Mark Allen advances in Masters despite battle with food poisoning

  • Allen wins five frames in a row against Mark Williams

  • Zhao Xintong cruises to 6-2 win over Gary Wilson

Mark Allen shrugged off a bout of food poisoning to beat Mark Williams 6-2, winning five successive frames, and book a quarter-final with Judd Trump or Ding Junhui, who play on Wednesday.

Speaking to the BBC, Allen, the 2018 champion, said: “I prepare properly for these events, but I couldn’t prepare for this at all as I’ve been lying in bed all week with food poisoning. I just thought: ‘Go out there and give my best.’ I wouldn’t have had much left if it had got much closer.”

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Postponed Heat, Bulls game rescheduled for Jan. 29, games scheduled that night now Jan. 31

The slippery court that forced the Miami Heat and Chicago Bulls to postpone their game last Thursday has slid both into a tough stretch of the schedule.

The league announced that the postponed game been rescheduled for Jan. 29. Additionally, the Chicago at Miami game, previously scheduled for Jan. 30, has been rescheduled to Jan. 31.

What that means in practice is that both the Bulls and Heat will now have to play four games in five days and play each other three times in that stretch.

This all came to pass because of condensation on the court that made it unsafe to play the teams' scheduled Jan. 8 game. The combination of a Blackhawks game the night before (so there was ice under the floor) with an unseasonably warm and humid day in Chicago led to condensation forming on the court. While there were extensive efforts to mop up and towel off the court, the water would just come back because of the conditions.

It was unsafe, and ultimately, both coaches — along with league representatives and the referees — chose to postpone the game rather than risk players' health.

Jaylen Brown gets what he asked for, fined $35,000 for rant about officials

"I'll take the f****** fine. Curtis (Blair), those dudes was terrible tonight. I don't care. They can fine me whatever they want."

Ask and ye shall receive. The NBA fined Jaylen Brown $35,000 on Monday for "public criticism of the officiating," the league announced.

Brown said he was "irate" after the Celtics lost to the Spurs on Saturday in a game where Brown scored 27 points, took 28 shots, and didn't get to the free throw line once. For the game, Boston shot four free throws to San Antonio's 20. After the game, Brown ranted about the officials and put up an NSFW social media post along the same lines.

"I hope somebody can pull up the clips," Brown said, via the Associated Press. "It's the same s*** every time we play a good team. It's like they refuse to make the calls and they call touch calls on the other end. That's just extremely frustrating...

"Somebody please pull it up. Every time we play a good team, the inconsistency is crazy. ... I'm irate at how they officiated the game today."

While this is not the first time Brown has criticized the officiating of Celtics games this season, it is his first fine.

How Kings rookies helped Malik Monk stay ready to make impact in win vs. Lakers

How Kings rookies helped Malik Monk stay ready to make impact in win vs. Lakers originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

It hasn’t been an easy 2025-26 NBA season so far for the Kings, and the same can be said for Malik Monk.

But Sacramento has put together two consecutive wins after their dominant 124-112 victory over the Los Angeles Lakers on Monday night at Golden 1 Center, and the veteran point guard has battled through adversity to make an impact in both. Staying ready hasn’t been easy, but taking up a mentorship role has helped Monk focus on the task at hand: contributing no matter what his situation is.

“Man, come in here, whether I’m playing or not — come on, man, watch out,” Monk told Morgan Ragan and Kyle Draper on “Kings Postgame Live” as rookie centers Dylan Cardwell and Maxime Raynaud interrupted the interview. “Just dealing what I was dealing with, coming in and not hanging my head, talking to my rooks right here that just came up, just trying to teach them the game and keep my mind off of the stuff I can’t control. So that’s how I just stay ready.

“Kept getting shots up, staying with my work and playing the game like this, man. Playing the game like this. Happy about it.”

Monk has dealt with trade rumors and DNPs in recent weeks, sitting three straight games from Jan. 2-6 after two DNPs in December, but helping the rookies has allowed him to keep a clear head and contribute off the bench. He scored 26 points on 9-of-15 shooting from the field and 7 of 9 from deep with a game-high-tying eight assists against the Lakers, one night after contributing 15 points in Sacramento’s home win over the Houston Rockets.

While Monk said after Monday’s game he wasn’t given a specific adjustment he needed to make in order to return to the Kings’ rotation, coach Doug Christie told reporters the point guard has played to Sacramento’s “standard” over the last two games with Dennis Schröder suspended.

“… Everything about his focus. He’s talented as hell, man,” Christie said after the win. “So defensive intensity, coverages, communicating with his teammates. Everything about him has been top-notch. So, he deserves everything. He was the player of the game for us. The 26 points, as I told him, fantastic. It was the eight assists that was really impressive for me, actually, because he has the capabilities to do all those things.”

Monk’s teammate Russell Westbrook never felt worried that time on the bench would impact the former NBA Sixth Man of the Year Award finalist.

“Not surprising to me,” Westbrook told reporters postgame. “‘Lik can hoop, can put the ball in the hole. Give [him] an opportunity, he’ll produce some shape or form. If it’s not scoring, generating off — he [does] good job of making the best play for somebody else as well, too. So, I never worry about Malik one bit.”

Nothing is certain — in life, or in the NBA. But ensuring he’s prepared to make an impact helped Monk contribute to the Kings’ 10th win of the season and just their second winning streak of the campaign, on a back-to-back, no less.

When Sacramento plays former Kings coach Mike Brown and the New York Knicks on Wednesday at Golden 1 Center, Monk no doubt will look to do the same as the team seeks it’s first three-game streak of the season.

“Definitely trying to come in and make an immediate impact so I can stay on the court,” Monk said. “So yeah … I do that, I’ll be out there.”

And in the meantime, he’ll continue to teach Sacramento’s promising group of youngsters.

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Observations after massive 1st half drives Sixers to bounce-back win

Observations after massive 1st half drives Sixers to bounce-back win  originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

The Sixers rode a dream first half to a bounce-back win Monday night in Toronto. 

They earned a split in their back-to-back against the Raptors with a 115-102 victory.

Tyrese Maxey scored 33 points. Joel Embiid had 27 points, eight rebounds and four assists.

The 22-16 Sixers had a full-strength squad. The 24-17 Raptors’ RJ Barrett, Jakob Poeltl and Ja’Kobe Walter were out with injuries. 

The Sixers will host the Cavs on both Wednesday and Friday nights. Here are observations on their win over the Raptors:

Maxey shows off three-level skills 

Paul George scored the Sixers’ first five points on two free throws and a pull-up three-pointer. VJ Edgecombe and Embiid also canned early long-distance jumpers.

Maxey wasted no time in displaying his three-level scoring prowess. He sped past defenders, hit mid-range jumpers, fired away well beyond the arc and appeared to pose a legitimate threat from almost anywhere.

The 25-year-old tallied 18 points in the first quarter on 6-for-7 shooting. Through 36 games, Maxey’s averaged 30.9 points. It’s remarkable that, if Maxey finishes the season with at least 30 points per game, the Sixers will have had four such years in the past five. Embiid did it three straight times between the 2021-22 and 2023-24 campaigns and won two scoring titles in the process. Maxey currently leads the Eastern Conference in scoring and sits third in the NBA. 

As a team, the Sixers shot 14 for 17 from the floor in the first quarter (7 for 8 from three-point range). The Sixers’ star trio had 37 of the team’s 45 first-period points.

Embiid above the rim

Unfortunately for the Raptors, a new quarter did not mean the Sixers’ offense drastically cooled off.

Embiid jammed in his most powerful dunk of the season in the second quarter. He accepted an Edgecombe pass, took a hard dribble through the lane and elevated for a one-hand slam that the Sixers’ bench enjoyed. Beyond the entertaining two points, it’s clearly an excellent indicator with Embiid’s health that he’s willing and able to score in that fashion above the rim.

Embiid’s now just three points away from the milestone of 13,000 career points. He’s seventh on the Sixers’ all-time scoring list.

Toronto remained unable to handle the Maxey-Embiid two-man game. Maxey sunk yet another three off of an Embiid dribble handoff to stretch the Sixers’ advantage to 73–44. They led by as many as 31 points late in the second quarter. 

The Sixers were due for a good shooting game after subpar outings in their win over the Magic and overtime loss Sunday to the Raptors. Their first half Monday night was better than anyone could’ve possibly envisioned.

Lowry feels the love

Edgecombe was a significant part of the much-improved shooting effort. The rookie posted 15 points (5 for 7 from the field, 5 for 6 from three-point range) and eight assists. 

Toronto finally gathered some momentum late in the third quarter, making a run and cutting the Sixers’ lead to 18 points on a Gradey Dick layup.

The Raptors hung around in the fourth, though never to a degree that truly alarmed the Sixers. For several minutes, the main lingering question was whether all the fans asking for Sixers head coach Nick Nurse to sub in Kyle Lowry would get their wish.

Much to everyone’s delight, Lowry checked in at the 1:57 mark. The six-time All-Star and Raptors legend basked in the moment and thanked the crowd.

The 39-year-old tried three jumpers and came up empty. That didn’t diminish the cheers at the final buzzer. Lowry held the ball as the clock expired and raised his arm to acknowledge the love again.

Former Jets Head Coach Comes Out Of Retirement, Becomes Blue Jackets Head Coach

The Columbus Blue Jackets officially announced Monday that veteran coach Rick Bowness has been named their new head coach following the firing of Dean Evason and assistant coach Steve McCarthy. Evason was relieved of his duties after the Blue Jackets failed to meet expectations this season, leaving the club after going 19-19-7 for the worst record in the East.

Bowness, 70, comes out of retirement to take on the challenge in Columbus, bringing nearly four decades of NHL coaching experience and a reputation for steady leadership. Prior to stepping away from the bench in May 2024, he concluded a highly successful two-year stint with the Winnipeg Jets, where he posted a 98-57-9 record and led the club to consecutive playoff appearances.

Bowness’s time in Winnipeg revitalized the Jets’ identity, implementing a structured style of play that became the foundation for future success. During the 2023-24 season, under his guidance Winnipeg tied a franchise record with 52 wins, set marks for road victories and defensive consistency, and earned recognition that saw him named a finalist for the Jack Adams Award as the NHL’s top coach.

His coaching roots run deep in Winnipeg history as Bowness began his NHL coaching career with the original Jets franchise in the 1980s, first as an assistant before serving 28 games as head coach during the 1988-89 season.

Jets Call Up Former Blackhawks Defenseman, Place Colin Miller On IRJets Call Up Former Blackhawks Defenseman, Place Colin Miller On IRWith Miller sidelined, the Jets tap former Blackhawk Isaak Phillips to bolster their struggling defense, hoping he brings stability to the blue line.

Beyond his time in Winnipeg, Bowness’s coaching résumé is one of the most extensive in NHL history. He has held head coaching positions with the Boston Bruins, Ottawa Senators, New York Islanders, Phoenix Coyotes and Dallas Stars, among others, and has served as an assistant coach with several teams including the Vancouver Canucks and Tampa Bay Lightning. His tenure with the Stars included guiding Dallas to the Stanley Cup Final in the pandemic-altered 2020 season.

Over his 38-year career, Bowness coached more NHL games than anyone else in league history and became one of only three coaches to lead teams in five different decades.

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Flyers' nightmare with Lightning finishes on a 5-1 loss

Flyers' nightmare with Lightning finishes on a 5-1 loss originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

The Flyers will be happy to be done with the Lightning this season.

They were outclassed by Tampa Bay again in a 5-1 loss Monday night at Xfinity Mobile Arena.

Christian Dvorak provided the Flyers’ lone goal when the Lightning already had a 3-0 lead.

The Flyers (22-14-8) couldn’t rebound from their worst loss of the season, a 7-2 drubbing right here two days ago to this same Tampa Bay team.

Rick Tocchet’s club has dropped consecutive games in regulation for just the second time. The Flyers are now 9-2-2 in games following a regulation loss.

A banged-up Travis Konecny returned to the lineup after he missed his first game of the season with an upper-body injury. Konecny, though, is now dealing with a lower-body injury after he took a puck to his knee Sunday at practice.

It didn’t keep him out Monday night. His game ended early with 9:24 minutes left in the third period when he was tossed for “abuse of officials” after being whistled for crosschecking.

The Lightning (28-13-3) are on an absolutely torrid stretch in which they’ve scored five goals per game over 10 straight wins.

The Flyers were swept in their three-game regular-season series with Tampa Bay and were outscored 15-3.

• Dan Vladar could do only so much for the Flyers.

He wasn’t at his best, but he really wasn’t a problem. The 28-year-old finished with 21 saves on 25 shots.

The Lightning’s final goal was an empty-netter.

The Flyers fell behind 1-0 for the 30th time. Tampa Bay’s game-opening goal came just 1:10 minutes into the action when the Flyers couldn’t locate a loose puck at the feet of Pontus Holmberg.

Then, only 33 seconds into the middle stanza, Erik Cernak’s shot went off Jake Guentzel and past Vladar. Not even four minutes later, Brayden Point padded the Lightning’s lead to 3-0 on the power play. Vladar made the initial save on Point, but he had little to no chance at stopping the next shot off the rebound.

Dvorak stemmed the tide for the Flyers with a goal. The Flyers had a chance to trim the deficit to 3-2 with a couple of power plays, but they didn’t record a shot on either one.

Tampa Bay took advantage, extending its lead back to three with another power play goal in the final minute of the second period.

Lightning netminder Jonas Johansson stopped 19 of the Flyers’ 20 shots.

• Matvei Michkov was held without a point.

Since the start of December, the 21-year-old winger has just one goal — an empty-netter — in 19 games. Michkov has eight assists over that span, but the Flyers could really use his goal-scoring ability.

It just hasn’t been there right now.

• Rodrigo Abols and Nikita Grebenkin both dropped the gloves for the Flyers simultaneously in the third period.

• The Flyers are back in action Wednesday when they visit the Sabres (7:30 p.m. ET/TNT).

The Early Returns For Egor Chinakhov Are Encouraging

When the Pittsburgh Penguins traded for Egor Chinakhov back on Dec. 29, I was a bit surprised. It came out of nowhere, and I didn't think they'd be in the market for another forward since their forward depth was already really good. 

Chinakhov had been hoping for a fresh start since the summer, when he requested a trade from the Columbus Blue Jackets, which they granted. The Penguins sent a 2026 second-round pick, a 2027 third-round pick, and forward Danton Heinen back for Chinakhov, which shows what they think of him.

He's the type of player that Dubas has routinely gone after over the past couple of years. When he sees that a young player needs a change of scenery, he pounces. He did the same for Philip Tomasino, Jesse Puljujarvi, Cody Glass, and Emil Bemstrom. Yes, it didn't work out for those four players in Pittsburgh, but that doesn't mean history will repeat itself here with Chinakhov. 

I know it's only been six games, but I've really liked the way he's played since making his Penguins' debut against the Detroit Red Wings on Jan. 1. He has two goals and three points in those six games for the Penguins and has showcased his blistering release multiple times. 

His first goal with the Penguins came off a brilliant stretch pass from Ben Kindel on Jan. 3, but it was his release that really stole the show. He came in on a breakaway against Red Wings goaltender John Gibson, and before you could even blink, the puck was in the back of the net

His second goal came against the Calgary Flames this past Saturday, and it capped off an awesome two-on-one with Evgeni Malkin. Chinakhov dished the puck to Malkin, who gave it right back to him, and made no mistake with a blistering one-timer. Flames goaltender Devin Cooley had no chance on this shot. 

That goal brought the crowd at PPG Paints Arena to life in the second period before Matt Coronato scored the game-winner early in the third. The loss snapped the Penguins' six-game winning streak that had vaulted them into a playoff spot. 

Outside of Chinakhov's release, his speed has been on display. He can fly up the ice and really burn opposing players when going for loose pucks. He really showcased his speed on Sunday against the Boston Bruins when he came in on a semi-breakaway and had a good chance against Joonas Korpisalo, but it was ultimately saved. 

Chinakhov has also been good in his own zone and has done a nice job defending against chances. His backchecking has been really solid, and I've liked how he anticipates plays before they happen. He hasn't been out of position, either. 

Detroit Red Wings center Michael Rasmussen (27) skates with the puck against Pittsburgh Penguins right wing Egor Chinakhov (59) during the third period at PPG Paints Arena. Mandatory Credit: Charles LeClaire-Imagn Images
Detroit Red Wings center Michael Rasmussen (27) skates with the puck against Pittsburgh Penguins right wing Egor Chinakhov (59) during the third period at PPG Paints Arena. Mandatory Credit: Charles LeClaire-Imagn Images

He has played 65:09 at 5v5 with the Penguins and has been on the ice for 51% of the shot attempts, 50.7% of the scoring chances, 51.8% of the high-danger chances, and 45.5% of the expected goals, though I think that latter number will go up in the second half of the season. 

Chinakhov and Kindel have spent a good chunk of time together on the same line and have shown some chemistry, even if some of the metrics are below water. They have played 49:46 at 5v5 together and are +1 in shot attempts, -3 in scoring chances, and -2 in high-danger chances. The latter two numbers will likely improve with more minutes together. 

Penguins Defenseman Sent To Wilkes-Barre/Scranton On Conditioning AssignmentPenguins Defenseman Sent To Wilkes-Barre/Scranton On Conditioning AssignmentPenguins defenseman Caleb Jones is inching closer to a return.

They could potentially play on the third line with Tommy Novak once Bryan Rust is healthy, while Evgeni Malkin reunites with Anthony Mantha and Justin Brazeau. Malkin works better at center and showed a ton of chemistry with the big wingers earlier in the season.

With a Novak-Kindel-Chinakhov line, you'd have a nice balance. Novak is a good playmaker, but has been scoring more as of late. Kindel has excellent vision, and Chinakhov can finish chances. 

Chinakhov still has 38 more games to show the Penguins' brass that he should be extended since he's slated to be a restricted free agent this summer, but he's off to a good start. 

(Data via Natural Stat Trick). 


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Brooks Koepka returns to PGA Tour after $5m charitable donation

  • PGA offers re-entry to LIV Golf players via new program

  • Koepka stands to miss out on at least $50m in equity

Brooks Koepka is returning to the PGA Tour just five weeks after bolting from LIV Golf, agreeing to a one-time program for elite players that comes with a financial penalty that could rank among the largest in sports.

Koepka plans to resume his PGA Tour career in the Farmers Insurance Open at Torrey Pines at the end of the month. But he will not be eligible for PGA Tour equity grants for five years, he will not receive FedEx Cup bonus money in 2026 and he cannot play signature events unless he earns his way in.

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Jets Call Up Former Blackhawks Defenseman, Place Colin Miller On IR

The Winnipeg Jets have made a surprising move on the blue line, recalling defenseman Isaak Phillips from the Manitoba Moose (AHL) while placing Colin Miller on injured reserve retroactive to January 11th.

Miller sustained his injury during Sunday’s game against the New Jersey Devils after a collision along the boards that required assistance off the ice. This marks the second recent injury to the Jets’ defense corps, following Haydn Fleury, who remains sidelined after a serious fall into the boards that left him stretchered off with multiple injuries.

Phillips’ call-up comes as a surprise, as many anticipated Jets prospect Elias Salomonsson would get the promotion. Salomonsson, who received his first recall earlier this season, played four games with Winnipeg, going minus-four before returning to the AHL.

Phillips brings a different look to the Jets’ lineup. The 23-year-old defenseman has NHL experience, having appeared in 56 games over four seasons with the Chicago Blackhawks. Originally a fifth-round pick by Chicago in 2020, Phillips was eventually sent to the AHL and traded to Manitoba, where he has continued his development.

The Jets hope Phillips can tap into his potential and provide a steady presence on the blue line. He is expected to make his Winnipeg debut Tuesday against the New York Islanders.

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Former Kings Center Signs Three-Year Contract Extension

Former Los Angeles Kings center and current member of the Pittsburgh Penguins, Blake Lizotte, has signed a three-year contract extension.

Lizotte will earn a total of $6.75 million under this deal, averaging $2.25 million per season and against the Penguins' salary cap, beginning next season.

This new deal will expire following the 2028-29 campaign, and he'll be 31 years old.

Lizotte has spent the past two seasons with the Penguins after his first six years were with the Kings.

The 28-year-old has spent nearly his entire career as a fourth-line center. This year, he's averaged 13:57 of ice time. That's just one second below his career-high of ice time that was set in 2019-20 with Los Angeles.

He's featured in 35 of 44 games for Pittsburgh and has recorded five goals and five assists for 10 points on the year. With that, he has a respectable 51.4 faceoff percentage and a plus-six rating.

Last season was his first in Pittsburgh. He ended that 2024-25 campaign with 59 games to his name, as well as 11 goals and 20 points.

Blake Lizotte (Charles LeClaire-Imagn Images)
Blake Lizotte (Charles LeClaire-Imagn Images)

Lizotte's time with the Kings began when he signed in April 2019. He was an undrafted forward who joined Los Angeles following two seasons at St. Cloud State from 2017-18 to 2018-19.

He made his NHL debut in 2018-19, but played his first full season in 2019-20. Lizotte scored six goals and 17 assists for 23 points in his rookie season as a 21-year-old.

His best NHL season was in his fifth year with the Kings. In 81 appearances for Los Angeles, he scored 11 goals and recorded 23 assists for a total of 34 points. He averaged 12:57 of ice time that season and registered a plus-11 rating.

From Kopitar to Uncertainty: The Kings’ Center CrisisFrom Kopitar to Uncertainty: The Kings’ Center CrisisLOS ANGELES, CA — For two decades, the Los Angeles Kings have had the luxury franchises spend years chasing: a true number one centerman in Anze Kopitar. Alongside Jonathan Quick and Drew Doughty, the Kings formed Hockey's Holy Trinity—three franchise-level pillars down the middle, on the back end, and in net. In their primes, all three ranked among the very best at their respective positions. That spine was the foundation of two Stanley Cups in three years, before the Mike Richards and Slava Voynov situations derailed the Lombardi administration.

Lizotte also accumulated a whopping 70 penalty minutes that year. He never reached more than 28 in any other NHL campaign.

His tenure with Los Angeles ended in the 2023-24 off-season when he signed with the Penguins as a free agent. Lizotte inked a two-year contract at $1.85 million per season, the same deal that is set to expire at the end of this season.


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NBA power rankings 2025-26: Pistons retain top spot while Thunder move up to second

We have moved into the dog days of the season, which can lead to strange results as players grow tired and start looking ahead to the All-Star break. All that gets taken into account in these latest NBA Power Rankings.

1. Detroit Pistons

(28-10, last week No. 1)
Detroit seems to have answered every question this season. The only question facing the Pistons now is "can they beat good teams in the playoffs?" While that can't be answered until April and May, they have been doing it during the regular season — Detroit is a league-best 10-4 against teams over .500, including 6-1 on the road. If you don't want to do the math yourself, the Pistons are 18-5 against teams below .500. Also impressive: The Pistons are 6-1 on the second night of a back-to-back this season. When the All-Star Game starters are announced a week from today, expect Cade Cunningham to be among them.

2. Oklahoma City Thunder

(33-7, last week No. 3)
Two Thunder games this coming week — hosting the Spurs and then traveling to face the Rockets — are good mid-season tests to see if the mid-season slump that made OKC look beatable continues, or if they have returned to form (watch that Spurs/Thunder game as part of Coast 2 Coast Tuesday on NBC and Peacock). Being the team with the target on its back is something the Thunder have had to adjust to this season, coach Mark Daigneault said last week. "When you win the championship and you start the way we started, it comes with the territory… It's a competitive privilege to be a team that other teams are up to play for." The best news out of OKC in recent weeks is that Nikola Topic has resumed training at the team's facility following chemotherapy for testicular cancer. This is a great milestone for Topic that deserves to be celebrated.

3. Minnesota Timberwolves

(26-14, last week No. 6)
Minnesota is looking more and more like the team that has gone to the Western Conference Finals in back-to-back years — coming from 15 down on Sunday to beat the Spurs was the latest example. Minnesota has all the hallmarks of a contender: It is top-10 in the league in both offense and defense, it is clutch and second in the league in points scored in the fourth quarter per game, and it has the superstar to take and make the big shot when it matters. Speaking of Anthony Edwards, he played it down like it was no big deal, but it is — congratulations to Edwards on becoming the third youngest player in NBA history to reach 10,000 points.

4. San Antonio Spurs

(27-12, last week No. 2)
After missing just a couple of games following a knee hyperextension, Victor Wembanyama was back on the court last week. Wemby pushed to come back sooner, with coach Mitch Johnson saying, "I do know his long-term health and making sure we keep that kid from himself in terms of his competitiveness [is a priority]. We want him to be healthy for years, not for just trying to win the next couple of games." Just after Johnson said that, Wemby went and dropped 30 on the Grizzlies in 21 minutes, but had to sit out the clutch minutes at the end of the game due to a minutes limit and the Spurs lost by one. The Spurs are doing the right thing, but when Wemby can do this, how injured is he?

5. Boston Celtics

(24-14, last week No. 5)
The Celtics don't slide in our rankings this week, but losses last week to the Timberwolves and a shorthanded Nuggets team raise a question about just how good this team is against the best (the Celtics are 11-9 against teams over .500 this season). Those concerns (and the return of Jayson Tatum in the next couple of months) are why they are actively looking for another big man to solidify the front line. The Celtics can solidify their position in the East with seven games in a row against the conference coming up, but six of them are on the road.

6. Phoenix Suns

(24-15, last week No. 8)
Let's give owner Mat Ishbia some props. We all rolled our eyes this summer when he said the focus in Phoenix would be on culture building — too many previous owners and GMs had said that and not followed through, and we hadn't seen that from Ishbia to that point — but he has done it. Give Dillon Brooks the locker room assist, along with the quiet leadership of Devin Booker (who, because the West is ridiculously deep, is a borderline All-Star). It is all working for the team that is the biggest surprise in the league. That culture will be put to the test over the next couple of weeks as the Suns head out for a five-game road trip through the East. Grayson Allen returned after missing nine games with a right knee injury, adding depth to a team that has thrived this season because it is stacked with good players.

7. New York Knicks

(25-14, last week No. 7)
The Knicks went 3-5 (without Josh Hart in the lineup, but he returned on Sunday and had 18 points and six dimes in a Knicks win. It's not a coincidence the team struggled without him — he is the Knicks' glue guy. He makes everyone else fit. "He's the heart and soul of the team from an energy perspective," Miles McBride told Stefan Bondy of the New York Post. "I bring a lot of energy, we got a lot of guys that do. But he's been doing it for so long and we've all been able to use him as the nucleus." New York is 1-1 so far on its road trip with a back-to-back against the Kings and Warriors remaining before a return to Madison Square Garden.

8. Houston Rockets

(22-14, last week No. 4)
Alperen Sengun's absence for essentially four games (he only played one minute in the game he got injured) showed exactly how much the Rockets depend on him, and why he should be an All-Star. The Rockets don't take a lot of 3-pointers (31.2 a game, 29th in the league) but make a top-five 37.2% when they do. Without Sengun on Friday against Portland, the team went 1-of-17 from 3 in the fourth quarter and lost. With him out, plus the one game he returned (a loss to the Kings), the Rockets are shooting a league worst 24.3%. The Rockets will try to get right with five straight home games, but that includes a Thursday-Friday back-to-back against the Thunder and Timberwolves.

9. Denver Nuggets

(26-13, last week No. 9)
The Nuggets are a very respectable 4-3 since Nikola Jokic went out, and while their league-leading offense has fallen off without the Joker, it is still a solid 14th in the league over those seven games. While Jokic is "antsy" to return, according to coach David Adelman, the wins and the fact that Denver remains third in the West mean they can afford to be patient about bringing the MVP candidate back. The day to really watch on that front is Jan. 30, when the Nuggets host the Clippers: If Jokic is out past that date he will miss too many games to qualify for postseason awards or the All-NBA team under the league's 65-game rule. Which is a stupid rule (I can guarantee you voters already took games played into account), but that is a discussion for another day.

10. Toronto Raptors

(24-16, last week No. 12)
Jakob Poeltl has missed the last 10 games, which is why the Raptors are active in the trade market looking for a big man. That said, his absence has not hurt the Toronto defense, as the team is seventh in the league over its last 10 games, and it has gone 7-3 overall (sitting fourth in the East). The Raptors beat the 76ers on Sunday but have a rematch on Monday, then later this week host a red-hot Clippers team led by Kawhi Leonard, a guy Raptors fans know well.

11. Cleveland Cavaliers

(22-18, last week No. 10)
The Cavaliers have played well during a tough stretch of the schedule, going 6-4 in their last 10 and posting the eighth-best net rating in the league (+4.8) during that stretch. While the Cavaliers have already lost as many games this season as they did all of last season and sit seventh in the East, they are just two games back of the No. 4 seed and the chance to host a first-round playoff game. Cleveland has an opportunity to help itself in the East standings this week with two games at Philadelphia.

12. Los Angeles Lakers

(23-13, last week No. 11)
Is the national media too hard on the Lakers? My old friend Darius Soriano at Silver Screen and Roll argued that recently, and he's not totally wrong. It's interesting to point out that the Lakers have essentially the same point differential this season as the 14-25 Charlotte Hornets (the Lakers are -12, the Hornets -13), but the reality is the Lakers are 10 games over .500 and sitting fifth in the West. While the Lakers are looking hard for a 3&D wing at the trade deadline, their problem is that 29 other teams are looking for one, and the price to get a good one — such as Herb Jones in New Orleans — is higher than the Lakers can pay at the deadline.

13. Philadelphia 76ers

(21-16, last week No. 13)
Paul George has been key to the 76ers' strong play of late — winners of 5-of-7 — because he has been the guy carrying the team in the minutes (particularly at the start of the fourth quarter) when both Joel Embiid and Tyrese Maxey are getting a rest. Even with more things going right, this team does things like last Monday's loss to a shorthanded Denver team, which just makes them hard to trust. One game against the Raptors and two against the Cavaliers this week are the kind of games the 76ers need to win if they are really going to earn our trust, and not just tease us with a few nights flashing their potential.

14. Orlando Magic

(22-18, last week No. 16)
The Magic are the comeback kids — they have nine wins this season in games where they trailed by at least 10 points, tied for second-most in the league. However, the more important comeback this week was the return of center Mo Wagner to the lineup. He has missed the first half of the season recovering from the torn ACL he suffered last December (last season he averaged 12.9 points and 5.9 rebounds a game off the bench). His brother, Fanz Wagner, is expected to return to the lineup soon (hopefully before the team's game in Berlin on Thursday). Finally, we all heard Paolo Banchero call bank before he launched the game-winner against the Nets, right?

15. Golden State Warriors

(21-19, last week No. 15)
One thing holding this season's Warriors back: They are not very good in the clutch. Golden State is 8-12 in games within five points in the final five minutes, and they have a -8.6 net rating in those minutes, largely because they have the second-worst clutch defense in the league this season. That shouldn't be the case on a team with veterans Jimmy Butler and Draymond Green. Golden State is 2-1 to start an eight-game homestand, where they have a chance to pad their record and move up the Western Conference standings.

16. Los Angeles Clippers

(15-23, last week No. 19)
Frankly, this ranking may be too low considering the way the Clippers are playing of late. The Clippers are 9-2 in their last 11 games with a +10 net rating in those games (and a top-10 offense and defense in that stretch). With a healthy Kawhi Leonard dominating games, the Clippers — a team many were writing off just a few weeks ago — are within half a game of the play-in tournament (and you can be sure this is not a team the top squads in the West want to see early in the playoffs). Very winnable home games this week against Charlotte and Washington should continue the streak.

17. Milwaukee Bucks

(17-22, last week No. 17)
The Bucks are 5-3 since Giannis Antetokounmpo's return to the lineup (but the only win in that stretch against a team over .500 came against the Lakers). For the season, the Bucks are 14-11 in the games Antetokounmpo plays, a winning percentage that ultimately would work out to a 46-win season, which would have the Bucks in the mix for a top-six seed. As it stands, they still have work to do to get into the play-in. Unsurprisingly, Antetokounmpo leads the NBA in points scored in the paint this season, both total (500) and per game (20).

18. Portland Trail Blazers

(19-21, last week No. 22)
Deni Avdija leads the NBA in average drives per game at 20.4 — that's over two a game more than second place Shai Gilgeous-Alexander. With drives come free throw attempts, which is why he leads the league in total free throw attempts and is second in attempts per game (to the Lakers Doncic). All of that is why Avdija laughed off comments from the Rockets' Tari Eason about Avdija getting favorable whistles. "That made me laugh, for real. Let's address it. I drive the most in the league. I'm very physical. I'm not shying away from contact. I'm going downhill and I don't care who's in front of me. I'm going straight through them. And I'm not playing for those fouls, but I'm going to get fouled. This is part of the game. I can't control it. I'm very aggressive. I initiate the contact and that's my game … if it's hard to stop, you've got to own it or do something else." You can watch Avdija and decide for yourself, he and the Trail Blazers take on the Warriors in the second game of Coast to Coast NBA Tuesday on NBC and Peacock this week.

19. Atlanta Hawks

(20-21, last week No. 20)
Atlanta has moved on from Trae Young, and while we can say there was a missed opportunity cost there — they could have gotten more a year ago, or even last summer — the fact is that trading away the face of the franchise and a fan favorite is never easy. That the team came to the realization it was time and convinced ownership to do it for what amounted to a salary dump is a win. It was time for both sides to move on and they did. The Hawks have won their last two games since the trade, and they also have that New Orleans Pelicans pick in their back pocket.

20. Miami Heat

(20-19, last week No. 14)
This ranking may be too low for Miami, but they have lost 4 of 5, including an ugly one to Indiana over the weekend. The good news is that Tyler Herro has returned to the lineup after missing the last 11 Heat games (and had 21 in that loss to the Pacers). Things do not get easier for the Heat as they face the Suns, Thunder, and Celtics this week.

21. Chicago Bulls

(18-20, last week No. 18)
The best reason for optimism in Chicago? The play of second-year forward Matas Buzelis. He has taken a big step forward this season, particularly of late, averaging 19.8 points, 5.8 rebounds, and three assists per game in January. "I think the biggest thing with him that I've been the most pleased with and that's been really consistent from him is he's not holding the ball and dancing with it," Bulls coach Billy Donovan said (via Joe Cowley of the Chicago Sun Times). "He was decisive when he had it in space. Whether it was shooting the ball or driving the ball, he was decisive, and I feel like that's how he has to play." Buzelis just looks more comfortable on the court now.

22. Charlotte Hornets

(14-25, last week No. 23)
There are plenty of changes in Charlotte. LaMelo Ball got moved to the bench — something he wanted to do, according to coach Charles Lee — and instantly responded with a 33-point outing. However, he returned to the starting five the next game in a win against Utah. Also, Grant Williams made his season debut (he had been out since tearing his ACL 14 months ago) and put up nine points in 14 minutes, looking understandably rusty in his first game back. Last season, Williams averaged 12.6 points and 5.1 rebounds a game for the Hornets. Last week's win over the Thunder will go down as one of the season's highlights.

23. Memphis Grizzlies

(17-22, last week No. 21)
Memphis and Ja Morant are ready to part ways, but league sources NBC speaks with think this is more likely to be an offseason trade. This is not unlike the Trae Young trade situation, which ended up being basically a one-team market (and that team is off the board). There are teams willing to take a chance on Morant, but questions about his availability, concerns about his salary, and the fact that the Grizzlies are looking for a first-round pick in return make this look more like an offseason move than one that happens before Feb. 5.

24. Dallas Mavericks

(14-25, last week No. 25)
As of this writing, the Mavericks have not made an official announcement on how long Anthony Davis will be out with ligament damage in his left hand, but it's long enough that his trade market is sunk. That domino falling knocks over a lot of others. First, Daniel Gafford just became one of the more likely players to be traded at the deadline as Atlanta, Toronto, and others that had their eyes on Davis start looking at the next big in line, and he also happens to be a Maverick. (Keep an eye on Boston in the Gafford sweepstakes.) One other thing to watch is how Davis' injury affects Kyrie Irving's potential return this season. If Davis is out for a significant period of time, do the Mavericks pull the plug on the season and push Irving to take the rest of it off to recover from his torn ACL?

25. Brooklyn Nets

(11-25, last week No. 24)
If one thing seems inevitable at the trade deadline, it's that Brooklyn will trade Michael Porter Jr. — he is the hottest name in league trade talks right now. The question is how much the Nets can get back for a guy averaging 25 points a game this season. On the court, the Nets have had a couple of nice in-game comebacks in the past week, but have still dropped 6-of-7.

26. Washington Wizards

(10-28, last week No. 26)
Trae Young has yet to step on the court for Washington, but said he wanted to go to the Wizards because he believed he could help turn the organization around. "It's a day-by-day process. I know what it takes. It's not going to be easy. But I know this is a place that I'm excited about and I was excited about whenever I heard it could be a possibility." These last two games could be telling. We may not see much of Young in a Wizards uniform this season — especially if he starts to raise the floor of this team — because the Wizards owe their first-round pick to the Knicks, but it is top-eight protected. As of the trade, the Wizards had the fourth-worst record in the league, and with that, were guaranteed to keep their pick. Washington does not want to give up that pick this season, heading into what scouts consider a very good draft. If Young starts to inspire a lot of winning, expect there to be an injury or some reason for him to sit the rest of the season.

27. Utah Jazz

(13-25, last week No. 27)
When the Jazz put their best players on the floor, they have a respectable offense and a team that can pull off some upsets, which is why once a week or so, Lauri Markkanen gets rested now. The latest example of that was Saturday, at home, when he sat against Charlotte and the Hornets led by as many as 46 in a rough outing for the Jazz. You want to know why everyone in Utah is high on Keynote George? Watch this game-sealing bucket to beat the Mavericks — that is the whole bag of moves.

28. Indiana Pacers

(8-31, last week No. 30)
Indiana snapped its 13-game losing streak last week, and with that congratulations go to coach Rick Carlisle for reaching 1,000 wins in his career. Carlisle was a quality NBA player — he has a ring from the 1986 Celtics — who has been an even greater coach, one of the best Xs-and-Os minds in the game. It took a while for the Pacers to get Carlisle to 1000 because of how hard injuries have hit this team — Indiana has used a league-leading 22 different starting lineups this season (in 38 games).

29. Sacramento Kings

(9-30, last week No. 29)
Sacramento remains one of the most active sellers at the trade deadline with Zach LaVine (maybe to Milwaukee), Domantas Sabonis and Keon Ellis being the players most likely to need a go bag next to the door. The Kings' impressive win on Sunday over the Houston Rockets — snapping a seven-game losing streak — keeps them out of the bottom spot in these rankings.

30. New Orleans Pelicans

(9-32, last week No. 28)
Trey Murphy III has had some big games of late, scoring 42 in a loss to the Lakers (a team that could really use him) and then 35 in a win against the Wizards on Friday. Also in that win, Derik Queen had his first career triple-double with 14 points, 16 rebounds and 12 assists. With games against the Nets and Pacers this week, the Pelicans have some opportunities to pick up wins (and move out of the bottom of these rankings and the 15th slot in the Western Conference.

Broberg Day To Day In Concussion Protocol

MARYLAND HEIGHTS, Mo. -- The St. Louis Blues believe they came out with a best-case scenario with defenseman Philip Broberg.

Broberg is in concussion protocol and is doubtful to play on Tuesday against the Carolina Hurricanes after leaving Saturday’s 4-2 loss to the Vegas Golden Knights early in the first period.

Broberg, who had an assist in his 55 seconds of game time, left the game when he was checked into the defensive zone boards by Vegas captain Mark Stone, who was questioned for his follow-through on the hit that ultimately upended Broberg backwards landing on his head and face. Stone fought Brayden Schenn later in the period for his actions.

But Blues coach Jim Montgomery had a good report on Broberg, who earlier in the day signed a six-year, $48 million extension.

“Broberg's doing well, but he's still day to day in the concussion protocol,” Montgomery said. “But we are very happy with his progress.”

The reason for the optimism was, “No headaches, was able to work out today and we'll see how he progresses with that,” Montgomery said. “I think it's very doubtful (for Tuesday) just with the concussion protocol.”

It was obvious what missing Broberg meant for the team needing to play pretty much the entire game with five defensemen.

“We felt it in the last game, right,” Montgomery said. “We were at the end of three in four (games) and we had to play five D-men the whole game and you just don’t have one more guy that’s not an elite puck-stopper and ending plays and joining plays. With him being out and possibly others again tomorrow, it’s an opportunity for more people to seize more ice time.”

Other injury news includes Dylan Holloway and Pius Suter, each dealing with a high ankle sprain, skating prior to Monday’s practice at Centene Community Ice Center. Montgomery did call Holloway’s progress last week prior to a three-game road trip as “baby steps.”

Also, Robert Thomas (lower-body injury) had a maintenance day on Monday, and the center is questionable for Tuesday against the Hurricanes; it’s something Montgomery said the team will have to deal with the maintenance days, probably leading into the Winter Olympic break.

Also, Mathieu Joseph was absent from practice with an elbow infection that Montgomery called, “day to day right now, but he’s just on some antibiotics to clear up the infection.”

Also, Nick Bjugstad, who's been out since Dec. 9 against the Boston Bruins (15 games), skated on a regular line on Monday and appears set to rejoin the lineup Tuesday, if that's what is needed with Thomas out. Bjugstad centered a line with Pavel Buchnevich and Jonatan Berggren.

St. Louis Blues Weekly Prospect Report (Jan. 11)St. Louis Blues Weekly Prospect Report (Jan. 11)Zach Dean back playing hockey; Jiricek picks up where he left off for Brantford; Kaskimaki picking up scoring since going back to AHL; Carbonneau reaches 30 goals
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