Author: rb809rb

  • Kings’ Zach LaVine will reportedly undergo season-ending surgery on right hand

    Sacramento Kings guard Zach LaVine will undergo season-ending surgery on his right hand after the All-Star break, longtime NBA insider Chris Haynes reported Friday.

    LaVine, a two-time All-Star, was averaging a team-leading 19.2 points per game and shooting 47.9% from the field, including 39% from 3, this season. It’s his second season with Sacramento after he was traded midseason from the Chicago Bulls last year in the three-team deal that sent now-two-time All-Star guard De’Aaron Fox to the San Antonio Spurs.

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    The Kings have been riddled with injuries this season. Notably, center Domantas Sabonis missed extensive time earlier in the 2025-26 campaign due to a partially torn meniscus.

    A three-time All-Star, Sabonis returned before the trade deadline. He had been the subject of trade talks this season, and so had LaVine and fellow veteran DeMar DeRozan.

    The Kings, an NBA-worst 12-44 at the break and losers of 14 consecutive games, didn’t deal any of those players. General manager Scott Perry did, however, send Keon Ellis and Dennis Schröder to the Cleveland Cavaliers in a three-team trade that brought back De’Andre Hunter and moved Dario Šarić to the Chicago Bulls.

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    Šarić has since been traded again and waived.

    As for the soon-to-be-31-year-old LaVine, he sat out the past three games due to what the team described as a “right fifth finger tendon injury.” That shooting-hand issue is reportedly requiring a procedure that will end LaVine’s 12th season in the league.

    Earlier this season, he sustained a left ankle injury when he landed awkwardly on a drive into the paint against his old team, the Minnesota Timberwolves, on Dec. 14. He missed nine games in a row as a result.

    LaVine has a $48.9 million player option for next season. He’s expected to pick that up, but trade rumors likely will resume in the offseason.

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    Although he led an imbalanced Kings roster in scoring this season, LaVine’s 2.3 assists per game were the fewest he has averaged in his career. Plus, he was reeling in under three rebounds per contest for just the third time and the first since the 2015-16 campaign.

    Known for his athleticism, LaVine made a name for himself as a two-time NBA Slam Dunk Contest champion with the Timberwolves, who took him No. 13 overall in the 2014 draft. Friday marked the 10-year anniversary of LaVine’s high-flying showdown versus Aaron Gordon in the memorable 2016 dunk contest.

  • Dodgers’ journey to three-peat begins as Shohei Ohtani, Yoshinobu Yamamoto take the mound in Arizona

    GLENDALE, Ariz. — The Los Angeles Dodgers are back at the beginning, preparing once again to climb the mountain that is the major-league season, sights set squarely on adding to this golden era for the franchise.

    The Friday, Feb. 13, report date for Dodgers pitchers and catchers was the latest of any team league-wide, an appropriately delayed start after the Dodgers’ championship run stretched into November. And unlike the previous two years, when the Dodgers opened the season with series in Seoul and Tokyo, the team will stay grounded on the west side of Phoenix this spring, affording a bit more wiggle room to ease into camp activities, rather than needing to arrive early and expedite the preparation process.

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    “First day, good,” manager Dave Roberts said. “Getting the pitchers, catchers here, majority of the position players are here already. Guys are anxious. I think for me, we got a long camp, longer than we’ve had in recent years. So to try to get guys to start slow but intentional, methodical … is kind of the message.”

    While the World Baseball Classic will add a wrinkle for a handful of Dodgers stars, the vast majority of the roster is embarking on a more normal spring training leading up to Opening Day against the D-backs on March 26 at Dodger Stadium. Granted, little is normal about even the most average day at Camelback Ranch, the spring training home of MLB’s supervillains and superheroes, a gobsmacking collection of baseballing talent that only grows each year.

    A large banner touting Los Angeles’ status as “BACK-TO-BACK WORLD SERIES CHAMPIONS” now adorns the chain-link fence looming over the bullpen mounds. A full week before the Cactus League slate begins, hordes of fans swarmed the backfields Friday in hopes of catching their favorite Dodgers in action, if even in low-intensity practice settings. As each player emerged from the facility to make his way down to the fields, crowds erupted, offering expressions of adoration and appreciation for the team that has given them so much to cheer about across consecutive title runs.

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    The specifics of what was happening on each field seemed to matter less than the fact that it was happening at all — baseball is back, bringing a breath of fresh air after a long winter. But Friday did offer a particularly intriguing sampling of backfield activity, at least by mid-February standards: Shohei Ohtani threw a bullpen, and Yoshinobu Yamamoto threw live batting practice.

    The duo is in their third spring together, and the buzz around their presence in Glendale has grown each year as the two have achieved more and more while wearing Dodger blue. Ohtani is entering his first fully healthy spring with the Dodgers, gearing up to put his unprecedented two-way abilities on full display from the get-go in 2026. Yamamoto is only a few months removed from one of the most legendary pitching performances in World Series history, earning an almost mythical aura that now follows him in perpetuity. Perhaps more pertinently, both stars are ramping up to represent Japan in the World Baseball Classic, adding a level of urgency to their early camp activities that most of their teammates don’t feel quite yet.

    Along with USA’s Will Smith, Puerto Rico’s Edwin Díaz (reminder: he’s on the Dodgers now) and Korea’s Hyeseong Kim, Ohtani and Yamamoto are two of the five players in Dodgers camp slated to participate in the upcoming international tournament. Japan’s pool-play games will be in Tokyo, with its first official game on March 6 and five pre-tournament friendlies against NPB clubs beginning Feb. 22. Roberts said Friday that he’s unsure when exactly the duo will make the trip back to Japan. But it stands to reason it will be at least a few days before Smith and Diaz will need to depart to join their national teams, whose training will commence in early March. As such, the time spent in Arizona is especially crucial for the two Japanese stars.

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    [Get more L.A. news: Dodgers team feed

    Yamamoto faced Smith and Kim for a few at-bats each in his live batting practice session Friday, coaxing some weak contact from Kim and a swing-and-miss from Smith on a running two-seam fastball that had the All-Star catcher shaking his head in disbelief. Yamamoto looked as dialed in as ever, his picturesque mechanics unfolding in perfect sequence to unleash pitches to the location of his choosing. It was an infinitely lower-stakes setting than his most recent on-mound experience, but it was Yamamoto all the same. To that end, it’s impossible to watch him now without recalling the unfathomable feats of pitching endurance he displayed in the Fall Classic. Yet Roberts isn’t worried about a lingering hangover from the right-hander’s rare workload last postseason, even as Yamamoto builds back up to participate in the WBC.

    “I just believe that he knows his limitations, and he’s prepared,” Roberts said. “So I’m not too concerned.”

    Earlier Friday, it was Ohtani’s turn to take the mound, albeit not against hitters. His bullpen took place right alongside Diaz, who was making his first high-intensity tosses in his new threads. Unlike Yamamoto, Ohtani is not preparing to pitch in the World Baseball Classic — he will DH only for Team Japan — but that doesn’t lessen the hype for Ohtani’s first full season in the Dodgers’ rotation. Roberts was not shy about his expectations for what Ohtani The Pitcher is capable of now that he’s further removed from his second elbow surgery.

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    “I think there’s certainly a lot more in there,” the manager said. “And regardless of my expectations for him, his are going to exceed those. And I think it’s fair to say he expects to be in the Cy Young conversation. But we just want him to be healthy and make starts, and all the numbers and statistics will take care of themselves.”

    Asked whether the league’s top pitching honor is indeed a personal target, Ohtani didn’t confirm his ambitions but acknowledged it could be in the cards if he’s able to stay on the mound.

    “If in the end the result is getting a Cy Young, that’s great,” Ohtani said through interpreter Will Ireton. “Getting a Cy Young means just being able to throw more innings and pitch throughout the whole season. So if that’s the end result, that’s a good sign for me. That’s what I’m more focused on — just being healthy the whole year.”

    Redirecting the focus to his durability might sound like a way to downplay his ambition, but it’s also rooted in reality. The closest Ohtani has come to winning a Cy Young was during his healthiest campaign in 2022, when he threw a career-high 166 innings. He ultimately settled for fourth that year (and second in MVP voting), but it’s a reminder that his potential as a pitcher should not be discounted whatsoever. For all the prolific power-speed exploits Ohtani has demonstrated as a hitter, entering 2026, he seems eager to seize on his currently prime physical condition and remind everyone what he’s capable of on the mound.

    “Everything he does is with purpose,” Roberts said. “So I’m really excited to see — with the full offseason to just prepare and not rehab — what he can do this year.”

  • Tony Stewart gets taken out in crash in first NASCAR start since 2016 retirement

    DAYTONA BEACH, FL - FEBRUARY 12: Tony Stewart (#25 Kaulig Racing RAM) prepares to enter his race truck prior to practice for the NASCAR CRAFTSMAN Truck Series Fresh from Florida 250 on February 12, 2026 at Daytona International Speedway in Daytona Beach, FL. (Photo by Jeff Robinson/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

    Tony Stewart’s return to NASCAR didn’t even make it to lap 50 of Friday night’s Truck Series race. (Photo by Jeff Robinson/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

    (Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

    Tony Stewart’s hopes of a win in his first NASCAR race back from retirement ended before the race was even halfway over.

    Stewart’s truck was shoved into the wall when Jake Garcia’s truck got loose off Turn 4 in the second stage of the 100-lap Craftsman Truck Series race at Daytona. As Stewart was to his outside, Garcia overcorrected and collided with Stewart as he hit the wall.

    The damage to Stewart’s truck was significant enough that it ended any chance he had at winning the race. After his Kaulig Racing team made repairs, it decided to take the truck to the garage.

    The three-time Cup Series champion and Hall of Famer was making his first start in a NASCAR event since he retired after the 2016 season. Stewart won 49 races over 618 career Cup Series starts and was one of the best drivers of the 2000s before he stepped away. He won the 2002, 2005 and 2011 Cup Series titles, and his final title is widely credited with helping create NASCAR’s recently ditched winner-take-all championship race.

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    That season, Stewart and Carl Edwards waged one of the greatest playoff battles in NASCAR history. Stewart, who won five races in the 10-race playoffs after going winless in the regular season, won the final race of the year at Homestead-Miami Speedway to tie Edwards and win the championship via tiebreaker because he had more wins.

    Stewart was back in NASCAR on Friday thanks to Ram’s reentry into the Truck Series. The manufacturer returned to the NASCAR Truck Series in 2025, and Stewart, whose NHRA team fields Dodges, was chosen to run the team’s No. 25 truck, which will have a rotating cast of drivers throughout the 2026 season.

    The race was Stewart’s first Truck Series start in more than 20 years. He had last made a Truck start in 2005 and had won twice in six starts across NASCAR’s third-tier series.

  • MLB free agency: Zac Gallen returns to D-backs on 1-year, $22 million deal

    Zac Gallen took a risk early in the offseason by declining the Arizona Diamondbacks’ one-year, roughly $22 million qualifying offer. That decision led to the 30-year-old sitting on the market for quite some time, but his free-agent wait is finally over.

    Was it worth the wait? Well, the deal he landed is essentially the qualifying offer, with deferred money.

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    Gallen reportedly agreed to a one-year, $22.025 million contract with the D-backs on Friday, according to The Athletic’s Ken Rosenthal. Approximately $14 million of the money is reportedly deferred.

    Zac Gallen’s red flags led to a cold free-agent market

    While the longtime Diamondbacks starter has a history of success in the majors, he entered free agency at arguably the worst possible time. Gallen showed signs of decline in 2025, posting the highest ERA and lowest strikeout rate of his career in 192 innings with the Diamondbacks.

    It marked a troubling trend for Gallen, who has seen his ERA rise in three straight seasons.

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    Early in his career, Gallen looked like a future superstar on the mound. He burst onto the scene in 2019, posting a 2.81 ERA with the Miami Marlins and Diamondbacks. He maintained that excellence during the COVID-19-shortened 2020 MLB season, earning-down ballot Cy Young votes.

    After some uncharacteristic struggles in 2021, Gallen bounced back to turn in his two best seasons in the majors. In 2022 and 2023, he posted a 3.04 ERA over 394 innings. He ranked fourth in ERA, sixth in starting pitcher fWAR, seventh in strikeouts and eighth in innings pitched during that period. Gallen finished fifth in Cy Young voting in 2022 and third in 2023. For the first time in his career, he also gained a few MVP votes following his strong 2023 season.

    He carried that success into the postseason, in which the Diamondbacks went on a miraculous run to the World Series. The team fell short in the end, falling to the Texas Rangers in five games. Gallen performed well in his only World Series start, allowing just one run over 6 1/3 innings in Game 1. Despite that, he was saddled with the loss.

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    While the team’s World Series run was an overall positive, it came with an unfortunate side effect. Gallen tossed a total of 243 2/3 innings in 2023. That workload might have come back to bite him in 2024.

    Gallen got off to a solid start the following year, posting a 3.12 ERA over his first 11 starts before sustaining a hamstring injury. The issue kept him sidelined for a month. While his first start back was encouraging, Gallen then posted a 5.02 ERA over his next 11 games. He finished the year strong, posting a 2.67 ERA in his final five games, but it still marked his worst year in the majors since 2021.

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    Things got even worse in 2025. Over his first 22 starts, Gallen posted a 5.20 ERA. He had the worst strikeout rate and highest home-run rate of his career. He rebounded down the stretch, posting a 3.32 ERA in his final 11 games, but that came with an even lower strikeout rate, leading to questions about his ability moving forward.

    Does re-signing Gallen move the needle for the D-backs?

    Gallen’s return reinforces a D-backs rotation that could be best described as solid but is by no means spectacular.

    The team was previously set to enter Opening Day with a rotation of Merrill Kelly, Ryne Nelson, Brandon Pfaadt, Eduardo Rodriguez and Michael Soroka. Kelly was also a free agent this offseason and returned on a two-year, $40 million deal, while Soroka came aboard on a one-year, $7.5 million contract. It’s a veteran group with limited upside, though it’s set to get a boost when former Cy Young winner Corbin Burnes returns at some point this season.

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    Gallen certainly presents some risk, but Arizona is more aware of the potential reward than any other team. That was apparently reason enough to bring him back, and he’ll certainly be motivated to perform better ahead of a second foray into free agency.

  • Winter Olympics 2026: Cheating accusation, profanities hurled as Canada beats defending men’s curling champ Sweden

    Canada men’s curling remained undefeated in round-robin competition Friday during the 2026 Milan Cortina Winter Olympics, but only after tension overheated on the ice.

    Following the ninth end of an 8-6 Canada victory over 2022 Olympic champion Sweden, which is now a ghastly 0-3 in its gold medal defense, Swedish third Oskar Eriksson levied a serious cheating allegation.

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    He did so against Canada third Marc Kennedy, whom Eriksson accused of double-touching stones beyond the hog line.

    “I haven’t done it once,” Kennedy said. “You can f*** off.”

    Eriksson then asked, “You haven’t done it once?”

    An impassioned Kennedy reiterated while pointing toward himself, “I haven’t done it once.”

    Eriksson said back, “I’ll show you a video after the game.”

    The heated back-and-forth continued, with Kennedy hurling more profanities Eriksson’s way.

    By rule, a double touch prior to the hog line — the boundary before which the thrower must release the stone for it to be considered in play — isn’t considered a violation.

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    World Curling introduced electronic handles on the stones at this year’s Games. Triggered by a touch sensor, as well as a magnetic strip in the ice, they flash red if players are still touching the handle after the hog line.

    But the Swedes appeared to be contending that the Canadians, namely Kennedy, were making contact with the granite after releasing the handle. Eriksson said that’s why the red light wasn’t going off, per Reuters.

    Long before the exchange between Eriksson and Kennedy between the ninth and 10th end, Sweden asked officials to watch for Canada double-touching. Canada requested that officials also keep an eye on Sweden’s deliveries.

    In a statement, as reported by Reuters, World Curling said umpires were monitoring the hog line for three ends after the issue was first brought up.

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    “There were no hog line violations or retouches of the stone during the observation,” the statement said, per Reuters.

    Kennedy told the National Post afterward that playing the Swedes is a battle and that the teams have quite a bit of history that goes back several years.

    “I have a ton of respect for Oskar Eriksson,” he said, per the National Post. “He’s one of the best players to ever play. I just told him … I would never accuse you of cheating. I’ve been on tour for 25 years. He pulled a hog line official on us to make sure we weren’t double-touching. The hog line official was there … never said a thing, and he’s still talking about it in the ninth end.”

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    Swedish skip Niklas Edin was disappointed the quarrel took place.

    “We’re all super good friends out there,” he said, per Reuters.

    “We’ve known them for 20 years. And [rule violations] happened many times before, so it’s just sad that it gets to heated discussions on the ice instead of just curling, according to the rulebooks, but it’s what it is.”

  • Wisconsin sinks 15 3-pointers, takes third top-10 win of season with beatdown of No. 10 Michigan State

    Not even a patented high-flying dunk from Michigan State forward Coen Carr could swing the momentum in Wisconsin’s Kohl Center on Friday night.

    The Badgers, who used a 19-4 run to build an 18-point lead in the first half, kept the No. 10 Spartans at distance in the second half.

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    Wisconsin came into the day averaging 11 triples per game — tied the for the 11th most nationally as of Thursday morning — and splashed 15 3-pointers in an 92-71 victory over Michigan State (20-5, 10-4 Big Ten), which has lost three of its past four games. The Spartans’ lone win in that span, though, was a significant one, as they outlasted then-No. 5 Illinois in overtime last week.

    Wisconsin (18-7, 10-4) now has three top-10 wins this season. Greg Gard’s squad previously spoiled then-No. 2 Michigan’s historic start to its 2025-26 campaign on Jan. 10 and then climbed out of a 12-point hole to come back and defeat now-No. 8 Illinois in overtime on Tuesday. Both of those victories came on the road.

    Friday’s was in Madison, and Badgers fans were ready to celebrate with a court storming.

    Speaking of Gard, his 18 top-10 wins during his 11-season tenure match Bo Ryan for the most such victories recorded by a head coach in program history.

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    Nick Boyd knocked down five of Wisconsin’s 15 3-pointers — tied for its second most in a game this season — and finished with a game-high 29 points.

    The former San Diego State and FAU guard has now scored at least 25 points six times this season. He ranks third in the Big Ten with 20.6 points per game.

    Backcourt partner John Blackwell buried four 3s and wasn’t far behind with 24 points.

    Carr paced Michigan State with 19 points on 6-of-10 shooting. Point guard Jeremy Fears Jr., who fueled the Spartans’ come-from-behind, overtime win at Rutgers on Jan. 27, made only three of his 12 field-goal attempts, although he clocked out with 14 points and 12 assists.

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    Wisconsin dominated Friday’s game, both on the perimeter and inside, where the Badgers doubled up the Spartans in the paint 28-14.

    Michigan State shot a mere 36.4% from the field, and Wisconsin scored 21 points off the Spartans’ nine turnovers.

    That said, the story of the day was Wisconsin’s 3-point shooting. The Badgers made their first five 3-point attempts during the opening 5 1/2 minutes of play and didn’t take their foot off the gas.

    They’ve got three top-10 wins, including two in the past four days.

  • NBA Rising Stars: Team Vince triumphs behind 2 game-winners from Sixers rookie VJ Edgecombe

    Philadelphia 76ers rookie VJ Edgecombe was Team Vince’s first pick of the draft that decided the NBA Rising Stars rosters. He wound up making Vince Carter look wise.

    With a game-winning shot in the first game and the clinching free throws in the second, Edgecombe led Team Vince to the win in the first night of the NBA’s All-Star festivities at Intuit Dome. Naturally, that earned him MVP honors.

    Like last year, the Rising Stars Challenge was played as a four-team bracket with three teams composed of young players from around the NBA and a fourth team of top G Leaguers. The first games were played as a first-to-40, while the final was first to 25.

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    In total, Edgecombe posted 23 of Team Vince’s 55 points Friday, leading the team in both games. He had 17 in the first game, including the game-winner against a Team T-Mac squad led by Charlotte Hornets rookie Kon Knueppel, who was taken one spot behind Edgecombe in the 2025 NBA Draft.

    It was a stepback jumper over Memphis Grizzlies guard Cam Spencer that did it.

    Team Vince and Team Melo were neck-and-neck throughout the final, with San Antonio Spurs rookie Dylan Harper leading Carmelo Anthony’s team in scoring at eight points plus five rebounds. The game was ultimately decided when Edgecombe drew a foul from Portland Trail Blazers big man Donovan Clingan.

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    Carter appeared to try preventing the game from being decided by anti-climactic free throws, approaching Anthony and implying the play wasn’t a foul, but Team Melo was out of timeouts and couldn’t challenge the play.

    Some air was taken out of the Rising Stars Challenge with the absences of Dallas Mavericks rookie Cooper Flagg and Washington Wizards big man Alex Sarr. Flagg was the first overall pick in the draft for Team Melo, but the 19-year-old had to pull out with a foot sprain.

    Edgecombe’s heroics continue a strong first season for the Sixers guard, who ranks third among rookies in both points and assists per game.

  • NBA All-Star 2026: 76ers rookie VJ Edgecombe sets tone for the weekend with Rising Stars performance

    INGLEWOOD, CA — With both arms outstretched as he walked away triumphantly, it was only fitting that 76ers rookie VJ Edgecombe — after exploding for 17 out of a possible 40 points for Team Carter in the semis of the Rising Stars Challenge— sealed Friday night’s All-Star festivities at the free-throw line in the final versus Team Melo.

    “There was no pressure,” Edgecombe said after being named tournament MVP following the 25-24 win. “Free throws, man. I just try to be dialed in, try to be focused at the line. Free throws are precious. Obviously tonight, we needed them to win the game. I just focused and made them.”

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    With 23 points across both Rising Star games, Edgecombe’s efficient performance was a timely reminder of the 20-year-old’s value as a scorer in Philadelphia this season.

    Feb 13, 2026; Inglewood, California, USA; Team Vince guard VJ Edgecombe (77) of the Philadelphia 76ers reacts with the MVP trophy after defeating Team Melo during an NBA All Star Rising Stars championship game at Intuit Dome. Mandatory Credit: Jayne Kamin-Oncea-Imagn Images

    Team Vince guard VJ Edgecombe celebrates after defeating Team Melo during an NBA All Star Rising Stars championship game at Intuit Dome. (Jayne Kamin-Oncea-Imagn Images)

    (IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect / REUTERS)

    There are some natural efficiency roadblocks that he’ll need to iron out — his 105.5 points per 100 shot attempts place him in the 34th percentile among combo guards, and his .212 points per touch wedge him between Boston’s Hugo Gonzalez and Sacramento’s Nique Clifford — but his potential is through the roof. Edgecombe leads all rookies in touches per game, according to Second Spectrum, all while taking care of the ball (70th percentile in turnover rate). Statistically, the 76ers’ offense is better with him on the floor, a testament to his in-season development and the presence of All-Star guard Tyrese Maxey as a backcourt partner.

    Overall, Edgecombe’s value as a rookie can’t be understated, even on a team ripe with veterans. Through 50 games, Edgecombe is averaging 14.9 points, 5.4 rebounds and 4.1 assists per game. According to Stathead, there are 21 players this season posting those numbers with at least 2.5 win shares; Edgecombe and Cooper Flagg are the only rookies that comprise that list.

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    Friday night, despite the negative discourse that has surrounded All-Star weekend in recent years, was also a reminder that although much of the rookie conversations have been centered around Flagg and Kon Knueppel, Edgecombe is much more than a suitable consolation prize. From a sheer effort standpoint, it was clear the Philly guard wanted to compete at both ends of the floor, whether it was being in attack mode or being defensively engaged at the other end.

    As a whole, the Rising Stars participants seemed to take the games seriously, a refreshing deviation from the norm. Spurs players Dylan Harper and Stephon Castle, members of Team Melo, were actively discussing the in-game events shortly after the final buzzer, almost as if this was a key regular-season game.

    “We wanted to compete,” Team Vince’s Jaylen Wells of the Grizzlies told Yahoo Sports. “Set the tone for the weekend, and a lot of guys on the team wanted to win. And the last one is money! We get paid!”

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    “I hate losing,” Edgecombe added. “I really hate losing. It’s really a credit to my teammates. We all bought in.”

    Heading into the break, the 76ers (30-24) find themselves in a comfortable tier in the Eastern Conference, sixth place and just 3.5 games out of the top four. However, with Paul George in the midst of a 25-game suspension for a banned substance and superstar center Joel Embiid currently out with right knee management (he’ll be re-evaluated after the break), Edgecombe’s true value will surface. It’s rare for rookies to be depended on for pivotal stretch runs like Philadelphia is about to embark on, but outside of Maxey, Edgecombe is one of the few players on the roster who can create his shot and score from all three levels, in addition to creating plays for others.

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    “It feels great to win the MVP of the Rising Stars game,” Edgecombe said. “But I’m focused. My next focus is the push after the All-Star break. After the break, we’ve just got to make a push. We’re still in the hunt for that playoff spot. Just got to stay together, keep hooping and trusting each other. I feel like we’re a dangerous team if we’re healthy. I stand on that.”

  • LeBron James, Dwyane Wade, Lindsey Vonn, Naomi Osaka among several sports stars to wish Chris Paul a fond farewell after his retirement

    After 21 seasons and 12 All-Star selections, Chris Paul called it a career on Friday. It didn’t take long for the well wishes to start flooding in.

    Between his tenures with seven different teams, his leadership role with the NBPA and his famous Banana Boat friendships, few players in the history of the NBA have been connected across the league like Paul. Here’s a sample of the comments that came in on his Instagram post making the announcement:

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    • LeBron James: “HELLUVA CAREER CHAMP! CONGRATULATIONS 🙏🏾✊🏾”

    • Dwyane Wade: “An honor to compete against you my brother. A Legendary Career”

    • Klay Thompson: “Point god ! It was a pleasure being your teammate. Congrats on a legendary run my man !”

    • Tyrese Maxey: “LOVE OG!! Respect”

    • Trae Young: “Set the Blueprint 🫡 Legend !”

    • Bradley Beal: “Happy for you and the fam! Congrats on a great career bro! LEGEND”

    • Kyle Lowry: “Amazing career my brother!! Love brother!!”

    • Naomi Osaka: “❤️❤️❤️”

    • Donovan Mitchell: “Point God🤞🏾🫡”

    • Matt Barnes: “One of the Greatest PG’s the games ever seen. Love you bro”

    • Chiney Ogwumike: “LEGEND! ✊🏿✨”

    • Al Horford: “Congrats CP!!!!! 👏👏👏👏👏”

    • Muggsy Bogues: “One hell of a ride young fella- You did it your way🎩👊🏾”

    • Trayce Jackson-Davis: “It was an honor cp! 🙏🏾”

    • Mike Conley: “👏🏾👏🏾 Congrats!!”

    • Richard Jefferson: “Point God🤞🏾The best is yet to come”

    • Nina Westbrook (wife of Russell Westbrook): “👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾 congratulations on an incredible career!”

    Lindsey Vonn even got in there from her hospital bed, writing “❤️💪🏻 legend!!!” And, of course, State Farm chimed in with “From assists on the court to assists in life – you’ve always been a good neighbor. Respect the legacy, CP3 👏”

    Stephen Curry, who has been both friend and foe for Paul in their careers, released a video message praising the future Hall of Famer:

    One interesting note is that of Paul’s seven teams played for, six of them posted a farewell note on X soon after the announcement: the New Orleans Pelicans, Houston Rockets, Oklahoma City Thunder, Golden State Warriors and San Antonio Spurs.

    FILE - Los Angeles Clippers guard Chris Paul drives to the basket during the second half of an NBA basketball game against the Orlando Magic, Thursday, Nov. 20, 2025, in Orlando, Fla. (AP Photo/Phelan M. Ebenhack, File)

    FILE – Los Angeles Clippers guard Chris Paul drives to the basket during the second half of an NBA basketball game against the Orlando Magic, Thursday, Nov. 20, 2025, in Orlando, Fla. (AP Photo/Phelan M. Ebenhack, File)

    (ASSOCIATED PRESS)

    The one holdout was the Los Angeles Clippers, where Paul arguably enjoyed the best years of his career. They ended up posting a tribute video at 9:43 p.m. PT.

    It was unclear if the Clippers would even acknowledge the news during the day given how awkward the situation was. Paul reunited with the team for a farewell season only to be permanently sidelined in early December and eventually traded to the Toronto Raptors, who waived him Friday.

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    It was an ugly divorce, as there were reports of Paul clashing with team leadership. The Clippers announced they were sending him home in the dead of night, and that wound up being the finale of his career.

  • Baylor’s Tyce Armstrong makes baseball history with 3 grand slams in season-opener

    Baylor first baseman Tyce Armstrong knows how to make a first impression.

    Facing New Mexico State in the Bears’ 2026 season opener, the redshirt senior tied an NCAA record with three grand slams in a single game in his Baylor debut. The only other player to accomplish the feat is Louisville’s Jim LaFountain on March 24, 1976.

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    Armstrong was playing his first game in a Baylor uniform after transferring from UT Arlington.

    For perspective, MLB.com’s Sarah Langs notes only one team in MLB history has hit three grand slams in a game (the New York Yankees on Aug. 25, 2011), let alone a single player. There are 13 MLB players with two grand slams in a game.

    Batting in the leadoff position, Armstrong’s first homer came on a low curveball in the third inning.

    Then came another on an inside fastball in the fourth inning.

    And finally, there was a high fastball in the seventh inning to end the game as a 15-2 Baylor win by mercy rule. All three homers landed in left field.

    Armstrong is now hitting .750 and slugging 3.000 through one game with Baylor, with 12 RBI. And a hit-by-pitch. It seems to have been a big moment for him, via the Associated Press:

    “I’m speechless,” Armstrong said. “It’s the coolest thing I’ve ever been a part of.”

    The Bears landed Armstrong after he slashed .319/.415/.556 with 12 homers and 46 RBI in his final season at UT-Arlington, where he earned second-team All-WAC honors.