's apartment just before a date, she found him standing in front of one of the bedroom's two closets. She looked closer and saw that the closet was cleaned out of his clothes, empty except for a single hanger with a new dress dangling from it. Gwen turned and Dan was on one knee.
Ella was born in 2009. Abby arrived 21 months later and Olivia came three years after that. Their life (and their minivan) was full. It is an undeniable truth that big families feel different: With all that chaos and noise, it's like the cabling and wires beneath the surface have to be even stronger. The Zittouns were a clan, a pack, a force -- dinners didn't often finish with all five still at the table, but only because at least one person usually left to avoid choking from laughing too hard.
The girls were best friends and Abby was the motor. Once, while eating at Burger King on a road trip, they admired the paper crowns on display behind the counter. Dan suggested that Ella, the eldest, go up and ask the man at the register for one. Ella didn't want to go -- she loved the crown but was fine with letting the opportunity pass.
Abby wasn't. She stood up, marched to the front, talked to the man at the register and returned moments later. She had three crowns. The girls wore them in the car.
"She's a little firecracker," Gwen says. "She had ringlet hair, really curly hair, and it just fit her personality: smiley, happy, the one to raise her hand. She wants to help, she wants to participate, she wants to be involved."
Then came Friday, Oct. 6, 2017. The family was supposed to fly to Florida that evening for a wedding. Gwen took Abby to the ophthalmologist because her right eye had started wobbling -- sometimes it looked as if she was going cross-eyed. Gwen and Dan were worried it was something with her retina and wanted to get it checked before they left.
After dilating Abby -- no easy task with a 6-year-old -- the ophthalmologist grew visibly concerned. She started talking about pressure. Something was pushing on Abby's eye. They needed to go to the emergency room, she told Gwen. Like, right now.
Dan met them at the hospital. Doctors and nurses came and went. Tests were done. Scans. Examinations. That night, and the next few weeks really, slipped into a frenzied blur for Dan and Gwen, a hazy tapestry of waiting rooms and hushed conversations and questions asked and answers not quite given that was spattered with a few searing moments of clarity -- details and fragments, of varying importance, that they'll never forget.
The mass in Abby's skull was the size of a plum. The show "PJ Masks" was on an endless loop as they waited that first night, and the theme song was catchy but annoying. They didn't know how to tell everyone in Florida that they weren't coming to the wedding. A kind doctor sat with them on the floor of the hospital and gave them the mantra they would cling to: "Just be in the place where you are. Other people in your life are going to be 500 steps down the road. Just be in the place you are."
At some point in those early stages, as they were still learning about neuroblastoma, Dan and Gwen made a pact: No matter how tough it got, they would never have a simultaneous breakdown. Tears, anger, rage, desperation -- it was all allowed, they said. Melting down was perfectly acceptable. Just not together. That way, there was always one person who could hug the other and say, with whatever assuredness was summonable, that they could and would get through this.
"We never fell apart at the same time," Dan says. "There were so many times we could have. ... But we would say, 'Hey: They need us.'"
DAN DIDN'T GIVE Westbrook all those details that day at Gampel, of course. He didn't go in-depth about the initial craniotomy and all the surgeries that followed. Or the endless chemotherapy and how Abby wanted to dye her hair before it fell out so Gwen dyed hers, too, and was, for a time, the mom with pink hair.
He didn't go line by line on all the places they went for treatments, all the doctors they talked to in Connecticut and Boston and New York and Philadelphia, or all the papers they read and trials they considered. He didn't list all the apartments and Ronald McDonald House rooms they slept in or all the times that he and Gwen drove home early (or late) to switch out so that someone was always there for Ella and Olivia. He didn't describe the brutal, gut-wrenching cancer yo-yo -- how Abby was "cancer-free" and then it was back and then it was somewhere else and then it was gone and then it was back, this thin, fluttering, tantalizing thread of normalcy that would sway right in front of them only to vanish again without mercy. There were four relapses in seven years.
No one can ever really understand it all because only those living it are there for everything. Every single ride to the hospital. Every injection. Every Friday when a test result doesn't come back and you have to wait until Monday. The port being put in and taken out and put in. The crushing guilt over enjoying something -- a beer, a book, anything -- when you know your daughter is in pain. The anguish of trying to sleep when your baby has something wrong with her and there is nothing you can do to fix it.
"Abby would tell me, 'Don't cry,'" Dan says. "She would say it all the time. Finally, I pushed back. I was like, 'I can cry sometimes.' And she got OK with it."
The Zittouns were open; they shared plenty with their community about what was happening because they knew how many people cared. But a single phone call or Facebook post or update is a little like trying to grasp a 20-volume encyclopedia by pulling out a single page. There may be no greater gap in the English language than the space between what it's like to simply read the words, "During MIBG therapy, Abby spent five days quarantined in a hospital room," and understanding what it actually means to be there, sitting in a lead-lined anteroom outside a locked door for 120 hours as your 8-year-old child's tiny body is pumped full of radiation, unable to hold her hand or hug her or whisper in her ear that she's safe.
How do you explain that to someone? How do you explain what the hair on the back of your neck does when you're the dad, the one who is supposed to have the answers to everything in the world, and you're walking in a parking lot one day and one of your children quietly asks you, "Is Abby going to live?"
You don't explain it. You can't. So that day at Gampel, Dan just gave Westbrook the broad strokes of all Abby had been through and talked more about how she'd faced it -- with the resilience and strength and commitment to the present that Westbrook had already seen.
He told her that their family looked at what was in front of them and, given a choice on how to proceed, chose joy. He told her that they were busy, were active, were always pushing and looking forward. That Gwen, the family's unbreakable rock, constantly went places with Abby and made plans with Abby, always finding something -- anything -- on weekends or vacations or on days Abby couldn't go to school because they learned, very quickly, that she was the best version of herself when she could do things and see things and try things and be things. They all were.
"It takes her mind off it," Gwen says. "That's really why she was happy, because she wasn't thinking about things all the time. ... We're going to do this thing today and that thing today, and we're going to be together today. And that's how we got through a lot of the days."
Walks in the woods. Treasure hunts. Disney. Broadway. So many parks and playgrounds. And a few weeks after meeting Westbrook, the UConn-Mercer first-round NCAA tournament game at Gampel.
After the game, which UConn won in a blowout, Westbrook looked at the crowd waiting to see the players and pointed at Abby, waving her over. "I wanted to talk to her again," Westbrook says, "because she was so fun." Abby sat with Westbrook and Nika Muhl, and they watched part of the second game of the doubleheader while chatting with a slew of others, including three younger players with whom Westbrook was especially close:
Bueckers, Fudd and Ducharme.
NO ONE IS exactly sure when Abby and Westbrook exchanged numbers and started texting. Or when, exactly, Westbrook's teammates asked for Abby's number so they could text with her, too.
It just happened the way any connection does. Solo texts became group texts and group texts became side texts, and suddenly there were moments when Abby would just casually mention an injury that Westbrook was dealing with in the WNBA or ask Gwen, offhandedly, "Do we have any plans on Monday? Because I invited Paige and Azzi over for dinner."
The games remained a tether, absolutely. Abby loved being there, particularly at the end when she would go on the court carrying a bag of mini-basketballs. She would hug the players and joke with them and hand out the mini-basketballs for them to toss to the fans in the stands. She held the bag with pride. It was a job she took seriously.
But these are members of Gen Z and so, naturally, the phone was where everything truly grew. There was nothing forced in it, no obligation on either side -- neither UConn coach Geno Auriemma nor Dan and Gwen were involved with any of the relationships being made. And that absence of parents or coaches or doctors, the ones usually exerting control over so much of their lives, only made Abby and the players feel freer. "I texted her like she was my little sister," Ducharme says.
Each thread built on its own. Bueckers became fascinated with doing Legos, so she and Abby would share photos of their projects. Fudd and Abby had an animated and long-running debate over whether the proper color for mint chocolate chip ice cream was white (Fudd) or green (Abby). Ducharme, who is from outside Boston, could talk with Abby about two New England classics: the Celtics and "Gilmore Girls."
Everyone checked in on each other, made fun of each other, raised each other up. Abby vented about friendship dynamics in middle school and how math class was excruciating (Bueckers, supportively: "Math is the worst."). The players complained about a hard practice or the challenge of a rehab visit, and Abby would send a funny meme or a heart or an image of the Zittouns' dog, Cooper, who is a very good boy. Pictures of candy, in all its formations and constructions, were always welcome with no segue needed.
There were, occasionally, moments when the conversation shifted to basketball or cancer, but like any real text thread, the swings were sudden and erratic: Making fun of Westbrook for not liking TikTok could be interrupted by a quick praise of Bueckers' shooting; on one day, Abby might write "PS now I have spine and brain cancer" (followed by the speechless emoji, the eyeroll emoji and the single tear emoji), while other days there might be a lengthy discourse between Westbrook, Ducharme and Abby that started with a discussion of blue cheese vs. ranch dressing but then somehow veered into a discourse on the best kind of bug (Abby, inquisitively: "Does a butterfly count?" Westbrook, authoritatively: "Yes. Great answer.").
Once, when the Zittouns were on vacation in Vermont, Gwen and Dan came back to their rental house after a quick walk and found Abby in the middle of an impromptu three-way FaceTime with Westbrook and Ducharme. ("We needed to catch up," Ducharme says.) Fudd came over to the Zittouns' house one day last year, rang the doorbell and surprised Abby, who nearly exploded with delight and wrapped Fudd in a bearhug before they spent the afternoon playing with Cooper and engaging in a heated battle of Cards Against Humanity.
When Bueckers and Fudd were part of a group that came for dinner another night, Abby shared some of her preferred jokes (another classic: What do you call a porcupine in summer? A porcupine!) and performed for them her famous card trick, where she lays out 21 cards on a table and -- with her magical powers -- correctly picks the one her subject selects. "She got me on that one," Bueckers says. "It's impressive." Afterward, Abby led the players upstairs so they could hang in her room, telling Gwen, politely, "You can stay down here."
"They just treated Abby like Abby," Gwen says. "It was just about letting her be her. And I think the beauty of the relationship was that she treated them that way, too -- that they were just friends who happened to be, like, superstar basketball players."
The connection between Abby and Ducharme might have run the deepest. A highly recruited shooting guard, Ducharme has played in just four games over the past two seasons because of a series of medical issues, including head and neck injuries and a concussion. She has spent long stretches of time away from the team for different treatments.
It was common ground. She and Abby were honest with each other, were open about what it's like to constantly miss out on things that, if not for your own body's refusal, you'd be doing too. Ducharme once visited Abby in the hospital on a treatment day when Abby was in pain and tired and frustrated. Ducharme expected they would play a game or chat like usual, but as soon as she walked through the door, Abby looked up, saw her friend and burst into tears. She buried her head in Ducharme's lap.
"She always put on this brave face," Ducharme says. "And this was the first time I really saw her struggle. ... I think I brought her hot chocolate, which was one of her favorites, and a little bracelet-making kit. And I was, like, 'Do you want to do anything? You want the hot chocolate?' And she was like, 'No, I just want to lay here.'"
There was a vulnerability between them, a tenderness. They made picture boxes for each other to keep in their rooms when they were away. They crafted. In the days before Ducharme headed to Florida for treatments last March, Abby texted Bueckers and other players asking what sweets Ducharme preferred (Bueckers, without hesitation: "Laffy Taffy, Twizzlers, Swedish fish, sparkling water ice drinks, York, Pringles, Mamba candies.").
Abby gathered all her intel. And even as she was prepping to travel to Pennsylvania for her own treatment, she put together a bag for Ducharme to take on the road. She packed it full of activities to do and photos to look at and snacks to eat. She put a handwritten letter inside.
"I really hope everything goes well," she wrote near the bottom, her playful signature always including two hearts beside her name. "I love you so much," she signed. "Love, Abby."
LIKE MANY UCONN fans, Dan booked the hotel at the start of last season: Cleveland, Final Four weekend. Just in case.
He knew, even back in the fall when he made the reservation, it was unlikely they'd be able to go. Treatments, travel -- everything had gotten a little tougher. Abby's situation wasn't improving the way anyone wanted. By January, when UConn literally struggled to field a team some nights because so many players were out injured, it looked like the Huskies had little chance to make it there anyway. Dan almost canceled the hotel a half-dozen times.
Except UConn did make it. And when Carley Mooney, a do-it-all staffer for UConn who helps the players with just about everything and has also become close with the Zittouns, called to let Gwen and Dan know that the team had two tickets for them if they could get to Cleveland, a decision had to be made.
They had been at the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia all week as Abby had her T-cells harvested for a potential future treatment. They were exhausted. She was exhausted. Her bat mitzvah, already moved a few different times, was a week later. Was it too much? Was it worth it? Was it even safe for her to be around so many people?
"We asked, 'Is it OK for her to be in an arena with 20,000 people?'" Dan says. "And they were like, 'She should be fine ...' and I said, 'Great, stop [talking].' That's it.'"
On Thursday, Abby had surgery to put a catheter in her neck, then spent four hours having her T-cells removed and the catheter taken out. On Friday morning, Gwen flew home, and Dan and Abby got in the car. Tipoff was at 9 p.m. and they were 430 miles away. They passed Hershey and Harrisburg, Pittsburgh, Gibsonia and Youngstown as the sun rose and peaked and fell.
Abby's playlist powered them. "Hamilton." "Wicked." Olivia Rodrigo. They talked about the team. About the summer. About Cooper, who really is a very good boy. They laughed. They were a father and a daughter on a road trip, racing the clock. After a hurried bathroom break at a rest stop, Dan handed something to Abby as they returned to the parking lot.
A Burger King crown. She wore it in the car.
They made it to Cleveland with just enough time for a short snooze and a slice of pizza. In the arena that night, Abby screamed and cheered and shouted as UConn and Iowa battled. She jumped up when Muhl hit a 3-pointer to pull the Huskies close near the end. She dropped when an official made a controversial call on Aaliyah Edwards and UConn lost by two. She stared as Caitlin Clark and her teammates celebrated. In the frenzy and disappointment after the game, Abby couldn't visit with the players, but there were many texts.
The next day, as Dan made the long, winding drive through rain and snow back to Connecticut, he looked in the rearview mirror and saw Abby smiling at him. The end of the game, the referee's call -- it stunk. But in a life full of regimented treatment plans and scheduled check-ins and restrictions on what to eat because there is this procedure or that infusion coming on precisely this day, they had thrown away the rules. They'd done something spontaneous, done something unexpected. Abby loved it.
"I would have driven to California," Dan says.
THROUGH THE SUMMER and into this past fall, Abby's treatments became less frequent. There wasn't as much they could do, the doctors said. There weren't as many things they could try.
Abby was tired more often but didn't buckle. When Muhl came to Connecticut with her WNBA team in September, the Zittouns went to the game. Even though it was a little too frenetic in the arena for Abby, they spent time afterward with the UConn players who came to see their former teammate. A fan even asked Ella for an autograph, assuming she was a player, too.
Still, the text threads never wavered. Abby shared early impressions of 8th grade and pictures of the 5,201-piece Lego Avengers Tower that was her favorite build yet. The players checked in with updates on their prep for the season that was fast approaching. On Sept. 27, Abby and Ducharme discussed making plans for dinner; on Sept. 29, Abby sent birthday wishes to Westbrook and they traded emojis.
On Sept. 30, Abby went to school and had a choir audition that she said went pretty well. It was Gwen's birthday, and Dan came home early from work so they could celebrate. But that night, Abby became nauseous and complained of a searing headache. They rushed to the hospital.
The next morning, after the UConn players finished a preseason workout, Mooney called them over. She told them she had heard from the Zittouns and it wasn't good: There had been a brain bleed. Abby wasn't conscious.
Ducharme sobbed. The players went into their locker room and held each other. They stayed there and wept together. "The silence in the room," Fudd says, "was very loud." Ducharme remembers locking eyes with Bueckers and sensing that both felt the same thing: "We have to go see her. We have to go see her."
They went the next morning. "It was definitely scary," Bueckers says. They didn't know what it would look like in that room or feel like in that room. They just knew they wanted to be there.
Bueckers, Fudd, Ducharme and Aubrey Griffin -- the seniors, along with Mooney -- drove into Hartford and took the hospital elevator to the eighth floor. Gwen and Dan met them near the nurse's station, then brought them into a room next door to Abby's. They hugged. They prayed. Gwen and Dan told the players that Abby could hear them even if she wasn't responsive. Then they opened the door to Abby's room so the players could be alone with her.
"It's what comes when you love someone -- you're going to be with them in that moment," Mooney says. "And that's what they did."
The players sat by Abby's bed. They held her hand. They rubbed her back. They talked about how practice was going. They read cards to her, messages written by every player on the team.
Fudd drew hearts of all different colors on the front of hers but inked the words on the inside in purple.
"I hope one day I can be as amazing as you are," she read to Abby.
"That said, Cooper is still my favorite," she continued.
"Your smile is one of my favorite things because it is so contagious but the way you carry yourself is something I look up to."
They went through each one. The car ride back to campus was quiet. "Just getting to share one more moment with her was special," Fudd says. "I'm super grateful they let us have that."
Over the next two weeks, Gwen and Dan barely left the hospital, never slept anywhere but the tiny couch wedged into the corner by the window. The players tried to go about their routines with school and practice, but Mooney says it was obvious how much they were struggling because "a huge piece of them was with Abby." They asked for updates constantly, even as it became clear there weren't many coming. Remembering what they'd been told about how Abby could hear them, they recorded videos of themselves talking to Abby and sent them to Gwen and Dan.
"Haven't had a practice like that since sophomore year," Bueckers told Abby in one video. "We have a lot to learn.
"I know you'd have a lot to say -- constructive criticism, which we need!" she said. "We love you."
On Oct. 15, Abby died. She was 13. Bueckers says the players stayed in the locker room for hours. Talking. Looking at the text threads. Weeping. "Paige and I called Evina," Ducharme says. "I was a mess telling her. I was bawling."
The memorial service -- the celebration of life -- was held at Beth El Temple, a synagogue in West Hartford. There was a murmur when the UConn team walked into the overflowing sanctuary, but the players settled quietly into their seats. This wasn't an appearance; they were, like everyone else, just there to grieve. They were mourners. (Really, really tall mourners.)
The rabbi quoted Abby, who months earlier had stood on the same pulpit at her bat mitzvah and taught a lesson from the Bible about "the importance of finding strength when we are challenged." Ella and Olivia, with incredible grace, spoke of Abby's humor and her love of breakfast, and shared a story from when they were little and Ella cut Abby's hair. (It wasn't great.) Gwen talked about Cooper, who always seemed to know when Abby was struggling and lay protectively at her feet until just days before she died. Dan referenced one of Abby's favorite songs from "Rent" -- the one that suggests that while most people think of lives in terms of days or months or years, the greater quantity -- the best quantity -- might be to measure the love.
When it was their turn, the UConn seniors stood together at the lectern. Ducharme spoke of Abby's beloved Jayson Tatum sneakers and the crafts they made and the kisses they'd blow each other before games. "I never thought this sweet little girl with such an infectious smile would change my life in the way that she did," she said.
Bueckers mentioned the Legos and the dinners and the card trick -- Abby never did share with anyone how she did it. "From the first day we met, we all knew the bond was going to be something special," Bueckers said.
She looked out at the audience.
"Abby lives within all of us."
IN MID-DECEMBER, during UConn's game against USC, there was a moment when a USC player ran down the court, in position to make a play, only to trip and fall out of nowhere. There was no one around her, no obvious reason for her slip, but down she went.
Watching, Fudd had an immediate sensation: Abby.
"Like -- thank you," she thought.
The memories, the twinges, the feelings come at different times and in different ways. The littlest things hit hardest. An opponent's unexpected stumble, sure. A ball hanging on the rim and falling off. But also, a segment about dad jokes on the radio. For Bueckers, it's when she works on her Lego project, a build of the house from the movie "Despicable Me." For Gwen, it's when she shops for groceries without Abby taking part of the list or when she calls a restaurant to make a reservation and the host says, "How many in your party?"
The Zittouns still go to the UConn games. How could they not? They feel comfortable there, feel warm there, feel happy there. At the start of the season, Dan made a hotel reservation for this year's Final Four in Tampa.
On Feb. 2, when the Huskies played Butler at the XL Center in Hartford, the players and coaches came out for warm-ups wearing black shooting shirts that had the signature from Ducharme's card -- "Love, Abby," with the two hearts -- across the chest. During a timeout, Dan, Gwen, Ella and Olivia went on the court and received an ovation from the crowd, a framed photo collage of Abby with the players and a $10,000 check from Auriemma for the Abigail Zittoun Family Foundation. The arena DJ played songs from Abby's Spotify playlist all afternoon.
They were grand gestures, lovely public tributes to a connection that endured. But for the Zittouns -- and for the players, too -- the quieter parts mattered just as much.
The video explaining to the crowd how much UConn cared for Abby was voiced by Ducharme. The quote inscribed beneath the photo montage -- "Because we knew you, we've been changed for good" -- was inspired by Abby's favorite song from "Wicked." And the bouquet of flowers the Zittouns received wasn't made of flowers at all. It was a bouquet of Legos; Bueckers and Fudd built it together.
"It was," Bueckers says, "an unconditional love."
Near the end of the game, Mooney had the plastic bag full of mini-basketballs ready -- the bag Abby used to hold. When the final buzzer sounded, Ella and Olivia took the bag and marched on to the court.
Standing at their seats, Dan and Gwen watched, just like before. They saw the players laughing with their children, high-fiving their children, hollering with their children. They saw delight. They saw joy.
Fudd hugged Olivia. Ducharme wrapped an arm around Ella's shoulder. Bueckers bounded over and Abby's sisters opened the bag. The brightest lights might burn out the fastest, but their glow is unforgettable. Bueckers took a handful of mini-basketballs, stepped toward the baseline and lofted them up into the crowd.
NBA scraps Curry-Ionescu shootout around ASG
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SAN FRANCISCO -- There will be no Stephen Curry vs. Sabrina Ionescu rematch at All-Star Weekend.
The NBA announced Thursday that the 3-point shooting event -- one of the highlights of last year's All-Star Weekend in Indianapolis that brought together two of the biggest stars in the NBA and WNBA -- is not going to be part of the lineup in San Francisco.
Talks went on for weeks to try to make it happen, even stretching into All-Star week itself. It seemed more than logical that a rematch would occur: All-Star Weekend is on Curry's home floor, and Ionescu, who plays for the WNBA champion New York Liberty, is a Bay Area native who grew up watching Curry and the Golden State Warriors.
"We weren't able to land on a plan we thought would raise the bar off of last year's special moment," NBA spokesman Mike Bass said. "We all agreed not to proceed and will instead keep the focus on All-Star Sunday's new format."
Curry said he wanted the rematch to occur, and there were talks of making it a 2-on-2 format this year potentially involving Klay Thompson, Curry's former Warriors teammate, and WNBA Rookie of the Year Caitlin Clark.
The 2-on-2 talks seemed to fall apart in recent weeks, though the NBA had hope of bringing some form of Curry vs. Ionescu back -- potentially even including it in Sunday night's lineup between games of the new All-Star mini-tournament rather than having it be part of All-Star Saturday like it was a year ago.
"We've been talking about finding different ways to change this up next year," Ionescu said after last year's event. "I think he has a partner in mind that's going to join him. So I'm open to any partner that could help me win and take that belt that he has up front and center away from him."
Curry beat Ionescu 29-26 last season in the first such him-vs.-her event of its kind at the league's weekend showcase. The competition generated money for their foundations.
Snubs: The case for the top unselected player for all 30 teams
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When the NBA's best players gather in the Bay Area this weekend for the All-Star Game, more than a third of the league's teams won't be represented on the rosters. That's the inevitable result of the NBA selecting fewer players (26, including two injury replacements) than there are teams (30), plus a handful hogging multiple selections.
The NBA's All-Star model is very different from MLB, which awards every team a spot. Some players had a legitimate shot this season at being All-Stars, including several on teams that will be represented this weekend. With that in mind, let's look at who would be chosen if every team had an All-Star -- plus one additional candidate for the teams that do have All-Stars.
In the spirit of looking at which players have performed the best this season, I've leaned a little more heavily on 2024-25 production than I typically would in picking All-Stars. That works in the favor of rising players like Dyson Daniels of the Atlanta Hawks and Amen Thompson of the Houston Rockets at the expense of a couple of proven All-Stars.
In addition to making a pick for each team, I'll also consider their chances of actually joining the All-Star Game going forward, with some far more realistic than others.
Jump to a tier:
All-Snub? Had a legit claim for '24-25
Ex All-Stars who should bounce back
Time's up for these former All-Stars?
Should expect more chances for first nod
Wasn't in the cards in this season
If their team had to pick a player
Had a legit case this season
LaMelo Ball, G, Charlotte Hornets
All-Star case: Ball's situation is the first of its kind: a player to lead his position group (East backcourt) in All-Star voting yet not make the game. A seventh-place finish in media voting doomed Ball's hopes of starting. The coaches picking Ball as a reserve from a lottery team never seemed likely, particularly given he's missed a third of the Hornets' games. So his 27.3 PPG and 7.2 APG weren't enough to earn a second All-Star appearance.
Future chances: If Ball can stay healthy and translate his production into more team success like 2021-22 when he was chosen, there are surely All-Star trips ahead for him. Actually, it will be historic if not. Ball was 20 for his All-Star debut. Not counting active players, Alvan Adams is the only one-time All-Star to have his only appearance come before age 22. (Adams was chosen as a rookie in 1975-76, the year before the ABA-NBA merger.)
All-Star case: An All-Star for four of the past five seasons, Booker is averaging 26.2 PPG and 6.7 APG, albeit not with the same efficiency as years past. Booker shooting just 34% from 3-point range, along with the Suns' middling record, hurt his chances. Since Jan. 1, Booker has played like an All-Star. He's boosted his scoring to 28.0 PPG on 48% shooting in that span.
Future chances: The West backcourt competition doesn't figure to get any less fierce, but Booker should be a leading contender if he can avoid serious first-half slumps.
Suns guard Devin Booker says the NBA should increase the roster limit so more players can be featured in the league's showpiece game.
Domantas Sabonis, C, Sacramento Kings
All-Star case: Although Sabonis is averaging fewer assists with the arrival of DeMar DeRozan, his scoring and rebounding are up more than during his past two All-Star campaigns -- and shooting 45.8% from 3-point range. Remarkably, Sabonis is fourth in the league in estimated plus-minus wins. Other advanced metrics don't rate Sabonis as well, but he's probably got a stronger case than Alperen Sengun aside from Houston's superior record.
Future chances: Sabonis should remain part of the All-Star conversation on an annual basis.
Amen Thompson, F, Houston Rockets
All-Star case: My hottest take is that Thompson is not only the strongest Rockets candidate not to make the All-Star Game but the best one, period. Advanced stats suggest he's been more valuable this season than his Bay Area-bound teammate Sengun, who has gaudier per-game statistics but has scored with below-average efficiency. Thompson has averaged 17.0 PPG, 9.7 RPG and 4.5 APG as a starter and was the West Defensive Player of the Month for January.
Future chances: When, not if. Having just turned 22, Thompson is scratching the surface of his potential. I would give him better than even odds of playing in the game next season.
Former All-Stars who fell short, but should bounce back
Scottie Barnes, F, Toronto Raptors
All-Star case: Barnes is averaging nearly the same combination of stats (20.2 PPG, 7.8 RPG, 6.3 APG) that earned him an All-Star debut last season at age 22. However, Barnes hasn't been nearly as accurate a shooter, going from a promising 34% on 3s to a career-low 26.8%. Add in Barnes missing 13 games, and he hasn't been in the mix.
Future chances: Still just 23, Barnes is far from his peak as a player. If he can rediscover last season's shooting touch, Toronto (with midseason acquisition Brandon Ingram) should be competitive enough to put Barnes in All-Star consideration regularly.
Luka Doncic, G, Los Angeles Lakers
All-Star case: If we were simply picking the best 24 players in the league or the biggest stars, Doncic would be an easy choice. The calf injury that sidelined Doncic for more than a month prevented him from being chosen, the first time since his rookie season (2018-19). Before adding Doncic via trade, the Lakers had no serious candidates outside of All-Stars Davis (now with Dallas) and LeBron James.
Future chances: The question is how many for Doncic in a Lakers uniform.
Luka Doncic shares how special it was to make his Los Angeles Lakers debut vs. the Utah Jazz.
Tyrese Haliburton, G, Indiana Pacers
All-Star case: Despite scoring and assisting less frequently than his past two All-Star campaigns, Haliburton still rates as an All-Star-caliber player by most value metrics. Avoiding turnovers is a key subtle part of Haliburton's value. He's averaging under two, the lowest since his rookie campaign as a reserve. Additionally, despite battling health concerns, Haliburton is in the NBA's top 20 in minutes played.
Future chances: At 24 with two All-Star Games under his belt, Haliburton should have more opportunities.
De'Aaron Fox, G, San Antonio Spurs
All-Star case: Before a three-game absence in early January, Fox was well on his way to a second All-Star appearance, averaging 26.7 PPG and 6.2 APG on solid efficiency as a shooter. He dropped to 19.1 PPG and 40% shooting after returning, falling out of serious All-Star consideration. Since being dealt to San Antonio, Fox appears back on track.
Future chances: If the Spurs develop into contenders led by first-time All-Star Victor Wembanyama, Fox should have a good chance for additional appearances as the team's clear No. 2 player. It's unsurprising that Fox's one All-Star nod came in 2023, when the Kings finished third in the West.
Tyrese Maxey, G, Philadelphia 76ers
All-Star case: With veteran All-Stars Joel Embiid and Paul George missing extended stretches due to injury and not playing at that level when healthy, Maxey has kept the Sixers afloat in the play-in race. He's averaging a career-high 27.6 points and has nearly doubled his steal average to a career-high two.
Future chances: Had coaches voted after Philadelphia's four-game winning streak last month, during which he averaged 33 points, I wonder whether Maxey would have made it for a second consecutive year. We'll see how crowded the East backcourt race pans out, but Maxey should remain a strong contender.
Wasn't in the cards for these former All-Stars
Jarrett Allen, C, Cleveland Cavaliers
All-Star case: There was a reasonable argument for Allen to join his three Cleveland teammates (starters Donovan Mitchell and reserves Darius Garland and Evan Mobley) in the Bay. Although Allen is averaging just 13.6 points, down from 16.1 when he was chosen an All-Star alongside Garland in 2022, that's with incredible efficiency. Allen is shooting a career-high 69.8% from the field.
Future chances: As Mobley's star rises, Allen's will probably dim as far as individual awards are concerned. It might take an absence from a teammate for Allen to get enough shots to have a realistic chance.
Jimmy Butler, F, Golden State Warriors
All-Star case: Well, maybe if they held the vote before Butler lost his "joy" of basketball in Miami. With just 27 games played this season at less than his usual standard, Butler wasn't a serious contender. Then again, neither were any of the Warriors aside perhaps Andrew Wiggins, traded to the Heat for Butler.
Future chances: Would you believe Butler has only been an All-Star once in the past five seasons? That's a strong data point in the distinction between regular season and playoff value, but also reflects how Butler's brash nature may not play well with coaches. Keeping that in mind, Butler may need to help Golden State near the top of the standings to add a seventh All-Star appearance to his résumé.
Jimmy Butler drops 25 points in his Warriors debut as Golden State comes back to beat Chicago.
Rudy Gobert, C, Minnesota Timberwolves
All-Star case: Eighth in offensive rating when they were 17-17 on Jan. 4, the Timberwolves have ranked in the league's top five since as they've moved comfortably above .500. Gobert remains their anchor at that end, ranking in the top five in opponent shooting within five feet, despite playing a smaller role offensively. His 10.8 PPG are Gobert's fewest since 2015-16.
Future chances: At 32, Gobert has probably played in his last All-Star Game, having made three with Utah.
Brook Lopez, C, Milwaukee Bucks
All-Star case: Lopez remains one of the NBA's top rim protectors. Opponents are shooting 55% inside five feet with Lopez as a primary defender, per Second Spectrum tracking on NBA Advanced Stats, putting him in the bottom 10 among players defending at least five such shots per game.
Future chances: Lopez sports a career-low 15% usage rate and will turn 37 in April. An All-Star in 2013 with Brooklyn, Lopez has no legitimate chance of reaching that level again during the twilight of a remarkable career.
All-Star case: Markkanen is clearly Utah's best player, but he hasn't performed at nearly the same level as when he made the All-Star team in 2023 or even last season. Markkanen's scoring has dipped to 19.2 PPG, his lowest with the Jazz, and he's shooting just 35% on 3s after being north of 39% the past two campaigns.
Future chances: It's starting to look like 2022-23 might be a high point in Markkanen's career. He'll turn 28 during the offseason, and while it's reasonable to expect Markkanen's shooting to bounce back, he may no longer be performing at an All-Star level by the time Utah is competitive enough to earn him consideration.
All-Star case: An All-Star in 2022, Wiggins is putting up virtually identical numbers across the board in a bounce-back campaign after averaging a career-low 13.2 points in 2023-24. Wiggins was second on the Warriors in scoring before being traded to Miami and is one of just four players on the Heat's roster averaging more than 12 points this season.
Future chances: Now that Wiggins has joined the Heat, he'll be competing with Bam Adebayo and Tyler Herro for All-Star consideration, making it an uphill climb.
Nikola Vucevic, C, Chicago Bulls
All-Star case: Semi-serious question: Would the Bulls have traded Zach LaVine if the NBA gave every team an All-Star and he was their representative? After his trade to Sacramento, Vucevic is the only real option on Chicago's roster, and that would be a stretch. Vucevic isn't scoring as prolifically as when he made the All-Star team in 2019 and 2021 with the Orlando Magic, nor anchoring as strong a defense.
Future chances: At 34, Vucevic's All-Star days are surely behind him. The more interesting question is which member of the current Bulls is most likely to be an All-Star. The answer might be 20-year-old rookie Matas Buzelis, who will be in the Bay for the slam dunk contest.
Expect more chances for a first selection
Desmond Bane, G, Memphis Grizzlies
All-Star case: Bane has been the Grizzlies' most consistent No. 2 option after All-Star Jaren Jackson Jr. and previous two-time participant Ja Morant. Bane slumped in November, averaging just 10.6 points while coming back from an oblique strain, but has posted 50/40/90 shooting splits over the past two months.
Future chances: Bane had more All-Star momentum in 2022-23, when he was Memphis' second-leading scorer at 21.5 points. Jackson's emergence as a primary offensive option might make it difficult for Bane to stand out as long as Morant is healthy and in the lineup.
Dyson Daniels, G, Atlanta Hawks
All-Star case: With Trae Young chosen as an injury replacement, Jalen Johnson sidelined by season-ending shoulder injury and De'Andre Hunter traded to the Cavaliers, Daniels is the best remaining choice for the Hawks. He's fourth on the team in scoring and leads the NBA with nearly three steals per game, making a compelling case for All-Defensive honors.
Future chances: As outstanding as Daniels' perimeter defense is, he'll probably need to contribute more than 13.7 PPG and 4.0 APG to become an All-Star candidate. Given Daniels is younger (22 next month) than nine first-round picks in the 2024 draft, that's certainly possible.
Luguentz Dort, G, Oklahoma City Thunder
All-Star case: Averaging 9.8 points, Dort would certainly be an unconventional All-Star pick. He's the most valuable perimeter defender on the NBA's No. 1 defense and has started nearly as many games as centers Chet Holmgren (Oklahoma City's clear next-best player after All-Stars Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and Jalen Williams when healthy) and Isaiah Hartenstein combined. Add in career-high 41.2% 3-point shooting and I think Dort has been the Thunder's third-most valuable player this season.
Future chances: As long as Holmgren is healthy, Oklahoma City's three talented young stars figure to hog any Thunder All-Star appearances for the foreseeable future.
Trey Murphy III, F, New Orleans Pelicans
All-Star case: Besides a lottery pick, Murphy getting to spread his wings has been the silver lining to the Pelicans' ill-fated season. He's averaging a career-high 22.6 points without sacrificing any efficiency as a scorer. Murphy is still shooting nearly 39% beyond the arc.
Future chances: At 24, Murphy is entering his prime. The question is whether New Orleans can be good enough to have a player merit All-Star consideration without having a star -- Zion Williamson, Dejounte Murray or someone else -- surpass Murphy in the team's pecking order.
Jamal Murray, G, Denver Nuggets
All-Star case: Murray, who scored a career-high 55 points in Wednesday's win over Portland, has played like an All-Star. Since mid-December, he's averaging 22.9 points and 6.1 assists on 39.8% 3-point shooting and 93% from the foul line. Murray's track record gives him an edge over Michael Porter Jr., averaging a career-high 19.0 points while shooting 61.6% on 2s and 41.7% on 3s, as well as revitalized Russell Westbrook.
Future chances: Murray has a chance to go down as one of the NBA's best players never to make an All-Star Game. His career value ranks 12th in my wins above replacement player (WARP) metric among active players who have never been All-Stars, and he's the youngest player in the top 19. The next-best younger player: Porter, with teammate Aaron Gordon (ninth) also among the leaders. Denver hasn't had an All-Star besides Nikola Jokic since Carmelo Anthony.
Jamal Murray sets a career high with 55 points to lead the Nuggets past the Trail Blazers.
Franz Wagner, F, Orlando Magic
All-Star case: If Wagner stays healthy during the second half, keeping him out of the All-Star Game because he missed 20 games will seem silly. Wagner has supplanted 2024 All-Star Paolo Banchero as Orlando's leading scorer this season, averaging a career-high 25.4 points on better efficiency, plus 5.0 assists. Add in Wagner's defensive contributions, and he's played at a clear All-Star level when healthy.
Future chances: Presumably, Banchero will rebound after struggling since returning from his more serious oblique tear. Banchero looks like an All-Star fixture but make room for Wagner in the Eastern Conference frontcourt alongside him if the Magic get back on track.
Wasn't a realistic shot this time around
Malik Beasley, G, Detroit Pistons
All-Star case: Of Detroit's veteran additions last offseason, Beasley has made the biggest impact as the Pistons have leaped into playoff contention. Despite coming off the bench most of the year, Beasley is in the running for second in the NBA in 3-pointers, making them at a 41.5% clip.
Future chances: Given how little Beasley does to fill out the box score, an All-Star appearance isn't realistic. Nonetheless, it's impressive how Beasley has rebuilt his value after playing last season in Milwaukee for the veteran's minimum.
Daniel Gafford, C, Dallas Mavericks
All-Star case: Gafford would have missed any All-Star activities after he sprained his right knee last week, adding to the Mavs' frontcourt injury woes. But he particularly excelled with fellow center Dereck Lively II sidelined, averaging 15 points, 9 rebounds and nearly 3 blocks in games Lively has missed. Gafford has created more of his offense while continuing to shoot 70% from the field.
Future chances: Once he returns to action, it's going to be difficult for Gafford to keep up this production. Not only will he be splitting time with another starting-caliber center in Lively, Gafford will compete for rim runs with newcomer Anthony Davis. Gafford had just five points in Davis' one game in Dallas before being sidelined by an adductor strain.
All-Star case: By virtue of their rock-solid starting five, the Knicks have multiple players on a long list for All-Star selections. Mikal Bridges, averaging 17.8 points, or OG Anunoby (16.4 points as the team's best defender) are more conventional choices, but I'm going with Hart's well-rounded game. At 14.7 points, 9.8 rebounds and 5.7 assists, Hart is essentially delivering a prime Draymond Green season. And while Hart isn't a Defensive Player of the Year candidate, he's been a better scorer, shooting 61% on 2s.
Future chances: As long as New York's starting five is intact, Anunoby and Bridges probably have better chances of becoming All-Stars than Hart.
Cameron Johnson, F, Brooklyn Nets
All-Star case: One of the most interesting players not to change teams prior to last week's trade deadline, Johnson is averaging a career-high 19.2 points and shooting nearly 42% from 3-point range. Johnson is a more efficient scorer than teammate Cam Thomas, who's been limited to 19 games by injury, and contributes more on defense.
Future chances: Realistically, Johnson will probably never score this prolifically again. A trade this summer will likely send him to a supporting role on a contending team, similar to the one Johnson played with the Phoenix Suns before being dealt to Brooklyn.
Derrick White, G, Boston Celtics
All-Star case: I picked White on my first All-Star projections of the year, back when he was averaging 18.3 points through November. White subsequently fell into a shooting slump, hitting just 34% of his 3s in December and January. However, White's advanced stats remain strong. He ranks 13th, for example, in single-season estimated plus-minus (EPM) wins produced while playing a larger role than hot-shooting teammate Payton Pritchard.
Future chances: At 30, White might be running out of time to make an All-Star Game. His best chance will come if injuries allow him to play a larger role in the Celtics' offense than his current below-average 19% usage rate.
All-Star case: Zubac isn't scoring or creating as prolifically as guards James Harden and Norman Powell, more conventional All-Star candidates. However, Zubac anchors the NBA's second-best defense that has helped the Clippers remain competitive this season. He's also averaging a career-high 15.4 points on 60-plus-percent shooting. As a result, Zubac is in the top 20 in estimated plus-minus wins (EPM) -- ahead of Harden, chosen as a reserve, and Powell.
Future chances: It will probably take winning Defensive Player of the Year for Zubac to become an All-Star in the West. That would give him a similar case to the one that has made Gobert a three-time All-Star.
MLB rules? These teams' lone rep would be...
Deni Avdija, F, Portland Trail Blazers
All-Star case: Despite coming off the bench as recently as late December, Avdija has been the Blazers' best player during his first season in Portland. Since starting the year in a deep slump (17% from 3 over the first 11 games), Avdija has averaged 16 points on 49% shooting, including 37% on 3s.
Future chances: If Avdija can maintain above-average 3-point shooting in the larger offensive role he's playing this season, that could translate into All-Star consideration if he remains the Blazers' best player as they improve. However, younger teammates Scoot Henderson and Shaedon Sharpe might usurp that role.
Jordan Poole, G, Washington Wizards
All-Star case: Teams like the Wizards that aggressively rebuild are a strong case against the NBA ever considering the MLB's All-Star model. Poole is the only Washington player ranked in the top 140 of either estimated plus-minus wins (EPM) or my wins above replacement player (WARP) metric. He deserves credit for bouncing back from a disappointing first season with the Wizards but not All-Star attention.
Future chances: It will take Poole and his team making a leap for an All-Star appearance to be possible.
Dunk-offs, OGs and Rising Stars: NBA experts break down 2025 All-Star Weekend
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With a wild trade deadline in the books, the NBA shifts its focus to this year's All-Star Weekend. Golden State Warriors star Stephen Curry, who has been busy building chemistry with new teammate Jimmy Butler, turns his attention to playing host at the weekend's festivities in San Francisco. Curry will play alongside Los Angeles Lakers star LeBron James and Phoenix Suns' Kevin Durant on Team Shaq. The trio shined on the Olympic stage in August as they led Team USA to a gold medal over Team France.
Victor Wembanyama has a chance to get his revenge Sunday, however, as he leads his fellow international stars, including MVP front-runners Nikola Jokic and Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, on Team Chuck.
Wembanyama will also take the court Saturday night, alongside San Antonio Spurs teammate and 12-time All-Star Chris Paul in the skills challenge. Saturday will also feature a pair of attempted three-peats as Milwaukee Bucks star Damian Lillard tries to win his third straight 3-point competition while Mac McClung goes for his third dunk contest crown.
Here's everything to know about the star-studded events, including who our experts think will come out on top.
Expert picks were voted on by a panel of NBA insiders including Chris Herring, Marc Spears, Michael C. Wright, Ramona Shelburne, Kevin Pelton, Dave McMenamin, Baxter Holmes, Ohm Youngmisuk, Tim MacMahon, Jeremy Woo and Bobby Marks.
Rising Stars | Skills challenge | 3-point contest
Slam dunk contest | All-Star tournament
Edey, Castle, Knecht! The Rising Stars are here to play
Friday, 9 p.m. ET (TNT)
The league's Rising Stars have a little something extra to play for this year. With the new All-Star Weekend format, the best of the four rising stars teams will earn a spot in Sunday's four-team tournament alongside this year's All-Stars.
The Golden State Warriors' Hall of Fame trio Run TMC will reunite in the Bay with Team T being coached by Tim Hardaway, Team M coached by Mitch Richmond and Team C coached by Chris Mullin, while Jeremy Lin will coach Team G League.
The action starts at 9:15 p.m. ET with Team C vs. Team T and continues at 9:55 with Team G League vs. Team M.
Which of these teams will earn a spot in Sunday's tourney and give the All-Stars a run for their money?
Game 1: Team C vs. Team T
Game 2: Team G League vs. Team M
Game 3: Winner Game 1 vs. Winner Game 2
The winner of Game 3 will play in the All-Star mini-tournament Sunday
The 2025 #CastrolRisingStars rosters!
Friday, 2/14 at 9:00pm/et on TNT pic.twitter.com/sj8YUw4IWv
NBA (@NBA) February 4, 2025
This one is always tricky to peg on paper, but I'm personally excited to see the notoriously competitive twins Ausar Thompson and Amen Thompson reunite as teammates in this setting on Team M. Team T also looks strong, led by several quality sophomores such as Jaime Jaquez Jr. and Brandin Podziemski. While Team C isn't as loaded on paper as the other two, it's possible Zach Edey just takes over for the squad. And I'm curious to see Reed Sheppard, who has been waiting his turn for the Houston Rockets as an ostensible ringer for Team G League. -- Jeremy Woo
Expert pick: Team M
Celebrity takeover!
Friday, 7 p.m. ET (ESPN)
Pro Football Hall of Famer Terrell Owens returns to the game, but this time on the basketball court, and it won't be surprising if the former San Francisco 49ers wide receiver shows out. Owens, 51, last appeared in the All-Star celebrity game in 2010 but is best known for his off-the-backboard alley-oop dunk in 2009 from a Harlem Globetrotter. This time he'll be a few years older and going up against some young competition such as streamer Kai Cenat. Cenat advertised his appearance in 2024 with a mock basketball mixtape, but played sparingly in the actual game under coach Shannon Sharpe. This time around, coached by baseball legend Barry Bonds and rapper 2 Chainz, he'll look to bounce back. However, in his way is comedian Druski, who has advertised his matchup against the internet star as "Kai vs. Druski". It's a one-on-one matchup worth watching. -- Anthony Gharib
Tandem team-ups, high-flying dunks and a Dame three-peat?
Saturday, 8 p.m. ET (TNT)
The night kicks off with the skills competition, which features some formidable duos. Draymond Green and Moses Moody will represent the home team in the competition. Like the Warriors, the red-hot Cleveland Cavaliers will be represented by a veteran and newcomer in Donovan Mitchell and Evan Mobley. Victor Wembanyama makes his All-Star Weekend debut alongside one of the most skilled point guards of all time in Chris Paul. It'll prove tough competition for Team Rooks, Zaccharie Risacher and Alex Sarr.
Oakland's own Damian Lillard will compete in this year's 3-point competition. A win would give Lillard a record-tying three straight wins in the event. And speaking of three-peats, two-time defending champ Mac McClung is looking for one of his own to close the night out.
Which dynamic duo will dominate the skills competition, and what do they bring to the table together?
Team Cavs (Donovan Mitchell and Evan Mobley)
It's fitting that Mitchell and Mobley are a tandem. New Cleveland Cavaliers coach Kenny Atkinson altered the rotation from previous seasons to always pair Mobley with Mitchell, who had been attached to Jarrett Allen under previous coach J.B. Bickerstaff. The idea was to attempt to accelerate Mobley's evolution. It has worked, which is why Mobley has proved enough this season to stick around for the Sunday showcase. -- Tim MacMahon
Donovan Mitchell finds Evan Mobley, who goes in for a big poster dunk.
Team Rooks (Alex Sarr and Zaccharie Risacher)
The top two picks from the 2024 NBA draft are teaming up. The two Frenchmen have not come into the league as heralded as previous top selections, but both have had flashes of success this season. Risacher has scored 30 points in separate games, one of only two rookies (along with Jared McCain) to do so in 2024-25, while Sarr leads all rookies in blocks (1.6 per game). A strong showing in the skills competition and during Friday's Rising Stars challenge could help introduce these rookies to a more national audience. -- Jamal Collier
Team Spurs (Chris Paul and Victor Wembanyama)
They've spent all season up to this point working to improve their chemistry, but the skills competition presents a different challenge from figuring out how to attack opponents in screen-and-roll scenarios. The upshot is that both Paul and Wembanyama are not just skilled ball handlers but also gifted passers. Strictly from the standpoint of skill sets, Paul and Wembanyama should be favored to win this thing handily. -- Michael Wright
Chris Paul lobs the rock off the backboard on a fast break to Victor Wembanyama for a Spurs alley-oop slam.
Team Warriors (Draymond Green and Moses Moody)
Green just recently returned from a calf injury that cost him seven straight games. And one game prior to that absence, he had missed three games due to illness and a back issue. Green has been back for six straight games and should be fun to watch in the skills competition with his versatility. Moody has seen an uptick in minutes since Jonathan Kuminga went down with a sprained ankle Jan. 4. During a 13-game stretch, Moody scored in double figures in 11 of them. In that same span, Moody hit three or more 3-pointers in seven games. -- Ohm Youngmisuk
Expert pick: Team Spurs
Dame time! What will it take for the Bay Area native to three-peat from 3?
Growing up across the Bay Bridge in Oakland, Damian Lillard fondly recalled attending All-Star weekend in 2000 as a kid and called it a full-circle moment to be back in the Bay Area for this one. But he's also no stranger to this event and the pressure that comes with defending his 3-point crown. The rest of the field might want to hope Lillard is distracted by a weekend of home cooking, but players such as Jalen Brunson (39.7% from 3) and Tyler Herro (38.8%) are going to be tough competition. -- Collier
Expert pick: Lillard
Jumping over cars or Shaq? Bold predictions for this year's bounciest competition?
I'm not sure whether San Antonio Spurs rookie Stephon Castle has the deep bag of creative tricks required to win the dunk contest, but he has the hops -- no doubt about that. I've seen seasoned scouts gasp at some of Castle's thunderous two-handed dunks in traffic given reason to believe that he can emerge to make a surprise impact on this year's event. -- MacMahon
Michael Jordan, Dominique Wilkins, Harold "Baby Jordan" Miner, Jason Richardson, Nate Robinson and Zach LaVine. Those are the names of all the legendary dunkers who have won the dunk contest at least twice. And Mac McClung will try to do something none of them have done: three-peat. Only Robinson has won the title three times -- but never three in a row. McClung is ready to make history Saturday night. -- Youngmisuk
Before the Spurs hit the road for their annual rodeo road trip, Castle was seen at the team's Victory Capital Performance Center putting in plenty of work in preparation for the event. When Wembanyama talks about wanting to see Castle "go crazy" at the dunk contest, pay close attention. Just imagine a scenario in which Castle attempts to sky over the 7-foot-4 Wembanyama with Paul sitting on the French phenom's shoulders. It could happen. -- Wright
I think we'll get one or two very creative dunks this year that will be worth checking out. Milwaukee's Andre Jackson Jr. had his entire head above the rim on a putback dunk attempt last season and that moment is still etched into my memory. Also, watch for Chicago rookie Matas Buzelis, who was working with LaVine on ideas before LaVine was traded earlier this month. -- Collier
The days of McClung are over. After seeing him win it two straight years, there's nothing new he can do. I am going to go with Castle. I heard rumblings of his behind-the-scenes practice for this competition and I am sure he will do something to include Wembanyama. There is a new sheriff in the dunk contest, and he's from San Antonio. -- Marc Spears
Expert pick: McClung
OGs vs. up-and-coming? International vs. homegrown? What to watch in the All-Star game
Sunday, 8 p.m. ET (TNT)
Another format change has been introduced to All-Star Weekend, with four teams of eight players going head-to-head in a mini-tournament.
Chuck's Global Stars, Shaq's OGs, Kenny's Young Stars and Candace's Rising Stars will compete for a prize pool of $1.8 million, but also on the line is All-Star MVP, claimed by Damian Lillard last year.
Kenny's Young Stars will face off against Chuck's Global stars in the first game, followed by Shaq's OGs against Candace's Rising Stars. The first team to 40 points will advance to the championship game.
Game 1: Kenny's Young Stars vs. Chuck's Global Stars
Game 2: Shaq's OGs vs. Candace's Rising Stars
Game 3: Winner Game 1 vs. Winner Game 2
A crop of stars from around the world. A new generation taking the league by storm. All-time greats & OGs doing work.
Presenting the new team names for our #NBAAllStar squads! Watch them battle it out in The Bay on Sunday, Feb. 16 at 8:00pm/et on TNT. pic.twitter.com/5EnOmCjXvo
NBA (@NBA) February 12, 2025
Kenny's Young Stars
The young stars have a roster full of players with something to prove and I'll always be watching Anthony Edwards. At last year's All-Star Weekend, he vowed to shoot left-handed, doing so in the skills competition raising some eyebrows. This time around, with Team Shaq made up of old-guard players, he'll have something to prove. He's the player most likely to get his competitive juices going and try to show out to win MVP. -- Collier
Shaq's OGs
Can LeBron James, Stephen Curry and Kevin Durant keep the good times rolling? That future Hall of Fame trio had a remarkable run together while leading Team USA to gold in the 2024 Paris Olympics. The three players have a barrage of accolades under their belts, and their collective seven MVP awards should stand for something. Oh, and reigning Finals champion Jayson Tatum is on this team, too. Steve Kerr isn't coaching, so Tatum shouldn't have to worry about whether he's in the rotation. -- MacMahon
Chuck's Global Stars
There's a reason we haven't seen an American player win a regular-season MVP since 2018 (James Harden). The international players have staked a claim to hoops dominance over the years. And when you've got an international star such as Wembanyama saying that he doesn't "have any interest in making friends," at the NBA All-Star Game, you can expect a serious approach from a team led by a three-time MVP (Nikola Jokic) and one of the favorites (Shai Gilgeous-Alexander) to win this year's award. -- Wright
Candace's Rising Stars
One 2024 NBA All-Star told me that the All-Star players have everything to lose and nothing to gain from playing the Rising Stars team this year, adding that it would be quite embarrassing for the young players to win the weekend. I'm worried that this could end up true, with the All-Stars appearing to care less and less about the game. So here we are. -- Spears
Expert pick: Shaq's OGs
Hart joins Padres after starring in South Korea
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PEORIA, Ariz. -- Left-hander Kyle Hart has signed a one-year contact with the San Diego Padres after one season in the Korean Baseball Organization, where he was selected as the league's top pitcher.
The Padres announced Thursday the signing of the 32-year-old Hart to a deal for this season that includes a club option for 2026.
Hart won the Choi Dong-won Award in the KBO last season after leading the league with 182 strikeouts. He was 13-3 with a 2.69 ERA in 26 starts, ranking second in the league for wins and ERA. He walked only 38 of his 631 batters over 158 innings.
In his only MLB action, Hart pitched in four games (three starts) for Boston during the pandemic-shortened 2020 season. He was 0-1, allowing 24 hits and 19 earned runs over 11 innings.
The Red Sox took Hart in the 19th round of the 2016 MLB amateur draft out of Indiana University. He pitched over parts of eight minor league seasons for the Red Sox (2016-22), Seattle (2023) and Philadelphia (2023).
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Tadhg Beirne has signed a new two-year contract with Ireland and Munster until 2027.
The forward made his Test debut in 2018 and has earned 58 caps, playing a key role in Ireland's back-to-back Six Nations title wins in 2023 and 2024.
The 33-year-old played every minute of the autumn Tests in November and started Ireland's opening Six Nations wins over England and Scotland this year.
Beirne was one of four Ireland players named in the World Rugby men's XVs dream team of the year for 2024.
He was also named Munster captain before the start of the season.
"It is a source of great pride to represent Ireland and Munster and I am delighted to continue to do so for the foreseeable future," said Beirne, who can play in the second or back rows.
"Playing in Ireland is a dream come true and I believe that Irish rugby is in a strong place with competitive environments across all of the provinces continuing to drive the highest levels of competition at national team level.
"I am hugely excited about the future and will do my best to hopefully deliver for our amazing supporters over the coming seasons."
"Tadhg is a world-class talent whose consistent levels of performance for club and country have been of the highest standards for many years," said IRFU performance director David Humphreys.
"Since breaking into the scene with Clongowes Wood College, Lansdowne and then into the Leinster Academy, he has taken the road less travelled and displayed enormous durability and consistency of performances in achieving league successes with the Scarlets and more recently Munster.
"For Ireland he has been a mainstay in the pack across a hugely successful era and it is a great boost for the IRFU and Munster Rugby, whom he captains, that he has extended his long association in Irish Rugby through until the Rugby World Cup 2027."
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Bath forward Ewan Richards has signed a new contract with the club until 2027.
Richards - who can play across the back row - has made 40 appearances for the club since his debut in 2021, after coming through the club's academy.
The 22-year-old has been captain through last season and this campaign's Premiership Rugby Cup, with Bath having already booked their place in the quarter-finals of the competition ahead of their final pool game against Bristol on Saturday.
"I'm surrounded by world-class players and coaches, and really excited to see what the future holds and where this team goes," Richards said.
Richards, who has also represented England at under-20 level, has "developed as a player and a leader", said head of rugby Johann van Graan.
"Captaining the Premiership Rugby Cup team for the last two seasons, in line with what we are about as a group - tough to beat and all about the squad," Van Graan said.
"Ewan's best is definitely yet to come, and his versatility will be very important to the squad in the coming years."
Richards is the sixth player to agree new terms with Bath ahead of next season in recent weeks.
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OCALA, Fla. Justin Grant kicked off Winter Dirt Games XVI at Ocala Speedway Wednesday night with another USAC AMSOIL Sprint Car National Championship win.
The $6,000 score came at the expense of outside front row starter Daison Pursley, who looked to be headed to his third series victory until Grant caught him in a gaggle of lapped cars with four laps remaining in the 30-lap feature.
Kyle Cummins also disposed of Pursley, dropping the fleet youngster to third ahead of fast-timer Mitchel Moles and Jake Swanson.
Something happened there, offered the sixth-starting Grant after climbing out of his NOS Energy Drink/Topp Motorsports mount. Either they got worse or I got better. I love this place! The lapped cars helped a lot and it helped when Chase Stockon dropped out, but Ill take em any way I can get em.
Pursley got the drop on polesitter Stockon on the initial break, with Brady Bacon, Grant and Cummins dropping in line behind them. They ran that way until Mark Smith and Briggs Danner tangled on the frontstretch on lap five to draw the races first yellow.
Grant, who had been working Bacon hard on the inside line, went right back to work when the green flag waved but could not put him away.
Meanwhile, Pursley caught the backmarkers on lap ten but two laps later another yellow flew and got him back out of traffic.
The caution was for Bacon, who suffered a bad ignition box and coasted to a stop, finally moving Grant into the top three.
Pursley prevailed again on the restart, which only went three laps before Ricky Lewis stalled on the backstretch for a third caution. That time, Grant got alongside the second running Stockon on the restart but couldnt get all the way by. But yet another caution for a slowing car on lap 19 saw Stockon pit under the yellow, moving Grant within striking distance of the leader.
The top six cars edged away from the field when green reappeared but eight laps later Pursley got into lapped traffic again and the writing was on the wall. Grant pounced and grabbed the lead when Pursley was held up momentarily, a move duplicated by Cummins and despite a final caution, the finish was set.
The lapped cars me hurt a little, but not bad, tipped a surprisingly calm Pursley. Justin is really good, so it wasnt a surprise that he got to me. I just couldnt run any harder because I was pulling the front wheels when I did.
Cummins was equally calm about his second-place run, saying: Im not thrilled but Im happy. I was too tight before I started and it got worse, so I couldnt have done anything different.
Robert Ballou led a second five that included Englishman Tom Harris, Logan Seavey, 15th-starting C.J. Leary and Kale Drake.
USAC AMSOIL Sprint Car National Championship, Ocala Speedway, Ocala, Fla., Feb. 12, 2025
HONEST ABE ROOFING QUALIFYING: 1. Justin Grant, 4, TOPP-14.347; 2. Mitchel Moles, 19AZ, Reinbold/Underwood-14.373; 3. Brady Bacon, 20, Dyson-14.534; 4. Kyle Cummins, 3p, Petty-14.608; 5. Daison Pursley, 86, CBI-14.610; 6. Logan Seavey, 57, Abacus-14.635; 7. Chase Stockon, 92, Sertich-14.688; 8. Robert Ballou, 12, Ballou-14.700; 9. Ricky Lewis, 74B, Lewis-14.717; 10. Mark Smith, M1, Smith-14.776; 11. C.J. Leary, 21AZ, Team AZ/Curb-Agajanian-14.812; 12. Briggs Danner, 39, Hogue-14.893; 13. Kale Drake 2B, 2B Racing-14.923; 14. Kevin Thomas Jr., 3R, Rock Steady-14.939; 15. Eddie Tafoya Jr., 51T, Tafoya-14.947; 16. Gunnar Setser, 5G, KO-14.965; 17. Nic Harris, N2, Harris-15.014; 18. Jake Swanson, 5T, Daming/Swanson-15.034; 19. Kobe Simpson, 21K, Simpson-15.078; 20. Hayden Reinbold, 19, Reinbold/Underwood-15.095; 21. Tom Harris, 84, Harris-15.131; 22. Harley Burns, 16, Britt Aero-15.189; 23. Matt Goodnight, 39G, Goodnight-15.237; 24. Carson Garrett, 15, BGE-15.251; 25. Trey Osborne, 6T, Osborne-15.387; 26. Stevie Sussex, 5, Baldwin/Fox-15.403; 27. Jadon Rogers, 66, Amati-15.451; 28. Joey Amantea, 88J, JPA-15.460; 29. Kyle Jones, 79, Hall-15.543; 30. Kayla Roell, 4K, Roell-15.556; 31. John Mollick, 4J, Clever-15.970; 32. Troy Carey, 45N, Carey-16.189; 33. Eddie Vancil, 7v, Vancil-16.551; 34. Oliver Akard, 32, Rase-18.717.
ROD END SUPPLY FIRST HEAT: (8 laps, top-5 transfer to the feature) 1. Tom Harris, 2. Justin Grant, 3. Kale Drake, 4. Nic Harris, 5. Daison Pursley, 6. Ricky Lewis, 7. Trey Osborne, 8. Kyle Jones, 9. Eddie Vancil. 2:03.783
CAR IQ SECOND HEAT: (8 laps, top-5 transfer to the feature) 1. Jake Swanson, 2. Harley Burns, 3. Mark Smith, 4. Kevin Thomas Jr., 5. Mitchel Moles, 6. Logan Seavey, 7. Stevie Sussex, 8. Kayla Roell. 1:58.602
K1 RACEGEAR THIRD HEAT: (8 laps, top-5 transfer to the feature) 1. Kobe Simpson, 2. C.J. Leary, 3. Brady Bacon, 4. Chase Stockon, 5. Matt Goodnight, 6. Eddie Tafoya Jr., 7. Jadon Rogers, 8. John Mollick. 2:02.354
HOOSIER TIRE FOURTH HEAT: (8 laps, top-5 transfer to the feature) 1. Hayden Reinbold, 2. Briggs Danner, 3. Kyle Cummins, 4. Robert Ballou, 5. Carson Garrett, 6. Gunnar Setser, 7. Joey Amantea, 8. Troy Carey. 1:59.911
ELLIOTTS CUSTOM TRAILERS & CARTS SEMI: (12 laps, top-4 transfer to the feature) 1. Ricky Lewis, 2. Logan Seavey, 3. Jadon Rogers, 4. Gunnar Setser, 5. Eddie Tafoya Jr., 6. Trey Osborne, 7. Kyle Jones, 8. Kayla Roell, 9. Stevie Sussex, 10. John Mollick, 11. Troy Carey, 12. Eddie Vancil. NT
FEATURE: (30 laps, starting positions in parentheses) 1. Justin Grant (6), 2. Kyle Cummins (3), 3. Daison Pursley (2), 4. Mitchel Moles (5), 5. Jake Swanson (7), 6. Robert Ballou (12), 7. Tom Harris (10), 8. Logan Seavey (11), 9. C.J. Leary (15), 10. Kale Drake (17), 11. Hayden Reinbold (9), 12. Chase Stockon (1), 13. Jadon Rogers (24), 14. Harley Burns (21), 15. Gunnar Setser (19), 16. Matt Goodnight (22), 17. Nic Harris (20), 18. Kevin Thomas Jr. (18), 19. Kobe Simpson (8), 20. Mark Smith (14), 21. Brady Bacon (4), 22. Carson Garrett (23), 23. Ricky Lewis (13), 24. Briggs Danner (16)