Nine of those assists came in the 16 minutes he played in the first half.
His final total could have been much higher, but he only needed to play four minutes in the second half.
Sunday marked the third time this postseason that Towns has reached double digits in assists.
In the regular season, he did it just once.
It is part of a dramatic change the Knicks made ahead of Game 4 of the first round, operating their offense through Towns at the elbow and allowing him to facilitate with the four others on the court cutting and setting screens around him.
That change has unlocked the best version of the Knicks.
Karl-Anthony Towns looks to pass during the Knicks’ May 10 playoff game. Jason Szenes for the NY Post
“Shout out to our team,” Towns said. “We found a way to, in a way, stabilize our season and do what was needed to adjust to Atlanta. And [we] found ourselves in a better position. It’s a shout-out to the coaching staff for realizing adjustments that needed to be made and also [a] shout-out to me personally that they trusted me.”
He is still considered day to day, and the Knicks have been optimistic that he won’t miss much time.
Imaging revealed that it is a “very minor” strain, The Post’s Stefan Bondy previously reported.
But with a 3-0 series lead, the Knicks didn’t feel the need to rush him back Sunday.
Now, he has another week of rest before playing again.
Miles McBride, for the second straight game, started in Anunoby’s place and erupted for 25 points.
Knicks fans regularly jeered Joel Embiid with “F–k Embiid” chants throughout the series.
He spoke about that experience — and having his son hear those chants — after Game 4.
“We go on the road, they’re chanting,” Embiid said. “I hate that he hears that, but he has to understand that that’s the way the world is, and you’ve just got to live and understand that there’s going to be negativity, there’s going to be positivity, but you’ve got to go through it, and it’s OK.”
CHICAGO, IL - MAY 12: Utah Jazz win the 5th overall pick during the 2025 Draft Lottery on May 12, 2025 at McCormick Place in Chicago, Illinois. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2025 NBAE(Photo by Melissa Tamez/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images
In what has a chance to be one of the most important nights in Jazz history, the Utah Jazz jumped in the NBA Lottery to the #2 spot for the upcoming NBA draft.
Here are the final results, which show all the movement.
Postition
Team
Lottery Movement
1
Washington Wizards
Stayed
2
Utah Jazz
Up 2
3
Memphis Grizzlies
Up 3
4
Chicago Bulls
Up 5
5
Los Angeles Clippers (From Indiana)
Indiana dropped 3 giving pick to Clippers
6
Brooklyn Nets
Down 3
7
Sacramento Kings
Down 2
8
Atlanta Hawks (From New Orleans Pelicans)
Down 1
9
Dallas Mavericks
Down 1
10
Milwaukee Bucks
Stayed
11
Golden State Warriors
Stayed
12
Oklahoma City Thunder (From LA Clippers)]
Stayed
13
Miami Heat
Stayed
14
Charlotte Hornets
Stayed
Aside from it being a massive night for the Wizards, Jazz, Grizzlies, and Bulls, it was a devastating night for a few teams, but no one more than the Indiana Pacers. The Pacers, in their trade for Ivica Zubac, had a stipulation on their pick that if the pick was top-4 they kept it. But if it fell below 4, they would give it to the Clippers which is exactly what happened. Now, the Clippers, who are without Zubac, find themselves with a #5 pick to build around.
For the Jazz this is a culmination of four years of rebuilding that ends with an extremely satisfying end. Utah will now have one of the tier-1 players from this draft: AJ Dybantsa or Darryn Peterson. The player Utah drafts will be one of their cornerstone pieces and will have the chance to not only play, but be a part of a team that will be competing for the playoffs this season.
The Utah Jazz now have a Sinister Six core: Darryn Peterson (If AJ Dybantsa goes #1), Keyonte George, Ace Bailey, Lauri Markkanen, Jaren Jackson Jr., and Walker Kessler (if he signs). It’s quite the core with a mix of youth and veterans in their prime. With this group, the Jazz will have a chance to be one of the top teams in the Western Conference. Yes, the Thunder and Spurs are going to be difficult to beat, but Utah has the mix of talent, coaching, and depth that could absolutely do the trick.
Now the Utah Jazz look forward to the NBA Draft that be on June 23rd. Let the posturing begin!!
Knicks fans made their presence known during their Game 4 victory over the 76ers on May 10.
PHILADELPHIA — “Let’s go Knicks,” they roared early as the 3-pointers fell like an avalanche.
“Deuce,” they bellowed after every one of Miles McBride’s seven 3-pointers.
“Knicks in four,” they chanted as the road team piled it on.
Technically, Game 4 of the Eastern Conference semifinals was a road game for the Knicks.
It just didn’t feel anything like one, fans of the orange and blue taking over Xfinity Mobile Arena to watch their Knicks complete a four-game sweep of the host 76ers with a 144-114 decimation on Mother’s Day.
“I used to think Philly was a sports town,” Josh Hart said with a wry smile. “I don’t know if it is anymore.”
It was a Knicks town this weekend.
There was a strong contingent of Knicks fans for Friday night’s Game 3, but they were mostly drowned out by the 76ers supporters until the game was out of reach.
Knicks fans celebrate at Xfinity Mobile Arena on May 10. Charles Wenzelberg / New York Post
Sunday was different.
Sunday, they owned the building.
Sunday, they made it their home.
The only resistance came from the ear-splitting 76ers public address announcer.
His effort was futile.
It started in warmups, with Knicks fans booing Joel Embiid.
“I thought we were back in the Garden for a second,” Hart said.
Knicks fans celebrate during their Game 4 win against the 76ers on May 10. N.Y. Post: Charles Wenzelberg
To add salt in the wound, a group of Knicks fans brought mini-posters of Mitchell Robinson’s alley-oop dunk Friday over Embiid and tried to hand them out to 76ers fans.
“Man, Mitch did his thing right here, so shout-out to the fans,” McBride said.
Knicks fans celebrate after their win against the 76ers on May 10. Charles Wenzelberg / New York Post
Before the series began, Embiid called on 76ers fans to hold on to their tickets and not let it be a repeat of two years ago, when Knicks fans invaded Xfinity Mobile Arena.
The team limited tickets to residents of the Philadelphia area, mirroring the Pistons plan from a year ago in the first round against the Knicks.
They also donated 500 tickets for each game to local community groups.
It didn’t work, as available tickets flooded the secondary market once the Knicks won the first two games of the series at home.
Josh Hart is pictured after the Knicks defeated the 76ers on May 10. Charles Wenzelberg / New York Post
The takeover seemed to anger Tyrese Maxey.
“It absolutely sucks, if I’m being honest. It just sucks,” the star guard said. “That’s really all I can say about it, man. It’s hard. It’s definitely difficult. It’s only one way to put a stop to it and it’s we have to go out there and win these games.
“Just being completely honest, we were better when we played them in the Garden this entire season. I know we lost Game 2 and 1, but Game 2 was better. The regular season was better. I was telling them, it felt louder here for them than it did in the Garden.”
PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA - MAY 08: Joel Embiid #21 of the Philadelphia 76ers in action during Game Three of the Second Round of the NBA Eastern Conference Playoffs against the New York Knicks at Xfinity Mobile Arena on May 08, 2026 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Emilee Chinn/Getty Images) | Getty Images
Context matters when breaking down sports.
“A banged-up Joel Embiid lost in the second round of the NBA Playoffs,” sounds like a familiar story, but that’s only if you ignore everything that’s happened over the last two-plus years.
Sure, there was plenty of disappointment after the Sixers were crushed in Game 4 Sunday by the New York Knicks to complete a sweep, but there was also plenty of optimism. They made the second round of the playoffs after a 24-win season. They came back from a 3-1 deficit to defeat the Boston Celtics in the postseason for the first time since 1982. Tyrese Maxey took another leap and VJ Edgecombe had one hell of a rookie season.
And Joel Embiid played basketball. At times, he even played it at an extremely high level. If you weren’t sure that could happen this season, you weren’t alone.
“I thought I was done. That’s the best way to put it,” Embiid said. “I came into this year not knowing where I was going to be, how long I was going to play, if I was even going to play, based on how the knee was the last few years.”
The former MVP played in 38 games this season and eight more in the playoffs. After a rough start, his numbers from his last 29 regular-season games were, well, Joel Embiid-esque. He averaged 29.6, 8.4 rebounds, 4.2 assists and 1.2 blocks in 33.5 minutes a game. He shot 50.9% from the field and 37.6% from three during that span.
Of course, the appendectomy came at the worst possible time, with Embiid trending in a positive direction health-wise and the team beginning to coalesce. When all seemed lost against the Celtics in the first round, Embiid played his guts out in Games 5, 6 and 7 to complete a historic comeback from a 3-1 deficit.
After that, there simply wasn’t much left in the tank. Embiid was dealing with a right hip issue, which he seemed to indicate was a complication from his recent surgery. Remember, he returned just 17 days post-op and it’s a procedure that cuts through muscle. It was pretty remarkable he returned at all, let alone carried his team to a Game 7 victory in TD Garden.
The most positive news from Embiid as his 2025-26 season ends: his knees feel good.
Embiid is optimistic his most recent procedure and work with Dr. Jonathan Glashow will allow him to be more available, something he admits led to a lot of the team’s inconsistencies this past season.
“That’s where I put it on me,” he said, “where I felt like I wasn’t around for much of the season, for a lot of things, and moving forward, understanding what it takes when it comes to my body, and what we have to do as a group to make sure that I get to play every game. I feel like we found that solution, so it’ll be better next year.”
So, this will be an offseason where Embiid gets to work on his game and not worry about rehabbing yet another knee surgery. It’ll take some time to recover from his most recent ailments, but there’s nothing to suggest those will be long-term hurdles.
Aside from his body, Embiid does seem to be in a great place mentally. He sat postgame with his son, Arthur, who looked ready for bed. He was asked a question about his legacy, but it wasn’t something he wasn’t interested in discussing — at least as far as on the basketball court.
“I don’t know. I don’t care,” he said. “I got this beautiful young man. You guys might’ve taken away my chance to put my daughter to sleep. My wife is going to be extremely mad at me.”
Again, there was disappointment, but no anger or finger-pointing or doomerism.
But there was trolling, of course.
“Maybe I got to go to church more so I don’t have those type of things right before the playoffs,” Embiid said. “I don’t know. Maybe I’m cursed. I don’t know. Maybe Philadelphia is cursed. …
“That’s a joke, but, yeah, just got to keep doing the right things over and over and hope that at some point it changes.”
MINNEAPOLIS, MINNESOTA - MAY 10: Anthony Edwards #5 and Rudy Gobert #27 of the Minnesota Timberwolves embrace after the 114-109 victory against the San Antonio Spurs in Game Four of the Second Round of the NBA Western Conference Playoffs at Target Center on May 10, 2026 in Minneapolis, Minnesota. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by David Berding/Getty Images) | Getty Images
What did Sunday night’s Game 5 win take for the Minnesota Timberwolves?
“Some heart,” Rudy Gobert said to the Target Center crowd after the madness had ended.
Where do we even start?
Perhaps the part where this should have been less close than it ended up as with a sharp elbow to the face?
With 8:39 left in the second quarter, Victor Wembanyama teed off on Naz Reid out of frustration. A 36-34 game favoring the Wolves at that point in time seemed to open up the clouds.
Status alert: Victor Wembanyama has been ejected Sunday after being assessed a Flagrant 2 foul. pic.twitter.com/G02YylonQE
“KICK HIM OUT” chants rained down at Target Center as Wemby initially didn’t know what getting flagrant foul 2 meant. With his trek back to the locker room, Luke Kornet was needing to play heavy minutes out of necessity – a big man the Wolves have had a lot of success against, especially wiht Rudy Gobert on the floor.
Compound one of the best defender ever being out of the rest of the game, a great start out of the gate had any reasonable person thinking that the Wolves were going to sleep walk to a 2-2 series tie.
As with many of the situations throughout the season, the Wolves unfortunately thought they were going to as well.
Cue the regular season music!
At the end of the third quarter, the Wemby-less Spurs were 62% on their twos, while the Wolves were 44% on theirs.
Leading by eight in the second half at their peak, the Spurs and DeAaron Fox killed the Wolves drop coverage. Fox got to whatever he wanted in the mid range, and missed rotations made the undisciplined Gobert-led defense show its warts.
THIS is why De’Aaron Fox is so important to this Spurs team
With Wemby out and it being clutch time, Fox has stepped up and made big plays down the stretch
For such a young team, having a player with Fox’s shotmaking and experience is key pic.twitter.com/y4e82fdz8r
— Point Made Basketball (@pointmadebball) May 11, 2026
But similar to the situations that would shake out over the 82-game schedule, a certain number 5 would go on to throw the cape on.
Regaining the lead with four minutes left, Anthony Edwards went 6-8 and notched 16 points in the fourth quarter.
In a game where Julius Randle struggled with six turnovers, Jaden McDaniels was 6-15 from the field, and Ayo Dosunmu was 3-12, Anthony Edwards on .75 knees cam through.
Game 5 in San Antonio begins knotted up 2-2.
Up Next
A game at a reasonable time!
With the New York Knicks sweep of the Philadelphia 76ers, tipoff for Game 5 in San Antonio on Tuesday will be at 7:00 PM CST. It’s extremely doubtful Wembanyama will be suspended, but you never really do say never. The league will certainly review it, but what follows will likely be a fine at worst.
MINNEAPOLIS, MN - MAY 10: Dylan Harper #2 of the San Antonio Spurs dribbles the ball during the game against the Minnesota Timberwolves during Round Two Game Four of the 2026 NBA Playoffs on May 10, 2026 at Target Center in Minneapolis, Minnesota. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this Photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Joe Murphy/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images
Early in the second quarter tonight, Victor Wembanyama, who was being manhandled by multiple players every time he entered the game, tried to spin his way out of a double bear hug from a couple of Wolves, and caught Naz Reid hard on the neck with an elbow. The referees called this a flagrant foul two, which resulted in an immediate ejection for the Spurs best player and emotional leader. It was a move that didn’t look intentional at all to me, but that was not the judgment of the officials, who had an interesting evening calling the game.
[As much as it pains me to write this, it does seem like the elbow might have been intentional, because a close analysis of the video shows that Wemby had eyes on Reid before the elbow lands. So, correct call but also the officials need to address how much other players are able to scratch and grab on Wembanyama without being called for a foul. This goes beyond normal physical defense into a long form mugging attack, and it’s not basketball.]
The Spurs almost overcame Wemby’s absence with some solid performances with their trio of elite guards, as Dylan Harper had a solid night on both ends of the court, Steph Castle had another great night, and De’Aaron Fox stepped up late in the game with timely scoring. Luke Kornet had a good outing as the sole big, protecting the rim while he was in. The Spurs had to go small for long stretches of the game and that’s when Minnesota took advantage of the Spurs lack of rim protection. Carter Bryant couldn’t get going tonight, and he committed a few bad fouls, which limited his minutes. The Spurs tried to control Anthony Edwards by double teaming him every time he touched the ball, but he’s just too good to completely stop, as he took over the game in the fourth quarter with 14 points and brought them back from an 8 point deficit to take the the lead with 3 minutes left. Rudy Gobert made some key plays in the comeback as he took advantage of the Spurs lack of size to grab timely rebounds and put them through the iron circle thing bolted to the backboard, a thing that he’s mostly unfamiliar with.
The Spurs almost pulled off an improbable rally in the last 30 seconds, but Minnesota was able to avoid a turnover as Ayo Dosunmu somehow bounced the ball off his trailing leg and kept it in bounds to keep the Spurs from having a shot to tie it up with 10 seconds left. Despite their valiant effort, the Spurs couldn’t quite eke out a win tonight, and this series is going to at least six games. It resumes on Tuesday at 7:00 PM in San Antonio, which is now a must-win game for the Silver and Black squad.
Observations
Because this game was broadcast over the air, I watched it on my antenna-connected TV, and also on my streaming network provider on my computer. The stream was consistently about 15 seconds behind the antenna feed, which got really distracting. I get it that for technical reasons that the streaming content is behind the antenna feed, but modern TV broadcasts are already in a digital format. Fifteen seconds seems excessive.
Oh no, Reggie Miller. Having him announcing a game makes it a lot less fun to watch.
The Spurs leave Gobert open on the perimeter for a reason.
The Timberwolves started the game with a lot of energy and physicality, tying it up at 10 in the first 4 minutes. The offensive rebounding of the Wolves is a problem for the Spurs. The possession isn’t over until the defense gets a rebound.
Terence Shannon is a master of theatrical defense because he relies a lot on flopping to sell charge calls. It’s too bad, because he is actually a good defender, but almost every time he draws a charge, he’s still moving into the path of the driving player.
When Wemby went to the bench, the Wolves went on a 14-3 run and briefly took a 5 point lead with two minutes left in the first.
Dylan Harper went on a heater in the last couple of minutes of the first, while the Timberwolves exploited the Spurs zone and uncharacteristically hit three-point shots. The Wolves led 34-30 at the end of the first quarter.
Early in the second quarter, Wembanyama was called for an insane flagrant penalty two after being manhandled for about 5 seconds by McDaniels and Naz Reid, and tried to spin out of the hold and caught Reid with an elbow. It didn’t look intentional at all, but it looked bad, and I could see a flagrant one, just based on how bad it looked. But a flagrant two and ejection was just insane and unjustified.
Is kneeing the shooter in the shoulder a foul? Apparently it is, but you need to call for a review for the refs to call it, and even then it wasn’t a shooting foul. When does the gather begin? Nobody knows. Thanks to Julian Champagnie’s two charity shots, the Wolves led 60-56 at the half.
The Spurs survived Wemby’s absence for most of the second quarter, they trailed by two when he was ejected, and the deficit only grew by two by halftime. One troubling indicator was the five missed free throws by the Silver and Black, if they had made those, they could be ahead at the half even with all of the tough things that happened and odd officiating of the first half.
I really like Carter Bryant, but he sure gets called for a lot of fouls.
The Spurs started the third quarter with increased intensity, taking the lead back from the grasping and leaping Wolves. Fox got mauled when Dosunmu dived at his knees to contest a rebound, but somehow that was just a common foul. He had to sit about five minutes, but looked fine after he returned to the game, using the stepback and speed to get a couple of quick baskets for San Antonio.
Edwards was held under control for most of the third quarter, while the Wolves’ offensive production came from unexpected sources, as two consecutive corner triples from Shannon cut the Spurs lead to a pair of buckets. The Spurs survived a late surge from Minnesota and led 84-80 with a quarter to play.
Naz Reid went down with an ankle injury early in the fourth, and the Spurs increased their lead to 8 with a Fox triple. You can never feel comfortable against a team that has Anthony Edwards, who can go crazy with scoring at any time, and on cue, a five point barrage from the Ant Man cut the lead to just three points, leading to a quick Mitch Johnson timeout.
The Wolves retook the lead with Anthony Edwards doing everything, and Rudy Gobert taking advantage of the double team to roam at the hoop and get easy offensive rebounds and a couple of timely putbacks.
The Spurs were down by 7 with 30 seconds left and cut the deficit to one score with 20 seconds left. The Spurs were close to getting the ball back with 13 seconds, but a lucky bounce of Ayo Dosunmo’s leg allowed the Timberwolves to maintain possession and hold of for a 114-109 win.
Up next
The Spurs will play Minnesota in the Frost Bank Center on Tuesday night, at 7:00 PM because it’s the only game of the night after the Knicks swept the Sixers.
KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI - MAY 10: Maikel Garcia #11 of the Kansas City Royals slides into second base against Zack Short #15 of the Detroit Tigers during the first inning at Kauffman Stadium on May 10, 2026 in Kansas City, Missouri. (Photo by Jay Biggerstaff/Getty Images) | Getty Images
Well, you felt good about a sweep going in. All you had to do was best the Tigers bullpen, and after overcoming a 3-0 deficit to tie it after 4 innings, the Royals looked primed to sweep their divisional foe.
However, Gage Workman, who literally got recalled this afternoon from AAA hit his first career MLB homer off Nick Mears, it was worth two runs, and the Royals dropped the series finale 6-3.
It was another lackluster start for Noah Cameron. He went just 4 innings allowing 5 hits, 3 runs, walking 3 and striking out 4 batters. It took him 95 pitches to get just 12 outs.
John Schreiber threw a scoreless 5th. It’s still scary every time he takes the hill, but he has looked better after a very tough beginning of the season. Mears gave up a leadoff single ahead of the two-run homer.
Daniel Lynch IV finally looked human, struggling in his 2/3 of an inning. He allowed a run on two hits and a walk. Alex Lange pitched a scoreless inning, and two thirds and Steven Cruz threw a scoreless 9th inning for the second consecutive night.
Offensively, it looked like the April Royals. They were 3-11 with runners in scoring position and squandered an opportunity right out of the gate. After back-to-back singles in the bottom of the first, Vinnie Pasquantino weakly flew out to left, Isaac Collins fouled out to third and Carter Jensen fouled out to the catcher. Scoring right of the gate would’ve been the gut punch to the Tigers bullpen game plan and put a lot of pressure on the visitors, but the missed opportunity swung the momentum.
The Royals got a pair of runs back in the third after Garcia doubled and Witt singled. Vinnie came through this time with an RBI single and Jensen just missed a three-run homer with a sac fly to deep right field.
Garcia bailed out Elias Diaz and Kyle Isbel in the bottom of the 4th after Jac Caglianone led off the inning with a double, Garcia smacked a 2-out single to center to tie it at 3. Garcia was 3-3 after the first four innings of the game.
The Royals threatened in the 7th and 8th but hit into double plays that ended the threat. They went down 1-2-3 in the 9th.
The Royals finish the homestand 4-3. On the season, they are 3-4 against Cleveland, who they don’t play again until August and 2-4 against Detroit, who they don’t play again until July. A couple of key head-to-head tiebreakers as the season progresses.
The Royals are 19-22 on the season, just like the Tigers, and a game and a half back of the 21-21 Guardians for the division. The Royals are off tomorrow after 13 straight days of baseball. They have a three-game series against the White Sox in Chicago, and then next weekend are in St. Louis to take on the Cardinals. It’s a big trip and week for the Royals who are still trying to climb out of the hole they dug for themselves.
First pitch on Tuesday is at 6:40 p.m. CT, the game can be watched on Royals.TV. Stephen Kolek is expected to start.
The Syracuse Mets suffered their third straight loss to the Rochester Red Wings on Sunday afternoon, but some of the organizations top young talents enjoyed another big day.
Both A.J. Ewing and Ryan Clifford accounted for a bulk of the team’s offense.
Ewing continued his strong start at the new level, picking up two more hits and driving in a run across four at-bats.
One of those knocks was a double and he also stole a base.
The 22-year-old surging prospect is now hitting .333 with four extra base-hits, four RBI, five stolen bases, and a .844 OPS in 13 games since joining Syracuse.
Clifford reached three times with a walk and a pair of extra base-hits.
He helped Syracuse even things up with a 400 foot solo homer to deep right in the fourth, then ripped a triple down the right-field line before scoring on Christian Arroyo’s sacrifice fly in the sixth.
The slugger is now hitting .252 with a triple, six doubles, seven home runs, 21 RBI, and an even .800 OPS after a bit of a slow start to the season.
Not much went right for Syracuse on the pitching side of things, but Dylan Ross did strike out two as he worked around a pair of walks in a scoreless inning of work.
He was able to reach up to 99 mph on his fastball.
27-year-old starter Xavien Curry and veteran lefty reliever Cionel Pérez made their first appearances with the organization after signing on minor league deals last week.
PHILADELPHIA (AP) — Jalen Brunson, Josh Hart and the New York Knicks are back in the Eastern Conference finals, tying the NBA postseason record with 25 3-pointers in front of a raucous crowd rooting for the road team and rolling past the Philadelphia 76ers 144-114 on Sunday to sweep the second-round series.
Deuce McBride hit seven 3-pointers, going 4 for 4 in the first quarter when the Knicks had another record with 11, and scored 25 points. Brunson had 22 points and Hart and Karl-Anthony Towns each scored 17 in the Knicks’ latest lopsided playoff victory.
The Knicks advanced to the East finals for the second straight season and will play the winner of the Cleveland-Detroit series. The Pistons lead the series 2-1.
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — Anthony Edwards had 16 of his 36 points in the fourth quarter to help Minnesota even their second-round NBA playoff series against San Antonio with a victory following the stunning ejection of star Victor Wembanyama early in the second quarter of Game 4.
Naz Reid took the fateful elbow to the neck from a frustrated Wembanyama and finished with 15 points and nine rebounds to help the Timberwolves finish strong after some shaky stretches.
Edwards hit a 27-footer to bring the Wolves within 94-91, turning to shout at the crowd for some help down the stretch as the Spurs quickly called timeout. His catch-and-shoot 3-pointer from the wing with 5:12 left put them up 98-97, their first lead since midway through the third quarter.
Then the big men went to work without Wembanyama patrolling the paint. Rudy Gobert got a three-point play with 3:02 left off a slick feed from Reid and later threw down a dunk for a 107-101 lead with 1:56 to go after a pass from Julius Randle. Gobert had 11 points and 13 rebounds.
Reid’s follow shot with 40 seconds left gave the Wolves a seven-point lead, before Dylan Harper had a rebound, a drawn foul, a steal, and two free throws to help the Spurs pull within three. Ayo Dosunmu sank two foul shots with 9.8 seconds left to put the game out of reach and tie the series at two games apiece.
San Antonio hosts Game 5 on Tuesday, with Wembanyama’s status to be determined by the league following the Flagrant 2 foul call and automatic ejection he was levied for the excessive contact to Reid.
Naz Reid falls to the court after he was fouled by Victor Wembanyama on Sunday.Photograph: Abbie Parr/AP
Victor Wembanyama was ejected for the first time in his NBA career after an elbow to the jaw and neck of Naz Reid as the Minnesota Timberwolves beat the San Antonio Spurs to level their playoff series.
Wembanyama was whistled for an offensive foul as soon as he struck Reid, who had swarmed the Spurs star outside the paint along with teammate Jaden McDaniels after the 7ft 4in Wembanyama rebounded a missed three-pointer by the Spurs.
After a video review of the play, with the fans at Minnesota’s Target Center chanting, “Kick him out! Kick him out!,” the foul was upgraded to a Flagrant 2 for excessive contact above the neck. The penalty triggered an automatic ejection, and the Timberwolves went on to win 114-109. The best-of-seven series is now level at 2-2. However, despite the ejection the Wolves never fully took advantage of the gift created by his absence. They’ve long had a tendency of losing their edge, particularly defensively, when an opponent’s star player is missing and the score was closer than many of their fans may have expected.
When the penalty was announced, Wembanyama appeared to ask teammate Harrison Barnes: “What does that mean?”
While Spurs coach Mitch Johnson did not condone Wembanyama’s conduct he said referees needed to do more to protect him.
“He’s going to have to protect himself if [the referees] are not … It’s disgusting. I just think that the amount of physicality that people play with him at some level you have to protect yourself,” Johnson said after the game.
After Wembanyama slapped hands with each of his Spurs teammates on his way off the floor, with the arena sound system blaring Michael Jackson’s Beat It!, Reid sank both free throws to give the Timberwolves a 38-34 lead. The reigning NBA defensive player of the year finished with four points, four rebounds and three fouls in 13 minutes.
With Reid, Julius Randle and McDaniels in their frontcourt, the Timberwolves have had plenty of muscle and tenacity to send at Wembanyama, even if he’s been good enough offensively to overcome the pressure. He had 39 points on 13-for-18 shooting from the floor in Game 3. On Sunday, Anthony Edwards led the way for Minnesota, scoring 66 of his 36 points in the fourth quarter. Reid finished with 15 points and nine rebounds to help the Timberwolves finish strong after some shaky stretches.
San Antonio host Game 5 on Tuesday, with Wembanyama’s status to be determined by the NBA on Monday. The league could decide to fine or suspend Wembanyama for his actions.
Johnson said he Wembanyama should be allowed to play. “There was zero intent,” he said. “I think it would be ridiculous [to punish him further].”
David Peterson throws a pitch during his May 4 outing against the Rockies.
PHOENIX — David Peterson received no love from his defense, particularly third baseman Andy Ibáñez, but he did his part to give the Mets an opportunity to win Sunday.
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The lefty, who has been placed in the bullpen to work as a bulk reliever, pitched five innings without allowing an earned run in the team’s 5-1 loss to the Diamondbacks.
All three runs that scored with Peterson on the mound followed Ibáñez’s second throwing error of the day, in the sixth inning.
“I think it’s just getting back to who I am as a pitcher, getting the sinker down, and using the four-seamer,” said Peterson, who owns a 5.49 ERA. “I feel like I have had better feel the last couple of outings with the changeup and the sliders continue to be good.”
David Peterson throws a pitch during his May 4 outing against the Rockies. IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect
Peterson surrendered two earned runs over four innings in relief on Monday in Colorado, both scoring after Carson Benge tripped chasing a fly ball in the outfield.
Peterson has been less successful as a starter.
In each of his last four appearances as a starter Peterson has surrendered at least four earned runs.
That included a seven-run meltdown over 3 ²/₃ innings against the Nationals in his last start, on April 29.
“I thought he was really good today,” manager Carlos Mendoza said. “He got ground balls, made pitches, we didn’t make a couple of plays and it ended up costing us runs. But overall, I thought he threw the ball very well.”
David Peterson commits a throwing error during his May 10
appearance. AP
Mendoza utilized Huascar Brazobán as the opener, sticking with him into the second inning and got burned when the right-hander walked two batters to begin the frame.
Tobias Myers got two outs before Ryan Waldschmidt delivered a two-run double for the game’s first scoring.
“Overall, [Brazobán] had a hard time throwing strikes today,” Mendoza said.
Mendoza said he didn’t consider using Myers to start the second inning because of the right-hander’s recent workload.
“Toby was short today,” Mendoza said. “We knew we were going to try to get through the first time through the lineup with the two of them, it just didn’t work.”
MINNEAPOLIS — Anthony Edwards had 16 of his 36 points in the fourth quarter to help the Minnesota Timberwolves even their second-round NBA playoff series against the San Antonio Spurs with a 114-109 victory following the stunning ejection of star Victor Wembanyama early in the second quarter of Game 4 on Sunday.
Naz Reid took the fateful elbow to the neck from a frustrated Wembanyama and finished with 15 points and nine rebounds to help the Timberwolves finish strong after some shaky stretches.
Edwards hit a 27-footer to bring the Wolves within 94-91, turning to shout at the crowd for some help down the stretch as the Spurs quickly called timeout. His catch-and-shoot 3-pointer from the wing with 5:12 left put them up 98-97, their first lead since midway through the third quarter.
Then the big men went to work without Wembanyama patrolling the paint. Rudy Gobert got a three-point play with 3:02 left off a slick feed from Reid and later threw down a dunk for a 107-101 lead with 1:56 to go after a pass from Julius Randle. Gobert had 11 points and 13 rebounds.
Reid’s follow shot with 40 seconds left gave the Wolves a seven-point lead, before Dylan Harper had a rebound, a drawn foul, a steal, and two free throws to help the Spurs pull within three. Ayo Dosunmu sank two foul shots with 9.8 seconds left to put the game out of reach and tie the series at two games apiece.
San Antonio hosts Game 5 on Tuesday, with Wembanyama’s status to be determined by the league following the Flagrant 2 foul call and automatic ejection he was levied for the excessive contact to Reid.
Harper and De’Aaron Fox each scored 24 points and Stephon Castle added 20 as the Spurs guards unflinchingly took the baton from their 7-foot-4 superstar and turned the rest of the night into a mid-range clinic with an array of pull-up jumpers in and around the paint.
The crowd at Target Center went wild when Wembanyama walked off the floor with Minnesota leading by two, but the Wolves never fully took advantage of the gift created by his absence. They’ve long had a tendency of losing their edge, particularly defensively, when an opponent’s star player is missing.
After committing six turnovers in a 20-point third quarter, the Wolves found themselves in another eight-point hole early in the fourth following Fox’s 3-pointer.
Things were looking a bit better for the struggling Mets.
Despite falling to the Rockies on a late-inning grand slam on Thursday afternoon, they showed some positives and took the first two series of their nine-game road trip.
This weekend in Arizona, though, all of that was quickly erased.
The Mets were able to salvage the series opener on Friday night thanks to Mark Vientos and some late-inning heroics, but otherwise the shorthanded offense wasted more strong pitching.
Clay Holmes followed that by put together 5.2 innings of two-run ball on Saturday, only to be handed his second loss of the season as the bats managed just a run on three hits.
Despite facing struggling right-hander Merrill Kelly, who came into the night with a 9.95 ERA on the season, they didn’t record a baserunner after the top of the fifth.
That stretch would carry into the fourth inning on Sunday afternoon, as 22 consecutive Mets were set down in order before Juan Soto drew a leadoff walk, which tied their season-high drought.
While the perfect game was broken up, Arizona southpaw Eduardo Rodriguez kept his no-hit bid intact until Carson Benge laced a single with one out in the top of the sixth.
Luis Torrens followed that with a double to breakup the shutout as well, but the D-backs answered back with three unearned runs in the bottom-half to put this one away for good.
Rodriguez finished just two outs shy of his first career complete game, allowing just three walks and four hits.
“He was hitting his spots,” Soto said. “He was throwing the ball well, he was being careful with the big guys and being aggressive with guys he thought he could be aggressive to.”
That's been the case of late for the extremely shorthanded Mets, as both Soto and Bo Bichette haven't nearly look like themselves with a lack of big threats behind them.
Soto has just three hits in 33 at-bats this month, Bichette has seven in 36.
New York dropped three of the final four games of the nine-game road trip, scoring just seven times over that span, after starting with four wins over the first six games.
"We’re better than that,” Carlos Mendoza said. “Especially the past couple of days, we needed to be better.”
If you didn’t know any better, you would have thought 6abc’s Cheyenne Corin was standing on the concourse at Madison Square Garden.
The reporter with the local ABC affiliate in Philadelphia was swarmed by Knicks fans who had taken over the Xfinity Mobile Arena on Sunday, after the Knicks defeated the Sixers 144-114 in Game 4 to complete the sweep and return to the conference finals for the second consecutive season.
6abc’s Cheyenne Corin was swamped by Knicks fans after they swept the 76ers on Sunday. Cheyenne Corin/Instagram
The scene around Corin has now gone viral, as the studio anchor tossed to the reporter in the field, and she was quickly mobbed by cheering Knicks fans.
“Watch me get absolutely TROLLED by Knicks fans in Philly after the Sixers lost,” she wrote, accompanying a video of her news report from the arena that she posted to TikTok.
She also shared a video on Instagram Stories of Knicks fans chanting “f–k Embiid” on the concourse after the Knicks win.
Responding to a post on X by Barstool Sports owner Dave Portnoy that “Philadelphia has fallen,” she wrote on her Instagram Story, “We still standing strong just how I was in this live shot.”
6abc’s Cheyenne Corin was swamped by Knicks fans after they swept the 76ers on Sunday. @JDumasReports/X
While Knicks fans were ecstatic over the win on Sunday night, 76ers fans were devastated to see their team swept out of the playoffs with little more than a whimper.
One fan described the loss as a “Mother’s Day massacre.”
“Sell the team, fire Nick Nurse, everybody gone, gone gone,” one young fan told the Philadelphia news station. “Let Kyle Lowry coach.”
One fan was even moved to tears as she cried over the loss and hoped that Joel Embiid would remain in the City of Brotherly Love.
Knicks fans celebrate their win while leaving the arena. New York Knicks fans in Philidelpha, PA, to see if the Knicks will win and sweep the NBA playoff basketball series against the 76ers. Aristide Economopoulos for NY Post
“I love the whole team. They did amazing, but it’s just heartbreaking, it really is,” she said.
The Knicks now will wait to find out their next opponent, with the Cavaliers and Pistons still in the middle of their best-of-seven series.
May 10, 2026; Kansas City, Missouri, USA; Detroit Tigers Gage Workman rounds the bases after hitting a home run during the sixth inning against the Kansas City Royals at Kauffman Stadium. Mandatory Credit: William Purnell-Imagn Images | William Purnell-Imagn Images
The younger Detroit Tigers powered them to victory on Sunday, snapping a five-game skid. Gage Workman launched his first major league homer after being called up for Kerry Carpenter earlier in the day. Hao-Yu Lee and Wenceel Pérez had big RBI knocks, as did Matt Vierling, and the bullpen was pretty good overall filling in for a suspended Framber Valdez as the Tigers won 6-3.
We at Bless You Boys hope you all had a good Mother’s Day and did something nice for your mother. The Tigers matchup vs. the Royals featured the usual array of pink bats, spikes, and catchers’ gear on a lovely sunny evening in Kansas City.
The Tigers got a leadoff walk to Matt Vierling from lefty Noah Cameron, a decent but certainly not overpowering starter in his second season, but didn’t take advantage. After Vierling reached, Kevin McGonigle battled through a long at-bat but ultimately popped out to shallow left field. Cameron kept everything soft and down to Jahmai Jones, who struck out swinging, while Dillon Dingler lined out sharply to Bobby Witt Jr.
Brenan Hanifee started things off in a bullpen game. Maikel Garcia hit a high chopper over Kevin McGonigle at third for an infield single. Witt Jr. lifted a weak flare to shallow right field and Wenceel Pérez froze before coming in late. The ball dropped and it was runners at first and second with no outs. Well this feels familiar. Vinnie Pasquantino popped out to shallow left field for the first out. Isaac Collins also popped out, this time foul down the third base line, and McGonigle hauled that in. With lefty Carter Jensen up, Hanifee’s work was done, and he didn’t allow a single well hit ball despite the results. Brant Hurter was warming, and AJ Hinch went to him to put Jensen away and snuff a potential rally. The big lefty got it done, quickly inducing a pop-up that Dingler handled.
Riley Greene led off the second, and he lined a ball to right field, and Jac Caglionone froze much like Pérez as the fading late day sun was directly into the right fielder’s eyes. Pérez was up next and he flipped a soft pop-up into shallow right field and again Caglianone looked like he never saw it off the bat. The ball got down, but Greene had to wait to see if it would drop and was thrown out by second baseman Nick Loftin at second. Spencer Torkelson took a curveball for strike three, Hao-Yu Lee, who hits for most of his power against lefties, crushed a drive off the right field wall for an RBI triple. So it was up to (checks notes) Zack Short? to drive in Lee from third. Shorty got into a full count, fouled off a cutter in on his hands, and then drew a walk. Nicely done.
That left it up to Matt Vierling, and he came through, cranking a drive off the wall in left centerfield. Lee scored, Short raced around from first to score, and Vierling cruised into third with a double and a one-base error after the Kyle Isbell had some trouble getting the ball in. 3-0 Tigers. Hamilton started McGonigle off with a pair of sliders on the outer edge. The Royals wasted a challenge on one of them, but in the end McGonigle slapped a broken bat grounder to Loftin for the final out.
Loftin drew a walk from Hurter to start the bottom half, but Caglianone grounded one to Torkelson, who fired to second to get the lead runner. Elias Diaz struck out as Hurter jammed him with a sinker, and Isbell lined out to Torkelson. Good defense from Torkelson in the inning.
Jahmai Jones opened the third with a rocket one-hopper that Maikel Garcia made a great diving play on, but the throw went a little wide and Pasquantino whiffed on it. They ruled it a single as Dingler dug into the batter’s box. Cameron was already at 60 pitches as Dingler drew a walk. This new Riley Greene with added plate discipline has been a rare nice development in the first quarter of the season. He worked a full count, but this time he chased a high heater for strike three. Pérez fouled off a pair of changeups and eventually worked a full count as well, but another changeup got a pop-up to Loftin. Eventually all this discpline and deep counts have to pay off, right? Not this time, as Cameron got ahead in the count pitching Torkelson in and then back-footed a slider for a whiff to turn the Tigers away.
Drew Anderson took over in the bottom of the third to take on the right-handed top of the Royals order. Garcia greeted Anderson with a double into the right field corner. An 0-1 changeup to Witt saw a grounder up the middle that tipped off Anderson’s glove. Lee cut across in front of Short moving toward third base, and couldn’t make the play as Garcia took third base. Anderson missed well down with a 2-2 changeup, and Pasquantino grounded a fastball away through the left side to score Garcia as Witt raced to third. That brought Chris Fetter out for a chat. Anderson responded by falling behind 2-0, but then worked back into 2-2 count and punched Collins with a power curve down and in for a whiff. That brought up Jensen and a first pitch slider was right down the middle. A fly ball deep to right field was caught by Pérez, but the sacrifice fly cut the lead to 3-2. Anderson punched out Loftin with a good changeup to finally get the Tigers off the field.
Lee flew out to right to open the fourth inning. Short flew out to deep left center field as Cameron neared 90 pitches. Vierling followed with a rocket to center field, but it was too low and Isbell hauled it in.
Anderson started the bottom half giving up an opposite field double to Caglianone. He bounced back to blow away Diaz and whiffed Isbell on a curveball. Unfortunately, that brought up Garcia again and he lined an RBI single to center to tie the game. The throw from Vierling should’ve gone to second, but Vierling tried to fire it home with no chance to get Caglianone, and that gave Garcia second base with Witt at the plate. Fortunately Witt flew out to left to end the inning. Still, after a bunch of solid outings in a row, Anderson had coughed up a three-run lead as we headed to the fifth inning.
Cameron was still on the mound despite being over 90 pitches, but he was just there to get McGonigle. The rookie nearly homered just down the right field line, but it went foul, and so he singled to center field instead. That brought John Schreiber into the game in relief of Cameron. That took Jones out of the game, with Colt Keith pinch-hitting for him as the DH. After another long at-bat, Keith flew out softly to left field. Dingler worked a full count and then chased two fastballs up and whiffed to strike out. Schreiber fell behind to Riley Greene and didn’t appear to want anything to do with him as the Tigers’ left fielder walked, but Pérez’s struggles hitting left-handed continued and he tapped back to Schreiber to squander the chance.
Enmanuel de Jesus took over in the bottom half, and he racked up three quick outs on balls in play. The middle out was a rocket to center from Isaac Collins, but Vierling hauled it in to send this to the sixth.
Nick Mears took over for the Royals, and Torkelson greeted him with a solid single to start the inning. Zach McKinstry pinch-hit for Hao-Yu Lee, but he took a pair of called strikes and then chased a slider down and popped out to shallow left. That brought up newly promoted infielder, Gage Workman, hitting for Short. An 0-1 fastball clanged off Diaz’s glove to the backstop but Torkelson read it poorly and didn’t advance. That didn’t matter, because Mears hung a breaking ball down and in and Workman launched it just fair down the right field foul line for his first major league home run. You’ve gotta love it.
Workman was teammates with Torkelson back at Arizona State and drafted by the Tigers in 2020 as well, as their fourth rounder in the five round draft. He struck out way too much, and eventually had to ditch switch-hitting and go lefty full-time, but he’s always had good power and speed, and solid defense at third base and decent shortstop too in a pinch. He was taken by the Cubs in the 2024 Rule 5 draft and got a look at the majors with them, and briefly the White Sox, last summer before being returned. It’s been a long road to get to the majors with the Tigers, but Workman has been white hot for a month in Toledo and finally got the call. Way to announce your arrival, Gage. You’ll be delighted to know his middle name is Tater. No joke. Baseball family.
That blow made it 5-3, but was followed by a Vierling strikeout, and Matt Quatraro turned to lefty Daniel Lynch IV against McGonigle. The rookie drew a walk, but Keith popped out again to end the frame.
De Jesus got Loftin on a pop-up, and then a deep flyout from Caglianone out to Vierling. Diaz grounded out to McKinstry to end the inning, and that was six straight outs for de Jesus, though with precious few whiffs involved. Could the Tigers now go three innings without allowing two runs? The Magic 8-ball says “reply hazy, try again.”
Dingler struck out to start the seventh, but Riley Greene pulled a hot ground ball down the right field line for a double. Pérez, hitting right-handed now, spanked a grounder back through the box for a single. Isbell pointlessly fired home with Greene easily scoring, and that let Wenceel take second base. 6-3 Tigers. That brought Torkelson to the plate, and it brought Quatraro out to call on old friend Alex Lange and the turtleneck of destiny. Pérez, knowing Lange’s long history of failure in holding runners, tried to exploit it by stealing third, but Diaz cut him down by a foot. Trying to get to third with Torkelson at the plate and one out is worth the attempt, but instead there were two outs, and after Torkelson walked, McKinstry grounded out to end the frame.
Lane Thomas pinch-hit for Isbell against the southpaw de Jesus to start the bottom half. De Jesus froze him with a good fastball on the bottom rail for strike three. Thomas lost the Royals last challenge on that one, but was wrong. So that was seven straight outs from de Jesus, and that was the end of his night with Garcia and Witt coming up. Hinch turned to Kyle Finnegan, hoping to get five outs from him and then presumably turn this over to Kenley Jansen in the ninth.
Instead, Finnegan took over and walked Garcia on four straight pitches. Witt pulled a hard grounder to third, and Workman fired to McKinstry and on to first for a 5-4-3 double play to send us to the eighth.
Workman flew out to left center field to start the inning. Vierling and McGonigle grounded out, and we were on to the bottom of the eighth.
Finnegan quickly gave up a sharp single to center field from Pasquantino. Collins bounced one to Torkelson, who fired to McGonigle to cut down Pasquantino. Jensen fell behind 1-2, but a pair of balls made it a full count and Finnegan missed down to walk him. Finnegan’s walk rate is already horrendous and it was getting worse in this game. Michael Massey pinch-hit for Loftin, but grounded into a slick 4-6-3 double play to end the inning. On to the ninth.
Right-hander Steven Cruz took over from Lange in the top of the ninth and just blew Keith away with high 90’s fastballs. Dingler worked a full count and smoked a cutter away up the left center field gap for a double. In a 1-1 count, Riley Greene challenged a fastball just off the outer edge successfully and so it was 2-1 and Cruz missed away again and then up to walk him as Greene reached for the fourth time in this one. Pérez popped up to third base, and Torkelson struck out.
So it was Kenley Jansen time. The right-hander hadn’t pitched in six days, and perhaps that allowed the slight groin strain he was dealing with for a few weeks to abate. Either way, he went through the Royals with no trouble, breaking Caglisnone’s bat on a baby bloop to Workman at third, and then blowing away Marte and Thomas to end it.
The Tigers move back to 19-22, tied with the Royals for third and a half game behind the White Sox. They’ll have a day off on Monday to rest their bullpen before tackling the struggling Mets on the road on Tuesday.