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Sources: Knicks' Towns has bone chip in thumb

Published in Basketball
Thursday, 16 January 2025 00:00

PHILADELPHIA -- New York Knicks center Karl-Anthony Towns has a bone chip in his right thumb to go along with the sprain he sustained in Monday's loss to the Detroit Pistons, sources confirmed to ESPN on Wednesday, though those same sources also said Towns was expected to play through the injury.

Towns hurt his thumb in the first half of Monday's game, when he smacked his shooting hand on the backboard on a drive. He played the rest of the game -- finishing with 26 points and 12 rebounds in 43 minutes -- though he grabbed at his hand several times as the game progressed.

Afterward, Towns said the thumb injury "is what it is," and after initially being listed as questionable to play Wednesday against the reeling Philadelphia 76ers, he was eventually ruled out before the game, with the swelling in his thumb needing to subside before he can return.

"We'll see where he is [Thursday]," Knicks coach Tom Thibodeau said of Towns' status during his pregame news conference.

Towns, who was acquired by the Knicks in a blockbuster trade on the eve of training camp in September, has had a brilliant season for his hometown team, averaging 25.4 points and a league-leading 13.9 rebounds while shooting 55% from the field and 44.9% from 3-point range.

He has ranked third among Eastern Conference frontcourt players in each of the first two rounds of All-Star voting, putting him on track to start in the game -- which would be a first for him after making four All-Star teams as a reserve during nine seasons with the Minnesota Timberwolves to begin his career.

New York entered Wednesday's game with a 26-15 record, putting the Knicks on pace for a 52-win season -- which would rank among the 10 best records in the history of the franchise. They went on to beat the 76ers 125-119 in overtime.

Towns' bone chip was first reported by the New York Post.

ISAIAH HARTENSTEIN HAD done almost everything expected of him during his delayed debut for the Oklahoma City Thunder.

After missing this season's first 15 games due to a broken left hand, the center filled up the stat sheet with 13 points, 14 rebounds, three assists and four blocks in a Nov. 20 home win over the Portland Trail Blazers. It was the type of impact performance the Thunder anticipated when Hartenstein signed a three-year, $87 million deal in free agency over the summer.

But Hartenstein still needed to put the finishing touches on his first official outing in an Oklahoma City uniform.

"You know you gotta bark, right?" Thunder forward Jalen Williams said to Hartenstein seconds after the final buzzer sounded.

As is uniquely the norm with the Thunder, Hartenstein had plenty of company while he answered a few questions from the team's sideline reporter Nick Gallo.

"Nick, he's out of breath," Williams jokingly chimed in from behind Hartenstein, eager to get to the grand finale. As the interview ended, Hartenstein grabbed the microphone with both hands and released what he later termed "a solid, little bark" as a rite of initiation.

"Roo-roo-roo! Roo-roo-roo!"

It's a silly tradition that started midway through last season, when the Thunder were in the process of becoming the youngest No. 1 seed in NBA history. It began with an impromptu bark from Williams, known as "JDub" in Thunder parlance to avoid being confused with Jaylin "J-Will" Williams.

The barking became an audible expression of the group's mix of goofy personalities. The Thunder take their jobs extremely seriously. Themselves, not so much.

"Just assimilate into the culture, man," Alex Caruso told ESPN. "It's a long year. For us to get to where we want to be, we got to be one and together, and that's part of it."

The post-win interviews on the television broadcast, which always are group affairs and occasionally end with barking, display the bond of an ascending contender that has a collegial feel and a professional approach.

Oklahoma City -- only a few years removed from having one of the NBA's worst records -- has remained true to its core organizational philosophies even as the Thunder emerged as an elite team earlier than anticipated. Coach Mark Daigneault has managed to get one of the league's youngest teams to consistently embrace the mundane -- from skill work to game-plan detail -- even while experiencing success that often results in inflated egos.

"I think that's why we've been able to accelerate our development," Shai Gilgeous-Alexander told ESPN. "All those little things that go into winning, they mean a lot to us because of our competitiveness and what our common goal is as a group."

The Thunder made jumps of 16 and 17 wins over the past two seasons, respectively, as 2022 lottery picks Jalen Williams and Chet Holmgren proved themselves as star-caliber complements to Gilgeous-Alexander. Instead of trading for another star in the wake of last spring's second-round playoff exit, Thunder general manager Sam Presti targeted top-notch role players who fit the Thunder's culture and style of play, signing Hartenstein and trading for Caruso, who became the oldest player on the roster (30) when he was acquired in a summer trade with the Chicago Bulls.

As this season nears the midway point, Oklahoma City is on a 69-win pace despite Holmgren playing in only 10 games before suffering a fractured pelvis that has sidelined him since Nov. 11. The Thunder are especially dominant on the less glamorous end of the floor. They are allowing a league-low 102.9 points per 100 possessions, 3.8 fewer than any other team, entering Thursday's home against against the East-leading Cleveland Cavaliers, who snapped Oklahoma City's 15-game winning streak on Jan. 8.

The combination of what Caruso describes as "youthful energy" and "discipline" made an immediate impression on Oklahoma City's veteran offseason additions.

"I think a lot of young guys focus too much on what's going to happen in the future, but I feel like they're really good at making sure we're getting better each day," said Hartenstein, 26, the third-oldest player on the Oklahoma City roster behind Caruso and reserve forward/center Kenrich Williams. "If you want to be a great team in this league, you have to focus on the boring stuff, the details. They do a great job in that."

DAIGNEAULT COMPARES GILGEOUS-ALEXANDER'S evolution into one of the league's best players to investing in a mutual fund. It's not flashy, just steady gains compounding day after day.

It's an analogy that also applies to the Thunder's path from a rebuilding project to the clear-cut Western Conference favorite in the four and a half years since Presti promoted Daigneault from assistant to head coach as Oklahoma City was in the process of tearing down the roster around Gilgeous-Alexander.

Presti -- armed with a historic stockpile of draft picks that was built beginning with the 2019 blockbuster deal that sent Paul George to the LA Clippers and brought Gilgeous-Alexander (and eventually Jalen Williams) to Oklahoma City -- refrained from making splashy trades in an attempt to expedite the franchise's return to relevance. Instead, the Thunder leaned into patience and player development, enduring two seasons near the bottom of the Western Conference standings at the start of Daigneault's tenure before the progress became apparent.

"Those years when we weren't the greatest, he always made sure that we were playing the game the right way and doing the stuff that would transfer once we became a better team," Gilgeous-Alexander said. "And that's carried over obviously with the more talent we get and the better we get."

Gilgeous-Alexander worked his way from intriguing prospect to All-Star to arguably the NBA's most well-rounded superstar since arriving in Oklahoma City. Luguentz Dort, the only other player remaining from that 2019-20 roster, has transformed from an undrafted player with an ugly jumper to one of the league's premier 3-and-D players, a perimeter stopper who has shot 39.7% from 3-point range over the last season and a half. The rest of the roster has followed suit.

Rival executives and coaches widely believe that the Thunder are in the early stages of an extended window as a contender, but Oklahoma City's roster has been built without repeated swings in the upper half of the draft lottery.

Chet Holmgren, selected second in the 2022 draft, is the lone single-digit draft pick on the roster and one of only four first-rounders in the Oklahoma City rotation. It's a deep roster full of under-the-radar developmental success stories occupying key roles, the sort of team that is the result of tremendous scouting, which is still how Presti views himself at the core.

Isaiah Joe, a skinny, sharpshooting reserve guard whom Daigneault likes to refer to as one of the league's toughest players pound-for-pound, was a waiver-wire pickup. Aaron Wiggins, a backup forward, was the No. 55 pick in 2021. They both earned new four-year contracts over the summer.

This summer's major additions, Caruso and Hartenstein, fit into the ethos of grinders made good. Like Dort, they both had to toil in the G League to earn end-of-the-roster spots in the NBA and work their way into becoming essential role players. Caruso actually began his pro career with Oklahoma City Blue, the Thunder's G League affiliate, before leaving for a two-way deal with the Los Angeles Lakers. With a smile, Presti cited this as proof that he's made his share of talent evaluation errors.

Daigneault has attributed "an uncommon maturity" of a roster that still ranks as the league's fourth-youngest weighted by playing time, according to ESPN Research, as an essential element of Oklahoma City's success.

"They want to be a part of something bigger than themselves," Daigneault said. "I think that's one of the things that Sam's nailed in this process. The types of people that we've brought in the door, regardless of whether they're still here or they're not, by and large, have been committed professionals that are ambitious, but they're also willing to complete the team.

"So that's been a huge starting point. And then you take those people, you put 'em in a stable environment, you educate 'em on the value of all the invisible things, and you hammer that over and over again. You hammer that environment over and over again. You hammer those messages over and over again and then you double down on the people that you have and just allow that to grow and compound."

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Thunder's Nikola Topic makes postgame barking debut

After a convincing win against the Spurs, the Thunder make sure to get rookie Nikola Topic in on their postgame barking tradition.

THE GROUP POSTGAME interviews are cute demonstrations of the Thunder's chemistry, but they have also been fodder for criticism from a four-time NBA champion.

Golden State Warriors power forward Draymond Green called the Thunder's group interviews "a little alarming" during an early-season edition of his podcast.

"There's a certain seriousness that it takes to win in this league, and there's a certain fear you have to instill in teams in order to win," Green said. "And I don't know if they're instilling that fear in teams with all of the bromance and stuff after the game."

Green's comments, whether serious concern or a trolling attempt to create controversy for a rival, went viral. But they didn't elicit much more than a shrug from the Thunder, a team that does not do drama.

"We're just concerned about what's going on here and everything else kind of takes care of itself," Jalen Williams said, claiming it was the first he'd heard of Green's comments when asked about them a few days later. "I feel like it's kind of weird to have a strong opinion on it, but we're just so locked in on what we have going on here."

The Thunder have a point differential of plus-12.8 points per game, which would break the record set by the 1971-72 Lakers (plus-12.3) for the best in NBA history. They have lost consecutive games just once this season and have yet to lose three in a row. That's a pretty convincing way to prevent questions about whether a team is serious enough.

"We all know it's a job and then it's a business, but at the end of the day, we're playing a game we love every day," Dort said. "Every time we wake up, we're doing something fun and we want to keep that in everything. I mean, this game brings a lot of stress and a lot of stuff outside, so whenever we're together, we want to have as much fun [as] we can have. That's just some of the goofiness that we started doing and it helps the team, honestly."

Gilgeous-Alexander didn't bark after his Dec. 26 performance that Daigneault described as "a masterpiece," when he carried the Thunder to a road win over the Indiana Pacers by scoring 16 of his career-high-tying 45 points in the final seven minutes.

But Gilgeous-Alexander's final words of his on-court interview with Gallo did provide a glimpse of the Thunder's bond.

"All right, let's go to Charlotte!" Gilgeous-Alexander said with genuine enthusiasm before revealing why the next stop, and a meeting with one of the NBA's worst teams, had been circled on the Thunder's calendar for weeks.

"It's Wiggs' jersey retirement in Charlotte," Gilgeous-Alexander said, pointing his thumb behind him at Aaron Wiggins as Kenrich Williams playfully massaged the reserve forward's shoulders and Jaylin Williams jokingly smacked him in the chest. "Let's hurry up and get there!"

A day ahead of their game against the Hornets, the team's entire traveling party boarded a bus at their hotel in Charlotte for a 90-minute drive to High Point, N.C., to visit Wiggins' high school alma mater, Wesleyan Christian Academy. Wiggins was honored in a pregame ceremony, and the Thunder stayed for the first quarter to watch his younger brother, Zacch, play before getting back on the bus and making the journey back to the Charlotte hotel.

The Thunder made a similar trip -- 90 minutes each way from Dallas to Waco -- to celebrate Kenrich Williams when his high school retired his number the night before a December road game last season.

"This is my only team, but I don't think it's like that on every team," Jalen Williams said. "It's something that nobody on the squad takes for granted."

Beloved Brewers broadcaster Uecker dies at 90

Published in Baseball
Thursday, 16 January 2025 08:06

Longtime Milwaukee Brewers broadcaster Bob Uecker has died at the age of 90, the team announced Thursday.

Uecker served as the Brewers' radio announcer since 1971, a job that earned him a spot in the Baseball Hall of Fame as the Ford C. Frick Award winner in 2003.

The Milwaukee native was so beloved in his hometown that when the Brewers reached the National League Championship Series in 2018, the team had him throw out the first pitch for Game 1.

Uecker may be best known for his role in the 1989 movie "Major League." Playing Cleveland Indians announcer Harry Doyle, Uecker had some of the movie's most memorable lines, such as "Juuuust a bit outside." He reprised the role for two sequels.

He also made a number of appearances on Johnny Carson's "Tonight Show," starred in the 1980s sitcom "Mr. Belvedere" and had a series of Miller Lite commercials in the 1970s and 1980s in which he played "Mr. Baseball," a nickname that stuck.

"The Tonight Shows and doing that stuff was easy," Uecker said in 2018 before his Game 1 pitch. "Doing play-by-play [was hard], because I kept thinking about my friends here in Milwaukee. Guys that I grew up with, listening to the game, and here I am doing play-by-play, you know. And what they were thinking? That's what I was thinking, what they thought of me."

Along with his famed broadcasting career, Uecker played six seasons in the majors as a catcher for the Braves, Cardinals and Phillies. He was a career .200 hitter -- his biggest hit being a home run off Sandy Koufax, a moment Uecker says he always apologized to the Los Angeles Dodgers Hall of Famer for.

The Brewers have honored him with two statues, one that's outside American Family Field and another in the back row of the terrace level, a nod to the old Miller Lite commercial in which he said, "I must be in the front row!" as he was escorted to the back of a stadium.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Tearful Jabeur overcomes breathing problems to win

Published in Tennis
Wednesday, 15 January 2025 21:29

Jabeur, 30, has dropped down to 39th in the world rankings after injury problems last year prevented her from competing at the US Open and Paris Olympics.

She ended her 2024 season in September, returning to action at the beginning of this year and suggested the long spell away had caused her asthma problems to resurface.

"Having taken off a lot [of time] didn't help. I think it provoked it even more," she said.

"I think I will have to find a way to feel better the next two days, which I am hoping to do because this started kind of two days or three days ago. I feel like it got worse for some reason."

Jabeur will face American eighth seed Emma Navarro, who beat China's Wang Xiyu 6-3 3-6 6-4, in the next round.

"I'm really just taking it one minute at a time and see how it's going to go, but definitely I'm doing everything that I can to be ready," said Jabeur.

"I don't want to be greedy just after coming back from an injury. Sometimes I get angry because I feel like I'm getting back there, but every time something happens."

Meanwhile, 2022 Wimbledon champion Elena Rybakina beat 17-year-old American wildcard Iva Jovic 6-0 6-3 to seal her 50th Grand Slam match win.

Jovic was the youngest woman in the second round of the draw but struggled against 2023 Australian Open finalist Rybakina, who is ranked 184 places above Jovic.

The Kazakh will face Ukrainian 32nd seed Dayana Yastremska, who reached the semi-finals last year as a qualifier, in the third round.

Fritz to give 67,000 prize money to LA fire victims

Published in Tennis
Wednesday, 15 January 2025 23:32

Fourth seed Taylor Fritz said he is going to donate his first-round prize money from the Australian Open to support victims from the Los Angeles wildfires.

The fires, which began on 7 January, have killed at least 25 people and are being marked as the most destructive in the city's history.

After beating Chilean qualifier Cristian Garin to reach the third round on Thursday, American Fritz pledged his 132,000 Australian dollars (67,000) first-round prize.

"I just want everyone to stay safe, it's insane what happened," the 27-year-old said.

"I'm going to be donating my first round prize money to LA wildfire relief funds.

"It's the least I can do. Southern California is my home and LA was my home for a very long time, so I'm just doing what I can possibly do to help."

Fritz, who lost to Jannik Sinner in last year's US Open final, wrote "LA" and drew a love heart on a camera lens after his 6-2 6-1 6-0 over Garin in Melbourne.

The world number four will face French veteran Gael Monfils in the third round.

Four-time Grand Slam champion Naomi Osaka revealed on Monday that the wildfires were just three blocks from her home.

Coco Gauff, Jessica Pegula and Iga Swiatek also dedicated their first-round wins to LA and the firefighters who have been tackling the fires.

Raducanu 'pushes past pain' to set up Swiatek clash

Published in Tennis
Thursday, 16 January 2025 00:03

Having pulled out of her season-opening event in Auckland after suffering a back spasm, Raducanu had not played since mid-November before her first-round win over Ekaterina Alexandrova.

Raducanu struggled with her second serve against the Russian 26nd seed, hitting 15 double faults which she put down to a remodelled serve and early tournament nerves.

Another on her first service point against Anisimova was not an encouraging start.

Although she quickly stemmed the flow, Raducanu's serve was regularly punished by the American's explosive hitting.

But Anisimova - who reached the French Open semi-finals as a 17-year-old in 2019 and is re-establishing herself after taking a mental health break from the sport in 2023 - also had issues with her serve and handed over the opening set with a double fault.

At the start of the second set, there were further signs of Raducanu's back issue having an effect.

Afterwards, Raducanu said she had not "fully investigated" whether it was related to the back spasm.

"When you haven't played a match in so long, then to have two really physical ones, I think small niggles are going to come up here and there," she added.

"I'm just hoping that it is that."

After stretching out the area between points, three double faults handed over another break and Raducanu called the trainer when she lost serve again for 3-0.

The physiological, and perhaps psychological, boost helped her immediately.

Borthwick backed to repeat Tigers rebuild with England

Published in Rugby
Thursday, 16 January 2025 00:08

England's extraordinary 42-37 defeat by the Wallabies in November was said to have Borthwick's side "battling to keep fans onside", according to BBC Sport's rugby union correspondent Chris Jones at the time.

Van Poortvliet, who is among five Leicester players called up by Borthwick for the upcoming Six Nations, says the public perception of the team differs greatly from those within the set-up.

And with his previous experience playing under Borthwick, having been part of the Tigers side he revived as a Premiership force, the 23-year-old is adamant that success will eventually come.

"Obviously results haven't been what we wanted in the last year, but I think it is similar to when we were almost into our second year at Tigers," Van Poortvliet said.

"He has a lot more time with us, so you get the changes quicker, but when we finished sixth in the table [in Borthwick's first full season] for half that year we were on the wrong ends of results and then by the end of the year we got more of a run together.

"It was close, the performances were there and we were just off it. And that's how I see it with England - we are so close.

"It can seem to the media or be seen by fans that you are miles off it, but it is really close and I'm sure this Six Nations we will work even harder and Steve will push us hard and keep us working on what we need to improve on.

"I have full faith that we will be able to turn those results around and be able to push forward to have a more successful campaign."

McDavid passes Kurri for 2nd on Oilers' points list

Published in Hockey
Wednesday, 15 January 2025 22:31

ST. PAUL, Minn. -- Connor McDavid continues setting records and moving up scoring lists.

McDavid had two goals and an assist in the Edmonton Oilers' 5-3 win against the Minnesota Wild on Wednesday night, passing Jari Kurri for second all time in points in Edmonton history. McDavid, a three-time Hart Trophy winner for league MVP and five-time scoring champion, now has 1,044 points in his 10-year career and trails only Wayne Gretzky on the franchise list.

Kurri had 1,043 points in his 10 years with the Oilers, playing on a line with Gretzky for much of it. Gretzky, the NHL's all-time leading scorer, had 1,669 points in nine seasons in Edmonton.

"Quite a remarkable feat," Oilers coach Kris Knoblauch said. "For him to go up the scoring list as quickly as he has, and within an organization that has had so many significant players. I've seen so many remarkable things from him. He's a tremendous player and great teammate. I said I wouldn't be surprised anymore just because he surprises you so often over these years, but it's a nice feat for him and the guys are very proud of him."

McDavid's second goal was of the highlight variety. He shot the puck from a tough angle, lifting it over Minnesota goalie Filip Gustavsson without much room.

McDavid didn't speak to reporters after the game. He was involved in a collision with Minnesota forward Marcus Johansson in the second period in which McDavid's elbow hit Johansson in the face. There was no penalty called, but it drew the ire of the Wild.

Gavi: Barcelona's Yamal best in world after Messi

Published in Soccer
Wednesday, 15 January 2025 21:55

Barcelona midfielder Gavi says Lamine Yamal is the best player in the world after Lionel Messi following the teenager's devastating showing in Wednesday's 5-1 Copa del Rey win over Real Betis.

Yamal scored one, created two and had another goal ruled out for offside as Barça eased into Monday's quarterfinal draw.

The 17-year-old has now scored nine times this season and laid on 13 assists for his teammates in 24 appearances.

"Yes, he is," Gavi told reporters when asked if Yamal is already the best player in the game. "Well, after Lionel Messi, he's the best."

Yamal, who led Spain to European Championship success last summer, finished eighth in the Ballon d'Or last year and also claimed the Kopa Trophy and the Golden Boy award, prizes given to the best young player in the world.

He has long since established himself as a regular in Barça's first team, clocking up over 70 appearances already, and was a nuisance for Betis all night on Wednesday.

After Gavi had opened the scoring, Yamal's brilliant lobbed pass set up Jules Koundé for Barça's second. The winger then set up Kounde again, only for the goal to be ruled off for offside after a lengthy VAR check.

Yamal thought he had added Barça's third after the break, only for a VAR review to once again cancel out the effort for offside, before a brilliant solo run from the edge of his own box led to Raphinha scoring.

Substitute Ferran Torres scored Barça's fourth before Yamal finally got his goal, finishing well after being fed by Fermín López. Vitor Roque, on loan at Betis from Barça, scored a late consolation from the penalty spot.

"You know, Gavi's very emotional, so I say yes as well," Barça coach Hansi Flick said in a news conference when asked if he agreed with Gavi's take on Yamal. "You can see it. I think in great matches you see big talent and he's showed it many times. He's on a really good way. But we have to take care about him."

After a disappointing end to 2024, Barça have now started 2025 with four straight wins, including Sunday's 5-2 demolition of Real Madrid in the Spanish Supercopa final.

Flick wants his players to now take that form into LaLiga, where they have fallen six points behind leaders Atlético Madrid and five behind Real.

"For us, today was very important after the big win against Real Madrid," the German said. "It was very good to see how all the team come back because we travel [back from Saudi Arabia] and we train only yesterday.

"So it's good to see this, how we play today, the performance from the beginning. We controlled the game and this is really great to see how they do.

"The big goal [is to play like this in LaLiga]. We are looking match to match, of course Saturday is the next one against Getafe. We want to play and be ready for that and win."

Durbar Rajshahi have promised to pay their local players on Thursday, a day after the players boycotted training in Chattogram to protest the non-payment of fees by the franchise. Jayed Ahmed, the operations in-charge of Rajshahi, said in a late-night video statement on Wednesday that they spoke with BCB president Faruque Ahmed and assured him that the unpaid dues would be cleared.

Bangladesh Premier League franchises are supposed to pay 50% of a player's total payment before the start of the tournament, 25% during the tournament and the rest of the 25% after the tournament is over. Rajshahi however didn't pay the local players their first installment even two weeks into the tournament, which began on December 30.

After the players' demonstration, BCB chief Faruque held a meeting with his board of directors. He also spoke to the Rajshahi owner Shafique Rahman, captain Anamul Haque and other cricketers.

"There's no doubt that they will receive payment on January 16," Jayed said. "We express regret at not being able to make the payments on time. There's no denying the fact. This shouldn't have happened. The management has decided to pay 25% payment in cash. We will pay another 25% in checks.

"Our owner spoke to the BCB president on the phone. I met him in person. We had a cordial conversation. He wanted to understand the situation. We expressed our regret for the payment delay. We promised him that we will make the payments tomorrow."

Jayed said some of the cheques bounced because the bank couldn't clear the payment without confirming with Shafique on the phone.

"You will remember that the day our owner's wife went to the ground, she got hit by a ball, she suffered a fracture. She was taken to Bangkok for treatment. Our owner was with her. We had given the cheque beforehand, so our owner told me to inform the players that the cheques won't be submitted since he was not in the country.

"Otherwise the bank won't get me on the phone. We told this to all the cricketers but one or two of them submitted the check. They forgot about the owner being in Bangkok."

Rajshahi had made the 25% payment to their overseas players and coaching staff. The side will take on Khulna Tigers in their seventh game in Chattogram on January 17.

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