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Home Blog Page 10623

Reigning winner Connor McDavid among Hart Trophy finalists


Edmonton’s Connor McDavid, Toronto’s Auston Matthews and New York Rangers goalie Igor Shesterkin were named finalists for the 2021-22 Hart Trophy on Thursday.

The trophy is given to the player voted to be most valuable to his team.

All three players are still alive in the Stanley Cup Playoffs with their respective teams.

This season’s Maurice “Rocket” Richard Trophy winner as the league’s leading goal-scorer, Matthews, 24, posted a career-high 106 points (60 goals, 46 assists) in 73 games. He became the 21st different player in NHL history — first in a decade — to register 60 goals in a season. Matthews was the runner-up for the Hart Trophy last season.

McDavid, 25, is the reigning Hart winner and also won it in 2017. He won the Art Ross Trophy as the league’s top scorer with 123 points (44 goals, 79 assists). He is vying to become the ninth player in NHL history to take home the award at least three times — and just the third to do so before turning 26 — after Wayne Gretzky and Bobby Orr.

Shesterkin, 26, is looking to become the first goalie to win since Carey Price in 2015. Shesterkin had a 36-13-4 record, a 2.07 goals-against average, .935 save percentage and six shutouts. He led the NHL in both GAA and save percentage, and posted the seventh-highest save percentage in league history. He’s also a finalist for the Vezina Trophy.

–Field Level Media

Sebastian Munoz’s 60 is good for 4-shot lead at Byron Nelson

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Colombia’s Sebastian Munoz fired a 12-under-par 60 in the first round of the AT&T Byron Nelson on Thursday in McKinney, Texas, opening a four-shot lead and making PGA Tour history along the way.

The 29-year-old Munoz, whose only previous PGA Tour win came in 2019, finished with two eagles, nine birdies and one bogey. On a four-hole span straddling the turn, he went eagle-birdie-birdie-eagle to leave him at 8 under after 12 holes. He then birdied four of the final five holes as well.

“It’s a great feeling when everything is clicking,” Munoz said. “When everything is going, it’s just stay out of the way and just kind of let it happen.”

Munoz also entered the record book for his second round of 60 or under in the same season, after he shot a 60 in the first round of the RSM Classic in November on a par-70 course. He acknowledged that going even lower crossed his mind when he was on the fairway of the par-5 18th hole.

“Fifty-nine. Yeah. I mean, I wanted to give me a chance,” Munoz said. “I think it was 250 to the pin into the wind. I kind of wanted to hit like a bullet, like a little draw. I knew if I want to hit it close had to be a fady, soft-landed shot; I tried to do that. Overdid it and ended up with a (birdie for a) 60, which is really good around here.”

Four golfers are tied for second, four shots back at 64: Mito Pereira of Chile, defending champion K.H. Lee of South Korea and Americans Peter Malnati and Justin Lower.

Pereira, who started on the back nine and had an early eagle, sat at 3 under after a bogey on No. 1, but he bounced back to birdie five of his final seven holes.

Lee played a bogey-free round, opening with a birdie and then going on an impressive run of his own straddling the front and back nine, going 7 under from the fifth hole to the 12th, which he eagled.

Lee said he “feels very comfortable here” and that the course rewards his irons play. “I think here (a strong) irons game … and also putting, because a lot of guys a lot birdies and eagles, so (you) need to low under par.”

Malnati, who also went bogey-free, gained his ground on just six holes, with two eagles and four birdies within a 10-hole span. Lower went 4 under with no bogeys on the front nine, and then offset a bogey with an eagle and three birdies to wind up 4 under on the back.

Kyle Wilshire is alone in sixth place after a 7-under 65. FedExCup leader and world No. 1 Scottie Scheffler and Jordan Spieth, a native of nearby Dallas, are among a large group who are tied for 12th at 5 under.

–Field Level Media

Grizzlies’ Zach Kleiman is NBA Executive of Year


Memphis Grizzlies general manager Zach Kleiman was named the 2021-22 NBA Executive of the Year on Thursday.

Kleiman, 33, is the youngest recipient of the award, presented annually since 1972-73 and voted on by his peers.

Kleiman, who is also the team’s executive vice president of operations, helped to assemble a Memphis roster that finished 56-26 this season. The Grizzlies matched a franchise record for wins and earned their highest seed (No. 2) ever in the Western Conference playoffs.

He received 16 first-place votes and 85 total points. Tied for second with 27 points each were Cleveland Cavaliers president of basketball operations Koby Altman and Chicago Bulls executive VP of operations Arturas Karnisovas.

Kleiman is the second Grizzlies executive to win the honor, joining Jerry West (2003-04).

Memphis routed Golden State 134-95 in Game 5 on Wednesday night but still trails the Warriors 3-2 in the best-of-seven conference semifinal series. Game 6 is Friday night in San Francisco.

–Field Level Media

Jaguars sign No. 1 pick Travon Walker


Jacksonville Jaguars defensive end Travon Walker signed a four-year contract Thursday worth $37,372,621 fully guaranteed.

The deal for the No. 1 pick in the 2022 NFL Draft is predetermined by the league’s slotting system and includes a $24,360,088 signing bonus and a fifth-year team option.

Walker went one spot ahead of Michigan defensive end Aidan Hutchinson, who signed with the Detroit Lions earlier this month.

“As we looked and really put our plan together for the draft, you know, defense was an area we felt we could shore up and obviously Travon Walker — and of course Aidan was there as well,” Jaguars coach Doug Pederson said. “Both guys are high-character guys, great athletes, and Travon we felt was a better fit for us, you know, here in Jacksonville.”

The 6-foot-5, 272-pound Walker is a freakish athlete who timed in 4.51 seconds in the 40-yard dash at the NFL Scouting Combine.

–Field Level Media

Thunder Awaken start with two wins at ESL One Stockholm


Thunder Awaken got off to an unbeaten start on the first day of Group Stage action at ESL One Stockholm, the first major of the Dota Pro Circuit season in Sweden.

Thunder Awaken opened with a 2-0 win over Team Liquid, then benefited from a forfeit by Mind Games. Three members of the Russia-based team did not receive their travel visas in time to arrive in Sweden.

That decision was enough to give Thunder Awaken the early lead in Group B, with Gaimin Gladiators close behind with one win and one tie (1-1-0). OG leads Group A, also at 1-1-0.

Fourteen teams from around the world are competing in the season’s first major, beginning in two groups of seven in a round-robin Group Stage. All Group Stage matches of best-of-two. The top four teams in each group will qualify for the upper bracket of the playoffs and the fifth- and sixth-place teams will start in the lower bracket.

After the Group Stage concludes Sunday, the playoffs will begin Monday with best-of-three matches until the best-of-five Grand Final on May 22. The winning team will earn a $200,000 grand prize.

Thunder Awaken needed 51 minutes to win the first map against Team Liquid on green, then completed the sweep in 39 minutes on green.

Gaimin Gladiators opened their tournament with a 1-1 draw with TSM. TSM won the first map in 45 minutes on green before GG rallied for a 29-minute victory, also on green.

OG handily defeated beastcoast in 30 minutes on red and 52 minutes on green. In their next match, BOOM Esports picked up a 44-minute win on green before OG fought back for the draw with a 36-minute triumph on green.

ESL One Stockholm Group Stage standings (match record via W-T-L, map record):
Group A
1. OG, 1-1-0, 3-1
2. BetBoom Team, 0-2-0, 2-2
2. BOOM Esports, 0-2-0, 2-2
2. T1, 1-0-0, 2-0
2. Tundra Esports, 1-0-0, 2-0
6. beastcoast, 0-1-1, 1-3
7. Evil Geniuses, 0-0-2, 0-4

Group B
1. Thunder Awaken, 2-0-0, 4-0
2. Gaimin Gladiators, 1-1-0, 3-1
3. Fnatic, 1-0-1, 2-2
3. Team Spirit, 1-0-1, 2-2
5. TSM, 0-1-1, 1-3
6. Mind Games, 0-0-1, 0-2
6. Team Liquid, 0-0-1, 0-2

–Field Level Media

Status of Penguins’ Sidney Crosby unclear, to be evaluated Thursday


The Pittsburgh Penguins missed an opportunity to close out the host New York Rangers in Game 5 of their first-round playoff series on Wednesday, and their chances of advancing might be diminished due to an injury to their star center.

Sidney Crosby took an elbow to the head from Rangers defenseman Jacob Trouba late in the second period, and Crosby never returned to the ice after that shift ended. No penalty was called.

“Sidney Crosby will be evaluated when he goes back to Pittsburgh with us today. His injury is an upper-body injury. I’m not going to get into more specifics with that,” Penguins coach Mike Sullivan said Thursday. The team remained in New York overnight.

After the game, Sullivan said merely that Crosby was being assessed for an upper-body injury. Reports indicated a possible head injury.

The coach was asked to comment on the play that injured Crosby, and Sullivan replied, “Did you see the hit? You probably have the same opinion I do.”

Trouba will not be disciplined by the league for the hit.

“I tried going stick on puck when he was going to shoot,” Trouba said Thursday. “My stick kind of went in between his legs and hit his thigh and I pushed my arm up … kind of a fluky play. It wasn’t massively hard contact. You don’t ever want to see a guy get hurt. I don’t know exactly what the injury is but hopefully he’s better soon.”

Trouba scored a goal a few minutes after his hit on Crosby, helping the Rangers win 5-3 to slice their deficit in the Eastern Conference opening-round matchup to 3-2. Game 6 is scheduled for Friday in Pittsburgh.

Crosby, 34, had two goals and seven assists in the first four games of the series, but he didn’t score before exiting Game 5.

In the regular season, he had 31 goals and 53 assists in 69 games. The three-time Stanley Cup champion has played all 17 of his NHL seasons in Pittsburgh.

–Field Level Media

Sebastian Munoz fires 60 to open Byron Nelson

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Sebastian Munoz did that 60 thing again.

Munoz topped the leaderboard at the Byron Nelson Classic with an opening-round 60 on Thursday, becoming the first player in PGA Tour history with multiple rounds of 60 or lower in the same season.

“It’s a great feeling when everything is clicking,” Munoz said after draining his ninth birdie of the first round in McKinney, Texas.

The University of North Texas product made few mistakes with a 12-under round at TPC Craig Ranch, opening a four-shot lead over Mito Pereira of Chile and American Peter Malnati through the morning wave.

Needing his third eagle of the day on No. 18 for a 59, Munoz went wide of the green on his approach but was able to get an up-and-down birdie to seal the 60.

Munoz bogeyed the par-4 eighth but sandwiched two birdies between eagles on No. 9 — with a 15 1/2-foot putt — and No. 12 and recorded a 28 on the back nine. Munoz eagled 9 and 12 in the first round of the event in 2021.

The 29-year-old Colombian also scored a 60 in the first round of the RSM Classic in November on a par-70 course.

–Field Level Media

New trophies honor Larry Bird, Magic Johnson, others


As part of the league’s 75th anniversary celebration, the NBA unveiled new and redesigned trophies and awards on Thursday honoring some legendary players.

The standout players from this year’s conference finals will take home the first Larry Bird Eastern Conference Finals MVP award and the first Earvin “Magic” Johnson Western Conference Finals MVP award.

The updated Eastern Conference championship trophy is now named after Bob Cousy and the Western Conference championship trophy is now named after Oscar Robertson.

The Larry O’Brien NBA Championship Trophy and Bill Russell Finals MVP Award trophy also got makeovers, with the former adding a base that includes the etched names of all previous champions and the latter now finished in gold vermeil.

“Our minds were on what the trophy should look like and how heavy they should be,” said Christopher Arena, the NBA’s head of on-court and brand partnerships, who spearheaded the project. “We wanted to explore and start a new 75 years and bring some aesthetic consistency to that and have some meaning behind all the trophies we had.”

Artist Victor Solomon collaborated with Tiffany on the designs for the six trophies.

–Field Level Media

Reports: Raiders to acquire QB Jarrett Stidham from Patriots


Jarrett Stidham was acquired by the Las Vegas Raiders to be the backup to Derek Carr in a swap with the New England Patriots, according to multiple reports.

Stidham and a seventh-round draft pick in 2023 would go to Vegas for a sixth-round pick, NFL.com reported.

Stidham would step into the No. 2 role vacated when Marcus Mariota joined the Atlanta Falcons. The Patriots drafted Bailey Zappe to become the backup in New England behind Mac Jones.

Stidham, 25, played collegiately at Baylor and Auburn, and has worked closely with new Raiders head coach Josh McDaniels. McDaniels was offensive coordinator of the Patriots and had input when Stidham was drafted in the fourth round of the 2019 draft.

The Raiders also have backups Nick Mullens and Garrett Gilbert on the roster.

–Field Level Media

Daria Kasatkina upsets Paula Badosa to reach Rome quarterfinals


Daria Kasatkina reached the quarterfinals of the Internazionali BNL d’Italia for the first time by recording a 6-4, 6-4 victory over second-seeded Paula Badosa of Spain on Thursday night in Rome.

Kasatkina had cracked the Round of 16 four previous times without success before delivering the breakthrough victory against Badosa in one hour, 46 minutes.

“I feel like my level is growing with every match,” Kasatkina said after the triumph. “I’m pretty happy with my level today, and I hope I’m going to be the same or better tomorrow.”

The Russian won 71.9 percent of the points on Badosa’s second serve.

Kasatkina will face Jil Teichmann in the quarterfinals after the Switzerland native posted a 6-7 (3), 6-3, 7-5 victory over Elena Rybakina of Kazakhstan.

“Jil, now she’s in great condition, she just played the semis in Madrid,” Kasatkina said. “She already beat very good players. She’s lefty, it’s clay, so yes, it’s going to be a good match. … We’re the same age, we know each other pretty well, so I think it’s going to be fun.”

Meanwhile, top-seeded Iga Swiatek increased her winning streak to 25 matches with a 6-4, 6-1 victory over No. 16 seed Victoria Azarenka of Belarus.

Swiatek battled consistency issues — she had 34 winners but 39 unforced errors — in the 79-minute victory.

“I didn’t start well, and everybody could see that,” Swiatek said afterward. “I’m really happy with the way I reacted and how I improved in the first set. Also how different the second set looked to the first one because I could really reset and really change the way I played. That’s the most positive thing for me.”

Azarenka has 18 winners and 31 unforced errors.

Swiatek will next face Canada’s Bianca Andreescu, who knocked off Croatia qualifier Petra Martic 6-4, 6-4.

The 2019 U.S. Open champion said she is eager for her first career match against Swiatek.

“She’s playing great tennis,” Andreescu said of Swiatek. “I really admire her success. I’m very excited to play her. I love the challenge.”

Third-seeded Aryna Sabalenka of Belarus reached the quarterfinals with a 6-1, 6-4 victory over 13th-seeded American Jessica Pegula.

Sabalenka will face Amanda Anisimova, who excelled during a 6-2, 6-2 victory over seventh-seeded Danielle Collins in an All-American affair. Anisimova is 4-0 all-time against Sabalenka, including two clay-court wins this season.

Fourth-seeded Maria Sakkari of Greece advanced with a 6-4, 7-5 victory over American 15th seed Coco Gauff.

Sakkari will next face ninth-seeded Ons Jabeur, who increased her winning streak to nine with a 6-3, 6-2 triumph over Yulia Putintseva of Kazakhstan in 61 minutes.

“It’s gonna be a tough match,” Jabeur said of facing Sakkari. “I know she plays really good: big serve, big forehand and really great backhand.”

–Field Level Media