
I Dig Sports
Fox anticipates 'special team' with Spurs, Wemby

ATLANTA -- Holding his form at the end of a shot, new San Antonio Spurs point guard De'Aaron Fox threw up both arms in exasperation upon learning the rules of a new shooting game he was playing with Stephon Castle.
That interaction took place at morning shootaround.
But the learning curve steepens later Wednesday at State Farm Arena, where Fox will make his Spurs debut against the Atlanta Hawks alongside generational star Victor Wembanyama.
"It's a very unique opportunity," Fox said. "Not many guys come around like that. And I think it's not just him, but everybody else. With the way they're built, with the athleticism, with the length that they have and also the youth, I just felt like this could be a special team. I felt like the fit would be spectacular, and I feel like I have a lot of years left to play. Some people say you kind of expedited [San Antonio's development] process. But you look at a team like [Oklahoma City], where outside of Shai [Gilgeous-Alexander] and I think outside of [Alex Caruso], everybody else is pretty much on a rookie contract. I feel like we can do the same thing."
The Spurs officially acquired Fox from the Sacramento Kings on Monday as part of a three-team trade involving several players and draft picks. Fox learned the deal was done Sunday as he sat in a hotel room in Minnesota playing Call of Duty: Warzone with a friend ahead of the Kings' matchup against the Timberwolves.
"I got the call from [Kings co-owner Vivek Ranadive], [general manager] Monty West, Paul Johnson. Everybody ended up coming into my room, and we talked about it," Fox said. "But from that point on, I've been in contact with basically everybody in the Spurs organization and it has been great. It's been great since it happened, and I'm ready to get on the court."
Fox mentioned receiving a text from a member of the Spurs organization on Monday, as he watched stagnant offense down the stretch in Memphis sink the club in a 128-109 loss to the Grizzlies. The organization believes Fox alleviates many of the issues faced by San Antonio in that defeat.
"This is kind of what we missed," the text read, according to Fox, who added, "[San Antonio was] going through some of those dry spells offensively. Just adding another guy who could put the ball in the basket, who can get downhill and create for others, I feel like will help with that."
Veteran point guard Chris Paul agreed and has explained to Fox that one of the obstacles this young Spurs team will face will involve the team learning to flip plays to accommodate for the fact that Fox is left-handed.
"Excited to see what it looks like," Paul said. "I've known Fox for a while. To get a chance to play alongside him, it's going to be a lot of fun."
Fox, 27, has averaged 25.0 points, 6.1 assists and 5.0 rebounds this season. Over the past three seasons, the eighth-year veteran has ranked in the top three in clutch time field goals, and he joins a Spurs squad that owns a record this season of 9-11 in clutch time games.
Wembanyama described the new addition as "a player that disrupts a lot of the opponent's game plan."
But in his Spurs debut, Fox just wants to fit in with his new team.
"Just try to get comfortable as much as I can with all the playcalls, all the terminology [and have teammates] try to get comfortable with me," Fox said. "What this team struggles with [are] some of the things that I can bring: more self-creation outside of Vic, being able to touch the paint, get into the teeth of the defense, being able to collapse defenses. I feel like even in games where I haven't played well, I still command attention. [With San Antonio] not losing a rotational piece [in the trade], I feel like we can be much better [as the season progresses]."
Sources: Bucks trade Middleton, land Kuzma

The Bucks have traded Khris Middleton to the Wizards, ending his tenure as one of their franchise cornerstones in a multiplayer deal that sends Kyle Kuzma to Milwaukee, sources told ESPN's Shams Charania.
The Bucks also sent rookie guard AJ Johnson, their first-round draft selection last year, and a pick swap to Washington, which dealt forward Patrick Baldwin Jr. and second-round draft compensation to Milwaukee, sources told Charania.
Middleton, 33, spent the past 11-plus seasons in Milwaukee and was one of the foundational players on the Bucks' championship team in 2021.
But he has been hampered by injuries in recent years and continues to recover from offseason surgery on both ankles, which sidelined him for the first 21 games of this season and has limited his production -- his 12.6 points per game is his lowest scoring average since 2013-14.
Middleton is owed $31.7 million this season and has a player option for next year worth $34 million. Kuzma is making $23.5 million this season, but his salary drops to $21.4 million next season, followed by $19.4 million in the final year of his deal.
To help Milwaukee build out its roster, Kuzma is reducing a portion of the trade bonus in his contract, sources told ESPN's Bobby Marks. The savings drops Milwaukee below the second apron, which will give the Bucks more flexibility to improve their roster.
The Bucks can now aggregate salaries to make a trade, which they were previously restricted in doing under the collective bargaining agreement. But to achieve that flexibility, the Bucks traded their longest-tenured player, a longtime running mate to franchise superstar Giannis Antetokounmpo.
Middleton rose from G League player to NBA All-Star on the strength of his ability to play well off Antetokounmpo. The three-time All-Star averaged over 20 points four times in a five-year stretch that began with the 2017-18 season and ran through the 2021-22 campaign. He co-starred with Antetokounmpo and Jrue Holiday to lead Milwaukee to its first NBA title in 50 years with a six-game Finals victory over the Phoenix Suns to cap the 2020-21 post-bubble season.
But after the championship run, knee injuries slowed Middleton, as he hyperextended his knee during the 2021-22 regular season before suffering an MCL sprain in his left knee during the playoffs. He missed the start of the following season while recovering from offseason wrist surgery, then missed an additional 18 straight games during the year with knee soreness.
The ankle surgeries in the offseason delayed Middleton's season debut until December, and he has appeared in 23 games since, starting in seven.
Middleton owns the Bucks franchise record for career 3-pointers with 1,382. He had 12,586 points with Milwaukee to rank as the franchise's third-leading scorer, behind Antetokounmpo and Kareem Abdul-Jabbar.
He ranks second in team history in games played (735) and minutes played (23,039) -- behind Antetokounmpo -- and third in assists (2,990).
Kuzma, 29, is averaging 15.2 points and 5.8 rebounds on 42% shooting this season, the lowest percentage of his career. He injects some youth to a Bucks roster that features three core players -- Antetokounmpo, Damian Lillard and Brook Lopez -- in their 30s.
Kuzma, who is 6-foot-9, also can play in the frontcourt next to Antetokounmpo in Milwaukee's small-ball lineups. However, he has struggled throughout his career shooting from the outside; he is a career 33% 3-point shooter, including a career-low 28% this season.
Kuzma signed a four-year, $102 million deal with Washington in July 2023, a contract that came after he averaged 21.2 points and 7.2 rebounds in 64 games. He has had a strong defensive season, according to ESPN Research, which tracked opponents shooting 42.7% against him this season. That falls within the top 25 players with at least 250 field goal attempts.
Johnson, 20, has not played much for the Bucks as a rookie and has spent most of the season in the G League.
Baldwin, 22 and raised in Wisconsin, has also been used sparingly, appearing in 22 games for the Wizards this season.
Rangers to add Andrus to Hall; statue for Beltre

ARLINGTON, Texas -- Two-time World Series shortstop Elvis Andrus, who has started more games at one position than any player in Texas Rangers franchise history, will be inducted into the team's Hall of Fame this summer.
The Rangers also will unveil and dedicate a bronze statue of Hall of Fame third baseman Adrian Beltré on Aug. 22 before a game against Cleveland.
The Rangers said Wednesday that Andrus will be the 27th member of the Hall of Fame that was established in 2003. Andrus will go in during a ceremony June 28 before a game against Seattle.
Andrus started 1,605 games at shortstop for Texas over 12 seasons, from his big league debut at age 20 in 2009 until he was traded to Oakland at the start of spring training in 2021. He was part of the Rangers' first two World Series teams in 2010 and 2011. He hit .274 for them, and his franchise-record 305 stolen bases are 133 more than any other player.
He also ranks top three in team history with his 1,652 total games, 6,366 at-bats, 983 hits and 48 triples.
After not playing last season, Andrus officially retired as a Ranger on Sept. 6. He remained with the Athletics until being traded to the Chicago White Sox during the 2022 season and played with them through 2023.
He will work as a pregame and postgame analyst for select televised games on the new Rangers Sports Network this season.
Beltré was a first-ballot induction last year into the Baseball Hall of Fame. The Rangers retired his No. 29 jersey in 2019 and this summer will unveil his statue outside Globe Life Field, where there are already statues of Hall of Fame players Nolan Ryan and Iván "Pudge" Rodríguez.

Sweden selected Rickard Rakell of the Pittsburgh Penguins to its roster for the upcoming 4 Nations Face-Off, replacing injured Vegas Golden Knights forward William Karlsson.
Swedish national team coach Sam Hallam announced the roster update Tuesday. His team also recently added Philadelphia's Samuel Ersson to fill in for injured New Jersey goaltender Jacob Markstrom.
Rakell, 31, leads his NHL club with 23 goals and ranks second with 45 points in 53 games this season. Karlsson is listed as week to week with a lower-body injury.
"'Raks' has just, quietly, had a really strong season," Penguins coach Mike Sullivan, who will also be behind the bench for the U.S., told reporters in Pittsburgh. "He's playing the game the right way. He's playing on both sides of the puck. He has a hardness to his game. He's stiff on the puck. He's physical, he's willing to block shots. He's playing defense. The offensive side, everybody sees. But he's committed to a lot of the subtleties that, on our mind, adds to winning. So, we couldn't be happier for him. We think he's so deserving."
Sweden's top international rival, Finland, recently made two replacements on its blue line after Dallas' Miro Heiskanen was injured and Toronto's Jani Hakanpaa ruled out. Heiskanen underwent knee surgery and is now considered month-to-month, Stars coach Peter DeBoer said.
Buffalo's Henri Jokiharju and the New York Rangers' Urho Vaakanainen took their places.
The United States has a couple of situations to watch with Vancouver's Quinn Hughes and Columbus' Zach Werenski banged up and missing game action.
"He's not playing tonight," Blue Jackets coach Dean Evason said in Buffalo of Werenski. "We'll continue to evaluate same as we do with everybody that's hurt or injured. We'll evaluate it and move forward."
Canucks coach Rick Tocchet said after his team's overtime loss Monday night that Hughes "wanted to gut it out but not the smartest play to play him." Tocchet said Hughes was also out Tuesday night against Colorado.
Canada must still select a replacement for Alex Pietrangelo after the two-time Stanley Cup champion and 2014 Olympic gold medalist withdrew to tend to an ailment and prepare for the rest of the season with Vegas. Drew Doughty of the Los Angeles Kings, also a two-time Cup winner and part of Canada's Sochi team 11 years ago, is considered among the candidates to take Pietrangelo's spot, though the 35-year-old has only been back playing for a week since returning from a broken left ankle.
Practices for the 4 Nations Face-Off begin on Feb. 10, with game action on Feb. 12, Feb. 13 and Feb. 15 in Montreal before play shifts to Boston for the end of round-robin and the championship. The NHL-run tournament is taking the place of All-Star Weekend and is occurring as a slimmed-down version of a World Cup of Hockey a year before the 2026 Milan Olympics.

Mikel Arteta has described Kai Havertz as a genetic "powerhouse" and backed the Germany international to compensate for Arsenal's failure to sign a forward in January.
The Gunners made no secret of their desire add an attacking player in the midseason window following injuries to Bukayo Saka and Gabriel Jesus but were unsuccessful after having a 40 million ($49.9m) bid rejected by Aston Villa for Ollie Watkins.
Jesus is set to be sidelined for the rest of the season after undergoing knee surgery while Saka is not expected back until next month at the earliest, putting more focus on Havertz to play a key role as Arsenal challenge on three fronts.
Ahead of Wednesday's Carabao Cup semifinal second leg against Newcastle, Arteta backed Havertz -- a 65m signing from Chelsea in 2023 -- to handle the workload, which could theoretically mean starting every game for the rest of the season.
"I don't know ... it is a possibility [he could start every game]," Arteta said. "Maybe we go through that scenario and he scores another 15 or 18 goals? Can you imagine? That's a good scenario.
"Genetically, he is a powerhouse. He is so well-built. He is a player that anything you ask him, he is happy to do: to run in zone six, to be very robust, to make long distances. His body absorbs everything. And then he really looks after himself.
"When you see the professional, how he lives his life, it is immaculate. He does more than any other player there. That is not a coincidence. And then I think he is so intelligent.
"He knows what is good for him and what is not. We know how to manage him and we believe that when he says something it is for the right reason, not because he wants to avoid something. When something works, don't touch him."
Havertz has scored 15 goals and registered five assists in 33 games this season but has faced criticism for a series of bad misses, particularly during the period when Arsenal won just once in five games last month, including a 2-0 first-leg defeat to Newcastle.
"He has played a lot of football but his robustness, his availability is unbelievable," Arteta continued.
"When you ask him he feels better when he is playing every three days. Against Girona for example, we gave him a rest. And then he felt fresher.
"He then had a very demanding game physically against Manchester City for the role that he had to do. We will see how they are. Players give you a lot of information but if you are playing well and scoring goals, all this helps."
Arteta also claimed Arsenal will soon appoint a permanent sporting director to replace Edu, who resigned in November and is set to take up a prominent role leading the multi-club model spearheaded by Nottingham Forest owner Evangelos Marinakis after completing six months of gardening leave.
Sources have told ESPN that the Gunners have now identified a shortlist of candidates to consider alongside interim sporting director Jason Ayto, who stepped up following Edu's exit.
"The decision I think will be done relatively quickly, whether it's Jason or somebody else I don't know but I think that decision will be done quite early," Arteta added.

Manchester United defender Tyrell Malacia has completed a loan move to Eredivisie side PSV Eindhoven, the club confirmed on Tuesday.
Malacia was the first signing of Erik ten Hag's two-and-a-half year tenure at United. He joined from Feyenoord in a 13 million ($16m) deal in July 2022.
However, the Netherlands defender was unable to hold down a regular starting spot and had an extended period on the sidelines with a knee injury, holding him to 47 appearances in all competitions.
Malacia's loan departure comes two days after United completed the signing of left-back Patrick Dorgu from Serie A club Lecce
Sources told ESPN that United agreed a fee of 30m ($31.1m) plus a possible 5m in performance-related bonuses with Lecce.
Konstas leaves Sri Lanka to play Sheffield Shield

With Head making a speedy half-century to set the tone for Australia's big win, Konstas was set to miss selection again for the second match beginning Thursday.
Konstas trained with the team at their main session in Galle on Tuesday before packing his bags to fly back to Australia in the evening, Cricket Australia confirmed.
Australia selectors determined the 19-year-old would be better served lining up for NSW against Queensland on Saturday at the Gabba - a Test venue at which he has never played - than watching from the sidelines in Galle. The selectors value players getting experience at home Test venues. It was part of the reason Nathan McSweeney got the nod at the start of the Border-Gavaskar series, as Konstas has not played at either the Gabba or Adelaide Oval.
Australia will have adequate concussion substitutes in Konstas' absence, with 15 remaining in the squad as well as development player Tanveer Sangha.
The tour was Konstas' first with the Australian squad to the subcontinent, but he previously attended development camps in Chennai and Sri Lanka.
He may have an additional opportunity to hone his skills against spin with an Australia A tour of India in the works for later in 2025.
After his famous start to life as a Test player, the Sri Lanka tour may have shaped as underwhelming for Konstas, who missed selection and was then struck down by a stomach bug.
But Head said Konstas would have learnt from the touring experience.
"Sam's a big part of where we're going, there's no doubt about it," Head said. "Disappointed that he missed out on the first Test but great for him to be here, great for him to be experiencing conditions."
Head expected Konstas would return to the top of the batting order when Australia travelled to England for the World Test Championship Final against South Africa in June.
"Most likely I'll go back in the middle order and Sam will open," Head said.
Green hopeful of Shield return and county cricket ahead of WTC final

The 25-year-old underwent the same back surgery that many fast bowlers around the world have had including Jasprit Bumrah and WA and club teammate Jason Behrendorff, who he consulted with both before and after undergoing the procedure in Christchurch. Green also caught up with former New Zealand fast bowler Shane Bond while recovering in New Zealand, with Bond one of the first to undergo the radical procedure that includes having screws and a wire inserted into the spine.
Green's recovery is well ahead of schedule. He was back running in early January and has been batting for a number of weeks. He is not going to return to bowling until later in the year, well after the WTC final and the three-Test tour of the Caribbean, with the long-term aim to have him bowling without restrictions for the 2025-26 Ashes series which starts in late November.
From very early in the recovery phase there were hopes in Western Australia that Green could be fit to play a Shield game as a batter in late February or early match. While speaking at the Cricket Australia Awards on Monday night in Melbourne, after winning the Community Impact Award for his work with Kidney Health Australia, Green confirmed that he was eyeing a possible return in WA's final Shield game of the home and away season against Victoria at the WACA ground on March 15. WA is also in the mix to play in a fourth straight Shield final which begins on March 26.
He would need clearance from CA's medical staff to be approved to play in that game. Green has to have scans on his back at regular intervals post surgery to monitor his progression.
Beyond that, Green is understood to be open to a stint in county cricket in England prior to the WTC final. There are eight rounds of championship fixtures scheduled in April and May, the last of which begins on May 23 before the WTC final starts on June 11.
CA would only likely approve him for a short stint if a club was keen to sign him under those restrictions given he would not be capable of bowling.
Green's return to fitness will create a squeeze in Australia's top order. He made 174 not out batting at No.4 in his second last Test against New Zealand in March last year but Steve Smith has returned to No. 4 in style, scoring three centuries in his last four Test matches against India and Sri Lanka.
Cummins 'heavily unlikely' for Champions Trophy, Smith or Head to lead Australia

Cummins missed the Test tour of Sri Lanka due to the birth of his second child, but he has also been nursing the ankle issue that had flared up after a heavy workload in the Border-Gavaskar Trophy.
Australia's ODI players, who are not on the Test tour, are due to fly out to Sri Lanka on Thursday but McDonald revealed on Wednesday morning that Cummins was unlikely to be among them.
"Pat Cummins hasn't been able to resume any type of bowling so he's heavily unlikely, so that would mean that we do need a captain," McDonald told SEN. "Steve Smith and Travis Head are the two that we've been having conversations with while we've been building out that Champions Trophy team along with Pat back home. They'll be the two that we look at for that leadership post.
"They're the two obvious ones. Steve has done a great job here in the [first] Test match. He's done some good work in one-day international cricket across the journey as well. So it's between those two.
"But, as I said, Patty is hugely unlikely, which is a bit of shame, and we've also got Josh Hazlewood, who is battling [to be fit] at the moment. So that medical information will land over the next couple of days and we'll be able to shore that up and let everyone know the direction."
Hazlewood is understood to be dealing with a hip issue after recovering from the side and calf injuries that saw him miss three of the five Tests against India and the Test tour of Sri Lanka.
Tanveer Sangha has been flown to Sri Lanka ahead of the second Test for development purposes but McDonald confirmed he could play a part in the two ODIs in Colombo before the team flies to the Champions Trophy
Australia's selectors will have a challenge cobbling an XI together for the first ODI against Sri Lanka on February 12 given there is only one travel day scheduled between the fifth day of the second Test and the first ODI, with ODI squad members Head, Smith, Marnus Labuschagne, Josh Inglis, Alex Carey and Mitchell Starc all set to play in the Test match. But there may be extra days to recover if the Test ends quickly on a surface that already appears much drier than the previous one.
Red-ball specialist Bedingham 'still trying to learn' his trade in T20s

"I've found it quite tough. But I also feel that the bowlers that we played against have been quite good as well, so it's probably a combination of both," he said. "But speaking to the guys that played the first two seasons, they've definitely said that the wickets have played a bit tougher. I've spoken to Russ(ell Domingo, Sunrisers' batting coach) and he said that in India, and England, those types of countries are probably a lot easier to bat in the first six overs, whereas in South Africa, you probably have to be a bit more circumspect. So especially in this tournament where the wickets have played quite tough, I think those first six overs have been crucial. And I think a lot of the teams, including us, have probably struggled in those first six overs."
"I've basically tried to just play one-day cricket in those first three or four overs," Bedingham said. "Obviously, if we have wickets in hand, then you can maybe push the tempo a bit but I've either been out in the first couple overs or we've three or four wickets in the first three overs, so it's been quite tough to kick on and try and hit quick runs. But in saying that we're in the Eliminator, so hopefully we can start off well and win that game."
Sunrisers are the only team to have won the SA20, and they've done it twice under the same coach Adi Birrell and captain Markram and seemed to have mastered the recipe for success. Now, it's just about whether all the ingredients can come together to do it again.