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Home Blog Page 10603

Jonquel Jones, Sun fight off Fever


Jonquel Jones scored 19 points to lead six players in double figures Friday night as the Connecticut Sun held off the Indiana Fever 94-85 in Uncasville, Conn.

DeWanna Bonner added 18, including a corner 3-pointer with 34.1 seconds left in the game that gave Connecticut (3-1) a 90-80 lead. Alyssa Thomas tallied 17 points, while Brionna Jones and DiJonai Carrington each came off the bench to net 11. Another reserve, Natisha Hiedeman, chipped in 10 points.

Kelsey Mitchell shot Indiana (2-5) into contention in the fourth quarter, scoring 19 of her game-high 23 points. Victoria Vivians added 15 points and Danielle Robinson hit for 10. But the Fever couldn’t pull off the upset despite canning 54 percent of their field goal attempts.

Indiana rookie NaLyssa Smith (ankle) missed her second straight game, which led to the Sun controlling the lane. Connecticut earned a 31-25 rebounding advantage, allowing just three offensive boards.

The Sun hit only 43.7 percent from the field, but were splendid from the 3-point arc, sinking 11 of 19 shots. They also connected on 21 of 29 free throws, while the Fever hit 11 of 13.

After coach Marianne Stanley called them out for a lackluster effort in a 101-79 home loss on Tuesday night against Atlanta, Indiana responded with a much better performance on both ends of the court against one of the WNBA’s best teams.

The Fever led most of the first quarter and took a 19-16 advantage to the second period when rookie Lexie Hull canned a 3-pointer in the final minute. But Connecticut fought back, using a 3-pointer by Jasmine Thomas as time expired to grab a 37-35 edge at halftime.

The Sun exploited their advantages in experience and size over the last 4 1/2 minutes of the third quarter. Following a Destanni Henderson layup that brought Indiana within 48-47, Connecticut went on a 15-4 run. Brionna Jones’ layup with 3.4 seconds remaining made it 63-51 going to the fourth period.

–Field Level Media

Oilers overtake Flames to level series at 1-1


Zach Hyman scored the game-winning goal with Edmonton short-handed midway through the third period, and the Oilers evened their Western Conference semifinal series with a 5-3 road victory over the Calgary Flames on Friday.

The best-of-seven Battle of Alberta is tied 1-1 going into Sunday’s Game 3 in Edmonton.

With the score tied 3-3, Hyman was sprung on a breakaway and lifted a glove-side shot with 9:46 remaining in regulation to collect his fifth goal of the playoffs.

Two minutes later, Leon Draisaitl added another breakaway tally, sprung by goaltender Mike Smith, his seventh marker of the playoffs to cap a three-point outing.

Duncan Keith added a goal and two assists while Connor McDavid had one goal and one assist for the Oilers, and Evan Bouchard also scored. Smith made 37 saves in a bounce-back performance from the opener, a 9-6 Calgary win.

Michael Stone, Brett Ritchie and Tyler Toffoli replied for the Flames. Johnny Gaudreau had two assists, and Jacob Markstrom stopped 35 shots.

The Flames blew a 3-1 lead and have now dropped 13 consecutive Game 2 clashes in the Stanley Cup playoffs.

Reminiscent of the opener, the Flames burst out of the blocks again with a pair of early goals. Stone converted a point-shot blast at 3:02 of the first period for his second goal of the playoffs, and Ritchie doubled the lead with his second tally in as many games on a rebound at 6:02 mark.

Keith put the Oilers on the board at 13:38 of the opening period, coming in from the point to convert McDavid’s one-handed pass for his first goal of the playoffs. At 38 years, 308 days, Keith is the oldest player in Oilers history to score a postseason goal.

Toffoli’s power-play goal restored Calgary’s two-goal edge, a one-timer set up by Elias Lindholm’s cross-ice pass at 2:04 of the second period.

However, McDavid responded 61 seconds later to make it a 3-2 affair. Seconds after a tally was disallowed because McDavid made contact with the goalie, the Oilers captain was sprung alone in the slot and converted a deke from in tight for his sixth goal of the playoffs.

Then, while the Oilers were enjoying a four-minute power play, Bouchard’s point shot tied the affair at 15:03 of the second frame.

–Field Level Media

Warriors rally to defeat Mavericks, take 2-0 series lead


Rival coaches Steve Kerr and Jason Kidd agreed Friday night: Game 2 of the Western Conference finals was just like Game 1.

It just started 24 minutes later.

Kevon Looney shocked the Dallas Mavericks with a career-high 21 points and the Golden State Warriors erased a 19-point deficit en route to a 126-117 victory Friday night in San Francisco for a 2-0 lead in the Western Conference finals.

Warriors star Stephen Curry put up a team-high 32 points.

Luka Doncic rebounded from a playoffs-season-low 20 points with a game-high 42 and the Mavericks connected on 21 3-pointers, but that wasn’t enough to prevent them from heading home without a win in the best-of-seven series.

The scene shifts to Dallas for Games 3 and 4 of the best-of-seven series on Sunday and Tuesday.

Coming off a 112-87 shellacking in Game 1, the Mavericks buried 15 3-pointers in the first half and led by as many as 19 in 24 minutes that featured four technical fouls, including one on Golden State’s emotional leader, Draymond Green.

With Dallas up 72-58 at the break, Kerr’s instructions to the Warriors were simple.

“I told them if we develop some poise in the second half, the game would come to us,” Kerr said. “Dallas came out and punched us. We were scattered. We just needed to get poised. We felt confident they wouldn’t make 15 threes in the second half. And if they do, you pat them on the back and say, ‘Nice job.’ If somebody makes 30 threes in a game, they deserve to win.”

But as they did in the first quarter of a one-sided loss in Game 1 two nights earlier, the Mavericks lost their way from beyond the arc in the second half. And while they were going 2-for-13 on long-range attempts in the third period, the Warriors rallied.

The advantage was still 79-64 with 7:06 remaining in the third before the Warriors exploded. The game-turning spurt began with a 19-6 run at the end of the period to close the gap to two. Looney contributed five points to the spurt while Jordan Poole and Andrew Wiggins each had four.

Mavericks coach Kidd admitted he sensed the game was slipping away and hoped his team learned a lesson.

“The guys came out and executed and put us in a position to win on the road,” he said of the first half. “But the third quarter … we’ve got to do better. We have to understand when three or four in a row miss, you’ve got to get the ball to the rim, into the paint, you’ve got to get to the free-throw line. But when you go 2-for-13 and you rely on the three, you can die by the three.”

Golden State took the lead for good when Otto Porter Jr. opened the fourth quarter with a 3-pointer, and the hosts didn’t stop there. The Warriors built a 99-92 advantage by completing a 16-7 run in which Porter (seven), Poole (five) and Looney (four) did all the scoring.

The Mavericks got no closer than five after that.

Looney, whose previous career high of 19 came in the 2019 playoffs against the Los Angeles Clippers, hit 10 of his 14 shots and also found time for a game-high 12 rebounds. The double-double was just the second of his postseason career.

The playoff-tested big man shrugged off the individual glory and praised the team’s defense.

“In the first half, they got to wherever they wanted and got a lot of wide-open threes,” he said. “In the second half, we were able to get them off the 3-point line and make things tougher for them. When we’re able to get stops on a great player like Luka, it’s a big boost to us and the crowd.”

Looney and Curry got plenty of help. Poole finished with 23 points, Wiggins 16, Klay Thompson 15 and Porter 11 for the Warriors, who shot 56.1 percent for the second consecutive game.

Doncic shot 12-for-23 overall and 5-for-10 on 3-point tries for the Mavericks, who improved from 36 percent shooting in Game 1 to 47.4 percent in the rematch.

Dallas’ Reggie Bullock hit six 3-pointers to account for almost all his 21 points. Jalen Brunson made five treys on a 31-point night, helping the Mavericks rebound from an 11-for-48 effort from beyond the arc in the opener to hit 21 of 45.

Doncic also accumulated a game-high eight assists, while Dorian Finney-Smith collected a team-high eight rebounds to complement 10 points.

–Field Level Media

Hurricanes blank Rangers to take 2-0 series lead


Defenseman Brendan Smith scored a short-handed goal in the second period to fuel the host Carolina Hurricanes to a 2-0 victory over the New York Rangers on Friday in Game 2 of their Eastern Conference semifinal series in Raleigh, N.C.

Former Rangers backup goaltender Antti Raanta registered his first career postseason shutout by making 21 saves for the Hurricanes, who seized a 2-0 lead in the best-of-seven series. Game 3 is on Sunday afternoon in New York.

Sebastian Aho set up Smith’s goal before sealing the win by scoring into the empty net with two seconds to play in the third period.

Carolina has won its first six home playoff games in 2022 to set a franchise record for the longest postseason-opening home winning streak, besting its 5-0 mark in 2019.

Vezina Trophy finalist Igor Shesterkin finished with 20 saves for the Rangers, who mustered just two shots on goal overall on four unsuccessful power plays.

New York’s Chris Kreider and Artemi Panarin were each held without a shot on goal. Kreider recorded a career-high 52 goals during the regular season and a team-leading five against the Pittsburgh Penguins in the first round, while Panarin led the team in assists (74) and points (96) this season.

Carolina defenseman Brady Skjei was whistled for a four-minute high-sticking penalty on Alexis Lafreniere with 6:59 remaining in the second period.

The Hurricanes, however, held New York without a shot to begin the power play and drew first blood with 4:06 left.

Aho raced up the right wing and wristed a feed between the legs of Rangers defenseman Adam Fox to Smith, who directed the puck inside the left post. The postseason goal was the first for Smith since May 18, 2013.

Smith, who spent parts of the previous five seasons with New York, joined Mike Commodore as the lone defensemen in Hurricanes/Hartford Whalers franchise history to score a short-handed goal in the NHL playoffs. Commodore accomplished the feat in Game 1 of the 2006 Eastern Conference finals against the Buffalo Sabres.

–Field Level Media

Aaron Wise OK after taking Cameron Smith drive to head

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Golfer Aaron Wise was struck in the head by a tee shot from Australia’s Cameron Smith during Friday’s second round of the PGA Championship at Southern Hills Country Club in Tulsa, Okla.

Smith’s drive at the second hole sliced badly to the right and hit Wise in the adjacent seventh fairway.

“I was walking down seven, surprised my ball was in the fairway, and then next thing you know, I mean there’s a little bit of ringing in my head,” Wise said, according to ESPN.

Wise said he was down for “maybe 20 seconds” before being able to recover and finish his round.

“Thankfully, he’s fine,” said Joel Dahmen, one of Wise’s playing partners. “It was a glancing blow, but the ball took off another 40 or 50 yards down the fairway. It ended up in the rough. You could hear it. All the spectators heard it. It was loud.”

Wise finished off his round at 2-over 72 to make the cut at 1 over. He had three holes to go when the incident occurred because he began his round on the back nine, and wrapped up par-par-bogey.

“You know, obviously, there’s a lot of adrenaline in the body after something like that happens,” Wise said. “I was just trying to calm myself down and get back to being somewhat normal for the last few holes.”

–Field Level Media

Mayhem, Fuel, Justice tally wins at Kickoff Clash qualifiers

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The Florida Mayhem, Dallas Fuel and Washington Justice proved victorious Friday during West division action in the Overwatch League Kickoff Clash qualifiers.

The Mayhem moved into second place with a 3-0 win over the New York Excelsior, the Fuel slid into third in the West by also earning a 3-0 sweep over the Toronto Defiant and the Washington Justice moved up to fourth after a 3-1 decision over the last-place Paris Eternal.

Florida opened with back-to-back 2-0 map wins on Ilios and Eichenwalde, then finished with a 5-4 nailbiter on Dorado.

Dallas began with a 2-0 blanking of Toronto on Oasis, then scored a 3-2 victory on King’s Row before taking the match with a 1-0 win on Circuit Royal.

Washington also jumped out to a 2-0 lead, winning 2-0 on Lijiang Tower and 5-4 on King’s Row. Paris pushed back by winning 3-2 on Watchpoint: Gibraltar for just its second successful map of 14 in the event. But the Justice ended all Eternal hopes with a 1-0 decision on Colosseo.

Qualifying for the Kickoff Clash continues through May 29, with double-elimination bracket play to follow from June 2-5.

Action continues Saturday with six matches:
Guangzhou Charge vs. Chengdu Hunters (East)
Hangzhou Spark vs. Shanghai Dragons (East)
Los Angeles Valiant vs. Seoul Dynasty (East)
Houston Outlaws vs. London Spitfire (West)
Los Angeles Gladiators vs. San Francisco Shock (West)
Toronto Defiant vs. Boston Uprising (West)

Overwatch League Kickoff Clash standings, with win-loss record, map differential and league points:
West
1. San Francisco Shock, 4-0, +10, 4
2. Florida Mayhem, 3-2, +5, 3
3. Dallas Fuel, 3-1, +4, 3
4. Washington Justice, 3-1, +4, 3
5. Los Angeles Gladiators, 2-1, +3, 2
T6. London Spitfire, 2-1, +2, 2
T6. Atlanta Reign, 2-1, +2, 2
8. Houston Outlaws, 2-2, +1, 2
9. Toronto Defiant, 2-2, -1, 2
10. Boston Uprising, 1-2, -3, 1
11. New York Excelsior, 1-4, -8, 1
12. Vancouver Titans, 0-4, -9, 0
13. Paris Eternal, 0-4, -10, 0
East
1. Philadelphia Fusion, 1-0, +3, 1
T2. Hangzhou Spark, 1-0, +2, 1
T2. Guangzhou Charge, 1-0, +2, 1
4. Chengdu Hunters, 0-0, 0, 0
T5. Los Angeles Valiant, 0-1, -2, 0
T5. Seoul Dynasty, 0-1, -2, 0
7. Shanghai Dragons, 0-1, -3, 0

–Field Level Media

Celtics’ Marcus Smart leads NBA All-Defensive first team


NBA Defensive Player of the Year Marcus Smart was a near-unanimous choice for the league’s All-Defensive first team.

In balloting results revealed Friday, the Boston Celtics guard got 99 first-team votes from the pool of 100 sports writers and broadcasters who made the selections.

Smart was joined on the first team by Phoenix Suns guard Mikal Bridges (95 first-place votes), Utah Jazz center Rudy Gobert (76), Milwaukee Bucks forward Giannis Antetokounmpo (63) and Memphis Grizzlies forward Jaren Jackson Jr. (55).

Gobert was selected to the top defensive team for the sixth time, while Antetokounmpo made his fourth first team in addition to one second-team selection. Smart is a three-time member of the defensive first team, while Bridges and Jackson were honored for the first time.

The All-Defensive second team consists of Miami Heat forward Bam Adebayo (third second-team selection), Golden State Warriors forward Draymond Green (third second-team selection in addition to four first-team honors), Bucks guard Jrue Holiday (second second-team selection in addition to two first-team honors), Philadelphia 76ers guard Matisse Thybulle (second second-team selection) and Celtics center Robert Williams III (first appearance on an All-Defensive team).

The players who finished just below the honorees in the voting were guards Fred Van Vleet of the Toronto Raptors, Dejounte Murray of the San Antonio Spurs and Chris Paul of the Phoenix Suns; forwards Evan Mobley of the Cleveland Cavaliers, Herbert Jones of the New Orleans Pelicans and Dorian Finney-Smith of the Dallas Mavericks; and center Joel Embiid of the 76ers.

–Field Level Media

Tiger Woods shoots 69, makes cut at PGA Championship

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Tiger Woods made the cut at a major for the second time in two tries since nearly losing his right leg 15 months ago.

Woods’ 1-under-par 69 in Friday’s second round of the PGA Championship helped him make the cut at Southern Hills Country Club in Tulsa, Okla. He moved to 3 over for the tournament with Friday’s round, which featured four birdies.

The top 70 and ties advance to the weekend, and late in the day the cut line was projected to be 4-over.

Woods was 1-under through 10 holes before suffering a double-bogey at the par-3 11th. He overshot the green off the tee and watched his second shot roll off the green and into a bunker.

But he stuck his approach shot at the par-5 13th about 8 feet from the pin to set up a birdie. Then, at the par-4 16th, his approach nestled up to 4 feet. That birdie gave him some cushion, and he parred the final two holes.

Woods said he was well aware what the cut line would be while he was on the course.

“Almost whip-hooked it in there on 11, made double and next thing you know I’m outside the cut line,” Woods said on the ESPN broadcast. “I had to grind it and go to work, and I did.”

In February 2021 Woods was badly injured in a single-car accident suffering multiple fractures in his right leg that caused him to briefly consider amputation. A year ago at this time, he was in a wheelchair. He made his return to competitive golf last month at the Masters, made the cut and finished in 47th place.

This week, the 15-time major winner shot a 4-over 74 in his first round and admitted that he was experiencing pain in his surgically repaired leg. During Friday’s round, his limp was less pronounced.

“The mission is to go ahead and win this thing somehow,” Woods said. “I know sometimes (my leg) doesn’t exactly feel well, but hey, that’s just the way it is. That’s life. That’s sports.”

He enters the weekend 12 shots off the pace set by leader Will Zalatoris (9-under).

Woods won the PGA Championship the last time it was held at Southern Hills in 2007.

–Field Level Media

Will Zalatoris leads Mito Pereira by one at PGA Championship

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Will Zalatoris shot a 5-under-par 65 Friday to move to 9 under and take a one-shot lead through the second round of the PGA Championship at Southern Hills Country Club in Tulsa, Okla.

Zalatoris will play in Saturday’s final pairing with Chile’s Mito Pereira, who posted a 64 and shot up to 8 under.

Earlier on Friday, Justin Thomas posted his second straight round of 67 to move to 6 under and grab the midday lead. His score stood up for third place by day’s end, and Bubba Watson leapt into fourth place at 5 under by shooting the round of the day, a 7-under 63 with nine birdies.

First-round leader Rory McIlroy of Northern Ireland carded a 1-over 71 to slip into a tie for fifth at 4 under with Davis Riley (68) and Mexico’s Abraham Ancer (69).

The top 70 players, plus ties, made the cut of 4-over par. Tiger Woods shot 69 to get to 3 over for the tournament and make his second major cut in as many tries since his gruesome leg injury in 2021.

Zalatoris opened the event with a 66 and went off in the Friday afternoon wave that got to enjoy far better scoring conditions, with the wind dying down after 4 p.m. local time. He went bogey-free and rang up three of his five birdies at Nos. 11-13. That run began when he landed his tee shot at the par-3 11th just 5 feet from the cup.

Best known for finishing second at the 2021 Masters in his tournament debut, Zalatoris has yet to win on the PGA Tour but flashed his talent with four top-10 finishes in seven major starts.

“I’ve kind of had an attitude with the majors, especially since the Masters, where I wanted to enjoy the experience as much as I could,” Zalatoris said. “Looking back from 20 years from now I don’t want to regret my attitude or anything like that.”

At the seven previous majors hosted at Southern Hills, all seven champions held at least a share of the lead after two rounds.

Pereira, who earned his PGA Tour card less than a year ago, tied his career-low round of 64. After starting on the back nine, he went 4 under on the front, with three of those birdies rolling in from 11 feet or farther.

He said he felt lucky to get the early-late draw — early tee time Thursday, late tee time Friday — that proved to offer much milder weather.

“Sometimes you get the bad draw, sometimes you get the good one,” Pereira said. “But today for sure the wind in the back nine, there was almost none.”

Thomas walked in his fourth and final birdie of the round with a celebratory sidestep at the par-4 ninth. It pushed him into sole possession of the lead for the first time, though it didn’t last for long.

Thomas hit 16 of 18 greens in regulation and got a 23 1/2-foot birdie putt to fall at No. 5. He won the PGA Championship in 2017, his only major title to date.

“I played better today than I did yesterday. It was a lot more difficult due to the winds,” Thomas said on the ESPN broadcast. “I told (caddie Jim “Bones” Mackay at the) beginning of the day, ‘Let’s just hit as many fairways, as many greens as possible,’ because it’s going to be very difficult to try to salvage pars all day, and I made it very easy on myself.”

The biggest beneficiary of Friday afternoon’s scoring opportunities was Watson, the two-time Masters champion. His irons were hot, helping him set up six birdie putts of 5 feet or shorter. He also drained a 40-foot birdie putt from way off the 11th green.

Stewart Cink (68), who turns 49 on Saturday, and England’s Matt Fitzpatrick (69) were tied for eighth at 3 under.

Notable players to miss the cut included world No. 1 Scottie Scheffler (6 over), Dustin Johnson (6 over), Sergio Garcia of Spain (7 over), Patrick Cantlay (11 over) and Daniel Berger (13 over).

Scheffler’s 5-over 75 on Friday came as a bit of a shock after he won four tournaments, including the Masters, to start his season. Scheffler opened with nine straight pars before piling up four bogeys and a birdie across his next seven holes.

At the ninth, a poor chip on his third shot led to a three-putt for a double bogey 6, dooming him to miss his first cut since October.

–Field Level Media

Former Bucs TE Calvin Magee dies at 59


Former Tampa Bay Buccaneers tight end Calvin Magee, who was in his first year as an assistant coach at Jacksonville State, died at age 59 after a suffered heart attack last weekend.

The school announced news of Magee’s death on Friday. No funeral details have been announced.

“Our hearts are broken with the loss of our beloved friend Calvin Magee,” Jacksonville State head coach Rich Rodriguez said in a statement. “Calvin was a great husband, great father and grandfather, great coach, great friend and great man. He impacted my life and the lives of so many others in such a positive way. … Our world is less, but heaven got better. I miss him dearly already. I love you my brother.”

Magee, who was hired by the school in December, also held titles of offensive coordinator and tight ends coach. He spent 25 of the previous 26 seasons at numerous FBS spots and served as offensive coordinator at five of them: West Virginia, Michigan, Pittsburgh, Arizona and New Mexico.

Magee was a star tight end at Southern University who was eventually inducted into the school’s Hall of Fame in 2000. He joined the Buccaneers as an undrafted free agent in 1985 and spent four seasons with the team.

The Buccaneers released a statement that reda, “Calvin Magee was part of the Tampa Bay community for many years, first as a Buccaneers player, and then as a high school and college coach. We send our condolences to his family, friends and the countless players he impacted in his more than three decades coaching the game.”

In his four NFL seasons, Magee caught 114 passes for 1,379 yards and 11 touchdown passes in 56 games (34 starts).

–Field Level Media