Category: Sport

  • Jonathan Kuminga requests trade from Warriors on the first day he’s eligible to be dealt

    After months of offseason drama, Jonathan Kuminga and the Golden State Warriors appear to be headed for a split. The 23-year-old forward reportedly requested a trade Thursday, the first day he was eligible to be dealt after signing an extension with the Warriors in the offseason, according to ESPN.

    The report comes as no surprise, considering Kuminga has not played in the last 13 games with the team. After starting for the Warriors early in the season, Kuminga found himself relegated to backup duty. Shortly after that, he stopped playing altogether.

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    After coming off the bench during a Nov. 12 game against the San Antonio Spurs, Kuminga sat out or did not dress for seven straight games due to a knee injury that was initially not thought to be serious.

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    He returned to play in four more games, getting a start against the Cleveland Cavaliers on Dec. 6, but then missed three games due to an ankle issue. He returned to action Dec. 12, playing just over nine minutes off the bench in a loss to the Phoenix Suns. Kuminga hasn’t taken the court for the Warriors since that game.

    The trade request comes months after Kuminga signed a two-year, $46.8 million extension with the Warriors in the offseason. That extension came after a lengthy contract dispute between the team and Kuminga, who fell out of the team’s playoff rotation last season.

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    Because of that extension, Kuminga could not be traded until Jan. 15. It appears he wasted no time in letting the Warriors know that was his desired outcome.

    With Kuminga’s request in, the Warriors have until Feb. 5 — the NBA trade deadline — to get a deal done.

    In 18 games and 13 starts this season, Kuminga is averaging 11.8 points, 6.2 rebounds and 2.2 assists per game. His scoring is down compared to the last two seasons, when Kuminga averaged 15.8 points per game in roughly the same amount of playing time.

  • 2026 Australian Open draw: Jannik Sinner seeks third straight title; Coco Gauff, Venus Williams could meet in second round

    The 2026 Australian Open begins on Jan. 18 and the draws for the men’s and women’s brackets were held on Thursday. Italian Jannik Sinner and American Madison Keys are the men’s and women’s reigning champions, respectively.

    Sinner is seeking his third straight Australian Open title. He has reached the finals in each of his past five appearances at a Grand Slam, which also includes wins at Wimbledon and the U.S. Open. Keys’ win last year is her only Grand Slam victory. The only other time she has reached a Grand Slam final was the 2017 U.S. Open, where she fell to Sloane Stephens.

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    Novak Djokovic-Jannik Sinner semifinal a possibility

    Sinner, seeded No. 2, will begin his quest for a four-peat against Hugo Gaston of France. Sinner’s road to another title could also see a matchup with American Ben Shelton in the quarterfinals. Sinner has an 8-1 lifetime record against Shelton with the pair squaring off during last year’s Australian Open semifinal, which saw the Italian coming out on top in straight sets 6-3, 7-6[4], 6-3.

    Potentially waiting for Sinner in the semifinals is Novak Djokovic, a 10-time winner down under. Djokovic has reached the semifinals the past two years, losing to Sinner in 2024 and withdrawing against Alexander Zverev last year.

    Djokovic is 4-6 lifetime against Sinner with his last win against the Italian coming in 2023 at the final of the ATP Finals. Sinner has won out the last three times they’ve met in Grand Slams (Wimbledon and French Open in 2025; Australian Open in 2024).

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    The Australian Open is the lone Grand Slam that No. 1 seed Carlos Alcaraz has yet to win. The reigning French Open and U.S. Open champion will begin his journey for the career slam against Australia’s Adam Walton.

    Shelton, the highest-ranked American as the No. 8 seed, will face Ugo Humbert of France in the opening round. He could face the retiring Gaël Monfils should they both advance. No. 9 seed Taylor Fritz is looking to improve upon his third-round exit last year. He’ll face Valentin Royer to start.

    Venus Williams, a seven-time Grand Slam champion, is entered into the tournament after receiving a wild-card entry. (Photo by Steve Bell/Getty Images)

    Venus Williams, a seven-time Grand Slam champion, is entered into the tournament after receiving a wild-card entry. (Photo by Steve Bell/Getty Images)

    (Steve Bell via Getty Images)

    Venus Williams returns, could face Coco Gauff

    After being granted a wild-card entry into the singles field, 45-year-old Venus Williams will play in her first Australian Open since 2021. The seven-time Grand Slam champion has five career titles in this event, but all in doubles and mixed doubles. She’s reached the singles final twice, losing to her sister Serena in both 2003 and 2017.

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    If Williams can get by Serbia’s Olga Danilović and reigning French Open champion Coco Gauff and beat Kamilla Rakhimova, it would set up the first meeting between the American women since the 2020 Australian Open.

    Gauff holds a 2-0 career record against Williams, which includes their first meeting at Wimbledon in 2019 as the 15-year-old Gauff went on to win her first Grand Slam match and reach the fourth round.

    Top-seeded Aryna Sabalenka has reached the final in Australian in each of the past three years, winning in 2023 and 2024 and losing to Keys last year. Sabalenka could see Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova in the second round after the two previously met in last year’s quarterfinals, which went the distance.

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    No. 2 seed Iga Świątek was a semifinalist a year ago and is seeking the career slam with victory in Australia. Her road could include a fourth-round match against American Naomi Osaka, a two-time Australian Open winner.

    Amanda Anisimova, who was bounced in the second round last year, is seeded fourth and could meet Keys in the quarterfinals. Jessica Pegula has not gotten out of the third round since reaching three consecutive quarterfinals from 2021-23. The No. 6 seed will begin against 23-year-old Russian Anastasia Zakharova and her path to the final could include a fourth-round meeting with Keys.

  • Fantasy Football Video: Is Emeka Egbuka a top-50 WR for next season, despite rough second half?

    Tampa Bay Buccaneers WR Emeka Egbuka had one of the most exciting starts to an NFL (and fantasy football) career that we’ve seen. Unfortunately, the hype train went off the rails fast and by the time December rolled around, we were questioning everything we saw and knew about Egbuka in this Tampa Bay offense.

    Matt Harmon and Justin Boone discussed Egbuka’s fantasy outlook for the 2026 season and whether he’s a top-50 wide receiver after having such a quiet second half of his rookie campaign.

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    Harmon viewed Egbuka as more of a Tier 2 prospect coming out of the 2025 NFL Draft, where the WR was selected in the first round with pick No. 19. The initial thought was Egbuka would become a very good No. 2 WR option in the NFL. Despite the hot start, that’s sort of what we got from Egbuka in what Harmon described as a “bizarre” rookie season.

    Egbuka, 23, finished with 63 catches on 127 targets for 938 yards and six TDs over 17 games. That was good for a WR26 finish in half-PPR formats in terms of fantasy points per game (10.2) on the season.

    Boone admits that they might have to take the “L” on this one with Egbuka. Through the first five weeks, the Bucs rookie was the WR3 overall. From Week 6 and on, Egbuka was the WR57 in scoring. You probably regretted hanging onto him late in the season, Boone explains.

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    In dynasty, it’s a different story.

    When you look at Tampa Bay’s receiver room, there are plenty of question marks, Boone says. Mike Evans turns 33 and is a pending free agent who could also decide to retire. Chris Godwin Jr. was injured in 2024 and took a while to get back up to speed this season. It’s unclear if he can bounce back and be the same player we saw from 2019-23. Jalen McMillan missed almost all of 2025 but returned in Week 15 and made some noise to end his season.

    Hopefully, after things shake out this offseason, we see some optimism going into Egbuka’s second year in the league. But for now, things are a bit up in the air.

    Boone has Egbuka ranked 71st overall in his early top-150 players for fantasy football in 2026. The Yahoo analyst also has Egbuka ranked as the WR32 in his positional ranking, just behind Godwin. Egbuka comes in as the WR20 in Boone’s dynasty rankings for January and his early trade value charts.

  • How to watch the 2026 ISU European Figure Skating Championships this week

    If you’re excited for the 2026 Winter Games in Milano Cortina this year and can’t wait to see some of the world’s best athletes in action, the 2026 ISU European Figure Skating Championships might be able to scratch that itch for you. The ISU European Figure Skating Championships, which started today (Jan. 14) and run through Jan. 18, feature some of Europe’s best figure skaters competing for the European skating titles. Skaters in the men’s and women’s singles division, pairs, and ice dance will all take the ice, with many of them gearing up to compete in Milan this February, too. You can watch the entirety of the ISU European Figure Skating Championships on Peacock this year, and select events will also air on E!. NBC announcer Bill Spaulding will handle play-by-play throughout the competition, and he’ll be joined by Olympic gold medalist Tara Lipinski and three-time U.S. champion Johnny Weir.

    Here’s everything you need to know about the ISU European Figure Skating Championships this year including a complete schedule of events and how to watch.

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    How to watch the 2026 ISU European Figure Skating Championships

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    Image for the mini product module

    Dates: Jan. 14-18

    Location: Utilita Arena Sheffield, Sheffield, England

    TV channel: E!

    Streaming: Peacock, DirecTV, and more

    Where can I stream the 2026 ISU European Figure Skating Championships?

    The 2026 ISU European Figure Skating Championships will stream entirely on Peacock. That includes every skater in every discipline throughout the duration of the championship event.

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    Parks and Recreation and The Office, every Bravo show and much more.

    For $17 monthly you can upgrade to an ad-free subscription which includes live access to your local NBC affiliate (not just during designated sports and events) and the ability to download select titles to watch offline.

    Where to watch the 2026 ISU European Figure Skating Championships on TV:

    While you’ll find the most comprehensive coverage of the 2026 ISU European Figure Skating Championships on Peacock, select events will also be broadcast on E!, which you can stream on DirecTV, Hulu + Live TV and more.

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    How to watch the ISU European Figure Skating Championships without cable:

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    Who is competing at the ISU European Figure Skating Championships?

    The 2026 ISU European Figure Skating Championships is a competition between the best figure skaters in the European Union. 163 skaters from 35 different nations will be represented at the competition, among those competing are Italy’s Charlene Guignard and Marco Fabbri, who are competing for their fourth consecutive Ice Dance title, German pairs duo Minerva Fabienne Hase and Nikita Volodin, Belgium’s Loena Hendrickx, Estonia’s Niina Petrõkina, and France’s Kevin Aymoz.

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    2026 ISU European Figure Skating Championships Schedule:

    All times Eastern

    January 14

    • Pairs Short: 8 a.m. (Peacock)

    • Women’s Short: 12 p.m. (Peacock)

    • Women’s Short: 4 p.m. (E!, Peacock)

    January 15

    • Men’s Short: 8:15 a.m. (Peacock)

    • Men’s Short: 1 p.m. (E!, Peacock)

    • Pairs Free: 2 p.m. (Peacock)

    • Pairs Free: 3 p.m. (E!, Peacock)

    January 16

    • Rhythm Dance: 7:30 a.m. (Peacock)

    • Women’s Free: 1 p.m. (Peacock)

    • Women’s Free: 3 p.m. (E!, Peacock)

    January 17

    • Men’s Free: 8 a.m. (Peacock)

    • Free Dance: 1:30 p.m. (Peacock)

    • Free Dance: 3 p.m. (E!, Peacock)

    January 18

    • Exhibition Gala: 10 a.m. (Peacock)

    More ways to watch the 2026 ISU European Figure Skating Championships:

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  • Bills-Broncos NFL divisional round playoff preview: Josh Allen tries to keep it going at Denver

    Josh Allen has become the player who the NFL postseason is revolving around.

    In a wide-open field, the biggest question is whether reigning NFL MVP Allen and the Buffalo Bills can finally make a Super Bowl. Allen was excellent in a win over the Jacksonville Jaguars in the wild-card round, including a touchdown drive in the final minutes to take the lead. The road to the Super Bowl doesn’t get easier though.

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    Next in the Bills’ way is the Denver Broncos, who went 14-3 this season and got the No. 1 seed. As the top seed they were resting last week while the Bills had a tough game against the Jaguars. There is skepticism about the Broncos due to their hot-and-cold offense, but their defense has been one of the best in the NFL all season.

    There aren’t any unbeatable teams in this season’s playoff field, but there also aren’t many easy opponents either. If Allen and the Bills make a Super Bowl, they know they’ll have earned it.

    Previous meeting this season

    These two teams didn’t play this regular season but they do have some recent history. Last season the Bills beat the Broncos 31-7 in the wild-card round. In that game Buffalo got 272 passing yards and two touchdowns from Josh Allen and 120 rushing yards from James Cook. It was an absolute domination, though the Broncos are a better team this time around.

    Josh Allen and the Buffalo Bills face Nik Bonitto and the Denver Broncos in a playoff rematch from last postseason. (Photo by AAron Ontiveroz/The Denver Post)

    Josh Allen and the Buffalo Bills face Nik Bonitto and the Denver Broncos in a playoff rematch from last postseason. (Photo by AAron Ontiveroz/The Denver Post)

    (AAron Ontiveroz via Getty Images)

    Health update

    There’s no worry about Josh Allen missing Saturday’s game, but injuries to his finger, knee and foot were noted on the Bills’ injury report. He’s not 100% coming into this game. Buffalo also had two season-ending knee injuries at receiver last week, to Gabe Davis and Tyrell Shavers, leaving the Bills very thin at that position. In the secondary, safety Jordan Poyer and cornerback Maxwell Hairston missed practice to start the week. Denver is clearly the healthier team; the Broncos didn’t have anyone miss practice at the beginning of the week. That’s the benefit of a bye.

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    The head coaches

    Sean Payton’s offense has been a disappointment this season but it’s hard to deny the overall results. Payton has taken the Broncos, who didn’t make the playoffs for eight straight seasons after winning Super Bowl 50, to the postseason each of the past two seasons. He has firmly established himself as one of the best coaches of this era and a probable Hall of Famer, especially if he can take Denver to a Super Bowl. Sean McDermott won’t get that kind of respect until he takes Buffalo to a Super Bowl, and he has a shot at it this season.

    Key player for the Bills

    Khalil Shakir had 12 catches for 82 yards against the Jaguars on Sunday, and he’ll need to be a big part of the offense with Buffalo’s injuries at receiver. The Bills simply don’t have many other pass catchers. It’s not an easy task against the Broncos’ strong cornerback unit, which includes last season’s NFL Defensive Player of the Year Pat Surtain II, but Buffalo needs some production from its wideouts if it will win. Brandin Cooks will be a part of that too, but Shakir is the focal point.

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    Key player for the Broncos

    Josh Allen hasn’t been easy to sack in his career, but was sacked 40 times in the regular season. That was way up from only 14 last season. That’s good news for the Broncos, who led the NFL with 68 sacks. That was 11 more than any other team. Their best pass rusher is Nik Bonitto, who had 14 sacks. Jonathon Cooper, John Franklin-Myers and Zach Allen also had seven or more sacks in the Broncos’ group effort to get to the quarterback, but Bonitto is the star of the group. His ability to get to Allen and get the Bills’ quarterback down to the ground might be the difference in which team moves on.

    Betting market watch

    The Bills opened as 1-point favorites at BetMGM, before the line flipped early Tuesday to Broncos -1. Denver has been poor in the role of favorite this season, winning 10 of 12 games but going only 3-9 against the spread. The health of RB Ty Johnson will be vital for a banged-up Bills offense that just lost WR Tyrell Shavers to a torn ACL. Josh Allen also got beat up in the 27-24 wild-card win over the Jaguars. Buffalo’s rush defense has been porous, but Denver has just the 19th-best rushing attack by DVOA. Can a healthier, well-rested Broncos team with home-field advantage take advantage? — Ben Fawkes

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    Check out more of Ben’s work at the Yahoo Sports betting hub.

    Prediction

    The Bills will have the best player on the field Saturday. Josh Allen provides a huge edge, and he has been a fantastic playoff performer throughout his career, just without the help from his team to get to a Super Bowl. That could continue. The Broncos are rested and have the defense to make things difficult on Allen. The Broncos don’t get a lot of respect, considering their 14-3 record, but it is a good, well-coached team that has lost only once since Sept. 21. And don’t underestimate the home-field advantage Denver has in mile-high altitude. It wouldn’t surprise anyone if Allen put on his cape and carried the Bills to a win, but it’s a difficult challenge.

    Broncos 20, Bills 17

  • Australian Open: Is this it for Novak Djokovic?

    While much of America and Europe is bundled up, dodging snowstorms or sick with the flu, there’s a reason they call the Australian Open the “Happy Slam.”

    Fresh from tennis’ offseason, most players have already been Down Under for a couple weeks basking in summer heat and sunshine as they prepare for the first big event of the year. While casual fans might consider the Australian Open an afterthought compared to Wimbledon, Roland Garros and the U.S. Open, it has sneakily become a lot of players’ favorite tournament for the logistics, hospitality and atmosphere. It also helps that most competitors have spent the last couple months healing up injuries, refreshing their minds and arrive in Australia eager to compete for one of the sport’s biggest prizes before the monotony of the tour season sets in.

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    Here are the seven storylines to know as the Australian Open kicks off Saturday night in the U.S.:

    The world No. 1 has a new coach

    When we last checked in on the best rivalry in tennis, Carlos Alcaraz defeated Jannik Sinner handily in the U.S. Open final to win his sixth Grand Slam title. After the match, a concerned Sinner said he needed to add more variety to his game, even if it meant some growing pains along the way.

    But actually, it’s Alcaraz who enters 2026 amid more significant change after separating from longtime coach Juan Carlos Ferrero.

    The underlying dynamics of why they split are a bit murky. It obviously wasn’t based on results, and Ferrero has denied there was a financial dispute. There’s been speculation in the Spanish press that Alcaraz’s father and Ferrero were not on the same page on a variety of issues.

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    However it went down, Ferrero’s absence will be very different for Alcaraz, who often leaned on his coach for guidance during rough patches, almost to the point of being overly dependent. It’ll be interesting to see how he reacts now that Samuel Lopez, who was previously part of the team, is the head coach. It also appears Alcaraz has made some technical adjustments to his serve motion in the offseason.

    Spain's Carlos Alcaraz (R) shakes hands with Italy's Jannik Sinner (L) after their exhibition tennis match at Inspire Arena in Incheon on January 10, 2026. (Photo by Jung Yeon-je / AFP via Getty Images)

    Carlos Alcaraz (R) and Jannik Sinner (L) have met in three straight Grand Slam finals. Will they make it four in a row? (Jung Yeon-je / AFP via Getty Images)

    (JUNG YEON-JE via Getty Images)

    Another ‘Sincaraz’ final on deck?

    One of the subplots of this year is the race between Alcaraz and Sinner to complete the career Grand Slam.

    Alcaraz gets the first shot in Australia, where he’s been bounced in the quarterfinals each of the last two years. Sinner, who has won the last two Aussie titles, is hoping to complete the set in Paris.

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    Until proven otherwise, they have to be considered the favorites to face off in a fourth straight Grand Slam final, which last happened between Novak Djokovic and Rafael Nadal across the 2011 and 2012 seasons.

    Interestingly, they both opted to skip the warm-up events and instead began 2026 with a big-money exhibition match against each other in Korea (Alcaraz won 7-5, 7-6, for whatever that’s worth) before sharing a private jet to Australia.

    MELBOURNE, AUSTRALIA - JANUARY 15: Novak Djokovic of Serbia plays a forehand in his opening week showdown match against Frances Tiafoe of the United States ahead of the 2026 Australian Open at Melbourne Park on January 15, 2026 in Melbourne, Australia. (Photo by Andy Cheung/Getty Images)

    MELBOURNE, AUSTRALIA – JANUARY 15: Novak Djokovic of Serbia plays a forehand in his opening week showdown match against Frances Tiafoe of the United States ahead of the 2026 Australian Open at Melbourne Park on January 15, 2026 in Melbourne, Australia. (Photo by Andy Cheung/Getty Images)

    (Andy Cheung via Getty Images)

    Djokovic’s last stand?

    Speaking of the 38-year-old Djokovic, you never know if this will be a final trip to Australia, where he’s won 10 of his record 24 Grand Slam titles. How competitive will he be this year? It may determine how long he continues to chase No. 25.

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    Though Djokovic made the semis of all four majors last year, it felt like he was getting further away from winning one. After the U.S. Open, he admitted that beating both Alcaraz and Sinner in best-of-five matches was a huge physical hurdle at this stage of his career and that he would have a better chance in a best of three.

    The endurance issue is complicated by several factors besides age. Djokovic barely plays the regular tour anymore, so he doesn’t come into the Slams with a great foundation of match fitness. He’s also had a tendency the last couple years to pick up injuries during the Slams, and there’s been reporting in recent days he’s dealing with some type of neck issue that has limited his time on court.

    If Djokovic can make his way through the draw, his best shot might be rooting for someone else to knock out one of the top two. Seeded No. 4, he would project to play 27th seeded American Brandon Nakashima in the third round, No. 16 seed Jakub Mensik in the fourth and No. 5 seed Lorenzo Musetti in the quarterfinals. After that, it’ll probably be hard to dodge Sinner in the semifinals — unless rising Brazilian star Joao Fonseca beats him in a blockbuster potential third round.

    Meddy magic is back

    If it’s not Sinner, Alcaraz or Djokovic holding the trophy, look out for former No. 1 Daniil Medvedev. A three-time finalist in Australia, with heartbreaking five-set losses to Nadal in 2022 and Sinner in 2024, the 29-year old Russian seems to be back on form after a miserable 2025.

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    After winning just one Grand Slam match last year, Medvedev dropped out of the top 15 for the first time since 2019 and made a coaching change. By the fall, he started to put the pieces back together. Now, he enters the Australian Open off winning his 22nd career ATP title at a warm-up event in Brisbane. It was particularly notable that Medvedev’s serve, which was such a weapon at his peak, looked far more effective than it had been the last couple years. If he’s got his A-game, he’s proven that he can be a nuisance to the top two.

    Belarus' Aryna Sabalenka reacts after a point against USA's Madison Keys during their women's singles match at the Brisbane International tennis tournament in Brisbane on January 9, 2026. (Photo by Patrick HAMILTON / AFP via Getty Images) / --IMAGE RESTRICTED TO EDITORIAL USE - STRICTLY NO COMMERCIAL USE--

    Aryna Sabalenka was going for a third straight Australian Open title a year ago, only to lose to USA’s Madison Keys. (Photo by Patrick HAMILTON / AFP via Getty Images)

    (PATRICK HAMILTON via Getty Images)

    Women’s No. 1 out for revenge

    In an otherwise fabulous year, Aryna Sabalenka’s loss to Madison Keys in last year’s final stands out as a low point. Going for three Australian titles in a row, Sabalenka lost most of the big points in a tense third set and felt like she let a huge opportunity slip through her fingers.

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    Still, Sabalenka is clearly the best player in women’s tennis right now and deserves to be the favorite here. The last time she failed to make a final at a hardcourt major? The U.S. Open in 2022 when she lost in the semis.

    Sabalenka looked sharp last week in Brisbane, winning the title without dropping a set — including a 6-3, 6-3 win over Keys. Her draw could present some interesting challenges, including a potential third round against the very talented Emma Raducanu and a fourth round against Canadian teenage sensation Victoria Mboko.

    Concerns hover over Iga Swiatek

    No. 2 Iga Swiatek, who needs an Australian Open to complete her career Slam, did not start 2026 with aplomb. Though her Polish team won the United Cup last week, Swiatek lost matches to Coco Gauff (6-4, 6-2) and Belinda Bencic (3-6, 6-0, 6-3), continuing the shaky form with which she finished 2025.

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    What’s the deal? Early in 2025, Swiatek started to implement some adjustments in her game alongside new coach Wim Fissette to become more reliable under pressure. Overall, her results have been uneven since then with notable highs (like last year’s surprise Wimbledon title) and some earlier exits than she’s used to. Swiatek has been committed to taking the longer view of her career, even if there’s a painful short-term transition, but she has been susceptible at times of retreating to old habits.

    With someone that talented but in a period of internal conflict, you never know what you’re going to get. It wouldn’t be surprising if Swiatek lost in an early round or ended up with the trophy and her seventh Grand Slam title.

    MELBOURNE, AUSTRALIA - JANUARY 14: Amanda Anisimova of the United States enters the arena ahead of her opening week showdown match against McCartney Kessler of the United States ahead of the 2026 Australian Open at Melbourne Park on January 14, 2026 in Melbourne, Australia. (Photo by Andy Cheung/Getty Images)

    Can Amanda Anisimova elevate her game to be become the top-ranked female from the United States? (Photo by Andy Cheung/Getty Images)

    (Andy Cheung via Getty Images)

    Fight for American No. 1

    The 2026 season begins with a very close race between Coco Gauff and Amanda Anisimova for the top-ranked American woman. Gauff, No. 3 in the world, leads Anisimova by just 103 ranking points, meaning they would flip flop if Anisimova advances further.

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    Gauff had a very uneven 2025. After winning Roland Garros, she went into a pretty concerning slump and hired a biomechanics expert to help fix a serve that was regularly breaking down.

    Her Australian Open draw could include a second-round matchup with Venus Williams, which would be a fitting full-circle moment for Gauff. It was their 2019 first-round match at Wimbledon, which Gauff won 6-4, 6-4 as a 15-year-old, that launched her to superstardom.

    Anisimova was the breakout player in women’s tennis last year, winning two WTA 1000-level titles and making the finals of Wimbledon and the U.S. Open. For the first time in her career, she comes into a season under a significant spotlight and an expectation to win her first major.

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    Anisimova’s prodigious baseline power can be mesmerizing when she’s in the flow, but the key to cashing in a Slam title might be whether she can harness her aggression in the biggest moments. She certainly has to like her draw, which looks soft on paper until a potential quarterfinal matchup with American Jessica Pegula.

  • Cubs’ lineup headlines early things to get excited about for 2026 fantasy baseball season

    Before I finished this article this morning, I went outside, cleaned off my car, shoveled some snow. It’s winter in the Midwest. My toes are cold, my head a little stuffy. So the opening of Yahoo Fantasy Baseball comes at the perfect moment. I could use some spring fever. You probably could, too.

    [Join or create a Yahoo Fantasy Baseball league for the 2026 MLB season]

    With the game opening this week and our rankings hitting the streets, I thought it was a good time to list a few themes I’m excited about for 2026. Consider this your appetizer into the new season, with more comprehensive entrees served up in the weeks to follow.

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    The Chicago Cubs lineup

    Before I dive into the fun, let me concede that as a Red Sox fan, the Alex Bregman loss stings quite a bit. Bregman’s career arc lines up remarkably with that of Hall of Famer Adrian Beltre. Both players spent their year-31 seasons in Boston, got back to the All-Star Game after a few years absent and posted a plus season to take to the market. Beltre shipped off to Texas after his Boston stop, had a lovely run in his 30s; Bregman will look to do the same with the Cubs.

    Beltre’s first season in Texas (2011) resulted in a World Series trip, sparked by an offense that had six regulars above league average. The 2026 Cubs have similar dreams, and they probably boast a deeper offense than that Rangers team did. Eight of Chicago’s nine primary hitters hold a projected wRC+ over the mean, and the one lagger — Dansby Swanson — is right around league average. Pitchers are going to hate facing this lineup.

    The Cubs have a balance of lefties and righties in their lineup, a mix of power, speed and OBP skills, and plenty of players around their theoretical peaks — everyone here is in their 20s or early 30s. Last year’s 92-win season feels like a starting point.

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    The lineup isn’t just fun, it’s fantasy-affordable — at least, so far. Pete Crow-Armstrong and Seiya Suzuki are the only Chicago players currently in the top 100 in global ADP. Nico Hoerner, Michael Busch, Bregman and Swanson all make sense in the top 150. Ian Happ and Carson Kelly are even cheaper, and thus far Moisés Ballesteros is an ADP giveaway. Give this lineup a long look all spring.

    Ranking and drafting the shortstops

    The first moments of baseball awareness as a kid, you quickly learn that shortstop is where the action is. The best player on your little league team is probably the shortstop (he might pitch, too). MLB’s first-year player draft is commonly overloaded with shortstops, with the hope that a chunk of them can actually hold the position as professionals.

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    Once upon a time, the shortstop position was a fantasy wasteland. But in the internet era, we’ve been treated to a plethora of offensive options at this position, making this a fantasy playground. Consider that last year, we saw seven different shortstops make it to 20 homers and 20 steals, and a handful of guys just missed those cutoffs. (For contrast, consider just one second baseman made it to 20-20 in 2025.)

    Shortstop is a position filled with young and ascending talent. Geraldo Perdomo was the best offensive player at this spot last year (using Baseball-Reference oWAR), a breakout season in his age-25 campaign. Bobby Witt (age 25) was just behind him, and Gunnar Henderson (24), Jeremy Peña (27), Bo Bichette (27) and Elly De La Cruz (23) made the top 10. Zach Neto only needs health to become a superstar. Jacob Wilson batted .311 as a rookie. CJ Abrams offers plenty of category juice.

    The older guys aren’t bad either. Francisco Lindor is remarkably consistent, Trea Turner is a multi-talent guy, Mookie Betts wasn’t lost at shortstop. The price might be right on Willy Adames, Corey Seager or Swanson. Take a good look around, there’s a lot to unpack here.

    Targeting the top of the Seattle pitching staff

    The trivia question lives on — the Mariners are still the only current MLB club that’s never made the World Series. They almost got there in 2025, finally succumbing to the Blue Jays in the seventh game of a terrific ALCS.

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    But this Seattle team still has plenty of talent on the escalator, especially on the pitching staff. Bryan Woo is coming off a breakout season, the fourth-most valuable pitcher in fantasy last year. Andrés Muñoz was the third-most valuable closer. Logan Gilbert missed a chunk of starts but was useful when available (3.44 ERA, 1.031 WHIP). George Kirby also battled injury and didn’t have the ratios we wanted, but he also struck out 137 men in 126 innings. His upside remains tantalizing.

    Any of these pitchers could have career seasons on the way — they’re all in attractive age pockets. Woo steps into his age-26 campaign, Muñoz will turn 27 this year, Kirby has 28 candles on his next cake and Gilbert turns 29 in May.

    Anytime you roster a Seattle pitcher, there’s a tailwind behind you. T-Mobile Park is by far the hardest stadium to score in over the past three seasons, and with favorable dimensions and atmosphere at play, the Seattle pitchers can let their hair down. This park also has a strikeout boost of 17% over the past three years, easily the best float in the game. You need to audit this staff before you step into any fantasy draft.

  • 49ers-Seahawks NFL divisional round playoff preview: Can San Francisco pull off another upset, this time of Seattle?

    The Seattle Seahawks and San Francisco 49ers will square off for the second time in a three-week span on Saturday night, though this battle between the two NFC West foes feels different.

    The Seahawks are coming off a bye after earning the No. 1 seed in the NFC, and they’re now a win away from reaching the conference title game for the first time since their Super Bowl run during the 2014 campaign. While not all were dominant by any means, they are on a seven-game win streak and successfully made it through the toughest division in the NFC.

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    The 49ers are in a much different position. They snuck past the Philadelphia Eagles last week in the wild-card round, thanks to a go-ahead touchdown to Christian McCaffrey late in the fourth quarter. They are significantly injured, too, and just lost star tight end George Kittle to an Achilles injury. Though a win would keep the 49ers’ hopes of playing in a home Super Bowl alive, it’s clear these two teams are in very different places entering the NFC West grudge match.

    Previous meetings this season

    This will be the third matchup between the two teams this season, and the first two were incredibly entertaining. The 49ers edged out a late 17-13 win in Seattle in Week 1 to open the season, thanks to a game-winning drive from Brock Purdy and then a strip sack turnover by Nick Bosa that sealed the deal near the goal line.

    Then 17 weeks later, the two teams met again in Northern California. Darnold and the Seahawks dominated the entire game to win 13-3 while shutting the 49ers’ offense down. That gave Seattle the No. 1 seed in the NFC, and allowed it to take last week off.

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    Health update

    The 49ers are pretty banged up, and are without Kittle for the rest of the season. Linebacker Fred Warner is trying to return from a fractured and dislocated right ankle, but he may not be able to return until the next round should the Niners advance. LB Dee Winters (ankle), DB Keion White (groin, hamstring), DE Yetur Gross-Matos (knee), LB Luke Gifford (quad) and S Ji’Ayir Brown (hamstring) were all either limited or not practicing due to injuries as of Wednesday, leading to potentially more struggles for their defense.

    The Seahawks, coming off their bye, are relatively healthy. Linebacker DeMarcus Lawrence is expected to play after being limited with an Achilles injury.

    The head coaches

    Mike Macdonald got the Seahawks to the No. 1 seed in the NFC for the first time in more than a decade in just his second season on the job, so what’s not to love there? While there may be time to question Kyle Shanahan soon, he has led the 49ers to the Super Bowl twice and the NFC championship game four times in his nine seasons. He may not have delivered a ring yet, but that’s hard to beat.

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    Key player for the 49ers

    The 49ers lost a big target with Kittle now out for the rest of the postseason, so McCaffrey will have to be an even bigger presence for their offense on Saturday night. And the last time out against the Seahawks, McCaffrey was almost a non-factor. He had just 23 rushing yards, his lowest output of the season.

    If he can make some ground up there, and find the end zone at least one, the 49ers will be in a position to pull off the upset.

    Key player for the Seahawks

    We could pull out one player here, but it’s the defense as a unit that will decide this game for Seattle. The Seahawks held the 49ers to just 173 yards the last time out, the fewest the Niners had in a regular-season game in the Shanahan era. Seattle allowed only three first downs in the first 30 minutes. The Seahawks shut down McCaffrey, and didn’t allow much from Brock Purdy, who has been dealing with plenty of injuries and can be very hit-or-miss.

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    The 49ers will have undoubtedly learned from their mistakes in Week 18, but a repeat performance now at home on this side of the ball would be huge for the Seahawks’ chances.

    Betting market watch

    “The Seahawks opened as 7.5-point favorites in this game, the fourth time this season that Seattle has been that big a favorite at home; Seattle is 4-0 straight up and 3-1 against the spread in those games. It’s also an unfamiliar position for the 49ers, as it’s the biggest underdog they’ve been in the postseason in more than 40 years. We’ve seen this game twice already this season and San Francisco has scored just 20 total points. I think this game stays under the total of 45.5 points, as Seattle advances to the NFC title game.” — Ben Fawkes

    Check out more of Ben’s work at the Yahoo Sports betting hub.

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    Prediction

    The Seahawks are a 7.5-point favorite at home, and it’s no surprise why. They’re fully rested and in the midst of a seven-game win streak, and the 49ers have been just scraping by at best the past few weeks. While a third battle between these two division opponents would be fun, the Seahawks should once again control this contest and secure their first spot in the NFC title game in more than a decade.

    Seahawks 24, 49ers 10

  • NFL divisional round against-the-spread picks, predictions for every game: Can the Bears keep it going?

    The Chicago Bears could check out for the rest of the postseason and they’ve already made their fans happy.

    This has been a dream season in Chicago. An NFC North title was great. Beating the Green Bay Packers in the playoffs took it to another level. Ben Johnson certainly liked it, and let the Packers know about it. He spoke for all Bears fans.

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    But the Bears’ season isn’t done. They have another shot at a win that would (somehow) make this season even more memorable.

    The Los Angeles Rams come to Chicago, and the Rams haven’t played like a Super Bowl favorite for about a month. They blew a huge lead to the Seahawks in Week 16, lost to the Falcons in Week 17 (and Sean McVay angrily said his starters needed to play in Week 18 because they weren’t playing well enough), they trailed a terrible Cardinals team in the third quarter of the finale before pulling away, then in the wild-card round barely beat a Panthers team that went 8-9 in the regular season. The Rams were a popular Super Bowl pick, and they have the talent to do it, but they will need to play better to get there.

    Meanwhile, the Bears continue to defy logic in many cases. Teams aren’t supposed to fall way behind and rally to win over and over, but the Bears are never out of any game. They have confidence, and a quarterback in Caleb Williams who has played very well in fourth quarters. That goes a long way.

    The Rams are 3.5-point favorites at BetMGM. That was Rams -4.5 earlier in the week but it has come down. Perhaps the weather, which is expected to be 20 degrees at kickoff with a 52% chance of snow, has bettors fading Los Angeles. Or maybe it’s the idea that the Bears just find a way to get back in games and pull off wild wins. Maybe the Rams win, but it will be close. Bears +3.5 is the pick, with another entertaining game in Soldier Field on tap.

    Caleb Williams and the Chicago Bears are underdogs against a good Rams team. (Photo by Cooper Neill/Getty Images)

    Caleb Williams and the Chicago Bears are underdogs against a good Rams team. (Photo by Cooper Neill/Getty Images)

    (Cooper Neill via Getty Images)

    Here are the rest of the picks for the divisional round, with all odds from BetMGM:

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    Broncos (-1.5) over Bills

    The Bills began the week as a 1-point underdog. Perhaps oddsmakers overestimated the betting public’s admiration for Josh Allen. The line has been on the move in Denver’s direction since early in the week.

    There are many reasons to like the Broncos’ side. They’re at home, and the altitude provides a unique advantage for them. The Broncos had a bye week while the Bills have a short week on a Sunday-to-Saturday turnaround. Denver is also a very good team. They were seventh in DVOA this season, one spot above the Bills. The Broncos are discounted more than you’d expect from a 14-win team, but that’s due to their fortunate 11 wins in games decided by eight points or fewer, and an offense that is prone to disappearing for long stretches.

    Allen is the equalizer for the Bills. They have injury issues at receiver and in the secondary, the run defense wasn’t good this season and they rely far too much on their quarterback, who suffered finger, foot and knee injuries against the Jaguars last week. But they have Allen. That gives them a chance in any game, but the Broncos have a lot going for them as well.

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    49ers (+7) over Seahawks

    The Seahawks are fresh off a bye, facing a banged-up 49ers team that lost George Kittle to an Achilles tear. We saw Seattle dominate the 49ers in San Francisco two weeks ago, a 13-3 win that clinched the No. 1 seed. This game is in Seattle as a result of that win. The point spread, at a full touchdown, doesn’t seem unfair.

    And yet, the 49ers have been surprising everyone all season. Why not again in this divisional round game?

    The 49ers pulled the biggest upset of the wild-card weekend when they won at Philadelphia. Doing it after Kittle’s injury added to the surprise. San Francisco has gotten to this point with a fantastic coaching job from Kyle Shanahan and defensive coordinator Robert Saleh. The 49ers looked bad, especially on offense, against Seattle two weeks ago. But they will make adjustments. Seattle is much better, but San Francisco can keep this game close.

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    Patriots (-3) over Texans

    This is a tough pick against Houston, whose defense is clearly championship quality. And the Texans were my pick when the playoffs began to win the AFC. But Nico Collins’ injury changes things.

    Collins suffered a concussion on Monday night. It’s his second concussion of the season, and the Texans play on short rest this week. It seems very unlikely that Collins, Houston’s best offensive player, plays on Sunday. And no matter how good the Texans’ defense is, the offense needs to score something.

    The Patriots looked good in wild-card weekend. Their defense had its best game of the season, keeping the Chargers out of the end zone. They’re not going to score that much against Houston, but if Collins is out, they might not need to score too many points to win and cover.

    Last week: 2-4

    Season to date: 136-135-7

  • Behind the Wemby Effect: The sneaky ways the Spurs smother opponents (and what teams can do about it)

    You don’t need me to tell you that Victor Wembanyama is a force defensively. There is a visual, visceral loudness to what Wemby brings to the table that can be seen by many. The question to me is: What are opposing teams trying to do about Wemby?

    One of my favorite subplots is watching as announcers talk about the “Wemby Effect” (when teams stop driving), but Eurostep over the attempts coaches and players are making to poke at his impact. The blocks are fun, but let’s walk through the little things that have allowed Wemby’s defensive impact to stick night in and night out.

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    How the Spurs keep Wemby near the paint

    One of the keys for San Antonio is the effort to keep Wembanyama in a position to rotate and protect the rim. Random possessions where an attack may look available feel a little different once you see Wembanyama’s presence in the paint.

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    In an ideal setting, the Spurs operate at their best when Wembanyama is planted on the block with his primary assignment being whoever is in the corner. This allows the Spurs guards and wings to pressure, switch and funnel drives toward the paint. With Wembanyama’s size, speed and timing, openings can close quick and drives can be discouraged. If teams run pick-and-roll when Wembanyama is defending the weakside corner, he will rotate to take the roller, point for the guard to close out to his man, and, just like that, the Spurs’ defense is set again. Wembanyama is free to roam and protect the paint. And if teams put him back in action, he can take away the paint and switch if you dribble too far.

    The tricky part is opponents have to understand how hard the Spurs work to get Wembanyama in that low-man, help position. The ability to contain drives or block shots at the rim will get all the rage, but I’m a fan of the little things. When the Spurs reset their defense after a made basket, watch Wembanyama. More times than not you’ll see him pointing and communicating, making sure everyone is matched up so he can get in his spot.

    In the play above, Oklahoma City worked to get to a guard/guard screen with an empty right side. What initially looks like a ton of space for Jalen Williams to attack quickly comes with the price tag of Wemby’s help. The commitment is so strong that there is a moment where Shai Gilgeous-Alexander is just left without someone guarding him. The help on the drive discourages an extra attack and allows the Spurs to defend with activity knowing what is behind them.

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    How offenses can attack Wemby’s help

    One thing to track as the season goes on is how offenses try to counter and poke at what the Spurs want to do. As difficult as it may be to deal with Wemby patrolling the paint, every defensive scheme has an opening. If the rotations are consistent, the offense has to work to find the advantage and make the defense pay.

    In the clip below, when OKC has Shai Gilgeous-Alexander post up on the right side of the floor with everything clear, Wemby sees it and rotates over to help. On the kick, the Spurs are able to recover. But how set up are they for the next attack? OKC drives from the middle of the floor, Wemby is hanging around the paint, and it’s a 2v1 on the left side. A skip pass opens up a wide-open 3.

    Another way to counter Wemby’s help is to work to get him on the strong side of the floor. The tricky part is teams have to disguise it to a degree. Because of the previously mentioned communication, if they try to set it up too early, the Spurs will work to switch their way out of it. Pushing him on the strong side of the floor should, in theory, remove him as the low man or the last man standing help-wise defensively.

    OKC’s plan was to start with a guard/guard screen, but only use that as a setup for the real action. Notice the quick advance to Williams and Chet Holmgren going right into pick-and-roll. Williams is now attacking that left side, making Wemby a strong-side defender and leaving Harrison Barnes as the help as Holmgren rolls to the floor. OKC went back to the same set later in the first quarter and Wemby engaged, which opened up a kick to the corner for a 3.

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    (There is a world where teams can try to get Wemby to defend a shooter in that corner. The issue is how many times can you get back to it once you show it and, as much as a I love the X’s and O’s, the disguise of plays, the manipulation of defense, we have to be honest: Basketball is played with pace, space, tempo and randomness. It’s not easy to always tap those kinds of buttons within the flow of play.)

    Wemby’s corner

    What’s the counter to Wemby’s defense? An easy thing to point to is to work to get him out of the corner. Wemby’s presence defending that corner was so strong against Boston on Saturday that Joe Mazzulla was yelling at Baylor Scheierman to get out of the corner.

    Was Scheierman involved in the action? Absolutely not. The most important thing is that he was no longer in that corner. And that meant that Wembanyama was also not in that corner, but on the move and not in a position to plant and help. The result? Jaylen Brown was able to attack Luke Kornet, turn the corner and finish.

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    The problem is that counter is not an automatic because of Wembanyama’s vision and communication. Adjustments get made and plans get changed. When Minnesota worked to move Wembanyama on Sunday, he refused to cooperate.

    As Julius Randle clears the corner to go screen, Wembanyama is communicating a switch to keep him close to the block. When Jaden McDaniels sees that and decides to go screen, Wemby once again communicates a switch to keep him close to the block. It helps to have Anthony Edwards, who can go get a basket, but the Spurs’ overall defensive scheme was not poked at. Wemby was able to stay on the block, everyone else was able to stay out of rotation and reset. The communication and rotations allow the Spurs to maintain a consistent impact defensively when Wemby is on the court.

    Pop quiz, offenses

    The impact of Wembanyama staying near the block and roaming the paint to help exists partly because of two questions.

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    The first: Are offenses ready for the rotations around what Wemby is doing?

    Because of Wemby’s size, length, ability to recover and ability to take space, there isn’t an automatic coverage you are going to receive. And behind him is a defense (when humming) that is connected and works to move to get Wemby back into optimal position.

    When Brown gets a screen (below), Wembanyama starts at the nail at the free-throw line. If you take a snapshot, that feels like drop. As Luka Garza tries to find a screening angle, you can see how Wembanyama begins to lurk and churn space away quickly. That presence (and the hesitation it can produce) allows Stephon Castle to navigate and recover. And because the Spurs are aware of their rotations, instead of pressuring Wemby to rotate to the pop, it’s De’Aaron Fox who pulls over instead.

    An easy answer may be to move whomever Wemby is guarding to the wing, but that unlocks what makes the Spurs’ defense hum and gets Wemby in his ideal help position.

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    When Boston goes with high pick-and-roll for Brown (below), Wemby has Derrick White on the wing. He’s not low, and technically the roll would not be his responsibility. Unfortunately for Boston, Wemby just takes the roller as he gets in the paint, the Spurs recover around it and, just like that, he’s back near the block. The ability to shape-shift, anticipate what an offense is doing and dictate terms is when the Spurs’ defense is at its best.

    In another example, OKC goes with a guard/guard screen for Gilgeous-Alexander on the left side of the floor. Holmgren is spaced on the right wing to take Wemby out of that low, help position. You can see Wemby communicate with the weakside defenders to rotate so he can sink back to that low man position. The Spurs are able to rotate, and when OKC gets back to a high pick-and-roll guess who is waiting to take Holmgren’s roll? You guessed it, Wemby.

    The second question: How much do you want to put Wembanyama in action?

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    In other words, are you going to get the results you want, and is that going to keep San Antonio from getting Wemby back into a help position?

    In the clip below, Boston goes to pick-and-roll for Brown and Wemby switches. The key is not that the Spurs take away the drive and the pop, it’s what happens once Boston decides to go to the second side of the floor. Wemby immediately points to Barnes to rotate to Brown so he can get back to the block and, just like that, the Spurs have put you in the same dilemma. Pritchard is able to drive and finish, but the pressure is on teams to win matchups and counter Wemby’s help again.

    In the clips after the make, notice the consistency of Wemby passing defenders off to make sure he stays low. The idea is to keep offenses in the same box, facing the same problem. Wemby is able to turn a switch into offenses facing the same problem: he’s the low man communicating switches, deterring drives and wishing you would tempt fate.

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    Does this mean the Spurs, currently a top-five defensive unit, will automatically vault to the best defense in the NBA? No, it does not. Teams will adjust. The best course of action is likely not one single thing, but working to move Wembanyama around the court and poking at the rotations behind what he brings to the table.

    The issue for offenses is they will have to work to make sure that becomes a realistic equation because of how the Spurs work to keep Wembanyama in a strong position. It’s something to monitor throughout the rest of the season as we enter a very interesting playoff race.

    But for now it’s clear: Every night Victor Wembanyama steps on the court is a night when he can anticipate and dictate terms on the defensive end.