Category: Sport

  • The Spurs make it clear as can be: They already are legit contenders

    OKLAHOMA CITY — The final Spurs timeout of an emphatic 117-102 Christmas Day win, with a little over a minute left to play and the game already decided, was the most prominent.

    Thirty seconds earlier, Thunder head coach Mark Daigneault had recalled his starters, resigned to the reality Oklahoma City was mere moments away from their third defeat to San Antonio in less than a fortnight.

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    So as Spurs two-way forward David Jones García strolled on the floor with 72 seconds remaining, emphatically waving a white towel in the direction of the downtrodden Thunder bench and thrusting it side-to-side as if he was disciplining them, the significance was clear. And it didn’t matter that the courier in one of the season’s most important games was a player with more minutes spent at baggage claim than on the floor. There was no more escaping or denying not only the presence of a rivalry, but a forced entry into the contender’s lair.

    Belt to ass. A lesson. A reminder. A message.

    “You don’t lose to a team three times in a row in a short span without them being better than you,” Shai Gilgeous-Alexander said following the game. “We have to get better, look in the mirror, and that’s everybody from top to bottom.”

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    For all the glitz, grit and glamor the Thunder possess — reigning champions, home to the MVP, owners of the best record in the NBA — they have been reminded on multiple occasions by the Spurs the distance that separates them is closing, not widening.

    Just a few weeks ago, Oklahoma City was 24-1, revered and feared from coast to coast. The Thunder’s path to June and a repeat seemed as clear as the water that flows in the Great Barrier Reef. Heading into the new year, as asinine as it would be to have the Thunder as anything other than the clear-cut favorites, the rapid emergence of San Antonio has forced a recalibration of sorts.

    It won’t be so easy.

    That’s what made Thursday afternoon so poignant. From the opening tip, this wasn’t just a regular December game. On a day that could have been billed as a conference final opener, the grappling match between ethics and analytics was fascinating, with the Thunder hell-bent on making their physicality the main character and the Spurs comfortable with adjusting to what was being presented to them. Each time Gilgeous-Alexander or Jalen Williams attempted to bother Victor Wembanyama with force, San Antonio responded with fluidity.

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    What makes the Spurs different is also what makes them bold; an array of smart point-of-attack defenders (who blitz you at the other end) that trust the very large Frenchman behind them to deter, clean up and destroy. San Antonio refused to yield space to Oklahoma City’s ball-handlers, mucking up the middle and forcing action to the perimeter. Add everything up — a rejuvenated De’Aaron Fox (who led all scorers with 29 points), holding Gilgeous-Alexander to just 22 points on 19 shots and 33 missed Thunder 3s — and you have yourself a recipe for success. Over and over and over again.

    “I think we learned that when you play a team multiple times in short stretches, there’s a familiarity obviously that it breeds,” head coach Mitch Johnson said. “And when you play a team of this caliber, the details are that much more magnified, and I thought we did a phenomenal job as the game progressed at adhering to those details and nuances.”

    Perhaps Oklahoma City (26-5), given all that it has accomplished in such a short time, isn’t yet at the point where it recognizes San Antonio as an actual rival. But the Spurs, who have attempted to downplay comparisons or get ahead of themselves, are built similarly. Both teams have been constructed by forward-thinking front offices that put as much stock into human meshing as on-court machinations. Both teams drafted well, place a plethora of trust in development and embrace their small-market mentality. Both teams have generational talents, quality role players and smart coaching on the sidelines.

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    They’re also different.

    “One thing that defines us is we’re going to try and use the weaknesses of other teams,” Wembanyama said. “We can use everybody on the court. We’re never going to let the talent of one guy take away from the collective. That’s what allows us to beat great teams like that.”

    The initial (and sustained) decision to bring Wembanyama off the bench so as to keep his return from injury contained — all while not disrupting the harmony that the current starters have — is indicative of a win for the collective. The third-year center spoke about his mindset change in those instances, looking for impact over sheer counting stats. The championing of Stephon Castle, who has rapidly risen to the occasion as a bonafide defender, playmaker and scorer, is a reminder of the joys of youth. The sage wisdom and floor spacing of Harrison Barnes, who provides a unique glue that makes everything work, is an embracing of age and experience. This is a group that wasn’t created overnight but has an eye on a dynasty, years after the last one. Beating the best team in the NBA at this frequency in a short span of time isn’t definitive, but it damn sure feels good.

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    “Our confidence has been at an all-time high for the majority of the season,” Castle said. “Obviously still a small sample size, but we’re definitely trending in the right direction.”

    The state of current NBA online discourse almost shuns the regular season in favor of the postseason — discrediting accomplishments or events along the way until real games start. But building blocks and small steps matter.

    San Antonio (23-7) is 2.5 games back of the best record in basketball, is sixth in offense and seventh in defense, per Cleaning the Glass, and has won eight straight, not counting the NBA Cup Final. The Spurs take and make smart shots (fourth in true shooting, fifth in effective field-goal percentage) and have had seven different players lead the team in scoring this month alone.

    If that doesn’t scream contender from the mountains, maybe try another terrain.

  • Bo Nix, Broncos survive scare in Kansas City on Christmas to maintain lead in AFC race

    It wasn’t great, but Bo Nix and the Denver Broncos are still in full control of the AFC.

    Nix and the playoff-bound Broncos mounted a late touchdown drive Thursday night to grab a 20-13 win over the Kansas City Chiefs at Arrowhead Stadium, wrapping up a three-game Christmas Day slate for the NFL. That win pushed the Broncos to 13-3 on the season, and they’re now poised to win the AFC West for the first time since the 2015 campaign, which was the last season they won the Super Bowl. It also kept their advantage over the New England Patriots in the race for the top seed in the AFC playoffs.

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    The Broncos had to get past Chris Oladokun, who was making his first career start in the NFL after Patrick Mahomes and Gardner Minshew both went down with season-ending knee injuries. The Chiefs had nothing to play for, either, as they’ve already been eliminated from playoff contention for the first time since 2014.

    Though he completed only five passes for 27 yards in the first half, Oladokun held his own. He didn’t make any glaring mistakes in the opening two quarters of his first start, and even threw a 5-yard touchdown pass to Brashard Smith early in the second quarter. That, paired with several great stops deep in their own territory, actually let the Chiefs enter the locker room at halftime with a 7-6 lead. The Broncos had to settle for just a pair of field goals after their drives repeatedly stalled out.

    Finally, after a long 14-play drive that lasted nearly 10 full minutes in the third quarter, the Broncos took the lead again. Nix scrambled into the end zone himself from 9 yards out. By that point, the Broncos had more than doubled Kansas City’s time of possession.

    That lead didn’t last, as Harrison Butker drilled a 47-yard field goal early in the fourth quarter to tie the game back up.

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    The Broncos, however, killed nearly the entire rest of the clock after that to put the game to bed. They nearly had to settle for a short field goal inside of the two-minute warning, but got the Chiefs to jump offsides on fourth down to give them a fresh set of downs.

    Eventually, Nix found RJ Harvey in the back of the end zone to complete the 14-play drive and put the Broncos on top for good. From there — even though Oladokun led the Chiefs deep into Denver territory with several passes to Travis Kelce — the Broncos picked up one last stop to seal their win.

    Nix went 26-of-38 passing for 182 yards with a touchdown and an interception. He and Harvey each had 43 yards on the ground, and Courtland Sutton led Denver through the air with 40 yards on four catches.

    Oladokun went 13-of-22 passing for 66 yards with a touchdown. Kareem Hunt had 38 yards on seven carries, and Kelce — in what may have been his last home game before retirement — had 36 yards on five catches. The Chiefs (6-10) have lost five straight.

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    The Broncos now will wait and see, and can potentially clinch the No. 1 seed in the AFC later this weekend if things go their way. They’ll win the division if the Houston Texans beat the Los Angeles Chargers on Saturday. Otherwise, the division will come down to next weekend’s matchup between the two teams in Denver.

    While it’ll likely take a better showing offensively against the Chargers to end the season on a win, the Broncos still got the job done Thursday night. With playoff seeding on the line, that’s all that matters.

    Live coverage is over37 updates
    • Jack Baer

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      Jack Baer

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      Jack Baer

      Bo Nix: 26-of-38, 182 passing yards, 1 TD, 1 INT, 76.9 passer rating

      RJ Harvey: 14 rushes, 43 rushing yards, 5 catches, 33 receiving yards, 1 receiving touchdown

      Chris Oladokun: 13-of-22, 66 passing yards, 1 TD, 79 passer rating

    • Jack Baer

      Jack Baer

      The Broncos sweep the Chiefs and are still alive in the quest for the No. 1 seed in the AFC at 13-3. The Chiefs fall to 6-10 in what could be Travis Kelce’s final game at Arrowhead Stadium.

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      Jack Baer

      Chris Oladokun overthrows Hollywood Brown and we’re done here.

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      Jack Baer

      Chris Oladokun hits Travis Kelce for a 14-yard gain, then scrambles for another seven. Less than 30 seconds left as the Chiefs try to pull off a miracle.

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      Jack Baer

      On 3rd-and-1 at the KC 44, Kareem Hunt breaks off a 14-yard run to enter Denver territory.

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      Jack Baer

      On 3rd-and-goal, Bo Nix finds RJ Harvey in the back of the end zone and the Broncos take back the lead with 1:45 left. The Chiefs need a touchdown with 1:45 left and one timeout.

       

    • Jack Baer

      Jack Baer

      WOW. The Broncos line up for the direct snap with RJ Harvey, an obvious offside bait, and Chris Jones (!) falls for it. It’s 1st-and-goal for Denver with two minutes left.

      That’s the Chiefs’ first penalty of the game.

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      Nick Bolton comes up big to force 4th-and-2 for the Broncos. Now comes a significant fourth-down decision after the two-minute warning.

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      With 5:52 left and 3rd-and-10, Lil’Jordan Humphrey gets wide open for a 17-yard gain. That gets Denver into field goal range and a fresh set of downs.

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      Jack Baer

      The Broncos defense gets the stop, but Harrison Butker is good from 47 yards to tie this game. Given how much the KC offense has struggled to move the ball, that Brashard Smith return was massive.

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      Jack Baer

      The Chiefs third-stringer hasn’t even broken 50 yards, but he’s had a couple nice plays tonight.

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      Jack Baer

      Chris Jones takes down Bo Nix for a drive-killing sack and ends the Denver drive. Then Brashard Smith returns the ball 45 yards to put Kansas City already in striking distance.

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      Jack Baer

      The Chiefs got 5 yards from a neutral-zone infraction penalty and -1 yards from the rest of the plays. The Broncos are on the verge of getting the ball back with the lead as the third quarter ends.

    • Jack Baer

      Jack Baer

      The Broncos convert on a 4th-and-inches, then Bo Nix runs in a nine-yard touchdown. Gutty drive by Denver to take the lead.

    • Jack Baer

      Jack Baer

      Facing 1st-and-20 after an OPI call on tight end Evan Engram, the Broncos post their longest play of the day with a 23-yard strike from Bo Nix to Courtland Sutton.

    • Jack Baer

      Jack Baer

      Harrison Butker is good from 53 yards out and it’s a four-point lead for the Chiefs. They had been nearing the red zone but a Dondrea Tillman sack ended up killing the drive.

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      Jack Baer

      The Chiefs QB scrambles, straight-up drops the ball on the run, then picks it up and hits JuJu Smith-Schuster for a 12-yard gain. That’s his longest pass of the game.

    • Jack Baer

      Jack Baer

      Kansas City returns to the kick off to the 37 and we’re off in the third quarter.

  • Lakers coach JJ Redick promises ‘uncomfortable’ practice after third straight loss: ‘Tonight, we were a terrible basketball team’

    Los Angeles Lakers head coach JJ Redick was not in a charitable mood after the team’s 119-96 loss to the Houston Rockets on Christmas Day.

    The team took its third straight loss Thursday in a one-sided affair, an outcome made worse by rising star Austin Reaves exiting the game with another calf injury. The Rockets led by double-digits for the entire second half and outrebounded the Lakers 48-25.

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    After the game, Redick railed against his team’s effort level and bluntly assessed how it performed:

    “The two words of the day were ‘effort’ and ‘execution.’ I feel like when we’ve done both of those things at a high level, we’ve been a good basketball team. When we haven’t, we’re a terrible basketball team. And tonight, we were a terrible basketball team.”

    He went on to note the team’s next practice Saturday will not be a fun one for certain players, whose consistency he is directly questioning:

    “We don’t care enough right now. That’s the part that bothers me a lot. We don’t care enough to do the things that are necessary. We don’t care enough to be professional.

    It’s a matter of making the choice, and too often we have guys that don’t want to make that choice. It’s pretty consistent who those guys are. Saturday’s practice, I told the guys, it’s going to be uncomfortable. Meeting is going to be uncomfortable. I’m not doing another 53 games like this.”

    That choice calls back to what Redick said after the Lakers’ previous loss to the Phoenix Suns, in which he painted the team’s defensive effort as a series of choices it wasn’t making correctly.

    PHOENIX, ARIZONA - DECEMBER 14: JJ Redick of the Los Angeles Lakers calls out to an official during the second half of a game against the Phoenix Suns at Mortgage Matchup Center on December 14, 2025 in Phoenix, Arizona. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Mike Christy/Getty Images)

    JJ Redick is not a happy man these days. (Photo by Mike Christy/Getty Images)

    (Mike Christy via Getty Images)

    His full postgame conference Thursday:

    The Lakers have spent nearly the entire season on solid footing despite LeBron James’ early season absence, but now sit at 19-10, good for only fifth place in the Western Conference. The team can only hope Reaves isn’t further injured after missing three games last week with a calf strain, but it has other problems to figure out now.

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    The Lakers’ next chance to get back on track will be a Sunday home game against the Sacramento Kings, who currently hold the worst record in the West at 7-23.

  • Travis Kelce leaves field with a smile in potential final game at Arrowhead Stadium amid retirement speculation

    Travis Kelce walked off the field at Arrowhead Stadium with a smile Thursday night, seemingly in good spirits. While we still don’t know if that was it for him at the stadium in Kansas City, and the 20-13 loss to the Denver Broncos wasn’t the best way to go out, Kelce still got plenty of love from Chiefs fans on his way out the door.

    Kelce’s mom, Donna, and his fiancée, Taylor Swift, were in attendance, too. The walk back to the locker room this time felt different.

    “You only get a few of those where you just get to stand there and appreciate 60-70,000 Chiefs fans screaming for you,” Kelce said in his postgame news conference. “I always embrace that moment, man. It’s fun. Hopefully I got everybody fired up for it.”

    Kelce has spent his entire career with the Chiefs, who selected him in the third round of the 2013 NFL Draft out of Cincinnati. He quickly became a fan favorite and played an integral part of the Chiefs’ dynastic run and their three Super Bowl wins. His public relationship with Swift has only skyrocketed his fame over the past several years.

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    The 11-time Pro Bowler is closing in on 13,000 career receiving yards and has 82 touchdowns on 1,077 catches over his 13 seasons in the league. All three of those figures are the most in franchise history. He had five catches for 36 yards Thursday night.

    But at 36, Kelce is undoubtedly nearing the end of his career. There has been plenty of speculation that he may retire at the end of the season, especially considering the Chiefs are going to miss the playoffs for the first time since Kelce’s second season in the league. Quarterback Patrick Mahomes is recovering from an ACL and LCL injury he suffered earlier this month, making the start of next season unclear.

    If Kelce were to retire after this season, which would mark the end of an era for the franchise that has dominated the league in recent years, Thursday’s game would be his final one at home. He’s at the end of a two-year, $34.25 million deal with the team and would become a free agent in the coming months.

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    Kelce declined to give much clarity on the speculation postgame.

    “Honestly, I’ve been just focused on trying to win football games, man,” Kelce said about retirement. “I’ll let that be a decision that I make with my family, friends, the Chiefs organization when the time comes.”

    The Chiefs will take on the Las Vegas Raiders next weekend to wrap up their season. Based on Kelce’s comments Thursday night, we won’t have an answer on his future until after that.

    But if this was the end, considering the circumstances, Kelce sure took advantage of his final moments at Arrowhead.

  • Rockets-Lakers takeaways: L.A. certainly doesn’t have the look of a title threat

    The Houston Rockets celebrated Christmas in style, delivering an overwhelming and dominant outing in a 119-96 thrashing of the Los Angeles Lakers on Thursday.

    Amen Thompson led six Rockets in double figures with 26 points in the win, which ended a brutal six-game road trip — three overtime losses plus a 20-point blowout at the hands of the woeful Clippers — on a strong note to improve to 18-10 on the season. Luka Dončić scored a team-high 25 points for the Lakers, but also committed six of their 16 turnovers in a game L.A. never led, and in which Dončić, LeBron James and Co. only briefly even appeared competitive.

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    Here are three takeaways from the Rockets’ commanding performance at Crypto.com Arena:

    So, about that Lakers defense …

    After consecutive blowout losses to the Clippers and Suns, L.A. head coach JJ Redick offered a curt reply to an inquiry as to whether his Lakers — who entered Christmas ranked 25th in defensive efficiency — had shown enough of a willingness to dig in and grind it out on the less glamorous end of the floor:

    L.A. brought a similar flavor of indifference for much of its Christmas Day matchup with Houston. The Lakers repeatedly allowed Rockets ball-handlers to beat them at the point of attack, get into the paint and generate good look after good look, seemingly whenever and wherever they wanted:

    Houston barely needed five minutes of game time to build a double-figure lead that it would never relinquish, ending the opening frame with 37 points on 24 possessions — a torrid 154.2 offensive rating. For reference, the best offense in the NBA, the Denver Nuggets, scores 125.6 points-per-100.

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    “The two words of the day were ‘effort’ and ‘execution,’” Redick said after the game. “I feel like when we’ve done both of those things at a high level, we’ve been a good basketball team, and when we haven’t, we’re a terrible basketball team. And tonight, we were a terrible basketball team. And that started, legitimately, right away.”

    When the Lakers briefly made a push midway through the second quarter, cutting the deficit to four at 48-44 following 3-pointers by Dončić and Jarred Vanderbilt, the Rockets calmly stuck to their guns, scored 15 points in the next three minutes and pushed the lead back to 10 at halftime. After the Rockets opened the third quarter with buckets on four straight possessions, Redick shifted tactics and dialed up a zone, which resulted in a pair of stops … which Houston promptly rendered irrelevant by grabbing offensive rebounds, scoring second-chance points and extending its lead even further.

    Redick rifled through his Rolodex in search of different combinations that might offer a level of physicality and defensive activity that could short-circuit Houston’s smoothly operating machine. The combo of Vanderbilt and Marcus Smart helped key an 11-4 second-quarter run that constituted L.A.’s best basketball of the night; a unit flanking Dončić and whisper-quiet center Deandre Ayton with Vanderbilt, Smart, gap-plugging connector Jake LaRavia (one that had played just 10 possessions together all season prior to Thursday) showed intermittent sparks.

    For the most part, though, the Lakers’ Christmas fizzle looked remarkably similar to their Emirates NBA Cup quarterfinals loss to the San Antonio Spurs: a team top-heavy with scoring skill but light on size, athleticism and defensive steel proving unable — or unwilling — to hang with a younger, stronger, more physical and more relentless opponent.

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    “We don’t care enough right now,” Redick said. “That’s the part that bothers you a lot. We don’t care enough to, like, do the things that are necessary. We don’t care enough to be a professional. We had it. We had it. I always say this about culture, I always say this about a team being a functioning organism: It can change like that. We don’t have it right now.”

    What the Lakers do have, in Dončić, James and Austin Reaves (who sat out the second half with what the Lakers called left calf soreness, a worrying note considering he just missed three games with a calf strain) is enough high-end scoring and playmaking to produce a top-flight offense. If they can’t provide a higher class of resistance against similarly skilled opponents, though, that won’t be enough — especially not if the goal is to make a deep postseason run in this Western Conference.

    “It’s a matter of making the choice, and too often, we have guys who don’t want to make that choice,” Redick said. “And it’s pretty consistent who those guys are. I told the guys: Saturday’s practice is going to be uncomfortable. The meeting is going to be uncomfortable. I’m not doing another 53 games like this.”

    Possession is nine-tenths of the law

    Coming into Christmas Day, the Rockets were the NBA’s sixth-best team at winning the possession battle on a night-to-night basis, according to analysis by Jared Dubin at Last Night in Basketball, averaging three more offensive trips per game than their opponents. They pressed that advantage early and often Thursday, pulling down four offensive rebounds against some lackadaisical Lakers boxouts and forcing six turnovers in the first quarter alone.

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    That allowed them to take five more shots than L.A. in the opening stanza — a key factor in the Rockets opening that early double-digit lead and keeping the Lakers at arm’s length.

    The Rockets finished with nearly as many offensive rebounds (17) as the Lakers had defensive rebounds (18) and monster edges in second-chance points (24-10), points off turnovers (23-11), points scored per possession in transition (1.33 to 1.13) and total field-goal attempts (90-77). Getting that many more bites at the apple, and capitalizing on them so effectively, is how the Rockets can shrug off 25 from Luka and the Lakers shooting 50.6% as a team overall — and how a Houston team that takes fewer 3-pointers per game than any other squad in the NBA can still boast one of the league’s most potent and efficient attacks.

    Many hands make light work

    When they’re at their best, the Rockets come at you in waves on the offensive end. It’s Thompson (26 points on 12-for-19 shooting with five assists) repeatedly getting downhill into the paint, and Alperen Şengün (14 points, 12 rebounds, four assists) meanspiritedly pirouetting his way into all manner of infuriating flip shots and needle-threading drop-offs, and Kevin Durant (25 points on 8-for-14 shooting, eight assists) barely seeming to break a sweat as he gets to his preferred spots in the midrange or pops a trail 3 in an unsuspecting defender’s eye.

    When they’re really scary, it’s because those headliners have help: Jabari Smith Jr. (16 points on nine shots) drilling jumpers spotting up and running off pindowns, Reed Sheppard (13 points, 5-for-10 from the floor) snaking the pick-and-roll to get to CP3-style elbow pull-ups in rhythm, and Tari Eason — an absolute menace on both ends of the court, just fully Grinching it up — ripping and running and terrorizing.

    On some nights, the lack of a proper half-court organizer of a point guard will rear its ugly head; on others, though, the sheer tonnage of Houston’s athleticism, ferocity and talent will dispense with any such concerns. On those nights, these Rockets can straight up run you out of your gym. Ask the Lakers. They can tell you all about it.

  • NFL Christmas games INSTANT takeaways: Lions are tamed as playoff race takes shape

    Nate Tice reacts to the Christmas Day NFL slate and looks ahead to the NFL playoff race. Nate gives his instant takeaways from the Dallas Cowboys win over the Washington Commanders, a wild Minnesota Vikings upset win to knock the Detroit Lions out of playoff contention and the Denver Broncos taking care of the Kansas City Chiefs on Thursday night in their quest for the top seed in the AFC.

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    (1:20) – Cowboys beat Commanders

    (6:00) – Vikings beat Lions

    (12:15) – Broncos beat Chiefs

    MINNEAPOLIS, MINNESOTA - DECEMBER 25: Jared Goff #16 of the Detroit Lions leaves the field following the 23-10 loss against the Minnesota Vikings at U.S. Bank Stadium on December 25, 2025 in Minneapolis, Minnesota. (Photo by Stephen Maturen/Getty Images)

    MINNEAPOLIS, MINNESOTA – DECEMBER 25: Jared Goff #16 of the Detroit Lions leaves the field following the 23-10 loss against the Minnesota Vikings at U.S. Bank Stadium on December 25, 2025 in Minneapolis, Minnesota. (Photo by Stephen Maturen/Getty Images)

    (Photo by Stephen Maturen/Getty Images)

    🖥️ Watch this full episode on YouTube

    Check out the rest of the Yahoo Sports podcast family at https://apple.co/3zEuTQj or at Yahoo Sports Podcasts

  • Prime Video provides first taste of Nicolas Cage as John Madden in ‘Madden’ biopic

    Millions of viewers turned into Prime Video to watch the final game of the NFL’s Christmas triple-header. They also got a first taste of how “Nicolas Cage as John Madden” is going to work.

    The streamer released the first trailer of its upcoming biopic “Madden” on Thursday during the Denver Broncos’ close win over the Kansas City Chiefs, showcasing the mercurial actor’s take on the beloved coach-turned-broadcaster.

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    You really only see him in action for a single five-second scene, but that can still tell you a lot:

    You can compare that quick rant to the real thing in this clip.

    The film is directed by David O. Russell and will chronicle both Madden’s life as a Super Bowl-winning coach with the Oakland Raiders and his involvement in the Electronic Arts video game franchise that still bears his name.

    A closeup of the John Madden Thanksgiving day patch on a Dallas Cowboys jersey during pregame warmups before a NFL football game against the Kansas City Chiefs on Thursday, Nov. 27, 2025, in Arlington, Texas. (AP Photo/Matt Patterson)

    The jury is still out on Nicolas Cage as John Madden. (AP Photo/Matt Patterson)

    (ASSOCIATED PRESS)

    In addition to Cage as Madden, the film features Christian Bale as former Raiders owner Al Davis, Kathryn Hahn as Madden’s wife Virginia and John Mulaney as EA co-founder Trip Hawkins.

    Fittingly, the release date is set for Thanksgiving 2026. It was the NFL’s Thanksgiving broadcasts where Madden arguably made his biggest mark as a broadcaster, introducing the famous turducken after games as a celebration of the winning team. The league’s Thanksgiving slate is now officially called the John Madden Thanksgiving Celebration.

  • Nikola Jokić makes NBA history with 56-point triple-double against T’Wolves

    The final matchup of the NBA’s five-game Christmas Day slate produced a rousing way to end a busy holiday of basketball.

    The Denver Nuggets held on for a 142-138 overtime win over the Minnesota Timberwolves that featured a Nikola Jokić triple-double with 56 points, 16 rebounds and 15 assists, as well as an eventful night from Anthony Edwards.

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    We’ll start with Edwards, who finished the game with 44 points, 6 rebounds, 3 assists, 3 steals, 1 game-tying shot with 1.1 seconds to go in regulation, and 1 ejection.

    The fifth 40-point game of the season for Edwards was highlighted by his 24 points in the fourth quarter and overtime. The game needed only an extra period because of the Timberwolves’ guard’s clutch shot late in regulation to erase a 15-point lead by Minnesota.

    Edwards would not finish overtime, however, as he picked up his second technical foul with 20.5 seconds remaining.

    On the other side, Jokić’s night saw him record the 179th triple-double of his career in the victory. The three-time MVP put up 18 points in the first quarter and completed his triple-double by the middle of the third quarter. He finished by scoring 18 of Denver’s 27 points in overtime for the first 55/15/15 game in NBA history.

    Jokić’s 56 points puts him third all-time on the NBA’s Christmas Day scoring list behind Bernard King (60) and Wilt Chamberlain (59). He also seems to enjoy playing the Timberwolves after posting triple-doubles in each of his past four games against Minnesota, which includes his career-high of 61 points last April.

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    “Bro, it’s unbelievable. We’re watching history on a night-to-night basis,” Nuggets guard Peyton Watson said afterward.

    The win improved the Nuggets to 22-8 as they sit second in the Northwest Division, 2 1/2 games ahead of the Timberwolves. Denver remains in third place in the Western Conference, one game behind the San Antonio Spurs and 3 1/2 games behind the conference-leading Oklahoma City Thunder.

  • ‘Hollow and unserious’: Aryna Sabalenka vs Nick Kyrgios is not Billie Jean King vs. Bobby Riggs

    There aren’t many days in the history of women’s sports more significant than Sept. 20, 1973.

    Despite the garish spectacle of Billie Jean King being carried into the Astrodome on a chariot by barely-dressed men, then presenting Bobby Riggs with a baby pig to symbolize his chauvinism, tennis’ iconic Battle of the Sexes is remembered — and rightly so — as a serious turning point in the fight to legitimize female athletes in the eyes of a male-dominated culture.

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    Set against the backdrop of Title IX’s passage the year before and the establishment of the WTA Tour months earlier, 90 million people worldwide watched King’s victory on television. It turned her into a global superstar. It validated women’s tennis as a commercial enterprise, opening the door for other women’s sports to do the same. In many ways, it turbocharged the women’s liberation movement into households and workplaces across the country.

    “(It) was really political,” King told BBC Sport in a recent interview. “It was rough, culturally, what was coming with it. I knew I had to beat him for societal change. I had a lot of reasons to win.”

    For comparison’s sake, the next Battle of the Sexes on Dec. 28, 2025 is, uh, not going to be that.

    If anything, the match between world No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka and tennis bad boy Nick Kyrgios — in Dubai, of all places — is a nakedly cynical, agency-arranged cash grab representing little more than the cultural rot of social media and the same addiction to meaningless theatrics that gives our overstimulated brains the dopamine hit we now wake up craving.

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    “Hollow and unserious and feckless while still being nugatory and pointless,” longtime commentator and soon-to-be International Tennis Hall of Fame inductee Mary Carillo wrote in an e-mail to Yahoo Sports. “But in the larger sense it’s a useless, invalidating, inane piece of flapdoodle.”

    It might be unserious, but it comes with a serious question: Given that women’s tennis is well past the point of needing gimmicks to gin up attention, would it potentially be damaging if the No. 1 player in the world and a four-time Grand Slam champion loses to a tennis carnival barker who has played six official matches since the start of 2023?

    Evolve, the sports agency that represents both players and set up the event, is billing the match as an homage to the legacy of what happened 1973.

    But not only is that ridiculous on its face, it’s completely unnecessary.

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    For one thing, this isn’t even going to be a real tennis match. Whereas King and Riggs played a standard best-of-five set format — a huge part of what made King’s 6-4, 6-3, 6-3 victory so meaningful — the dimensions of the court for this one have been modified so Sabalenka has about 9-percent less real estate to defend on her side of the net. Also, both players will only get one serve, which probably plays to her advantage since Kyrgios — one of the biggest servers in tennis history — will be forced to play a bit safer.

    So even if Sabalenka wins, the modified rules ensure an automatic asterisk.

    “It’s more of a show — it has nothing to do with the Battle of the Sexes, with what Billie Jean King versus Bobby Riggs meant,” former No. 1 Garbiñe Muguruza said recently on the Spanish COPE podcast.

    (Original Caption) Tennis star Billie Jean King is carried to the court by four men for the battle of the sexes tennis match with 55-year-old aging tennis star Bobby Riggs.

    Billie Jean King was carried to the court by four men for the battle of the sexes tennis match with Bobby Riggs. (Getty Images)

    (Bettmann via Getty Images)

    Let’s face it, there’s also the misogyny of it all, starting with where the match is going to be held.

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    While the United Arab Emirates constitution guarantees equal rights in areas like education, employment and property, human rights groups have identified several areas of concern, especially regarding domestic violence and family laws that do not protect women equally and do not align with Western values.

    There’s also the Kyrgios issue.

    In 1973, Riggs was a 55-year old has-been and country club hustler whose garden-variety, Archie Bunker-style chauvinism was both cartoonish and reflective of a society in transition.

    Kyrgios reflects modern society’s thirst for a circus from his on-court meltdowns, to his prodigious but largely wasted talent, to a guilty plea in Australia for pushing his ex-girlfriend onto the pavement during an argument in 2021 (the magistrate in the case did not record a criminal conviction) to an episode in 2024 where he had to disavow self-described misogynist and controversial influencer Andrew Tate over social media activity that became the source of complaints during Wimbledon when he was working as a broadcaster for the BBC.

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    At this point, with Kyrgios’ tennis career hanging by a thread, it’s hard to escape the feeling this is one last shot at a giant payday, using a vapid instrument that will accomplish nothing except once again validating his ability to generate attention.

    “In whatever we do in today’s day and age there’s always going to be negative noise, there’s always people trying to tear us down,” he said in an interview with UK-based Talk Sport. “I have ultimate respect for Aryna. We have a good friendship. It’s done in a good way. We’re going out there to compete and we’re entertainers, going to have some fun, but we want to play a hard match. That’s it. She’s the No. 1 player in the world, she’s very capable. There’s going to be millions of people watching this. If I don’t get a good start it’ll feel like the world’s on my shoulders.

    “Think about all the good that’s going to come from this.”

    Good for his bank account, maybe. But for tennis? For the popularity of women’s sports? For the advancement of women’s rights in the Middle East?

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    Please.

    “It’s quite funny to see how some people say that,” Sabalenka said on Piers Morgan Uncensored. “We’re just bringing our sport to the next level and bringing the show and the visibility this event got in the last couple months is incredible and we’re going to compete and fight and it’s going to explode our sport a bit more.”

    Sure, if you believe all attention is good attention.

    But the beauty of being a top-ranked women’s tennis player in 2025 is that you don’t need to do stuff like this. Largely thanks to the foundation King laid for the WTA Tour and pushing for equal prize money at the Grand Slams, Sabalenka has made $15 million this year alone in on-court earnings. Women’s tennis can stand alone as a premiere sport in practically any country in the world.

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    In fact, the whole point of what King accomplished that day in 1973 was building a sustainable sport so that women didn’t have to do anything like that again to get respect as athletes.

    To reduce that legacy to crass commercialism and social media views is disappointing, but fitting.

    “The only similarity is one’s a boy, one’s a girl,” King said. “That’s it. I hope it’s a great match. I want Sabalenka to obviously win. It’s just not the same.

  • Fantasy Football: ‘We’re leaving here with a championship, thanks to Trevor Lawrence’ — Tale of the Take, Week 17

    Fantasy football championship week. Week 17. The final Tale of the Take for 2025. It’s been a wild ride of tall tales that hit big and a few that face-planted, but you stayed locked in from kickoff until now and I appreciate you for it.

    If these calls helped you advance or kept you entertained on Thursdays throughout the season, that’s a win in my book.

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    We ain’t playing around here this week. We’re going for week-flipping outcomes. I’ll lay out the tale, then give you the take you can use when it’s time to set the lineup that decides the trophy.

    Trevor Lawrence, Week 17’s QB1 overall

    The Tale: Trevor Lawrence is straight up balling right now. There’s no other way to put it. Since Week 12, he’s been the QB1 by 5.0 points per game, averaging 26.7 and stacking production like a closer. Boom, boom, boom.

    From Weeks 12 through 16, he’s thrown 17 touchdowns, and the surge matches what we’re seeing on the field. It started a little rocky, but the chemistry between Lawrence and Liam Coen is fully in sync. They’re ripping off commanding wins, and Lawrence is answering every week with big-time throws and clean decision-making. He’s finding answers in the red zone with his legs or his arm. He’s protecting the ball and playing with the type of confidence that tilts a fantasy matchup by halftime.

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    Now the Jags roll into Week 17 with a chance to finish the job against Indianapolis. The Colts have watched their season slide from division favorite to just hanging on, and this defense has been a target for fantasy lineups. Jacksonville still has something to grab here, and Lawrence is playing like a quarterback who refuses to give the week back. You can feel when the switch flips. The processing is crisp, the placement is money and the urgency shows up, snap after snap. You want volume, you want touchdowns, you want a quarterback who has been carrying lineups since Thanksgiving. That’s T-Law in this spot.

    We’re not playing around. As Denzel Washington said, “I’m leaving here with something.” Week 17, we’re leaving here with a fantasy championship, thanks to Lawrence.

    The Take: Trevor Lawrence finishes against the Indianapolis Colts as the fantasy QB1 on the week.

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    The December King returns; Derrick Henry is back

    The Tale: December belongs to Derrick Henry. Baltimore dropped one at home to New England, yet the only reason it stayed tight was No. 22 taking over. He scored two touchdowns, averaged 7.0 a carry then barely saw the ball in the fourth. Head Coach John Harbaugh said it was inexcusable to go away from Henry late. Lamar Jackson left before halftime with a back issue. Lesson learned.

    This week, the plan is simple: hand it to Henry and let him set the tone.

    Now, it’s Green Bay. The Packers are banged up and just gashed by the run versus the Chicago Bears last week. D’Andre Swift went 13 for 58, Kyle Monangai went 9 for 50 and the Bears rolled to 150 rushing yards on 5.8 a pop. On the season, Green Bay is allowing about 103 rushing yards per game, which sits 22nd.

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    This isn’t the spot to get cute. Baltimore needs to get in, control the clock and get out on a short week with Lamar less than 100% (if he even plays). Henry is the Ravens’ hammer in December. Feed him early, finish drives with him then close the door when defenders want no part of tackling No. 22 late. Last week’s mistake won’t repeat. Volume meets December form and the outcome feels inevitable.

    The Take: Derrick Henry finishes as a top-five running back on the week.

    Bengals vs. Cardinals = fantasy fireworks

    The Tale: You should be grinning from ear to ear if you roster pieces from this game. Two teams at the bottom are about to give us a top-shelf fantasy script with a 52.5 total and Cincinnati favored by 7.5. This is the start-everyone game. The Bengals are allowing 402 yards per game, most in the league. Arizona isn’t far behind at 350, seventh worst. That’s the recipe you hunt in championship week. Joe Burrow to Tee Higgins and Ja’Marr Chase is live from the opening drive. Chase Brown gets a runway against a front that leaks chunk gains. Even Mike Gesicki can get home if you’re digging for a tight end.

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    On the other side, I know Jacoby Brissett let you down last week and Trey McBride didn’t bail you out, but the matchup swings back in their favor. Cincinnati has been a target for tight ends; it allows the fourth-most passing yards per game to the position. Arizona allows the 10th-most rushing yards and the 11th-most passing yards, which is a problem when the opposing quarterback is Joe Burrow. This isn’t the spot to get cute or overthink last week’s dud. Brissett distributes, McBride reclaims the volume, Marvin Harrison Jr. and Michael Wilson both carry spike potential, and Michael Carter slides in as a strong flex against the league’s softest run group.

    It’s a true fantasy dream that checks every box — high total, bad defenses, concentrated usage and a quarterback on one side who can force the pace for all of us.

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    The Take: Start everybody in Bengals-Cardinals for Week 17.

    Ashton Jeanty’s volume rolls

    The Tale: These teams are heading in the same direction for the wrong reasons, but this tale is about how bad the Giants’ defense has been. They are giving up 150 rushing yards per game, second-worst in the league and a league high 5.5 per rush. They have allowed the fourth-most total yards per game and it shows in every phase. Missed fits, sloppy angles, late tackles. Yes, Brian Burns and Abdul Carter can flash with pressure yet this unit still struggles to finish drives or flip field position. That is the type of team you can attack with a strong running game.

    Especially with a rookie back who is built to handle contact and keeps gaining yards with every touch.

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    Last week, we finally saw Ashton Jeanty look like the top running back drafted. The Raiders committed to him early to manage the game and he answered with 24 carries for 128 yards at 5.3 a tote, plus one explosive catch that reminded everyone he is dangerous when the ball finds space. It was his first 100-yard day since Week 5 and his first multi-touchdown game since that same Week 5 performance. The volume is bankable, the role is secure and the motivation is real with a path to 1,000 on the season.

    New York has not stopped anyone on the ground all year. This is where you lean on a workhorse, play from ahead then salt the fourth with body blows that add up by the whistle.

    Jeanty can play. The matchup is outstanding. The clock will be your friend once Jeanty starts stacking first downs.

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    The Take: Ashton Jeanty finishes as a top-three running back on the week.

    Justin Jefferson, for old times’ sake

    The Tale: It hasn’t been the season anyone signed up for with Justin Jefferson. The Vikings have shuffled quarterbacks all year with J.J. McCarthy, Carson Wentz and Max Brosmer taking snaps, and now McCarthy is out again for championship week. Still, you saw the door crack open last week. I told you the Giants matchup made Jefferson viable, and while it wasn’t one of those vintage monster spikes, it was a step forward for a star who spent about a month stuck around two catches a game. Jefferson answered with six for 85 and looked like the steadying force this offense needed when everything else felt shaky.

    This is a spot in which Jefferson should be able to do damage. Detroit is in a defensive free fall. Since Week 12, no team is allowing more than 400 total yards a game except the Lions, and they aren’t just over 400 — they’re bleeding 458. They’re giving up a league-high 313 passing yards per game and close to 150 on the ground. Pressure hasn’t arrived, even with Aidan Hutchinson.

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    On the other side, the Vikings defense has made life hard for quarterbacks, allowing the fewest passing yards since Week 12, which can tilt the game toward controlled targets for the best player on the field. That’s Jefferson. New quarterback or not, the job is simple in Week 17 — throw Jefferson the ball, then keep throwing it to him.

    The Take: Justin Jefferson finishes as a top-15 wide receiver on the week.