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Will Australia bring in Starc for Boland at Lord's?
"We'd seen the way they go about it, they are ultra-aggressive," McDonald said. "But I think Scott Boland, that match-up probably surprised us how aggressive they were against Scott. So that's something we can look at and find better ways through."
Boland did dismiss Zak Crawley twice the game and was threatening under gloomy skies on the third evening, but for the first time in his Test career he was largely treated with disdain.
McDonald suggested that with a degree of hindsight about how conditions played out at Edgbaston, where the pitch was largely flat and slow, Starc could have had an impact.
"I think the fact the line and length potentially over left-arm swing, and we didn't feel as though we may have got swinging conditions here," he said. "It's really down to a gut feel at selection, it can be critiqued any way you want.
"We feel as though, looking back on it, potentially Mitch could have played a role, there's no doubt about that. But we felt like when we went into the game with all the information that we had, we made the best decision.
"We took Starcy on that journey, he understands that and he understands the fact there are four more Test matches and he's got a pivotal part to play within that."
One of the knock-on effects of England playing at such a rapid tempo is that the fast bowlers did not clock up massive workloads at Edgbaston. Captain Pat Cummins sent down the most with 32.2 overs and Hazlewood was used for 25 alongside Boland's 26. Allrounder Cameron Green bowled just eight.
McDonald said there was a plan mapped out of which bowlers may suit certain venues but that it could also be adjusted on the fly.
"Our bowlers didn't bowl as many overs as we probably expected in this Test match," he said. "There's a longer turnaround, so you can have a pencil plan but the reality is you see how they pull up, what the conditions are when we get to Lord's, and you make a decision with what's in front of you. The issue is we've got great depth in the fast bowling, and that's one of our great strengths."
On the field, Australia played a largely defensive game during the opening Test, operating with three or four sweepers for large periods and sometimes only a slip and a gully. It was a tactic flagged before the series but came in for scrutiny which would likely have escalated had Cummins and Nathan Lyon not forged their match-winning stand. However, McDonald wasn't going to be drawn into judging one team's approach over another.
"I think it should be more a celebration," he said. "Two styles come together and produce a Test match like that. Certainly no vindication, we'll go about it our way and England will go about it their way and we'll see what happens at the end of the series.
"We're clear from the way that we play. I've suggested over the last 12-18 months it's pretty clear the way that we do go and we feel as though we've got some great strengths around that."
Andrew McGlashan is a deputy editor at ESPNcricinfo
Ponting: If Robinson hasn't learned already ... then he's a slow learner
On the third morning of the Test, Robinson removed Khawaja for 141, knocking back his off stump as Khawaja came down the pitch while looking to force the ball through the off side. Robinson celebrated by shouting towards Khawaja, and appeared to tell him to, "F*** off, you f***ing prick".
Ponting had remained tightlipped on the subject on commentary for Sky Sports for the remainder of the Test, but delivered some stern words to Robinson on ICC Review Podcast on Wednesday.
"As I said after Ollie Robinson said what he said, this England cricket team hasn't played against Australia, and they'll find out pretty quickly what playing Ashes cricket and playing against a good Australian cricket team is all about," Ponting said. "And if Robinson hasn't learned that already after last week, then he's a slow learner."
Robinson had even referenced Ponting during the same interaction, going to justify his actions citing the example of the former Australia captain.
"We've all seen Ricky Ponting, [and] other Aussies do the same to us," Robinson said. "Just because the shoe is on the other foot, it's not received well."
But Ponting shot back at Robinson, saying the latter would "learn pretty quickly" what it means to prick the Australians in an Ashes series.
"Some of the things he had to say - I mean he even brought my name into it, which I felt was a little bit unusual," Ponting said. "But for me, it's water off a duck's back. If he is sitting back thinking about me, then no wonder he bowled like the way that he did in that game, if he's worried about what I did 15 years ago.
"He'll learn pretty quickly that if you're going to talk to Australian cricketers in an Ashes series, then you want to be able to back it up with your skills."
However, Khawaja was unperturbed by what was apparently said to him by Robinson, claiming that he did not hear the bowler's send-off in the moment. The pair had a quiet exchange on the final day while Khawaja was batting, but the Australia opener said there was nothing in it.
"The other day, the crowd was so loud I had no idea," Khawaja said. "I got out and all I could hear was the Barmy Army. I didn't actually hear anything. Today there was nothing much in it. Just a bit of friendly banter."
"I've heard them say that before, that they're not 'results driven', but I don't believe that for a second," Ponting said. "This is an Ashes series; this is the biggest challenge that Ben Stokes has had in his career as a captain.
"I'm not copping that. I mean, if they're not results driven, they wouldn't be disappointed at all about losing. And it seemed to me last night; and he said it, that all his players were in pieces at the end of that game. So that means to me that they do care about losing, and you should.
"Winning Test matches is not an easy thing to do, and winning an Ashes Test is not easy. You don't want to be giving good cricket teams opportunities back into a game of Ashes cricket when you're in control of the game. England were in control of the game late on day one. So England presented Australia with an opportunity, and Australia made the most of it."
Former Australia and Queensland paceman Peter Allan dies aged 87
Allan had previously toured the Caribbean with Australia in 1965 but did not play a Test due to illness.
Remarkably, Allan also took 10 wickets in an innings in a Brisbane club game in March of 1966.
Allan's first-class career spanned a decade from 1959 to 1969. He took 206 wickets at 26.10, including 12 five-wicket hauls and three 10-wicket hauls in 57 matches.
His post-cricket career featured a variety of roles including with the Brisbane City Council, as a hotel publican and civil celebrant on Hamilton Island.
Queensland Cricket Chairman Chris Simpson honoured Allan upon his passing.
"Peter had great skill as a bowler which was also mixed with determination," Simpson said. "He typified that strike bowler role in the teams he played for. He served on the executive committee of the Queensland Cricket Association from 1985 to 1991 and was generous with his time and insights for any aspiring player who sought him out.
"His feat of taking 10 wickets in an innings remains a high point in Australian cricket. Peter made a wonderful contribution to cricket in Queensland and on behalf of Queensland Cricket, we thank him for his service to the game."
Wrexham learn fixtures for League Two return
Wrexham have learned their schedule for the upcoming 2023-24 campaign in League Two after securing promotion back to the English Football League (EFL) last season.
The Welsh club, owned by Hollywood stars Ryan Reynolds and Rob McElhenney, will start their EFL campaign with a home game against Milton Keynes Dons on Aug. 5.
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Wrexham will then face a three-game stretch in a week when they travel to AFC. Wimbledon (Aug. 12) before hosting Walsall (Aug. 15) and Swindon Town (Aug. 19).
Wrexham secured a fairytale return to the EFL following a 15-year absence as National League champions after ending the season with a record 111 points.
Notts County were Wrexham's closest rivals in the National League last season after finishing second and earned promotion to League Two through the playoffs.
In March, Wrexham edged County 3-2 in a dramatic game which saw former Manchester United and England goalkeeper save a 97th-minute penalty to set up his team for promotion.
Wrexham face an away trip to County on Oct. 28 before welcoming them to the Racecourse Ground on Feb. 17.
Before the start of the new season, Wrexham are set to play summer friendlies in the U.S., with matches scheduled against Chelsea in Chapel Hill, North Carolina, on July 19, LA Galaxy II at their home in Carson, California on July 22 and Manchester United in San Diego on July 25.
Meanwhile, Leeds United and Leicester City have learned their schedule for life in the Championship after relegation from the Premier League last season.
Leicester will be playing in the second-tier of English football for the first time since 2014 despite being crowned Premier League champions seven years ago.
They begin their 2023-24 campaign by welcoming Coventry City to the King Power Stadium on Aug. 6 before facing Cardiff City and Rotherham United the following week.
United States stars Tyler Adams and Brenden Aaronson start their Championship season at Leeds with a home game against Cardiff on Aug. 6.
Both clubs have still not appointed a permanent manager ahead of the new campaign as they look to bounce back to the Premier League.
PALM DESERT, Calif. -- Michael Vecchione scored off a rebound at 16:19 of overtime to give the Hershey Bears their 12th American Hockey League title, 3-2 over the expansion Coachella Valley Firebirds in Game 7 of the Calder Cup final Wednesday night.
Connor McMichael and Hendrix Lapierre scored for Hershey in the second period as the Washington Capitals' top affiliate overcame a 2-0 deficit to tie it. Hunter Shepard made 45 saves for the Bears.
Hershey coach Todd Nelson won his second Calder Cup after guiding Grand Rapids to the 2017 title. He joined Bun Cook and John Paddock as the only head coaches to win Calder Cups with two teams.
Defenseman Ryker Evans and captain Max McCormick scored for Coachella Valley and Joey Daccord made 35 saves. Seattle's top farm club, the Firebirds were the first to reach the final in their first season since the 2010 Texas Stars.
Evans opened the scoring at 4:41 of the first period, beating Shepard with a wrist shot off Andrew Poturalski's pass from behind the goal.
McCormick made it 2-0 24 seconds into the second taking a cross-ice feed from Kole Lind and beating Shepard through the legs from close range for his 14th goal of the playoffs. Evans also assisted.
With McCormick off for tripping, Hershey cut it to 2-1 on a power play on McMichael's goal with 6:08 left in the second. Mason Morelli got the puck across the crease for McMichael to jam in. Lapierre tied it with 2:51 remaining in the period, tipping Vincent Iorio's long shot past Daccord.
How U.S. Soccer's strange coaching search played out
In early January, roughly a week after Gregg Berhalter's contract as the United States men's soccer coach expired, Zinedine Zidane rejected an approach from the United States Soccer Federation (USSF) to be the next coach.
His lack of interest wasn't surprising given his résumé, but the USSF's pursuit felt instructive. It was a big swing.
A World Cup winner with France as a player, Zidane doesn't need much of an introduction. He established himself as an all-time great on the field and is among the sport's most respected managers, having guided Real Madrid to three straight UEFA Champions League titles from 2016 to 2018. If somehow the USFF had managed to land him, it would have been widely celebrated and set a positive tone for the lead-up to the World Cup on home soil in 2026.
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When that didn't happen, though, there was reason to believe it was someone in that mold -- accomplished at the sport's highest level -- the federation would continue to pursue. Call it basic logic, especially since in that same week, U.S. Soccer announced it had hired a law firm to investigate a domestic violence incident in which Berhalter admitted he had kicked his now-wife in 1991, when they were in college.
With all of this going on, the idea that Berhalter would be rehired seemed far-fetched, and that was before it became public that the parents of budding star Giovanni Reyna -- close friends with the Berhalter family for decades -- had attempted to orchestrate his downfall.
When the investigation was complete in March, its report showed that U.S. Soccer legend Claudio Reyna and his wife, Danielle, both threatened to reveal damaging information about Berhalter to U.S. Soccer officials during the World Cup as their son received limited playing time.
"Once this tournament is over, I can make one phone call and give one interview, and his cool sneakers and bounce passes will be gone," Danielle Reyna told a federation staff member, according to the report.
On Dec. 11, she did, informing then-sporting director Earnie Stewart of the incident. And at least for roughly six months, that call had the desired effect: Berhalter was out as USMNT coach.
That, of course, is no longer the case. Berhalter was reintroduced as the U.S. coach on Friday and will take the baton back from interim coach B.J. Callahan at the conclusion of the Gold Cup.
Whether Berhalter is the right coach can -- and will -- be debated ad nauseam, but what's not up for discussion is that his circuitous route back to the role was bizarre.
Few details on candidates, interview process
When Stewart departed to become the director of football at PSV Eindhoven in late January, U.S. Soccer announced it hired an outside agency, Sportsology, to head the search for his replacement, who would then be responsible for hiring the next head coach.
"Working with key U.S. Soccer leadership, Sportsology has also already begun a full review of U.S. Soccer's sporting department," the USSF announced in January. "The group will also analyze head coach candidates to accelerate the Sporting Director's hiring process."
It took three months before Matt Crocker, most recently the director of football operations at English club Southampton, was hired in April. In a Q&A after his hiring, Crocker said he'd conduct a series of interviews in June, narrow the list of candidates, and then another round in the middle of July.
At Berhalter's re-hiring news conference, Crocker said that a "worldwide" search had been conducted, adding: "I spoke to numerous candidates from guys that were [in roles] in the top leagues, coaches who have coached internationally previously."
Crocker also confirmed the number of candidates was in "double-digits" but did confirm any other names or if that second round of planned interviews had occurred. It's also unclear who of those interviewed were subjected to what U.S. Soccer described as a "battery of practical and psychological testing."
One candidate, Jesse Marsch, was presumably in the mix until the end given his agent, Ron Waxman, tweeted that the ex-Leeds United manager would will not take the USMNT job just hours before news leaked of Berhalter's return. Another candidate, ex-Arsenal star and recent Crystal Palace manager Patrick Vieira, had initial talks with the federation but sources told ESPN's Julien Laurensthat talks did not progress.
Oguchi Onyewu, recently hired as the federation's vice president of sporting, said Sunday on the Paramount+ Nations League pregame show that other names would not be divulged as a matter of confidentiality.
Sebastian Salazar tries to make sense of why Gregg Berhalter's return as USMNT coach isn't until after the Concacaf Gold Cup.
Did salary or budget play a role?
None of the known candidates represent the same type of ambition associated with the early approach for Zidane, which can be explained a few ways. What is most likely is that the U.S. job -- as desirable as it appears domestically, with a young, talented core and a home World Cup to prepare for -- still doesn't interest the sport's most accomplished coaches.
Then there's the budget. USSF CEO JT Batson said they had no salary restrictions, but a USSF source told ESPN in April that budget would play a role and, for example, something in the range of $10 million salary for a top-tier coach was unrealistic.
Multiple sources told ESPN's Jeff Carlisle the names of the other finalists were not circulated widely among the 23-person USSF board of directors, which approved the Berhalter hire, with only one member voting not to confirm.
Prior to the confirmation, multiple board members expressed concern about giving Berhalter a second World Cup cycle, perhaps primarily as a matter of principle. It's a common refrain all over the world that coaches can lose their effectiveness at the international level beyond one World Cup and that rotating in a fresh voice or perspective guards against that. Jurgen Klinsmann's second cycle with the U.S. supports that idea, but of the 16 teams that reached the 2022 World Cup knockout phases, 10 had either been with the team at the 2018 World Cup or served as the head coach previously.
Did the players want Berhalter back?
As most of the American soccer public dismissed the possibility of Berhalter's return, star Christian Pulisic had not. In an interview with ESPN in March, Pulisic admitted he was not always a fan of Berhalter, but eventually he came around.
"There were moments when -- he benched me. I hated him. I was so angry," Pulisic said. "But then the next game comes along and then I find myself in a better place.
"The way he handled a lot of situations, I have to give him a lot of credit. I think he created a team that was probably the best brotherhood family that I've been a part of. On the football side of things, when it came down to it in World Cup time, I think you could say a lot of people were impressed with what we did out on the field as well."
Pulisic was far from alone. Weston McKennie, Timothy Weah, Walker Zimmerman and DeAndre Yedlin among others all lauded the job Berhalter did in the past few weeks and months.
In Qatar, the U.S. advanced from the group without allowing a goal from open play before their 3-1 loss to the Netherlands in the round of 16. It was a strong showing by U.S. standards, especially considering it was using the youngest starting XI in the tournament. After the exit, negotiations for a contract extension with Berhalter were set to begin with the expectation that it was little more than a formality.
But when word leaked that Berhalter referenced Gio Reyna's poor attitude in Qatar (without naming him specifically) during a leadership summit, it changed everything. That's what prompted Danielle Reyna to finally go through with her threat, and once the USSF was made aware of the domestic violence allegation, it made the decision, if largely forced, to back away from extension talks.
"Whoever it is, I'm going to play and give a 100% and that's what I'm going to do," Pulisic told ESPN in March. "In my opinion, everything that happened with Gregg, first of all, was I think handled in an extremely childish manner. I think we all have seen what's been going on. I think it's childish, it's youth soccer, people complaining about playing time. I don't want us go in too far into that, but that's what we'll say.
"I think Gregg has been extremely unfortunate to even get into the position he is now [while he was out of contract]. Do I feel like we should just wait and wait? I don't think it's necessary because I don't feel we're in a phase like we were after, not qualifying four years ago or however many years ago for the last World Cup where we need a complete rebuild."
Gregg Berhalter hopes to foster a strong relationship with Gio Reyna in his return to the USMNT.
And what about Gio Reyna?
Pulisic's comments were made prior to Crocker's hiring, and it's impossible to quantify how much weight they carried, but had the players taken a firm stance that it was time for a new coach, it's hard to allow for the possibility that Berhalter would have been rehired.
"From day one, my job was to make sure that I engaged with the players, so they understood where we were and what type of process I was intending to take the candidates through to work through who the best candidate was ultimately coming out ... the other end," Crocker said. "And I kept them up to speed throughout the process."
Crocker never said specifically whether Gio Reyna was among those he consulted, and Berhalter said on Friday he has not spoken with Reyna since the World Cup.
"I'd certainly acknowledge that there's work to do and Gio is an important player to this team," Berhalter said. "He's an extremely talented individual, and I have the obligation and the commitment to coach him like I coach every other player and I want to get the best out of him. We want to get the best out of him and we know that if we can unlock his talents, he's going to be a game-changer for this program. So there's work to do, and part of it is working together with Matt and trying to rebuild a relationship that we know will be important moving forward."
Tough, potentially awkward conversations are sure to come. Reyna has addressed the situation publicly only once, in a December Instagram post, in which he expressed disappointment that events in a private team setting were made public and "extremely surprised that anyone on the U.S. men's team staff would contribute to it. Coach Berhalter has always said that issues that arise with the team will stay 'in house' so we can focus on team unity and progress."
His initial on-field response, however, couldn't have been better. Reyna played what might have been his most impressive half of soccer in a U.S. shirt during the Concacaf Nations League final against Canada on Sunday, assisting both goals in the 2-0 win -- one on a corner, one on a brilliantly weighted pass to new striker Folarin Balogun -- before leaving the game at halftime with an injury. His influence on the game was pronounced and he ran that game from central midfield, a role Berhalter never deployed him in.
"Meeting with me is not the priority [for Reyna]," Berhalter said Friday. "It's for him to get rest and prepare for the upcoming season. We'll have time to do that. It is a priority, but we'll have time to do that before the September window."
LSU stays alive in MCWS, set for Wake rematch
OMAHA, Neb. -- LSU staved off elimination from the Men's College World Series for a second time. And now the Tigers are right where they expected to be all along.
Cade Beloso hit a go-ahead three-run homer, freshman Griffin Herring pitched 4⅔ innings of shutout relief in his longest outing and LSU forced a second-bracket final with a 5-2 victory over No. 1 national seed Wake Forest on Wednesday night.
The winner of the rematch Thursday night will advance to play Florida in the best-of-three championship series that starts Saturday. The Gators clinched their spot with a 3-2 win over TCU.
"We expect to be playing important baseball in June," Tigers coach Jay Johnson said. "We play every game like we're playing important baseball in June. Like, the Tuesday on March 22 against McNeese is a playoff game to us. The thought process behind that is if you do that all year long, then you can just stay in character when you get to the postseason."
Wake Forest (54-11) will look to bounce back from its first loss in its eight NCAA tournament games. The Demon Deacons, who have not lost consecutive games this season, are trying to reach the championship round in their first MCWS appearance since the 1955 team won the national title.
"We'll come out ready to play tomorrow like we've done all year," Wake Forest coach Tom Walter said. "We've responded to adversity all year. Tomorrow will be no different."
LSU hopes to set up a rematch of the 2017 finals, which Florida won.
"It's the same game we've been playing since February," Beloso said. "We're going to go out there, have fun, we're going to compete to the best of our abilities and let the rest take care of itself. Everybody knows the scenario. But you don't have to put any more pressure on yourself."
The coaches didn't announce starting pitchers, but aces Paul Skenes of LSU and Rhett Lowder of Wake Forest were not ruled out.
The Deacons scored 75 runs and hit 19 homers in their first five NCAA tournament games, all played at home. They have just eight runs -- their fewest over three games since April 2021 -- and one homer at Charles Schwab Field, where the wind has blown in for three days. They're batting .198 here, and leading hitter Nick Kurtz is 0-for-9, while Justin Johnson is 0-for-12.
"We play in a pretty small ballpark, and the balls that usually go out there aren't going out here," Wake Forest's Pierce Bennett said. "We just need to adjust on keeping hard and low line drives. It's hard to do. Hitting's hard. You can't really intentionally do that all the time. But just focusing in, zeroing in on just hitting line drives, finding the holes."
The Tigers erased a 2-0 deficit in the third inning when Dylan Crews scored on a wild pitch to tie it before Beloso launched Seth Keener's 2-0 offering into the right-field bullpen. As Beloso approached the plate, he pulled his helmet off, chest-bumped Gavin Dugas and slapped Tre' Morgan's arm -- and all three then did cross-arm flexes in front of their celebrating dugout.
It was only the fourth homer surrendered by Keener in 69 innings this season.
Herring, who hadn't pitched since June 5 and had never gone more than three innings, steadied the Tigers after starter Javen Coleman and Blake Money combined to get just five outs.
The left-hander entered with LSU down two runs and held one of the country's top offenses scoreless.
"Pure adrenaline," Herring said. "This place is awesome. I think I kind of was able to feed off the adrenaline instead of letting it get to me, kind of like a steroid shot. Pretty cool."
Coach Johnson drew laughs when he interjected: "We'll make sure adrenaline is not on the NCAA banned substance list."
Herring allowed three hits, walked one and struck out six. He left with runners at the corners and one out in the sixth.
Gavin Guidry came on and struck out national home run co-leader Brock Wilken and Justin Johnson to end the threat. The Deacons got two runners on in the eighth before Riley Cooper, who shut out Tennessee over the last three innings on Tuesday, got Tommy Hawke to line out.
Cooper, who earned his second save in as many nights and third of the season, worked around a leadoff walk in the ninth to strike out Kurtz and Wilken and got Johnson to ground out to end the game and set up the winner-take-all bracket final.
"It's just another game," Bennett said. "Bottom line: We've been doing it all year. Haven't lost a series all year. Knock on wood on that one."
Middleton declines $40M option, will be free agent
Three-time All-Star forward Khris Middleton has declined his $40 million player option with the Milwaukee Bucks to become a free agent, his agents Mike Lindeman and Jeff Schwartz told ESPN's Adrian Wojnarowski.
A return to the Bucks on a new deal remains a possibility.
Injuries have plagued Middleton since the 2022 playoffs, when he missed Milwaukee's final 10 playoff games with a sprained MCL. He underwent left wrist surgery during last year's offseason, which sidelined him for the first 20 games of the 2022-23 season.
He returned on Dec. 2, 2022, and played six of seven games before missing 18 straight with right knee soreness.
Middleton, who turns 32 in August, underwent successful surgery on his right knee shortly after Milwaukee's first-round playoff exit to address the lingering issue. He averaged nearly 24 points and 6.2 assists in that playoff series, a five-game loss to the Miami Heat.
Middleton has been with the Bucks for 10 seasons, transitioning from role player to three-time All-Star and one of the faces of the franchise alongside Giannis Antetokounmpo. He had several big playoff performances in 2021 en route to the team's first NBA championship in 50 years.
Information from ESPN's Jamal Collier was included in this report.
Sources: Smart, Porzingis traded in 3-team deal
The Boston Celtics, Washington Wizards and Memphis Grizzlies agreed to a three-team trade late Wednesday night that sent center Kristaps Porzingis to the Celtics, guard Marcus Smart to the Grizzlies and guard Tyus Jones to the Wizards, sources told ESPN's Adrian Wojnarowski.
As part of the deal, Memphis is sending Boston its first-round pick in Thursday's draft -- the 25th overall selection -- as well as the Golden State Warriors' top-four-protected first-round pick in 2024, sources said, while the Celtics are sending the 35th pick in Thursday's draft to Washington. The Celtics are also sending forward Danilo Gallinari and center Mike Muscala to Washington as part of the deal, sources said.
The three-team deal came together in the minutes leading up to a midnight ET deadline for Porzingis to opt in to his $36 million player option for the 2023-24 season. With the deal completed, Porzingis did opt in, sources said.
The trade capped a long day of negotiations involving the Celtics and Wizards over a possible Porzingis deal, after the two teams first attempted to hammer out a three-team agreement with the LA Clippers that would've sent Malcolm Brogdon to Los Angeles, the 30th pick in the draft to the Wizards and Porzingis to the Celtics.
But when that deal fell apart, Boston pivoted to talks with Memphis, allowing this deal to come together just before the deadline.
For the Celtics, the deal presents a radical shift in what their team will look like.
Porzingis, who will turn 28 on Aug. 2, had arguably the best season of his NBA career this past year in Washington, averaging a career-high 23.2 points to go along with 8.4 rebounds, 2.7 assists and 1.5 blocks in 65 games for the Wizards. The fourth overall pick in the 2016 NBA draft by the Knicks was playing his first full season in Washington after the Wizards traded for him at the 2022 trade deadline, sending Spencer Dinwiddie and Davis Bertans to Dallas in exchange.
Now, he is off to Boston, where the Celtics are attempting to retool their roster to make another run at an 18th NBA championship this coming season, as Porzingis will give the Celtics an entirely different offensive dimension alongside stars Jayson Tatum and Jaylen Brown, in addition to the Celtics landing those two first-round selections.
Landing Porzingis was just the first of several big decisions ahead for the Celtics this summer, as Boston also can offer Brown, an All-Star forward, a five-year, $295 million contract extension this summer and has to sort out the future of restricted free agent forward Grant Williams.
Boston will also have to adjust to life without Smart, who has been the heart of the team throughout his nine years with the franchise, making him the longest-tenured player on the current roster in addition to being one of the league's best and most versatile perimeter defenders, which was recognized by his winning the 2022 Defensive Player of the Year award.
But all of the things that made Smart so valued in Boston are exactly what the Grizzlies will be looking for him to provide in Memphis, as they try to bounce back from last year's first-round exit against the Los Angeles Lakers. Smart, who averaged a career-high 6.3 assists last season for the Celtics, will also be more than capable of stepping into the starting point guard role for Memphis while Ja Morant is serving his suspension over the first 25 games of the season.
It had been anticipated that Jones was going to be the player filling in for Morant. Instead, Jones will now be the starting point guard in Washington, where new president of basketball operations Michael Winger continues to remake the team's roster.
This is the second significant trade the Wizards have made in the space of a few days, after completing the blockbuster deal to send Bradley Beal to the Phoenix Suns on Sunday for Chris Paul, Landry Shamet, several second-round picks and first-round pick swaps.
Meanwhile, sources told Wojnarowski on Tuesday that Washington forward Kyle Kuzma, one of the more intriguing free agents on the market this summer, declined his player option and will be an unrestricted free agent.
Overturned call costs Padres a night after Rangers
SAN FRANCISCO -- A play at home plate in a game between the San Diego Padres and San Francisco Giants was overturned on review Wednesday night, the second straight day a disputed review had a significant impact on the outcome of a game.
In the fifth inning at Oracle Park, Blake Sabol of the Giants appeared to be thrown out sliding into home by a strong throw by Padres outfielder Fernando Tatis Jr. on Joc Pederson's two-out single to right.
Sabol was initially ruled out, but the call was challenged by San Francisco and changed following a lengthy review when umpires cited San Diego catcher Gary Sanchez for blocking the plate. Frustrated Padres manager Bob Melvin argued the call after the video review but was unsuccessful.
"The throw took (Sanchez) up the line," Melvin said. "Based on where he started, it looked like they showed the replay from when the throw was already on the way, and as a catcher, you have to have some feel for that. You've got to also understand the impact and where the runner was. To me, it was just one of the worst calls I've seen this year."
Sabol knew quickly that something was amiss on the play,
"I was running as hard as I could," Sabol said. "I was trying to avoid a collision there. I feel like I didn't even have a chance to touch (the plate). That was a big, big challenge for us."
Mike Yastrzemski followed Pederson's hit with an RBI liner up the middle, and J.D. Davis then lashed a single to right center for a four-run lead in a game eventually won by the Giants 4-2.
"It was a definite momentum shift," Giants manager Gabe Kapler said. "Obviously we came out on the good end of it. If I was on the other side, I'd probably find something to be upset about. But under the circumstances I'm good with it."
A night earlier, Texas Rangers manager Bruce Bochy was ejected after a call at the plate was overturned because catcher Jonah Heim was ruled to have blocked the plate illegally.
The Chicago White Sox's Zach Remillard singled in Elvis Andrus with the go-ahead run on a play that was overturned by video review. Andrus was initially called out at the plate by umpire D.J. Reyburn on Travis Jankowski's throw.
Bochy was booted for the 80th time in his career.
"For that call to be made, I'm dumbfounded," Bochy said. "It's absolutely one of the worst calls I've ever seen, and it was done by replay. I just don't get it. I don't care how many times they'll try to explain it. You can't do that in that situation. It's a shame. It's embarrassing, really.
"There was never any contact with the catcher. It was a sweep tag. I don't get it. I really don't. Again, I'm shocked. Jonah did a great job there. The throw took him to the left a little bit, sweep tag. I'm lost on this one. That's a tough one to take."
The Associated Press contributed to this report.