Khani Rooths scored 20 points to lead No. 11 Louisville to a 104-45 rout of South Carolina State in the season opener for both teams on Monday night. Rooths, a sophomore and one of the few returning players for the Cardinals in coach Pat Kelsey's second season, posted a career-high in points on 8-of-12 shooting and tied his personal best with seven rebounds. Isaac McKneely, a senior guard who transferred from Virginia, scored a dozen of his 17 points in the first half.
Freshman Darryn Peterson impresses with 21 points in 22 minutes in win for No. 19 Kansas
Kansas freshman Darryn Peterson made his presence felt in an abbreviated stint against Green Bay in the teams' season opener. Peterson, a potential No. 1 pick in next summer's NBA draft, scored 21 points in 22 minutes in his debut for the No. 19 Jayhawks in a 94-51 win over Green Bay on Monday night. “That was literally the easiest 21 points in 21 minutes of action,” Green Bay coach Doug Gottlieb said.
Knicks' Karl-Anthony Towns steps up with 'monster' performance in win over Wizards
Karl-Anthony Towns had his strongest performance of the season in Monday's 119-102 win over the Washington Wizards, dropping 33 points with 13 rebounds and five assists over 30 minutes of action.
It's the first time Towns has scored 30-plus points in a game this year and under new head coach Mike Brown, who called the big man a "monster" that's only going to improve as the season continues.
"KAT was a monster," Brown said after the win. "He was a monster on the glass, he was really good defensively. He was a monster inside, outside. He's starting to feel and find his rhythm in what we're trying to do.
"But I'm telling you, there's still a lot of room there to grow. Not just for him, but for us to learn him, starting with me, and us to continue to learning the different parts of we're trying to do offensively. He was a monster."
Matched up against 2024 No. 2 overall pick Alex Sarr, Towns went right to work in the first quarter. He scored or assisted on the Knicks' first 13 points of the game (eight points, two assists) and grabbed six rebounds (four offensive), finishing the first half with 15 points, 11 rebounds, and five assists.
After the game, Towns was asked about his mindset heading into the matchup and what contributed to the noticeable aggressiveness.
"Just win the game," Towns said. "Got us chances tonight to get some good shots up so I just went and capitalized on it."
He had a number of one-on-one matchups with Sarr while the Washington defense focused on guarding Jalen Brunson and knew it was a chance to help lead the team. Towns took eight more shots against the Wizards than he had in any game this season, despite playing the least amount of minutes so far.
"I saw opportunities to get some shots up and be aggressive and I just wanted to take advantage of the opportunity," Towns said. "JB requires a lot of attention obviously, so take what the defense gives us and thought tonight I saw that I had an opportunity to do something."
Towns previous season-high in scoring came in New York's second game of the season against the Boston Celtics when he had 26 points. He followed that performance up with two tough outings in losses to the Miami Heat and Milwaukee Bucks, scoring only 15 and eight points, respectively.
The Knicks have now won back-to-back games after dropping three straight. Towns, like Brown, acknowledged the team is still a work in progress and believes they will continue to improve in a new system.
"We are all figuring it out," Towns said. "Getting better every day, understanding what our roles are and what we got to do. It's good, we got two wins in a row but we're obviously still a work in progress."
Enforcer Debate: Senators Head Coach Travis Green Shows Some Love For His NHL Heavyweight
The Ottawa Senators get a little break from game action this week. Following their 4-3 overtime loss in Montreal on Saturday night, which ended a run of six games in ten days, the Senators won't face off again until this Thursday night in Boston against the Bruins.
The Senators went 4-1-1 in those six games, and on Monday, head coach Travis Green took a moment to give some credit to his fourth-line winger and enforcer, Kurtis MacDermid, a player who's been in and out of the lineup and hasn't gotten much media or fan love in the first month of the season.
Green was asked by TSN 1200's Gord Wilson about the play of Lars Eller, and the coach quickly spun the topic over to MacDermid. Green had obviously heard or read some of the media and fan critiques of having the enforcer in his lineup.
"I've liked that line with Eller, MacDermid and Zetterlund in different ways," Green said. "I know there's been a little talk about Dermi being in the lineup. We're 4-1-1 with McDermid in the lineup. And I don't know if there's been any talk about that.
"He brings an element that is hard to find, but he also understands that he might not play that much some nights."
Green pointed to the flexibility that brings, allowing him to give extra minutes to some of his top guys without anyone's nose being out of joint.
"We've scored two goals by being able to put Drake Batherson or someone else out with that line. They scored a big goal against Calgary and scored one in Montreal the other night."
When asked how MacDermid directly impacts the lineup, Green drove home the obvious point about toughness. At 6-foot-5, 233 pounds, the guy is a handful.
"People know who's tough in the league and who's not," Green said. "He's a great teammate, he's great in the locker room, and understands his role. And we've played some hard teams that are known for being tough as well."
That would include the Senators' season opener in Tampa Bay, where MacDermid lost the only bout he's been in so far. It was Kurtis on Curtis action, with rookie forward Curtis Douglas trying his hand against the veteran. Even for an established NHL heavyweight, the kid's reach at 6-foot-9 will make him tough for anyone to contend with. In his only other fight, Douglas held his own against Mathieu Oliver.
On Saturday night against the Canadiens, MacDermid played only 2:04 and took a costly penalty that led to a Montreal power play goal. Zach Bolduc had checked Jake Sanderson into the Canadiens' bench and then dropped and covered up when MacDermid arrived to take exception.
That's part of the challenge of employing a true NHL heavyweight: very few players are willing to add MacDermid to their dance card. Arber Xhekaj is one of those players, but when MacDermid openly challenged him on Saturday, Xhekaj declined.
I've been critical of MacDermid's ability to contribute outside of his toughness. When you think about it, every team that's ever rostered an enforcer had a more skilled player in the organization they could be using instead. But they sacrifice that to have a player who can serve and protect.
I will continue to maintain that there is a real benefit to having a true heavyweight in the lineup, whether it's MacDermid, Xhekaj, Douglas, Olivier or someone else. Having a guy on your bench who's capable of protecting teammates and mopping the ice with people – even if he never actually does that night – can not only improve opponents' behaviour, but it can also infuse confidence into your team.
And keep in mind, none of these tough guys are ever in the game at the expense of a highly valuable NHL player. No team runs so deep that their 12th forward is all that impactful.
Some people are bullish on the matter, strongly believing one-dimensional enforcers are a waste of a roster spot and a ridiculous, archaic concept.
But a lot of NHL head coaches, including Green, Martin St. Louis, and Jon Cooper, who's probably the best head coach in the game. still strongly believe in them. And they have a lot more knowledge, experience, and a lot more at stake than the Monday morning quarterbacks on social media.
More Sens Headlines at The Hockey News Ottawa:
Senators at Montreal: Former Canadiens Forward Says Ottawa 'Feels Like Home'
Senators Winger Nick Cousins And The NHL's Unofficial Frontier Justice System
Calgary vs Ottawa: Comparing First-Rounders Yakemchuk and Parekh
Tyler Kleven Interview: His Game, His Offseason, And Travis Green's Tough Love
What's Going On With Fabian Zetterlund's Lack of Production?
Senators Walk The Early Season Fine Line Between Disaster And Success
Grant-Foster has 15 to lead No. 21 Gonzaga over Texas Southern 98-43
Tyon Grant-Foster scored 15 points and Graham Ike added 13 points and 11 rebounds, as No. 21 Gonzaga opened the season with a 98-43 victory over Texas Southern 98-43 on Monday night. Braden Huff added 14 points on 6-for-8 shooting to help the Bulldogs win their 22nd consecutive regular-season opener and their 36th straight home opener. Jaylen Wysinger and Duane Posey scored eight points apiece to top the Tigers, who never led after going up 10-8 early on a three-point play by Cameron Patterson.
David Mirkovic has 19 points, 14 rebounds to lead No. 17 Illinois to a 113-55 win over Jackson State
David Mirkovic scored 19 points and grabbed 14 rebounds on Monday night as No. 17 Illinois opened the season with a 113-55 win over Jackson State. Mirkovic, a 6-foot-9 freshman forward from Montenegro, is one of four new international players on the Illinois roster this season. Ben Humrichous and Tomislav Ivisic each had 21 points, Keaton Wagler had 18, and Jake Davis had 13 for Illinois, which was the highest scoring team in the Big Ten last year.
K'Andre Miller Won't Make Return From Injury Against The Rangers
K’Andre Miller will not face his former team on Tuesday night when the Carolina Hurricanes play the New York Rangers.
Miller was placed on injured reserve on Oct. 31 for a lower-body injury he suffered in a game against the Vegas Golden Knights on Oct. 20.
His move to injured reserve is procedural by the Hurricanes to make room on the roster for Pyotr Kochetkov.
The 25-year-old defenseman has missed the team’s last five games, but Rod Brind'Amour does not envision Miller being out for much longer.
“I was kind of hopeful that he'd maybe make the trip and give it a go,” Brind'Amour said of Miller’s injury status. “I don't think that's going to happen, but I don't anticipate that one being too much longer.”
The Hurricanes and Rangers completed a sign-and-trade during the offseason that sent Miller to Carolina, as he signed an eight-year, $60 million contract.
Knicks overcome sluggish start, ride Karl Anthony Towns to emphatic 119-102 win over Wizards
The Knicks came off the NYC Marathon weekend looking a little sluggish on Monday night at Madison Square Garden. The veteran team was slow to react on defense and stagnant on offense, while the youthful Wizards pushed the pace and had the Knicks on their heels, taking a 30-22 lead at the end of the first quarter.
However, much like the NYC Marathon, an NBA game is a grind, and even though the Wizards gave the Knicks everything they could handle for half of the contest, the Knicks adjusted to the younger team’s length and athleticism. The Knicks came out of halftime and clamped down on the Wizards’ transition offense while swinging the ball beautifully to get repeated open looks from beyond the arc. The adjustments led to a 41-24 third-quarter advantage that helped fuel a 119-102 win.
On the night, five Knicks hit multiple three-point shots, led by Karl Anthony Towns, who went 3-of-8 from beyond the arc and led all scorers with 33 points to go along with 13 rebounds, five assists, and two steals. Six other Knicks finished in double figures, with OG Anunoby having 16 points, six rebounds, and five steals and Josh Hart chipping in 12 points, 10 rebounds, and five assists off the bench.
On the other side, Alex Sarr and Kyshawn George continued their breakout seasons for the Wizards in a losing effort. Sarr finished with 19 points, eight rebounds, seven assists, and two steals, while George had 15 points, five rebounds, three steals, and two assists. It wasn’t enough tonight, but it’s enough to give Wizards’ fans plenty of hope for the future.
This was a Karl-Anthony Towns statement game
The Knicks clearly wanted to attack through Towns tonight. The center hit a three off a pick-and-pop for the first points in the game, and the Knicks used him as the hub of the offense in the perimeter pick-and-roll game right from the start. He finished the quarter with eight points and three assists while shooting 2-of-3 from deep, and it seemed like Towns would flourish on the perimeter for much of the game.
However, the team also felt comfortable having Towns try and bully second-year center Alex Sarr in the post. At one point in the second quarter, Towns aggressively backed Sarr down until he was under the basket and then emphatically dunked on the young Wizards center. That’s not a small feat since Sarr is 2nd in the NBA with 2.2 blocks per game and is 4th in contested shots.
Perhaps the added emphasis on Towns creating offense was a response to the big man's slow start to the season in Mike Brown’s offense. Towns came into the game averaging 18.3 points and 2.8 assists, while shooting 35.7% from three and 38% overall. All of those numbers would be essentially the worst marks he’s posted in any season of his career. A 2-for-12 performance three games ago against the Bucks seemed to be the nadir for Towns, and the big man has been slowly crawling back to his previous levels before having arguably his best game of the season tonight.
Getting Towns comfortable in the offense is crucial for the Knicks if they want to ultimately hoist a trophy at the end of the season. They don’t want to be as reliant on Jalen Brunson dominating the offense with the ball in his hands. They want to run a faster scheme that relies on hitting the extra pass and making the defense work. They have to get comfortable doing that while Towns also feels confident that he can get his looks in that type of scheme without having to force isolation post possessions, like he did against Kyle Kuzma in that Bucks game.
On Monday, Towns showed that he’s capable of taking his man off the dribble and capitalizing on a mismatch while also cutting off the ball, hitting spot-up threes, and working within the flow of the larger offense. Now, the Knicks just need to see him do it regularly.
Washington plays fast and loose, and it’s both fun and dangerous
The Wizards are the second youngest team in the NBA, with an average age of 23.78. Only the Brooklyn Nets have a younger roster. Given that, it’s no surprise that this team wants to play fast.
The Wizards came into Monday ranking 2nd in the NBA in pace. The Knicks, who have talked about wanting to play faster, ranked 28th. Early on, the Wizards’ pace and athleticism were a major problem for the Knicks. Washington was too quick and physical defensively when the Knicks tried to use the pick-and-roll to create offensive opportunities. The Wizards were also too athletic and long when the Knicks tried to thread the needle on passes through minuscule passing lanes.
When the Knicks would miss a shot or give the ball away, the Wizards were down the court on the other end in a hurry. In the first quarter, the Wizards had nine assists and were shooting nearly 75% from the field while taking a surprising eight-point lead. Of course, they also had seven turnovers and would ultimately finish the game with 20.
That’s a little bit of the gift and the curse of playing at the speed that the Wizards do, with the lack of experience that they have. There will be stretches of games where their young, physical defenders like George and Bilal Coulibaly frustrate their opponents and allow the offense to get plenty of easy buckets. There will also be stretches where the Wizards play a bit too out of control, throwing wild passes or losing control of the handle in traffic.
It makes for entertaining basketball, and the Wizards may very well iron out the kinks and become a really tough matchup in the second half of the season, but right now they're going through the growing pains.
The Knicks are finally leaning into the NBA’s three-point landscape
When the Knicks made a coaching change and moved on from Tom Thibodeau after making the Eastern Conference Finals last season, it was a clear message that his style of play was not one that the front office believed could win them a title. The change to new head coach Mike Brown has not only brought an increased focus on pace and ball movement but a vast uptick in three-point frequency.
Coming into Monday’s game, the Knicks were 3rd in the NBA with 44.3 three-point attempts per game and led the league in corner three-point attempts per game. That’s a stark change from last year, when the Knicks were 27th in the NBA at 34 attempts per game. Last year, they shot 36.9%, which was 9th-best in the league, and this year they are shooting 36.5%, which is 13th in the league.
However, the looks they are getting are better.
Entering Monday, the Knicks were getting the 4th most open threes per game at 18.8 per game. Open, according to NBA.com, is when there is not a defender within four to six feet. Last year, the Knicks had 15.3 open threes a game and just 14.5 wide-open threes per game, no defender within six feet, second-to-last in the league. This year’s Knicks team came into tonight getting 18.7 wide-open three-point shots per game. However, they were shooting just 36.6% on them, which was 21st in the league.
Things weren’t much different on Monday. In the first quarter, the Knicks took 26 shots, and 13 of them were from beyond the arc. They were just 3-for-13 in the first quarter and trailed 30-22. Midway through the third quarter, they were 9-for-26 from beyond the arc, and it seemed like it would be another rough shooting night from beyond the arc before the shots started to fall, and they wound up hitting 6-of-10 from deep in the quarter.
That quarter alone should be proof that this approach is an exciting one for the Knicks. The quality of shots the team is generating is significantly improved, and they're running a scheme that will allow them to score points in bunches without taxing their best players with slow-developing, dribble-heavy possessions. If those open looks start to fall consistently, as they did in the third quarter, the Knicks are going to be tough for anybody to beat.
Nets lose to Anthony Edwards-less Timberwolves, drop to 0-7
NEW YORK (AP) — Julius Randle had 19 points, 11 rebounds and 10 assists in his 15th career triple-double, and the Minnesota Timberwolves beat the winless Brooklyn Nets 125-109 on Monday night.
Donte DiVincenzo scored 25 points, Jaden McDaniels finished with 22 and Rudy Gobert added 15 points and 12 rebounds for the Timberwolves, who won their two straight.
Randle had his first triple-double with the Wolves.
Cam Thomas had 25 points and Nic Claxton chipped in 19 for the Nets, who fell to 0-7. The Nets opened the 2009-10 campaign with 18 straight losses while playing in New Jersey, two seasons before their move to Brooklyn.
Playing once again without All-Star guard Anthony Edwards (hamstring), Minnesota led by 12 points with 9:09 to play in the third quarter before the Nets answered with a 24-13 run.
Ziaire Williams hit a 3-pointer from the left wing and was fouled by Randle before his free throw put Brooklyn ahead 88-87 with 1:57 remaining.
The Timberwolves took advantage of four straight missed shots and two turnovers as Randle scored four points for a 91-88 advantage at the end of the period.
Minnesota then opened the fourth quarter with a 6-0 run while the Nets misfired on three consecutive shots to increase the lead to 97-88, and eventually put the game out of reach.
The Timberwolves shot 56 percent from the field and 41 percent from 3-point range while outrebounding Brooklyn 53-40.
Michael Porter Jr. didn’t play for the Nets because of personal reasons.
Up next
Timberwolves: Remain in New York and will play the Knicks on Wednesday.
Nets: Visit the Indiana Pacers on Wednesday.
Knicks use 41-point third quarter to run away from Wizards in 119-102 win
The Knicks beat the Washington Wizards 119-102 on Monday night at Madison Square Garden.
Here are some takeaways...
- Mitchell Robinson sat this one out on the second night of a back-to-back for load management. Mike Brown revealed pregame that the team is watching the big man’s minutes as he ramps up in the early going of the season -- Robinson hasn't played 20+ minutes in either of his appearances thus far.
With Robinson sidelined, Landry Shamet jumped back into the lineup making his second start of the season.
- Karl-Anthony Towns picked up where he left off last year when he dominated the matchup with Washington's Alex Sarr. Towns scored or assisted on each of New York's first 13 points of the game (eight points, two assists) and he reeled in a whopping six rebounds (four offensive) halfway through the opening frame.
- Outside of Towns, though, New York struggled offensively in the first quarter. They shot just 32 percent from the field and turned the ball over five different times, while Washington got out to a terrific start to help them hold a seven-point advantage after the first 12 minutes.
- The Knicks' second unit was able to get them going early in the second with Towns continuing to lead the way on both ends of the court. The big man picked up two more quick buckets, one of which surpassed 15,000 points in his career and the other a monstrous posterization of Sarr to even things at 40.
Towns left with trainers midway through the second with his hand bleeding, but he quickly returned.
- New York used a 10-2 run late in the half to open their largest lead of the game at the time (nine), but Washington refused to go away and answered back with 13 straight points of their own. Towns would drill a buzzer-beater three and a free throw to help the Knicks carry a three-point lead into the break (57-54).
Towns finished an outstanding half with 15 points, 11 rebounds, and five assists.
- The third quarter started much like the first. Both teams put forward some sloppy play on both ends of the court, but this time around the Knicks were able to quickly right the ship, and they used a 17-0 run to open a commanding advantage over the young Wizards that they never looked back from. New York finished a tremendous quarter with 41 points on 15-of-22 shooting.
- Their scoring was much more balanced as well, as Jalen Brunson got going in the frame to finish with 16 points and nine assists, Shamet knocked down some big buckets for eight points, Josh Hart had a double-double (12 points, 10 rebounds), and Jordan Clarkson provided another big spark with 15 points off the bench.
Towns finished his dominant night with his sixth double-double through seven games. The big man led all scorers with 33 points, reeled in 13 rebounds, and dished out five assists. Anunoby chipped in 16 points as well, pulled down six rebounds, and swiped five steals as he put together another strong effort on both ends.
- New York is now a perfect 4-0 at Madison Square Garden so far this season.
Game MVP: Karl-Anthony Towns
The big man dominated his matchup all night long, and made a little history in the process.
Highlights
Early KAT buckets 🔥 pic.twitter.com/GVfaxKFaEZ
— Knicks Videos (@sny_knicks) November 4, 2025
Jalen Brunson with the NASTY move for two 💪 pic.twitter.com/clxz7rHEf6
— Knicks Videos (@sny_knicks) November 4, 2025
Beautiful basketball leads to an OG slam 👏 pic.twitter.com/pENNBxiMcB
— Knicks Videos (@sny_knicks) November 4, 2025
KAT WITH A THREE AND THE FOUL TO END THE FIRST HALF pic.twitter.com/J1WfysBfgI
— Knicks Videos (@sny_knicks) November 4, 2025
More instant offense from Jordan Clarkson! pic.twitter.com/G9RJoWdoZy
— Knicks Videos (@sny_knicks) November 4, 2025
What's next
The Knicks host old friend Julius Randle and the Minnesota Timberwolves on Wednesday at 7:30 p.m.
Penguins' Goaltender Hits Big Milestone
Another Pittsburgh Penguin has hit a career milestone.
In Monday's game against the Toronto Maple Leafs, goaltender Tristan Jarry suited up for his 300th career NHL game. He is third goaltender in team history to hit the 300-game mark, with the others being Tom Barrasso and Marc-Andre Fleury.
Accoring to Penguins PR, Jarry's 157 wins are the most in franchise history by a Penguins' goaltender through 300 games.
Tristan Jarry is the third goaltender in @penguins history to reach 300 games with the team.
— Penguins PR (@PenguinsPR) November 4, 2025
Jarry's 157 wins entering tonight are the most by a Pittsburgh goaltender through 300 games in franchise history. https://t.co/nktpMDTfQZ
Jarry is in the third season of a five-year contract. The 30-year-old netminder is off to a sizzling start this season, as he was 5-1 with a .923 save percentage and a 2.35 goals-against average going into Monday's game.
In his 10-season NHL career with the Penguins, Jarry has a .910 save percentage and a 2.77 goals-against average. Jarry sits third on the Penguins' all-time win list for goaltenders.
Bookmark THN - Pittsburgh Penguins on your Google News tab to follow the latest Penguins news, roster moves, player features, and more!
Former Canadiens Defender Traded To New Team
Former Montreal Canadiens defenseman Corey Schueneman is on the move.
The St. Louis Blues have announced that they have traded Schueneman to the Washington Capitals in exchange for defenseman Calle Rosen.
Schueneman kicked off his NHL career with the Canadiens, as he made his NHL debut with them in 2021-22. In 31 games over two seasons as a member of the Canadiens, Schueneman posted two goals, five assists, seven points, 52 blocks, and a minus-4 rating.
Schueneman primarily played with the Canadiens' American Hockey League (AHL) affiliate, the Laval Rocket, during his time with the organization. In 130 games with Laval from 2020-21 to 2022-23, Schueneman recorded 13 goals, 33 assists, 46 points, and a plus-16 rating.
Scheuneman's time with the Canadiens ended when he signed a one-year contract with the Colorado Avalanche during the 2023 NHL off-season.
In nine games this season with the Blues' AHL affiliate, the Springfield Thunderbirds, Schueneman posted one goal and five assists. He will now look to make an impact with the Hershey Bears after being acquired by the Capitals.
Pace, unconventional up-tempo halfcourt offense have made Miami must watch
LOS ANGELES — It has been shocking — and wildly entertaining — to watch the Miami Heat this season.
For as long as anyone can remember, the Heat have been methodical. Last season, Miami ranked 27th in the league in pace, with just 16.5% of its possessions starting in transition (25th in the NBA). The season before that (2023-24), the Heat were 29th in pace with just 16.2% of their possessions starting in transition. It's been that way throughout Erik Spoelstra's first 17 seasons in Miami — slow, grind it out, old-school Eastern Conference basketball. In each of the last six seasons, Miami has been in the bottom four in the league in pace, and Spoelstra's teams have never finished in the top half of the league in pace — including the explosive LeBron James championship teams.
Which is why this season has been a shock.
Look how fast the Heat get out and run off the make.... pic.twitter.com/DUWnz2VKeD
— Heat Central (@HeatCulture13) October 28, 2025
Miami leads the league in pace — and it's not close. The Heat are pushing the ball in transition every chance they get — 23.9% of their possessions start in transition — but that is just the tip of the iceberg. Their halfcourt offense is just as relentless with its ball and player movement. There are no stars pounding the ball and getting picks set for them — Miami has run pick-and-roll on 7.8% of its offensive possessions this season, less than half of the next-lowest team. It's a blur of motion, drives, kicks, and everyone getting a touch and a shot.
It's working — and with essentially the same roster Miami had last season.
"We're just trying to build something that makes sense for this roster…" Spoelstra said. "Where our pace ultimately lands, we'll find out."
Pace in half court
When we think of a team playing fast, we think of transition basketball. We think Showtime or the "seven seconds or less" Suns. The Heat certainly do run — as noted above, they lead the league in transition opportunities. Third-year forward Jaime Jaquez Jr. is thriving in transition, averaging 18.7 points a game off the bench.
"I think that's part of my role in this team, coming off as that sixth man," Jaquez said. "It's to infuse life and energy, give the team a spark, whatever they need, or be the gas that we throw in the fire. I take that role very seriously."
However, where things are really diffrerent for the Heat is in the half court.
Pace is not just about running, it's about making quick decisions and pressuring the defense, and that's exactly what the Heat are doing with their halfcourt offense— and doing it in a system like nobody else runs. This summer, the Heat brought in Noah LaRoche as a consultant, the guy who introduced the "wheel" style offense that Memphis ran for parts of last season (the one Ja Morant did not like). It's a system widespread in European leagues. Put simply, there are rarely picks (again, 7.8% of possessions), instead, players attack one-on-one, try to get by their man into the paint, and the other players rotate behind him to keep the spacing and open up passing lanes. It's drive-and-kick, drive-and-kick until there is a good shot.
.@Bam1of1 and @npowell2404 break down the Heat offense with the #NBAonPrime crew pic.twitter.com/yFPFdDgzu5
— NBA on Prime (@NBAonPrime) November 1, 2025
"They play super fast," Lakers coach J.J. Redick said of facing Miami's offense. "And then that sort of swing, swing, drive over and over again until they get the advantage. Still can't allow the ball to go middle, but Memphis last year felt really reliant on the middle drive. This team doesn't. They do a great job of just attacking and that low man, whoever just cut sits there, and he kind of just reads where he's supposed to go."
It's working, the Heat are 10th in the league in offensive rating. It's not for everybody — for example, the Lakers, with Luka Doncic and Austin Reaves, should stick with the pick-and-roll where their stars thrive. And we're likely we see more pick-and-rolls in Miami once Tyler Herro returns from injury, but the Heat aren't going all the way back to the old days either.
Defending at pace is the challenge
Against the Lakers on Sunday, the Heat had an offensive rating of 114.3, which is a couple of points below their average but not bad. However, they had a defensive rating of 121.5 (for comparison, that would be the third worst in the NBA this season).
After the loss, that's what frustrated Spoelstra and the team.
"That's our identity. That's what this franchise has really hung their hat on, defense," Bam Adebayo said. "So even though our offense has changed and we're scoring in the 120s, we still got to defend."
That game was also a one-off — Miami has the third-best defensive rating in the league this season. They are pressuring full court, trying to speed teams up, and it's working. It just didn't work Sunday night.
However, that defense and that pace have made the Heat the most interesting team in the NBA this season.
2025 MLB Awards: Finalists, schedule, how it works, past winners
MLB teams are already shifting their attention to how they can improve going into 2026, but before we look ahead, it's time to celebrate some of the amazing seasons we just witnessed. Individual hardware is about to be handed out in the National and American Leagues in recognition of accomplishments during the 2025 MLB regular season.
The American League features an intriguing MVP showdown pitting Cal Raleigh's historic season against Aaron Judge's continued brilliance. In the National League, Shohei Ohtani remains the obvious favorite, but can anyone challenge him? Will Paul Skenes be a unanimous Cy Young Award winner, and can Tarik Skubal repeat? Nick Kurtz is likely a runaway winner for AL Rookie of the Year, but things are tighter in the National League, with Cubs right-hander Cade Horton and Braves catcher Blake Baldwin in the mix.
Below you’ll find everything you need to know about the Most Valuable Player Award, the Cy Young Award, the Rookie of the Year Award, and the Manager of the Year Award.
Don’t forget: Check out the Rotoworld player news feed for all the latest news, rumors, and transactions as MLB’s Hot Stove gets underway!
▶ What is the MLB Awards schedule?
The announcements of the winners for the National League and American League breaks down as follows:
- Monday, November 10: Jackie Robinson Rookie of the Year Awards
- Tuesday, November 11: Manager of the Year Awards
- Wednesday, November 12: Cy Young Awards
- Thursday, November 13: MVP Awards
▶ Who are the finalists for the 2025 MLB Awards?
AL MVP Award finalists
Aaron Judge (Yankees), Cal Raleigh (Mariners), José Ramírez (Guardians)
NL MVP Award finalists
Shohei Ohtani (Dodgers), Kyle Schwarber (Phillies), Juan Soto (Mets)
AL Cy Young Award finalists
Tarik Skubal (Tigers), Hunter Brown (Astros), Garrett Crochet (Red Sox)
NL Cy Young Award finalists
Cristopher Sánchez (Phillies), Paul Skenes (Pirates), Yoshinobu Yamamoto (Dodgers)
AL Rookie of the Year finalists
Nick Kurtz (Athletics), Roman Anthony (Red Sox), Jacob Wilson (Athletics)
NL Rookie of the Year finalists
Drake Baldwin (Braves), Cade Horton (Cubs), Caleb Durbin (Brewers)
AL Manager of the Year finalists
Dan Wilson (Mariners), John Schneider (Blue Jays), Stephen Vogt (Guardians)
NL Manager of the Year finalists
Pat Murphy (Brewers), Terry Francona (Reds), Rob Thomson (Phillies)
▶ Who votes for the MLB Awards?
The awards are voted on exclusively by Baseball Writers’ Association of America (BBWAA) members. The BBWAA consists of writers who cover MLB in a variety of capacities, ranging from national to local beat writers.
▶ Where can I watch the MLB Awards announcements?
All of the award announcements will be broadcast next week on MLB Network at 6 p.m. ET.
After the announcements are made, full results (including those who opted to make their ballots public) can be found at BBWAA.com.
▶ Who are the past MLB Award winners?
National League MVP
2024 - Shohei Ohtani, DH, Dodgers
2023 - Ronald Acuña Jr., OF, Braves
2022 - Paul Goldschmidt 1B, Cardinals
2021 - Bryce Harper OF, Phillies
2020 - Freddie Freeman 1B, Braves
2019 - Cody Bellinger OF, Dodgers
American League MVP
2024 - Aaron Judge OF, Yankees
2023 - Shohei Ohtani DH/SP, Angels
2022 - Aaron Judge OF, Yankees
2021 - Shohei Ohtani DH/SP, Angels
2020 - José Abreu 1B, White Sox
2019 - Mike Trout OF, Angels
National League Cy Young Award
2024 - Chris Sale SP, Braves
2023 - Blake Snell SP, Padres
2022 - Sandy Alcantara SP, Marlins
2021 - Corbin Burnes SP, Brewers
2020 - Trevor Bauer SP, Reds
2019 - Jacob deGrom SP, Mets
American League Cy Young Award
2024 - Tarik Skubal SP, Tigers
2023 - Gerrit Cole SP, Yankees
2022 - Justin Verlander SP, Astros
2021 - Robbie Ray SP, Blue Jays
2020 - Shane Bieber SP, Cleveland
2019 - Justin Verlander SP, Astros
National League Rookie of the Year
2024 - Paul Skenes SP, Pirates
2023 - Corbin Carroll OF, Diamondbacks
2022 - Michael Harris II OF, Braves
2021 - Jonathan India 2B, Reds
2020 - Devin Williams RP, Brewers
2019 - Pete Alonso 1B, Mets
American League Rookie of the Year
2024 - Luis Gíl SP, Yankees
2023 - Gunnar Henderson INF, Orioles
2022 - Julio Rodriguez OF, Mariners
2021 - Randy Arozarena OF, Rays
2020 - Kyle Lewis OF, Mariners
2019 - Yordan Alvarez OF, Astros
National League Manager of the Year
2024 - Pat Murphy, Brewers
2023 - Skip Schumaker, Marlins
2022 - Buck Showalter, Mets
2021 - Gabe Kapler, Giants
2020 - Don Mattingly, Marlins
2019 - Mike Shildt, Cardinals
American League Manager of the Year
2024 - Stephen Vogt, Guardians
2023 - Brandon Hyde, Orioles
2022 - Terry Francona, Cleveland
2021 - Kevin Cash, Rays
2020 - Kevin Cash, Rays
2019 - Rocco Baldelli, Twins
Dodgers celebrate repeat World Series title with another downtown parade, stadium rally
The celebration had hardly begun, when Shohei Ohtani first voiced the theme of the day.
“I’m already thinking about the third time,” he said in Japanese, standing atop a double-decker bus in downtown Los Angeles with thousands of blue-clad, flag-waving, championship-celebrating Dodgers fans lining the streets around him for the team’s 2025 World Series parade.
Turns out, he wasn’t alone.
Two days removed from a dramatic Game 7 victory that made the Dodgers baseball’s first repeat champion in 25 years, the team rolled through the streets of downtown and into a sold-out rally at Dodger Stadium on Monday already thinking about what lies ahead in 2026.
With three titles in the last six seasons, their modern-day dynasty might now be cemented.
Read more:Photos: World Series champion Dodgers parade through Downtown L.A.
But their goal of adding to this “golden era of Dodger baseball,” as top executive Andrew Friedman has repeatedly called it, is far from over.
“All I have to say to you,” owner and chairman Mark Walter told the 52,703 fans at the team’s stadium rally, “is we’ll be back next year.”
“I have a crazy idea for you,” Friedman echoed. “How about we do it again?”
When manager Dave Roberts took the mic, he tripled down on that objective: “What’s better than two? Three! Three-peat! Three-peat! Let’s go.”
When shortstop Mookie Betts, the only active player with four World Series rings, followed him, he quadrupled the expectation: “I got four. Now it’s time to fill the hand all the way up, baby. ‘Three-peat’ ain’t never sounded so sweet. Somebody make that a T-shirt.”
For these history-achieving, legacy-sealing Dodgers, Monday was a reminder of the ultimate end goal — the kind of scene that, as they embark on another short winter, will soon fuel their motivations for another confetti-filled parade this time next year.
“For me, winning a championship, the seminal moment of that is the parade,” Friedman said. “The jubilation of doing it, when you get the final out, whatever game you win it in, is special. That night is special. But to be able to take a breath and then experience a parade, in my mind, that is what has always driven me to want to win.”
“[To] do this for the city, that’s what it’s all about,” first baseman Freddie Freeman added. “There’s nothing that feels as important as winning a championship. And if so happens to be three in a row, that’s what it is. But that’s what’s gonna drive us to keep going.”
Last November, the Dodgers’ first parade in 36 years was a novelty.
Much of the group had been part of the 2020 title team that was denied such a serenade following that pandemic-altered campaign. They had waited four long years to experience a city-wide celebration. The reception they received was sentimental and unique.
Now, as third baseman Max Muncy said with a devious grin from atop a makeshift stage in the Dodger Stadium outfield, “it’s starting to get a little bit comfortable up here. Let’s keep it going.”
“Losing,” star pitcher and World Series MVP Yoshinobu Yamamoto added, in English, in a callback to one of his memorable quotes from this past October, “isn’t an option.”
Doing it won’t be easy.
This year, the Dodgers’ win total went down to 93 in an inconsistent regular season. They had to play in the wild-card round for the first time since the playoffs expanded in 2022. And in the World Series, they faced elimination in Games 6 and 7, narrowly winning both to complete their quest to repeat.
“I borderline still can’t believe we won Game 7,” fan favorite Kiké Hernández said in a bus-top interview.
But, he quickly added, “We’re all winners. Winners win.”
Thus, they also get celebrations like Monday’s.
As it was 367 days earlier, the Dodgers winded down a parade route in front of tens of thousands of fans from Temple Street to Grand Avenue to 7th Street to Figueroa. Both on board the double-decker buses and in the frenzied masses below, elation swirled and beverages flowed.
Once the team arrived at Dodger Stadium, it climbed atop a blue circular riser in the middle of the field — the final symbolic steps of their ascent back to the mountaintop of the sport.
Anthony Anderson introduced them to the crowd, while Ice Cube delivered the trophy in a blue 1957 Chevy Bel Air.
Familiar scenes, they are hoping become an annual tradition.
“Job in 2024, done. Job in 2025, done,” Freeman said. “Job in 2026? Starts now.”
The Dodgers did take time to recognize their newfound place in baseball history, having become just the sixth MLB franchise to win three titles in the span of six years and the first since the New York Yankees of 1998 to 2000 to win in consecutive years.
Where last year’s parade day felt more like an overdue coronation, this one served to crystallize their legacy.
“Everybody’s been asking questions about a dynasty,” Hernández said. “How about three in six years? How about a back-to-back?”
And, on Monday, all the main characters of this storybook accomplishment got their moment in the sun.
There was, as team broadcaster and rally emcee Joe Davis described him, “the Hall of Fame-bound” Roberts, who now only trails Walter Alston in team history with three World Series rings.
“We talked about last year, wanting to run it back,” he said. “And I’ll tell you right now, this group of guys was never gonna be denied to bring this city another championship.”
There was Game 7 hero Miguel Rojas calling up surprise October closer Roki Sasaki, on his birthday, to dance to his “Bailalo Rocky” entrance song; a request Sasaki sheepishly obliged by pumping his fist to the beat.
Yamamoto, coming off his heroic pitching victories in Games 6 and 7, received some of the day’s loudest ovations.
“We did it together,” he said. “I love the Dodgers. I love Los Angeles.”
Muncy, Ohtani and Blake Snell also all addressed the crowd.
“I’m trying to get used to this,” Snell said.
“I’m ready to get another ring next year,” Ohtani reiterated.
One franchise face who won’t be back for that chase: Clayton Kershaw, who rode into the sunset of retirement by getting one last day at Dodger Stadium, fighting back tears as he thanked the crowd at the end of his illustrious (and also Hall of Fame-bound) 18-year career.
“Last year, I said I was a Dodger for life. And today, that’s true,” Kershaw said. “And today, I get to say that I’m a champion for life. And that’s never going away.”
Kershaw, of course, is one of the few still around from the club’s dark days of the early 2010s, when money was scarce and playoff appearances were uncertain and parades were only things to dream about — not expect.
As he walks away, however, the team has been totally transformed.
Now, the Dodgers have been to 13 straight postseasons. They’ve set payroll records and bolstered their roster with a wave of star signings. They’ve turned the pursuit of championships into a yearly expectation, proud but unsatisfied with what they’ve achieved to this point.
“I think, definitionally, it’s a dynasty,” said Friedman, the architect of this run with the help of Walter’s deep-pocketed Guggenheim ownership group. “But that to me, in a lot of ways, that kind of caps it if you say, ‘OK, this is what it is.’ For me, it’s still evolving and growing. We want to add to it. We want to continue it, and do everything we can to put it at a level where people after us have a hard time reaching.”
Read more:Complete coverage: How the Dodgers won the 2025 World Series
On Monday, they raised that bar another notch higher.
“This parade was the most insane thing I’ve ever witnessed, been a part of,” Kershaw said. “It truly is the most incredible day ever to be able to end your career on.”
On Tuesday, the Dodgers’ long road toward holding another one begins.
“I know they’re gonna get one more next year,” Kershaw told the crowd. “And I’m gonna watch, just like all of you.”
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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.