Trout, Lowe and Neto homer in Angels 6-2 win over Astros

HOUSTON (AP) — Mike Trout, Josh Lowe and Zach Neto hit home runs and the Los Angeles Angels beat the Houston Astros 6-2 on Friday night.

In his second game with the Angels, Lowe broke a 1-1 tie in the second when he sent a first pitch fastball from Mike Burrows into the Crawford Boxes for a three-run homer. Lowe was acquired by the Angels in a trade from the Tampa Bay Rays on Jan. 16.

Trout’s fifth inning solo home run was part of a three-hit game, and it marks the first time in his 16-year major league career that he’s gone deep in his first two games of a season.

Neto added a solo shot leading off the ninth inning for his second extra base hit of the night.

The long balls were in support of an Angels staff led by Yusei Kikuchi, who allowed two runs on eight hits over 4 1/3 innings. The bullpen quartet of Chase Silseth, Ryan Zeferjahn (1-0), Sam Bachman and Jordan Romano combined for 4 2/3 scoreless innings.

Burrows (0-1), who was making his Astros debut after he was traded from the Pittsburgh Pirates on Dec. 19, surrendered five runs on nine hits over 5 2/3 innings. He struck out six.

Yordan Alvarez hit a home run for the Astros, while Carlos Correa went 2 for 3 with a walk.

Jeremy Peña, who missed Thursday’s season opener, had two hits, a stolen base and scored a run.

The Astros have started 0-2 for the second time in three seasons under manager Joe Espada.

Up next

Astros RHP Cristian Javier faces Angels LHP Reid Detmers when the series continues Saturday.

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AP MLB: https://apnews.com/MLB

Warriors ‘running out of games’ for Steph Curry to return, Steve Kerr admits

SAN FRANCISCO — The longer Steph Curry remains sidelined, the louder the ticks on the clock grow inside the Warriors’ building.

Time is running out to get the Golden State superstar the buildup he would need to return for the play-in tournament, Steve Kerr acknowledged before Friday’s game against the Wizards.

“We need to give him a runway if this is gonna work, and we are running out of games. That’s fair to say,” the Warriors coach said, acknowledging that among the staff “it’s actually a conversation now.”

The Warriors’ Steph Curry missed his 24th consecutive game with runner’s knee. Robert Sabo for NY Post

After hosting Washington, the Warriors have eight games left in the regular season. They clinched their spot in the play-in and are on track to visit the Trail Blazers in the 9-10 matchup.

“We’re not bringing him back, like, for the play-in game,” Kerr said. “He needs to play some games.”

Curry, 38, missed his 24th consecutive game with runner’s knee, and while Kerr said the injury has “frustrated” him at times, he added that Curry was “in a good place now” and currently “encouraged.”

The Warriors provided the latest update on Curry’s status before Friday’s game, saying he was making “good progress” and was expected to participate in a 5-on-5 scrimmage “in the coming days.” 

However, Curry was supposed to take part in a scrimmage this past Sunday. That never happened, and Curry is still waiting to receive the go-ahead from Rick Celebrini, the head of their medical staff.

“The whole idea is that if he’s healthy, he’s going to play,” Kerr said. “If he’s not healthy, or if there’s any risk at all, then he won’t play.”

Kerr said Curry was still working with the mindset that he’ll return this season. However, the longer Curry’s absence draws on, the less likely it is that happens.

Warriors injury updates

Golden State has been so beaten up recently that the update on Curry came with status reports on three other injured players, including his younger brother, Seth Curry.

The two brothers have yet to share the floor this season because of their various ailments. The younger Curry has at least returned to live on-court work, according to the team, after missing his eighth straight game with a groin strain.

Al Horford, who also missed his eighth straight game with a calf strain, has started “light on-court workouts,” according to the team. The 39-year-old is set to be reevaluated in a week, ruling him out for at least three more contests

Without Horford or Quinten Post, the Warriors have been lacking size. The Dutch 7-footer is still considered day to day with right foot soreness, which left the Warriors down two big men for the third game in a row.

Caleb Foster 'had no business playing tonight.' But he did — and led Duke to Elite 8

WASHINGTON – Caleb Foster rolled out of the Duke locker room with his right foot wrapped in ice and his right knee perched atop a one-legged scooter, a bag of ice strapped and wrapped around his left calf for good measure.

Twenty days ago, Foster fractured his right foot in a win against North Carolina. In the wake of the injury, Duke coach Jon Scheyer believed Foster, a junior, had a “one-in-a-million” chance on returning this season.

On Friday night, Foster came off the bench to score 11 points, corral three rebounds and dish out a pair of assists across 19 crucial minutes to spark the No. 1 Blue Devils’ 80-75 win against No. 5 St. John’s to reach the East Region finals.

“Still a little stunned with what happened, to be honest with you guys, because what this guy did, to be honest, he had no business playing tonight,” Scheyer said.

“Ninety-nine percent of guys do not come back to play under the circumstances of what's happened to him. It was incredible the way he willed us. There's no analytics. There's no stats that can measure how big this dude's heart is for what he did.”

Part Jordan flu game, part Willis Reed on one leg, Foster’s performance against the Red Storm should linger in Duke history.

“What I saw today was pretty unbelievable,” said guard Dame Sarr. “I’ve never seen something like this before. The way he played for us today, it was really unbelievable.”

Duke players found out Foster was going to play on Thursday night, though he’d come off the bench behind freshman Cayden Boozer. That fulfilled a promise he made last week: Foster told teammates he’d be back for the Sweet 16 if they were able to advance out of the opening weekend.

“He just worked his butt off every single day, every single hour,” said freshman forward Nikolas Khamenia. “Before practice, after practice, he was doing everything he could.”

Intensive rehabbing increased Foster’s odds. But even then, he rolled into the Capital One Arena for Thursday’s open practice on his scooter and didn’t take part in any 5-on-5 work. Still, there was enough improvement for Scheyer to roll the dice: Foster would play as one of the Blue Devils’ first players off the bench.

The injury against the Tar Heels and the chance that his season was over left Foster “real stunned,” he said. “I didn't know if I was going to be able to bounce back from that, but as soon as the doctor told me that it's a chance, I just took it and ran with it. That's where my mindset has been from here on out.”

That didn’t surprise the locker room, even if the same group initially believed, like Scheyer, that Foster’s return this season was the longest of long shots.

But the Blue Devils saw him work. They watched Foster constantly rehabbing his foot while they did their on-court work. They saw Foster steadily improve his mobility and flexibility. Steadily, Duke players began to believe that Foster would be back this season.

“He was just telling us he was going to be back ASAP. He was going to do everything. Literally, he did everything he possibly could,” said guard Darren Harris.

“All the players expected him to play. Just the way he was handling everything, the way he was talking to us. He was with us since the day he got hurt. So it was no surprise to us.”

And seeing Foster on the court gave the Blue Devils the mental boost they needed to combat the Red Storm’s physical play, teammates said.

“That was special,” said Harris. “The resilience he has, that he’s showed us since Day 1. That was a special moment to kind of see him will us to a win. First game back after his surgery, that was crazy.”

Said Sarr, “It does a lot. I feel like it shows how much we want it. It’s just not talk. We really want to advance, we really want to win. We’ll find a way. And that’s what we did today.”

After starting the second half on the bench, Foster entered the game with 16:42 to play and Duke trailing 50-44. Two minutes later, that deficit would grow to 55-45. Then Foster stepped up to change the complexion of a game that seemed to be slipping away.

“I wanted to come out and provide anything possible, experience, whatever the team needed,” he said. “I didn't know what we needed or what to expect, but just providing a boost out there any way I can.”

He made a second-chance layup to make it 55-47, and then drove for another layup on the next Duke possession to cut the lead to 55-49. A short jumper, a free throw and an assist on a Cameron Boozer bucket made the score 57-54 with 12 minutes remaining.

After being replaced by Cayden Boozer at the 9:39 mark, Foster returned with 4:22 remaining and the score tied 67-67. Down the stretch, he delivered two key scores to keep St. John’s at bay: Foster made a pull-up jumper to put Duke in front 75-69 with 2:14 left and then delivered on a driving layup to put the lead to 77-72 with 1:27 to play, locking down the win.

“I had full confidence in him,” Cayden Boozer said. “Obviously, what he did today was elite. For him having surgery 20 days ago and to be able come back as fast as he did and play the way he did, that’s super impressive. That’s like my older brother. I’m super proud of him.”

Beyond the key buckets and assists, Foster was the inspiration Duke needed to remain composed in the face of the Red Storm’s pressure.

“We were getting a little too low on ourselves,” Sarr said. “He was talking to us in a way that I felt secure that we were going to win. His eyes were talking. He’s special, man.”

But even playing just 19 minutes — his fewest in a complete game since logging 18 minutes against Western Carolina in the second game of the year — was almost too much for Foster, who was visibly fatigued in the second half and struggled to get lift on his shots from beyond medium range.

“Obviously, he was a little tired out there,” said Harris.

But he had fight — and so did Duke. The Blue Devils reached the Sweet 16 without Foster; on Friday night, he returned the favor.

“I didn’t know what to expect,” said Sarr. “I was like, ‘Let’s go.’ He’s ready? I’m going to roll for him. He’s our point guard. He’s our leader. I was ready to go with him, to fight.”

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Caleb Foster returns from injury to lead Duke past St John's, into Elite 8

Raptors beat the Pelicans 119-106 as Barnes has 23 points and 12 assists

TORONTO (AP) — Scottie Barnes had 23 points and 12 assists, Jakob Poeltl had 18 points and 11 rebounds, and the Toronto Raptors beat the New Orleans Pelicans 119-106 on Friday night.

RJ Barrett, Sandro Mamukelashvili and J’Kobe Walter also scored 18 points apiece for the Raptors, and Brandon Ingram added 13.

Zion Williamson scored 22 points for New Orleans on 9-for-13 shooting from the field and 4 for 4 from the foul line. Saddiq Bey added 19 points.

The Raptors won for the second time in three outings to remain in sixth place in the Eastern Conference, a full game ahead of the idle Philadelphia 76ers. The top six teams automatically make the playoffs in each conference.

The Pelicans lost their fourth in a row overall and fifth straight on the road. They were without top scorers Trey Murphy III (ankle) and Dejounte Murray (Achilles). Immanuel Quickley (Achilles) was absent from the Toronto lineup.

Barnes scored 13 of his game-high total in the third quarter. Mamukelashvilli came off the bench for his total that included three 3-pointers.

After pulling away with a 25-8 run to begin the second quarter, the Raptors took a 59-44 lead into halftime. Toronto maintained its 15-point advantage after three quarters.

The Raptors played on two days of rest after a five-game road trip that concluded in Los Angeles on Wednesday.

Up next

Pelicans: Host the Houston Rockets on Sunday.

Raptors: Host the Orlando Magic on Sunday.

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AP NBA: https://apnews.com/hub/NBA

Lakers’ PA announcer Lawrence Tanter misses game because of ‘health matter’

When the Lakers hosted the Nets on Friday, there was an iconic deep voice missing inside of Crypto.com Arena.

Longtime franchise public address announcer Lawrence Tanter wasn’t in attendance for Friday’s game as he recovered from a health matter, the team announced.  

Longtime franchise public address announcer Lawrence Tanter wasn’t in attendance for Friday’s game as he recovered from a health matter, the team announced.   AP

Jason Barquero filled in for Tanter. 

“The entire Lakers organization is wishing Lawrence all the best in his recovery,” the Lakers said in a statement, “and we look forward to welcoming him back soon.”

Tanter, 76, has been the Lakers’ PA announcer since the 1982-83 season. 

Lakers broadcast analyst Stu Lantz also wasn’t at Friday’s game because he was under the weather, with five-time NBA champion Derek Fisher filling in for Lantz.

Cavs extinguish the Heat 149-128

CLEVELAND, OH - MARCH 27: Evan Mobley #4 of the Cleveland Cavaliers handles the ball during the game against the Miami Heat on March 27, 2026 at Rocket Arena in Cleveland, Ohio. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and/or using this Photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by David Liam Kyle/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

It was a tale of two games for the Cleveland Cavaliers, with the second being a lot more to their liking. Max Strus hit eight threes, Jarrett Allen had a double-double in his return to the starting lineup, and James Harden added 17 points and 10 assists as the Cavs throttled the visiting Miami Heat 149 to 128. After laying an egg Wednesday night against the very same Heat team, it was a full 180-degree turnaround in front of a raucous Cleveland crowd.

Cavs head coach Kenny Atkinson talked about Allen’s return to the starting lineup and how much it meant, and he may have undersold it. Allen’s paint presence as a defender, ability to run to the rim off screens, and his sense as a roller of the pick-and-roll was on full display in the first half. The Cavs clearly missed him, on several levels.

Atkinson mentioned pregame how much of a difference it is having both Allen and Evan Mobley patrol the interior, and he was right. The Heat only attempted just 24% of their shots in the paint per Cleaning the Glass, almost 8% lower than their team average. That is an indicator of how much of a deterrent having two bigs is for opposing teams when facing a healthy Cleveland front court.

Despite the Cavs putting up 149 points, it was not because of Donovan Mitchell. The superstar shooting guard had a quiet scoring night, but still dished six assists and had four steals. Truthfully, there was not a need for him to carry the offense when everyone else was clicking so well.

Harden put together a 17-point 14 assist double-double, making the role of point guard look far too easy. The biggest benefactor to that was Allen, who had 18 points while being an ideal rim-running partner. His athleticism and contact on screens makes things easier, and the Cavs as a unit made things look extremely easy. Here is just one of Harden’s passes to Allen:

But the real star of the night was Max Strus, who was absolutely blistering from deep in the first half. The former Heat wing hit six three-pointers in the first half and eight overall en route a 29-point effort. Strus has been an instant-impact player for the Cavs sing returning from a foot injury, and this game was the highlight. A healthy Strus hitting shots and playing hard off the bench in the playoffs is an ideal scenario for the Cavs.

Mobley had a quiet first three quarters, but exploded out of the gate in the fourth to the tune of six straight points, and 12 for the quarter in total. He finished with 23 points and 10 rebounds on 10-15 shooting. The aggressiveness at the start of the fourth quarter was welcome, as the Cavs had just allowed that Heat to make up 13 points in the third. Mobley essentially iced the game, if Keon Ellis’ buzzer-beater three didn’t already do that:

The end of the game got a little chippy. Tyler Herro was assessed a technical after plowing right through Sam Merrill on a screen and arguing about the call. Then Myron Gardner fouled Tyrese Proctor hard on a layup that resulted in in a technical for him and Thomas Bryant, the latter for defending his teammate. The infractions didn’t matter, but it highlighted a frustrating night for the Heat in general, who were seemingly run off the court from the opening tip. They trailed 15-2 just a few minutes into the game and never recovered.

The Cavs managed to salvage the second end of this home-and-home series with the Heat, and get a few days off before starting a West Coast swing – beginning in Utah on Monday night. Tip-off is at 9:00 p.m. EST on FanDuel Sports Ohio.

Payton Pritchard, Jayson Tatum lead Celtics in 109-102 win over Hawks

BOSTON, MA - MARCH 27: Jayson Tatum #0 of the Boston Celtics celebrates during the game against the Atlanta Hawks on March 27, 2026 at TD Garden in Boston, Massachusetts. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and/or using this Photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Brian Babineau/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

Jayson Tatum set his season high in the Celtics 109-102 win over the Hawks on Friday night with 26 points. After a rough first half, Tatum really settled in during the 2nd half with 21 points and 5 rebounds on 6/13 from the field. However, it was Payton Pritchard who led team in scoring with 36 points.

Jaylen Brown joined Nikola Vucevic on the Celtics injury report. Baylor Scheierman replaced Brown in the starting 5 with Derrick White, Sam Hauser, Jayson Tatum and Neemias Queta. Just Jock Landale missed the game for Atlanta. The Hawks started CJ McCollum, Dyson Daniels, Nickeil Alexander-Walker, Jalen Johnson and Onyeka Okongwu, a group that has led them on a big winning streak as of late.

It was a slow start for the Celtics and a fast one for the Hawks. The Hawks starting 5 has been among the best in the league and that was the case at the start of this one. They got off to a 16-7 lead over Boston.

Jordan Walsh took Jaylen’s spot in the rotation; it was his first action since March 12 against the Thunder.

It was a 25-9 start for the Hawks, but the Celtics outscored the Hawks 17-4 to end the quarter. The Hawks led 29-26 at the end of 1. Payton Pritchard led the team with 7 points. Jayson Tatum had 5 of his own.

The Hawks got off to a quick start in the second quarter, taking a 37-28 lead but 9 straight Celtics points, 5 of which came from Payton Pritchard who got off of to a scorching hot start, evened the score.

The Celtics took the lead at 46-43 but a 13-4 Hawks run put Atlanta up, 56-50. The Hawks defense did a big part of the run, doing a good job of holding the Celtics offense down.

Basketball is a game of runs and the first half was the half of runs. The Hawks led, 60-55 at the end of the 2nd quarter. Pritchard led the C’s with 19 points while Sam Hauser had 7.

It was a tough half from the field for Jayson Tatum and Derrick White.

Payton Pritchard was a huge reason as to why the Celtics stayed in the game. He gave them a 69-68 lead in the middle of the third quarter after back-to-back deep threes.

The Celtics led at the end of three quarters, 87-82 as Pritchard was the leading scorer with 30 points. Jayson Tatum had 13 points with 8 on 3/5 shooting coming in the third quarter.

I thought the 2nd half was an awesome Tatum half, he was very good in 3rd quarter and it carried over to the 4th. He was getting to the cup, finishing strong, making the right passes and rebounding the ball.

Then, he finally hit the setback three.

Celtics got a bunch of offensive rebounds late in the game, 4 fourth quarter offensive rebounds gave the Celtics extra opportunities. Including a big one from Payton Pritchard who kicked the ball out to Tatum and was fouled on a three point shot.

The Hawks just did not have enough to keep up with Boston, even without Jaylen Brown. Boston beat Atlanta, 109-102.

Payton Pritchard led the team with 36 points, 7 rebounds and 4 assists while Jayson Tatum had a season high 26 points. Luka Garza, Derrick White and Sam Hauser also scored in double figures.

The Celtics shot 47% from the field and 40% from three while Atlanta shot 39% from the field and 36% from three. The Celtics next game is Sunday in Charlotte against the Hornets at 6 EST.

Aerin Frankel earns third straight shutout as Fleet take 4-0 win over Sceptres

TORONTO (AP) — Aerin Frankel made 18 saves for her third straight shutout and seventh of the season as the Boston Fleet topped the Toronto Sceptres 4-0 on Friday night.

Liz Schepers, with two goals, Jessie Eldridge and Sophie Shirley scored for Boston, which extended its lead atop the standings to five points ahead of second-place Montreal.

Elaine Chuli stopped 19 shots for Toronto, which had its six-game point streak snapped. Three of the Sceptres’ four wins during the streak came against Vancouver and Seattle, the PWHL’s last-place teams.

The Sceptres last played on March 17, a 2-0 win at Boston. It was the second of back-to-back shutout wins for Toronto, including a 2-0 home win over Seattle on March 15.

Schepers opened the scoring 11:38 into the first period when she put home a rebound after Shirley’s point shot was initially tipped by Hadley Hartmetz.

Schepers added her second of the game at 10:54 of the second period after she tipped in a wrist shot from Haley Winn.

Eldridge scored with 5:28 remaining in the middle frame.

Shirley put home a rebound with 5:46 left in the third period after Chuli stopped consecutive shots from Jamie Lee Rattray and Mia Biotti.

The Fleet now hold the best goal-differential in the PWHL at plus-23, and have scored first in a PWHL-leading 18 games this season.

Up next

Fleet: Visit the Minnesota Frost on Sunday.

Sceptres: Host the Vancouver Goldeneyes on Sunday.

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AP women’s hockey: https://apnews.com/hub/womens-hockey

NBA fines Timberwolves' Naz Reid $50,000 for questioning officials' integrity

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — The NBA fined Timberwolves big man Naz Reid $50,000 "for questioning the integrity of game officials" in Minnesota's 110-108 victory over the Houston Rockets 110-108 on Wednesday.

Reid was hit with a technical foul and ejected with 4:13 left in overtime. He had not been charged with a prior technical, which would have resulted in an automatic ejection.

Crew chief Scott Foster told the pool reporter after the game that Reid was ejected for making “a statement that questioned the integrity of the crew.”

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AP NBA: https://apnews.com/NBA

Caleb Wilson declares for the NBA Draft

Feb 7, 2026; Chapel Hill, North Carolina, USA; North Carolina Tar Heels forward Caleb Wilson (8) on the court in the second half at Dean E. Smith Center. Mandatory Credit: Bob Donnan-Imagn Images | Bob Donnan-Imagn Images

Per his Instagram account, UNC forward Caleb Wilson has declared for the NBA Draft. His announcement arrives just less than a week after former head coach Hubert Davis was relieved of his duties.

Wilson had one of the most incredible individual seasons that we’v seen in a long time at UNC. He finished his season averaging 19.8 points, 9.8 rebounds, 2.7 assists, 1.4 blocks, and 1.5 steals per game. At one point during the season he lead the team in all major categories, but then he injured his left hand in the game against Miami. There was hope that he would be able to return before the season was over, but while practicing for the Duke game he broke his thumb in his right hand during a non-contact drill. That injury ended his freshman season, and it effectively ended his Carolina career.

Despite missing a decent amount of time, Wilson as named first-team All-ACC, second-team All-American, and was selected for the ACC All-Rookie team. His incredible season guaranteed that his jersey will be hung in the rafters of the Dean Smith Center.

There was some hope that Caleb Wilson would return for a sophomore season, but it was never a likely outcome. Wilson is a projected top-five NBA Draft pick, and while NIL has made sure college players are making good money, it is still nothing compared to a top-five rookie contract — if he is picked fifth overall, he can still around $9 million his first two seasons. His NIL valuation during his freshman season was reportedly $1.9 million per On3.com.

Wilson is bound to be a really good player in the NBA. His skill set is something that many NBA GMs are looking for, and he’s drawn a lot of comparison to Kevin Garnett. He certainly has enough talent to be in the league for a long time, and he may even have enough talent to become a NBA All-Star if he lands in the right system. That’s a tough ask considering the teams that are at the top of the NBA Draft boards right now, but perhaps he will get a fortunate break and not land with a team like the Sacramento Kings. Is it messy to say that? Maybe. Is it a fair statement? NBA fans would almost certainly tell you yes.

We wish Caleb Wilson the best of luck at the next level. Thank you for giving your all to the program, and I will be rooting for you loud and proud wherever you land.

Eighth-grader's perfect women's NCAA bracket lasts until Sweet 16 before finally missing a game

It took Pittsburgh eighth-grader Otto Schellhammer until the Sweet 16 to finally miss one of his women's picks for March Madness.

No. 6 seed Notre Dame beat second-seeded Vanderbilt on Friday in Fort Worth, Texas, to open the regional rounds of the women's NCAA Tournament. That ended the 14-year-old's run as the last perfect bracket after the opening weekend of the men's and women's tournaments from more than 40 million entries across all the major contests.

Schellhammer previously told The Associated Press it was “100% luck” and that he didn't know anything about basketball despite that perfect start through 48 games. His mother, Amy, called it “absolutely hilarious” and said her son had been getting more excited about watching the games because of the perfect start.

He has Texas winning the title in his bracket.

Mike Benzie, the senior director of content for NCAA Digital, said there were about 36 million men’s entries and 5.2 million on the women’s side.

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AP March Madness bracket: https://apnews.com/hub/ncaa-mens-bracket and coverage: https://apnews.com/hub/march-madness

Warriors say Stephen Curry now officially day-to-day in rehab, will be re-evaluated next week

With his "runner's knee" and the strained adductor he suffered during rehab, Stephen Curry has missed the Warriors' last 23 games. Without him, they have gone 8-15 and slid to 10th in the West, where they would have to win two games just to make the playoffs.

The good news is that Curry is now officially listed as day-to-day by Golden State, and the next step is live 5-on-5 scrimmages, the team announced. The team also gave updates on Al Horford and Seth Curry, and NBC Sports' Bay Area's Dalton Johnson laid it out this way:

The Warriors are the 10 seed, two games back of the No. 8 seed Clippers with nine games left to play. It's not impossible that the Golden State can move up in the standings, but the odds are getting longer and longer by the day.

What matters is getting Curry back on the court and feeling like himself for the postseason. Curry continues to be the engine of the Warriors' offense, and when he was healthy this season he looked elite, averaging 27.2 points and 4.8 assists a game, shooting 39.1% from 3-point range. With Jimmy Butler (ACL) and Moses Moody (knee) out for the remainder of the season, the Warriors need Curry's shot creation and gravity to stand a chance in the play-in, let alone the playoffs.

Hubert Kos defends title in 100-yard backstroke and Texas holds onto lead at NCAA swim championships

ATLANTA (AP) — Texas senior Hubert Kos defended his national title in the 100-yard backstroke with a NCAA record time and the Longhorns held onto their team lead at the national swimming and diving championships on Friday.

Texas holds the top spot heading into the final day of competition with 340.5 points. Florida is second at 331 and Indiana has 254. Arizona State sits at 245 — with 120 coming on three relay wins.

California sophomore Yamato Okadome won his second individual title in consecutive nights, sweeping the breaststroke events. He took the 200 in a personal-best 1:48.61 after winning the 100 on Thursday.

Florida senior Josh Liendo also won his second individual title of the championships with a time of 18.06 in the 50 freestyle. Arizona State finished third, fifth and sixth.

Florida went first, second and fifth in the 500 freestyle for 51 team points, led by Ahmed Hafnaoui at 4:06.56.

Missouri senior Collier Dyer took the three-meter diving title in his first-ever final.

Saturday's events include the 200 IM, 100 freestyle, 200 butterfly, 200 backstroke, 400 freestyle relay and platform diving.

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AP sports: https://apnews.com/sports

Warriors star Steph Curry out for at least another week with runner’s knee

ATLANTA, GEORGIA - MARCH 21: Stephen Curry #30 of the Golden State Warriors looks on against the Atlanta Hawks during the fourth quarter at State Farm Arena on March 21, 2026 in Atlanta, Georgia. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Paras Griffin/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Golden State Warriors will re-examine Steph Curry next week, delaying any return for the superstar point guard. While Curry has already missed 20 games, reports last week suggested that he was expected to resume scrimmaging with hopes to ramp up for a return. According to a report by Shams Charania of ESPN, however, Curry was unable to scrimmage this week and so the Warriors will wait another week to re-evaluate his injury. Curry will now be out for at least 25 games, and could very well be out for the season.

At this point, even if Curry is cleared to play, the Warriors may be hesitant to have him return with only a few games to ramp up for the intensity of the NBA Play-In Tournament. It would not be a surprise for Golden State to table Curry for the remainder of the season, effectively forfeiting their chances of reaching the playoffs, and looking ahead to next year. Of course, they would have to get Curry on board with that strategy, and the hyper competitor will likely have another idea in mind.

The Warriors have unsurprisingly collapsed in the standings without Curry anchoring an already shorthanded roster. Golden State has fallen to 35-38 on the season and is currently the 10th seed in the Western Conference standings. While they have virtually no risk of missing the play-in entirely, they will have to win back-to-back road games to reach the postseason unless they can catch the Los Angeles Clippers (37-36) and/or Portland Trail Blazers (37-37). If the Dubs want to avoid playing the top seed in the West, likely the Oklahoma City Thunder, they will have to climb above both Portland and LA.

Curry has only appeared in 39 games so far this season, averaging 27.2 points, 4.8 assists, 3.5 rebounds, and 1.1 steals in 31.3 minutes on 46.8%/39.1%/93.1% shooting. The Warriors have outscored opponents by 2.2 points per 100 possessions with Curry on the court this season (as opposed to being outscored by 0.8 points per 100 possessions).

NBA moves further away from point of having a draft with latest ideas to curb tanking

Tanking has become the white whale of the NBA league office.

Stamping out tanking has become Adam Silver's quest, but that obsessive effort has the league missing the big picture. Silver runs a multi-billion-dollar business, and he has business reasons to focus on tanking. While many fans in Utah or Sacramento or Washington — or the other six cities where tanking is going on this season — will say they want their team to tank for draft potential, the reality is that there is a steep drop-off in attendance and viewership for those teams' games, according to league sources. Fans say they are okay with tanking, but they stop tuning in when the product is that bad.

The problem is that the league's obsessive quest to deal with tanking is moving it further away from the point of having a draft in the first place. It's making it harder for smaller and mid-market teams to land the players they need to get or stay good.

And, ultimately, not one of the league's new ideas will end tanking. Full stop.

NBA’s latest anti-tanking ideas

This week, the NBA presented its Board of Governors — made up of the 30 team owners — with three different conceptual ideas that drastically change the NBA Draft Lottery process. In a nutshell those are:

1) Expand the lottery to 18 teams (10 teams that miss the postseason and 10 teams in the play-in), then flatten the odds and give all 10 teams that miss the playoffs an 8% chance at the top pick. Only the top four or five draft spots would be determined by lottery, then it would fall in reverse record order.

2) Expand the lottery to 22 teams (the 18 above plus the four eliminated in the first round of the playoffs), then have those teams' lottery odds determined by their record over the past two seasons. Also, there would be a minimum win total for each team in relation to the lottery (hypothetically, if that win number is set at 22, and a team only wins 19 games that season, for the lottery it would have a 22-60 record). All 22 teams would be in the lottery, but only the top four slots would be selected, and then there might be a second lottery for the remaining spots, with limits on how far a team can fall.

3) Expand the lottery to 18 teams, but from there it pretty much follows the same system as is currently in place, except that the top five teams would get the same odds (11%, currently the top three teams have a 14% chance) and the odds would slowly decrease from there. The top five spots in the draft would be determined by the lottery, then the rest of the draft would be in reverse order of record.

These are not set proposals for the owners to choose among, league officials emphasize, they are more concepts where they can pick and choose the ideas they like. It's more of a buffet of ideas. For example, while the league is theoretically open to a lottery that selects the top 18 spots in the draft, there is no way the owners will vote for a concept where, if their team has the worst record, it might pick 18th.

Why all these ideas miss the mark

The NBA is a business, and what the teams are selling to their respective fan bases is either winning or hope. "Come see our good team with a star or two, a team that will win a lot of games and is playoff bound." Or, "Come see our promising young players as we start to build something — get in on the ground floor of what we will become in a few years."

It becomes very difficult to sell hope when the flattened lottery odds make it much more difficult for the league's struggling teams to get the good players they need to turn things around. Put simply, most bad teams will just be bad longer. Fans of tanking teams tend to be okay with it for a year or two (at least on an intellectual level), but drag that process out, and they really tune out. And don't come back. The league's lottery odds make that more likely.

This is a particularly big risk for small and middle-market teams that are not destinations for free agents or players with options — those teams rely on the draft to get their stars (either drafting those players or trading their picks to get said player). Decrease the value of those picks and the bad teams get stuck in a cycle where it's harder to improve. By extension, this is a big win for Los Angeles, New York, Miami and any other market where players want to go.

The point of any draft

These new concepts move the NBA away from the entire point of having a draft — get the worst teams the best young players so they can turn things around.

In the NFL, the Raiders, Jets, Cardinals and Titans had the worst records last season, they get the top four picks in this draft. Simple. Clean. I have written that’s what the NBA should do (with a rule that if a team gets the No. 1 pick, it can't pick in the top five the next two years). The NBA is never going to do that, in part because the draft lottery has become its own televised show and event. It's baked into the new NBA national television agreements. If there is one thing we can be certain about, it's that the league's billionaire owners are not giving up a penny of that television money, and doing away with the draft lottery would force them to do just that.

These proposals also can make things more complex for fans to understand. Particularly the second proposal, with two-year combined windows. The NBA's overly complex salary cap is something casual fans hate talking about and tune out discussions on; these new lottery options (especially the second one) have a lot of math that people just don't want to do to know where their team will pick. Simpler is better, yet the league is leaning more toward complexity and bureaucracy.

This won’t stop tanking

Ultimately, none of these proposals will completely stop tanking. The next time there is a Cade Cunningham or Anthony Edwards or Cooper Flagg — or especially a generational player like Victor Wembanyama — are in a draft, teams will do anything and everything to maximize their chances in that lottery. Because those are No. 1 picks and the kinds of players who turn franchises around — and drive up a franchise's value. Any marginal help is worth it.

At the end of the day, more than maybe any other team sport, one elite basketball player can change everything. And it's worth it to teams to do whatever it takes to get a player like that. Even if the odds are longer than they were a few years ago.