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Home Blog Page 8628

Foot Locker Downgraded After Disappointing Q1, Shares Plunge

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Citi analyst downgraded Foot Locker (NYSE:FL) to Neutral from Buy and lowered their price target to $30.00 from $48.00 after the company reported disappointing Q1 results and revised down its full-year guidance. As a result, shares dropped more than 27% on Friday and are trading more than 5% lower intra-day today.
Q1 EPS was $0.70, worse than the Street estimate of $0.78. Revenue came in at $1.93 billion, missing the Street estimate of $1.99 billion. For fiscal 2023, the company anticipates EPS in the range of $2.00-$2.25, compared to the Street estimate of $3.46. Sales are expected to be down 6.5-8%, compared to the prior guidance of a 3.5-5.5% decline.

Mystics seek to reverse outcome against Sun


New Connecticut Sun coach Stephanie White did not need to wait long to confirm something about her team.

“They’re just tough,” White said Sunday after the team’s 80-74 win over the Washington Mystics. “They understand how to make winning plays, whether that’s on the defensive end and getting the big stuff, getting the critical rebound. You know, getting a big score and just finding ways to win ballgames.”

Connecticut gets another chance to exhibit that toughness on Tuesday night when it travels to Washington D.C. to finish the teams’ home-and-home series.

Coming off a 70-61 win in Friday night’s season opener at Indiana, the Sun got off to a slumbering start against the Mystics and trailed 24-14 after a quarter. But they gradually reeled in Washington, cutting the margin to four at the half and one point following three quarters before taking over in the final 10 minutes.

DeWanna Bonner scored 21 points to pace Connecticut. Brionna Jones recorded a 15-point, 10-rebound double-double, while Alyssa Thomas chipped in 14 points, 16 rebounds and six assists. Thomas has been a stat-sheet stuffer in the first two games, averaging 16 points, 13.5 rebounds and six assists.

Washington nearly followed up its impressive 80-64 victory over WNBA Finals favorite New York with a good road win. But the Mystics turned cold after a great first quarter, when they shot 47.1 percent from the field, to finish the game at 39.1 percent.

Shakira Austin (21 points, 11 rebounds) and Elena Delle Donne (19 points, 11 rebounds) each collected double-doubles for Washington. Natasha Cloud contributed 13 points and six assists.

Delle Donne is pacing a balanced attack through two games with 16 points and 7.5 rebounds per game. Cloud and Austin each are scoring 13.5 points per game.

“We’re confident with what we have in this locker room,” Cloud said. “You’ll continue to talk about the superhero teams but we know who we are and we know what we bring every single night. We know what we have in our locker room.”

–Field Level Media

Dream, Lynx aim to put offensive struggles behind them


Offensive woes led to season-opening losses for the Atlanta Dream and Minnesota Lynx. One of those teams will collect its first victory when they meet in Minneapolis on Tuesday night.

The Dream shot 35.4 percent from the field and committed 19 turnovers in an 85-78 loss to Dallas on Saturday.

Atlanta trailed 47-30 at halftime.

“We had great shots in the first half,” Dream coach Tanisha Wright said. “I was OK with our shot selection. … If we had knocked down half of the looks we had in the first half, it’s a different ballgame.”

The Dream gradually reduced the deficit and got within three points with just over a minute remaining but couldn’t finish off the comeback.

“We just spotted them too many points. Trying to make your way back into the game is really tough,” Wright said. “I thought we did some things well. Some things we still need to clean up. We have got to clean up our turnovers. That has to change for us.”

Rhyne Howard led the Dream with 20 points and 10 rebounds but shot 8-for-24 from the field. Cheyenne Parker contributed 18 points and 11 rebounds but committed six turnovers.

Reserve guard Danielle Robinson injured her left knee in the opener.

The Lynx fell to the Chicago Sky 77-66 on Friday due to a nightmarish second quarter. The Lynx were outscored 22-3 during those 10 minutes and trailed 44-27 at the break.

“That was tough. That was obviously tough to overcome,” Lynx coach Cheryl Reeve said. “Won every other quarter. But very clearly we are a work in progress.”

For the game, Minnesota shot 33.3 percent and committed 21 turnovers.

“Our pick and roll offense just was not good,” Reeve said.

Napheesa Collier and Kayla McBride combined for 29 points but shot just 9-for-26 from the field.

“We didn’t have that much fluid movement on offense and we can’t be like that,” McBride said.

–Field Level Media

Nikola Jokic, Nuggets sweep Lakers to reach first Finals


Nikola Jokic has been as good as anybody in basketball over the past three seasons, and the Denver Nuggets’ big man now will get the NBA Finals stage to show it.

Jokic and his teammates overcame LeBron James, Anthony Davis and the Los Angeles Lakers as the visiting Nuggets advanced to the NBA Finals for the first time in franchise history with a 113-111 victory on Monday and a four-game sweep in the Western Conference finals.

The two-time MVP scored 30 points, grabbed 14 rebounds and dished out 13 assists for his fifth triple-double in his past six games. He set a record for total triple-doubles in a single playoff run with eight, breaking a tie with Wilt Chamberlain, who had seven for the Philadelphia 76ers in 1967.

Jamal Murray scored 25 points and Aaron Gordon added 22 for the Nuggets, who trailed by 15 points at halftime and weathered a 31-point first half from James.

“We don’t give up,” Jokic said on the ESPN broadcast. “I’ve been saying this the last five years, when we were bad, we were good, we don’t give up. That’s what happened today. They jumped on us in the first half, they were aggressive, they were scoring easy. But in the second half, we turned the page and everybody was stepping up.”

Denver swept the series after losing once in the first round to the Minnesota Timberwolves and twice in the second round to the Phoenix Suns.

The Western Conference’s top seed will now await the winner of the Eastern Conference finals, in which the Miami Heat have a 3-0 lead over the Boston Celtics. There has never been a pair of conference-finals sweeps in NBA history.

Game 1 of the NBA Finals is scheduled for June 1 in Denver or Boston.

James finished with 40 points, 10 rebounds and nine assists, cooling off from a 21-point first quarter when he was 7 of 9 from the field and 4 of 4 from 3-point range. He played all but 4.3 seconds in the game while setting a playoff career high for points during any half.

James’ last-second shot attempt inside the paint to tie the game was tied up by Murray and blocked by Gordon.

“I thought (James) came out with a mindset to keep this (series) going,” Lakers coach Darvin Ham said. “He came into the building as he’s been all year, all throughout the playoffs, with a focus and a determination to get it done by any means necessary.

“I just thanked them all. The competitive spirit was phenomenal from Day 1.”

Davis scored 21 points and grabbed 14 rebounds for Los Angeles, while Austin Reaves had 17 points, Dennis Schroder added 13 and Rui Hachimura contributed 10.

The Nuggets opened the second half with a 9-2 run to pull within 75-67. They got to within 79-78 with 6:27 remaining in the third quarter on a jumper from Murray and pulled in front 83-81 on a three-point play by Kentavious Caldwell-Pope with 4:39 remaining in the third.

Denver led 94-89 entering the final period, with Jokic already having recorded his triple-double.

“For me, (Jokic) hasn’t proven anything (new) because I already know he’s a great player,” Nuggets coach Michael Malone said. “But I think he’s shown other people nationally that he’s real, what he’s doing is real, the MVPs are real, the triple-doubles are real. All the silly narratives this year are just that, silly and ignorant.

“I think Nikola has gone through three rounds where he’s averaging a triple-double. Have you seen any stat padding out there? I’m serious. Enough with the silliness. The guy is a great player. Give him his damn respect.”

The Lakers tied the game 102-102 on a putback dunk by Davis with 5:02 remaining. However, Murray was fouled on a 3-point attempt and made all three foul shots, the Lakers had consecutive misses from 3-point range and Gordon’s dunk put Denver up 107-102 with 3:34 left.

Los Angeles came back again to tie the game 111-111 on a pair of Davis free throws with 1:13 remaining before Jokic put the Nuggets back on top 113-111 on a layup with 51.7 seconds remaining. Neither team scored again.

“To get the first Western Conference championship in franchise history, it means a lot,” Malone said. “But I speak for 17 players in that locker room, and the entire organization: We are not satisfied. We can enjoy it for a moment. I think it’s gonna be a hell of a plane ride home, but we have a lot of work to do.”

–Field Level Media

Report: Raptors interview Steve Nash for coaching post


The Toronto Raptors interviewed former Brooklyn Nets coach Steve Nash for the head coaching vacancy, The Athletic reported Monday.

Nash left the Nets just seven games into the 2022-23 season in what the sides called a mutual parting of ways.

Nash went 94-67 in two-plus seasons in Brooklyn. The Nets tabbed Jacque Vaughn as interim head coach before naming him to the permanent post in November.

The Raptors fired Nick Nurse late last month after five seasons and an NBA title, looking for a reset on the “spirit of who we are,” Raptors president of basketball operations Masai Ujiri said.

Nurse compiled a 227-163 record during his five seasons as head coach of the Raptors.

While in Brooklyn, Nash had to deal with Kyrie Irving limited to playing road games in 2021-22 over his refusal to take the COVID-19 vaccine. Nash also dealt with the trading of James Harden to Philadelphia in exchange for Ben Simmons, who didn’t play at all in 2021-22. Mega-star Kevin Durant played in just 55 games during the 2021-22 season.

Nash, who attended high school in Victoria, British Columbia, played 18 seasons in the NBA and averaged 14.3 points with 8.5 assists in 1,217 games for the Phoenix Suns, Dallas Mavericks and Los Angeles Lakers.

–Field Level Media

Report: Bucks narrow search to 3 finalists


The Milwaukee Bucks have narrowed their coaching search to three finalists — Nick Nurse, Kenny Atkinson and Adrian Griffin — ESPN reported Monday.

The trio will be engaged with Bucks’ leadership this week, per the report. Nurse, however, is also in the mix in the Philadelphia and Phoenix coaching searches.

The Bucks are replacing Mike Budenholzer, who was fired earlier this month after five seasons and an NBA championship.

Nurse, 55, also parted ways with Toronto after five seasons and the 2019 NBA title.

Atkinson, 55, has been an assistant coach in Golden State the past two seasons. He left the Charlotte Hornets at the altar last year after agreeing to become their new coach but then changing his mind. He went 118-190 in four seasons as the Brooklyn Nets’ head coach from 2016-20.

Griffin, 48, has never been an NBA head coach and was an assistant to Nurse in Toronto.

Other candidates for the post were Bucks assistant Charles Lee, Portland’s Scott Brooks, Miami’s Chris Quinn, Phoenix’s Kevin Young and former Charlotte Hornets coach James Borrego. The Bucks also reportedly interviewed Kelvin Sampson and Washington Wizards assistant Joseph Blair.

Budenholzer, 53, was 271-120 in Milwaukee, making the playoffs every year and winning the title in 2021.

–Field Level Media

Underdog Nuggets popular pick to sweep Lakers in Game 4


Perhaps their underdog status will propel the Denver Nuggets toward their goal of completing an improbable sweep of the Los Angeles Lakers in the Western Conference finals.

The Lakers are 3.5-point favorites by BetMGM at home ahead of Game 4 on Monday night, but it’s the Nuggets who have been backed by 76 percent of the spread-line bets and 85 percent of the money. The line is 3.0 at BetRivers, which has caused a bit more split action, with Denver drawing 68 percent of the total bets but Los Angeles backed by 80 percent of the money.

ONE FROM HISTORY

The Nuggets are seeking to reach the NBA Finals for the first time in franchise history. They get their first crack at it on Monday, following a 119-108 win in Los Angeles on Saturday.

The Lakers erased all of a double-digit deficit in the first half to lead 94-93 with 7:48 remaining. But the Nuggets went on a decisive 13-0 run to take a 106-94 lead on a Nikola Jokic shot with 4:50 left. It was a three-minute stretch that brought Denver to the brink of where it has never been before.

Jokic scored 24 points with eight assists and six rebounds, with his effectiveness diminished by early foul trouble. The effort ended his run of four consecutive playoff triple-doubles. Jamal Murray stepped up with 30 first-half points and 37 for the game, while former Laker Kentavious Caldwell-Pope had 17.

“I never doubted my team,” Jokic said. “I know they’re capable. You saw it in the third quarter. (Caldwell-Pope) had a huge segment, like four minutes. He had a big box-out on (Anthony Davis), he had a steal, he had a big 3-pointer. We have some really good players that can step up in the right moment, and that’s what we did.”

The Nuggets essentially get four chances to advance, with two of those at home, if necessary. If the Lakers can earn a victory in Game 4, the series would shift to Denver for Game 5 on Wednesday.

“I know it’s cliche, but that next-man-up mentality has really served us well over the years,” Nuggets head coach Michael Malone said.

LAKERS RUNNING ON FUMES?

The Lakers’ impressive run through the postseason looks to have run out of steam. They needed to get through the play-in tournament just to get into the playoff field and then got through the No. 2-seeded Memphis Grizzlies in the first round and the defending champion Golden State Warriors in the second round.

And while the Lakers have been competitive in all three games of the Western Conference finals, they have lacked the finishing kick needed to take a game.

“I mean, I think the deficit is 3-0, not 4-0, so as long as they have not gotten to four yet, there’s still hope,” Lakers head coach Darvin Ham said. “We’re still alive. We just have to focus on winning one game.”

Davis scored 28 points with 18 rebounds in Game 3, while LeBron James and Austin Reaves each scored 23. James added 12 assists. On defense, the Lakers watched the Nuggets shoot 60.0 percent in the fourth quarter. Denver also recorded 30 assists and committed just six turnovers.

AGAINST ALL ODDS

The Lakers are +1400 at BetRivers to mount a miraculous comeback and win the series. Meanwhile, the Nuggets are -5000 to win the series and much of the attention has already turned toward their chances of winning a first NBA title for the franchise.

Denver opened at +1000 to win the title at BetMGM but now stands as the -225 favorite. The Nuggets, who have now drawn 16.3 percent of the total title-winning tickets and 20.2 percent of the money, are also the sportsbook’s biggest liability.

The Miami Heat, who enjoy their own 3-0 lead in the Eastern Conference semifinals, have the second shortest odds at +250. The Boston Celtics are +1400, followed by the Lakers at +3000.

“I can’t speak for the guys right now because I don’t know what’s going on through all their minds right now, but I still (have belief),” James said. “So you know, it’s time to go right back home and start to refuel and start the treatment process and recovery process and get ready for Monday. My mindset is always locked in as if it’s Game 1.”

The most popular prop pick ahead of Game 4 on Monday night at BetMGM is for the Nuggets’ Michael Porter Jr. at -120 to record more than 8.5 combined rebounds and assists. That’s followed by Lakers sharpshooter Reaves being offered at -110 to have more than 26.5 combined points, rebounds and assists.

The 220.5-point Over/Under has moved to 224.5 points with the Over being backed by 65 percent of the bets and 76 percent of the money. The same point total at BetMGM has seen the Over draw 30 percent of the bets, but some large wagers leading to the Under being backed by a whopping 72 percent of the money.

–Field Level Media

MLB News: Red Sox OF Masataka Yoshida showing value vs. Angels


Right-hander Griffin Canning will make his seventh start of the season Tuesday night when the Los Angeles Angels face the Boston Red Sox in Anaheim, Calif., but he still is working through the process of returning from a long layoff.

Canning (2-2, 6.14 ERA) was a starter for the Angels in 2021 but missed half of that season and all of 2022 with a stress fracture in his back. He did not return until this past April.

He’s pitched at least five innings in five of his six starts this year but has failed to finish six innings. He has struggled in May, giving up 13 earned runs in 14 innings, but Angels manager Phil Nevin said he sees Canning taking steps in the right direction.

“I just think he just keeps getting better and better the more pitches he throws,” Nevin said. “I think a lot of it is feel for him with the changeup and the breaking ball. And you take almost two years off, it’s hard to get that back. It takes some time. But he’s been really good for us.”

Canning has one career start against the Red Sox, giving up two runs on six hits and two walks in six innings. He struck out seven in the no-decision game on May 14, 2021.

Right-hander Brayan Bello (3-1, 4.45 ERA) will make his seventh start of the season for Boston. He is 0-1 with a 16.88 ERA in one career start against the Angels.

Boston outfielder Masataka Yoshida had two of the Red Sox’s four hits in Monday’s 2-1 loss in the series opener to the Angels, continuing to show observers he was worth the five-year, $90 million contract he signed in the offseason. It is the biggest contract for a position player to come from Nippon Professional Baseball in Japan.

It didn’t start well, though. Through the first 13 games of the season, Yoshida was hitting just .167 with two extra-base hits. But he turned things around quickly, putting together a 16-game hitting streak that pushed his average to .307.

Working with assistant hitting coach Luis Ortiz, Yoshida made adjustments, particularly opening up his stance somewhat, allowing him to see the ball better.

“I can pick out the balls that I should swing at, so I think that’s why I’m doing well,” Yoshida said. “I’m focused on my batting form, especially my stance. So, stance-wise, I’m stepping with my right foot back a little bit. Then it makes me more comfortable to see the ball. I haven’t changed anything swing-wise.”

The Red Sox devised part of their game plan with Yoshida even before the season began, reaching out to the hitting coaches at Yoshida’s team in Japan, the Orix Buffaloes.

“They talked about rolling over to second and what’s going to happen and why it happens with him,” Red Sox manager Alex Cora said. “I think that helped us in a sense, and just talking to those guys and learning a little bit about him. It was huge for us.”

Yoshida is hitting .360 (9-for-25) during his current six-game streak. For the season, he is hitting .308 with six homers, 29 RBIs and an .878 OPS.

–Field Level Media

MLB News: Marlins RHP Eury Perez gets first look at Rockies


Sports fans in Miami and Denver are understandably looking at a seemingly inevitable NBA Finals between the Heat and Nuggets, but there is another matchup between the cities happening this week.

The Marlins and Rockies are in the midst of a four-game series in Colorado — albeit with a lot less on the line than what is happening on the hardcourt. But it still matters to the baseball teams that will go at it again Tuesday.

The Rockies won the opener 5-3 on Monday night in Denver.

Miami will send right-hander Eury Perez (1-0, 2.79 ERA) to the mound on Tuesday to oppose Colorado left-hander Austin Gomber (3-4, 6.70).

Perez, like the Marlins’ Monday starter, Edward Cabrera, is a young flamethrower with a lot of potential. He made his major league debut May 12 against the Cincinnati Reds, allowing two runs in 4 2/3 innings, and he earned his first career win six days later with five innings of one-run ball against the Nationals.

He was 20 years and 33 days old when he beat Washington, becoming the youngest pitcher in club history to earn his first win.

All three runs Perez allowed in his two outings came on solo home runs.

“Guys are going to hit, and you don’t want to scare away from your fastball,” Marlins manager Skip Schumaker said. “He throws 100 (mph), so the last thing I’m going to say is, ‘Don’t throw your fastball.’

“You throw strikes, we have a good chance to win. I don’t want him or any of our guys to be scared to throw it inside the strike zone. We always have a good chance. Solo home runs typically don’t beat you anyways, so totally OK with the solo home run.”

The Rockies were able to shrug off being swept by the host Texas Rangers over the weekend to stop a three-game skid with the Monday win. Colorado has played better in May, going 11-8 after losing 20 of 29 in April.

Among the encouraging signs for Colorado are some strong performances from the injury-riddled rotation. Gomber, who struggled early in the season, put together four consecutive strong outings before allowing five runs in 4 1/3 innings during a no-decision against Cincinnati on Wednesday.

Colorado managed to win the game and is 4-1 in Gomber’s past five starts, which helps offset the losses of three starters to injuries.

“We’ve got guys who are throwing the ball well that have been here all year, and the guys that have filled in have been awesome,” said Gomber, who is 3-0 with a 3.54 ERA in his past five starts. “That’s your job. When you get the opportunity to pitch, you’ve got to go out there and give your team a chance to win.”

He can continue to build on his momentum while facing a Marlins club he has pitched well against in his career. In four appearances, two of them starts, Gomber is 2-0 with a 3.95 ERA.

In his only start against the Rockies in Denver, which came on Aug. 7, 2021, he tossed six scoreless innings and struck out nine.

–Field Level Media

MLB News: Tigers chase more clutch hits against Royals


After finally getting some timely hitting on Monday, the Detroit Tigers will look to clinch their three-game series against the host Kansas City Royals on Tuesday night.

The Tigers went 3-for-19 (.158) with runners in scoring position while losing the last two games of a three-game weekend series at Washington. However, they came through with several clutch hits on Monday, and none was bigger than Javy Baez’s bases-clearing, 10th-inning double that lifted Detroit to an 8-5 win.

Baez collected three hits for the night to snap an 0-for-19 slump. His first two hits — infield singles — registered exit velocities of 46.9 and 65.7 mph. His decisive double off the bullpen fence clocked in at 111.4 mph.

“He probably had the two softest hits tonight and the hardest hit,” Tigers’ manager A.J. Hinch said. “I’ll take them all.”

Detroit’s Matt Vierling also delivered a bases-loaded hit, in the first inning. He owns a five-game hitting streak in which he is batting .474 (9-for-19), but he had just one RBI over his previous 13 games before matching his career best with four RBIs on Monday.

“Getting good pitches to hit are key,” Hinch said. “When he wants to be aggressive, he’s got to make sure they are good pitches. When he’s super patient, he’s got to understand there are going to be hittable pitches early in the count. He needs to kind of learn when to put the gas pedal down and when to ease up.”

Riley Greene, who had two singles on Monday, has hit safely in all 16 games he has played against the Royals in his two-year major league career. He owns a .313 average vs. Kansas City.

Detroit’s Eduardo Rodriguez (4-3, 2.06 ERA) will try to stop that streak on Tuesday.

The left-hander is 3-1 with a 4.40 ERA in eight career starts against the Royals, most recently throwing 6 2/3 scoreless innings vs. them during a 10-3 win on Sept. 29.

Among current Kansas City hitters, Salvador Perez has seen Rodriguez the most with 11 at-bats and the lone homer.

With starters Brad Keller, Kris Bubic and Ryan Yarbrough on the injured list, Kansas City has used a relief pitcher as an opener in three of the past 10 games, increasing the bullpen workload.

After pitching 48 1/3 innings in the past 10 games, the relievers won’t get a respite Tuesday as the club likely will use another bullpen opener. Manager Matt Quatraro had not announced a probable starter by Tuesday morning.

Royals starting pitchers are averaging less than five innings per start, and the team’s seven quality starts are the fewest in the majors.

Walks continue to plague Kansas City pitching. As the team has lost eight of its past 10 games, Royals hurlers have walked 52. Kansas City has issued 189 walks, the second-highest total in the majors behind the Oakland Athletics’ 241.

Prior to Monday’s game, Kansas City recalled infielder Nicky Lopez from the 10-day injured list. He had been out for three weeks after undergoing an emergency appendectomy.

In a corresponding move, Hunter Dozier was designated for assignment. Dozier, who debuted with Kansas City in 2016, enjoyed the second-longest tenure among current Royals players, behind Perez.

“It was an extremely tough decision,” Quatraro said. “We think the world of him as a person. It’s very difficult on a personal level for a lot of the guys who have not only become teammates but friends and family.”

In parts of seven seasons with Kansas City, Dozier hit .238 with 73 homers and 235 RBIs over 594 games. He hit .183 with two homers and nine RBIs in 29 games this year.

–Field Level Media