Wheelchair rugby league is booming in England – they even won the Ashes

England’s 2-0 series win in the Ashes was the perfect preparation for the World Cup in Australia next year

By No Helmets Required

England did win the Ashes last month. The wheelchair team’s 2-0 series victory in Australia went under the radar in the UK. With games played in the early hours and not screened on mainstream TV, the team missed out on the adulation that came their way when they won the World Cup in Manchester three years ago. “The forgotten Ashes? That’s sad if it’s true,” says the coach, Tom Coyd. “The NRL showed great engagement and we did loads of media there, but we were in a bubble and pretty disconnected from back home.”

England will return to Australia next year to defend their world title. The favourites will be expected to beat Wales, USA and Ireland in their group before facing the second and third best teams in the world – France and Australia – in the knockout stages of the tournament in Wollongong. The Ashes series taught Coyd vital lessons about how to manage his troops on the road.

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Prep talk: Clippers, NBA teaming up to offer free outdoor basketball hoops to L.A. families

Christmas is coming early to some lucky families in Los Angeles.

The Clippers and the NBA are teaming up to give Los Angeles families an opportunity to receive free NBA All-Star-branded outdoor hoops over the next 75 days in celebration of the NBA All-Star Game coming to Intuit Dome.

Beginning Wednesday, Los Angeles residents can submit their personal stories at clippers.com/hoops for a chance to receive one of the hoops that will be distributed each day in a 75-day countdown to the All-Star Game on Feb. 15.

Coaches, parents and players can share: Why do you want a hoop? What inspires you to play? How has basketball influenced your life, family or neighborhood? How could the game change your future?

This is a daily look at the positive happenings in high school sports. To submit any news, please email eric.sondheimer@latimes.com.

Sign up for the L.A. Times SoCal high school sports newsletter to get scores, stories and a behind-the-scenes look at what makes prep sports so popular.

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Forsberg: It's time to re-evaluate expectations for the 2025-26 Celtics

Forsberg: It's time to re-evaluate expectations for the 2025-26 Celtics originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

How soon is too soon to call off the “gap year”? 

With Jayson Tatum out indefinitely due to a ruptured Achilles tendon and four core members of their 2024 championship squad on new teams, most assumed the Boston Celtics would fade to the NBA’s background in 2025-26. Maybe they’d make a push for a spot in the play-in tournament, but with a trimmed-down roster featuring plenty of new faces, this seemed like an opportunity to hit the reset button and focus on preparing for a bounce-back season in 2026-27 with Tatum back in the fold.

After Tuesday’s thrilling victory over the New York Knicks at TD Garden, however, the Celtics have won seven of their last nine games to improve to 12-9 at the quarter mark of the 2025-26 season. And as Celtics insider Chris Forsberg noted on Tuesday night’s Celtics Talk Podcast, it’s fair to wonder whether we’ve undersold this Boston team.

“It’s time to re-evaluate expectations,” Forsberg said on Celtics Talk. “We came into the season, and understandably there was this idea that we needed temper expectations — that it might be a year where a draft pick would be the most valuable thing. We knew there would be some ups and downs, and an 0-3 start certainly hammered that home.

” … But even I have to admit, a lot of the younger players have exceeded a lot of what I thought was possible. And now as we stand in early December with every Jayson Tatum Snapchat video that he puts out showing him doing some new move that I can’t even do with two full Achilles tendons, I’m left to think, ‘Oh my gosh, this team is very good.’

“They just completed a five-game stretch in which they beat the Pistons, the Cavs, the Knicks and the Magic, which in my mind are the four best teams in the Eastern Conference.”

To Forsberg’s point, the Celtics have played very well against elite competition: They have seven wins against teams .500 or better (tied for second-most in the NBA), and they’re 6-3 against the top six teams in the East. While Jaylen Brown is playing like a fringe MVP candidate (29.0 points, 6.0 rebounds and 4.8 assists per game), the C’s also have gotten surprisingly strong contributions from young role players like Jordan Walsh and Josh Minott.

The season is very young, of course, and Boston’s margin for error is very slim. If Brown, Derrick White or Payton Pritchard are forced to miss extended time, things could go south in a hurry.

But there’s also a world in which this Celtics team continues its upward trajectory and sets itself up to be a legitimate threat in the East whenever Tatum comes back.

“If the Celtics are healthy — if Derrick White, who has for small pockets of games pulled himself out of whatever random funk that he’s in for the start of the season, and Payton Pritchard, who has his moments where he just doesn’t have it on certain nights — if those guys all start just fully going, and you’re getting this from Walsh and Hugo [Gonzalez] and [Neemias] Queta … the Boston Celtics are not a play-in team,” Forsberg said.

“They’re not a lottery team. They are a legit playoff team, and the sort of team that, especially if Jayson Tatum is back out there … the Eastern Conference is not going to want to see these Boston Celtics.”

Defensive And Goaltending Woes Lead The Canadiens To Another Defeat

After a successful road trip despite the humiliating loss suffered in Denver, the Montreal Canadiens were back at home to take on the Ottawa Senators at the Bell Centre. Just like Montreal, Ottawa had been obliterated in its last game and was also looking to bounce back.

Given how heated a rivalry this one has become, everyone was expecting a spirited tilt with plenty of rough stuff. Still, the visitors were clearly instructed to focus on playing hockey rather than spending too much time and energy on extracurricular activities. As a result, the Habs dominated in the hits column, but that was their only victory on the night.

Canadiens: On The Eve Of Celebrating Andre Markov…
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Canadiens Spend Family Time On Day Off

There’s Something about “Monty”

While it’s nothing new, it’s impossible to report on this game without mentioning Samuel Montembeault. After having a good game against the Vegas Golden Knights last week, the hope was that the Becancour native was on his way back up, but tonight’s game crushed those hopes.

After 40 minutes, he had given four goals on 21 shots for a .810 save percentage, but beyond the stats, it’s his behaviour in net that was the most worrying. Without Mike Matheson and the post’s help, he would have given another two goals.

It’s hard to say why, but the puck appears to be a hot potato to him these days. His glove is either too slow to catch the shots, or he feels like they are burning him, for whatever reason, he drops an incredible number of shots. Worse, once he has dropped them, he’s not quick enough to recover the puck and freeze it.

Of course, the rest of the team could help by clearing the pucks he stopped, but on a few occasions on Tuesday night, he had more than the time needed to recover the puck, and he couldn’t do it.

Life Is A Highway

Tom Cochrane once sang that Life Is A Highway, and tonight, that’s precisely what the Canadiens’ slot was. Somehow, in a game where Montreal threw 33 hits and applied good forecheck, Ottawa was able to get into the slot easily and take shots from dangerous areas. After the match, Martin St-Louis was clear about what the problem was:

The other team defended way harder than we did; we lost a lot of battles, and defensively, we weren’t there. The other team just defended itself better than us.
-

However, the bench boss refused to put it down to the system he has his men playing:

I won’t talk about the system. You can play any system, but you have to be alert; the system has nothing to do with this.
-

Asked why that performance happened tonight, the coach said he had no idea why they could be so good at doing something one night, and then so bad at the same thing another night. He added:

If I show clips, they can all see, they could teach it themselves, they know the rules, they know everything you know. So, it’s an attitude.
-

It was clear tonight that St-Louis was irritated by his men’s performance and that he didn’t have an answer for how to fix what appears to be the problem. He said that issues like that start with the individuals. As for Nick Suzuki, he talked about mental errors, and in the end, that’s what it comes down to. You can understand the system perfectly, but if you make a bad read because of a lack of concentration, you’re going to find yourself in trouble and land your team in it as well.

Tkachuk True To Himself

There’s no denying that the Senators' captain has got his pest number down to a T. He gets under the Canadiens’ skin, and most of the time, he does it without getting sent to the box for it. Furthermore, he consistently contributes offensively.

In the first frame, he set up the Senators’ second goal as he was battling hard by the boards and even though he was more or less carrying Jayden Struble on his back, he managed to dish a perfect no-look pass to Artem Zub in the slot, who only had to push the puck past an unsuspecting Montembeault. Then, in the final frame, he scored Ottawa’s fifth goal, the one that sucked out what little air was left in the Bell Center and sent a lot of fans to the exit.

All through the night, he mixed it up with Habs players and escaped unscathed. In the second frame, as he was trying to get off the ice, Struble had him tied up. He flipped the situation on him when he hung tight to the defenseman’s stick and forced him to go back to play with no twig, hardly suitable for a defenseman Then, at the start of the third, when the Canadiens desperately needed a goal, he let himself fall on Suzuki who was already on the ice and stayed there for what seemed like an eternity, taking the Habs’ captain out of the play.

This 5-2 defeat, following the collapse in Colorado, has to hurt. Alexandre Carrier said after the game that the important thing was how they would respond on Wednesday against the Winnipeg Jets. Still, the fact is that they didn’t respond after their bad game in Colorado, and that should be worrying.

St-Louis can say until he’s blue in the face that he’s not worried about how few shots his team takes, but when your goaltenders are regularly giving four or five goals, you need to score more, and in the NHL, that won’t happen with minimal shooting. The league’s netminders are professionals, and if you don’t overload them with shots, odds are they won’t make many mistakes.


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Flyers Officially Decide on Tyson Foerster Injury Replacements

The Philadelphia Flyers are set to be without top forward Tyson Foerster for at least two months, and with the injury confirmed, Foerster's two injury replacements have already been selected.

Making their first move since the Foerster injury took place, the Flyers brought up forward Carl Grundstrom, who was with the team at the NHL level earlier in the season for a brief period, for depth at the position.

Grundstrom, 28, can play all three forward positions and has 293 career NHL games to his name, including one appearance with the Flyers - Nov. 8 against the Ottawa Senators.

He's not a player to get excited about and is certainly not a prospect, to be clear, but Grundstrom is someone who can be at least somewhat reliable and offer a slightly different profile from a Nick Deslauriers, for example, if the Flyers and head coach Rick Tocchet decide to go that route.

Speaking of Tocchet, the first-year Flyers coach had remarked previously about wanting to find ways to get more ice time for rookie forward Nikita Grebenkin, who has been in and out of the lineup for the last month.

Flyers Working to Turn Nikita Grebenkin Into 'A Force'Flyers Working to Turn Nikita Grebenkin Into 'A Force'While it's still early, the <a href="https://thehockeynews.com/nhl/philadelphia-flyers">Philadelphia Flyers</a> may have found themselves a hidden gem in winger prospect Nikita Grebenkin, who continues to impress in the NHL preseason and training camp.

Grebenkin, 22, has a goal and two assists in 16 games this season and has regularly flashed his playmaking chops in significantly limited minutes.

He, more than anyone else in the Flyers' pro system, is suited to take over for Foerster in a top-nine checking role that entails a bit of scoring, a bit of forechecking, and a bit of cycling.

Grebenkin doesn't have Foerster's shooting ability, no, but the gulf in overall offensive talent is not as significant as some would think.

In more practical terms, aside from Grebenkin's vision, creativity, and hands, the affable Russian is also arguably the best puck protector on the team, particularly down low and in close areas.

Watch: Flyers' Nikita Grebenkin Wins First NHL FightWatch: Flyers' Nikita Grebenkin Wins First NHL FightEleven games into his nascent NHL career, fan-favorite <a href="https://thehockeynews.com/nhl/philadelphia-flyers">Philadelphia Flyers</a> rookie Nikita Grebenkin has reached two milestones. First came his first assist and point, and now comes his first fight.

There's little doubt that Grebenkin has earned and has the skillset for an expanded role with the Flyers when they need it the most, and that was evidenced by the team's decision to call up Grundstrom rather than Alex Bump or Denver Barkey.

If Bump or Barkey had traveled over from the AHL Lehigh Valley Phantoms, it would only be because they are definitely going to play.

And for Grebenkin, that opportunity likely would have come at his expense, given Deslauriers's return to at least a rotational role, infrequent ice time, and some healthy scratches along the way.

Fortunately, though, Grebenkin doesn't have to worry about that, as he is instead about to receive the biggest opportunity of his NHL career with the Flyers now that Foerster is out with an upper-body injury for the foreseeable future.

De'Anthony Melton will make his season debut in Warriors-76ers after ACL rehab

De'Anthony Melton will make his season debut in Warriors-76ers after ACL rehab originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

De’Anthony Melton, after 387 days away, will return to NBA action on Thursday.

The Warriors guard has been sidelined for more than a year while recovering from a torn ACL injury he sustained in Golden State’s win against the Dallas Mavericks on Nov. 12, 2024.

Now, for the first time in more than a year, Melton is not on the NBA’s injury report ahead of Thursday’s game against the Philadelphia 76ers, his former team from 2022 to 2024.

On Saturday, the Warriors hinted that Melton could make his season debut during Golden State’s upcoming three-game road trip, which begins in Philadelphia.

This comes after the team shared that Melton was making good progress and has been a full participant in recent practices, even scrimmaging in various settings.

Melton, 27, underwent surgery on Dec. 4, 2024. He was traded to the Brooklyn Nets in December but re-signed with Golden State during the 2025 offseason.

In six games with the Warriors last season, Melton averaged 10.3 points on 40.7-percent shooting from the field and 37.1 percent from 3-point range, with 3.3 rebounds, 2.8 assists and 1.2 steals in 20.2 minutes.

And now, he’s looking forward to finishing where he left off with Golden State.

“I’m trying to provide everything – if it’s from shooting, to playmaking, to defense, to IQ – I think I bring all that stuff to the table,” Melton told reporters Monday after practice at Chase Center. “And also, just to have a secondary ball handler out there just to help break guys down and kick out at the same time…” 

“… And my ability to shoot and defend is definitely something I think any team can use. So, just bringing all that stuff to the table and just being a smart basketball player too.”

It certainly is a welcome sight for the struggling Warriors, who could use Melton’s services on both ends of the court following an underwhelming 11-11 start to the season.

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Warriors star Jimmy Butler's knee injury reportedly isn't believed to be serious

Warriors star Jimmy Butler's knee injury reportedly isn't believed to be serious originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

The Warriors, already missing Steph Curry for the entirety of their upcoming road trip, likely won’t also be without their second star for an extended period of time.

Jimmy Butler, who was seen limping after Golden State’s 104-96 win over the New Orleans Pelicans on Saturday, was questionable entering Tuesday’s matchup against the Oklahoma City Thunder with a glute contusion.

He wound up playing in the contest and starting, but the veteran forward exited the game early and sat out the entire second half due to a sore left knee. Warriors coach Steve Kerr had limited information after Golden State’s 124-112 loss.

“I don’t know anything more,” Kerr said. “I didn’t even know [he was out] until I was drawing up a play with a minute to go [before the second half] and somebody came in the huddle and said Jimmy is down.”

But Butler’s knee injury isn’t believed to be serious, ESPN’s Anthony Slater reported in a column published Wednesday, citing sources. While Butler’s status for the start of the Warriors’ road trip against the 76ers in Philadelphia is in question, Slater added that Butler shouldn’t miss much — if any — time.

The Warriors, just 22 games into the season, already have faced levels of adversity early in the 2025-26 season.

Butler also dealt with ankle and back soreness earlier this season, much of which he’s played through.

In 20 games this season, Butler is averaging 19.5 points on 51.9-percent shooting from the field and 43.9 percent from 3-point range, with 5.6 rebounds and 5.0 assists in 30.9 minutes.

Meanwhile, Curry won’t join the Warriors on the road trip and will remain in the Bay Area for treatment on his left thigh contusion.

After going 2-3 on their homestand, the Warriors will look to find a spark on the road as they head to Philadelphia, Cleveland and Chicago before returning to Chase Center on Dec. 12 to face the Minnesota Timberwolves.

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Five of the best sports books of 2025

From the trauma and triumphs of Olympic cyclist Bradley Wiggins to the secret life of a match fixer

The Chain
Bradley Wiggins, (HarperCollins)
The Tour de France winner’s autobiography begins with him sneaking into his walk-in wardrobe and doing a line of coke off his Olympic gold medal: the final emblematic descent from his crowning summer of 2012. And yet for all the personal lows chronicled here – addiction, self-harm, the collapse of his marriage, the haunting memories of his difficult father and of a coach who sexually abused him – this is not your classic misery memoir. Disarmingly honest and roguishly humorous, it is a journey of rediscovery: a man knocked sideways by the toxic winds of sport and celebrity, finally learning to stand straight again.

The Escape: The Tour, the Cyclist and Me
Pippa York and David Walsh (Mudlark)
In a previous life Robert Millar was one of this country’s greatest cyclists: a stern Glaswegian who won the King of the Mountains jersey at the 1984 Tour de France. Now known as Pippa York, she returns to the race in the company of the journalist David Walsh. It’s a freewheeling, fascinating read that defies genre: part travelogue and part memoir, it dances between present and past, sporting observation and self-reflection, drugs that help you cheat and drugs that help you live. And for all the pain and anguish that gets unlocked here, this is a book without a bitter or hateful bone in its body.

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Hosts Australia to face New Zealand in Rugby World Cup pool as England draw Wales

  • Champions South Africa face Italy, Georgia and Romania

  • Ireland and Scotland in pool with Uruguay and Portugal

The host nation Australia will face their traditional rivals New Zealand at the men’s Rugby World Cup in 2027 after the draw was made in Sydney on Wednesday.

The Wallabies, hosting a second men’s tournament, were guaranteed to face a top-ranked nation in Pool A due to a current world ranking of seventh, and the renewal of their fierce rivalry with the All Blacks is perhaps the most appetising possible outcome from the draw.

The potential for a “Bledisloe Cup” opening match to kick off the global showpiece, on 1 October 2027 in Perth, will be a hugely attractive prospect for fans. Chile, playing at a second Rugby World Cup after their debut in France in 2023, and debutants Hong Kong are also in Pool A.

England, who won the men’s tournament in Australia 22 years ago, have been pitted against their Six Nations rivals Wales, with Tonga and Zimbabwe the other sides in Pool F. Wales famously defeated England at their home tournament a decade ago before a second loss, to Australia, consigned the hosts to an early exit.

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Chris Paul cut by Clippers after conflict with teammates, coaches and executives

Clippers guard Chris Paul controls the ball under pressure from Mavericks forward Caleb Martin on Saturday.
Clippers guard Chris Paul controls the ball under pressure from Mavericks forward Caleb Martin on Saturday at the Intuit Dome. (William Liang / Associated Press)

Chris Paul was released by the Clippers overnight after extended conflict with the team, a league source not authorized to discuss the issue publicly told The Times.

Paul called out fellow Clippers players, coaches and president of basketball operations Lawrence Frank during his current stint with the team, a league source told The Times. The person added that Paul apologized, but "everyone was fed up."

It is unlikely Paul will sign with another team, a league source told The Times, because of his powerful voice in the locker room, which can be difficult for teams to deal with, and his age.

"He's not the player he used to be," a league source said when asked about Paul's options after the Clippers' decision.

Read more:Clippers' Chris Paul hints at retirement in return to North Carolina

Paul announced his abrupt and startling exit from the team amid what was expected to be his final NBA season.

“Just Found Out I'm Being Sent Home,” Paul posted on social media at around 3 a.m. Eastern time Wednesday morning, adding a peace emoji.

The struggling Clippers are in Atlanta for a game against the Hawks on Wednesday night. The Clippers lost at Miami on Monday night to fall to 5-16 in a wildly disappointing start to the season.

The 40-year-old Paul is playing his 21st NBA season, and he strongly hinted last month that it will be his last. The 12-time All-Star and two-time Olympic gold medalist has earned four All-NBA first team selections, and he ranks second in NBA history with 12,552 assists. He was the first player to score at least 20,000 points while recording at least 10,000 assists.

Read more:'Conspiracy theories': Clippers' Kawhi Leonard denies that his endorsement deal was cheating

He became arguably the most accomplished player in Clippers franchise history while leading the team to six winning seasons from 2011-17, including the Clippers' first two Pacific Division titles and three playoff series victories. Paul returned to Los Angeles as a free agent last July, rejoining a franchise where he is loved by fans while having an outside chance to contend for his first championship alongside Kawhi Leonard and James Harden.

Frank issued a statement confirming Paul's departure to several media outlets early Wednesday. He indicated the Clippers will attempt to trade Paul, who signed a $3.6-million deal to return to L.A.

“We are parting ways with Chris, and he will no longer be a part of the team,” Frank said in the statement. “We will work with him on the next step of his career. Chris is a legendary Clipper who has had a historic career. I want to make one thing very clear. No one is blaming Chris for our underperformance. I accept responsibility for the record we have right now. There are a lot of reasons why we've struggled. We're grateful for the impact Chris has made on the franchise.”

Paul hasn’t spoken to reporters since he strongly hinted at retirement while the Clippers were back in his native North Carolina. But he acknowledged a video retrospective of his career played by the Clippers during a timeout at Intuit Dome last week. The video ended with “Congratulations, Point God” on the screen.

Read more:Norman Powell torches struggling Clippers for 30 points in Heat victory

He is averaging 2.6 points and 3.3 assists while playing just 14.3 minutes per game — all career lows — and he didn't play at all in five straight games in mid-November. Paul had eight points and three assists while playing 15 minutes against the Heat in what turned out to be his final game with the team — a game in which Harden and other starters were effectively benched, in the latest sign of discord for coach Tyronn Lue's team.

The Clippers are on a five-game skid, and they're tied with Sacramento for the second-worst record in the Western Conference heading into Wednesday's games. Leonard has been limited to 10 games by injuries, and they've already lost guard Bradley Beal to season-ending hip surgery.

The Clippers’ streak of 14 consecutive winning seasons is the longest active streak in the NBA, but owner Steve Ballmer’s club has yet to show signs of contention this season — and now they're going forward without a historically talented point guard and franchise favorite.

The Associated Press' Greg Beacham contributed to this report.

Get the best, most interesting and strangest stories of the day from the L.A. sports scene and beyond from our newsletter The Sports Report.

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Sixers fined again by NBA for Embiid injury reporting violation

Sixers fined again by NBA for Embiid injury reporting violation  originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

The Sixers have been fined once again for an injury reporting violation with Joel Embiid.

The NBA announced Wednesday that the team has been fined $100,000 because it “failed to accurately disclose the game availability status” of Embiid before his return Sunday night vs. the Hawks. 

Embiid was first listed as out and later upgraded to questionable, then ultimately played 30 minutes in the Sixers’ double-overtime loss. He’d missed the prior nine games with a right knee injury. 

The Sixers have previously received Embiid reporting fines for games during the 2022 playoffs vs. the Heat, January 2024 against the Nuggets and April 2024 vs. the Thunder.

Embiid sat out the 11-9 Sixers’ blowout win Tuesday night over the Wizards with a “right knee injury recovery” designation. He posted 18 points, four rebounds, two assists, a steal and a block against Atlanta in his seventh game of the season. 

“When you miss a month and you’ve only had about two court sessions going up and down … it feels like the first game of the season,” he said. “You build on it. I’m not even mad about it. I’m just happy I got to play the game of basketball. Next game, whether shots fall or not, I don’t really judge myself on that. 

“It’s all about how I move laterally, jumping and all that stuff. Tonight was a good step toward that. I felt good in the first half. Obviously, in the second half it was a little rough, but you build on what that first half looked like and go from there.”

Draymond Green states having son on Warriors bench ‘makes me shut my mouth'

Draymond Green states having son on Warriors bench ‘makes me shut my mouth' originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

Very few people in the world can make Draymond Green zip his lips, and his son, Draymond Jr., is one of them.

Draymond Jr. was on the Warriors’ bench for Tuesday’s game against the Oklahoma City Thunder at Chase Center, which meant his dad had to be on his best behavior. Draymond shared what the moment was like while speaking to reporters after Golden State’s 124-112 loss to the reigning NBA champions.

“Yeah, it’s cool. If anything, it makes me shut my mouth on the bench if I was going to say something,” Green said, smiling. “It keeps me in check. I know he’s watching. But it was cool.”

Draymond, of course, is known to always speak his mind. His mouth often has gotten him in trouble in the past, but his son’s presence prevented that from being the case on Tuesday night.

Draymond repaid his son’s savings by granting a favor the young child had asked.

“He came up to me after the game like, ‘Can you introduce me to Chet Holmgren?’ So I went and introduced him to Chet, and Chet was nice. So I really appreciate that. Anytime you give them those experiences that quite honestly money can’t buy, I’m always forever grateful.”

Warriors players, especially the ones constantly getting scolded by Draymond, certainly can only hope he brings his son to the bench more often.

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Why Warriors' start to 2025-26 NBA season is ‘frustrating' to Draymond Green

Why Warriors' start to 2025-26 NBA season is ‘frustrating' to Draymond Green originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

Draymond Green, like much of Dub Nation, is disappointed in how the Warriors have begun their 2025-26 NBA season.

He, alongside Jimmy Butler, has been extremely vocal about the team’s poor defensive performance and inability to close out games due to late-game collapses.

But there is another factor leading to Green’s frustration with the team’s start, and that dates back to Golden State’s up-and-down 2024-25 season, in which the Warriors were second-round playoff exits but the journey getting there was more turbulent than they would’ve liked.

“My Dubs, we are 11-10 [now 11-11] and that is a little bit frustrating because I think we have probably completely blown five games,” Green shared on his “The Draymond Green Show” podcast. “Maybe we blow one or two games, but even if you blow one or two games, you’re sitting here at 14-7, 15-6. It’s frustrating because we dug ourselves a hole last year [then] made the trade for Jimmy. And then from that point on, we were in the playoffs forever because you’re fighting an uphill battle.

“So with the goal being to not put ourselves back in that position so we’re not fighting an uphill battle, you’re able to possibly focus a bit more on the playoffs late in the season as opposed to trying to get to the playoffs late in the season. With that being the goal, it’s a little frustrating because you look back at those five games you’ve blown in those 20 games, and they catch up to you. They catch up in the end. When you’re talking about playoff seeding and you’re fighting for position and all those things, that’s when those games catch up to you.”

Green has a point.

The playoffs seemed out of the picture for a struggling Golden State team before it traded for Butler in February and finished the season 23-7 in games the six-time NBA All-Star played for them.

But after playing desperately and, as Green stated, in playoff mode for the final stretch of the regular season, the Warriors were committed not to make the same mistake this season.

“So it’s a bit frustrating that we’ve blown so many games. And the reality is at some point you’ve got to win games you’re not supposed to win to make those games up. The schedule isn’t getting any easier. It’s gotten easier from a travel standpoint, although we’re about to go back on the road. So it’s gotten easier from a travel standpoint, but from an NBA standpoint, it doesn’t get any easier. And we’re headed East, which is never easy.

“We’ve got to put together a great string of basketball, and I just don’t think we’ve consistently put together a great stretch of basketball. But I do think we’ve put together some good spurts. In order to win in this league, you have to play as close to 48 good minutes as you can play, and we’re just not getting close enough to that.”

Green won’t ever shy away from the truth, no matter how hard it might be to hear.

But the truth must be heard, as long as people are listening.

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Bardakov Earns Landeskog’s Respect By Turning Defense Into A Strength

DENVER — When Zakhar Bardakov first arrived in Denver for optional skates ahead of Colorado Avalanche training camp, his difficulties in defensive drills were hard to miss. But over the past few months, the Russian forward has transformed that former liability into one of his emerging strengths — progress significant enough to draw the notice of his captain, Gabe Landeskog.

After Colorado’s 3–1 win over the Vancouver Canucks on Tuesday night, a game that opened at a sluggish pace, Bardakov spent the evening flying around the ice, forechecking as if everything were at stake. Afterward, The Hockey News asked captain Gabe Landeskog to evaluate how far the forward has come since first arriving in North America from Russia.

"He's a really good skater, a powerful guy, and he continues to adapt to this game here," Landeskog said. "I thought he's done a great job. Training camp, he (earned) that spot, continues to work well and work hard and it's not easy for anybody."

Why Bardakov’s Value Goes Far Beyond The Box Score

People often place too much emphasis on numbers. Statistics are undeniably important and an integral part of the game, but that focus can sometimes obscure the contributions of players who are not putting up MacKinnon-level totals every night. Bardakov is the kind of skater who is constantly working to get to the play, committed to checking on both sides of the puck, and relentless in pressuring opponents into mistakes that create opportunities for his teammates. Landeskog was particularly impressed with how he performed against the Canucks.

"Tonight, he was really strong," he continued. "It was one of his stronger games in a while, and he continues to bring a lot of energy. He's a physical guy, a strong guy. He continues to put himself in good spots to put pucks at the net and create offense."

Bardakov has been on Colorado’s radar for an NHL contract ever since he arrived as the return for Kurtis MacDermid in the 2024 trade-deadline deal with the New Jersey Devils. The former 2021 seventh-round pick then delivered the strongest season of his career with SKA St. Petersburg in the KHL, recording 17 goals and 35 points over 53 games. That performance earned him a one-year, entry-level contract for the 2025–26 season, which he signed in April.

Bardakov scored his first NHL goal on October 28 in an 8–4 Avalanche win over the New Jersey Devils at Ball Arena, on a night when Victor Olofsson recorded his first career hat trick and a career-high five points.

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A Look At Carter Hart's Notable &quot;Firsts&quot; in his First Game Back In The NHL

LAS VEGAS -- In his first start in nearly two years, it was a game full of FIRSTS for Golden Knights goaltender Carter Hart, as he returned to the net Tuesday night against the Chicago Blackhawks.

Hart, one of five 2018 Canada world junior hockey players acquitted of sexual assault in July, made 27 saves in the 4-3 shootout win over the Blackhawks.

Here are some notable FIRSTS for the 27-year-old after his Golden Knights debut:

FIRST Warmups - Hart led the Golden Knights onto the ice for warmups, and for the fans who made their way to the glass, he was greeted by cheers from Vegas' adoring fans. Several female fans were seen holding signs supportive of Hart. A few others emitted disdain.

FIRST Entrance and Introduction - With fans settled into the seats, and the massive golden helmet the Knights skate through resting on the ice, Hart once again led the Knights onto the ice, this time for real, with the lights out, the John Wick theme blaring and the crowd buzzing. As the starting lineup was announced, the anticipation grew for the final name, and as public address announcer Bruce Cusick announced Hart, the fans offered a vibrant roar - not the most electric - but certainly 99% in favor of the newest Knight.

FIRST Lead - Hart got his first lead to work when forward Ivan Barbashev scored 27 seconds into the game, a shot that looked as if he was passing into the slot, but instead deflected off Chicago defenseman Wyatt Kaiser's skate.

FIRST Goal Allowed - Hart's lead wouldn't last, as Oliver Moore tied the game for the Blackhawks 56 seconds later when he gathered a pass from across the ice and fired a dart of a wrist shot from the top of the right circle to tie the game, 1-1.

FIRST Breakaway Save - Hart came up big in the first period when he faced his first breakaway and stymied Chicago's veteran center Ryan Donato.

FIRST Penalty Kill - It only took six minutes, but the Golden Knights found themselves on the penalty kill with a little more than 14 minutes left in the first period. Though Hart didn't face any shots during the kill, it was successful for his first time defending the net while his team skated shorthanded.

FIRST Period - Hart made seven saves on the eight shots in the opening period. Hart said afterward that he settled in after allowing Moore's wicked shot into the net. After all, he hadn't been in an NHL game since Jan. 20, 2024.

FIRST Penalty - With 13:17 left in the second period, and the Golden Knights on a power play, Hart tripped Ilya Mikheyev, who was breaking in looking for a short-hander. Anyone with Hart catching a 2-minute minor in his debut on a prop bet was a big winner.

FIRST Big Mistake - As athletic as Hart might be, and while he may think his quick reflexes allow him to do things other goalies cannot, it wasn't wise in the least bit to leave his net with hopes of poking the puck away with Tyler Bertuzzi storming in. Hart swiped at the puck and nailed Bertuzzi, who then floated it over Hart and into the net.

FIRST Overtime - Hart was at his best during these five minutes, as he stopped all six shots he faced, including a shift in which teammate Shea Theodore's broke the blade of his stick, which theoretically gave the Blackhawks a 3-on-2 until the Golden Knights were able to get fresh life on the ice.

FIRST Shootout - Chicago started, and Hart's save on Teuvo Teravainen was rewarded at the other end with a Pavel Dorofeyev goal. Next up for Chicago was Connor Bedard, and there aren't many past or present goalie greats who were stopping the shot Hart faced. At the other end, Jack Eichel was stuffed by Blackhawks goalie Spencer Knight, keeping it 1-1 in the shootout. For a third time in the game, Hart made a huge save on Donato, but Knight stopped Marner. Hart then stopped Frank Nazar and seconds later, it was Theodore giving Hart his ...

FIRST Win - After 682 days, Hart is victorious and mobbed by his teammates as he celebrates a victory in his first game back and first as a Knight.

PHOTO CAPTION: Chicago Blackhawks center Ryan Donato (8) shoots wide of Vegas Golden Knights goaltender Carter Hart (79) during a shootout at T-Mobile Arena.