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Home Blog Page 10807

Aces hold off Lynx’s comeback bid


Fourth-quarter runs of 9-0 and 8-2 snuffed rally efforts from the visiting Minnesota Lynx as the Las Vegas Aces scored a 93-87 win on Thursday.

Jackie Young scored 25 points to lead the Aces (5-1).

Las Vegas rode a dominant second quarter to an 11-point halftime lead. Though the margin reached double digits at various points in the third quarter, the Lynx continuously clawed back.

Minnesota (1-5) got 25 points, six rebounds and six assists from Aerial Powers plus 20 points on 8-of-11 shooting and 11 rebounds from Sylvia Fowles.

Moriah Jefferson scored two of her 14 points on a jumper to pull the Lynx to within 76-74 with 7:05 remaining. Las Vegas answered with its 9-0 run, which included Young sinking all three free-throw attempts after a flagrant foul.

The Aces’ Dearica Hamby capped the run with a put-back, part of her 14-point, 12-rebound night. Hamby surpassed 2,000 career points in the win.

All five Las Vegas starters scored in double figures. A’ja Wilson and Chelsea Gray each notched 17 points, and Kelsey Plum had 14.

The Aces’ driving force was ultimately Young, who shined on both ends of the floor. In addition to her game-high-matching point total, she spent most of the night guarding Minnesota’s Kayla McBride. After McBride made her 2022 WNBA debut on Tuesday with 24 points in a win over Los Angeles, she was held scoreless on 0-for-4 shooting on Thursday.

Young’s defensive effort also produced a game-high three steals.

Jessica Shepard recorded a double-double in the loss for the Lynx with 14 points and a game-high 14 rebounds. Shepard’s and-one conversion ignited a 7-0 Minnesota run in the late fourth quarter that knocked the gap down to four points, but Las Vegas responded with its final surge — again capped on a Hamby basket in the paint.

–Field Level Media

Heat’s P.J. Tucker exits game with bruised knee


Heat starting forward P.J. Tucker departed Miami’s Eastern Conference finals game against the Boston Celtics in the third quarter on Thursday due to a left knee contusion.

The Heat announced a short time later that the 37-year-old veteran wouldn’t return to Game 2 of the best-of-seven series.

Tucker had five points and four rebounds in 22 minutes before exiting.

Tucker contributed five points and six rebounds in 31 minutes during Miami’s 118-107 victory in Game 1 on Tuesday.

Miami also played without point guard Kyle Lowry (left hamstring strain) for the eighth time in the past 10 games.

–Field Level Media

Blues cruise past Avalanche to level series


David Perron scored two goals, Jordan Kyrou and Brandon Saad also scored and the St. Louis Blues beat the Colorado Avalanche 4-1 in Game 2 of the Western Conference semifinals on Thursday night in Denver.

Jordan Binnington stopped 30 shots and Pavel Buchnevich had two assists for St. Louis, which evened the best-of-seven series at one win apiece.

Gabriel Landeskog scored and Darcy Kuemper had 28 saves for the Avalanche, who lost for the first time in the playoffs and had their eight-game postseason winning streak against the Blues snapped.

Game 3 is Saturday night in St. Louis.

The Blues controlled play in the first period before finally breaking through early in the second. Ryan O’Reilly carried the puck through the neutral zone and fed Kyrou as he skated into the Colorado zone. Kyrou used Avalanche defenseman Samuel Girard as a screen and fluttered a shot over Kuemper’s left shoulder to give St. Louis a 1-0 lead at 5:45.

It was Kyrou’s fifth goal of the playoffs.

Colorado had a chance to get even on a power play but couldn’t score, and then the Blues scored on a five-on-three late in the second period.

With Devon Toews off for tripping, Valeri Nichushkin ran into Binnington and was called for goaltender interference. St. Louis had 1:03 of a two-man advantage and cashed in with 13 seconds left on it when Perron scored from the left circle at 19:26.

The Avalanche went on the power play early in the third and made it count. Landeskog chipped a loose puck over Binnington’s left shoulder 1:49 into the frame for his fourth goal of the playoffs.

Colorado kept up the pressure, but it was the Blues who got the next goal. Perron stole the puck in his own end, skated into the Avalanche zone and put a shot through Kuemper at 10:31 for his seventh of the postseason.

Kuemper came off for an extra skater, and Saad scored into the empty net at 18:10.

–Field Level Media

Four HRs, sharp pitching power Astros over Nationals


Justin Verlander threw five shutout innings and the Houston Astros homered in three consecutive innings to bash the host Washington Nationals 8-0 on Sunday afternoon in the rubber game of a three-game series.

Martin Maldonado, Yuli Gurriel, Chas McCormick and Jose Altuve all hit home runs for Houston.

It was a strong bounce-back outing for the Astros, who a night earlier had an 11-game winning streak snapped with a 13-6 loss.

Verlander (5-1) used 107 pitches and gave up two hits to combine with three relievers on a four-hitter. Rafael Montero, Ryne Stanek and Bryan Abreu all worked in relief behind Verlander.

Nationals starter Patrick Corbin (0-6) took the loss, logging six innings and giving up five runs on six hits, including three home runs.

Houston has scored at least five runs in seven straight games.

The scoring began on Maldonado’s two-run shot in the fifth. Gurriel homered in the sixth with a solo blast and McCormick added a two-run homer in the seventh. Houston benefited from walks, as the players aboard in the fifth and seventh reached on free passes.

The Astros plated four runs in the seventh. Altuve finished the scoring with his homer to lead off the ninth. Gurriel and Altuve both homered twice in the series.

Gurriel had three hits for the second game in a row. Aledmys Diaz, Altuve and Maldonado each added two of Houston’s 11 total hits.

Washington had four singles and four walks, leaving seven runners on base while another was erased on a double play. The Nationals went 0-for-5 with runners in scoring position.

Houston is 5-1 on a nine-game road trip that is slated to continue in Boston on Monday.

Washington, which has been blanked three times this season, has lost five of its last seven games.

–Field Level Media

Last-minute goal gives Lightning 2-0 edge on Panthers


Ross Colton’s goal with 3.8 seconds left gave the Tampa Bay Lightning a thrilling 2-1 victory over the Florida Panthers on Thursday in Sunrise, Fla., and a 2-0 edge in their Eastern Conference semifinal series.

With overtime looming, Colton headed to the net just as Nikita Kucherov sent a no-look backhand pass from the end boards. Colton, who scored the Stanley Cup-winning goal last year, buried a high shot for his fifth goal of the 2022 playoffs.

Corey Perry also scored for the two-time defending champion Lightning, who will look to claim a stranglehold on the Battle of Florida when they host Game 3 of the best-of-seven series on Sunday — the first of two home games on consecutive days.

Tampa Bay’s Andrei Vasilevskiy made 35 saves amid an outstanding goalie battle.

Eetu Luostarinen scored for the Panthers, who finished atop the league in the regular season but are now in serious trouble in their attempt to unseat their state rivals. Sergei Bobrovsky stopped 25 shots.

Perry, who was injured in the warmup when a puck he shot ricocheted off the crossbar and hit him in the face, notched Tampa Bay’s fourth power-play goal of the series at the 12:06 mark of the first period.

While Steven Stamkos held the puck in the left circle, Perry set up shop in the slot and redirected the shot-pass for his fourth of the playoffs.

The Lightning have 11 power-play goals through the first nine games of the playoffs, the same total they had through their first 11 postseason games last year.

The Panthers pushed back and finally drew even when Luostarinen netted his first career playoff goal with 1:53 remaining in the second period. After taking a drop pass from Gustav Forsling as they raced down the left wing, Luostarinen sent a shot that just trickled over the goal line.

The Panthers had their chances to win. Vasilevskiy sparkled, but Florida failed to convert four power-play opportunities and is now 0-for-25 to start the playoffs.

The Lightning are known for their offensive play, but they showed they can defend and are willing to sacrifice. Tampa Bay had a few players go to the locker room after blocking shots. Stamkos left the game twice, while Brandon Hagel, Mikhail Sergachev and Erik Cernak were hobbled briefly once, but all returned to finish the game.

–Field Level Media

Celtics bounce back, blitz Heat in Game 2


Marcus Smart watched the opening game of the Eastern Conference finals from the bench and didn’t like what he witnessed.

Smart liked his view much better on Thursday, when he electrified Boston with a superb all-around effort as the Celtics rolled to a 127-102 victory over the host Miami Heat, evening the series at one win apiece.

Smart returned from a one-game absence caused by a right foot injury and contributed 24 points, 12 assists, nine rebounds and three steals in 40 minutes. Smart also made five 3-pointers to help the Celtics avenge their Game 1 setback.

The NBA Defensive Player of the Year didn’t look the least bit hampered as he was his usual pesky self on defense while accumulating at least 20 points and 10 assists in a postseason game for the third time in his career.

“I was pumped. I felt bad that I couldn’t be out there with my teammates and go to battle with them,” Smart said of his absence. “We’re playing against a really good Miami Heat team. I got to get my rest, I got my health back, I got to watch and see some things and come out to execute this game.”

Smart also received top-notch help as Jayson Tatum scored 27 points, Jaylen Brown registered 24 points and eight rebounds and Grant Williams added 19 points for Boston.

Jimmy Butler led the Heat with 29 points. Gabe Vincent and Victor Oladipo added 14 points apiece while Tyler Herro scored 11 for Miami.

Smart helped hound Butler, who scored 41 points in Game 1.

“My assignment was to make everything tough for him,” Smart said. “We knew he would hit some shots. If he did, he was going to have to work for them.

“We all know Jimmy is a great player. Jimmy has been doing this for a long time. He knows what it takes and he has that heart. It took a full team effort. I started on him but everybody got a shot.”

Game 3 is Saturday night at Boston.

The Celtics were outscored 39-14 in the third quarter of Game 1 as an eight-point halftime lead turned into a 118-107 loss. They had no such troubles this time.

Boston led by 25 points at halftime and played the Heat to a standstill (26 points apiece) in the third quarter to take a 96-71 lead into the fourth quarter.

Smart buried a 3-pointer to push the lead to 103-73 with 9:55 left as the Celtics continued to roll. Boston’s biggest lead was 34 points.

“This has to hurt,” Butler said of the margin of defeat. “They tried to embarrass us, they did embarrass us. We have to realize that.

“It can’t get too much worse. They whipped our tails on our home floor.”

Al Horford (COVID-19 protocol) also returned for the Celtics after missing Game 1 and had 10 points on 4-of-4 shooting. Horford cleared the protocol hours before tipoff.

Miami lost P.J. Tucker to a left knee contusion in the third quarter. He had five points and four rebounds in 22 minutes before exiting.

The Heat were also without Kyle Lowry (left hamstring) for the eighth time in the past 10 games.

The Celtics shot 51.2 percent from the field, including 50 percent (20 of 40) from 3-point range. Tatum and Brown each made four 3-pointers.

Miami connected on 44.2 percent of its shots and was 10 of 34 (29.4 percent) from behind the arc.

Heat coach Erik Spoelstra said his team can’t let the crushing loss linger.

“This only counts as one (defeat),” Spoelstra said. “That’s what experienced players and staff in the locker room understand. We don’t like it. They played extremely well.”

Boston made 12 of 19 3-point attempts (63.2 percent) in the first half while building a 70-45 halftime lead. The Celtics led by as many as 29 before the break.

Boston’s onslaught occurred after it fell behind by 10 just 4 1/2 minutes into the game.

Brown drained a 3-pointer with 3:44 left in the first period to start a string of 17 straight points as the Celtics eventually took a 32-21 lead. Boston led 35-24 at the end of the quarter.

Williams’ layup made it 68-39 with 1:16 remaining in the second quarter before Boston settled for the 25-point halftime cushion.

–Field Level Media

Rory McIlroy takes first-round lead at PGA Championship

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Rory McIlroy used four straight birdies early in his round Thursday to shoot a 5-under-par 65 and take the first-round lead at the PGA Championship at Southern Hills Country Club in Tulsa, Okla.

The four-time major winner from Northern Ireland also birdied his final hole to move ahead of Will Zalatoris and Tom Hoge, who shot 66 during the early wave of golfers. Matt Kuchar, Justin Thomas and Mexico’s Abraham Ancer are tied for fourth at 67.

A large group at 68 includes Xander Schauffele, Kevin Na, Australia’s Cameron Smith, England’s Matt Fitzpatrick and Chile’s Joaquin Niemann.

McIlroy is a two-time PGA champion (2012, 2014), but since his title in 2014, he has yet to break through and win another major. He started slowly at the Masters last month but finished with a stellar 64 to wind up in second place.

“I’ve been carrying some good form,” McIlroy said. “Obviously (I) took a lot from that last round at Augusta, played well up in D.C. at the Wells Fargo there and played good in the practice rounds earlier this week.

“I think when your game is feeling like that, it’s just a matter of going out there and really sticking to your game plan, executing as well as you possibly can and just sort of staying in your own little world.”

Playing in a group with Tiger Woods and Jordan Spieth, McIlroy started on the back nine and dialed up birdies at the 12th through 15th holes. At the par-4 12th, he stuck his second shot inside 2 feet of the pin for a tap-in. Another highlight came at the par-3 14th, where he rolled in a right-to-left birdie putt from 26 feet.

McIlroy added birdies at Nos. 2 and 5 to reach 6 under before giving those shots back by bogeying the next two par-3 holes, the sixth and eighth. But at the par-4 ninth, he sank a downhill 19-footer for birdie to move back into sole possession of the lead.

Woods started with two birdies in his first five holes before coming apart. He favored his surgically repaired right leg throughout the afternoon and finished at 4-over 74 after making seven bogeys and one more birdie. Spieth shot a 72.

“My leg is not feeling as good as I would like it to be,” Woods said. “We’ll start the recovery process and get after it tomorrow.”

Zalatoris counteracted two bogeys with six birdies, including a strong finish with a 24-foot birdie putt at the seventh hole and a 30-foot birdie at the ninth.

“I think I either made four or five 25-footers,” said Zalatoris, the 2021 PGA Tour Rookie of the Year. “It was kind of a bizarre day. … Anytime you can put up a 66 in a major, you’re obviously happy.”

Hoge collected five birdies and just one bogey. He opened with a 15-foot birdie putt at the par-4 first and had three more birdies inside of 6 feet thanks to his approach game. The 32-year-old earned his first career PGA Tour win earlier this year at the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am.

“I felt like the golf course was a little bit softer than I expected it to be,” Hoge said. “The greens were very receptive out there. So certainly felt like you could go out and do it and shoot a few under par if you played well, and I was fortunate to do so.”

The winds picked up later in the day, leaving tougher scoring conditions for the afternoon wave of golfers. Thomas played in that wave and finished with three birdies and no bogeys over the back nine, including a 20-foot putt to become one of the few to birdie No. 18.

The top three players in the world ranking — Scottie Scheffler, Jon Rahm of Spain and Collin Morikawa — played in a marquee afternoon group and all struggled, combining for nine bogeys on the back nine.

Scheffler, the Masters champion, made four bogeys in his last seven holes with water balls on Nos. 13 and 18 — though he recovered on the last hole to save par for a 71.

“I think you just try and use (frustration) for good,” said Scheffler, who also eagled the par-5 fifth. “I was definitely very frustrated out there but just kind of hung in there. I made a great par at the last and that’ll make dinner taste a little bit better.”

Morikawa posted a 72, and Rahm struggled to a 73.

–Field Level Media

Report: Immortals will sign jungler Kenvi


Immortals, coming off a last-place finish in the League of Legends Championship Series Spring Split, plan to sign jungler Shane “Kenvi” Espinoza, blix.gg reported on Thursday.

Kenvi, a 19-year-old from the Philippines, spent the past two years with 100 Thieves’ academy team.

According to blix.gg, Immortals also considered adding Dennis “Svenskeren” Johnsen, a backup jungler for Cloud9, before deciding on Kenvi.

In the North American Academy Spring Split, Kenvi led the 100 Thieves academy squad in kills.

Kenvi will fill the vacancy created when Immortals parted ways with Romanian jungler Andrei “Xerxe” Dragomir on May 2.

The team went 5-13 in the LCS Spring Split. Last year, Immortals came in seventh place in both the Spring and Summer Splits, then tied for fifth in the season-ending LCS Championship.

–Field Level Media

WOLF HOUND Official Trailer 2022 | Official Trailer | CWEB Reviews

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WOLF HOUND Official Trailer

WOLF HOUND Official Trailer 2022 Trevor Donovan, James Maslow Action Movie © 2022

 

THE FORGIVEN Trailer 2022 | Official Trailer | CWEB Reviews

THE FORGIVEN Trailer

THE FORGIVEN Trailer (2022) Jessica Chastain, Matt Smith, Ralph Fiennes, Drama Movie © 2022 – RoadsideFlix