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Nuggets fire coach Malone, also won't extend GM

Published in Basketball
Tuesday, 08 April 2025 13:54

The Denver Nuggets fired head coach Michael Malone and said they would not extend general manager Calvin Booth's contract Tuesday, just days before the end of the regular season.

David Adelman, the Nuggets' lead assistant, will take over as head coach for the remainder of the season.

The shocking decision to fire the coach and eventually part ways with the general manager who won a championship in 2023 comes at a time when the Nuggets (47-32) have lost four straight games and are in danger of falling into the play-in. It has been a frustrating stretch for the Nuggets as three-time MVP and current MVP candidate Nikola Jokic has tried to keep things together while Jamal Murray has been out for five straight games with a hamstring injury.

There have been moments when players have shown emotions on the sideline, with even normally calm Jokic displaying rare frustration recently while on the bench trying to sort out the Nuggets' struggles. The Nuggets have gone 11-13 since the All-Star break.

When the Nuggets entered this season, sources told ESPN that there was growing tension between Malone and Booth that grew into a "cold war." Since the team won the championship, the Nuggets have gone with younger role players such as Christian Braun and Peyton Watson around the team's core of Jokic, Murray and Aaron Gordon. Veterans such as Kentavious Caldwell-Pope and Bruce Brown left in previous summers during free agency to sign bigger deals elsewhere.

Malone had been with the team for 10 seasons, leading the Nuggets to their lone NBA championship. He had a 471-327 record.

"This decision was not made lightly," Josh Kroenke, vice chairman of Kroenke Sports and Entertainment, said in a team statement. "And was evaluated very carefully, and we do it only with the intention of giving our group the best chance at competing for the 2025 NBA Championship and delivering another title to Denver and our fans everywhere.

"While the timing of this decision is unfortunate, as Coach Malone helped build the foundation of our now championship-level program, it is a necessary step to allow us to compete at the highest level right now. Championship-level standards and expectations remain in place for the current season, and as we look to the future, we look forward to building on the foundations laid by Coach Malone over his record-breaking 10-year career in Denver."

Booth was promoted to be the Nuggets' GM for the past three seasons after Tim Connelly left for the Minnesota Timberwolves. Booth's first season was Denver's championship season in 2022-23.

"I want to thank Calvin Booth for leading our front office for the past three years," Kroenke said. "And most importantly for helping put the final pieces in place for the roster that delivered Denver and our fans their first NBA Championship. Calvin's knowledge of the game, his passion for scouting, and his long history as a player and executive in the NBA helped lift our organization to new heights which we will continue moving forward. We are grateful to Calvin for his eight years with the Nuggets and know his place in Nuggets history as our first championship-winning GM will be honored for years to come."

Adelman, a son of former head coach Rick Adelman, has been an assistant by Malone's side for eight seasons. He interviewed for head coaching vacancies with the Los Angeles Lakers and Cleveland Cavaliers last summer.

Jokic now moves forward without the only head coach he has had for his entire career.

"There is no amount of gratitude that we can properly convey to his contributions since he joined our franchise in 2015," Kroenke said of Malone. "It is with our utmost respect that we would like to thank Coach Malone for the most successful decade in Nuggets history, setting the all-time wins record and helping deliver Denver our first championship."

ESPN's Shams Charania contributed to this report.

A CELEBRATORY MOOD carried Austin Reaves down the ramp at Madison Square Garden and into the New York City night after a monumental road win. It was just after midnight on Feb. 2.

The Los Angeles Lakers -- fueled by 60 combined points from Reaves (27) and LeBron James (33) -- had just knocked off a New York Knicks team that was riding a five-game win streak. L.A. had done so without its best player, Anthony Davis, who had left the trip early to receive treatment for an abdominal strain.

"Me and Bron were talking in the locker room after the game," Reaves told ESPN. "It was like, if we play like that and add AD to that, we could be dangerous."

As the Lakers' bus navigated through midtown Manhattan traffic, Reaves pulled out his phone to scroll Instagram. He came across a post citing ESPN Shams Charania's report that the Lakers had just traded Davis and Max Christie -- fresh off 15 points against New York -- to the Dallas Mavericks in a deal for Slovenian superstar Luka Doncic.

"First thing, I was like, 'Oh this is [false]," Reaves said. "'He got hacked.'"

Instantly, Reaves' phone began to flood with incoming texts. "The group message started going crazy," he said. "AD, texting the [team] group message, was like, 'They traded me.' And I was like, 'OK, AD is bulls----ing with us.' He's a kid at heart, had his fun. He literally has a prank TV show. I thought it was one of those."

Then he received a message from Lakers assistant coach Beau Levesque.

"Bro ...," Levesque messaged.

Reaves called Levesque immediately.

"This ain't real," Reaves said, a statement posing as a question.

"Umm ... I think it's real," Levesque said, sitting on the Lakers' last bus to leave MSG, about 15 minutes behind Reaves. "I'm sitting right by Max."

The tectonic-shifting swap shocked the NBA, altered the career trajectories of two all-time greats in Davis and Doncic -- and could prove to be a divergent moment in the fates of the two franchises in Dallas and L.A.

Already it has reframed Reaves' role, who in four short years has gone from being an undrafted college prospect to L.A.'s third option, first behind the championship-proven duo of Davis and James and now behind James and Doncic.

L.A. is 26-8 when Reaves scores 20 points or more this season and 18-18 when he doesn't. Beyond bearing the burden of establishing the Lakers' ceiling with his offense, his defense has often been a target for opposing offenses. With the postseason reputations of James and Doncic solidified, and their respective production nearly a constant, it's Reaves who is the Lakers' swing piece this spring.

With a third ball-dominant star added to the mix, the 26-year-old Reaves' role and skillset could've naturally been duplicative and diminished.

Instead, the team has elevated him to the same perch as the 26-year-old Doncic and James in both promotion and in practice. At L.A. Live last week, digital billboards advertising Crypto.com Arena premium playoff seating featured three players in bright gold uniforms: James, Doncic and Reaves. And on the court, since Doncic's debut on Feb. 10, James, Doncic and Reaves are the only trio in the league to each average 75 touches per game, per Second Spectrum tracking.

"In the monthlong process of the Luka Doncic trade discussions, of course, you're thinking about the players you may possibly have to trade in a deal like that, AD and Max Christie," Rob Pelinka, Lakers vice president of basketball operations and general manager, told ESPN. "[But] one of the people I was thinking of the most in my head was just AR, because I knew how close he had gotten to Max and AD and I knew bringing in another primary ball handler would have implications for him."

Traditional roster construction suggests balancing talent between the backcourt and the frontcourt as most beneficial, but Pelinka insisted he knew Reaves would be just as important in this new iteration of his team.

And as indispensable as he has been for a Lakers team with real championship aspirations, how he performs in the playoffs will be his first real audition for his next role: Doncic's right-hand man whenever the 40-year-old James calls it a career.

"My theory is basketball geniuses that love to win, find ways to work and click together," Pelinka said. "And we knew LeBron was a basketball savant, wants to win at the highest level. Obviously Luka Doncic, basketball savant, wants to win at the highest level. And AR is coming into his own there. He gets the game, he sees it. He can fit, really, with anybody."


SIX WEEKS AFTER the trade, L.A. was matching up against its recent nemesis in the Denver Nuggets -- the team that has tormented the Lakers in the regular season and bounced them from the playoffs the past two years -- and with only one starter available to play. It was Reaves. And Brian Reaves, Austin's dad, was tuned in from his home in Batesville, Arkansas, to his son's solo starring act.

While Brian watched in the living room, his wife, Amanda, had the local news on in the bedroom, monitoring an ongoing tornado warning in the area. "It was funny because she would be like, 'Hey, babe, you might need to come in here and check out the weather,'" Brian told ESPN. "And I'm like, 'I'm locked into this game.'"

With James, Rui Hachimura and Jaxson Hayes leaving the team's trip early to return to L.A. to treat injuries, and Doncic watching from the sidelines in street clothes, Austin went head-to-head with the best player in the world, Nikola Jokic.

And he outplayed him.

Reaves attacked the opportunity to shoulder the extra load, slingshotting around defenders as he racked up 37 points, 13 assists, 8 rebounds and 4 steals -- the last one coming when he stripped the ball from Jokic in the final minute and sped down the court to score a go-ahead layup.

Seeing Reaves' production, it would've been difficult to tell he was playing the second leg of a back-to-back to end a long trip, or that he had his left wrist heavily wrapped in ice after the game the night before in Milwaukee, or that he was leading a group of players in Dalton Knecht, Shake Milton, Christian Koloko, Markieff Morris and Bronny James who had barely played together before and have rarely shared the court since.

"I just want to win and I feel like anytime I'm on the court versus off the court, I have a belief I literally can change the game," Reaves, who played in all 82 games last season, told ESPN.

The Nuggets used an 8-0 run in the final 48 seconds to escape with a victory, but Reaves' performance stuck with the Lakers, including first-year coach JJ Redick. Just two days prior, Redick had asked to meet with Reaves after he shot 3-for-14 in Brooklyn and the Lakers lost to a hapless Nets team. The Nets game had followed two subpar nights for Reaves in which he'd gone 2-for-13 in an OT win against the Knicks and 5-for-12 in a loss to the Celtics two nights later.

"[I] was basically like, 'You're too good to have a blank stare on your face in a game,'" Redick told ESPN about the check-in. "'And you're too good to be shooting poorly and playing poorly and not have any leadership on the court. You're just too good. You can't get away with that anymore. You're too important and you're too good.' And he took that well."

Redick has met with Reaves at several critical junctures throughout the season. After Reaves scored 38 points against the Brooklyn Nets on Jan. 17, Redick sought to reinforce Reaves' approach. "Some ownership on the court, some leadership on the court, needing more of that," Redick told ESPN of their conversation.

Late last month, the Lakers had lost four of five games and were struggling to recapture their midseason momentum heading into a crucial slate of games, starting with a visit to the Memphis Grizzlies. Redick met with Reaves, Doncic and James together, imploring the three offensive leaders to play with more force, pace and creativity -- particularly in the half court. Their combined capabilities should always make defenses uncomfortable when they work together. "Exhaust every option," he told them.

"The meeting was just still trying to build that chemistry amongst the three of us," Reaves said. In the five games since that meeting, the Lakers are averaging 121.7 points per 100 possessions when Doncic, James and Reaves share the court, going 4-1.

By every measure, Reaves has already maximized the expectations put on an undrafted player. In Friday's win over the New Orleans Pelicans, Reaves scored 30 points for the fourth time in his past five games and set a franchise record with 15 3-pointers in a two-game span.

"He's the best undrafted player since Ben Wallace, and that guy's a Hall of Famer," a Western Conference executive told ESPN.

Even with Doncic on the team, Reaves has consistently had the ball. His usage rate since Feb. 10 is 23.6% -- higher than it was from the beginning of the season through Dec. 28, before L.A. traded point guard D'Angelo Russell to the Nets for Dorian Finney-Smith (21.8%).

And Doncic's addition has made opponents assign their strongest defenders to him, allowing Reaves to feast on more favorable matchups. In the two games against Chicago in late March, Reaves was guarded by either Kevin Huerter or Coby White on 78 possessions, while Doncic was manned by Josh Giddey for 71 possessions, per Second Spectrum. Two days after that second Bulls game, against Houston, Doncic faced Amen Thompson for 33 possessions, while Reaves was defended by Fred VanVleet for 34.

As a result, Reaves has become even more assertive on offense; he has averaged a career-high 3.1 isolation plays per game this season -- and 4.5 isos per game since Doncic arrived.

Reaves has proved he's a legitimate NBA player. His next challenge is establishing himself as a core piece on a championship team -- and that he's worth the requisite investment. The four-year, $54 million extension Reaves signed in 2023 has become one of the best value contracts in basketball. He is eligible to sign a four-year, $89.2 million extension this summer, which would replace his $14.9 million option year in 2026-27 with Year 1 of the extension. He could also wait until the summer of 2026 when he'd be eligible for a four-year, $98 million extension, or opt out of the final year of his contract, become an unrestricted free agent and be eligible for 25% of whatever the salary cap is set at for 2026-27.

In any case, the Lakers want to maintain their stake in the Austin Reaves business.

"The way he plays the game, fights for every ball, sacrifices his body, when you see somebody like that, you can't help but get drawn in and cheer for them," Lakers governor Jeanie Buss told ESPN. "And he was that from day one ... he just keeps proving himself over and over and over again. ... We're just lucky to have him."

Reaves is used to proving himself -- and breaking down stereotypes.

"You know, as a white guy in the NBA, I sometimes look at white players and I'm like, 'They're not very good,'" Reaves told ESPN. "So, it's a stigma that I think is real."

Redick, who played 15 years in the league, understands. "I think every guy in our shoes has experienced some level of this where you're going to be tested," Redick told ESPN. "And truthfully, no matter how many times you pass that test, you're going to be tested again."

Reaves passed that test with James during training camp of his rookie season, when he was originally signed to a two-way contract.

"I saw that early, man," James told ESPN. "When we picked him up, I went back and started watching his Oklahoma highlights and stuff and seeing the way he could handle the ball and his creative [side], to be able to create shots off the bounce. His competitive fire, his drive. ... I could see it. I could see he had a spirit about him. He had an energy about him."

Pelinka said by the time James hosted his minicamp before the start of training camp that year, Reaves had shown that he belonged.

"You could just tell the game clicks for him," Pelinka said. "He has that utility about him. And I remember as we were making roster cut decisions, even saying to LeBron, 'I think he's the one. We have an open roster spot.' And I just remember quickly LeBron was like, 'I totally agree.' So you can just see it. There's something about him."

Doncic's arrival meant another power player Reaves had to impress. And he wasted no time doing so.

"Basketballwise, I already knew he was that good. But just being around it and seeing him do that, it was [a] higher [realization]," Doncic told ESPN of watching Reaves score a career-high 45 points in a win over the Pacers shortly after the trade deadline. "I mean, the expectation is that high. I think he has the potential to be an amazing player. He already is."

THE LAKERS' SPOT in the loaded Western Conference is tenuous. With four regular-season games left -- a road back-to-back against Oklahoma City and Dallas, followed by a home game against Houston and the road finale in Portland -- they have a 1-game lead on Denver for the 3 seed but could still finish anywhere from third to eighth (ESPN's BPI gives the Lakers an 82.3% chance of securing the 3 seed). Still, this can't compare to the jam the team faced in early December.

A four-game trip in which L.A. lost the middle two games against Minnesota and Miami by a combined 70 points capped a 2-7 stretch. At that time, it was Reaves who lifted the team out of its funk.

He'd missed the trip because of a left pelvic bruise, staying in L.A. to rehab. When the team returned, there was a rare reprieve in the schedule because of the NBA's in-season tournament. The Lakers hosted the Trail Blazers on Dec. 8 and then didn't play again until Dec. 13 in Minnesota.

Redick used the week to return to the practice court, hoping to salvage a season that was starting to get away from him. The Lakers were 10th in the West -- and falling.

"I just remember when everybody got back, everybody was kind of just in a fog," Reaves said. "So I randomly was like, 'F--- it, I'm going to put a headband on and see if I can make somebody smile.'"

Reaves has long known his messy brown hair flopping up and over the white fashion accessory came off as more court-jester than GQ, but he was OK with that.

"It definitely was a tough time for us," Lakers forward Jarred Vanderbilt told ESPN. "Coming off of that road trip, it was pretty nasty, so it kind of lightened the mood up a little bit. But that's just him. He's a good guy, good teammate. Always positive and just being a light and a joy to our team."

The mop-and-flop reveal worked as intended.

"They all just looked at me like I was crazy and just started laughing," Reaves said. "I was like, 'Well, I accomplished my goal.'"

He has kept it on since -- and L.A. has gone 34-19. Reaves had the headband on when he scored a last-second layup to beat the Golden State Warriors on Christmas Day. He had it on when he had his career night against the Pacers. He had it on when his dad tuned in to see him battle a three-time MVP. He had it on when he scored 31 in a win in Memphis last week after Redick gathered him, James and Doncic for that meeting to get on the same page offensively.

"I think for all three of those guys, they all have an understanding," Redick said. "Those two guys trust AR, for sure."

Two days before the team took the court in Memphis, L.A. lost a shocker in Chicago when Giddey hit a half-court heave at the buzzer.

In the visitors locker room at FedEx Forum, Reaves noticed James had a new look: He had a headband on too.

"He looked at me and said, 'Oh, you wearing a headband?'" James said. "I said, 'Yeah, you know, s---, I've been a little bit out of rhythm. I need to change the energy in this b----.'

"And I said, 'It worked for you.'"

If the Lakers hope to make a long playoff run this spring, they'll need Reaves to maintain the level of play that has fueled the team's rise up the Western Conference standings.

"The stuff he's been doing the last couple months has been amazing," Vanderbilt said. "He's damn near kind of transitioning into one of our captains. Obviously we got Bron and Luka, but they keep giving him more responsibility and he's proving it time and time again that he's built for it."

ESPN Research's Matt Williams contributed to this report.

Duran told of suicide attempt to help those 'alone'

Published in Baseball
Tuesday, 08 April 2025 14:08

BOSTON -- Red Sox outfielder Jarren Duran said he went public about his 2022 suicide attempt to "reach those who feel alone."

In an episode of the Netflix docuseries "The Clubhouse: A Year With the Red Sox," Duran said he attempted suicide after struggling early in his baseball career.

"Talking about this wasn't easy, but it felt important," Duran said in a statement released through the team after the episode aired Tuesday. "I knew that if I was going to share this, I had to be real about it.

"A few years ago, I found myself in a dark place, but I'm still here, and I'm so lucky I am. And if my story can help even one person, then it was worth telling."

A seventh-round draft choice who was an All-Star last season, Duran was one of baseball's top hitting prospects when he was called up to the major leagues in 2021. But he struggled early and spent much of his first two seasons shuttling between the majors and minors.

Duran said in the docuseries that the expectations of the fans and media wore on him and that at times he felt players were treated like "zoo animals."

He said he was even harder on himself.

"I couldn't deal with telling myself how much I sucked every day," Duran said in the docuseries. "I was already hearing it from fans. And what they said to me, [it's not like] I haven't told myself 10 times worse in the mirror. That was a really tough time for me. I didn't even want to be here anymore."

Director Greg Whiteley then asked, "When you say, 'here,' you mean 'here with the Red Sox' or 'here on planet Earth'?"

"Probably both," Duran said. He then described his suicide attempt.

Red Sox manager Alex Cora said Monday that Duran's decision to tell his story will save lives. Team president Sam Kennedy called it "an act of courage that reaches far beyond baseball."

"By opening up, he's showing others who may be struggling that they're not alone and that asking for help isn't just OK, it's essential," Kennedy said. "Every member of this organization continues to stand with him. He has our deepest admiration, he's always had our full support, and we're incredibly fortunate to have him as part of our team."

Duran's parents, Octavio and Dena Duran, said in a statement Tuesday that they only recently learned the depths of their son's mental health struggle.

"It was heartbreaking to hear," they said. "We are beyond grateful that he is still here, that he has found the courage to keep going, and that he is using his voice to help others. If his story can help even one person, then it was worth sharing. We are incredibly proud of the man he is today and love him more than words can say. We will always be in his corner."

Jarren Duran said Tuesday that he wanted to turn his attention back to the baseball season. He has six hits in his past four games, with two doubles Monday night after the details of his comments in the docuseries were reported.

"Right now, my focus is on the field," Duran said in his statement. "We have a postseason to chase, and that's where my head is. I've shared what I needed to share, and I appreciate everyone's understanding that my focus right now is on baseball and helping my team win a World Series.

"I am grateful for the tremendous support I've received. If you're struggling, please know there's help. You can call a friend, a trusted person, your doctor or an organization like Samaritans. And, if you're in immediate danger, call 988."

Mets catcher Alvarez to begin rehab assignment

Published in Baseball
Tuesday, 08 April 2025 14:08

NEW YORK -- New York Mets catcher Francisco Alvarez, who is on the injured list with a fractured hamate bone, will begin a rehab assignment Wednesday, manager Carlos Mendoza announced.

Alvarez suffered his injury while taking a swing during spring training last month. At the time, the Mets said he would miss six to eight weeks, making a return by the end of April a possibility.

"We'll see," Mendoza said. "I think it's going to come down to him catching back-to-back, hopefully, nine innings. Getting four or five at-bats. But the progression starts kind of like spring training -- five innings, off day, and we'll go from there. But the fact that he's going to start playing games and build competition, that's a good sign."

A year ago, Alvarez suffered a torn thumb ligament on the same hand that required surgery and sidelined him for more than seven weeks. He returned to produce a disappointing offensive season, posting a .710 OPS with 11 home runs in 100 games after clubbing 25 homers with a .721 OPS as a rookie in 2023.

The 23-year-old catcher took pregame batting practice on the field Tuesday for the first time since his injury in preparation for his first game action for single-A Port Lucie. Without Alvarez, Luis Torrens, who has been recently limited by a forearm contusion, has served as the Mets' catcher with six starts in the first 10 games. Hayden Senger, a 28-year-old rookie, is the team's backup.

Jeff McNeil also took batting practice at Citi Field on Tuesday for the first time since landing on the injured list with an oblique strain last month. Mendoza said the veteran second baseman, who also took ground balls on Tuesday, will begin his own rehab assignment this weekend. Mendoza said a late April return remains the target for McNeil, who turned 33 on Tuesday.

Brett Baty and rookie Luisangel Acuña have each struggled splitting time at second base in McNeil's absence. Baty entered Tuesday 2 for 21 (.095) with eight strikeouts and zero walks in eight games. Acuña was 2-for-17 (.118) with two walks and four strikeouts in nine games.

M's Robles out at least 12 weeks, possibly season

Published in Baseball
Tuesday, 08 April 2025 14:08

Seattle Mariners outfielder Victor Robles has a small fracture in the humeral head of his left shoulder and will miss at least 12 weeks -- and potentially the entire season if he needs surgery.

Mariners executive vice president/general manager Justin Hollander on Tuesday said the team believes Robles, who had an MRI, does not need surgery at this time but will continue to monitor the injury.

If Robles avoids surgery, the team estimated that it would take six weeks for the fracture to heal and another six of rehab before he returned to action.

If surgery is eventually required, Robles would be expected to miss the remainder of the season.

He was placed on the 10-day injured list Monday, one day after he made a jumping catch of a long ball hit by Patrick Bailey of the San Francisco Giants in the bottom of the ninth that had barely turned foul.

His glove hand still outstretched, Robles' elbow appeared to make contact with a padded wall, and he also got tangled in netting. Robles was carted off the field.

The 27-year-old joined the Mariners after being waived by the Washington Nationals during the 2024 season. Robles was Seattle's leadoff batter in its first 10 games of this season, and he was hitting .273 with 3 doubles, 3 RBIs, 3 runs and 3 stolen bases.

Robles has batted .248 in his 617-game career with Washington (2017-24) and Seattle, recording 35 homers, 185 RBIs, 257 runs and 103 stolen bases.

ESPN's Alden Gonzalez and Field Level Media contributed to this report.

The Philadelphia Phillies are no stranger to big MLB free agency moves, but the franchise was notably absent from the hot stove headlines this offseason -- and there was a reason for the quiet winter.

The Phillies believe they have a core in place that can compete with anyone this season, even without a splashy free agent addition, because they had already done the bulk of their star hunting over the course of several offseasons by signing Bryce Harper, Zack Wheeler, Trea Turner, Kyle Schwarber and Nick Castellanos to long-term deals.

The results since that group's arrival have been impressive: three straight postseason appearances, including a run to the World Series in 2022. But the Phillies have not held a parade at the end of any of those campaigns -- most recently coming up short in last year's NLDS against the New York Mets -- and the competition is only going to be tougher this season in the National League East and beyond.

"I looked at the power rankings ... 2 through 4 are in the NL East," Phillies president of baseball operations Dave Dombrowski said of ESPN's preseason list. "I talked to a GM in the American League, and I told him, 'You have a good club,' but he recognized that there were four to five teams in the National League better than his."

Yet instead of overhauling a team that keeps coming up just short for the ultimate prize, the Phillies front office chose to retool with smaller moves. As the division-rival Mets signed -- or re-signed -- Juan Soto, Pete Alonso, Sean Manaea, Clay Holmes, Frankie Montas, A.J. Minter, Jesse Winker, Ryne Stanek and Griffin Canning and the reigning champion Dodgers added Blake Snell, Roki Sasaki and Tanner Scott, the Phillies were content in adding depth in the form of outfielder Max Kepler, pitcher Jesus Luzardo and reliever Jordan Romano.

Although they didn't win the winter, the Phillies are right where they have been over the past several seasons: at the top of a tough NL East division. Their hot start included a weekend series win over the Dodgers in what could be an early playoff preview. In helping the team get to 7-2 to start the season.

The Phillies' top players have led the way early on with Schwarber, Wheeler, Harper and Castellanos all powering early wins, but the rest of the team is also already demonstrating Philadelphia is about more than just star power. Luzardo has shown he could be much more than a depth piece by allowing just two earned runs while striking out 19 hitters over his first twelve innings and Orion Kerkering has appeared ready to step into a larger role in the bullpen.

"When you look at our team on paper, you're still going to put us up there with some of the best teams in baseball," designated hitter Schwarber told ESPN recently. "We've got the talent. We're in the position every year, we just haven't got there. It's not for lack of talent. It's just the way the game works sometimes."


When the MLB general manager meetings began in early November, it seemed quite possible the Phillies could have a new look when they arrived at spring training a few months later. Fresh off that division series loss to the Mets, Dombrowski made it clear that the front office was going to look through every aspect of the defeat, refusing to let the idea that anything can happen in baseball keep the team from finding any potential areas to improve.

"You can't take anything for granted," Dombrowski said. "If you do, you won't make it. It's tough but if you get through it all -- and then October -- you'll deserve it."

But as the front office examined its options as the offseason unfolded, it came to a conclusion: It was difficult to find many positions where the roster could be improved. The same feeling was evident in the clubhouse when the team reported to spring training ready to make another run with a group that believes it can get a step further than it has in any of the past three postseasons.

"When you look around a locker room, you try to get better at every position," catcher Garrett Stubbs said near the end of spring training. "But when you look at this locker room and look at the guys that we have, you say, 'How do we even get better?' There's really a slim chance of getting any better in this locker room."

Though the Phillies are confident in their talent, they are also aware that many of their core players are already in their 30s and that contention windows don't stay open forever.

"I think the Dodgers have the oldest team [of hitters], so it's not like you can't win with older guys, but we've all seen how quickly things change for players in their 30s," Dombrowski said. "Philadelphia should have some urgency because the future is never promised."

Compounding the pressure to win now is the fact that some of the star additions of recent offseasons are nearing the end of their contracts. Clubhouse leaders and star players Schwarber and J.T. Realmuto are scheduled to hit free agency whenever the Phillies play their last game of 2025, giving this season a one-last-run feel for a group that has made Philadelphia an October mainstay for the first time in more than a decade.

"We don't know who is going to be here next year, so who knows -- this might be the last chance for us to win with this group," Harper said. "We have another great opportunity to do this.

"Just trying to win that last game."

Premiership clubs 'can't compete' in Champions Cup

Published in Rugby
Tuesday, 08 April 2025 05:20

Northampton's European form comes in stark contrast to their stuttering domestic campaign, with the defending Premiership champions currently sitting eighth in the English top flight.

Having cruised past Clermont Auvergne and into the last eight on Friday, Saints take on Castres in the Champions Cup this Saturday, with Bordeaux facing Munster the same day.

That follows Leinster against Glasgow on Friday, with Toulon versus Toulouse concluding the quarter-final ties on Sunday. The semi-finals are then slated for the beginning of May.

Saints - whose only previous Champions Cup victory came 25 years ago - have not progressed past the semis since 2011, but are looking to become the Premiership's first winners since Exeter in 2020.

Quarter-finals (ties to be played 11/12/13 April):

Friday: Leinster v Glasgow Warriors (20:00 BST)

Saturday: Bordeaux v Munster (15:00 BST)

Saturday: Northampton Saints v Castres (17:30 BST)

Sunday: Toulon v Toulouse (15:00 BST)

Semi-finals (ties to be played 2/3/4 May):

Bordeaux/Munster v Toulon/Toulouse

Leinster/Glasgow v Northampton/Castres

Rugby tackle change linked to drop in head collisions

Published in Rugby
Tuesday, 08 April 2025 06:07
Jonathan Geddes

BBC Scotland News

PA Media Scotland player Blair Kinghorn, wearing a Scotland strip of blue jersey and white shorts, is tackled by two Wales players in red jerseys and white shorts, during a Six Nations match. Players from both teams are watching on in the background.  PA Media

Lowering the tackle height in men's rugby almost halved the rate of head collisions among players, a study at Edinburgh University has found.

The lowered tackle height law was introduced for community rugby by World Rugby in the 2023/24 season in an attempt to improve safety for players.

Researchers at Edinburgh University used video analysis to study tackles from 60 men's community matches in Scotland before the trial and during it, and found the law change resulted in a 45% reduction in head-on-head contact.

Experts previously found head-to-head contact was one of the primary causes of sports related concussion.

Both rugby union and rugby league authorities are facing ongoing legal action from former players who have suffered brain injuries.

The study - which examined 18,702 tackles - also linked the law change to a 29% reduction in head-to-shoulder contact for the tackler and ball-carrier.

During the trial period in the 2023/24 season players were 22% more likely to tackle bent at the waist, the recommended technique to reduce player head proximity and contact.

Getty Images Medical staff sit next to Scotland player Finn Russell, who is sitting down on the field recovering after a blow to the head when he collided with a team mate during a Six Nations fixture v Ireland Getty Images

Dr Debbie Palmer, of the Institute for Sport, Physical Education and Health Sciences at the Moray House School of Education and Sport, and co-director for the UK Collaborating Centre on Injury and Illness Prevention in Sport IOC Research Centre, has been involved in researching concussions in rugby for about 10 years.

She told BBC Scotland News: "We know concussion is amongst the most common injury, but we also know participation in sport, particularly at recreational level, is really beneficial. We want to reduce the risks of injury and keep people involved in sport.

"We don't have injury data within the men's level to say if it has had an impact on concussion rates, but we do know approximately 250 head contacts for the tackler and just over 300 head contacts for the ball carrier potentially have been saved for one season."

Dr Palmer said the findings were "very encouraging" but it remained to be seen if the law changes were applied at the professional game as well as at community level.

She added: "The risks of injury, the risks of concussion, and the mechanisms for those types of injury do differ between professional players and amateur players, but this is a decision that Scottish Rugby and World Rugby will be looking at, and making, in the coming months."

The study's lead author, Hamish Gornall - of Edinburgh University's Moray House School of Education and Sport - added the study showed the rule change -which lowered the height from the shoulder to below the sternum or breastbone - had proved "effective" in altering tackling behaviour.

Mr Gornall told BBC Scotland News the increase in so-called "belly tackles" was promising.

He said: "The really encouraging highlight points are players are bending at the waist more often, we're seeing less contact at the high risk areas and that's resulted in less head to head and head to shoulder contacts. It's a really positive outcome from the study."

World Rugby trial

The study is part of an international project led by World Rugby to assess the effects of lowering the tackle height in a host of countries, including France, New Zealand and Australia.

Researchers found no significant increase in tacklers' heads coming into contact with the ball-carriers' hips or knees, which is associated with an increased risk of head injury assessments and concussion diagnosis.

The trial was adopted by Scottish Rugby and made compulsory across all amateur playing levels.

Scottish Rugby chief medical officer Dr David Pugh said: "At Scottish Rugby we strive to reduce the incidence of concussion in as many ways as we can.

"We are also working with the university on an injury surveillance project, and we hope that this will see a significant drop in concussion rates due to the lower tackle height trial.

"Hamish's research clearly demonstrates that player behaviours have changed, reducing head-to-head and head-to-shoulder contacts which should lead to reduced numbers of concussions in our players."

In 2023 a study of former rugby players brains by Glasgow University found that out of 31 donated brains analysed, 21 had evidence of a condition linked to repeated head injuries and concussion.

A Durham University study last year suggested rugby players who have suffered multiple concussions have biological differences that may make them more prone to developing motor neurone disease (MND) - the condition that former Scottish internationalist Doddie Weir died from.

More than 1,000 former amateur and professional rugby union and rugby league players are currently involved in a long-running concussion lawsuit against the sports' governing bodies.

32 Entries For Sumar Classic Silver Crown Opener

Published in Racing
Tuesday, 08 April 2025 04:24

TERRE HAUTE, Ind. Thirty-two USAC Silver Crown entries are set for this Sundays 21st running of the 100-lap Sumar Classic on April 13 at western Indianas Terre Haute Action Track.

The event at the half-mile dirt oval features five past winners: Kody Swanson (2014), Shane Cockrum (2015), C.J. Leary (2016), two-time victor Justin Grant (2018 & 2022) and defending winner Logan Seavey (2024).

SUMAR VETERANS

Theyre among the 22 Sumar Classic veterans in the field along with first-time winning hopeful and past runner-up Daison Pursley who finished second in the 2024 race.

Fellow top-five Sumar Classic finishers in this Sundays lineup include Brady Bacon (third in 2022), Chase Stockon (fourth in 2024) and Matt Westfall (fifth in 2002-03). Meanwhile, Bill Rose (sixth in 2022) and Briggs Danner (seventh in 2024) also return to the Sumar Classic field.

Further returnees to the Sumar Classic lineup are Mario Clouser (12th in 2024), Travis Welpott (14th in 2022), Jimmy Light (16th in 2024), Kyle Steffens (18th in 2002), Gregg Cory (18th in 2024) and Nathan Moore (19th in 2024), plus Mitchel Moles (20th in 2024), Chase Dietz (22nd in 2024), Jake Swanson (24th in 2022), Trey Osborne (25th in 2024) and Kyle Wissmiller (26th in 2004), who is making his series comeback after a 21-year hiatus.

ROOKIES

Nearly a third of this Sundays field belongs to Sumar Classic first-timers, including late model star Ricky Thornton Jr., who is making his USAC Silver Crown debut. USAC national winners Kaylee Bryson and Kyle Cummins also look to make their first Sumar Classic start.

Also looking to crack the Sumar Classic feature starting lineup for the first time are Dave Berkheimer, Saban Bibent, Rob Caho Jr., Aric Gentry, Kenny Gentry, John Tosti and Korey Weyant, whose great uncle, Chuck Weyant, scored a AAA Midget feature victory at the Terre Haute Action Track in 1955.

2025 SUMAR CLASSIC ENTRY LIST

Car # / Driver / Hometown / Car Owner

07 (R) JOHN TOSTI/High Ridge, MO (John Tosti)

08 KYLE STEFFENS/St. Charles, MO (Steffens Motorsports)

09 DAISON PURSLEY/Locust Grove, OK (Chris Dyson Racing)

3 (R) ARIC GENTRY/Robards, KY (Tim Simmons)

6 JAKE SWANSON/Anaheim, CA (Klatt Enterprises)

9 BRADY BACON/Broken Arrow, OK (Chris Dyson Racing)

10 BRIGGS DANNER/Allentown, PA (DMW Motorsports)

18 TRAVIS WELPOTT/Pendleton, IN (Welpott Racing)

19 MITCHEL MOLES/Raisin City, CA (Reinbold-Underwood Motorsports)

21 C.J. LEARY/Greenfield, IN (Team AZ Racing)

22 LOGAN SEAVEY/Sutter, CA (Rice Motorsports-Abacus Racing)

24 KODY SWANSON/Kingsburg, CA (John Haggenbottom)

26 KAYLEE BRYSON/Muskogee, OK (Sam Pierce)

31 DAVE BERKHEIMER/Mechanicsburg, PA (Berkheimer Racing)

32 GREGG CORY/Shelbyville, IN (Williams-Cory Racing)

33 KYLE CUMMINS/Princeton, IN (Petty Performance Racing)

48 NATHAN MOORE/Kaufman, TX (Chip Thomas-Joe Moore)

54 MATT WESTFALL/Pleasant Hill, OH (Westfall Racing)

66 BILL ROSE/Plainfield, IN (Bill Rose Racing)

69 CHASE STOCKON/Fort Branch, IN (Pink 69 Racing)

78 (R) ROB CAHO JR./Mound, MN (Caho Racing)

81 TREY OSBORNE/Columbus, OH (BCR Group)

86 CHASE DIETZ/York, PA (Bruce Lee)

88 (R) SABAN BIBENT/Cincinnati, OH (Sammy & Mouren Fetter)

91 JUSTIN GRANT/Ione, CA (Hemelgarn Racing)

92 MARIO CLOUSER/Auburn, IL (Kazmark Motorsports)

97 SHANE COCKRUM/Benton, IL (Hans Lein)

99 KOREY WEYANT/Springfield, IL (Scott Weyant)

118 JIMMY LIGHT/West Springfield, PA (Wingo Brothers Racing)

121 (R) RICKY THORNTON JR./Chandler, AZ (Team AZ Racing)

144 (R) KYLE WISSMILLER/Saybrook, IL (Wissmiller Racing)

181 KENNY GENTRY/Henderson, KY (Gentry Motorsports)

Ex-Liverpool forward's Israel home attacked

Published in Soccer
Tuesday, 08 April 2025 07:16

Former Liverpool and Chelsea forward Yossi Benayoun's home in Israel was the subject of a grenade attack.

The 44-year-old confirmed there had been an explosion at his house to Israeli news outlet Ynet.

"We were convinced it was a gas balloon that exploded, there was a strong smell," he told Ynet.

"The police are investigating, it's clear this was a mistake, luckily no one was hurt."

Ynet said witness testimony indicated that a motor cyclist had thrown a grenade at Benayoun's gate and then fled.

Reuters have a request in with the police for a comment.

The former Israel captain spent nine years in the Premier League, with stints at West Ham United, Liverpool, Chelsea, Arsenal and Queens Park Rangers.

Information from Reuters contributed to this report.

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