Category: Basketball

  • WNBA: Mystics shoot for four strong quarters vs. Fever

    WNBA: Mystics shoot for four strong quarters vs. Fever


    The Washington Mystics got to see Sunday what they look like when they play at their best.

    For two quarters, anyway.

    Now the trick is to carry that over into a full game, beginning with their Tuesday trip to Indianapolis to meet the Indiana Fever.

    Washington (5-3) is coming off a weekend sweep of the Seattle Storm, including Sunday’s 71-65 win in which it took a 46-21 halftime lead and then expanded it to 28 points before a near collapse. They Mystics were outscored 23-8 in the fourth quarter but hung on to get the win.

    “You can see what our offense is capable of looking like,” said Mystics coach Eric Thibault. “We moved the ball. We set good screens. We didn’t get up against the shot clock. For two quarters, we did a lot of the things we really want to see offensively.”

    Washington got a season-high 19 points, plus five assists, from point guard Natasha Cloud. Ariel Atkins added 12 points and Shakira Austin posted 11, plus nine rebounds. The Mystics played without leading scorer Elena Delle Donne (neck tightness), who missed her first game of the season.

    Meanwhile, Indiana (2-6) missed on a chance to score consecutive wins Sunday when it dropped an 85-82 decision at home to Phoenix. The Fever took a 67-59 lead to the fourth quarter but were outscored by 11 points.

    Wasted in the loss was a monster effort by second-year forward NaLyssa Smith, who pumped in 29 points on 11-of-19 shooting and grabbed 12 rebounds. Erica Wheeler added 17 points and eight assists.

    Rookie center Aliyah Boston struggled against the Mercury’s Brittney Griner, scoring only four points and landing in foul trouble. But Boston is still contributing 13.6 points and 7.1 rebounds. Kelsey Mitchell (16.8) and Smith (15.0) are the team’s other double-figure scorers. Smith also averages 10.8 rebounds per game.

    The Fever lost all four matchups with Washington last year by at least 12 points, allowing 87.0 points per game.

    –Field Level Media

  • NBA: Heat G Tyler Herro upgraded to questionable for Game 5

    NBA: Heat G Tyler Herro upgraded to questionable for Game 5


    The Miami Heat upgraded guard Tyler Herro to questionable for Monday night’s Game 5 of the NBA Finals 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: NBA Finals: Nuggets big favorites to close out Heat in Game 5

    NBA: NBA Finals: Nuggets big favorites to close out Heat in Game 5


    The last time the Heat and Nuggets met in Denver, Miami pulled off a victory in Game 2 that evened the NBA Finals.

    Fast forward to Monday, and the series returns to Denver with the Nuggets heavily favored to claim the first championship in franchise history. That’s courtesy of a pair of convincing wins in Miami that staked Denver to a 3-1 lead in the best-of-seven series.

    The Nuggets are heavy favorites ahead of Game 5. That includes 8.5 points at BetMGM, where they have received slightly more than half of the spread-line action with 51 percent of the bets and 52 percent of the money. The line is at 9.0 points at BetRivers, with the Nuggets heavily supported with 59 and 74 percent of the action, respectively.

    The Heat’s +300 moneyline has been far more popular at BetMGM, drawing 79 percent of the total bets and 51 percent of the money. However, the Nuggets have again been heavily backed at BetRivers, drawing 64 and 82 percent, respectively, at -375.

    “Yeah, just understand that we haven’t done anything,” Nuggets coach Michael Malone said. “I told our guys, the first thing I said (after the Game 4 victory), ‘We’re not celebrating. It’s a good win. We’ve done our job. But we’re not celebrating like we’ve done anything yet.’”

    THE NEWS
    For everybody outside of the Nuggets’ inner circle, there is plenty of evidence that their time is now. If not in Game 5, then in Games 6 or 7 during the coming days.

    The Nuggets’ Nikola Jokic has nearly averaged a triple-double for the entire playoff run with 30.1 points, 13.3 rebounds and 9.8 assists. In the Finals he is averaging 30.8 points with 13.5 rebounds and 8.0 assists.

    Aaron Gordon had what was perhaps his best game in a Nuggets uniform during Game 4 with 27 points on 11-of-15 shooting, including 3 of 4 from 3-point range.

    Gordon also has kept Heat star Jimmy Butler in check on the defensive end. Butler has averaged 21.8 points per game in the series, although he has been more productive on the offensive end in the past two games with scoring output of 28 and 25.

    The eighth-seeded team in the Eastern Conference, the Heat don’t seem to have enough offense to keep up with the Nuggets. All three of the Heat’s defeats in the series have been by double digits, although they will take solace in the fact that their lone victory — 111-108 in Game 2 — came at Denver.

    “Same thing it’s always been, it’s one game at a time,” Butler said. “Now we are in a must-win situation every single game, which we’re capable of. Some correctable things we’ve got to do, but it’s not impossible. We’ve got to go out there and do it. We’ve got three to get.”

    Bam Adebayo has averaged 22.3 points and 12.5 rebounds during the four games of the NBA Finals, up from his averages of 17.8 points and 9.8 rebounds in the playoffs. But Miami has been held to 95 points or fewer in all three defeats.

    “All we are going to focus on is getting this thing back to … Miami and things can shift very quickly,” Heat coach Erik Spoelstra said. “It’s going to be a gnarly game in Denver that is built for the competitors that we have in our locker room.”

    PROPPED UP
    The most popular player prop for Game 5 at BetMGM has been Jokic at +425 to score the first field goal of the game. At BetRivers, it has been Jokic at +120 to make more than 1.5 three-pointers, which has drawn 6.4 percent of the total player prop money at the book. Murray at -278 to score more than 20.5 points has been the most popular overall with 10.3 percent of the total bets.

    KEY STAT
    Game 2 was the Nuggets’ only home loss in the postseason. They have covered the spread in nine of their past 10 games against the Heat, and Denver has won the first half in each of its past 13 games against Miami.

    INJURY REPORT
    While the Heat’s Tyler Herro appears close to returning from a hand injury that occurred in the opening game of the playoffs, the shooting guard still has not contributed to the cause, leaving 20.1 points per game from the regular season on the bench.

    THEY SAID IT
    Malone’s plan over the weekend, in addition to figuring out how to get past the Heat one more time, was to have his players ignore all media — social and otherwise — and keep their minds on the task at hand as if it were still significantly out of reach.

    “Don’t listen to everybody telling you how great you are because we haven’t done a damn thing yet,” Malone said. “We have to win another game to be world champions, and we’re going to do that by simply taking it one quarter at a time.

    “We stay true to our identity, we’ll give ourselves a great chance to do that.”

    –Field Level Media

  • WNBA: Mercury to make travel changes after Brittney Griner heckled at airport

    WNBA: Mercury to make travel changes after Brittney Griner heckled at airport


    Phoenix Mercury coach Vanessa Nygaard said the team will make travel adjustments to upcoming road games after center Brittney Griner was confronted by a YouTube personality on Saturday at the Dallas Fort Worth International Airport.

    However, Nygaard declined to reveal details, citing safety concerns.

    The situation is a hot topic after Alex Stein, a Dallas-area YouTube personality, filmed Griner at the airport and attempted to ask her questions.

    On Saturday, Stein posted a photo on Twitter, saying “I just met my favorite WNBA player Brittney Griner. Video coming soon,” and later posted an 11-second video of him shouting toward Griner as she walked through the concourse.

    “Do you still want to boycott America, Britney?” Stein asks Griner as she walks by. Some security officials get physical with Stein at this point before he asks, “What about the merchant of death, Brit?”

    Griner spent 10 months in a Russian jail after being detained for marijuana possession in February 2022. In December, she was released in a deal in which the United States agreed to release imprisoned Russian arms dealer Viktor Bout.

    Stein, 36, aired the entire 93-second video on YouTube on Sunday.

    “Was it a fair trade for the merchant of death?” Stein asked Griner multiple times.

    Nygaard didn’t like what transpired at the airport as the Mercury were leaving Dallas to get to Sunday’s road game against the Indiana Fever.

    “No one should be a victim of targeted harassment,” Nygaard said before the game. “I’m grateful that our team and our staff are physically OK. Most of all, I’m grateful that BG has been back here in the United States for 185 days now. If her being home makes some people mad, I think that obviously says more about them than it does about her.”

    The Mercury traveling party was eventually escorted into a room at the airport to get away from the heckling.

    “That’s obviously nothing no one wants to deal with, especially on a business trip for work,” Phoenix center Brianna Turner said. “We’re representing the league, we’re representing the city of Phoenix, our organization and in times like that we don’t want to cause a big scene.

    “We don’t to like throw phones or say some things. I guess the lesson is you live and learn but I don’t know what you do if it happens again.”

    While the WNBA said it has been working to keep Griner and all the players safe, the players union said Saturday that the league needs to do a better job of providing charter flights.

    New York Liberty star Breanna Stewart, who is a member of the union’s executive committee, is all for Griner flying however she wants.

    “I think that, you know, that there needs to be extra precautionary measures taken and you know, I don’t think anyone is against BG having charter flights whenever she wants, so that she can be herself and travel and be comfortable and be safe,” Stewart said. “Because that’s the last thing we want is what happened yesterday.”

    Griner scored 29 points as the Mercury posted an 85-82 win over the Fever on Sunday.

    –Field Level Media

  • WNBA: Late 17-0 run helps Lynx shock Sparks

    WNBA: Late 17-0 run helps Lynx shock Sparks


    Bridget Carleton hit consecutive 3-pointers to give the Minnesota Lynx the lead for good as they rattled off 17 unanswered points in a three-minute stretch of the fourth quarter on Sunday night to stun the Los Angeles Sparks 91-86 in Minneapolis.

    Carleton connected with 1:10 remaining to put Minnesota (2-7) ahead at 84-83, then canned another trey with 32 seconds left for a four-point lead. Teammate Tiffany Mitchell added four straight free throws around a 3-pointer from Los Angeles’ Nneka Ogwumike to seal the outcome.

    Napheesa Collier scored 24 points, grabbed nine rebounds and dished out six assists for the Lynx. Mitchell added 17 points, while Kayla McBride tallied 13 and reserve Nikolina Milic hit for 10 points.

    Ogwumike fired in a game-high 27 points for the Sparks (4-4), while Lexie Brown scored 21 and Jordin Canada contributed 18 points and eight assists. Brown’s 3-pointer with 3:38 left gave Los Angeles an 83-72 advantage but it committed four turnovers during the game-changing run.

    Minnesota earned a 38-26 rebounding advantage, ceding only two offensive boards, and canned 24 of 25 free-throw attempts.

    On the night Minnesota retired the No. 34 of Sylvia Fowles, the Lynx played like she was still on the floor, at least early. They established a 13-4 lead just over five minutes into the game before Los Angeles finally found a rhythm and cut its deficit to 22-20 after a quarter.

    Minnesota maintained the lead most of the second quarter, pushing it up to six on multiple occasions, before the Sparks wiped it out in the final two minutes of the half. Ogwumike sank a free throw with 24.1 seconds left to tie the score at 43 at intermission.

    A 12-2 spurt midway through the third quarter gave Los Angeles its biggest lead of the period at 58-53 on a 3-pointer by Canada. The Lynx responded with a late surge, getting a runner from McBride in the last minute to draw within 64-62 going into the fourth.

    –Field Level Media

  • WNBA: Brittney Griner carries Mercury past Fever

    WNBA: Brittney Griner carries Mercury past Fever


    Brittney Griner poured in 29 points and was clutch down the stretch as the visiting Phoenix Mercury pulled out an 85-82 victory against the Indiana Fever on Sunday in Indianapolis.

    Diana Taurasi provided 18 points and seven assists and Sophie Cunningham made all three of her 3-point baskets in the second half on the way to 13 points for the Mercury (2-5), who snapped a three-game losing streak. Michaela Onyenwere’s 11 points and 12 rebounds and Sug Sutton’s 10 points and seven assists also helped the Phoenix cause.

    NaLyssa Smith cranked in 29 points and pulled down 12 rebounds for the Fever (2-6). Erica Wheeler supplied 17 points and eight assists and Kelsey Mitchell posted 12 points as Indiana failed to capture its second close-margin victory in three days.

    It was a struggle for Fever rookie forward Aliyah Boston, the No. 1 overall pick in this spring’s draft, as she was limited to four points and seven rebounds in 23 minutes.

    Griner’s two free throws put the Mercury ahead 80-79 with 2:06 to play. Her basket in the lane provided Phoenix an 82-80 edge on the team’s next possession, and Cunningham’s 3-pointer with 50 seconds left gave the Mercury some breathing room.

    Smith scored off an offensive rebound to keep the Fever in it. The Mercury milked the clock before Taurasi missed a jumper. The Fever’s bid to tie failed on Wheeler’s missed 3-point attempt at the buzzer.

    The Fever surged to a 10-point lead in the third quarter and led 67-59 going to the fourth. But Cunningham hit two 3-pointers during an 8-0 run in the first 56 seconds of the fourth quarter as the Mercury pulled even at 67-67 to set up a tight finish.

    The Mercury went up by nine points in the first quarter but briefly trailed during a back-and-forth final few minutes of the first half. Phoenix held a 43-42 edge at the break, boosted by Griner’s 14 points. Smith had 15 for Indiana in the first half.

    –Field Level Media

  • WNBA: Sun stay hot, beat Dream for fifth win in six games

    WNBA: Sun stay hot, beat Dream for fifth win in six games


    Brionna Jones scored nine of her 18 points in the fourth quarter as the visiting Connecticut Sun took control in the final period and pulled away for an 89-77 victory over the Atlanta Dream Sunday afternoon in College Park, Ga.

    The Sun (8-2) won for the fifth time in six games and earned their second straight double-digit win by using a 13-0 run that bridged the third and fourth quarters.

    Alyssa Thomas nearly posted a triple-double for the Sun by contributing 17 points, 12 rebounds and eight assists while also overcoming seven turnovers. DeWanna Bonner followed up her franchise-record 41-point showing from Thursday against Las Vegas by chipping in 15.

    Tyasha Harris contributed a season-high 15, including a pair of baskets in the final seconds of the second and third quarters. The Sun shot 43.8 percent, survived missing 11 of 15 3-point tries and withstood 16 turnovers.

    Cheyenne Parker scored 20 points to lead all scorers but Atlanta (2-5) lost its third straight game. Allisha Gray added 18 points and Rhyne Howard contributed 16 for the Dream, who shot 41.9 percent and missed 14 of 19 3-point tries.

    Thomas scored 10 points as the Sun overcame an early 10-point deficit for a 25-24 lead after the opening quarter.

    Bonner’s jumper gave the Sun a 46-40 lead with 49.2 seconds left and Connecticut took a 48-44 lead into halftime on a jumper by Harris right before the buzzer.

    A layup by Natisha Hiedeman staked the Sun to a 52-44 lead less than two minutes into the third quarter, and a basket by Jones made it 55-48 with 5:03 left. AD Durr hit two buckets in a span of 49 seconds to get Atlanta within 60-58 before Parker’s putback forged a 60-60 tie with 99 seconds left.

    But the Sun took a 65-60 lead into the fourth after Harris hit a 3-pointer with two seconds left. The Sun extended their run to 13 when Jones converted a three-point play for a 73-60 lead with 8:02 left in the game.

    Atlanta got within 77-68 on a 3-pointer by Nia Coffey with 5:18, but a jumper and a 3-pointer by Bonner pushed the lead to 84-70 with 2:36 left to essentially finish it off.

    –Field Level Media

  • WNBA: Sparks G Layshia Clarendon (foot) out 4-6 weeks

    WNBA: Sparks G Layshia Clarendon (foot) out 4-6 weeks


    Los Angeles Sparks guard Layshia Clarendon sustained a partial tear of the plantar fascia in her right foot and will miss approximately four to six weeks, the team said Sunday.

    Clarendon was apparently injured during Friday’s 77-62 victory over the Chicago Sky when she played a season-low 10 minutes.

    Clarendon, 32, is averaging 7.8 points and 3.7 assists in six games (all starts) in her first campaign with Los Angeles.

    Clarendon has averages of 7.6 points, 3.2 assists and 2.7 rebounds in 245 games (133 starts) over 10 seasons with six teams. She was an All-Star in 2017 when she was a member of the Atlanta Dream.

    The Sparks visit the Minnesota Lynx on Sunday night.

    –Field Level Media

  • WNBA: Natasha Cloud, Mystics spoil Storm’s Sue Bird celebration

    WNBA: Natasha Cloud, Mystics spoil Storm’s Sue Bird celebration


    Natasha Cloud scored 19 points as the visiting Washington Mystics spoiled Sue Bird’s jersey retirement ceremony by recording a 71-65 victory over the Seattle Storm on Sunday.

    Cloud made 4 of 6 shot attempts from 3-point range for the Mystics (5-3), who quickly built a 28-point lead before seeing the Storm (1-6) nearly make a spirited comeback. Seattle scored 17 straight points to begin the fourth quarter and whittled its deficit to three with 2:48 remaining.

    Ariel Atkins made a technical free throw to put Washington up 69-65 after the Storm’s Kia Nurse was whistled for a hostile foul.

    Cloud added two more from the charity stripe to send Washington to its second victory over Seattle in the last three days. The Mystics recorded a 73-66 win over the Storm on Friday.

    Atkins finished with 12 points and Shakira Austin collected 11 points and nine rebounds for the Mystics, who played without former WNBA MVP Elena Delle Donne (neck tightness).

    Seattle’s Jewell Loyd scored 16 points in her return from a one-game absence due to a foot injury.

    Ezi Magbegor scored 13 points, Nurse had 12 and Jordan Horston added 10 for the Storm, who retired Bird’s No. 10 jersey after the game. The 13-time All-Star and four-time WNBA champion joined Lauren Jackson — who was in attendance — as the lone players to see their respective jersey numbers retired by the franchise.

    Loyd drained a 3-pointer to trim Washington’s lead to 12-10 with 4:44 remaining in the first quarter before Atkins answered from beyond the arc to ignite a 30-4 run. Cloud sank all three of her 3-point attempts in the first quarter to finish with 11 points.

    The Mystics kept their foot on the gas to seize a 42-14 lead in the second quarter.

    The Storm made a modest run to trim Washington’s advantage to 46-21 at halftime.

    –Field Level Media

  • WNBA: A’ja Wilson, Aces, never trail while sailing past Sky

    WNBA: A’ja Wilson, Aces, never trail while sailing past Sky


    A’ja Wilson scored a game-high 21 points to lead five Aces in double figures as Las Vegas cruised to a 93-80 victory over the visiting Chicago Sky on Sunday.

    Wilson, the league’s reigning MVP, shot 8 of 15 from the field to go along with a game-high 10 rebounds. Chelsea Gray scored 19 points on 8-for-9 shooting from the field, including a perfect 3 of 3 from beyond the arc.

    Kelsey Plum added 16 points, with Jackie Young finishing with 14. Candace Parker chipped in 10 points, seven assists and six rebounds against her former team and also had a season-high five steals for the Aces.

    The Aces (8-1), who led by as many as 29 points in the fourth quarter, shot 38 of 65 (58.5 percent) from the field, including 6 of 16 (37.5 percent) from 3-point range. Las Vegas outrebounded the Sky 33-27 in the wire-to-wire victory.

    Chicago (5-5), which has dropped four of its past six games, was led by Marina Mabrey’s 20 points.

    Kahleah Copper finished with 18 points and six rebounds, while Dana Evans added 10 points and eight assists.

    The Sky shot 30 of 70 (42.9 percent) from the field, including 7 of 21 (33.3 percent) from beyond the arc.

    The Aces dominated the Sky, outscoring them 16-5 on the fast break and 50-28 in the paint.

    The Aces took control from the start, jumping out to a 25-14 lead after the first quarter that they stretched to a 56-39 halftime advantage.

    Plum had 14 points, Wilson added 12 and Gray chipped in 11 in the first half for Las Vegas. The Aces shot a blistering 22 of 31 (71 percent) from the field, including 3 of 6 (50 percent) from beyond the arc.

    The Sky were led by Mabrey’s 13 first-half points, while Copper added 11.

    Chicago shot 17 of 41 (41.5 percent) from the field, including a 3 of 9 (33.3 percent) from distance, prior to halftime.

    –Field Level Media