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Home Blog Page 10862

Jimmy Butler scores 36 as Heat roll over Hawks


Jimmy Butler posted 36 points, 10 rebounds, four assists and four steals as the Miami Heat defeated the host Atlanta Hawks, 110-86, on Sunday night in a first-round Eastern Conference playoff series.

Miami leads the best-of-7 series, 3-1. The Heat can clinch the series on Tuesday night in Miami.

Hawks star Trae Young, who led the NBA this season in total points and assists, had a quiet night. Young finished with nine points and five assists, and he was charged with five turnovers. He shot just 3-of-11 from the floor, including 3-of-10 on 3-pointers.

The Hawks were led by De’Andre Hunter, who scored 24 points on 9-for-13 shooting, including 4-of-6 on 3-pointers.

Heat star Tyler Herro scored just three points on 1-for-8 shooting. But the Heat got 14 points each from P.J. Tucker and Bam Adebayo.

Miami played without starting point guard Kyle Lowry, who suffered a hamstring injury in Game 3. Lowry was replaced by Gabe Vincent, who posted 11 points and four assists.

Starting center Clint Capela returned for Atlanta, posting two points and seven rebounds. He had been out since suffering a right-knee injury on April 10 in a play-in game against the Cleveland Cavaliers.

Hunter led Atlanta to a 26-25 first-quarter lead. Hunter had a quarter-high 11 points on 4-for-4 shooting, including 3-for-3 on 3-pointers.

With 16 seconds left in the first quarter, Atlanta’s Onyeka Okongwu made a spectacular block on Butler, forcing a jump ball.

The second quarter featured a 9-0 Hawks run, giving them a 35-27 lead. But Miami answered with a 15-0 stretch, taking a 55-41 lead into halftime.

In the third quarter, Tucker was charged with a technical foul after he jostled with Okongwu.

Even so, the Heat stretched their lead to 80-61 by the end of the third quarter.

Miami cruised in the fourth quarter, and the Heat finished with a 48-26 edge in paint points for the game.

The Heat, charged with just seven turnovers in the game, shot 43.5 percent from the floor, including 13-for-42 on 3-pointers (31.0 percent).

Atlanta shot 40.0 percent from the floor, including 15-for-42 on 3-pointers (35.7 percent).

–Field Level Media

Angels blow 6-run lead, still win to avoid sweep vs. Orioles


Taylor Ward’s bases-loaded walk in the seventh inning drove in the game-winning run in the Los Angeles Angels’ 7-6 victory over the Baltimore Orioles Sunday afternoon in Anaheim, Calif.

Angels left fielder Jo Adell hit a grand slam during a six-run first inning, but the Orioles rallied with three runs in the third and three in the seventh to tie the game at 6-6.

Ward came to the plate in the bottom of the seventh with the bases full and one out to face Baltimore’s hard-throwing reliever Felix Bautista. Ward quickly fell behind in the count 1-2 but fouled off three pitches with two strikes and worked the count full. On the ninth pitch of the at-bat, Ward took a 98-mph fastball out of the zone for ball four to drive in Shohei Ohtani from third.

The win allowed the Angels to avoid a three-game sweep.

The Angels had only six hits, including two each from Ohtani and Mike Trout. However, they drew nine walks, including four by Anthony Rendon and three by Ward.

Trey Mancini and Austin Hays homered for Baltimore, which finished with nine hits. Cedric Mullins reached base four times with two hits and two walks.

Angels reliever Austin Warren (2-0) got the win over Orioles reliever Mike Baumann (1-2). Archie Bradley pitched the ninth for his first save of the season.

The Angels scored all six of their first-inning runs before an out was recorded. Orioles starter Chris Ellis lasted five batters before having to come out of the game with shoulder discomfort.

Ohtani led off with a walk, Trout was hit by a pitch and Rendon walked to load the bases. Jared Walsh followed with a two-run single, and after Ward walked to reload the bases, Ellis was removed from the game.

Travis Lakins Sr. entered the game for Baltimore and gave up Adell’s grand slam, the Angels going up 6-0.

Angels starter Jose Suarez kept the Orioles off the scoreboard until the third when he surrendered a three-run homer to Mancini. It was Mancini’s first hit of the season with runners in scoring position after going 0-for-14.

Suarez went 4 1/3 innings, the same as his first two starts. He gave up three runs on four hits and two walks Sunday, striking out six and making 78 pitches.

–Field Level Media

Lightning halt Panthers’ 13-game win streak in 8-4 barn burner


Nicholas Paul scored twice, including a sensational short-handed goal to put his team up for good, as the Tampa Bay Lightning defeated the host Florida Panthers 8-4 on Sunday night at Sunrise, Fla.

The loss snapped the Panthers’ franchise-record 13-game win streak. The Panthers (57-16-6, 120 points) hadn’t lost since March 27 at the Toronto Maple Leafs.

Paul’s go-ahead goal was set up by Brandon Hagel, who beat Panthers star Aleksander Barkov to a loose puck behind Florida’s net. Hagel took a quick look behind him before passing to a charging Paul. From there, Paul slipped the puck between his legs before lifting it above goalie Spencer Knight’s blocker.

The Lightning (49-22-8, 106 points) also got two goals apiece from Nikita Kucherov and Steven Stamkos. Cal Foote and Brayden Point also tallied.

Florida got two goals from Sam Reinhart and one each from Brandon Montour and Mason Marchment.

Andrei Vasilevskiy made 35 saves for the Lightning.

Knight was pulled with 7:01 left in the second period. He allowed five goals and made 12 saves for the Panthers. Sergei Bobrovsky finished the night in goal, allowing three goals and saving 13 shots.

Tampa Bay opened the scoring with 2:37 gone in the first. After a pass from Pat Maroon, Kucherov roofed the puck from the right circle.

The Panthers tied the score less than two minutes later as Reinhart scored off the rush. Reinhart used Lightning defenseman Mikhail Sergachev as a screen, surprising Vasilevskiy with the quick shot.

Tampa Bay took a 2-1 lead on Stamkos’ power-play goal at 6:44. Stamkos took a pass from Victor Hedman and scored on a one-timer from the left circle.

With 5:02 left in the first, Tampa Bay extended its lead to 3-1 as the Lightning worked a two-on-one rush, finishing with Hagel’s pass and Foote’s goal.

The Panthers closed an active first period on Montour’s booming slapshot with 2:32 left. Panthers forward Patric Hornqvist provided a great screen.

Florida tied the score just 59 seconds into the second period as Claude Giroux lofted a pass ahead toward Marchment, who extended his stick and batted in the bouncing puck.

But Paul scored the go-ahead goal with 5:28 elapsed in the second.

Then, with 12:59 expired in the second, Paul scored again. This time, he stole the puck and attempted a pass to Alex Killorn, but Knight tried to intercept the pass and the puck went in off his stick for a 5-3 Lightning lead.

In the third, Point and Reinhart traded power-play goals. Kucherov’s second goal, with 8:24 left, sealed Tampa Bay’s win.

–Field Level Media

Rudy Gobert fined $25,000 for profane language on TV


Utah Jazz center Rudy Gobert was fined $25,000 Sunday for using profanity in a postgame television interview immediately following Utah’s Game 4 victory over the Dallas Mavericks on Saturday.

Gobert made a go-ahead dunk on a lob from teammate Donovan Mitchell as the Jazz won 100-99. In an interview on NBA TV, Gobert was asked what his team’s potential was.

“(Expletive) the talk,” Gobert replied. “We’re just trying to be the best team we can be. We’re trying to enjoy the moment, and whatever happens happens.”

The Jazz — who bowed out in the second round of last year’s playoffs despite owning the league’s best record — have faced criticism, particularly regarding the relationship between Gobert and Mitchell. Utah is now tied with the Mavericks 2-2 in their first-round series. Game 5 is set for Monday in Dallas.

–Field Level Media

Star players clicking as Mavs-Jazz series down to best-of-three


Luka Doncic was just 40 seconds away from having a storybook ending to his first game of the 2022 playoffs.

The Dallas Mavericks’ superstar had scored 30 points, including a step-back 3-pointer with 39.6 seconds left, and hauled in 10 rebounds with four assists after missing the three previous first-round games against the Utah Jazz due to a strained left calf.

“I missed basketball,” Doncic said. “I’m just excited to be back. Playing basketball is having fun. What can be better than playoff basketball? I’m just excited to be back.”

Game 4 did turn out to be somewhat of a storybook ending — just not for Doncic and the Mavs, who lost to the Jazz 100-99 and host Utah in Game 5 on Monday night in Dallas with the series tied 2-2.

After Doncic gave Dallas a seemingly safe four-point lead — only four teams had rallied out of a similar deficit with 40 seconds left in the past 10 postseasons — everything went the Jazz’s way.

With 31.2 seconds remaining, Donovan Mitchell rebounded his own miss for a putback layup and then hit the ensuing free throw after being fouled by Doncic.

With 19.8 to go, Mitchell fouled Dwight Powell, and the Mavericks big man missed both attempts.

Rudy Gobert snared a rebound and, with 11 seconds remaining, Mitchell made a lob pass to Gobert for an alley-oop dunk that was reminiscent of a Stockton-to-Malone play.

In half a minute, the Mavs went from being up four to trailing by one. Dallas chose to advance the ball full court after a timeout, and the Utah defense forced Jalen Brunson and a double-teamed Doncic into deferring the final attempt.

Spencer Dinwiddie’s rushed buzzer-beating attempt from the deep elbow sealed the series-tying win for Utah.

“We didn’t really execute it well,” Doncic said. “We should’ve gotten a better shot.”

Brunson said the Mavs “can’t hang our heads” after losing a game in which they overcame Utah’s 16-point lead in the first half.

“We actually are in a great position. Utah’s in a great position. It’s best-of-three now,” Brunson said. “We’ve got to go out there, play our style of basketball, play together, and that’s basically what we’ve got to keep doing.”

Health-wise, Doncic said his calf felt good, but his conditioning was a bit off after missing two weeks.

The Jazz, who’ve been surrounded by rumors of chemistry issues, were happy to see that an energetic defensive performance and unselfish basketball paid off to prolong a postseason that seemed perilously close to ending early.

Utah cherished the Mitchell-to-Gobert connection after much had been made on social media about the All-Star guard being unwilling to pass to the All-Star center.

“I think it’s funny. It wasn’t even the first pass. There was a bunch of them,” Mitchell said. “It feels good. You hear it. I don’t think he and I sit here and think there’s nothing, but you hear it. And it’s good to see that and do it on a stage like that.”

Mitchell finished with 23 points, seven assists and six rebounds, and Gobert contributed 17 points and 15 rebounds. It’s clear the Jazz need both All-Stars to play well, and play well together.

It also helped to get a defensive effort like Bojan Bogdanovic gave, along with the offensive outburst provided by 2021 Sixth Man of the Year Jordan Clarkson, who led Utah with 25 points.

“We gave everything we had. It started with Bojan pressuring the ball, and then it became all of us — Jordan, Don, Mike (Conley), everyone — everyone that came to the game was playing with intensity, defensively,” Gobert said. “We can feel it. Regardless of what happens at the end of the game, if you play that way, you deserve to win.”

–Field Level Media

Patrick Cantlay, Xander Schauffele go wire-to-wire at Zurich Classic

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Patrick Cantlay and Xander Schauffele completed a dominant week at the Zurich Classic of New Orleans by polishing off a two-shot win Sunday at TPC Louisiana in Avondale, La.

The fourth- and 12th-ranked players in the world carded an even-par 72 in the final round to finish at 29-under 259, a tournament record in the PGA Tour’s only team event. Sam Burns and Billy Horschel made a late push, drawing within one shot midway through the round, but settled for a 68 and a final score of 27 under.

Doc Redman and Sam Ryder (67 Sunday) placed third at 24 under.

It goes down as Cantlay’s seventh career PGA Tour victory and Schauffele’s fifth.

“Mid-range putts and kept the momentum going, especially in best ball,” Cantlay said. “It felt like whoever had the putt for birdie on that hole, especially if it was a makeable putt, we tended to make it.”

Teams played four-ball (best ball) on Thursday and Saturday and foursomes (alternate shot), considered the more difficult of the two formats, on Friday and Sunday. Cantlay and Schauffele opened the week with a tournament-record 59 during four-ball, when they put 11 birdies and an eagle on the card.

Sunday’s round started with six straight pars before they combined for an eagle at the par-5 seventh. Schauffele’s tee shot found the rough left of the fairway, but Cantlay dialed in his second shot to about 8 feet of the pin for Schauffele to convert the eagle.

“Pat hit an unbelievable shot into 7,” Schauffele said. “Just one of those shots you kind of see on coverage and you’re like, I don’t know how that ball got there. It was a pretty thing to see live from my angle from the fairway.”

The team bogeyed the ninth and 10th holes to slip back to 29 under, and Burns and Horschel reached 28 under with five birdies through their first 11 holes. But Cantlay and Schauffele recovered with a tap-in birdie at the par-5 11th, while Burns and Horschel cooled off down the stretch.

Horschel thought he and Burns would need to go exceptionally low to catch the leaders.

“I thought if we shot 10-under and got to 33, they shot 4-under in this format on Friday, so I wouldn’t be shocked if they did it again,” Horschel said. “We played really well on the front and we were right there with six holes left to play, and then we just couldn’t make anything happen.”

Cantlay and Schauffele held a three-shot lead when they reached the final hole and made bogey.

Will Zalatoris and Davis Riley shot the low round of the day, a 6-under 66, to secure a tie for fourth at 23 under with Keegan Bradley and Brendan Steele; Bubba Watson and Harold Varner III; Matthew NeSmith and Taylor Moore; the South Africa duo of Garrick Higgo and Branden Grace; and David Lipsky and Englishman Aaron Rai.

–Field Level Media

Former Patriots LB Clayton Weishuhn killed in crash


Former NFL linebacker Clayton Weishuhn was killed in a car accident, according to the Texas Department of Public Safety. He was 62.

Weishuhn died Friday near his hometown of Wall, Texas, after being ejected from his pickup truck. According to the accident report, he drifted into a ditch and overcorrected into a dirt field and wasn’t wearing a seat belt.

Weishuhn was pronounced dead at the scene.

Weishuhn was a third-round draft pick of the New England Patriots in 1982 and set a franchise record with 229 tackles in 1983.

But he badly injured his left knee in the 1984 season opener against the Buffalo Bills and missed the rest of the season and the following campaign.

He played in just 13 more NFL games — four with the Patriots in 1986 when he dealt with hamstring and groin injuries and nine for the Green Bay Packers in 1987.

Weishuhn was a college star at nearby Angelo State University and had 523 tackles from 1978-81 and helped the school win the 1978 NAIA national title. He was inducted into the school’s athletic Hall of Honor in 2006.

–Field Level Media

Evil Geniuses record another sweep to win LCS Spring Final


Evil Geniuses capped a dominant run through the losers’ bracket to win the Grand Final of the League of Legends Championship Series Spring Split playoffs Sunday.

The Geniuses, who dropped their opening playoff match three weeks ago against Team Liquid in a tough 3-2 result, rattled off their third consecutive 3-0 sweep — this time against upper-bracket winner 100 Thieves.

The Geniuses won their final four matches on the event by a combined 12-1 score.

With the victory, Evil Geniuses take home the $100,000 grand prize and qualify for the Mid-Season Invitational in South Korea in May.

EG won with relative ease, taking the first two maps on blue in 31 and 24 minutes, respectively. They then clinched the match on red in 25 minutes.

Kyle “Danny” Sakamaki of the U.S. (18-2-12 kills-deaths-assists total) had a match-best 18 kills — 10 more than the next competitor — while Polish teammate Kacper “Inspired” Sloma (6-1-33 K/D/A total) led all players with 33 assists over the three maps for Evil Geniuses.

League of Legends Championship Series Spring playoffs prize pool
1. $100,000 — Evil Geniuses
2. $50,000 — 100 Thieves
3. $30,000 — Team Liquid
4. $20,000 — Cloud9
5-6. No prize money — Golden Guardians, FlyQuest
7. No prize money — Dignitas
8. No prize money — Counter Logic Gaming
9. No prize money — TSM
10. No prize money — Immortals

–Field Level Media

Nasa Hataoka runs away with five-shot win at LA Open

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Nasa Hataoka has been a model of consistency this season, and that steady play was rewarded as she shot a 67 on Sunday to finish at 15 under and win her first LPGA event this season at the LA Open.

The 23-year-old Japanese native was the only player this weekend to shoot 68 or better in every round at Wilshire Country Club, and her five-stroke win marked her sixth career victory and second career in a 72-hole event.

While it marked Hataoka’s first winner’s trophy of the 2022 season, she has made eight of nine cuts and has finished in the top 10 six times.

Hataoka carried a four-shot advantage into her final round, and sent the message early in her round that she intended to keep it. She birdied her opening hole and three of the first five to jump out to 14 under. After a brief hiccup when carding a 5 on the par-4 sixth hole, she rebounded with another birdie at No. 7 to maintain her sizable lead.

Hataoka cruised from there, sinking seven straight pars before punctuating her performance with an eagle on the par-5 15th hole.

Saying afterward that her focus this season has made a big difference in her improvement, Hataoka pointed to her putting as the cherry on top this tournament.

“My putting good all week,” she said. “That’s it.”

Australia’s Hannah Green produced a second-place finish at 10 under after her 68 on Sunday. A trio of players ended tied for third at 7 under, including Sweden’s Madelene Sagstrom (66), South Korea’s Inbee Park (70) and former tournament champion Minjee Lee (68) of Australia.

Sagstrom’s 66 tied with four others for the low round of the day.

“I was really putting well,” Sagstrom said. “I think I told my caddie after probably the fourth hole, I was like, it’s one of those days where I just knew I was going to make a lot putts.

“So that was a whole mindset. Fought a little bit more in the end but, (I’m) really, really pleased with how I played today.”

After firing a 64 Friday to match Hataoka for the 36-hole lead, South Korea’s Jin Young Ko ended in disappointing fashion — following Saturday’s 72 with a 75 on Sunday. She tallied just one birdie in the final round with three bogeys and a double-bogey on No. 7.

–Field Level Media

Watch Chris Rock’s mom comments on celebrity Will Smith slapping her son as he reaches India

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Chris Rock’s mother, Rose Rock has finally opened up about the infamous incident that took place at the 2022 Oscars. Chris Rock had joked about Jada Pinkett Smith’s hairstyle and husband Will Smith went on stage and slapped the comedian. Smith then shouted profanities after he returned to his seat. Rose Rock spoke of the impact of the slap on her family, the minimal punishment given to Smith, who is also a celebrity, as well as his impersonal apology on social media.

Rose Rock, who is an author and motivational speaker, spoke to WIS TV. She told the South Carolina based TV station that she initially thought that it was staged until Will Smith shouted obscenities at her son Chris Rock. She added that she told someone that “when Will slapped Chris, he slapped all of us, but he really slapped me.” She believed that when someone “hurt” her child, he had “hurt” her.

When asked about what she could have said to Smith she mentioned that she would have asked him what in the world he was thinking about as she looked at the potential repercussions of the slap including her son falling and Smith leaving in handcuffs.



She also felt that Smith’s apology on Instagram sounded as if it was written by “his people.” She believed that the apology should have been personal and that he should have reached out to Chris.

Although the celebrity comedian’s mother was against the Oscar award being taken away from Will Smith, as advocated by some, she called his ten-year ban on attending the Oscars “kind of funny” as they had boycotted the award ceremony “a year they weren’t even invited.”

 

https://www.instagram.com/p/CctJ55QFaEQ/



Rose also expressed her sympathy for Questlove whose win for Best Documentary was overshadowed by the slapping event. The documentary producer had also expressed a similar sentiment, earlier.

 



Rose Rock said that her son, comedian Chris Rock was “doing well” and was “still processing” the incident that took place at the Oscars 2022. Meanwhile, celebrity Will Smith landed in Mumbai, on Saturday, to meet a spiritual guide Sadhguru, whose original name is Jaggi Vasudev.


(Photo/Credit: Twitter Screen Capture)