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Ostapenko stuns Sabalenka to win Stuttgart Open

Published in Tennis
Monday, 21 April 2025 06:24

Jelena Ostapenko beat world number one Aryna Sabalenka to win the Stuttgart Open in stunning fashion.

Ostapenko, who had failed to win in three previous meetings against Sabalenka, took the match 6-4 6-1.

The Latvian set the tone with a break of serve in the opening game and kept the pressure on throughout.

Sabalenka was broken again in the first game of the second set before dropping serve on a further two occasions in an uncharacteristically error-strewn performance.

Ostapenko raced to victory in emphatic style by reeling off five games in a row.

"I'm really happy today," Ostapenko said.

She said to her opponent: "It is great to share the court with you, you are such a great champion."

DTM Poised For Oschersleben Blast Off

Published in Racing
Monday, 21 April 2025 06:00

The Motorsport Arena Oschersleben will open the 2025 DTM season next weekend (April 25-27).

Nine manufacturers and a top-class field of drivers, including defending champion Mirko Bortolotti (Italy), three-time champion René Rast (Bregenz), and former Formula 1 star Timo Glock (Kreuzlingen), will battle for the first two victories of the year.

The field of favorites is huge the starting position ahead of the first of a total of eight tour stops promises an unpredictable season. For the drivers in the top-class field, this means that every mistake could be decisive in the battle for the DTM title.

A total of 24 drivers will compete in the 2025 DTM. The focus is primarily on Lamborghini works driver Bortolotti. The 35-year-old is launching his title defense project with his new team, Abt Sportsline, in Oschersleben. Bortolotti is entering his fourth DTM season and has developed into an absolute qualifying expert over the years.

The Viennese-based driver secured one of his eight DTM pole positions to date at Oschersleben last year and this year he aims to secure his first victory at the Börde circuit. Im happy that things are finally getting started again and Im full of energy. Defending the title will be a huge challenge, but we have all the ingredients to be successful together, says Bortolotti.

Bortolottis biggest rivals include a BMW double-team: Rast, born in Minden, and two-time title winner Marco Wittmann (Fürth) will be competing in two new BMW M4 GT3 Evos.

The duo will be competing for the Schubert Motorsport team, which is based in Oschersleben and has a home race.

Last year we won the team title. This season we also want to be at the top of the drivers standings. The new Evo package will hopefully bring a bit more performance and make the car even easier to handle, says Rast.

Last years Oschersleben winner Jack Aitken (GB) in the Ferrari 296 GT3 of Emil Frey Racing, Porsche works driver Thomas Preining (A/Manthey EMA) and Maro Engel (Monaco) of the Mercedes-AMG Team Winward Racing will also be looking to make their first mark in the title fight in the Magdeburg Börde region.

Timo Glock is looking forward to his first DTM race since a guest appearance in 2022. The former Formula 1 driver is celebrating his comeback and will compete in a McLaren 720S GT3 Evo fielded by Dörr Motorsport. Oschersleben will also be the stage for the DTM debut of the Ford Mustang GT3.

The powerful vehicle boasts a 5.4-liter V8 engine Indian Arjun Maini and Swiss Fabio Scherer will drive the two US racing cars from the HRT Ford Performance team. Comtoyou Racing, a Belgian racing team, will also make its DTM debut at Oschersleben.

The team will rely on two fellow countrymen, Nicolas Baert and Gilles Magnus, in the cockpit of the two Aston Martin Vantage GT3s.

Starting this season, the teams will battle for every tenth of a second in the Sunday race during two mandatory pit stops. The Saturday race will still be pitted once. All 16 championship races will be 55 minutes plus one lap. When the Cupra Safety Car is deployed, the race distance can be extended by a maximum of two laps thanks to an overtime rule. In addition, the DTM is looking for the Rookie of the Year this season this classification is for young drivers in their first or second DTM season.

Little 500 Gets New Title Sponsor

Published in Racing
Monday, 21 April 2025 07:00

ANDERSON, Ind. The historic Little 500 Sprint Car Classic at Anderson Speedway has a new title sponsor for the 77th annual running of the 500-lap sprint car race.

Unified Group Services, a full-service third-party administrator for self-insured group health plans, has come to terms with Anderson Speedway for a multi-year agreement to sponsor the Little 500. The event will now be sponsored by a Madison County based company for the first time since 2021.

Although this event has gained Regional, National, and International recognition, it has always been important to us that the event be sponsored by a local business, said Rick Dawson President, Anderson Speedway. We are very excited to welcome Rich, and the entire Unified Group Services team, to the Anderson Speedway family. We look forward to putting on a fantastic 77th Annual Unified Group Services Little 500 this May.

Founded in 1996 in the sunroom of owner Rich Mousty, Unified Group Services was created out of a need to provide exceptional customer service to current, and prospective clients.

The company quickly outgrew the sunroom and moved to an office located in Pendleton, Indiana. In 2004, the decision was made to move to Anderson, where the company has stayed, and expanded over the last 20 plus years. Unified Group Services was named a Top Workplace in 2024, and one of the Best Places to Work in Indiana in 2024 as well.

As we approach the 77th annual running of the Little 500, I am thrilled to announce Unified Group Services title sponsorship. The tradition of this race mirrors our own commitment to excellence and endurance qualities that have defined both racing and our business philosophy for decades, said Rich Mousty Owner, Unified Group Services, Inc. Beyond the excitement on the track, what truly drives this decision is the opportunity to deepen our connection with the incredible community that has supported this event for over seven decades. Through this sponsorship, we aim to honor the races storied legacy while helping write the next chapter of its history together with the fans, drivers, and families who make this event so special.

Kurt Busch Leads NASCAR Hall Of Fame Nominees

Published in Racing
Monday, 21 April 2025 07:01

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla.  NASCAR announced the 15 nominees for the NASCAR Hall of Fames class of 2026 and the five nominees for the Landmark Award for Outstanding Contributions to NASCAR.

Kurt Busch, the 2004 NASCAR Cup Series champion, joins the Modern Era ballot for the first time, alongside Randy LaJoie, a two-time champion in what is now known as the NASCAR Xfinity Series.

Additionally, Jake Elder, a three-time NASCAR Cup Series championship crew chief, returns to the Pioneer ballot.

Ten nominees appear on the Modern Era ballot, five on the Pioneer ballot designed to honor those whose careers began more than 60 years ago. Two Modern Era candidates and one Pioneer candidate will be elected as the class of 2026.

The Landmark Award honors those who made significant contributions to the growth and esteem of NASCAR. Former President and General Manager of Charlotte Motor Speedway, Humpy Wheeler, joins the Landmark Award ballot for the first time.

The NASCAR Hall of Fame Voting panel will meet in person to discuss and vote for the class of 2026 and Landmark Award on Tuesday, May 20.

Once again, the fans have a voice in the selection process via the NASCAR.com Fan Vote (www.nascar.com/halloffame).

The Modern Era Ballot and Landmark Award nominees were selected by the Nomination Committee, which consists of representatives from NASCAR and the NASCAR Hall of Fame, track owners from major facilities and historic short tracks.

The Honors Committee, largely comprised of all NASCAR Hall of Famers, Landmark Award winners and Squier-Hall Award winners, selected the Pioneer Ballot.

Greg Biffle (HHP Photo/Alan Marler)

Modern Era Ballot

Greg Biffle, 2000 NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series champion and 2002 Xfinity Series champion

Neil Bonnett, won 18 times in the NASCAR Cup Series including consecutive Coca-Cola 600 victories

Tim Brewer, two-time NASCAR Cup Series champion crew chief

Jeff Burton, won 21 times in the NASCAR Cup Series including the Southern 500 and two Coca-Cola 600s

Kurt Busch, 2004 NASCAR Cup Series champion and 2017 DAYTONA 500 winner

Randy Dorton, built engines that won over nine championships across NASCARs national series

Harry Gant, winner of 18 NASCAR Cup Series races, including two Southern 500 victories

Harry Hyde, 1970 NASCAR Cup Series championship crew chief

Randy LaJoie, two-time Xfinity Series champion and 1985 North Series champion

Jack Sprague, three-time NASCAR CRAFTSMAN Truck Series champion

Pioneer Ballot

Jake Elder, three-time NASCAR Cup Series champion crew chief, including the DAYTONA 500 and two Southern 500s

Ray Hendrick, won over 700 times in NASCAR Modified and Late Model Sportsman

Banjo Matthews, built cars that won more than 250 NASCAR Cup Series races and three championships

Larry Phillips, first five-time NASCAR weekly series national champion

Bob Welborn, winner of nine NASCAR Cup Series races and three Convertible Division championships

H.A. Humpy Wheeler (SPEED SPORT Archives photo)

Landmark Award

Alvin Hawkins, NASCARs first flagman; established NASCAR racing at Bowman Gray Stadium with Bill France Sr.

Lesa France Kennedy, NASCAR Executive Vice Chair and one of the most influential women in sports

Dr. Joseph Mattioli, founder of Pocono Raceway

Les Richter, long-time NASCAR executive oversaw competition, helped grow the sport on the West Coast

Humpy Wheeler, former President and General Manager of Charlotte Motor Speedway, transformed the venue into a world-class facility

As the 2025 Stanley Cup playoffs began, a number of storylines dominated the conversation: Can Connor Hellebuyck turn his historic regular season into a Dominik Hašek-esque postseason run for the ages for the Winnipeg Jets? Will the Colorado Avalanche-Dallas Stars showdown be a quasi-Cup Final right away in Round 1? Is it finally the year for Connor McDavid and Leon Draisaitl to win it all, after the Edmonton Oilers came so close last season?

But beyond the matchups and narratives, it's also a good time to take stock of which players bring the most value into the postseason.

That's where goals above replacement (GAR) comes in -- my evolved spin on earlier all-in-one value stats like Tom Awad's goals versus threshold and Hockey-Reference's point shares. The core idea of GAR is to measure a player's total impact -- in offense, defense or goaltending -- above what a generic "replacement-level" player might provide at the same position. It also strives to ensure the league's value is better balanced by position: 60% of leaguewide GAR is distributed to forwards, 30% to defensemen and 10% to goaltenders.

To then assess who might be most valuable on the eve of this year's playoffs, I plugged GAR into a system inspired by Bill James' concept of an "established level" of performance; in this case, a weighted average of each player's GAR over the past three regular seasons, with more emphasis on 2024-25. And to keep the metric from undervaluing recent risers, we also apply a safeguard: no player's established level can be lower than 75% of his most recent season's GAR.

The result is a blend of peak, recent, and sustained performance -- the players on playoff-bound teams who have been great, are currently great or are still trending upward -- in a format that gives us a sense of who could define this year's postseason.

One final note: Injured players who were expected to miss all or substantial parts of the playoffs were excluded from the ranking. Sorry, Jack Hughes.

With that in mind, here are the top 50 skaters and goaltenders on teams in the 2025 playoff field, according to their three-year established level of value, ranked by the numbers:

Guardiola talks up Man City-Villa as a 'final'

Published in Soccer
Monday, 21 April 2025 06:38

Pep Guardiola has branded Manchester City's clash with Aston Villa as "a final" in the race for the Champions League and called on the club's fans to help them against Unai Emery's side.

City and Villa meet at the Etihad Stadium on Tuesday with just a point separating the two teams.

Newcastle, Chelsea and Nottingham Forest are also fighting for a place in next season's Champions League and Guardiola has asked the City supporters to back them during what could be a dramatic end to the campaign.

"We we need our people, hopefully they can help us for the minute one," Guardiola said.

"Don't wait, because sometimes we're sloppy, sometimes we're not playing well, but it's now that we need them.

"We need them desperately, to support us, to make noise and be there all the time, because it's a final, absolutely it's a final for us. And after Aston Villa, it will be the game against Wolves and it will be a final again. Then Southampton, because every point, every game, counts."

Villa bounced back from the Champions League exit to Paris Saint-Germain with an impressive 4-1 win over Newcastle on Saturday.

Emery's team have won 11 of their last 13 games in all competitions but haven't won a league game at the Etihad since 2007.

"They're a contender to qualify for the Champions League and you see both games they played against my friend Luis Enrique, against Paris Saint-Germain -- wow! I was really, really impressed," Guardiola said.

"They can play in a low block or not, but when they decide to go forward, with the weapons they have, with the speed they have, the set-pieces, and the way they organise, it's a final."

LEICESTER, England -- The Liverpool fans did not want to go home. Long after the final whistle had blown to signal their team's 1-0 victory over Leicester City on Sunday, supporters of Arne Slot's side stayed in the thousands to serenade the club that could, within a matter of days, be crowned Premier League champion.

It had not been the most convincing of performances from Liverpool, but those who had made the trip from Merseyside to the East Midlands did not care one bit.

And why should they? Having been denied the chance to celebrate the club's last title win in 2020 owing to the coronavirus pandemic, Liverpool fans now seem determined to soak up every second of this extraordinary season, with only one win now required to mathematically confirm the Reds' coronation.

Of course, publicly, Slot and his players will insist there is still work to be done. Leicester's battling display Sunday -- on an afternoon when they were officially relegated to the Championship -- is proof enough of the levels required to win a Premier League game.

However, Liverpool are now undeniably on the cusp of something special, and the image of Mohamed Salah holding aloft one finger to the traveling supporters as he basked in their postmatch applause shows the players, too, know they are close to making history.

Hours before kickoff Sunday, vendors selling scarves that read "Liverpool Champions 2024-25" lined the streets to the stadium. Arsenal's comfortable 4-0 win over Ipswich Town earlier in the day ensured Liverpool would not be able to seal the title against Leicester, but that didn't deter those in the away end from launching into of a fervent chorus of "We're gonna win the league" long before a ball was even kicked at King Power Stadium.

The afternoon almost got off to a perfect start for Liverpool when Salah found space inside the penalty area, only to see his curling strike rattle both posts before bouncing to safety. It was the first of several good chances for the visitors in the first half, with Leicester goalkeeper Mads Hermansen making a string of brilliant saves and Salah blazing one effort over the bar from close range after an inch-perfect cross from Kostas Tsimikas.

Leicester had their moments too, though, and were unlucky not to score when Wilfred Ndidi hit the post with a fine low drive from the edge of the area. And the sense that this might just not be Liverpool's day only continued to grow after the break, when Luis Díaz and substitute Diogo Jota spurned good chances to give the visitors the lead, while Conor Coady's disallowed goal -- ruled out for an earlier foul by Patson Daka on Alisson Becker -- raised the decibel level inside the stadium.

However, one of Liverpool's most impressive traits this term has been the ability to find a way to win, and this time it fell to Trent Alexander-Arnold to deliver the decisive moment, rifling the ball home just five minutes after being introduced from the bench.

It has been a challenging few time for the defender, who was sidelined since March with an ankle injury. His rehabilitation has been underscored by growing noise over his future, with sources having told ESPN that Real Madrid are confident of signing the player on a free transfer when his Liverpool contract expires at the end of the season.

But, if this summer is to be the end of Alexander-Arnold's time at Anfield, then his match-winning turn against Leicester proved there are still a few more chapters left for him to write in his Liverpool story. Regardless of what he does this summer, the image of him tearing off his shirt and sliding across the turf in celebration will go down as one of the defining moments of this momentous campaign.

"The headline today should be the goal he scored and not about his contract, but it would be ridiculous if someone argues his commitment for this club," Slot said after the match. "The work rate he puts in, no one can argue his commitment to this club, but the headlines should be his great goal and not his contract."

From a Liverpool perspective, the headline is now that this team is just three points away from writing its name into the record books. Assuming Arsenal avoid defeat against Crystal Palace in midweek, the visit of Tottenham Hotspur to Anfield next Sunday will provide Slot's side with the chance to secure the club's 20th league title.

"The only thing the fans want is us winning the game," Slot said. "After one league title in 35 years, with them not being involved because of Covid, every moment that it happens it would be special for them."

Certainly, for the Liverpool fans in attendance Sunday, the celebrations have already started. This time next week, Slot and his players just might have joined the party.

DALLAS MAVERICKS' OFFICIALS and select staffers, past and present, packed the team's plane along with members of Dirk Nowitzki's inner circle. The flight was bound for Springfield, Massachusetts, in August 2023, to celebrate the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame induction of the most legendary figure in franchise history.

Mavs general manager Nico Harrison made the trip. He wasn't especially close to Nowitzki, but their relationship dated more than two decades to when Harrison began his career at Nike as an NBA regional field representative based in Dallas.

Casey Smith, Dallas' director of health and performance, was also part of the team's traveling party for the weekend. Nowitzki often credited Smith, who arrived in Dallas as the Mavs' head athletic trainer in 2004 and was promoted to the executive ranks 15 years later, for helping him extend his career to 21 seasons. Nowitzki trusted Smith implicitly, considering him one of his best friends.

Others who joined them for the Hall of Fame festivities, which featured a pair of extravagant private parties organized by Nowitzki's longtime special projects manager Lara Beth Seager in addition to the Hall of Fame functions, don't recall anything seeming amiss that weekend in Springfield, when Harrison and Smith were each accompanied by their wives.

What happened next began a series of behind-the-scenes decisions that have had massive ramifications for the Mavs during this shocking, drastically disappointing, injury-riddled season in Dallas. Interviews with more than a dozen team and league insiders reveal that while the Luka Doncic era officially ended on Feb. 2, it truly began to disintegrate, along with the franchise's culture, 18 months earlier, the summer before the generational talent led the Mavs to the NBA Finals.

A few days after returning to Dallas' Love Field from the Hall of Fame event, when the franchise that had endured a frustrating, losing season was on a high from honoring Nowitzki, Harrison informed Smith that they needed to meet. Smith replied that it wasn't possible to meet in person; he had gone to his hometown in Ohio to be at the side of his gravely ill mother in the final weeks of her life. Harrison set up a video conference meeting instead.

Smith was then informed that his services in Dallas were no longer needed, ending a nearly two-decade tenure with the franchise. The reason for the dismissal centered on Smith being "too negative," according to sources briefed on the discussion who interpreted the vague reasoning to mean Smith wasn't enough of a yes-man.

"He was 100 percent threatened by him," a team source told ESPN, referring to Harrison's concern that Smith's voice carried too much weight with the franchise. "He's going to show that I'm in charge and nobody else can question that."

It was a stunning first step in Harrison's overhaul of the team's health and performance group over the past two offseasons. Smith's unceremonious departure was followed by the dismissals of athletic performance director Jeremy Holsopple and manual therapist Casey Spangler in June, only days removed from Dallas' appearance in the NBA Finals.

"You bringing up Casey [Smith] is like almost, it's kind of a joke," Harrison said Tuesday during an availability with selected Dallas-based reporters. "Like last year, Casey wasn't around, and we made it to the Finals. No one brought up Casey last year. So, to bring him up this year doesn't really make sense. He's been away for two years. So it's -- I'm not even going to comment on that."

Sources told ESPN that the frigid dynamic between Doncic's camp -- led by Seager, who became Doncic's business manager after being introduced to him by Nowitzki -- and Harrison and his new staff factored into the GM's stunning decision to trade Doncic to the Los Angeles Lakers for Anthony Davis in February.

Smith, Holsopple and Spangler were all longtime Mavs employees who had helped Doncic, a Slovenian who spent his adolescence in Spain, make the major cultural transition after coming to Dallas as a teenager. They had become confidantes for the superstar, but sources said Harrison saw them as "enablers" of Doncic, despite them being immensely respected by their peers throughout the league. Holsopple was the NBA's Strength and Conditioning Coach of the Year in 2021, and Smith's tenure as Team USA's head athletic trainer included the 2008 and 2012 Olympic gold medal runs.

"We feel that the guys that replaced them have done an amazing job," Harrison said. "And again, you're coming at me from a negative standpoint, and I look at it from a positive standpoint. The guys that we brought in are better."

Dysfunction between Harrison's new hires -- director of player health and performance Johann Bilsborough and athletic performance director Keith Belton -- has been problematic as the Mavs' medical misfortune mounted throughout the season, sources said. The Mavs have not employed a full-time manual therapist this season. For a stretch late in the season, the Mavs sweated out fielding an active roster with the league-minimum eight available players as Dallas dipped below .500 before finishing 39-43 to claim the Western Conference's last play-in bid.

Harrison's decision to fire Smith, and the way he did it, also drove Nowitzki away from the franchise that he proudly played for his entire career. Sources said Nowitzki, who describes himself as a "Mavs fan" now, opted to no longer be involved in the inner workings of the franchise's basketball operations after Smith's forced exit. Nowitzki had served as a senior adviser to Mark Cuban, frequently attending practices and providing input when he was in Dallas.

Sources told ESPN that Smith's ouster also prompted the departure of Mavs vice president of basketball communications Scott Tomlin, another two-decade employee of the franchise who was close with Smith, Nowitzki and Doncic, among others. Tomlin accepted an offer to become the executive director of the DN Companies and The Dirk Nowitzki Foundation.

"My obligation is to the Dallas Mavericks," Harrison said Tuesday. "It's what's in the best interest of the Dallas Mavericks, and that's the most important thing. Again, some of those decisions are going to be unpopular, maybe to Dirk and maybe to the fans, but my obligation is to the Dallas Mavericks."

Nowitzki and Tomlin have attended two NBA games since the beginning of February: Doncic's Lakers debut in Los Angeles on Feb. 10 and his return to Dallas on April 9.

"Over the past year, you could already see the team heading in a different direction," Nowitzki, who declined an interview request from ESPN, said in German during a recent appearance on his foundation's Campus 41 podcast. "Now we're seeing the result of that."

DERECK LIVELY II, a 21-year-old center who projects as a long-term cornerstone, was listed as questionable on Jan. 20 because of a right ankle sprain after sitting out the previous two games. Under Belton's supervision, Lively went through an intense return-to-play workout before sitting out again that night.

The plan was for Lively to play at home two nights later against the Minnesota Timberwolves.

But Bilsborough had concerns, prompting him to send Lively for a CT scan. It revealed a stress fracture in his right ankle that sidelined the center for the next 2 months.

"Somebody should be fired for that," a team source said then.

It was a symptom of a much larger problem, multiple team sources said.

Harrison, though, portrayed the handling of Lively's injury as proof that his medical staff is "elite," as he said Tuesday. Sources said that Lively's camp was pleased with Bilsborough's communication and collaboration during the recovery and rehab process.

"It actually goes to show the strength of our medical team, because he was cleared to play, but his signs and symptoms where our medical team knew it was something more," Harrison said. "So that's why they went and tested them again and saw the CT scan, which they actually avoided a potential catastrophic injury. So you know, you will take the angle of being negative, but it's actually a positive thing, because they saw with the symptoms, even though he was cleared to play, they didn't feel right putting him on the floor.

"And so they went back. They stopped him from playing. They went back. They retested, and thank God we saw that he had a stress fracture."

According to more than 10 team sources, the situation led to a loud, heated confrontation between Bilsborough and Belton that began in the trainer's room at the practice facility and continued into the weight room. Harrison did not reply to a question about the incident -- or several others regarding the health and performance group -- ESPN submitted to the Mavs' media relations department this week. The Mavs declined to make Bilsborough or Belton available for comment.

"Not punches, but they were going at it," one of many sources who viewed the surveillance footage of the incident told ESPN.

"That was coming for a long time," another team source said.

THE FRICTION HAD been simmering for months. Harrison had created the uncomfortable dynamic by agreeing to hire Belton before Bilsborough, even though Bilsborough is in charge of the department.

Bilsborough does not respect Belton's acumen, sources said.

"He's a glorified cheerleader," one team source said. "But Nico clearly wanted cheerleader energy."

According to the National Strength Coaches Association database, Belton does not have either of the certifications from the association that are required for NBA strength coaches, per Article XXII of the collective bargaining agreement. The CBA states that an individual hired as a head strength and conditioning coach must have at least three years of experience since receiving those certifications.

An NBA spokesman said the league office was aware that Belton lacked the required certifications, but that the league office accepted his certifications from the College Strength and Conditioning Coaches Association on a temporary basis with the expectation he would receive his NSCA certifications immediately after the season. Belton's UCLA biography noted that he "was a winner of the prestigious Stucky Award given to individuals who excelled during the practical section of the exam."

Some of Belton's critics describe him as more of a personal trainer than the "body engineer" that is standard for modern NBA strength coaches.

"Johann is a little bit handcuffed in his department," a team source said. "[Belton is in] a pivotal role that trains players, but keeps the department in line to a philosophy and everyone working in the same way -- [Belton is] none of those things. And then on top of it, the two of them have been beefing since day one, which led to the big blowup.

"He has shown no respect to Johann the entire year. No collaboration whatsoever. He either ranges from completely standoffish to doing the dumbest s--- with a player just to prove a point to Johann. It's terrible. And you can't do it that way. You can't do what he's done and not put a player more at risk by doing that."

Belton, a former NFL fullback, had no previous NBA experience before this season. He had spent the previous four years as the director of football performance at UCLA, one of several college stops during a coaching career that has primarily focused on the sport he played professionally.

Bilsborough, an Australian sports scientist with a doctorate, also came to the Mavs from the football world, having spent the previous five seasons as the New England Patriots' director of performance and rehabilitation. He also had previous NBA experience, serving as the Boston Celtics' director of sports science from 2017 to 2020.

One Celtics source described Bilsborough as a highly intelligent academic expert -- but not a practitioner -- and someone who tends to be "divisive when he disagrees with somebody."

Bilsborough and Art Horne, the Celtics' head athletic trainer and director of performance at the time, disagreed often. They had no previous relationship but were hired in the same offseason to be co-heads of Boston's health and performance group.

"That was a problem," the Celtics source said. "There was a cold war. There were Art Horne people and there were Johann people."

The communication between the cliques in the department was infrequent and unproductive, Celtics sources said. Bilsborough left the Celtics after three seasons. Horne remains in Boston, having been promoted to director of organizational growth and team development in 2022.

Bilsborough struggled to establish rapport with Doncic and the five-time first-team All-NBA selection's "body team." Harrison had already alienated Doncic by running off the people he trusted and respected. Bilsborough, who already had big shoes to fill in replacing Smith, never earned Doncic's trust or respect, according to sources.

It's not a coincidence that Jalen Brunson's New York Knicks hired Smith as their vice president of sports medicine as soon as his Mavs contract expired last summer. New York also hired former Mavs athletic trainer Heather Mau. The games lost to injury for the Knicks have dropped significantly from last season, and Smith and Mau recently oversaw Brunson's recovery from a gruesome ankle sprain.

Weeks after leaving the Mavs in free agency in 2022, Brunson discussed how much he would miss "the Caseys," Holsopple and Mau during an appearance on the "Old Man and the Three" podcast hosted by JJ Redick. Redick mentioned that he still was in an active group chat with those then-Dallas staffers despite spending only two months with the Mavs at the end of his playing career a year earlier.

"Not a lot of people understand how much of a difference those people make in your everyday life," Brunson said. "I never take it for granted. They're really special. And the fact that they're so personable and you can talk to them about anything, that makes it even harder [to leave the Mavs]. It's not just work. They know how to be people."

Mavs sources, as well as agents and associates of multiple players currently on the Dallas roster, are split on Bilsborough. Some described him as evidenced-based and competent; others are critical. The complaints about him are that he doesn't establish relationships with players or staff, doesn't travel with the team often early in the season and occasionally had "optimistic" timetables for return from injury.

"If you're not around the team all the time, you shouldn't be involved in decision-making," a team source said.

Added another team source who otherwise praised Bilsborough: "That is definitely a challenge. You can't be perceived as this guy that hovers around. You got to be able to get in and obviously that's Casey's magic."

Harrison defended the Mavs' health and performance group, pointing out that the vast majority of injuries sustained by Dallas players this season have been "unavoidable" and caused by contact.

But on multiple occasions, Mavs players have aggravated injuries or sustained related injuries immediately upon their return.

"It's hard to say what a guy should have for a contact injury, but how fast they come back or how likely they are to reinjure it, that's another story," a team source said. "How do you get me back? How well am I when I got back? That's the medical staff and the [performance] staff."

Added another team source: "I think that is where you really see the effect of the dysfunction, but not just within the medical department, but the pressure to tread water until other guys come back so that you can prove what decisions [the front office] made up until this point were the right ones. ... I think there's a dysfunction on an organization level because of the trade itself."

The most notable and costly example is the left adductor strain sustained by Davis during his Dallas debut on Feb. 8, when he returned from an abdominal strain that he sustained Jan. 28, days before the trade.

With Harrison under fire, Davis was motivated to make a strong first impression to the outraged Mavs fan base in the first home game after the shocking blockbuster deal. He acknowledged that he should have waited another game or two to return, but Davis said it was his decision made in consultation with his personal medical team and Bilsborough.

"They meet and communicate every day," said Davis, who works with his own staff in the weight room instead of Belton. "Everybody is one big team."

That description doesn't apply to the dynamic between Bilsborough and Belton, according to multiple sources, who say their discord has been a detriment to the team.

"With all the great organizations, the performance and medical [staffs] are seamless," a team source said. "And here they're just completely separate and at odds. It's pretty clear to see the effect of the divide. The division created an unfortunate environment that ultimately the players had to suffer from."

play
2:01
Luka checks out to standing ovation from Dallas crowd

Luka Doncic receives a standing ovation from Mavericks fans after he leaves the game with 45 points in his return to Dallas.

MONTHS BEFORE SMITH'S exit, Doncic and Seager had hired Real Madrid physiotherapist Javier Barrio Calvo and Slovenian national team strength coach Anze Macek -- both of whom Doncic knew well -- to work for him after his nagging quadriceps injury contributed to the Mavs limping into the 2023 draft lottery. It followed a trend of NBA superstars, including Davis and Mavs guard Kyrie Irving, employing their own health and performance staff to work in consultation with their team's department.

Doncic and Seager had envisioned his staff working seamlessly with Smith, who made annual summer visits to Slovenia and often attended Doncic's national team games around the globe. With Smith having been dismissed for the final year of his contract, Holsopple was the Mavs' point man in the union with Doncic's body team.

Doncic's camp considered the first season of the arrangement a great success. He averaged a league-leading 33.9 points, 9.2 rebounds and 9.8 assists during the regular season and became the first player in NBA history to lead the league in points, rebounds, assists and steals during a postseason. He also led the league in total minutes with 3,524 combined in the regular season and playoffs.

"You don't perform like that ... if you're a fat, drunk pig," a friend of Doncic's grumbled, feeling as if that's how the Mavs portrayed the superstar in the aftermath of the trade, ending Doncic's dream to spend his career in Dallas.

Despite the historic production, Harrison was concerned Doncic had still gained weight during the season while carrying the heavy workload. The tension thickened between the GM and the increasingly alienated face of the franchise and his camp. Bilsborough stepped into a difficult situation and didn't endear himself to Doncic's camp.

Sources said Cuban, who had made Doncic's happiness his top priority since Dallas acquired the draft rights to the prodigy in 2018 and worked closely with Seager for years before that, volunteered to serve as an intermediary. But Harrison had succeeded in pushing Cuban completely out of basketball operations since Patrick Dumont took over as the team's governor and didn't want to cede any ground, sources said.

It didn't help matters that Doncic was hit in his left calf while scrimmaging with teammates at SMU just before training camp opened. It was initially believed to be just a bruise, but after Doncic experienced significant soreness in the opening practice of camp, an MRI revealed a Grade 1 strain, sources said, which the Mavs did not mention in their injury release.

Doncic sat out the preseason and added more than a dozen pounds during his absence, sources said, frustrating and angering Harrison and others in the organization.

Doncic, who also used his own team of doctors instead of the Mavs' physicians, was diagnosed with a sprained right wrist on Nov. 20. Sources said Harrison and the Mavs' medical staff considered the diagnosis a cover-up to allow Doncic time to work on his conditioning and shed weight after a sluggish start to the season by his standards.

On Nov. 29, a day before the fifth and final game he sat out, a television in the media room at the Mavs' practice facility was tuned into the closed-circuit feed of Doncic scrimmaging with low minutes players and staffers, launching long jumpers on almost every offensive possession. When a team employee noticed the feed, they changed the channel quickly, saying they were unsure how it became available. The feed has not been shown in the media room since.

Barrio Calvo and Bilsborough communicated regularly, but they frequently disagreed, sources said. Meetings that included Harrison, Bilsborough, Seager, Barrio Calvo and Doncic's agent, Bill Duffy, were often tense and unproductive. Doncic did not work with Belton at all.

The tension between the sides soared after Doncic sustained another left calf strain -- his fourth in a 28-month span -- on Christmas Day. Doncic's camp believed he had returned too quickly from a left heel bruise he had sustained during his 45-point triple-double in a Dec. 15 win over the Golden State Warriors and had been playing on his toes to avoid discomfort in his heel. Harrison blamed poor conditioning.

The sides also drastically disagreed on the timetable for Doncic's return after receiving the MRI results. Bilsborough believed Doncic could be back in two or three weeks, sources said, while Doncic's team adamantly stated that he needed to sit out six weeks. They got their way, and a target return date was set for the Feb. 8 home game against the Houston Rockets.

"That deepened the divide," a source said.

Doncic didn't put any weight on his left leg for two weeks, using crutches and a scooter to get around. The MRI results four weeks later were encouraging but the plan remained in place.

Another major disagreement emerged between the sides when Doncic refused Harrison's request to join the team on a five-game trip leading up to his target return date.

Harrison griped that Doncic was holding the team hostage, sources said.

Doncic's camp argued that he was better off having around-the-clock access to the Mavs' practice facility than traveling with the team. It pointed out that Doncic was doing two-a-day, multihour basketball workouts, which wouldn't be possible with court time difficult to book on the road. He also could utilize the weight room and the high-tech medical equipment at his convenience, which isn't the case in other team's arenas and hotels.

Harrison countered, insisting that Doncic needed to scrimmage. Doncic's camp, in response, said he'd be happy to practice with the G League Texas Legends in Frisco, a Dallas suburb.

The next time Doncic's camp heard from Harrison, it was to share the news that the trade he'd been secretly negotiating for weeks with the Lakers was finalized.

Usually Iga Swiatek is the one dishing out the bagels.

In recent years, the five-time major champion has become known for the ruthless manner of her victories, subjecting many opponents to the ultimate embarrassment of losing a set without winning a game.

Now 23-year-old Swiatek finds herself in the position of being on the wrong end of a 6-0 scoreline - having lost to Jelena Ostapenko for the sixth time in a row.

Ostapenko extended her flawless head-to-head record against the world number two in the Stuttgart quarter-finals on Saturday.

So what's behind the one-sided results?

Having won the 2017 French Open, Ostapenko certainly has the pedigree and her explosive ball-bashing - when it works, and the winners outweigh the unforced errors - can have devastating consequences.

Swiatek has encountered trouble against aggressive ball-strikers, too, so that adds further weight to the explanation.

You also wonder whether there is a mental block against an opponent who a player knows has their number.

Swiatek disputed that afterwards, saying her head "was much more clear" against Ostapenko in Stuttgart than her previous defeats.

While the agony was prolonged in Stuttgart, you can't imagine a player of Swiatek's quality will suffer a career-spanning hex.

There is a long way to go until Swiatek enters the conversation of being on the receiving end of the most dominant head-to-head record.

Gael Monfils has lost all 20 of his matches (so far) against Novak Djokovic, while Richard Gasquet's 18-0 record against Rafael Nadal and David Ferrer's 14-0 against Roger Federer are other notable lopsided match-ups in recent years.

In fact, Swiatek could shake off the hex as early as next week, with Ostapenko slated to be a prospective last-16 opponent in Madrid.

Five series of the 2025 Stanley Cup playoffs have begun, and two more will begin Monday. Meanwhile, the two matchups in the Central Division are on to Game 2.

Here's the four-pack of games on the calendar:

What are the key storylines heading into Monday's games? Who are the key players to watch?

Read on for game previews with statistical insights from ESPN Research, recaps of what went down last night, and the Three Stars of Sunday Night from Arda Öcal.

Matchup notes

Montreal Canadiens at Washington Capitals
Game 1 | 7 p.m., ESPN

You might've heard about the 2010 playoff matchup between these two teams a time or so in the past week.

In that postseason, the overwhelming favorite (and No. 1 seed) Capitals, led by Alex Ovechkin, were upset by the No. 8 seed Canadiens, due in large part to an epic performance in goal from Jaroslav Halak. Halak isn't walking out of the tunnel for the Habs this time around (we assume); instead it'll be Becancour, Quebec, native Sam Montembeault, who allowed four goals on 35 shots in his one start against the Caps this season.

Washington's goaltender for Game 1 has yet to be revealed, as Logan Thompson was injured back on April 2. But there's no question that there is a disparity between the offensive output of the two clubs, as the Caps finished second in the NHL in goals per game (3.49), while the Canadiens finished 17th (2.96). Can Montreal keep up in this series?

St. Louis Blues at Winnipeg Jets
Game 2 | 7:30 p.m., ESPN2

The Blues hung with the Jets for much of Game 1 and even looked like the stronger team at certain times, so pulling off the series upset remains on the table. But getting a win on the unfriendly ice at the Canada Life Centre would be of some benefit in shifting momentum before the series moves to St. Louis for Game 3. The Blues proved that Connor Hellebuyck is not invincible in Game 1, and they were led by stars Jordan Kyrou and Robert Thomas, who both got on the board.

The Jets have a mixed history after winning Game 1 of a playoff series, having gone 3-3 as a franchise (including the Atlanta Thrashers days) on such occasions. Like the Blues, the Jets were led by their stars, Kyle Connor and Mark Scheifele, but the game-tying goal came from Alex Iafallo, who has played up and down the lineup this season.

Colorado Avalanche at Dallas Stars
Game 2 | 9:30 p.m., ESPN

The Stars might like a redo on Game 1 after the visiting Avalanche essentially controlled the festivities for much of the contest. Stars forward Jason Robertson missed Game 1 because of an injury sustained in the final game of the regular season, and his return sooner than later would be excellent for Dallas; he scored three goals in three games against Colorado in the regular season. Also of note, teams that have taken a 2-0 lead in best-of-seven series have won 86% of the time.

Slowing down the Avs' stars will be critical in Game 2, which is a sound -- if perhaps unrealistic -- strategy. With his two goals in Game 1, Nathan MacKinnon became the third player in Avalanche/Nordiques history to score 50 playoff goals, joining Joe Sakic (84) and Peter Forsberg (58). In reaching 60 assists in his 73rd playoff game, Cale Makar became the third-fastest defenseman in NHL history to reach that milestone, behind Bobby Orr (69 GP) and Al MacInnis (71 GP).

Edmonton Oilers at Los Angeles Kings
Game 1 | 10 p.m., ESPN2

This is the fourth straight postseason in which the Oilers and Kings have met in Round 1, and Edmonton has won the previous three series. Will the fourth time be the charm for the Kings?

L.A. went 3-1-0 against Edmonton this season, including shutouts on April 5 and 14. Quinton Byfield was particularly strong in those games, with three goals and an assist. Overall, the Kings were led in scoring this season by Adrian Kempe, with 35 goals and 38 assists. Warren Foegele -- who played 22 playoff games for the Oilers in 2024 -- had a career-high 24 goals this season.

The Oilers enter the 2025 postseason with 41 playoff series wins, which is the second most among non-Original Six teams (behind the Flyers, with 44). They have been eliminated by the team that won the Stanley Cup in each of the past three postseasons (Panthers 2024, Golden Knights 2023, Avalanche 2022). Edmonton continues to be led by Leon Draisaitl -- who won his first Rocket Richard Trophy as the league's top goal scorer this season -- and Connor McDavid, who won the goal-scoring title in 2022-23 and the Conn Smythe Trophy as MVP of the playoffs last year, even though the Oilers didn't win the Cup.


Arda's Three Stars of Sunday

Toronto's Core Fore
Auston Matthews, Mitch Marner, William Nylander, John Tavares

For the last several seasons, much of the postseason narrative for the Leafs has been the lack of production from the Core Four. So this was a dream Game 1 against Ottawa for Marner (one goal, two assists), Nylander (one goal, one assist), John Tavares (one goal, one assist) and Matthews (two assists) in Toronto's 6-2 win over Ottawa.

Logan Stankoven
C, Carolina Hurricanes

Stankoven's two goals in the second period put the game out of reach, with the Canes winning 4-1 in Game 1. Stankoven is the second player in Hurricanes/Whalers history to score twice in his first playoff game with the club (the other was Andrei Svechnikov in Game 1 of the first round in 2019)

Brett Howden
C, Vegas Golden Knights

Howden had two third-period goals in the Golden Knights' victory over the Wild in Game 1, including a buzzer-beating empty-netter to make the final score 4-2.


Sunday's results

Hurricanes 4, Devils 1
Carolina leads 1-0

The Hurricanes came out inspired thanks in part to the raucous home crowd and took a quick lead off the stick of Jalen Chatfield at 2:24 of the first period. Logan Stankoven -- who came over in the Mikko Rantanen trade -- scored a pair in the second period, and the Canes never looked back. On the Devils' side, injuries forced Brenden Dillon and Cody Glass out of the game, while Luke Hughes left in the third period but was able to return. Full recap.

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0:44
Logan Stankoven's 2nd goal gives Hurricanes a 3-0 lead

Logan Stankoven notches his second goal of the game to give the Hurricanes a 3-0 lead.

Maple Leafs 6, Senators 2
Toronto leads 1-0

The first skirmish in the Battle of Ontario goes to the home side, as the Leafs never let the Senators get very close in this one. Oliver Ekman-Larsson and Mitch Marner scored in the first, John Tavares and William Nylander tallied in the second, while Morgan Rielly and Matthew Knies put the game away in the third. Drake Batherson and Ridly Greig -- scorer of a controversial empty-net goal against Toronto in 2024 -- scored for Ottawa. Full recap.

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0:42
William Nylander zips home a goal to pad the Maple Leafs' lead

William Nylander zips the puck past the goalie to give the Maple Leafs a 4-1 lead.

Golden Knights 4, Wild 2
Vegas leads 1-0

In Sunday's nightcap, the two teams played an evenly matched first two periods, as Vegas carried a 2-1 lead into the third. Then, Brett Howden worked his magic, scoring a goal to pad the Knights' lead 2:28 into that frame, and putting the game to bed with an empty-netter that beat the buzzer. The Wild were led by Matt Boldy, who had two goals, both assisted by Kirill Kaprizov. Full recap.

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0:31
Brett Howden buries Wild in Game 1 with buzzer-beating goal

Brett Howden sends the Minnesota Wild packing in Game 1 with an empty-net goal for the Golden Knights in the final second.

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