USA-Dominican Republic will be WBC clash of uber-talented teams with very different styles

An image collage containing 3 images, Image 1 shows Aaron Judge #99 of Team United States grounds out the ball during the fifth inning against Team Canada at Daikin Park on March 13, 2026 in Houston, Texas. (, Image 2 shows Juan Soto #22 celebrates with Vladimir Guerrero Jr. #27 of Team Dominican Republic in the second inning of the quarterfinal game against Team Korea in the 2026 World Baseball Classic at loanDepot park on March 13, 2026 in Miami, Florida, Image 3 shows Cal Raleigh #29 of Team United States reacts after his run to base sixth inning against Team Canada at Daikin Park on March 13, 2026 in Houston, Texas

To prepare for its quarterfinal game Friday, Team USA brought in guest speaker Robert J. O’Neill, a former SEAL Team Six member who was part of the unit that killed Osama bin Laden. 

Among the Team Dominican Republic celebratory props is a dumbbell that is wrapped with plantains, which is often lifted following home runs that turn ballparks into nightclubs. 

One team is serious. One team is, well, silly. One team is singularly focused on winning. One team wants to win but is determined to have fun along the way. 

Aaron Judge grounds out during the fifth inning of Team USA’s quarterfinal win over Team Canada at Daikin Park on March 13, 2026 in Houston. Getty Images

It will be a clash not just of stars but of cultures when the Americans and Dominicans face off Sunday night in Florida for a World Baseball Classic semifinal. 

“I know the fans definitely love [the Dominican flair], but I try not to look at what other teams are doing, what other people are doing,” Aaron Judge, captain of Team USA and the Yankees and a superstar who plays with more professionalism than joy, told reporters Friday night. “I’ll focus on what we got here. We got a special group of guys that love to play this game. They’re excited to be in this room. I know how they’re all honored to be in this room. They’re not taking it for granted. 

“So it’s exciting seeing what the D.R. is doing, and it’s been fun watching those games and seeing what’s going on. I think everybody in [the clubhouse] is excited to get there and be a part of it.” 

“There” is Miami, which is located in the United States but merely technically. South Florida might not pay much attention to the Marlins or MLB, but it does love baseball and the Dominican Republic. A country on the Caribbean island of Hispaniola with a population the size of Ohio and the physical size of West Virginia routinely produces many of the best baseball players in the world. 

The Americans, who played their group-stage and quarterfinal games with the fans in their corner in Houston, will be entering enemy territory. 

“I expect to be the away team, for sure, but that’s what we’re looking forward to,” Pete Crow-Armstrong told Fox Sports after knocking off Canada. “We want the electricity, the energy in the crowd. That’s why we’re throwing Mr. Skenes out there.” 

Juan Soto celebrates with Vladimir Guerrero Jr. in the second inning of the Dominican Republic’s quarterfinal win over Korea in the 2026 World Baseball Classic at loanDepot park on March 13, 2026 in Miami. Getty Images

Paul Skenes might be the greatest pitcher in the world, a 6-foot-6 specimen with a triple-digit fastball and calling-card splinker — the velocity of a sinker with the drop of a splitter — that helped him become the NL Cy Young Award winner last season. Like Judge and like much of Team USA, he performs more as a surgeon than celebrity. Formerly a two-way star at the Air Force Academy, Skenes operates with discipline and a calmness. 

The hitters he will face do not. 

Against Venezuela, Juan Soto admired a home run that just kept traveling, turned to his dugout and beat his chest before beginning his trot, which finished at home plate, where his team greeted him. Fernando Tatis Jr. did not quite finish his follow-through on his swing, launching his bat down the third-base line immediately after launching the pitch. Vladimir Guerrero Jr. remained at home plate until the ball cleared the left-field wall, then spiked his bat to the dirt and began gesturing to the dugout long before he broke out into a jog. Ketel Marte knew his shot would land in the seats upon impact, twirling his bat and pumping up his teammates rather than running or watching the trajectory. 

Cal Raleigh reacts after during the sixth inning of the United States’ win over Canada at Daikin Park on March 13, 2026 in Houston. Getty Images

Consider an American controversy during the WBC: Cal Raleigh declining to shake hands with Mariners teammate Randy Arozarena apparently because the catcher did not want to break focus or pal around with the competition. 

The styles are poles apart. The talent level is similar. 

Each roster features nine — nine! — players who received MVP votes last season. Team USA has the AL MVP (Judge) and runner-up (Raleigh). Team D.R. has No. 3 and No. 4 (Soto and Geraldo Perdomo) in the NL. (Perdomo, by the way, batted ninth in the quarterfinal game.) 

The American lineup has yet to unleash its power and potential, but maybe a familiar opponent in Luis Severino, the Dominican starter, will help the group click. 

The Dominican lineup has played five games and scored 51 runs, a total that would be higher if not for the tournament’s mercy rules. 

The matchup — the United Staids against Plátano Power — will be fascinating.

Pakistan wins toss, elects to field in final ODI against Bangladesh

DHAKA, Bangladesh (AP) — Pakistan won the coin toss and elected to field in the third and final one-day international against Bangladesh on Sunday.

Bangladesh won the first game by eight wickets before Pakistan leveled the series with a 128-run win by the DLS Method in the rain-affected second ODI.

Pakistan gave debuts to Ghazi Ghori and Saad Masood in place of the injured Hussain Talat and Shamyl Hussain, who was left out after failing in the first two games. Leg-spinner Abrar Ahmed also returned to the team and replaced fast bowler Mohammad Wasim.

Bangladesh retained the same side for the third successive game, keeping faith in its three-man pace attack — Taskin Ahmed, Nahid Rana and Mustafizur Rahman.

___

Bangladesh: Saif Hassan, Tanzid Hasan, Towhid Hridoy, Najmul Hossain Shanto, Litton Das, Afif Hossain, Mehidy Hasan Miraz (captain), Rishad Hossain, Taskin Ahmed, Nahid Rana, Mustafizur Rahman.

Pakistan: Sahibzada Farhan, Maaz Sadaqat, Ghazi Ghori, Mohammad Rizwan, Salman Agha, Abdul Samad, Saad Masood, Faheem Ashraf, Shaheen Shah Afridi (captain), Abrar Ahmed, Haris Rauf.

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

Carlos Rodon adjusting to rising velocity that ‘makes no sense’ as his Yankees buildup continues

New York Yankees pitcher Carlos Rodón throwing a multi-colored ball in the outfield.
Carlos Rodón is pictured during the Yankees' Feb. 13 workout during spring training.

TAMPA — Carlos Rodón does not understand it.

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But as he continues his buildup from elbow surgery and experiments with a newfound range of motion in his left arm, he is finding that his velocity is ticking up when he stops trying to throw as hard.

Such was the case Saturday during his second live batting practice session of the spring, as he increased his workload to two innings and 27 pitches.

“I backed off and threw harder,” Rodón said. “I was like, ‘OK, that makes no sense.’ But it made it easier to command. It’s just little ins and outs of pitching, trying to find the stroke again, knowing how much effort in this pitch and the line of this pitch. It takes a little time.”

Carlos Rodón is pictured during the Yankees’ Feb. 13 workout during spring training. Charles Wenzelberg

Rodón said he got up to 95 mph in the live session on a backfield, but was mainly sitting 93-94 mph.

The Yankees are hoping that one of the benefits of the surgery, which shaved down a bone spur and removed loose bodies in his left elbow, will be an uptick in velocity after Rodón lost some last season while pitching through it.

His four-seam fastball averaged 94.1 mph in 2025 — still effective enough to put together his best year as a Yankee but down from 95.6 mph in 2024 and the lowest it had been since 2020.

While Rodón still has plenty of buildup to go before he could join the Yankees in late April or early May, there is some curiosity as to where he ends up velocity-wise once he is pitching in real games.

“I’m just trying to tick up a little [before] I get there so I can close the gap of a big discrepancy in velocity,” Rodón said. “So just slowly building to get the velocity up so when I get in a game, it’s a lot more natural than just going from 90 mph to 98 mph. We’ll see what it does.”

Of course, the increased velocity would be of little use if Rodón cannot properly command it, which remains a work in progress that he hopes to straighten out the more he faces hitters.

But he should have a chance to do that every five days now as his buildup kicks into gear.

“Excited where he’s at,” manager Aaron Boone said. “He’s really probably not that far behind. He’s responded well to everything. We haven’t rushed anything with him. There were a lot of bullpens in there as he was kind of working through the kinks and stuff like that before we got him to lives. But he’s trending in a good way.”


Jake Bird, fighting for a bullpen spot, came into Saturday’s game with one out and a man on first in the sixth inning and promptly walked the first batter he faced on four pitches. But he rebounded to get out of the jam and toss 1 ¹/₃ scoreless innings. … Ben Rice delivered a left-on-left ground-rule double against Phillies reliever Kyle Backhus.


The Yankees made another round of cuts Saturday morning, reassigning RHP Michael Arias, LHP Kyle Carr, RHP Dylan Coleman and RHP Dom Hamel to minor league camp.

MMBets: The Dallas Mavericks visit the Cleveland Cavaliers

ATLANTA, GEORGIA - MARCH 10: Naji Marshall #13 of the Dallas Mavericks goes up for a shot during the first quarter against the Atlanta Hawks at State Farm Arena on March 10, 2026 in Atlanta, Georgia. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Todd Kirkland/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The last MMBets post went 4-for-4. I celebrated while writing this in the dark of the ‘ol home office with a bowl of Häagen-Dazs Caramel Cone ice cream, which was outstanding. In other news, my left SI joint spent the day reminding me that barometric pressure is a real and personal enemy. Life is good and also painful.

Alright, let’s do this. The Dallas Mavericks (22-45) travel to Cleveland to face the Cavaliers (41-26) Sunday at 2:30 PM CST in the back half of a home-and-home, after Cleveland routed Dallas 138-105 on Friday—a game that felt about as close as the score suggests. Cooper Flagg had a monster third quarter, and Naji Marshall showed signs of life. Everyone else was a supporting character in a Cavs highlight reel.

Cleveland will be without Jarrett Allen (right knee tendonitis, out) despite earlier reports suggesting his return—the official injury report filed at 2:30 AM puts that to rest. Klay Thompson is doubtful (rest). For Dallas, Gafford and Cisse remain doubtful, and PJ Washington is questionable with a left ankle.

Let’s scan the lines in search of value:

🏀 Fixture: Dallas Mavericks (22-45) @ Cleveland Cavaliers (41-26) 📍 Rocket Mortgage FieldHouse — Cleveland, OH 🕑 2:30 PM CST, Sunday, March 15, 2026 📺 NBA TV / KFAA Channel 29 / MAVS TV

📊 DraftKings Snapshot (as of 3:00 AM CST) Spread: CLE -16.5 (-112) | DAL +16.5 (-108) Total: 236.5 (O -115 / U -105) Moneyline: CLE -1600 | DAL +900

📉 Game Side Lean: Dallas +16.5

Sixteen and a half points is a canyon, and the Mavericks are a team that usually plays too hard to fall into those this season. Granted, they lost by 33 on Friday, but let’s gently set that aside and say the quiet part out loud: this spread is too big.

This is a roster with no quit—no tanking by committee, no mailing it in—just a group of guys playing out the string with something to prove on a nightly basis even when Tankathon wisdom might suggest otherwise. Cleveland, meanwhile, will be without Allen, and is juggling a playoff rotation with Strus working back from a Jones fracture. The Cavs are the better team. They may win by 20. But 16.5 asks a lot of a team that may have one eye on seeding and another on rest, and Dallas has enough scrappers to make the final margin uncomfortable. Back door cover is a real conversation here. Keep it light on this one.

🔮 Total Lean: Under 236.5

This number feels high for a game missing this much frontcourt. Allen out means the Cavs will again be missing an efficient Harden pick-and-roll partner, and the Dallas interior—already a wreck—slows possessions down by necessity rather than design. Friday’s game finished at 243 combined with everything clicking for Cleveland in a blowout. In a closer, messier game with more bodies on the injury report, the pace comes down. Under 236.5 has value.

🎯 Player Props We Like

Naji Marshall Over 24.5 PRA (+103) Marshall had 17 points, 7 rebounds, and 3 assists in 27 minutes Friday—27 PRA and a clear signal that the usage and confidence are back. You don’t wait three more games to confirm a player has returned to form; by then the books have already adjusted. Marshall is Dallas’s most versatile wing with the ball in his hands, and against a Cleveland defense that may be running a looser rotation with playoff positioning in mind, 24.5 is a number he’s capable of clearing. The plus money makes this an easy look.

Dean Wade Over 5.5 Points (+105) Wade has been one of the steadier quiet contributors in Cleveland’s home rotation, consistently clearing this number at Rocket Mortgage when he gets his minutes. This is the kind of low-floor prop that doesn’t make the highlight reel but cashes quietly while you’re watching something else. With Strus limited and the wing rotation stretched, Wade sees a clean path to his usual run. Plus money on a number he clears almost by accident. We’ll take it.

💡 Summary: Dallas +16.5 for a team too stubborn to lose ugly twice in a row. Under 236.5 with the frontcourt carnage on both sides. Marshall returning to form at plus money, and Dean Wade doing Dean Wade things at home. Let’s see if the Caramel Cone was the good kind of harbinger. Dark Cherry Truffle is also a solid pick. Go Mavs. Now, if you’ll excuse me, I am going to sleep dreaming of a shocking Mavs win, an SI joint hat will calm down and ice cream that never expands the waist line. Go Mavs.

Montreal faces Anaheim in a non-conference matchup

Anaheim Ducks (36-27-3, in the Pacific Division) vs. Montreal Canadiens (36-19-10, in the Atlantic Division)

Montreal, Quebec; Sunday, 7 p.m. EDT

BETMGM SPORTSBOOK LINE: Canadiens -152, Ducks +126; over/under is 6.5

BOTTOM LINE: The Montreal Canadiens play the Anaheim Ducks in a non-conference matchup.

Montreal is 36-19-10 overall and 18-12-2 at home. The Canadiens have committed 273 total penalties (4.2 per game) to rank fourth in the league.

Anaheim has gone 14-17-2 in road games and 36-27-3 overall. The Ducks have a 14-2-2 record in games they score one or more power-play goals.

Sunday's game is the second time these teams meet this season. The Ducks won 6-5 in a shootout in the last matchup.

TOP PERFORMERS: Cole Caufield has 38 goals and 27 assists for the Canadiens. Nicholas Suzuki has four goals and eight assists over the last 10 games.

Jackson LaCombe has eight goals and 38 assists for the Ducks. Cutter Gauthier has scored eight goals and added one assist over the last 10 games.

LAST 10 GAMES: Canadiens: 5-2-3, averaging 3.9 goals, 6.9 assists, 3.4 penalties and 7.1 penalty minutes while giving up 3.1 goals per game.

Ducks: 6-4-0, averaging 3.2 goals, 5.4 assists, 4.5 penalties and 11.6 penalty minutes while giving up 3.3 goals per game.

INJURIES: Canadiens: None listed.

Ducks: None listed.

___

The Associated Press created this story using technology provided by Data Skrive and data from Sportradar.

Red Wings take losing streak into home matchup with the Flames

Calgary Flames (26-33-7, in the Pacific Division) vs. Detroit Red Wings (36-23-8, in the Atlantic Division)

Detroit; Monday, 7 p.m. EDT

BOTTOM LINE: The Detroit Red Wings head into a matchup against the Calgary Flames as losers of three in a row.

Detroit is 36-23-8 overall and 18-11-3 in home games. The Red Wings are 29-4-6 when scoring three or more goals.

Calgary has a 10-21-3 record in road games and a 26-33-7 record overall. The Flames serve 11.2 penalty minutes per game to rank fourth in NHL play.

Monday's game is the second time these teams match up this season. The Red Wings won 4-3 in the previous meeting. Alex DeBrincat led the Red Wings with two goals.

TOP PERFORMERS: DeBrincat has scored 33 goals with 33 assists for the Red Wings. Moritz Seider has one goal and eight assists over the past 10 games.

Morgan Frost has 14 goals and 18 assists for the Flames. MacKenzie Weegar has five assists over the last 10 games.

LAST 10 GAMES: Red Wings: 3-5-2, averaging 2.2 goals, 4.1 assists, 3.4 penalties and 7.6 penalty minutes while giving up 2.7 goals per game.

Flames: 3-6-1, averaging 2.3 goals, 3.8 assists, three penalties and 6.2 penalty minutes while giving up 3.3 goals per game.

INJURIES: Red Wings: None listed.

Flames: None listed.

___

The Associated Press created this story using technology provided by Data Skrive and data from Sportradar.

Preview: Utah Jazz take aim at Sacramento in battle for the bottom

PORTLAND, OREGON - MARCH 13: Brice Sensabaugh #28 of the Utah Jazz celebrates after making a three point basket during the first half against the Portland Trail Blazers at Moda Center on March 13, 2026 in Portland, Oregon. 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 Soobum Im/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Some facts are irrefutable. Take the fact that I’m typing on a keyboard, and you, in response, are reading these words (thanks for doing that, by the way). Nobody denies such claims, because, well, there’s no benefit to arguing with a bulletproof truth. In stating such a rock-solid fact, the world stabilizes

Some truths of the world can be compared to the complexion of a slice of Swiss cheese. Facts that are largely true, save for a few rare exceptions. For example, gravity will always draw items to the ground. That is, of course, unless that thing is filled with helium, or is copping some Air Jordans (it’s gotta be the shoes!). Here’s my favorite Swiss cheese truth: The Sacramento Kings are always terrible at basketball.

We all hold the Mike Bibby, Chris Webber, Vlade Divac Kings of the early 2000s in high regard, of course, but aside from some minor blips on the chart, Sacramento has been one of the most consistently awful organizations in all of professional basketball.

We all celebrated when De’Aaron Fox and Domantas Sabonis dragged their organization from its prolonged postseason drought (I support the Seattle Mariners. Believe that I can empathize). We all roared with glee as the fanbase chanted “Light the beam!“ But when the Kings committed organizational suicide by dealing De’Aaron Fox for the distinguished honor of reconstructing the failed DeMar DeRozan, Zach LaVine-era Chicago Bulls (a team which has also suffered a relatively humiliating history outside of the Jordan years. Must be the shoes), we all just laughed.

The Kings will do what the Kings have done. Time is a circle; welcome back to the beginning.

Predicting Sacramento to miss the playoffs wasn’t difficult, but with the amount of veterans they loaded onto the depth chart, it’s clear that the front office had no intention of leading the tank race back in October. But here we are in the middle of March, and a purple emblem stands in the top 3 of Tankathon.com.

Look, I’ve been incredibly critical during this article, and I haven’t even mentioned the Utah Jazz yet, who are technically supposed to be the subject of this preview, but I have a little bit of sugar to spread on top of Sacramento’s dumpster stack. The Kings are winning basketball games these days — that’s right, basketball’s fraudulent royalty has descended from their throne atop the Great Tank Race and are now slumming it with the commoners.

Winners in 5 of their last 10 games, SacTown may be doing irreparable damage to their lottery odds, but Russell Westbrook (Utah Jazz legend) posted a triple-double in their recent win over the Clippers. They still carry a 17-51 record, which is the worst mark in the Western Conference.

Enter, stage left: The second-worst record in the Western Conference, the Utah Jazz. Utah (20-47) is still 3.5 games ahead of their adversary, but stands with a great deal of lottery gold to gobble should they fall to the home Kings on Sunday night. But keep this in mind: Utah beat Sacramento by nearly 30 points in their last meeting.

But the Jazz are positively hobbled, now without Keyonte George, Kyle Filipowski, Jusuf NurkicLauri Markkanen, Jaren Jackson Jr., Walker Kessler, John Konchar, and even Ace Bailey, who left the last game on concussion protocol after taking a gnarly elbow to the face.

Sacramento, though similarly hobbled, will essentially face off against the SLC Stars on Sunday.

The Kings are led by proud veterans unwilling to let losing become their identity. Utah is wheeling out whoever can play without losing the function of a vital appendage. With a sudden shot of momentum, this game is Sacramento’s to lose, which is why they are favored despite boasting an inferior record.

How to watch Utah Jazz vs Sacramento Kings

Date: Sunday, March 15, 2026
Time: 8:00 PM MT
Location: Golden One Center, Sacramento, California
Channel: Jazz+, KJZZ
Odds: SAC -2.5

Freddy Peralta has ‘no problem’ pitching with added rest as he keeps passing on wisdom to Mets

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows Freddy Peralta of the New York Mets pitching against the St. Louis Cardinals, Image 2 shows New York Mets pitcher Christian Scott throwing live batting practice during Spring Training
Freddy Peralta has helped Christian Scott adjust since joining the Mets.

WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. — Freddy Peralta is ready.

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The new Mets ace is set to start Opening Day and looked crisp Saturday over four innings, allowing just one run against the Astros.

He has one more outing remaining before the regular season begins.

The right-hander’s swing-and-miss stuff was evident in an 8-2 loss to Houston at Ballpark of the Palm Beaches.

And even if his velocity was a tick down from normal — about 1 mph down on most of his pitches, Peralta was unconcerned.

Freddy Peralta throws a pitch during the Mets’ Feb. 27 spring training game. Getty Images

“Everything is getting where I want it to be,’’ Peralta said. “I don’t check my speed. I know myself. I know how I work when I get into the season and the intensity of the game is when I am who I really am. I know what to do.”

That’s true, he said, whether he’s pitching every five or six days, as the Mets could use a six-man rotation.

Manager Carlos Mendoza previously stated Peralta would be the one starter not impacted by that schedule but said that could change, depending on the team’s needs.

Peralta added Saturday he would be fine with pitching with added rest, as long as it was communicated early.

“It’s no problem,” Peralta said. “I’ve been in that situation before — for years. I know I can manage.”

Peralta is passing that veteran attitude and pitching IQ on to the other Mets starters, including Christian Scott.

The 26-year-old, returning from Tommy John surgery, made his second appearance of the spring Tuesday as he works back into major league form.

With the rotation likely filled by Peralta, Clay Holmes, Kodai Senga, Nolan McLean, Sean Manaea and David Peterson, Scott is trying to pick up as much as he can from Peralta while they’re in camp together.

He’s not alone in that attempt, as Peralta came from the Brewers highly respected, as well as successful and willing to impart his wisdom.

And Scott believes he’s uniquely qualified to be a student of Peralta’s.

“I want to pick his brain throughout the season for whatever I can learn,’’ Scott said.

“I know he strikes out a lot of guys,” Scott said. “That’s his calling card. For me, as a pitcher, that’s what I strive to do: Strike out guys at a high level. I watch outings and his delivery is a little more funky than other guys, but to be able to go out there and do it and make every start every year and be able to stay healthy, it’s mind-blowing. I’m trying to be the same way.”

Christian Scott throws a pitch during the Mets’ Feb. 21 workout in spring training. Corey Sipkin for the NY Post

Scott has only nine major league starts to his name, but struck out eight batters in six innings in his second start with the Mets in 2024.

Peralta, as Scott noted, has shown an ability to be productive and dependable.

Over the previous three seasons, the 29-year-old has made at least 30 starts, had 200-plus strikeouts and made a pair of All-Star teams.

And Scott knows it’s not simply because of talent, which is why he’s kept a close eye on Peralta all spring, even between starts, to see what he can learn.

“The first thing is that he’s the same guy every day at the field,” Scott said. “You know what you’re gonna get from him. I feel that’s underrated, especially over the course of the season. I’ve already seen how high the highs can be and how low the lows are. He’s been through it all for a bunch of seasons and been an All-Star. It’s cool to be able to see a guy like that, who stays consistent on a day-to-day basis.”

And Scott is also getting to know the work it takes to make that possible.

“His catch-play with his throwing program is very consistent,’’ Scott said. “It’s like he hits the glove with every single throw, every time he’s out there. I’ll go by and say ‘That’s beautiful’ and he laughs, but mine isn’t as good.”

He’s working on it.

James praises Doncic after overtime Lakers winner

A smiling Luka Doncic celebrates with his arms raised, in the Lakers' yellow vest
Luka Doncic joined the Lakers from the Dallas Mavericks last year [Reuters]

LeBron James praised the "generational" talent of team-mate Luka Doncic after the Slovenian hit an overtime winner as the Los Angeles Lakers came from behind to beat the Denver Nuggets 127-125.

Doncic, 27, finished with 30 points, 13 assists and 11 rebounds for his eighth triple-double of the season as the Lakers secured their fifth consecutive victory.

The six-time NBA all-star hit a step-back jump shot with 0.5 seconds remaining on the clock to hand his side the victory.

"Just a big-time shot by a generational player," James said of his team-mate.

"He's just a big-time player, man. It's going to be just the first of many game winners like that for him in a Lakers uniform."

Austin Reaves hit a team-high 32 points, Marcus Smart added 21 points and five steals, while James, 41, contributed 17 points in 40 minutes as the Lakers moved up to third in the Western Conference.

James dived full length on the floor to prevent Denver getting an offensive rebound with 54.3 seconds remaining - a play Lakers coach JJ Redick said he had never previously seen in James' 23-year professional career.

"I think all of us have heard it from our coaches when we were little: the first man to the floor usually gets the ball," said James.

"So, that's just my little league coach kind of in my head at that moment, understanding the significance of it."

Lakers coach Redick was pleased with his side's collective performance.

"We still have got a long way to go, but we are certainly optimistic with how we handled this stretch of games," Redick said.

Japan routs Philippines 7-0 to reach Women's Asian Cup semis and clinch a World Cup spot

SYDNEY (AP) — Toko Koga headed in two goals as Japan routed Philippines 7-0 on Sunday to advance to the Women’s Asian Cup semifinals and secure a spot in next year’s World Cup in Brazil.

The 20-year-old Tottenham defender scored in first-half stoppage time and again in the 76th minute as Japan improved its tally to 24 goals and none conceded so far in the 2026 championship.

Japan will play 2022 runner-up South Korea on Wednesday for a spot in next weekend's final.

“It’s always nice to score a lot of goals and for the players to show what they can do, but it’s not going to help us against Korea,” Japan coach Nils Nielsen said. “I knew we scored a lot, but for the semifinal, (earlier goals) can’t help us.

“We will be ready to play South Korea.”

Four years ago, Japan lost on penalties to eventual champion China in the semifinals, ending its title defense.

All the semifinalists in Australia qualify automatically for the 2027 Women’s World Cup. The losing quarterfinalists go into playoffs for two more guaranteed places in Brazil.

Slow start, big finish

Japan completely dominated possession and field position but wasn't able to score for 45 minutes against a determined Philippines defense anchored by goalkeeper Nina Meollo.

Once the first goal went in — Mina Tanaka's header from point-blank range after a scrappy scramble in the goalmouth — it started a flow for the top-ranked team in the tournament.

Three minutes later, Koga jumped to meet a corner from Honoko Hayashi and angled it into the back of the net to give Japan a 2-0 halftime lead.

The Japanese scored twice in three minutes midway through the second half to lead 4-0, with Remina Chiba sliding in with a right-foot shot from the edge of the box in the 65th from Aoba Fujino’s long, floating cross and Manaka Matsukubo scoring in the 67th.

Koga scored again with a close-range header to make it 5-0 before substitutes Momoko Tanikawa and Riko Ueki added further goals in the last four minutes of regulation.

“Obviously it’s tough to take but you’re playing probably the best team in Asia … probably one of the top five teams in the world,” Philippines coach Mark Torcaso said. “Our girls showed a lot of determination in that first half. We had a lot of younger players out there in the first half, and they got some really good exposure and experience, so I’m really proud of that.

“But we’ve got another game to worry about to get to a World Cup, to play Uzbekistan, so we'll just turn the page over and we’ll focus on the next one now.”

Japan, the 2014 and 2018 champion, scored a tournament-leading 17 goals in the group stage.

China beat Taiwan 2-0 in extra time in a Saturday quarterfinal set against geopolitical tensions to move into a semifinal against host Sam Kerr 's Australia, which beat North Korea 2-1 on Friday night.

Iran's exit

The last of the quarterfinals was played hours after Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke announced another three members of the Iranian women’s soccer team who accepted refugee visas to stay in Australia have decided to return Iran.

Initially, six players and a support staff member accepted humanitarian visas to stay in Australia before the rest of the Iranian contingent flew from Sydney to Malaysia on March 9. So far, four of those have elected to rejoin the Iran squad which has temporarily remained in Kuala Lumpur.

___

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

Kimi Antonelli takes his first F1 win with victory in China to extend Mercedes' dominant start

SHANGHAI (AP) — He’s been defined by being Lewis Hamilton’s successor and George Russell’s teammate. Now Kimi Antonelli is a Formula 1 race-winner in his own right, and the second-youngest in history.

The 19-year-old Italian pulled clear of an entertaining battle between Russell and the two Ferraris to take a commanding win at the Chinese Grand Prix on Sunday and share the podium with his teammate and Hamilton, the seven-time champion he replaced last year.

It's a vindication of the gamble Mercedes team principal Toto Wolff took in picking the youngster, who'd joined Mercedes' junior program aged just 11, to replace an all-time great when Hamilton moved to Ferrari for 2025. There were plenty of doubters when Antonelli crashed 10 minutes into his practice debut in 2024.

“Many said it was just too early last year, and obviously we asked ourselves that question, whether it was too much to throw him into this pressure cooker," Wolff told Sky Sport Germany.

"One year with ups and downs and he’s young. We have to forgive him these mistakes, and now he’s in the second Grand Prix (of 2026) and brings it home ruthlessly. It’s good.”

The 19-year-old Italian was the youngest pole-position starter and briefly lost the lead to Hamilton at the start but retook it soon after and was in control the rest of the way.

“We did it! We did it!” Antonelli shouted to his team over the radio amid laughs and whoops, and he was holding back tears amid celebrations and a TV interview soon after.

It was another 1-2 finish for Mercedes to start the season as Russell came through a battle with both Ferraris to finish second. Hamilton was third for his long-awaited first Grand Prix podium finish for Ferrari.

The only driver younger than Antonelli to win a Grand Prix was Max Verstappen, who was 18 when he took his first victory in 2016. He's the first Italian to win since Giancarlo Fisichella in 2006.

Russell bests Ferraris in thriller

The new regulations again produced a dramatic fight for position between Mercedes and the fast-starting Ferraris as Russell fought his way past Charles Leclerc and Hamilton in a multi-lap battle with numerous changes of position. That allowed Antonelli to build his lead at the front.

Even after Russell had pulled away to secure second place, teammates Leclerc and Hamilton kept up their own fight for third. “This is quite a fun battle," Leclerc exclaimed over the radio.

Leclerc was fourth with Oliver Bearman fifth for Haas, Pierre Gasly sixth for Alpine and Liam Lawson seventh for Racing Bulls. Isack Hadjar recovered from an early spin to place eighth for Red Bull, ahead of Carlos Sainz, Jr. in ninth for Williams, while Franco Colapinto was 10th for Alpine to score his first point since 2024.

Max Verstappen was running sixth when his car lost power and he had to limp back to the pits in another blow for the four-time champion, who has been a leading critic of F1’s new cars.

Double disaster for McLaren

Formula 1 champion Lando Norris and his McLaren teammate Oscar Piastri were both unable to start after encountering technical problems minutes before the race began.

Piastri was due to start fifth and Norris sixth for Sunday's race. Norris was in his car in the pits but didn't leave for the grid, before Piastri was then withdrawn from the grid.

McLaren said it found “two different electrical problems on the power unit side” after an investigation. It's the second time Piastri has failed to start in 2026 after he crashed before the start of last week's race in Australia. Only 18 of 22 cars took the start, with Audi's Gabriel Bortoleto and Williams' Alex Albon also unable to make it, before both Aston Martin cars and Verstappen hit trouble in the race too.

F1 is racing hours after it announced next month's races in Bahrain and Saudi Arabia will not go ahead because of the war in the Middle East.

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Daniels hits 3 late 3s, Cal Baptist beats Utah Valley for WAC title, 1st NCAA Tournament berth

PARADISE, Nev. (AP) — Dominique Daniels Jr. hit three 3-pointers in the final two minutes and finished with 23 points on Saturday night to help No. 2 seed Cal Baptist beat top-seeded Utah Valley 63-61 to win the final Western Athletic Conference Tournament and clinch the first NCAA Tournament berth in program history.

Cal Baptist (25-8), which began the transition from Division II in 2018 and became eligible for the postseason in the 2022-23 season, extended its program record (D-I era) for single-season wins. The Lancers have won six games in a row.

Utah Valley (25-8), which has won back-to-back conference regular-season titles and four of the last six, had its seven-game win streak snapped.

Daniels, who finished 7-of-25 shooting, hit back-to-back 3s that tied it 60-all with 1:16 to play. Jackson Holcombe grabbed an offensive rebound, was fouled and made 1-of-2 free throws with 39 seconds left, but Daniel hit a pull-up 3-pointer with the shot clock winding down that gave Cal Baptist a two-point lead with 14.6 seconds remaining.

Isaac Davis missed a potential tying alley-oop dunk with three seconds left.

Holcombe led the Wolverines with 18 points and Davis scored 12. Trevan Leonhardt had 10 rebounds and eight assists to go with six points while consistently harassing Daniels defensively.

Bradey Henige had 11 points for the Lancers and Jonathan Griman had 10 points on 5-of-6 shooting before he fouled out with about 5 1/2 minutes left.

Utah Valley won the season series, 2-1, with both wins coming on its home floor. Daniels had a program-record 47 points in Cal Baptist's 78-71 home win over the Wolverines on Jan. 24.

Both programs are joining the Big West Conference beginning next season, when the WAC will rebrand as the United Athletic Conference.

Up next

Cal Baptist: Awaits its seeding and first-round opponent for the NCAA Tournament.

Utah Valley: Clinched an automatic invite to the NIT.

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New Zealand wins the toss, bats in the 1st T20 against South Africa

MOUNT MAUNGANUI, New Zealand (AP) — New Zealand has won the toss Sunday and chosen to bat in the first of five Twenty20 internationals against South Africa, beginning only a week after New Zealand's loss to India in the T20 World Cup final.

Eight members of the New Zealand World Cup squad including Rachin Ravindra, Finn Allen, Tim Seifert, Glenn Phillips, Jacob Duffy, Daryl Mitchell and Mark Chapman are unavailable while preparing for the Indian Premier League or Pakistan Super League.

New Zealand beat South Africa by nine wickets in the World Cup semifinals after previously losing to the Proteas in group play.

Australia-born batter Nick Kelly will make his T20 debut for New Zealand after previously playing in three one-day internationals against Pakistan last year. Tom Latham, Tim Robinson, Bevon Jacobs and Zak Foulkes rejoin the New Zealand team along with Ben Sears who was a traveling reserve at the World Cup.

Connor Esterhuizen will make his debut for South Africa along Dian Forrester and Jordan Hermann who joins brother Rubin Hermann in the Proteas lineup.

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New Zealand: Devon Conway, Tom Latham, Tim Robinson, Nick Kelly, Bevon Jacobs, Mitchell Santner (captain), Jimmy Neesham, Cole McConchie, Zak Foulkes, Kyle Jamieson, Ben Sears.

South Africa: Connor Esterhuizen, Jordan Hermann, Tony de Zorzi, Rubin Hermann, Jason Smith, Dian Forrester, George Linde, Gerald Coetzee, Keshav Maharaj (captain), Nqobani Mokoena, Ottneil Baartman.

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Indiana faces Milwaukee, aims to break road losing streak

Indiana Pacers (15-52, 15th in the Eastern Conference) vs. Milwaukee Bucks (27-39, 11th in the Eastern Conference)

Milwaukee; Sunday, 3:30 p.m. EDT

BETMGM SPORTSBOOK LINE: Bucks -7.5; over/under is 228.5

BOTTOM LINE: Indiana travels to Milwaukee looking to break its six-game road slide.

The Bucks are 19-26 in conference play. Milwaukee is ninth in the Eastern Conference with 32.4 defensive rebounds per game led by Giannis Antetokounmpo averaging 7.0.

The Pacers are 3-9 against opponents in the Central Division. Indiana ranks ninth in the Eastern Conference with 26.4 assists per game led by Andrew Nembhard averaging 7.3.

The Bucks score 110.8 points per game, 8.9 fewer points than the 119.7 the Pacers allow. The Bucks average 111.0 points per game, 5.0 fewer points than the 116.0 the Bucks allow to opponents.

The teams meet for the fourth time this season. The Bucks won 105-99 in the last meeting on Feb. 7. Kevin Porter Jr. led the Bucks with 23 points, and Nembhard led the Pacers with 22 points.

TOP PERFORMERS: Ryan Rollins is averaging 16.7 points, 5.6 assists and 1.5 steals for the Bucks. Bobby Portis is averaging 2.2 made 3-pointers over the last 10 games.

Pascal Siakam is averaging 24 points, 6.7 rebounds and 3.9 assists for the Pacers. Jarace Walker is averaging 14.2 points, 6.9 rebounds and 3.3 assists over the past 10 games.

LAST 10 GAMES: Bucks: 2-8, averaging 102.9 points, 39.3 rebounds, 25.4 assists, 7.4 steals and 2.8 blocks per game while shooting 46.1% from the field. Their opponents have averaged 119.4 points per game.

Pacers: 0-10, averaging 110.3 points, 39.4 rebounds, 28.1 assists, 6.9 steals and 4.1 blocks per game while shooting 44.7% from the field. Their opponents have averaged 125.4 points.

INJURIES: Bucks: Giannis Antetokounmpo: day to day (calf), Ousmane Dieng: day to day (illness).

Pacers: Pascal Siakam: day to day (knee), Johnny Furphy: out for season (knee), Tyrese Haliburton: out for season (achilles), Quenton Jackson: day to day (calf).

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The Associated Press created this story using technology provided by Data Skrive and data from Sportradar.

Sacramento hosts conference foe Utah

Utah Jazz (20-47, 14th in the Western Conference) vs. Sacramento Kings (16-51, 15th in the Western Conference)

Sacramento, California; Sunday, 10 p.m. EDT

BETMGM SPORTSBOOK LINE: Kings -1.5; over/under is 232.5

BOTTOM LINE: Western Conference foes Sacramento and Utah meet on Sunday.

The Kings are 10-34 in conference games. Sacramento has a 3-4 record in games decided by less than 4 points.

The Jazz have gone 11-31 against Western Conference opponents. Utah allows 125.0 points to opponents while being outscored by 7.6 points per game.

The Kings average 110.6 points per game, 14.4 fewer points than the 125.0 the Jazz give up. The Jazz's 46.5% shooting percentage from the field this season is 2.8 percentage points lower than the Kings have given up to their opponents (49.3%).

The teams play for the fourth time this season. The Jazz won the last meeting 121-93 on Feb. 12. Jaren Jackson Jr. scored 23 points to help lead the Jazz to the victory.

TOP PERFORMERS: DeMar DeRozan is averaging 18.4 points and 3.9 assists for the Kings. Russell Westbrook is averaging 1.6 made 3-pointers over the last 10 games.

Keyonte George is averaging 23.6 points and 6.1 assists for the Jazz. Brice Sensabaugh is averaging 18.3 points over the last 10 games.

LAST 10 GAMES: Kings: 4-6, averaging 115.1 points, 44.5 rebounds, 27.7 assists, 8.4 steals and 5.2 blocks per game while shooting 47.4% from the field. Their opponents have averaged 121.3 points per game.

Jazz: 2-8, averaging 112.6 points, 41.0 rebounds, 26.2 assists, 10.9 steals and 4.2 blocks per game while shooting 43.9% from the field. Their opponents have averaged 120.2 points.

INJURIES: Kings: Malik Monk: out (ankle), Domantas Sabonis: out for season (back), Devin Carter: out (calf), De'Andre Hunter: out for season (eye), Zach LaVine: out for season (finger), Drew Eubanks: out (thumb), Keegan Murray: out (ankle).

Jazz: Lauri Markkanen: out (ankle), Ace Bailey: day to day (concussion), Keyonte George: day to day (leg), Walker Kessler: out for season (shoulder), Jusuf Nurkic: out for season (nose), Jaren Jackson Jr.: out for season (knee), John Konchar: day to day (calf).

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The Associated Press created this story using technology provided by Data Skrive and data from Sportradar.