Porzingis talks helping Brown manage injury: ‘He looks good'

Porzingis talks helping Brown manage injury: ‘He looks good' originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

Kristaps Porzingis can relate to what Jaylen Brown is dealing with as the Boston Celtics prepare for the first round of the 2025 NBA playoffs.

A knee injury limited Brown late in the regular season and sidelined him for three of Boston’s seven games in April. Brown played through the ailment on multiple occasions, but the C’s ultimately decided to rest the 2024 NBA Finals MVP despite him being only two games short of All-NBA eligibility.

Porzingis, who has his fair share of experience with knee injuries throughout his career, was in favor of resting Brown until the playoffs.

“I think we just have to urge him to make sure he does everything he needs to prepare, to get it healthy and to prepare for what’s going to come,” Porzingis said last week. “And I think he’s a smart guy. So he will. It just shows his heart and how bad he wants to be out there even for games that don’t mean super much for us right now. But that’s who he is and I appreciate him for that.”

On Wednesday, Porzingis told reporters he advised Brown on managing the injury so that he’s a full-go for the postseason.

“We definitely talked about it. Just because of my history also with some of the knee stuff that had bothered me in the past,” Porzingis said. “So definitely talked and gave him my point of view and what I thought could help him.

“He did the things necessary, I think, to be as healthy and as feeling good as possible for this run that we’re about to have. He looks good. He’s always saying that he feels good, but he actually looks good, and that’s the most important.”

Porzingis joined C’s teammates Jrue Holiday and Al Horford in downplaying Brown’s injury. Both spoke highly of Brown’s performance in practice, with Holiday noting that “nobody is worried about him.” Celtics coach Joe Mazzulla said he is “100 percent confident” Brown will be ready for the playoffs.

The optimism should help Celtics fans breathe a sigh of relief ahead of their first-round series against the Orlando Magic. While Boston should be able to get past Orlando even with a hobbled Brown, it will need its star to be at full strength for tougher matchups on its road to a repeat.

Game 1 of Celtics-Magic at TD Garden is set for Sunday at 3:30 p.m. ET.

Dray shares admirable message to Ja after star's injury vs. Warriors

Dray shares admirable message to Ja after star's injury vs. Warriors originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

Warriors star Draymond Green had a sportsmanlike message for Grizzlies star Ja Morant after the guard admirably played through a tweaked right ankle in Golden State’s 121-116 win over Memphis in the NBA play-in tournament on Tuesday night at Chase Center.

“The dog that always is Ja,” Green told reporters postgame. “I think he may struggle to play in [Memphis’ play-in game] Friday. He came back tonight off straight adrenaline. But that’s who he is. That’s why this franchise has been in the position that they have been in over the last few years, and you’re kind of like, man, they may make a run.”

Morant hurt his ankle after landing on Warriors guard Buddy Hield’s foot when attempting a shot with 4:25 remaining in the third quarter. Morant went to the bench desperate for treatment and ultimately returned to finish the close game.

The 25-year-old finished with 22 points on 9-of-18 shooting with two rebounds and two assists over 35 minutes, though he had a Grizzlies-high 18 points on 7-of-14 shooting before landing on Hield’s foot.

As Green mentioned, Morant was able to play through the pain and rely on adrenaline to carry him to the finish line. And for that, the four-time NBA champion has even more respect for the rival, high-flying guard.

“Ja is special,” Green told reporters. “He’s one of the more special players in this league, and has the heart of a lion. So I wasn’t surprised at all. That’s who he’s been. That’s who he is going to be. His saying: ‘I’m going to run up the chimney,’ he live[s] by that. 

“You know, I respect it because he never not run up the chimney.”

Like Green, Morant has never been afraid of smoke.

So Green wouldn’t be surprised if the Grizzlies were to make noise in the NBA playoffs – if they handle business against the winner of Wednesday night’s Sacramento Kings-Dallas Mavericks play-in game – on Morant’s back and tweaked ankle.

“I’m playing,” Morant told reporters Tuesday night about the Grizzlies’ upcoming game. “That’s basically the answer I’m giving. It ain’t nothing different.”

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Butler defiantly responds to claim he should shoot more 3-pointers

Butler defiantly responds to claim he should shoot more 3-pointers originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

Jimmy Butler shot 2-for-4 on 3-point shots en route to a 38-point outing in the Warriors’ 121-116 win over the Memphis Grizzlies in the NBA play-in tournament on Tuesday at Chase Center.

But the career 32.8-percent 3-point shooter made it clear that his game against Memphis was an anomaly shooting-wise, and that no one should expect the Golden State forward to be a routine deep-range shooter – at least like his teammate Steph Curry.

“I can shoot, I just choose not to shoot threes,” Butler told reporters after Tuesday’s win (h/t ClutchPoints’ Kenzo Fukuda). “I’d rather drive into the paint and get a layup or pass the ball to someone on my team who’s probably a better shooter than I am. I think you and everybody else want me to shoot more threes, but I like shooting layups.”

Butler shot 10-for-16 inside the arc and sank 12 of 18 free throws against the Grizzlies. Those stats are more Butler’s speed.

After all, the six-time NBA All-Star averaged just 0.6 triples per game during the 2024-25 NBA season, and his career-high is only 1.7, which he averaged in 2018-19 with the Minnesota Timberwolves.

Butler is glad to play “Robin” to the greatest shooter ever in Curry, but their play styles remain vastly distinct.

“It’s always, ‘Play basketball the right way; shoot the ball when you’re open; attack into the paint, get to the free throw line and pass it to the open guy.’ I feel like I have the opportunity [in Golden State] to pick my spots incredibly well,” Butler said. “And they are always looking to get me the ball in my spots where I can be aggressive and put the ball in the basket, or make the right play for the next individual. 

“We ran a couple of sets for me to do that [against Memphis], and Steph did all the other stuff.”

The Warriors have a first-round playoff date with the Houston Rockets largely because of Butler’s impact after he was traded to Golden State from the Miami Heat on Feb. 5. His approach to basketball often has rubbed people the wrong way throughout his 14-year career, but his prideful stubbornness has led to promising results in the Bay thus far.

Butler is a scorer, but not a shooter. The same as he has always been.

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Draymond confident Kuminga will contribute in Warriors-Rockets series

Draymond confident Kuminga will contribute in Warriors-Rockets series originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

Jonathan Kuminga didn’t play a second in the Warriors’ regular-season finale loss to the Los Angeles Clippers on Sunday, nor in Golden State’s 121-116 win over the Memphis Grizzlies in the NBA play-in tournament on Tuesday.

While coach Steve Kerr’s rotation changes often, not many expected the 22-year-old to register consecutive DNPs during the most crucial points of the 2024-25 NBA season.

So the question now is: Will Kuminga play during the Warriors’ first-round Western Conference playoff series against the No. 2-seeded Houston Rockets? Draymond Green certainly believes so.

“He’ll contribute,” Green told reporters postgame on Tuesday about Kuminga. “He’s getting his work in. That’s all you can do in that situation, get your work in. He’ll be meaningful for us in that series. I have zero doubt about that. I think the challenge for him is to stay mentally engaged, as is for anyone in that situation. But I have zero doubt in my mind that he’s going to help us in this series – he will, 1,000 percent.”

Kuminga, even through his growing pains, seemingly brings great value to Golden State on any given night and would appear to be a key piece against Houston.

He averaged 15.3 points, 4.6 rebounds and 2.2 assists during his fourth Warriors campaign, and in four games against the Rockets this season, Kuminga averaged an impressive 21.3 points, 6.8 rebounds and 1.8 assists.

Kerr said Kuminga has been “pretty impactful” for the Warriors after the loss to the Clippers but proceeded to not play him Tuesday night. Green expects Kuminga to have a big role against the Rockets, but the rotation ultimately will be decided by Kerr.

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NBA admits refs missed four calls late in Warriors-Grizzlies game

NBA admits refs missed four calls late in Warriors-Grizzlies game originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

Both the Warriors and Grizzlies benefited from missed calls late in Golden State’s 121-116 NBA play-in tournament win over Memphis on Tuesday at Chase Center.

However, one of the calls, had it been correctly assessed, could have greatly benefited the Grizzlies in the game’s final seconds.

Chronologically, here are the four incorrect calls in the game:

  • Draymond Green should have been called for a shooting foul on Scottie Pippen Jr. after making contact with the Grizzlies guard’s wrist on a play with 1:29 remaining in the game.
Q401:29.3Foul: ShootingDraymond GreenScotty Pippen Jr.INCVideo 
Comment:Green (GSW) reaches in and makes illegal contact with Pippen Jr.’s (MEM) wrist after his gather during the driving shot attempt.
  • Zach Edey should have been called for offensive goaltending on a Warriors’ possession with 1:28 remaining in the game.
Q401:28.2Turnover: Offensive GoaltendingZach EdeyWarriorsINCVideo 
Comment:Edey (MEM) makes contact with the ball while it is in the imaginary cylinder above the rim.
  • One call that had Warriors fans upset, was Brandin Podziemski being called for a foul on his block attempt on Pippen Jr. with 37 seconds remaining in the game. The NBA stated that was an incorrect call.
Q400:37.0Foul: ShootingBrandin PodziemskiScotty Pippen Jr.ICVideo 
Comment:Podziemski (GSW) makes contact with the ball during Pippen Jr.’s (MEM) shot attempt near the basket and any ensuing contact once the ball becomes loose is considered incidental.
  • Perhaps the most notable missed call of the game, was the Warriors’ inbound pass to Steph Curry with 10.5 seconds remaining. Grizzlies guard Ja Morant initially appeared to knock the ball out of Curry’s hands, but the NBA stated the ball actually touched Curry’s hand last before it went out of bounds and possession should have been awarded to Memphis with 7.3 seconds remaining.
Q400:07.3Stoppage: Out-of-BoundsJa MorantStephen CurryICVideo 
Comment:After Morant (MEM) reaches in and makes contact with the ball, it touches Curry’s (GSW) hand last before going out of bounds. Possession is awarded to Golden State, but should have been awarded to Memphis.

Another controversial moment in the game was Kevon Looney being called for a loose ball foul on Edey under the rim with 14.3 seconds remaining. That, according to the NBA, was correctly called.

While there were missed calls that went against both teams, the Grizzlies certainly wish at least one, in particular, was called correctly.

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NBA Playoff Notes: How high are the stakes for Knicks' Tom Thibodeau?

There is plenty at stake in New York and around the NBA as the playoffs start. Here’s a look at the ramifications for some playoff teams: 

KNICKS: As noted on this week’s Putback, the stakes are high for Tom Thibodeau entering the playoffs. If the Knicks beat Detroit and are competitive in the second round against Boston, I’d assume Thibodeau will be fine. Given Thibodeau’s success in New York, this is the most likely scenario.

But if the Knicks struggle against Detroit or are noncompetitive in the second round against Boston, there will be tough conversations about the franchise’s next steps.

The post-mortem analysis will include an assessment of Thibodeau. Would the Knicks head coach survive a subpar playoff performance?

It all depends on how team president Leon Rose and owner James Dolan view the season.

Thibodeau has been on shaky ground in the past and survived. Rose made the decision to stick with Thibodeau amid past uncertainty. In hindsight, keeping Thibodeau was the best decision Rose could have made.

The head coach has helped guide the Knicks to their best three-year run since the late 1990s.

He is also under contract for four more seasons. Earlier in the season, I thought Thibodeau would survive any playoff shortcomings and be back next season. But that’s not the case anymore. I think anything is on the table if the Knicks struggle in the playoffs, including a coaching change.

No matter what happens this spring, the Knicks will have to decide on Mikal Bridges’ extension. Bridges is eligible for a four-year, $156 million deal on July 1. The Knicks gave up five first-round picks in order to acquire Bridges. So it would be surprising if they didn’t secure him long-term to an extension if everything goes well in the playoffs. If things go sideways, New York could include Bridges in a deal for a significant return. 

OTHER EASTERN CONFERENCE RAMIFICATIONS

PACERS: The Pacers want to retain 2025 free agent Myles Turner. But the team also reportedly wants to remain below the luxury tax. In order to achieve both of those goals, the Pacers may have to shed salary via trade.

They have several options if they want to go this route, including Bennedict Mathurin, Obi Toppin, and Aaron Nesmith. The club’s playoff performance – and the performances of its role players – will likely factor in to any roster decisions made around Turner.

BUCKS: The Nets aren’t the only NBA team keeping a close eye on the Bucks and Giannis Antetokounmpo. Several teams operated at the NBA trade deadline with a potential run at Antetokounmpo in mind. Why would teams see an Antetokounmpo trade as a remote possibility? That belief stems – in part – on Antetokounmpo’s own stance. He has said in the past that his top priority is to win. In acquiring Damian Lillard and Kyle Kuzma via trade and making high-stakes coaching changes, Milwaukee has operated like a team desperate to win. But the results haven’t been great. Will another subpar playoff performance cause Antetokounmpo to request a trade? That’s part of what is at stake for Milwaukee this spring. The Nets, it should be noted, have a bevy of assets to offer in a trade for Antetokounmpo – or another star. Brooklyn owns four first-round picks in the 2025 NBA Draft and has 13 tradeable first-round picks in the next seven drafts.

HAWKS: After losing to Orlando on Tuesday, the Hawks face an uphill climb to qualify for the playoffs. Whether their season ends later this week or after a first-round loss to Cleveland, the Hawks will have a significant decision to make with Trae Young. Young has a player option in 2026 and is eligible for a four-year, $230 million extension in the offseason.

Do the Hawks want to make that financial commitment to Young while building around Jalen Johnson, Dyson Daniels and, presumably, rookie Zaccharie Risacher? That’s a big question for Landry Fields & Co entering the offseason.

WESTERN CONFERENCE RAMIFICATIONS

TIMBERWOLVES: The most pressing issue for the Timberwolves is stopping Luka Doncic, LeBron James, and the Lakers. The big picture facing the Wolves: how much is ownership willing to spend on the roster? Naz Reid could test free agency. He has a $15 million player option for next season. Nickeil Alexander-Walker will be an unrestricted free agent. Julius Randle has a $30 million player option. The Timberwolves are facing a significant tax bill. It would be extremely challenging to keep all three of Randle, Alexander-Walker, and Reid.

Worth noting on Randle: the Heat have had interest in him at different points over the past few seasons. Randle could exercise his player option and be traded. The Nets, Bulls, and Pistons are among a small group of teams projected to have cap space this offseason. On the other side of Timberwolves-Lakers, James has a player option for 2025-26.

ROCKETS: The Rockets are in an enviable position. They won 52 games in the regular season and have a bevy of assets to swing a trade this offseason. Houston can acquire five additional first-round picks over the next five drafts and has several players – Jabari Smith Jr., Reed Sheppard, Cam Whitmore, Dillon Brooks, Fred Van Vleet- who would draw interest in the trade market.

Houston’s performance in the postseason will impact their approach in the offseason. The No. 1 question for Houston this summer: what would you trade for Kevin Durant? Durant will be available via trade and will presumably be moved to one of his preferred destinations. It’s well known that he and Rockets head coach Ime Udoka have a strong connection. The Rockets obviously would have competition for Durant. The Mavericks are among the teams who pursued him aggressively at the trade deadline. They continued to search for ways to land Durant even after he made it clear through back-channels that he didn’t want to be traded. So Dallas will almost assuredly explore the Durant market again this summer. Will Houston be in an as well? On the other side of the Warriors-Rockets series, Golden State will have a decision to make on restricted free agent Jonathan Kuminga. Kuminga was not in the Warriors’ rotation during their play-in win over Memphis on Tuesday.

KINGS: Sacramento has been underwhelming this season after firing head coach Mike Brown, trading De'Aaron Fox and acquiring Zach LaVine.

With Brown out, the Kings front office is under the microscope. Owner Vivek Ranadive is expected to take a hard look at the front office in the offseason. Obviously, a strong playoff run would factor in to any decision Ranadive makes on Monte McNair and his group. Other teams viewed Wes Wilcox’s move from the Kings to the University of Utah as a sign of uncertainty in Sacramento. The Kings face the Mavericks in the Play-In tournament on Wednesday night.

Five biggest X-factors for Celtics who could spark another title run

Five biggest X-factors for Celtics who could spark another title run originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

Every NBA champion has one or two superstars who play a significant role in their team lifting the Larry O’Brien Trophy, but winning 16 games over four playoff rounds doesn’t happen without supporting players stepping up along the way.

There are a couple games every playoff run that require someone to come off the bench and provide a spark offensively.

The Celtics know this fact better than most franchises.

Don Nelson hit a clutch shot toward the end of Game 7 in the 1969 NBA Finals. Glenn McDonald scored eight points off the bench in the triple-overtime Game 5 of the 1976 NBA Finals. Cedric Maxwell led the C’s with 24 points in Game 7 of the 1984 NBA Finals. Leon Powe scored 21 points off the bench in Game 2 of the 2008 NBA Finals. Kelly Olynyk scored 26 points off the bench in a Game 7 victory in the 2017 Eastern Conference semifinals.

Which players will be X-factors for Boston in the 2025 playoffs?

Here’s a list of five candidates, ranging from starters to role players, ahead of Sunday’s Game 1 of the first round against the Orlando Magic.

Kristaps Porzingis

The Celtics are at their best when they hit a lot of 3-pointers. Porzingis is a 7-foot-3 center who can score in the paint and step outside the 3-point line and make shots consistently. There aren’t many players like him.

He scored 34 points on 8-for-13 shooting from beyond the arc in an overtime win against the New York Knicks earlier this month.

Porzingis is also an X-factor defensively because he is so good at protecting the rim. Whether it’s on drives to the basket in the halfcourt or fast breaks, Porzingis consistently blocks shots or forces opponents to alter their shots to evade his long reach. And the Celtics will need this rim protection because three of their potential playoff opponents — Knicks, Cavs, Thunder — ranked top 10 in points in the paint this season.

We saw plenty of examples of Porzingis’ impact at both ends of the floor during the 2024 NBA Finals against the Dallas Mavericks.

This sequence from Game 1 shows how effective Porzingis can be as an outside shooter and a shot blocker:

Of course, the concern with Porzingis is always health-related. He missed most of the 2024 playoffs due to injury. But since returning in March from a battle with an illness, he has consistently stayed healthy and played quite well.

If Porzingis can play a full postseason, the Celtics might be even tougher to beat than they were a year ago.

Payton Pritchard

Pritchard took a huge leap in his development this season, setting career highs with 14.3 points, 3.8 rebounds and 3.5 assists per game. He shot 47.2 percent from the field and 40.7 from 3-point range. He’s the favorite to win the league’s Sixth Man of the Year award.

There will be a moment when the C’s need Pritchard to hit shots and give the team a boost of energy at both ends of the floor. Pritchard played OK in the 2024 playoffs. His best series was the second round against the Cavs, but he struggled in the Finals and scored three or fewer points in four of the five games versus the Mavs.

Can Pritchard be more consistent offensively in this year’s playoffs? If the answer is yes, the C’s will be very difficult to defend.

Sam Hauser

Hauser is one of the league’s best 3-point shooters and led Boston with a 41.6 3-point percentage this season. His ability to get hot from beyond the arc and hit five, six, or seven 3-pointers can totally change a game.

Hauser was pretty inconsistent from 3-point range in the 2024 playoffs. He hit more than three 3-pointers in just three of Boston’s 16 postseason games. He shot 2-for-9 from beyond the arc in the conference semifinals and 1-for-14 in the conference finals.

Hauser was able to stretch the floor on offense and not get burned defensively in last season’s title run. He was even a good defender at times in those four series, including some matchups against Kyrie Irving in the Finals. If that’s the Hauser the Celtics get for most of the 2025 playoffs, they’ll be in good shape.

Jrue Holiday

Holiday’s experience — two NBA titles and two Olympic gold medals — is so valuable to the Celtics. He is a steady, calming presence in high-pressure situations.

The veteran point guard made so many clutch plays in the 2024 playoffs. Whether it was a momentum-changing 3-pointer, a key offensive rebound or a steal, he consistently made the right decisions at both ends of the court. Whenever the Celtics offense is becoming too iso-heavy or bad shots are being taken, he settles everyone down and gets the team back on track.

Holiday’s ability to knock down 3-pointers and shoot around 90 percent from the foul line will make him a very important player in this Boston playoff run. How much will his finger injury impact him? You could argue he’s played his best basketball of the season the last month-and-a-half despite nursing this injury. He shot 38.6 percent from 3-point range in March and 41.7 percent in April.

The Celtics were 14-2 this season when Holiday scored 15-plus points. His best performances almost always translate into wins.

Luke Kornet

Kornet played just 10.2 minutes per game in the 2024 playoffs. It wouldn’t be surprising if that number goes up this year because the veteran center was highly effective in a lot of games this season.

Kornet scored 10-plus points in nine of his last 14 regular season games. He grabbed eight or more rebounds six times during that stretch, including a 16-rebound performance in a win over the Spurs on March 29. Kornet is very good in the pick-and-roll, too, with his ability to finish on lobs at the basket.

In fact, the Tatum-Kornet pick-and-roll combo was one of the best in the league this season:

The Celtics like playing with two centers on the court, especially in certain matchups. Kornet’s ability to produce at both ends of the floor alongside Porzingis or Al Horford is quite valuable.

He plays his role extremely well, and he might be asked to do it more in this playoff run than in previous years.

NBA Rookies Haven’t Exceeded Their Meager Expectations

Sometimes the NBA Rookie of the Year race features highly touted prospects like Victor Wembanyama and Chet Holmgren, or Luka Dončić and Trae Young. This season, it comes down to Stephon Castle, Alex Sarr and Zaccharie Risacher—a trio of players who despite moments of brilliance did not statistically stand up to top predecessors.

During the 2024 NBA Draft, analysts predicted a weak 2024-25 rookie class. In terms of scoring, at least, they were right. Only five rookies in the 2024-25 regular season averaged double-digit points per game—there were at least eight in each season since 2017-18, and the post-NBA/ABA merger record is 14.

The average NBA player this season scored 17.0 points per 36 minutes on the court, but the average rookie scored just 13.7. That gap of -3.3 is the largest of any of the past 40 seasons.

It’s not as if this season’s youngsters were picking their spots with greater efficiency on that lower volume. The league’s average true shooting percentage in 2024-25 was 57.6%, while first-year players collectively shot only 53.7%. That disparity is the largest since 1990-91, when that season’s rookies shot 4.4 percentage points below the NBA average.

The decline of rookie scoring, though, is a broader trend. Of the past 40 seasons, nine of the bottom 10 in rookie scoring frequency, according to the aforementioned calculation, have occurred since 2013-14. Similarly, eight of the bottom 10 years ranked by rookie scoring efficiency have also come during that recent time span.

Players are on average entering the league younger than ever before, even though the ability to jump straight from high school as Kobe Bryant and Kevin Garnett once did no longer exists. As NBA paychecks have gotten bigger, projected high lottery picks have been incentivized to be one-and-done in college, though NIL and revenue sharing under the pending Housesettlement could alter that equation. Additionally, there’s been an increase in international prospects declaring for the draft at a younger age.

The five youngest rookie classes in NBA history (weighted by minutes played) are 2023, 2019, 2021, 2022 and 2025. Naturally, these less-experienced players are having more difficulty adjusting to the NBA.

Using a more holistic metric than simply scoring, however, this year’s rookie class appears to be weak, but not a historical outlier. The rookies this season accumulated 0.054 win shares per 48 minutes—the ninth lowest of the past 40 seasons, but still significantly above recent seasons such as 2014, 2015 and 2017, as well as the infamously unproductive 2001 cohort.

In xRAPM, another all-in-one individual player statistic created by Jeremias Engelmann, three players who debuted this season graded out as having a greater-than-average impact on their teams—the Memphis Grizzlies’ Zach Edey and Jaylen Wells, along with the Portland Trail Blazers’ Donovan Clingan. Three may sound low, especially when compared to eight in 2023-24, but the average for a season is typically around four such rookies, and two seasons ago there was only one: the Utah Jazz’s Walker Kessler.

Rookie performance isn’t necessarily correlated with future success, especially for teenagers, such as Sarr and fellow Washington Wizards lottery pick Bub Carrington (No. 1 overall pick Risacher also just turned 20). A list of recent lottery picks who posted a negative xRAPM in their rookie season includes Giannis Antetokounmpo, Trae Young, Jalen Brunson, Anthony Edwards and Cade Cunningham.

And if nobody from the 2024-25 rookie class ever pans out, the NBA still has next season—and Cooper Flagg.

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Harden admits Steph, Warriors to blame for him not winning a ring

Harden admits Steph, Warriors to blame for him not winning a ring originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

If it weren’t for one man on one team, James Harden could be a multi-time NBA champion by now.

Instead, he is ringless.

The former Houston Rockets and current Clippers guard spoke to reporters Tuesday after Los Angeles’ 124-119 win over the Warriors in the regular-season finale on Sunday at Chase Center and was asked about Steph Curry’s career longevity, praising his fellow 2009 NBA draftee and jokingly (?) claiming Curry and the Warriors are why he has not won a championship in 16 seasons.

“That’s what it’s about. Year 16. Steph is obviously Steph. What he’s been able to accomplish his entire career, it’s unbelievable,” Harden said of Curry. “We’re all witnessing real greatness. The battles, the Warriors teams I had to go against, it’s probably the reason why I still haven’t gotten a championship yet. What he’s been able to do his entire career is unbelievable. I’m happy to be a part of something like that.”

While Harden has the regular-season ownage over Curry and the Warriors in recent seasons, Golden State’s sharpshooter and his dynastic teammates at the time, Draymond Green and Klay Thompson, dominated Harden’s Rockets in four playoff series in 2015, 2016, 2018 and 2019 on their way to NBA Finals appearances in each of those seasons.

Curry and the Warriors will play their fifth playoff series against the Rockets on Sunday at Toyota Center, but their first without Harden.

Harden and the Clippers will begin their first-round playoff series against the Nuggets on Saturday, and if they defeat Denver in the series, perhaps another playoff series against the Warriors is waiting for him in the Western Conference finals?

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Astros at Cardinals Prediction: Odds, expert picks, starting pitchers, betting trends, and stats for April 16

Its Wednesday, April 16 and the Astros (8-9) are in St. Louis to take on the Cardinals (8-9).

Ronel Blanco is slated to take the mound for Houston against Steven Matz for St. Louis.

The Astros beat the Cardinals last night 2-0, thanks to a run in the sixth and eighth innings. Hunter Brown was dealing. He picked up the win and pitched six shutout innings.

Last night was the first shutout for the Astros this season. They look to use that momentum to push a few wins together.

Lets dive into the matchup and find a sweat or two.
 
We’ve got all the info and analysis you need to know ahead of the game, including the latest info on the how to catch tipoff, odds, recent team performance, player stats, and of course, our predictions, picks & best bets for the game from our modeling tools and staff of experts.
 
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Game details & how to watch Astros at Cardinals

  • Date: Wednesday, April 16, 2025
  • Time: 1:15PM EST
  • Site: Busch Stadium
  • City: St. Louis, MO
  • Network/Streaming: FanDuel Sports Midwest, Space City Home Network

Never miss a second of the action and stay up-to-date with all the latest team stats and player news. Check out our day-by-day MLB schedule page, along with detailed matchup pages that update live in-game with every out.

Odds for the Astros at the Cardinals

The latest odds as of Wednesday:

  • Moneyline: Astros (-113), Cardinals (-106)
  • Spread:  Astros -1.5
  • Total: 8.0 runs

Probable starting pitchers for Astros at Cardinals

  • Pitching matchup for April 16, 2025: Ronel Blanco vs. Steven Matz
    • Astros: Ronel Blanco, (1-1, 6.94 ERA)
      Last outing: 5.0 Innings Pitched, 2 Earned Runs Allowed, 5 Hits Allowed, 1 Walks, and 7 Strikeouts
    • Cardinals: Steven Matz, (0-0, 2.31 ERA)
      Last outing: 2.1 Innings Pitched, 1 Earned Runs Allowed, 5 Hits Allowed, 1 Walks, and 1 Strikeouts

Rotoworld still has you covered with all the latest MLB player news for all 30 teams. Check out the feed page right here on NBC Sports for headlines, injuries and transactions where you can filter by league, team, positions and news type!

Top betting trends & insights to know ahead of Astros at Cardinals

  • The Astros have won 12 of their last 20 away games against teams with losing records
  • In his last 5 starts on the mound the Cardinals pitcher Steven Matz has an ERA of 8.74
  • The Cardinals have covered in 4 of their last 5 home games with Steven Matz as starting pitcher to return 3.78 units

If you’re looking for more key trends and stats around the spread, moneyline and total for every single game on the schedule today, check out our MLB Top Trends tool on NBC Sports!

Expert picks & predictions for tonight’s game between the Astros and the Cardinals
 
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Our model calculates projections around each moneyline, spread and over/under bet for every game on the MLB calendar based on data points like past performance, player matchups, ballpark information and weather forecasts.
 
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Here are the best bets our model is projecting for Wednesday's game between the Astros and the Cardinals:

  • Moneyline: NBC Sports Bet is recommending a play on the Houston Astros on the Moneyline.
  • Spread: NBC Sports Bet is leaning towards a play ATS on the St. Louis Cardinals at +1.5.
  • Total: NBC Sports Bet is recommending a play on the over on the Game Total of 8.0.

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How Celtics can achieve rare NBA feat by repeating as champs

How Celtics can achieve rare NBA feat by repeating as champs originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

There have been times in NBA history when repeating as champions wasn’t uncommon. And in some eras, it was actually quite common.

The Boston Celtics won eight titles in a row from 1959 through 1966. The Los Angeles Lakers went back-to-back in 1987 and 1988, and then three-peated from 2000 through 2002 before going back-to-back again in 2009 and 2010. The Chicago Bulls won three in a row twice in the 1990s — 1991 through 1993 and 1996 through 1998.

The Miami Heat won consecutive titles in 2012 and 2013. The Golden State Warriors achieved that feat in 2017 and 2018.

The job of repeating as champs is much harder today than it’s ever been.

Players, and especially superstars, change teams so often now. The CBA also makes it difficult for teams to keep championship-winning rosters together, especially when role players need to get paid.

As a result, the previous five champs failed to repeat.

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The last time pro basketball had a streak of five different champions was 1977 through 1981.

  • 1977: Portland Trail Blazers
  • 1978: Baltimore Bullets (now Washington Wizards)
  • 1979: Seattle SuperSonics (now OKC Thunder)
  • 1980: Los Angeles Lakers
  • 1981: Boston Celtics

This year’s Celtics are trying to end the streak of failed repeat bids and capture back-to-back titles, something the franchise hasn’t accomplished since 1968 and 1969.

But a historic repeat isn’t all that is at stake for the Celtics. They have a chance to achieve a very rare feat.

The C’s won 61 games this season. They are just the fifth team this century to win 60-plus games the season after lifting the Larry O’Brien Trophy.

Of the previous four, only one team — the 2012-13 Miami Heat — finished the job and repeated as champs. If the Celtics repeat, it will go down as one of the most dominant two-year stretches in league history.

2015-16 Warriors

  • W/L: 73-9
  • Did they repeat: Lost to Cavaliers in Game 7 of NBA Finals despite having a 3-1 series lead.

2012-13 Heat

  • W/L: 66-6
  • Did they repeat: Defeated Spurs in Game 7 of NBA Finals after a dramatic overtime win in Game 6 thanks to Ray Allen’s historic 3-pointer at the end of regulation.

2008-09 Celtics

  • W/L: 62-20
  • Did they repeat: Lost to Magic in Game 7 of conference semifinals without an injured Kevin Garnett.

2005-06 Spurs

  • W/L: 63-19
  • Did they repeat: Lost to Mavericks in overtime of Game 7 in the conference semifinals.

The Celtics enter the 2025 playoffs in better shape than a lot of other recent champions. Jaylen Brown’s right knee is a slight concern, but the team is not dealing with any major injuries. The C’s brought back pretty much their entire roster from last season’s championship. The team chemistry is off-the-charts good.

Despite winning last year, there is still plenty of motivation for this Celtics group. Jayson Tatum should be motivated after being benched at the 2024 Olympics and not winning Finals MVP last season. There was criticism last summer, including from Shaquille O’Neal, that the Celtics’ road to the 2024 title was easy. Lots of people are predicting the Celtics won’t make it back to the Finals this year, instead choosing the Cavs, Lakers or Thunder to win it all.

So there’s a lot for the Celtics to draw motivation from.

And it all begins Sunday when the Celtics host the Orlando Magic in Game 1 of the first round.

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Phoenix Suns’ Dead Money Pool Deepens With Budenholzer Firing

The Phoenix Suns are on the hunt yet again for a head coach, their fourth in as many seasons, after firing Mike Budenholzer, who led the team through a disappointing season that was exacerbated by missing the playoffs despite having the NBA’s highest team payroll.

The team issued a statement saying its “fans deserved better” and that a change was needed. Budenholzer, a two-time NBA Coach of the Year, exits with $40 million remaining on a five-year, $50 million deal signed last year. The decision is a costly one as the Suns are now on track to have three coaches on payroll entering the 2025-2026 season. The Suns’ coaching carousel (combined with the luxury tax penalties) shows the financial hits that billionaire owner Mat Ishbia is willing to take to build a championship contender.

The Suns were also due to pay former head coach Monty Williams, who was fired in 2023 with $20 million still on his contract after signing a five-year deal in 2019. But Williams reportedly had his owed money from Phoenix offset by his most recent NBA contract with the Detroit Pistons when they hired him in 2023.

Williams was replaced by Frank Vogel, who was fired after one season when the Suns were swept in the first round of the playoffs last year. Vogel was owed $24 million of a five-year, $31 million deal. Vogel, who led the Los Angeles Lakers to an NBA title in the pandemic bubble during the 2020 season, was dismissed for under-performing with a roster that included perennial NBA All-Stars Devin Booker, Kevin Durant and Bradley Beal.

Budenholzer won an NBA title with the Milwaukee Bucks in 2021, but did even worse than Vogel with the Suns’ three stars, finishing 11th in the West despite ownership spending $366 million on payroll (including a league-leading $152 million tax bill) this past season. The Suns were the only team this year with a top-10 payroll not to qualify for the playoffs; their tax bill alone surpassed the playoff-bound Detroit Pistons’ entire payroll ($142 million).

It’s not uncommon for teams in major pro sports to pay buyouts for head coaches fired before their deal expired. The NFL’s Cleveland Browns, for example, have a history of paying coaches not to work, with several over the last decade or so being canned with years remaining on their deals.

Both Vogel and Budenholzer were hired during the new ownership of Ishbia, who purchased the team for a league record $4 billion in 2022. The United Wholesale Mortgage CEO has been aggressive since taking over. In addition to spending to acquire players, he has also invested in a slew of player-related resources, including a new training facility for his WNBA team, the Phoenix Mercury.

The outlook for next season for the Suns is murky at best. Beal, who has a no-trade clause, Booker and Durant will again take a large chunk of the league salary cap. Meanwhile, Suns general manager James Jones, who oversaw the team’s NBA Finals run in 2021-22, is on a contract set to expire this offseason.

The team also has mortgaged the future by sending noteworthy draft capital to acquire stars like Durant (four first-round picks to land him in 2023). Oddsmakers are pointing to former Nuggets coach Michael Malone and former Grizzlies coach Taylor Jenkins as candidates for the Suns’ job—one of the league’s true hot seats.

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2025 NBA Awards: Ballot, picks including Shai Gilgeous Alexander wins first MVP

Every year, a couple of awards and positions on the ballot keep me up at night, trying to make the right call — but rarely is that tough call at the top of the MVP ballot.

It was this year. What follows is my official ballot for the NBA's end-of-season awards, and we'll start with the hardest choice on the board.

NBA Most Valuable Player

1. Shai Gilgeous-Alexander (Thunder)
2. Nikola Jokic (Nuggets)
3. Giannis Antetokounmpo (Bucks)
4. Jayson Tatum (Celtics)
5. LeBron James (Lakers)

I could write 3,000 words here to explain — Nuggets fans may say "try to justify" — my pick here. The reality is that both Gilgeous-Alexander and Jokic are deserving (and in some years, Antetokounmpo could have won with the campaign he had). This is as difficult a decision on MVP as I can remember.

For me, it came down to two things, both based around the idea of how valuable each player is to his team — something many people seemed to think applies to Jokic but I think is far more even, and even tilts SGA. First, both players are incredibly valuable. However, the fact that Sam Presti did a better job of roster construction than Denver's now-fired GM Calvin Booth can't be held against SGA. When it comes to driving winning, Gilgeous-Alexander is a better defender, which helps earn wins. Besides, SGA has more win shares per 48 minutes.

Also, I could not get this stat out of my head: Ten times in NBA history the NBA's leading scorer was on a 60+ win team, something Gilgeous-Alexander became the 11th player to do with his play this year. Nine of those players won MVP. The one that didn't was Michael Jordan in the 1996-97 season when voters gave it to Karl Malone, a case now seen as voter fatigue with Jordan.

The other difficult choice for me was the fifth spot, which I ultimately gave to LeBron James because — whether it was Anthony Davis or Luka Doncic on the team — he was the glue that held the Lakers together this season. He was the reason they racked up all the wins.

All-NBA Teams

First Team

1. Shai Gilgeous-Alexander (Thunder)
2. Nikola Jokic (Nuggets)
3. Giannis Antetokounmpo (Bucks)
4. Jayson Tatum (Celtics)
5. LeBron James (Lakers)

Second Team

1. Donovan Mitchell (Cavaliers)
2. Evan Mobley (Cavaliers)
3. Karl-Anthony Towns (Knicks)
4. Anthony Edwards (Timberwolves)
5. Stephen Curry (Warriors)

Third Team

1. Jalen Williams (Thunder)
2. Jalen Brunson (Knicks)
3. Tyrese Haliburton (Pacers)
4. Jaren Jackson Jr. (Grizzlies)
5. Cade Cunningham (Pistons)

It was very tough to leave Alperen Sengun off this list, he was my 16th guy, and while I don't buy into the "this team needs a representative" crap, not having a Rocket felt like an oversight. Along the same lines, I felt terrible not having Ivica Zubac or James Harden on the list after a quality season for a team that exceeded expectations. It was the opposite problem with Devin Booker and Kevin Durant — they put up great numbers, but with the way the Suns played all season, the way the team let go of the rope at the end, how do you reward them with a spot on the top 15?

NBA Defensive Player of the Year

1. Evan Mobley (Cavaliers)
2. Luguentz Dort (Thunder)
3. Draymond Green (Warriors)

This was brutal — Victor Wembanyama was running away with this award before the deep vein thrombosis in his shoulder ended his season and kept him shy of the 65-game, league-mandated cutoff. (Wembanyama played in 46 games but still finished with 176 total blocked shots, the most in the league, 28 more than the Bucks' Brook Lopez, who was second.)

Everyone remaining had a case was flawed. For my money, Mobley was the most valuable defender for his team because he both defended guys on the perimeter and did it consistently all season long (which is why I had him in front of Green).

Dort was the best perimeter defender I saw this season, with all due respect to Dyson Daniels. Dort just gets in guys' heads.

NBA All-Defensive Teams

First Team

1. Evan Mobley (Cavaliers)
2. Draymond Green (Warriors)
3. Luguentz Dort (Thunder)
4. Dyson Daniels (Hawks)
5. Amen Thompson (Rockets)

Second Team

1. Ivica Zubac (Clippers)
2. Jalen Williams (Thunder)
3. Jaren Jackson Jr. (Grizzlies)
4. OG Anunoby (Knicks)
5. Rudy Gobert (Timberwolves)

I could have filled a third team with deserving guys, including Jaden McDaniels (Timberwolves) and Bam Adebayo (Heat), who just feel like snubs here.

NBA Coach of the Year

1. Kenny Atkinson (Cavaliers)
2. J.B. Bickerstaff (Pistons)
3. Ime Udoka (Rockets)

Leaving Tyronn Lue (Clippers) and Jamahl Mosley (Magic) off this list hurts, let alone deserving guys like Joe Mazzulla (Celtics) and Mark Daigneault (Thunder). It was a deep class, but Atkinson gets the credit for taking the same players the Cavaliers had for a few years and getting more out of them with an improved offense.

NBA Sixth Man of the Year

1. Payton Pritchard (Celtics)
2. Malik Beasley (Pistons)
3. Ty Jerome (Cavaliers)

Pritchard is a 6'1" guard who does the things you expect from a smaller guard — like shoot 40.9% from 3 — but also things you don't expect, like being an elite offensive rebounder. I looked for a way to give this to Beasley, because he meant so much to Detroit, but this is Pritchard's year.

NBA Rookie of the Year

1. Stephon Castle (Spurs)
2. Jaylen Wells (Grizzlies)
3. Zaccharie Risacher (Hawks)

It was a down year for rookies, especially after Jared McCain was injured and out for the season before it even started.

NBA All-Rookie Teams

First Team

1. Stephon Castle (Spurs)
2. Jaylen Wells (Grizzlies)
3. Zaccharie Risacher (Hawks)
4. Zach Edey (Grizzlies)
5. Kel'el Ware (MIA)

Second Team

1. Matas Buzelis (Bulls)
2. Alex Sarr (Wizards)
3. Yves Missi (Pelicans)
4. Donovan Clingan (Trail Blazers)
5. Kyle Filipowski (Jazz)

NBA Most Improved Player

1. Dyson Daniels (Hawks)
2. Christian Braun (Nuggets)
3. Cade Cunningham (Pistons)

Let me be clear: My vote for Daniels to win this award had zero to do with the fact that Cunningham is a former No. 1 pick and this was expected of him. My guideline for this award is "which player do I think improved the most year-over-year?" That's it. If Jokic improved the most this season over last, give him the award. Cunningham had a big year and made an All-NBA leap, but Daniels saw the bigger improvement. As did Christian Braun, flying under the radar

NBA Clutch Player of the Year

1. Jalen Brunson (Knicks)
2. Nikola Jokic (Nuggets)
3. Anthony Edwards (Timberwolves)

Steph hilariously had ‘nice' request for Draymond after 3-point miss

Steph hilariously had ‘nice' request for Draymond after 3-point miss originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

“You’re not that guy, pal.”

For the record, that’s not what Steph Curry told Draymond Green in the final minutes of the Warriors’ 121-116 NBA Play-In Tournament win over the Memphis Grizzlies on Tuesday at Chase Center, but it’s somewhat close to the general message Golden State’s superstar had for his longtime teammate in one particular moment.

What Curry told Green after the veteran forward missed a corner 3-pointer with 2:48 remaining in the fourth quarter was much nicer and more respectful, and Green understood and appreciated his teammate’s plea.

Green spoke to reporters after the game and was asked how special it was to see Curry ignite the Warriors’ offense down the stretch by scoring the team’s final 10 points of the game, and revealed what his sharpshooting teammate told him after his 3-point miss.

“It was even more special for me to see, because when I shot that three in the corner, he very nicely told me it wasn’t time for me to shoot,” Green told reporters. “He came over to me saying ‘Hey man, we’ve got to get into [a certain action we call that we like to run]’ and I was like ‘All right, no problem.’ Like, that was a very nice way of telling me, ‘don’t shoot right now.’ No problem, I got him the ball the next play and he hits a three.”

Curry, as Green mentioned, buried a clutch 3-pointer approximately one minute later in the game that gave the Warriors a 114-109 lead with 1:50 remaining.

All’s well that ends well.

While Green might not have been “that guy” that Curry and the Warriors wanted shooting 3-pointers at that specific moment, he certainly is more than capable of hitting a clutch shot, or two, or three, when the team needs them most.

However, sometimes it’s best to let Curry take over and do what he does best. And Green would agree.

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Warriors seeing clear road to success only the start for playoff run

Warriors seeing clear road to success only the start for playoff run originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

SAN FRANCISCO – The Warriors can exhale. For a full day, maybe two, having dispatched the Memphis Grizzlies on Tuesday. And then, on Sunday evening, they will step onto the court in Houston and try to win a first-round playoff series against the Rockets.

The same Rockets that 10 days ago blasted the Warriors off the Chase Center floor. That outshot them, outrebounded them, forced 20 turnovers, punished them in the paint, plastered them with 26 fast-break points and wrestled Stephen Curry into three points on 1-of-10 shooting from the field.

Yet there is a serenity and confidence about the No. 7 seed Warriors. They believe they know the way to success against the second-seeded Rockets.

Much of that confidence comes from their collective faith in coach Steve Kerr and his staff. While the players are at ease Wednesday, the coaches will pore over video, craft a game plan and deliver it to them on Thursday.

One thing coaches and players know for certain: They must take care of the ball.

“We have to win the possession game against Houston for sure,” Kerr told NBC Sports Bay Area Tuesday night after the play-in tournament win over Memphis. “And then they’re going to come after us with everything defensively. They’re going to play two bigs, with (Steven) Adams and (Alperen) Sengun.

“We like our chances. We’ve got counters for everything.”

This is why veterans like Draymond Green and Curry are bristling with kinetic energy. They’re like boxers freed from the arduous tedium of the gym – the regular season – and finally making their way to the place they want to be. The championship ring.

“I was just telling the guys the only thing I was thinking about earlier today was just I want the opportunity to go through that first film session that we go through, just our every series,” Green said. “It’s like no other. And I’ve been looking forward to that. It’s just a different level of preparation that you just … it’s impossible to get in the NBA. There’s just way too many games.

“But you get to the playoff series, and the level of preparation is so different. So, I’m looking forward to not tomorrow but the following day. He can have tomorrow. But that preparation, getting ready for a team that you know you got to see possibly seven times in a row, is so fun. It’s like no other.”

That 106-96 loss to Houston on April 6 was, the Warriors tell themselves, fool’s gold for the Rockets. As if a convincing win means nothing. Golden State’s veterans know regular-season results are irrelevant once the postseason begins.

It’s a completely different game, requiring a sharpened mentality and a profoundly advanced level of focus.

“The beauty of these (playoff) games is that every possession counts,” Kerr told NBC Sports Bay Area. “And you know what? If you try to coach like this all year, it’s hard to implement everything during an 82-game season. If you approach every 48-minute game trying to hammer home how important everything is, you’ll just exhaust the guys after the quarter of the season. They won’t have anything left.

“What we’re really trying to do is build habits during the season. Then, if the habits are good, come playoff time you can commit and focus for 48 straight minutes and play a game where every possession matters.”

This is a familiar script to Golden State veterans. Curry has participated in 147 postseason games, Green in 157 and Kevon Looney in 77. Jimmy Butler III had appeared in 119 games, but his first as a Warrior comes Sunday. Kerr has played in 128 postseason games, coached another 140 in his first 10 seasons with the Warriors.

The playoffs are, for these folks, their comfort zone. A psychological living room.

“It is just attention to detail,” Curry said late Tuesday night. “You just flip the book on Houston and their patterns. You want to truly understand, a ‘know them better than they know themselves’ kind of vibe. Just be as prepared as possible. It’s fun because you have everybody locked in.

“What we enjoy about playoff series is it’s just one opponent, and it’s a chess match from before the first game and in between every game, just trying to find the subtle changes or game plan or discipline that can help just win four games.”

The Warriors, players and coaches, seem to believe the key to winning this series lies in ball security because that inhibits Houston’s transition game, which was fueled by turnovers 10 days ago. The analytics show the Rockets’ offense is much tamer when playing against set defense.

Knowing how to contain an opponent is one thing. That’ll be in the game plan. It’s the execute that’s more difficult and will dictate the difference between success and failure.

No question, though, the Warriors have more postseason soldiers than the Rockets.

“This is what we do,” Kerr said at the postgame podium. “I mean, this is so fun. This is the best time of the year. You know, this is Year 11. My favorite – maybe my favorite – day of the season is (Wednesday). We come in as a staff, we look at Houston tape. We start to put together our game plan. The players are resting. We’ve got a couple of days before we’ll see the players again.

“We get to go to work and try to beat a great team in a seven-game series. There’s nothing better. So, I can’t wait.”

The players can wait, particularly super vets Curry, Butler and Green. Mostly to treat their aches and catch their breath before beginning what they hope will be a trek that takes them into June.

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