Category: Basketball

  • NBA: Denver PD: 10 shot during celebration of Nuggets’ title

    NBA: Denver PD: 10 shot during celebration of Nuggets’ title


    The celebration following the Nuggets’ first-ever NBA championship turned violent overnight, with at least 10 people injured in a shooting in downtown Denver.

    Three victims were hospitalized in critical condition. Police said a suspected gunman was among those wounded and had injuries not considered life-threatening.

    “We took him into custody pretty quickly and without incident,” Denver police spokesman Douglas Schepman told the Denver Post.

    After the Nuggets’ 94-89 win over the Miami Heat in Game 5 of the NBA Finals on Monday night, a crowd gathered for a street celebration about a mile from Ball Arena. The shooting occurred near the intersection of Market and 20th streets following an altercation between groups of people.

    Police were investigating the incident Tuesday morning and trying to figure out who shot the suspect.

    Schepman said police had beefed up their presence in the area in advance of the celebration.

    “We had a lot of officers in that immediate area of 20th and Market when the shooting occurred, which is why the response to it was so quick,” he said.

    The city has set a celebratory parade in downtown Denver for Thursday morning.

    –Field Level Media

  • WNBA: High-scoring Liberty look for another win over Dream

    WNBA: High-scoring Liberty look for another win over Dream


    The Atlanta Dream head to New York to face the Liberty on Tuesday with at least one stat in mind.

    The Liberty have scored more than 100 points in consecutive games for the first time in franchise history. They defeated the Dream 106-83 in Atlanta on Friday and topped the Dallas Wings 102-93 at home on Sunday.

    New York leads the WNBA in 3-point percentage (37.7), total 3-pointers (81) and assists per game (24.5).

    Much of this is due to the addition of three stars who joined the Liberty this season: 2018 league MVP Breanna Stewart, six-time WNBA assists leader Courtney Vandersloot and 2021 league MVP Jonquel Jones. All three of them are four-time All-Stars.

    Stewart, a two-time WNBA Finals MVP, ranks second in the league in scoring (24.9), third in blocks (2.1) and third in steals (1.9).

    Vandersloot leads the league in assists (9.3).

    Then there’s Sabrina Ionescu, the first overall pick in the 2020 WNBA Draft by the Liberty. She leads the league in 3-pointers made (27) and scored a career-high 37 points on Friday when the Liberty defeated Atlanta.

    Ionescu made a franchise-record eight 3-pointers in that game as the Liberty (6-2) are starting to mesh.

    “As this group has come together,” Stewart said, “we’re having an awareness of where one another is, the spots.”

    The Dream (2-5), meanwhile, enter Tuesday on a three-game losing streak.

    Atlanta has wasted an early season schedule that was heavier on home games (1-4) than road contests (1-1), and will play its next four on the road.

    The Dream are led by wing Rhyne Howard, power forward Cheyenne Parker and guard Allisha Gray.

    Howard, the league’s first overall pick in 2022 out of Kentucky, averaged 16.2 points last season and was named the WNBA Rookie of the Year. This year, she is averaging 16.7 points, and she became the first WNBA player to get to 100 career 3-pointers in 40 or fewer games on Friday.

    “Okay, I made history,” Howard said after the loss to New York. “But I don’t think about that during a game.”

    Parker, a New York City native, will be making a homecoming. She is averaging 16.9 points, which puts her on career-high pace.

    –Field Level Media

  • WNBA: After ‘team effort,’ Mercury set to host Storm

    WNBA: After ‘team effort,’ Mercury set to host Storm


    The Phoenix Mercury seek consecutive wins for the first time this season as they welcome the Seattle Storm on Tuesday in a Commissioner’s Cup game.

    Phoenix (2-5) snapped a three-game losing skid on Sunday, rallying from down eight points at the start of the fourth quarter in an 85-82 road win over the Indiana Fever. All five Mercury starters scored in double figures, led by Britney Griner with 29 points.

    Phoenix also got 18 points, seven assists and six rebounds from veteran Diana Taurasi, who was playing on her 41st birthday.

    “Great, great team effort,” Mercury head coach Vanessa Nygaard told the team after the victory. “We had our backs against the wall, had people out, we’re on the road, all those things, y’all stepped up.”

    The Mercury were without Moriah Jefferson, who was limited to six minutes with an ankle injury in Friday’s loss to Dallas. She is listed as questionable for Tuesday.

    Seattle (1-6) limps into Phoenix having lost its last two after it snapped a season-opening, four-game skid.

    The Storm beat the Los Angeles Sparks 66-63 last Tuesday, showing a grind-it-out defense in a comeback victory. The win kicked off a three-game stretch in which Seattle has not allowed more than 73 points — however, the Storm have the WNBA’s lowest-scoring offense and failed to produce more than 66 in any of the three.

    That resulted in 73-66 and 71-65 losses to the Washington Mystics on Friday and Sunday, respectively. The losses marked the Storm’s fourth and fifth single-digit defeats of the season.

    “We just haven’t been in these moments enough as a unit to know just taking care of the ball and how we need to execute and just kind of be sharper,” Storm coach Noelle Quinn said. “But this is the growth that is happening, will happen, needs to happen for us to get over the hump.”

    Jewell Loyd has done her part to bolster Seattle’s league-low 73.6-points-per-game output, averaging a WNBA-high 26.0 points per contest. After Ezi Magbegor’s 14.0 ppg average, however, no other Storm player is producing more than 7.1 points a contest.

    Seattle played Friday’s contest without Loyd due to a foot injury. She returned to the lineup on Sunday and scored 16 points, leading four Storm scorers in double figures.

    –Field Level Media

  • NCAAB: Kentucky adds 3-star F Jordan Burks to help build thin roster

    NCAAB: Kentucky adds 3-star F Jordan Burks to help build thin roster


    Kentucky welcomed Class of 2023 three-star forward Jordan Burks on Monday, just the eighth player on the Wildcats’ 2023-24 roster so far.

    The Wildcats have the top-ranked incoming recruiting class, a six-man group highlighted by consensus top-10 players DJ Wagner, Aaron Bradshaw and Justin Edwards. Point guard Robert Dillingham is the fourth five-star of the bunch, per the 247Sports composite rankings.

    But coach John Calipari and the Wildcats aren’t getting back former National Player of the Year Oscar Tshiebwe, Jacob Toppin, Chris Livingston or Cason Wallace, former starters who entered the NBA draft.

    Guard Antonio Reeves entered the transfer portal but could decide to return to Kentucky, while forward Lance Ware (Villanova) and guard Sahvir Wheeler (Washington) are tranferring.

    Burks was once committed to Ole Miss before backing out. Burks’ high school plays in the Overtime Elite league, and he led the league last season with 27 points per game in the regular season and 23 ppg in the playoffs.

    The 6-foot-9, 190-pound Burks was ranked No. 172 overall in his class by the 247Sports composite.

    –Field Level Media

  • NCAAB: Reports: North Dakota St. transfer Grant Nelson picks Alabama

    NCAAB: Reports: North Dakota St. transfer Grant Nelson picks Alabama


    North Dakota State forward Grant Nelson, one of the top players remaining in the NCAA transfer portal, is expected to commit to Alabama, several reports said Monday.

    Nelson was deciding between Alabama and SEC rival Arkansas after visiting both schools.

    An All-Summit League first-team selection, Nelson posted 17.9 points and 9.3 rebounds per game over 30 starts in 2022-23. He declared for the NBA draft and received an invitation to the scouting combine before withdrawing ahead of the May 31 deadline to maintain his NCAA eligibility.

    In three seasons at North Dakota State, the 6-foot-11 Nelson owns career averages of 12.1 points, 6.0 rebounds and 1.3 blocks per contest.

    With the Crimson Tide, he’ll help replace the production of forward and SEC Player of the Year Brandon Miller, who is expected to be a top-three selection in this month’s draft.

    –Field Level Media

  • NCAAB: Reports: Ex-UNC commit Simeon Wilcher chooses St. John’s

    NCAAB: Reports: Ex-UNC commit Simeon Wilcher chooses St. John’s


    Combo guard Simeon Wilcher, a high-end four-star high school prospect who decommitted from North Carolina last week, will play for Rick Pitino at St. John’s, multiple reports said Monday.

    Wilcher was ranked No. 34 overall in the Class of 2023 and No. 7 among combo guards, per the 247Sports composite rankings.

    He played his high school basketball at New Jersey powerhouse Roselle Catholic and had been committed to North Carolina since October 2021.

    St. John’s hired Hall of Fame coach Pitino from Iona this spring after firing Mike Anderson. Pitino has since reshaped the Red Storm’s roster with several incoming transfers, three from Iona — Daniss Jenkins, Cruz Davis and Quinn Slazinski – as well as Zuby Ejiofor (Kansas), Ivy League Player of the Year Jordan Dingle (Penn), Glenn Taylor Jr. (Oregon State), Nahiem Alleyne (UConn), RJ Luis (UMass) and Sean Conway (VMI).

    –Field Level Media

  • NBA: Report: Raptors G Fred VanVleet opting out of contract

    NBA: Report: Raptors G Fred VanVleet opting out of contract


    Toronto Raptors All-Star Fred VanVleet is declining his $22.8 million player option for 2023-24 to enter free agency, ESPN reported Monday.

    The 29-year-old guard has not ruled out negotiating a new deal with Toronto, where he averaged 19.3 points, 7.2 assists and 4.1 rebounds in 69 games (all starts) in 2022-23. He was third in the NBA with 1.8 steals per game.

    VanVleet has spent his entire career with the Raptors, making the All-Star team in 2021-22 and helping them win an NBA championship in 2018-19.

    He owns career averages of 14.6 points, 5.3 assists and 3.3 rebounds in 417 games (268 starts) since arriving as an undrafted free agent in July 2016.

    VanVleet signed a four-year, $85 million deal with the Raptors in November 2020. If he declines his player option, he would become an unrestricted free agent on July 6.

    –Field Level Media

  • NBA: Heat G Tyler Herro active for Game 5 of NBA Finals

    NBA: Heat G Tyler Herro active for Game 5 of NBA Finals


    Tyler Herro was active for Game 5 of the NBA Finals after the Miami Heat upgraded him to questionable before the game Monday in Denver.

    The Heat trail the Denver Nuggets 3-1 in the best-of-seven series.

    Herro broke his right hand on April 16 in the second quarter of Game 1 in a first-round series against the Milwaukee Bucks. He underwent surgery on April 21.

    At the time of the surgery, the Heat said Herro would miss a minimum of six weeks. It has been roughly seven weeks.

    Herro averaged 20.1 points, 5.4 rebounds and 4.2 assists in 67 games (all starts) this season. He led the NBA and set a Heat record by shooting 93.4 percent from the free-throw line.

    The 23-year-old has a 17.7 scoring average in 242 games (100 starts) over four NBA seasons. He has made 601 3-point baskets.

    –Field Level Media

  • NBA: Nuggets open as favorites to repeat as champs

    NBA: Nuggets open as favorites to repeat as champs


    Fresh off capturing the first NBA championship in franchise history on Monday, the Denver Nuggets were installed by sportsbooks as favorites or co-favorites to repeat as champions.

    The Nuggets closed out the NBA Finals in Game 5, defeating the visiting Miami Heat 94-89 to end the best-of-seven series. Finals MVP Nikola Jokic amassed 28 points and 16 rebounds in the title-clinching win.

    DraftKings listed Denver as a +500 favorite to win the championship again in 2024. The nearest followers per DraftKings are the Boston Celtics (+550), the Milwaukee Bucks (+650) and the Phoenix Suns (+850).

    FanDuel posted Denver and Milwaukee as co-favorites at +460. The Celtics (+500) and the Suns (+700) are the only other teams with odds better than +1200, which is the number listed for both the Golden State Warriors and the Philadelphia 76ers.

    BetMGM has the Nuggets at +500, followed by the Celtics (+550), the Bucks (+600) and the Suns (+850).

    Others among the favorites according to FanDuel are the Cleveland Cavaliers (+1900), the Los Angeles Lakers (+1900), the Los Angeles Clippers (+2100), the Heat (+2500), the Dallas Mavericks (+2700) and the Memphis Grizzlies (+3000).

    Per DraftKings, the other favorites aside from the top four are the Lakers (+1200), the Warriors (+1200), the 76ers (+1300), the Mavericks (+1300), the Clippers (+1500), the Heat (+1800) and the Grizzlies (+1900).

    BetMGM’s other top contenders are Dallas, Golden State and the Lakers, all at +1200; the Clippers and Philadelphia, both at +1400; and Memphis and Miami, both at +2000.

    The biggest longshots according to FanDuel are the Charlotte Hornets, Utah Jazz, Orlando Magic, Indiana Pacers, San Antonio Spurs, Houston Rockets and Detroit Pistons, all at +50000. DraftKings has the Hornets at +40000 and the Pistons alone at the bottom at +50000, while BetMGM has Charlotte and Detroit bringing up the rear at +50000.

    Neither of this year’s finalists were among the top five favorites in odds posted right after the Golden State Warriors won the 2022 NBA Finals.

    –Field Level Media

  • NBA: Nikola Jokic powers Nuggets to first title in team history

    NBA: Nikola Jokic powers Nuggets to first title in team history


    As the final seconds ticked down toward the first NBA title in Denver Nuggets history, star center Nikola Jokic walked backward past center court, turned toward the Miami Heat bench and shook hands with his vanquished opponents.

    Understated when the championship moment arrived, Jokic was anything but during the Game 5 of the NBA Finals, scoring 28 points and grabbing 16 rebounds in a 94-89 victory on Monday to wrap up the championship.

    After not winning the overall NBA MVP award for the first time in three seasons, Jokic instead helped Denver earn the ultimate team prize and was chosen the Finals MVP. The Nuggets never lost more than twice in any playoff series and finished with 10 victories in their last 11 postseason games.

    “It’s good, it’s good,” Jokic said immediately after the victory on the ABC broadcast. “We can finally go home now.”

    Jokic, always reluctant to talk about his own play, instead spoke volumes on the court by averaging 30.2 points, 14 rebounds and 7.2 assists.

    “Nikola Jokic is a great person, he is a great husband, father, son and brother, and on the basketball court he has proven time and time again that he is the best player in the NBA,” Denver coach Michael Malone said. “He’s our MVP, we love him and we’re thankful he’s wearing a Nuggets uniform.”

    Michael Porter Jr. put up 16 points and 13 rebounds, Jamal Murray had 14 points and Kentavious Caldwell-Pope added 11 as the top seed from the Western Conference finished off the eighth seed from the Eastern Conference in the best-of-seven series.

    Denver advanced to the ABA Finals in 1976, joined the NBA the following season then lost in the Western Conference finals four times before making the title series this season.

    “All the hard work, all the sacrifice, all the dedication all culminated in winning the championship,” Malone said. “We have news for everybody out there: We’re not satisfied with one. We want more. We want more.”

    Jimmy Butler rallied late to score 21 points for Miami, while Bam Adebayo contributed 20 points and 12 rebounds and Max Strus and Kyle Lowry each had 12 points. The Heat knocked off the top-seeded Milwaukee Bucks and the second-seeded Boston Celtics on their way to representing the Eastern Conference in the Finals.

    The Heat became just the second eighth seed to reach an NBA Finals, joining the 1999 New York Knicks, who lost the title series to the San Antonio Spurs.

    “(It’s) true in sport and also in life that you don’t always get what you want, but there is no regret from our side,” Heat coach Erik Spoelstra said. “Everybody, staff and player alike, put themselves out there and put themselves into the team, whatever was best for the team. The tough pill to swallow is that it just wasn’t good enough. … (The Nuggets) are one hell of a basketball team.”

    Perhaps struggling with the magnitude of the moment, the Nuggets shot just 1 of 15 from 3-point range in the first half and 3 of 8 from the free-throw line. However, they trailed just 51-44 at halftime before leading by as many as three points in the third quarter. Denver entered the fourth quarter trailing 71-70.

    A jump hook by Jokic early in the final period gave the Nuggets a 72-71 lead with 11:39 to play before both teams ramped up their defensive intensity. After neither side scored for a 2:35 stretch, Jamal Murray’s 14-foot pullup jumper gave Denver an 81-76 advantage with 6:43 left.

    A Jokic runner put the Nuggets up 83-76 with 4:43 remaining as the Heat opened the fourth quarter 2 of 16 from the field. Butler came to life in the final period, scoring the team’s last 13 points, including three free throws that were awarded even though he kicked out his right leg and caught an opponent on a 3-point attempt. However, Miami did not score over the final 1:57.

    A Bruce Brown rebound and putback basket put the Nuggets up 90-89 with 1:31 remaining, and a steal followed by two free throws from Caldwell-Pope with 24.7 seconds left gave Denver a 92-89 lead.

    Butler missed a 3-point attempt with 17.1 seconds remaining, and Brown sealed the title with two free throws for a 94-89 advantage with 14.3 seconds left.

    “I learned a lot about myself just being out for two postseasons, just grinding and having so many things go through my head,” said Murray, who missed the playoffs in 2021 and 2022 as well as the entire 2021-22 regular season due to a knee injury. “Just to see us healthy and knowing what we can do, we had the belief from the get-go.”

    –Field Level Media