MELBOURNE, Australia (AP) — Novak Djokovic has had a walkover into the Australian Open quarterfinals after Jakub Mensik withdrew 24 hours ahead of their scheduled fourth-round match with an abdominal injury.
The tournament confirmed Mensik's withdrawal late Sunday. The match had been scheduled for Rod Laver Arena on Monday night.
“After last couple of matches, I started to feel worse, and actually the problem is my abdominal muscle on the left side,” Mensik said in comments published by the tournament. “Like I said, last few matches it got significantly worse, and I think if I would step on the court tomorrow, it would be such a big risk for me for my next weeks, for my next tournaments, and actually for my health.”
No. 16-seeded Mensik beat Ethan Quinn in straight sets on Saturday.
Novak Djokovic has won the Australian Open a record 10 times.
The 24-time major winner became the first player to reach 400 wins in Grand Slam singles when he beat Botic van de Zandschulp 6-3, 6-4, 7-6 (4) on Saturday night in the third round of the Australian Open.
The Dallas Mavericks lost to the Los Angeles Lakers 116-110 Saturday night in Dallas. It was a very weird, up-and-down game, with the Lakers jumping on the Mavericks early, Dallas storming back in the third quarter, then the Lakers returning the favor in the fourth.
This was former Mavericks star Luka Doncic’s first game back in Dallas this season, and only his second total since the shocking trade to the Lakers last year. Doncic was very good in this game, while the Mavericks struggled offensively outside of that third quarter burst.
It was a disappointing finish for sure, as the Mavericks had a 15 point lead at one point in the fourth quarter. Dallas didn’t get enough from their best players, as Cooper Flagg, PJ Washington, and Daniel Gafford all struggled, with Washington and Gafford putting up some pretty egregious stinkers.
This game snaps the Mavericks three-game winning streak. Onto the stats.
14-to-10: Lakers advantage in 3-point makes
In a game this tightly contested, the Lakers superior shooting was the biggest difference. Los Angeles won by six in a game they outscored Dallas at the three point line by 12.
The Lakers offense wasn’t doing too much outside of getting hot from three. Luka Doncic had 11 assists, most of them to shooters in the corner. The Lakers were 5-of-12 on corner threes. Dallas on the other hand, couldn’t make much — going 10-of-29 from three overall. This was the first game in what felt like weeks where the Mavericks couldn’t get their drive game going, so a lot of the Mavericks threes were end-of-shot clock, contested looks.
4: Combined points scored by PJ Washington, Daniel Gafford
It was a disastorious night for two of Luka’s former NBA Finals teammates. Daniel Gafford and PJ Washington were starters with Luka on that 2024 Finals team, but both came off the bench tonight as they are working their way to full health after nagging injuries.
Washington had the bigger stinker of the two, but it wasn’t a great night for either: Washington had two points in 26 minutes on 1-of-5 shooting, with only three rebounds and zero assists. Gafford had two points on 0-of-1 shooting, with two rebounds and two blocks in 16 minutes. At least Gafford had one impact play, a terrific blocked shot in the first half that felt like the first time all season we saw the old Gafford athleticism in action.
The Lakers are top-heavy, after Luka, LeBron, and Austin Reaves (who was out with injury), their depth drops off a cliff. Dallas theoretically has the advantage in depth but when two of their best players play like this? Woof. Dallas needed more from these two, even if they’re still working their way back from injuries.
3: Caleb Martin 3-pointers
This was a lousy game for Dallas, so I’ll end on a somewhat positive, although funny note: Caleb Martin nearly doubled his season three point total in one game. Martin entered tonight with five made three pointers: he made three, going 3-of-4 from deep.
Martin has been one of the worst rotation NBA players since arriving in Dallas last year, and injuries surely haven’t helped. This is the longest stretch of games Martin has played in the rotation and healthy, and it appears he might be inching back toward his Miami Heat form that earned him that multi-year deal with Philadelphia initially.
Who knows how long this lasts or where it goes. Martin did have six combined points in the previous three games. But Martin showing a pulse matters for a Mavericks team that needs all the help it can get.
Doncic was at the Dallas Mavericks from 2018 to 2025 [Getty Images]
Luka Doncic starred for the Los Angeles Lakers with 33 points as he helped them beat his former side, the Dallas Mavericks 116-110.
The Slovenian, playing in Dallas for the second time since being traded to the Lakers last February, also registered 11 assists and eight rebounds.
"We counted after the game, he [Doncic] had six straight stops where they targeted him," said Lakers coach JJ Redick.
"Just a fantastic job from him. Then [he] makes the game-sealing defensive play with the charge on [Naji] Marshall."
"It's a special place," Doncic told ESPN of his return to Dallas. "I mean, I'm always going to want to win no matter what. Every game I want to win, but obviously this one's a little bit different."
Doncic scored twice from beyond the arc in the first quarter as the 26-year-old became the youngest player in NBA history to reach 1,500 three-pointers.
He had been with Dallas from 2018 until last year, and said he almost went to the home dressing room at half-time as he "was kind of confused".
The Lakers trailed by 15 points with seven minutes and 41 seconds remaining, but overturned the deficit to secure a third win in four games.
LeBron James scored 11 of his 17 points in the fourth quarter, while Max Christie top scored for Dallas with 24 points.
"Understanding the system, understanding the city, the city embracing him. Understanding it's his team, and we're all rallying around him.
"Obviously we know it's emotional, a big game, to come back and play your former team. He showed who he is tonight."
The result leaves the Lakers fifth in the Western Conference, while the Mavericks are 12th.
Elsewhere, Kevin Huerter made a three-pointer just before the buzzer to help the Chicago Bulls beat the Boston Celtics 114-111, while Bam Adebayo scored 26 points as the Miami Heat thrashed the Utah Jazz 147-116.
After recovering from a disappointing loss to the Houston Rockets by beating the Utah Jazz on the road, the Spurs are headed back home to face a New Orleans Pelicans squad that has the worst record in the West but has still managed to make things difficult for the Spurs in their previous three match-ups. A win will give the Spurs a sweep of the season series, and it’s one they will want to have before heading right back on the road again and facing a sneakily tough schedule ahead of the Rodeo Road Trip in a few weeks.
San Antonio Spurs (31-14) vs. New Orleans Pelicans (11-36)
January 25, 2026 | 6:00 PM CT
Watch: FanDuel Sports | Listen: WOAI (1200 AM)
Spurs injuries: Luke Kornet — Questionable (adductor); Harrison Ingram — Out (G-League); David Jones-Garcia — Out (G-League); Stanley Umude — Out (G-League)
Pelicans Injuries: Jose Alvarado — Questionable (oblique); Dejounte Murray — Out (Achilles); Trey Alexander — Out (G-League); Hunter Dickinson — Out (G-League)
What to watch for
The return of Devin Vassell and the hunt for consistency
It has once again been a week of mixed results for the Spurs. Their offense has pretty much recovered from its post-Christmas slump, and they were steady and consistent as they gradually put the Jazz away at home to open the week. However, in their two road games since, they struggled to keep their foot on the gas after building sizeable leads. In Houston, they completely fell apart in the fourth quarter, giving up what had been a 16-point lead and unable to stop the Rockets on defense or find any good shots on offense, leading to another loss. Then the same thing happened in Utah, but fortunately for them, the Jazz were unable to maintain the momentum that had allowed them to come back and tie things up, and De’Aaron Fox and Victor Wembanyama put the team on their backs to recover and make a dominant game-winning run.
While that’s what you want to see from your superstars, it would be better to not even need their heroics. The Spurs need to recognize there such thing as a “comfortable” lead in today’s NBA and not let up. Perhaps Devin Vassell’s return will help them find some more of that consistency on offense since he is someone who can create his own shot when they get in a rut. Regardless, they’ll need to be careful because while the Spurs have won all three match-ups against the Pelicans so far, each has been close thanks to explosive performances from players like Trey Murphy III and Derik Queen, plus Zion Williamson played well in his one appearance against the Spurs (in the 2nd game of the season, which went to overtime). Speaking of Zion…
The uncertainty of Zion Williamson
He was supposed to be their savior: the one who mitigated the sting of Anthony Davis demanding a trade. With promises of a smaller version of Shaq, Williamson was going to be the one who made the New Orleans basketball a true contender for the first time since Chris Paul was there. Instead, he’s another cautionary tale of how sometimes hype and talent doesn’t align with reality. Don’t get it wrong: both are real for Zion, but he has never been able to stay healthy enough to live up to it and constantly faces scrutiny over how much of that is his own fault, to the point that there are massive incentives regarding body management tied to his contract.
Now, in a scenario that seemed almost unheard of a couple of years ago, he’s a part of trade rumors. The Pelicans may be accepting that he is not the one who will carry them to the promised land, and with no first round pick in this season’s loaded draft, trading him might be the best way to get one, even if the Trae Young deal showed teams are starting to value their own picks more than a star with massive question marks. Williamson has been his typical self when he’s played this season — a terror at the rim but not even a threat to shoot from outside — but it just isn’t translating to wins anymore. With the trade deadline looming, it will be interesting to see how focused he actually is.
The weather
For all the stereotypes about Texans out there, one that is absolutely true is we don’t handle winter weather well, especially as far south as San Antonio. (I was 25 before I ever saw snow in SA and only recall one “ice day” from school, although some form of winter precipitation has become a near-annual event this decade.) With a massive storm moving across the country and dipping well into the South, there is a chance for icy roads beginning Sunday morning, depending on if it’s still raining and/or wet enough once freezing temperatures set in. If so, it’s possible this game is either postponed or sparsely attended. If it’s the latter, please don’t judge us! We don’t have the road treatments and special tires folks up north do.
You can follow along with game here on the Game Thread, as well as on our X profile (@poundingtherock).
It was a fun night inside a very frozen American Airlines Center in Dallas. Although the visiting Los Angeles Lakers were able to pull out a 116-110 win over the Dallas Mavericks, the Dallas fans were once again able to welcome one of their own back home. Luka Doncic returned to Dallas as a visitor for the second time. And while the scene was not nearly as emotionally charged as the first time around (Nico Harrison was not in attendance as far as we know. We definitely know he is no longer employed by the Dallas Mavericks), it’s special when 77 comes to town these days.
It’s clear that it’s special to Doncic, too. For that, let’s open up the quote board.
LUKA DONCIC
On the emotions of returning to Dallas again
I mean, obviously there’s always going to be emotions. I was happy to be back here, back to my house, my cars, so obviously it’s always going to be emotional. I appreciate how [the fans] cheered for me when I was introduced. It’s always going to be a special place for me.
On Dallas feeling like home
I was here seven years, you know. A lot of things happened, bad and good. I kind of describe it how when I went to Madrid when I was 13, every time I came back to Slovenia I feel good. That’s why it’s always going to be a special place for me.
On what makes coming to Dallas special
Like I always say, it’s a special place. I’m always going to want to win, every game I want to win, but obviously this one’s different. But again, I want to win every game.
On the difference of emotions from April 9th to January 24th games
Oh there’s still emotions, trust me, but a little bit better, a little bit easier for me. Like I said before, how the fans accept me here, it’s unbelievable. I still got a lot of friends here, players, some other people, so I’m happy to be back for a little bit.
On walking towards the Mavericks locker room at halftime
I didn’t see that (laughing)
On the fans turning out to see him amidst a winter storm
It was really special. I didn’t know what to expect before, I know how the city gets when the weather gets this bad, but I really appreciate a lot of people showing up.
On buying a suite for fans and having a meet and greet pregame
Dallas will always be special to Luka 🥹
Almost a year after the trade to LA, Luka surprised 22 fans who supported him on social media with a suite for Lakers–Mavs, a pregame meet & greet, and gift bags with Luka Lakers jerseys and his signature shoe. pic.twitter.com/hdznSXx5bv
Yeah, that was something that was special for me to do. I see what a lot of them did on social media, and after when I got traded how much support they gave me. Obviously, there’s a lot more fans than [what could fill up a suite], but I could only fit 22 of them.
It’s clear that Doncic will always love coming back home to Dallas. Hey, you never know, maybe one day he might just…
Move aside Nikola Jokic, there’s a new triple-double king in the NBA — for this week.
In one of the most random statistical stretches in Utah Jazz history, Jusuf Nurkic has done what no other Utah Jazz player past or present has done: record three straight triple-doubles.
On Tuesday, Nurkic logged only the second triple-double in 16 years for Utah when he put up a 16-18-10 stat line in a win against the Timberwolves. It was the first time a Jazz player has recorded the feat since Jordan Clarkson in 2024.
In the very next game, Nurkic recorded a 14-assist triple-double against the Spurs. This was the Jazz’s first back-to-back triple-double performance since the franchise’s all-time leader in triple doubles, Pete Maravich, did so in New Orleans.
Which brings us to Saturday. He can’t do it three times in a row. Right? Surely there’s now way.
Wrong. Nurkic has done it again.
Against the Heat on Saturday night, Nurkic put up 17 points, 10 rebounds and 12 assists to become the first player in franchise history to record three straight triple-doubles. He did the impossible.
He becomes only the fourth center in NBA history to get back-to-back-to-back triple-doubles.
He is now one of one five players to have three triple-doubles to their name when wearing a Jazz uniform, joining Maravich (7), Mark Eaton (6), Karl Malone (3) and Andrei Kirilenko (3). He’s only played 36 games in a Jazz jersey, but is already etched in the history books.
With this accomplishment, Nurkic is now also the (unfortunate) owner of the worst plus-minus for a player with a triple-double in NBA history. His minus-30 in the 31-point loss to Miami surpassed Elfrid Payton and Lonzo Ball, who both recorded a minus-27 with the New Orleans Pelicans in 2019 and 2020 respectively.
This could very well be Nurkic’s only season in Utah, and I don’t foresee any great playoff battles for him wearing purple mountains on his jersey, but in 20 years every single Jazz fan will remember the triple-double drought, think of Nurkic’s three-game streak and say to themselves, “Oh yeah! Huh.”
The Jazz are back in action on Tuesday night against the Clippers. Can Nurkic make it four in a row?
The New York Knicks defeated the Philadelphia 76ers 112-109 yesterday, a win familiar for anyone who has ever sat on the edge of their bed at the end of a long day of getting a small child through shopping and vaccinations and missed naps and vegetables and vomiting and felt that peculiar buzz that’s a mix of adrenaline and apathy. The Sixers are the closest thing the Knicks have to a heated rivalry, especially when the teams play at Madison Square Garden West, especially especially when Joel Embiid is healthy and Embidding. At least he was half of the time — the very definition of Embiiding.
Believe it or not, we’re now nearing a decade of Embiid vs. Mitchell Robinson, who still gets as juiced for this matchup as he did his rookie year. Good thing he does, and that he played as well as he did, because the Knicks needed it with Karl-Anthony Towns still rabbit-holing down his one-man magical mystery tour. After five fouls each in four of the last five games, KAT went all “Have thy will, I am the love that dare not speak its name” with foul number six and finally gave in to temptation, fouling out after 16 minutes of play so bizarre they’d leave Kafka pissing his pants. Once Robinson checked in, the Knicks went on a 12-0 run.
“From a certain point onward,” Kafka wrote, “there is no longer any turning back. That is the point that must be reached.” Mitch was that point.
As Ryan Ruocco reminded the viewers every three minutes, when Embiid is at the top of his game the 76ers are a team every team must fear. Outside of San Antonio, how many teams have a truly unguardable two-way big man? If Embiid is still playing in June, he’s one of maybe four people alive the Thunder don’t have an answer for, along with Victor Wembanyama, Nikola Jokić and Kevin Durant, mysteries for whom neither God nor math offer answers. Peak Embiid is 28 points in 17 first-half minutes without breaking stride, like the Knicks endured Saturday.
As I repeated to Ruocco every three minutes via my TV screen — loudly and profanely late in the first half, when I was hungry and the Sixers took the lead; softer and smarmy most of the second, after mac and cheese and the Knicks resuming control — “‘Embiid’s good!’ isn’t news.” Despite his history with the Knicks, he’s easily one of my favorite players to watch play against them — a real marvel. The playoffs are way better when he’s a meaningful part of them. And yet to ignore the other shoe, the one everyone’s waiting for to drop, is to be a fool. And now is no time for fools. Be ye therefore wise as serpents, and harmless as doves.
After playing only six of Philadelphia’s first 18 games, never more than 26 minutes, yesterday was the 16th time in his last 19 games Embiid’s played 30+. In just over three weeks, he’s played 36+ five times. Last time he played that many in that short a span? Twenty-one months ago. Remember?
In the first half Embiid was the good boyfriend, stroking your hair, using the soft voice he did when you first met, when he first swept you off your feet. He finally met with your uncle for that job interview; it went really well. Why’s he so sweaty? He’s working out again. He’s even seeing a therapist. Things are gonna be different. Then one day he isn’t answering your texts, not since the night before, after he came home sweaty, long past when the gym closed. You’re missing some cash.
Ariel Hukporti fell on his knee. It could have been any number of things, could have happened to anybody. That’s what makes it human. But it’s always something, always happening to the same person. That’s what makes it Embiid.
Embiid played a part in Philly’s last stand, but looked to be laboring through it. For much of the endgame the Knicks played without a center and looked none the worse for it, though Embiid’s partial brilliance might have been enough to knock the Knicks off on a night Towns, Mikal Bridges and Miles McBride went 8-of-31. But there’s one advantage the Knicks enjoy over their fellow Boston-hating East Coast metropolis: OG Anunoby. Whether his flurry of first-half dunks or late game heroics on both ends, Anunoby, if not/alongside Mitch, was the player of the game. His fake swing pass as V.J. Edgecombe came flying at him led to a bounce pass to Landry Shamet in the corner showed the sublime ease of a perfect panenka.
When you sit at the high-rollers table, where the Knicks now do, how you win means less than how much. 85% of New York’s victories this season have been by 5+ points, including six by 20+. Detroit? 75% and five. Who cares? The Pistons have won 32 games, period, while the Knicks have 26. That’s the only number that matters, at least until they all re-set in April.
41 wins matters when you’re up and coming. 50 matters when some dreams have come true and others remain. When you’re the Knicks in January 2026, it’s all about winding your way through 82 games, then winning 16 more. Nobody cares how, or by how much.
Quoth iwamofo: “Fugly win.” It was. This one was never in jeopardy and never in the bag, for either team. When it ended I felt empty, tired, and joyless — but not hopeless. Every day like that is a win. Like the Knicks, all I can do today is win the games I’m in, then do it again tomorrow, every day, long as I can, long as it takes. You too, loves.
Another former professional basketball player has gone back to school.
Charles Bediako, who has already spent multiple seasons in the G League, played in his first game back with Alabama during their 79-73 loss against Tennessee on Saturday night.
Bediako finished the game with 13 points on 5-of-6 shooting, along with two steals and two blocks in 25 minutes off the bench.
Bediako said his relationship with coach Nate Oats played a key part in his decision to return.
“That staff really trusts and believes in me and plays to my strengths,” Bediako said after the game. “Obviously when that opportunity came, it just felt right to come back.”
Charles Bediako receives instructions from head coach Nate Oats during the first half of Alabama’s 79-73 over Tennessee on Jan. 24, 2026 in Tuscaloosa. Getty Images
Bediako checked into the game amid a rousing ovation with 16:11 to play in the first half and helped the 17th-ranked Crimson Tide score 26 points in the paint while building a 39-36 lead at the break.
He scored on an inbounds pick-and-roll play, two alley-oop passes and a layup. His emphatic block ignited a fast break that led to a dunk.
The 23-year-old center was quieter in the second half, but he added an inside presence that Alabama had been missing all season.
With starting center Aiden Sherrell in foul trouble throughout the game, Bediako logged the fourth-most minutes on the team and finished with the highest plus-minus rating at plus-10.
“I thought he was good,” Oats said after the loss. “Thought he meshed well with our guys early. For a guy that’s been here a few days, to fit in with the team, I thought he was good. He’s got to get a few more rebounds for us. He knows that. He’s a great teammate. He’s gonna help us moving forward.”
The 23-year-old was granted a temporary restraining order on Wednesday which ultimately made him eligible to return to college basketball immediately, making him the first player to return to the NCAA after previously signing an NBA contract.
“We are planning to play him,” Alabama head coach Nate Oats said of Bediako on Friday, per ESPN. “He’s eligible to play. We’re going to follow the court orders.”
Bediako, a 7-foot-3 center, had previously spent two seasons playing for the Crimson Tide in 2021-22 and 2022-23 before leaving the school for the NBA Draft.
He ultimately went undrafted and never played in an NBA game, but he did spend the past three seasons on three different G League teams, and signing two-way contracts with them.
Bediako has most recently suited up for the Piston’s G-League affiliate, Motor City Cruise, earlier this month.
Charles Bediako runs up the court during Alabama’s loss to Tennessee. Getty Images
Oats noted that Bediako is still in the five-year window of his high school graduation, comparing his situation to European players who have played professionally before being cleared to play college basketball.
“Since the NCAA has already allowed professionals to play — virtually every team we’ve played this year or will play has a former professional player on their roster — you tell me how I’m supposed to tell Charles and the team that we’re not going to support them when he’s been deemed legally eligible to play,” Oats said.
During his first stint in Alabama, Bediako was named to the SEC All-Freshman team, and later averaged 6.4 points and 6.0 rebounds during his sophomore campaign for the Crimson Tide.
Bediako’s return to college basketball comes after James Nnaji of Baylor made his NCAA return earlier this month after being drafted by the Hornets with the No. 31 pick in the 2023 NBA Draft.
Despite being an NBA draft selection, Nnaji never signed with a team, which is what ultimately made him eligible for college basketball.
No Jazz player has ever recorded three consecutive triple-doubles until tonight. Jusuf Nurkic, who was visibly gassed at the end of the game, stayed in despite the Utah Jazz being down by about 30 points. In the final minutes, he grabbed his tenth rebound, securing his third straight game with at least ten points, ten rebounds, and ten assists.
Will Hardy on Nurkic’s triple double streak: “It's a great statistical achievement. We lost by 30. … While Nurk, I think, is playing really good basketball, we just lost by 30.”
While Nurkic made some fun history, the Utah Jazz played one of their worst games as a team against the Heat. The Miami Heat absolutely dominated the glass all game long. Miami had 64 total rebounds to Utah’s 34, and 26 of the 64 for Miami were offensive rebounds. It was hard to watch, to say the least. The Jazz also shot a mediocre 7/25 from three-point land and just looked flat out there. Brice Sensabaugh shot 4/7 from three, leading the team with 23 points. Standout star Keyonte George couldn’t find any rhythm tonight, going 0/8 behind the three-point line.
Ace Bailey continues to add to his rookie season highlight reel, and Cody Williams keeps proving why he belongs in the NBA with his standout defense, tallying three blocks and a steal. Lauri Markkanen remains out (return-to-competition reconditioning). People can argue about what’s actually going on here, but having Lauri sit and letting the young guys develop—even if the results are tough like they were tonight—will only benefit the Utah Jazz moving toward the future.
This Utah Jazz team is young, fun, and inconsistent. Forty-six games into the season with 36 remaining, the Jazz will have to learn how to avoid nights like tonight—especially with next season approaching, when they should finally be ready to start competing. Nights like this show why the Jazz need to focus on keeping their 2026 pick and ignore anyone hoping for a play-in run. Despite Keyonte George ascending right before our eyes and Markkanen playing at an All-NBA level, the Jazz are not ready… yet.
Will Hardy needs to continue prioritizing the youth and letting them find the consistency required to win in the NBA. The Jazz started off decent tonight against Miami, but as the game went on it got worse and worse. Miami might be one of the most “mid” teams in the NBA, and they still rolled over the Jazz in Salt Lake City.
Will Hardy's opening: I mean that was as big of a physical loss as you can have. We just got obliterated on the glass. pic.twitter.com/jgs82KXdt3
The Utah Jazz still remain firmly at No. 6 in the lottery standings at 15–31. It’ll be tough for them to move up, but not impossible. Tonight wasn’t just historic for Nurkić—it also marked a huge night from a college basketball freshman, who posted insane numbers. If the Jazz keep their top-8 protected pick, they’ll guarantee themselves a high-level prospect regardless of whether the team moves up.
The Miami Heat won tonight 147–116, but the Jazz still appear to be building toward a successful 2025–2026 season despite the blowout.
Derrick Rose was honored by the Chicago Bulls with a jersey retirement ceremony Saturday, following the team's dramatic 114-111 victory over the Boston Celtics.
Rose, a Chicago native, spent eight years with the team and became the NBA’s youngest Most Valuable Player when he won the award in the 2010-11 season.
Several familiar faces from Rose’s career were at the United Center in Chicago to celebrate the point guard becoming the fifth player in the franchise’s history to have his jersey retired, joining the likes of Michael Jordan and Scottie Pippen.
There are players who become legends because they played like a Hall of Famer for a team and a city. There are players who become legends and are forever associated with the city where they were born.
There are very few who are both. Derrick Rose is that in Chicago, and Saturday night, his No. 1 jersey was retired, hung in the rafters of the United Center.
In his first four seasons with the Bulls, Rose won MVP, Rookie of the Year, was a three-time All-Star, and led the Bulls to the Eastern Conference finals, as far as the franchise has ever gotten since Michael Jordan retired (the first time).
It ended up being a game Rose could love, a hard-fought game against the Celtics that came down to the wire, when Kevin Huerter hit the game-winner.
SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — Bam Adebayo had 26 points and 15 rebounds to lead the Miami Heat to a 147-116 victory over the Utah Jazz on Saturday night.
Nikola Jovic added 23 points and Pelle Larsson had 20 as the Heat matched their most points in a game this season. Miami beat Denver 147-123 last month.
The Heat, who are 2-2 on their five-game West Coast road trip, narrowly ended its streak of nine straight games allowing 117 points or more.
Jusuf Nurkic had 17 points, 12 assists and 10 rebounds to become the first player in Jazz history with three consecutive triple-doubles. He had only one triple-double in his career before this streak, and the last came on Jan. 16, 2019, while playing for Portland.
Brice Sensabaugh scored 23 points for the Jazz, which has lost six of seven. Keyonte George finished with 19 points.
The Heat took the lead for good with 6:44 remaining in the first quarter and cruised to a 73-52 lead at halftime.
Miami made 19 3-pointers compared to the Jazz's seven and and outrebounded Utah 64 to 34.
Up next
Heat: Play at Phoenix on Sunday night.
Jazz: Host the Los Angeles Clippers on Tuesday night.
ADELAIDE, Australia (AP) — Australia's Jay Vine was knocked down by a kangaroo on the final stage Sunday but recovered to win the Tour Down Under cycle race, the first event of the 2026 World Tour.
Vine was knocked from his bike when two large kangaroos bounced onto the road on a high speed section with about 96 kilometers (61 miles) left in the undulating 169.8 kilometer (105 mile) stage through the hills around Adelaide. Three riders — Menno Huising, Lucas Stevenson and Alberto Dainese — were forced to quit the race and the kangaroo also was injured.
Vine led the race by 1 minute, 3 seconds on general classification entering the last stage. But he was already at a disadvantage because two of his UAE Team Emirates including the defending champion and then second-placed Jhonatan Narvaez crashed out in the fourth stage on Saturday.
Juan Sebastian Molano also abandoned the tour Sunday because of fatigue, leaving Vine with only two teammates on the last stage: Ivo Emanuel Oliveira and Briton Adam Yates.
Vine got up immediately after his crash and changed bikes twice before rejoining the peloton with around 92 kilometers remaining.
He remained near the front of the peloton for the rest of the stage and finished 1 minute, 3 seconds ahead of Mauro Schmid of Switzerland (Team Jayco Alula) and Harry Sweeny (EF Education - Easypost) of Australia who was a further nine seconds behind.
‘Dangerous’ intruders
“Everyone asks me what's the most dangerous thing in Australia and I always tell them it's kangaroos,” said Vine who won his home race for the second time in three years. "They wait and they hide in the bushes until you can't stop and they jump out in front of you. Point proven today.
“Two of them blasted through the peloton when we were doing probably 50 kph (30 mph) and one of them stopped and went left, right, left right, left right and I ended up hitting its backside.”
Matthew Brennan of Britain (Team Visma) won the stage in a sprint ahead of Finn Fisher-Black of New Zealand (Bora Hansgrohe) and Tobias Lund Andresen of Denmark (Decathlon).
The stage covered eight laps of a circuit which involved a slow, steep climb to the finish in the township of Stirling. There were two breakaways during the stage, the second of which came back to the peloton with only one kilometer remaining.
Vine managed to overcome an enormous amount of bad luck to win the race.
“This year we started off really positive and we just had more and more bad luck as the race went on,” he said. "Today was never going to easy and I've been saying all week it's not over until it's over.
“But it's proven to be not over till it's over in this race for us.”
What a truly hilarious and odd game from the Lakers.
If you simply fell asleep at halftime and woke up for the final minutes of the contest, you’d think it was a straightforward, comfortable win where the Lakers controlled things throughout.
Across the first, second and fourth quarters, the Lakers outscored the Mavs 112-75. They were dominant, especially in the fourth. They simply mixed in one of their worst quarters of the season in the middle of that.
LA was outplayed so thoroughly in the third, losing the period 35-14, that it almost defied logic, especially in hindsight, given how they responded in the fourth. What do you make of a game like that? I’m not entirely sure. And I don’t know if head coach JJ Redick will know either.
So, let’s dive into the win. As always, grades are based on expectations for each player. A “B” grade represents the average performance for that player.
A fairly quiet three quarters for LeBron gave way to a fourth quarter where his energy was important in turning the tide. This is the second game in a row where he’s turned it up a notch in the fourth to lead a comeback attempt.
When the Lakers are looking to move on from Ayton in the summer or discussing bringing him off the bench, remember this game. Every one of his shot attempts came in the paint, which makes his box score even more staggering.
One rebound as a seven-footer in 15 minutes is incredible, and not in a good way. He was also struggling defensively, which probably explains why Redick closed with no center on the floor.
What a fourth quarter from Rui. He’s taken to his role off the bench, one that looks like he’s set to remain in moving forward, but showed he can still hit big shots when it matters.
A solid enough showing from Vando, including a pair of 3-pointers. This was the first game since Dec. 30 where he made multiple threes.
Grade: B+
Drew Timme
Not a bad game from Timme, but not a great one. Redick opted to ride his small ball lineup more in the fourth, so he did not meet the 10-minute requirement.
JJ Redick
To that point, Redick went back to what he believes in, playing a smallball lineup to close this game. Considering the play of Ayton and Hayes, you could hardly blame him. But also, it was a lineup that bludgeoned the Mavs in the fourth.
The Lakers went with their center-less lineup of Luka Doncic, Marcus Smart, Jake LaRavia, Rui Hachimura and LeBron James at the 9:38 mark of the 4Q. They outscored Dallas 36-17 in that time. https://t.co/fXmfaeLXWC
TEMPE, Ariz. (AP) — Moe Odum had 33 points, eight assists and three steals on Saturday night to help Arizona State beat Cincinnati 82-68 to snap a three-game losing streak.
Odum made 10 of 17 from the field, 6 of 11 from 3-point range and 7 of 8 from the free-throw line. Anthony Johnson added 11 points and Santiago Trouet 10 for Arizona State (11-9, 2-5 Big 12). Massamba Diop had 10 rebounds to go with six points and four blocks.
Baba Miller had 23 points, nine rebounds and five assists for Cincinnati (10-10, 2-5) and Moustapha Thiam scored 15. Day Day Thomas and Jizzle James — who went into the game averaging 12.0 (second on the team) and 10.3 points (fourth), respectively — combined to make 3 of 13 from the field, 0 of 5 from behind the arc, and score six points. Thomas, who was scoreless on 0-for-6 shooting, had six assists.
Cincinnati scored eight of the first 11 second-half points to take a one-point lead with 16:49 left in the game, but Trouet answered with a 3-pointer, then added a dunk and two free throws in a 19-7 run that gave the Sun Devils the lead for good. Noah Meeusen hit a 3-pointer that made it 64-52 — their biggest lead of the game — with nine minutes remaining.
Sencire Harris made layups 21 seconds apart to cap a 9-0 spurt that made it a three-point game with 6:50 to go, but Odum responded with back-to-back 3-pointers and then added two free throws with 3:47 left that made it 74-63.
Up next
Cincinnati: The Bearcats host Baylor on Wednesday.
Arizona State: The Sun Devils play Tuesday at UCF.