How Jaylen and Horford rallied Celtics' locker room after Tatum's injury

How Jaylen and Horford rallied Celtics' locker room after Tatum's injury originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

BOSTON — Jayson Tatum’s injury was absolutely devastating for the Celtics, and in the moment, it showed.

After Tatum ruptured his Achilles tendon in Monday’s Game 4 loss to the New York Knicks, the mood around the Celtics was understandably somber. Boston had just lost its franchise cornerstone and gone down 3-1 to the Knicks in their second-round series, seemingly ending the team’s quest to repeat while altering the trajectory of a squad that aimed to win multiple championships.

But the Celtics still had a game to play Wednesday night. So on Tuesday, with a do-or-die Game 5 looming the following night at TD Garden, veterans Jaylen Brown and Al Horford decided to address the team to help shift the mindset.

“JB and Al talked to us, and they did a great job of really just understanding the situation,” Celtics big man Luke Kornet told reporters after Boston’s Game 5 rout of the Knicks. “Understanding that we have a game to play, and to go out and represent ourselves well and play hard — I feel like those two led the way in that.”

Kornet noted that Brown and Horford both acknowledged the harsh reality of Tatum’s injury — which could keep him out most if not all of the 2025-26 season — but urged their teammates not to give up the fight.

“I feel like they’re very aware of the situation, so there’s definitely a part of expressing that, and all of us kind of recognizing that and being in that,” Kornet added. “But at the same time, we do have an opportunity to move forward. We’ve just got to take it one game at a time, and the goal for today was just to make it back to New York.”

The Celtics succeeded in that goal, with Brown in particular leading the charge. The Celtics star delivered one of his best all-around performances of the season, tallying 26 points on 9-of-17 shooting (3-of-5 from 3-point range) along with eight rebounds and a playoff career-high 12 assists. Brown also played excellent defense on Knicks star Jalen Brunson, who fouled out early in the fourth quarter.

“Just come out and play,” Brown said of the message he and Horford delivered to the team. “Obviously, the air kind of left the room after hearing the news with JT. So, we didn’t want to go out like that.

“We didn’t want to make no excuses. We didn’t want to come out and give up or just turn the season in like what everybody else probably would expect. So we just said to the guys, said to each other, let’s come out, keep an open mind. Just come out and play basketball.

“Be ready to go and guard your ass off and take it from there.”

Brown has long embraced a leadership role on this team, even with Tatum in the fold. But the last two days presented an opportunity for the nine-year veteran to step up even further in that department, and he rose to the challenge with both his words and his actions.

“We want to stay the course throughout the game, but when those two guys are at the front of it and lead you into it, it’s easy to just follow course and do the best you can,” Kornet added.

The Celtics still trail the Knicks 3-2 and will need to win Game 6 at Madison Square Garden on Friday to keep their season alive. But for one game at least, Brown and his teammates showed they still have some fight in them.

Report: Kuminga, Warriors will explore sign-and-trade scenarios

Report: Kuminga, Warriors will explore sign-and-trade scenarios originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

There is a possibility that Jonathan Kuminga has played his final game with the Warriors.

Selected seventh overall by Golden State in the 2021 NBA Draft, the first of the Warriors’ two lottery picks that year, along with guard Moses Moody (No. 14 overall), Kuminga’s tenure with Golden State has been anything but smooth.

And as his fourth NBA season comes to a close with the Warriors’ 121-110 loss to the Minnesota Timberwolves in Game 5 of the Western Conference semifinals on Wednesday at Target Center, it appears increasingly likely the 22-year-old could play elsewhere next season.

Kuminga, who reportedly is expected to have his $7.9 million qualifying offer extended by the Warriors this offseason, making him a restricted free agent in July, will explore sign-and-trade scenarios with Golden State, The Athletic’s Anthony Slater and Marcus Thompson reported Thursday, citing league sources.

“Both sides are expected to explore sign-and-trade scenarios, those sources said, which would open up the market and theoretically give Kuminga the contract and fresh start he’d desire while bringing the Warriors back rotation players of immediate value,” Slater and Thompson wrote. “The Warriors’ decision-makers believe they need more positional size across the board — center and otherwise.”

However, Slater and Thompson also reported, citing league sources, that a reunion between Kuminga and the Warriors still is on the table.

The Athletic spoke with Warriors CEO Joe Lacob immediately after Golden State’s season-ending loss on Wednesday, and the long-time Kuminga proponent reaffirmed his support for the young forward.

“I was listening to the guys behind me tonight give running commentary — T-Wolves fans,” Lacob told The Athletic. “(Kuminga)’s the guy they talked about all night long. He’s the only guy that could really guard (Anthony Edwards) out there. Did a pretty damn good job. He had a tough situation with the DNPs from the last series, and to bounce back from that, I give him a lot of credit. I’m a big fan of his.”

Will Lacob’s advocacy play a role in Golden State potentially signing Kuminga to a lucrative long-term contract this summer, or will the Warriors leverage his value to land players who are better fits for coach Steve Kerr’s rotations?

We will find out in the coming months.

Download and follow the Dubs Talk Podcast

Pete Rose returns to the Hall conversation as baseball embraces his original sin

Pete Rose was one of the greatest players of his generation. Photograph: G Paul Burnett/AP

The not-so-bombshell decision on Tuesday by MLB commissioner Rob Manfred to reinstate Pete Rose, ‘Shoeless’ Joe Jackson and others to eligibility for the Hall of Fame, was actually months in the making. In January, representatives for Rose filed a petition in support of the former Reds star, who died last September, with MLB. Then in an April White House meeting, Manfred met with Donald Trump and discussed the Rose affair. Trump has made his opinions known about Rose for years. Though the wheels were already in motion, the meeting made Rose’s reinstatement feel inevitable.

Manfred was – and is – in a difficult position. Across American institutions – from law firms to media outlets to universities – the intense pressure from the White House to conform to Trump has been hard to ignore. And with immigration from countries that produce many of MLB’s players a major source of contention, it’s entirely understandable that Manfred would want to protect the interests of his sport.

Related: Major League Baseball ends lifetime bans for Pete Rose, ‘Shoeless’ Joe Jackson

On talent alone, Rose and Jackson would already be in Cooperstown. Rose is MLB’s all-time hits leader; Jackson’s career batting average ranks fourth in history. Both were banned for gambling and thus barred from Hall of Fame consideration. In his letter to Rose’s attorney, Manfred explained his decision. He effectively argued that because Jackson and Rose are now dead, they cannot threaten the game’s reputation. “Obviously, a person no longer with us cannot represent a threat to the integrity of the game,” Manfred wrote.

While Manfred was likely trying to traverse an exceedingly delicate middle ground with his decision, there is a faulty reasoning with the Commissioner’s stance when he states that once a player dies he is no longer a current threat to the integrity of the sport, but that doesn’t mean he didn’t damage it because of his deeds when he was alive.

To be clear, this isn’t the fault solely of MLB. The Hall of Fame and MLB were and are two separate entities. Then commissioner Bart Giamatti handed down Rose’s ban in 1989, but the Hall of Fame waited until 1991 to create a new rule stating that anyone on the MLB ineligible list cannot be enshrined in the Hall of Fame. Manfred made a point in his letter that Giamatti didn’t make any making public judgements about Rose’s Hall of Fame candidacy, with the then commissioner writing in 1989 that: “I need not point out to the Baseball Writers of America that it is their responsibility who decides who goes into the Hall of Fame. It is not mine. You have the authority, and you have the responsibility. And you will make your own individual judgments.”The Hall of Fame could have allowed Rose to be considered before their new rule and if so, Rose wouldn’t have likely gotten the votes. Perhaps this would have been a better and clearer way to adjudicate this matter in public.

It’s worth remembering that commissioners were once outsiders. Giamatti, a former Yale president, brought a degree of remove from the game. But after his sudden death and Fay Vincent’s tenure, MLB turned inward, appointing former Brewers owner Bud Selig. Since then, the commissioner’s office has functioned less as an independent arbiter and more as an extension of ownership.

Like the US and its former national pastime (for better or worse, football now holds that title), Rose was a highly complicated figure, full of contradictions – and that’s aside from his gambling on the sport while he was a manager. A player who gave 110% effort at all times, but sometimes bordered on dirty, Charlie Hustle was also a shameless self-promoter, a man of questionable attitudes and actions around women, a tax cheat and convict and also a defender and supporter of Black players.

And this is what his defenders have always argued, that Rose was just like the rest of us: capable of the divine and the diabolical. He never took PEDs. He never threw a game. He loved baseball. But he broke its most sacred rule: he bet on his own team while managing. Worse, he lied about it for 15 years. Americans can forgive almost anything – but not when remorse is absent.

Related: One woman’s fight against VIP schemes fueling the US sports betting boom: ‘You’re the biggest loser’

All that’s true. But he committed the ultimate cardinal sin of betting on baseball … on his own team … while he was the manager. And, worse, he never apologized when he should have. Then he continued lying about it for 15 years (he finally owned up to it in his 2004 book, My Prison Without Bars). Americans, both individuals and institutions, are generally forgiving. But forgiveness without accountability is a pointless gesture.

And it is this moral component to the story, the fact that Rose refused to display any remorse is what doomed him. One wonders whether, if Rose had immediately admitted his guilt and framed his gambling in the context of his addiction (which it was) and sought out treatment and advocated for those with the same disease and stayed away from those associated with gambling … whether there was a chance of reinstatement while he was alive. Perhaps an agreement would have been reached with the Hall of Fame that a full accounting of his career – including his banishment – would be on full display. But that never happened because Rose proved himself to be a pathological liar who didn’t show any concern for the integrity of the one thing he said he loved above all else – baseball.

And, finally, there is the “irony is dead” or shall we call it the “beyond parody” component to this whole sordid and sad affair. Rose committed the ultimate betrayal and was justifiably punished for it. But somehow, in this alternative universe we are currently inhabiting, legalized gambling has itself become inseparable from baseball. DraftKings is a major sponsor of MLB and gambling references are ever-present in media coverage of the sport. It’s widely documented that this sort of partnership is already causing serious concerns about a rise in gambling addiction. Even ignoring those effects gambling has compounded the data-centric focus on sports, robbing fans of greater and more enjoyable narratives in the games. This is by no means a baseball-only issue. The sport I cover most frequently, tennis, is awash in gambling, and viewers are bombarded during Tennis Channel broadcasts with in-match odds.

In MLB’s defense, the league has continued with its no-exceptions crackdown on gambling from those it employs. In February, umpire Pat Hoberg was fired for sharing legal sports betting accounts with a professional poker player, prompting a sharp and pointed statement from Manfred. It will undoubtedly continue to be a tricky practice, to both accept the fact that legalized gambling is a citizen’s right and a passion (unfortunately) for so many sports fans, while continuing to be utterly vigilant when it comes to policing betting whenever within baseball.

It’s possible that in July of 2028 (the first year in which Rose will be eligible to be accepted into the Hall) a member of his family will speak from the stage at the Hall of Fame ceremony celebrating the career of the most prolific hitter in the history of baseball. While it would give Rose’s family justifiable solace, it will only further remind us of how poorly this mess was handled and fill us with that cliched but apt notion: “For of all sad words of tongue or pen, The saddest are these: ‘It might have been.’”

Report: Warriors unlikely to pursue Giannis trade after playoff exit

Report: Warriors unlikely to pursue Giannis trade after playoff exit originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

Even in the wake of their 2025 NBA playoffs exit, it does not appear the Warriors are preparing to make an Earth-shattering move this offseason.

Particularly for the biggest name that could be available on the trade market this summer: Milwaukee Bucks superstar forward Giannis Antetokounmpo.

Hours after Golden State’s 121-110 loss to the Minnesota Timberwolves in Game 5 of the Western Conference semifinals on Wednesday at Target Center, The Athletic’s Anthony Slater and Marcus Thompson reported, citing league sources, that the Warriors currently are not expected to be major players in the potential market for Antetokounmpo, if he were to become available.

“There are no early indications that the Warriors will be at the front of the line of the yet-to-materialize Giannis Antetokounmpo sweepstakes, league sources said,” Slater and Thompson wrote. “As they enter the summer, team sources said, the internal plan and conversation is about how to best reform the role players around the [Steph] Curry and [Jimmy] Butler duo, not chase another star.”

Of course, this is the NBA, and as we have learned time and time again, it’s that you never truly can rule out anything.

As Slater and Thompson alluded to, the Giannis sweepstakes have yet to materialize, as the two-time NBA MVP reportedly is “open-minded” to playing elsewhere next season, but has not requested a trade, nor have the Bucks indicated any desire to move him.

If Antetokounmpo were to become available this summer, there is no doubt the Warriors, at the very least, would have some level of interest in acquiring the nine-time All-Star, who reportedly has been Golden State CEO Joe Lacob’s “dream target” over the years.

However, even if “Greek Freak” does hit the trade market, it does not appear the Warriors are a likely landing spot.

For now …

Download and follow the Dubs Talk Podcast

‘Boring … horrific’: Erling Haaland on Manchester City’s season of defeats

  • Striker puts focus on FA Cup final against Crystal Palace
  • ‘We need to finish well and get a trophy,’ he says

Erling Haaland has described Manchester City’s season as “horrific” and “boring” owing to the champions losing so many games, and said that makes winning Saturday’s FA Cup final against Crystal Palace even more vital.

City, the Premier League title winners in the past four seasons, are fourth, 18 points behind the champions, Liverpool, having lost nine times. They were eliminated by Real Madrid in the Champions League playoff stage and by Tottenham in the last 16 of the Carabao Cup.

Continue reading...

Celtics beat Knicks to keep play-off hopes alive

Derrick White of the Boston Celtics
Derrick White made seven three-pointers for the Boston Celtics [Getty Images]

The Boston Celtics kept themselves in the NBA play-offs with a win against the New York Knicks as the Minnesota Timberwolves beat the Golden State Warriors to reach the Western Conference final.

The Celtics, the reigning NBA champions, were 3-1 down in the best-of-seven Eastern Conference semi-final and missing star player Jayson Tatum, who went off injured in game four and has had surgery on a ruptured Achilles.

However, they earned a convincing 127-102 win at TD Garden thanks to Derrick White's 34 points, and 26 points, 12 assists and eight rebounds from Jaylen Brown.

Game five will take place in New York on Friday at 20:00 local time (Saturday 01:00 BST).

"We made winning plays on both ends of the floor," said Celtics coach Joe Mazzulla. "They made enough plays to win - gave us another chance to play."

The Timberwolves beat the Warriors 121-110 to secure a 4-1 Western Conference semi-final play-off series win.

Julius Randle scored 29 points and Anthony Edwards contributed 22 points and 12 assists for the Timberwolves at Target Center in Minneapolis.

The Timberwolves will play the Oklahoma City Thunder or the Denver Nuggets in the Western Conference final, with the former leading their series 3-2.

"It's great," said Randle. "We've had a season full of adversity. Coach (Chris Finch) said at the end of the regular season that we didn't do anything as far as trades or firing coaches. We just stuck together and we got through it together.

"I'm super proud of our team, everybody that stepped up in some type of way this year. We've got to keep going."

The Warriors did not won a game since losing star player Stephen Curry to a hamstring injury in game one.

"Injuries are part of the play-offs," said coach Steve Kerr. "I learned a long time ago that the play-offs are really about health and then just guys stepping up and making some big shots, big plays in key games. That's what decides every series.

"We've been on both ends of that. There's no sense in dwelling on it, and I don't want to take anything away from what Minnesota just accomplished."

Knicks, Karl-Anthony Towns must adjust offensive game plan to help close out Celtics

BOSTON – How can the Knicks get more out of Karl-Anthony Towns?

There are several answers to that question. Towns needs to limit his fouls. He was in foul trouble yet again in Game 5 on Wednesday.

Towns and the Knicks can attack Jrue Holiday more effectively when he guards Towns. Towns can also do more when the Celtics send a second defender at him.

But Towns can’t create more three-point shots for himself. The Knicks need to adjust their approach if they want to get more perimeter shots for Towns. He’s made just two three-pointers in this series. He was 1-for-3 from the perimeter in Game 5.

Afterward, Josh Hart was asked what the Knicks can do to create more perimeter looks for Towns.

“I think we can run actions that get him open more. We’re running a lot of ball-screen actions. And they’re in a drop, we can figure out ways to get him going, whether it’s transition or flares or quick screens. Ball screens into wides. We have to figure out ways to help him,” he said late Wednesday night. “Obviously, he’s a hell of a shooter. But if he was a guard, we’d be in a different situation, because he’d have the ball in his hands and be able to create [for himself]. We’ve got to help him get in positions for that. And I think from the top down, we’re not doing that.”

The Celtics used Holiday to defend Towns for long stretches of Game 5. That matchup, in theory, should allow Towns the opportunity to score inside. But Boston was also sending a second defender at Towns. The Knicks couldn’t take advantage often enough on Wednesday. They shot 35 percent from the field.

Afterward, Jalen Brunson was asked about Towns’ three-point shooting in the series.

"I think as a group we need to trust each other. I need to trust everyone out there and knowing who to attack and when to set the table. I think the biggest part of that is knowing how they are defending [Towns]," the guard said. "If they are going to put a smaller guy on him, then [we can feed him in] the post. They haven’t put a bigger guy on him. We need to attack accordingly, and him being aggressive gives us a big advantage.”

Towns said after Game 5 that his perimeter opportunities -- or lack thereof -- are by design.

“I haven’t really been out there really. Haven’t had the chance to shoot. We’ve just been trying to do our game plan and I’m just trying to execute at the highest level,” Towns said. “So I’m trying to do most of my damage inside and do whatever my team asks of me.”

The Knicks have found ways to get Towns more involved in the offense in the past. In the Detroit series, Towns got going in Game 3 and Game 4 after a quiet Game 2. In those games, the Knicks created early opportunities for Towns in the post or on the perimeter.

Maybe they make a similar adjustment in Game 6? The Knicks will probably need more from Towns on Friday night if they want to close out Boston.

DEFENSE RESTS

The Knicks' transition defense was a big issue on Wednesday. New York gave up several open threes due to poor communication or poor effort in transition. Boston finished 22-for-49 from beyond the arc.

“Pretty much everybody is back [on defense in transition] but we're not communicating,” Mikal Bridges said. “We’re not taking our man. We just got to do a better job of communicating and we gave them confidence.”

Tom Thibodeau noted that the Knicks were slow in getting back on defense at times.

“We’ve got to be tougher with our closeouts and taking air space away, we’ve got to be better with our communication,” Thibodeau said. “…I think it’s two-fold: the commitment to sprint back and then communicate to make sure that we understand what’s going on. You can't have any personal dilemmas of if you’re missing a shot or if it’s not going well for you offensively, that you're jogging back. You’ve got to sprint back, you’ve got to communicate. And we’ve got to be matched up. If one guy is slow, you’re gonna give them an open shot. You can’t do that against this team.”

CENTER OF ATTENTION

Joe Mazzulla went with Luke Kornet and Al Horford as his centers in the second half on Wednesday. He said Kristaps Porzingis was having trouble with his lingering illness. Kornet, the ex-Knick, was fantastic. He had five blocks in the third quarter and seven overall. It will be interesting to see how Mazzulla approaches the center position on Friday night. Porzingis is clearly not himself. In Boston earlier in the series, he received an IV during the game in an effort to get back on the floor.

Three takeaways: Panthers pull away after tight start to Game 5, Jesper Boqvist steps up in big spot

May 14, 2025; Toronto, Ontario, CAN; Florida Panthers defenseman Aaron Ekblad (5) congratulates Florida Panthers forward Jesper Boqvist (70) after his goal against the Toronto Maple Leafs during the second period of game five of the second round of the 2025 Stanley Cup Playoffs at Scotiabank Arena. (John E. Sokolowski-Imagn Images)

Don’t look now, but the Florida Panthers appear to be hitting their stride.

After dropping back-to-back games to open their second-round series with the Toronto Maple Leafs, Florida has fought back with a few haymakers capped off by Wednesday’s 6-1 victory in Game 5.

Now the Panthers are heading back to South Florida with a chance to knock out the Maple Leafs for the second time in three postseasons.

It won’t be easy, but it appears that over the past week, Florida has started to look more like the team they want to be, physically overpowering their opponent while allowing their skills to shine through.

That was certainly the game on Wednesday night.

Let’s get to Game 5’s takeaways:

BOQVIST'S BIG NIGHT

Jesper Boqvist had been on the ice for each of Florida’s first seven playoff games, skating primarily on the fourth line.

When Florida fell into a 0-2 hole against Toronto, Panthers Head Coach Paul Maurice made a fairly drastic change to his forward group, swapping out the entire fourth line.

Well, the Cats haven’t lost since, which understandably kept the roster intact, but when Evan Rodrigues was ruled out of Game 5, Maurice turned to Boqvist to take Rodrigues’ spot on Florida’s top line.

The 26-year-old Swede responded with one of his best games in a Panthers jersey, picking up a goal and an assist while logging a plus-3 on-ice rating and adding three shots and eight hits in 15:15 of ice time.

“He’s kind of a guy that scored big goals for us this year,” Maurice said. “He ended up with 12, but they weren't the last goal in a run. Those are the fun stories for a room when (Boqvist) gets one, (Gadjovich) has one, because those guys work hard. They don't get on the magazines, right? They're not the front of it, but it's special on the bench when those guys score.”

BOB KEEPS ROLLING

Sergei Bobrovsky is locked in.

He came 66 seconds away from logging his second straight shutout on Wednesday night, boasting an impressive goalless streak of 147:58.

Despite a tough start to the series in which he allowed 13 goals on just 81 shots, Bobrovsky is showing why he’s earned a reputation as one of the NHL’s absolute best money goalies of his generation.

Over the past two-plus games, because Bob was stellar at the end of Game 3 and during the overtime, we’re seeing exactly Florida’s players and coaching do nothing but exude confidence in their netminder.

“I think Sergei is always available to get into a groove,” Maurice said. “I think his prep doesn't change, he has no idea about his stats, but I think recently, and it was true in the latter half of the Tampa series, the guys in front are playing a game that he understands, that he has history with this year. He's had stretches this year where the shot total wasn't big for him, he never got warmed up in the game, he didn't get a bunch of outside angle shots that let him feel good about his game, (instead he faced) a breakaway, but not a ton of them. So he's kind of trained himself with this style of game that we play, (other than) the breakaways, which is a silly thing to say. He has a fairly consistent expectation of what's going to happen next. I don't know if that makes saving the puck any easier for him, just his anticipation and becomes very good.”

BEFORE THE BLOWOUT

Looking at the final score, one might believe that this was a Panthers-dominating game from start to finish.

That wasn’t quite the case.

While yes, Florida did score the first goal and play a statistically strong opening period, the game was still incredibly tight for basically the entire first half of it.

If not for a couple big saves by Bobrovsky and a couple fortunate goal posts that Toronto hit, the game could have taken a much different turn.

“(Taking an early lead) felt important because that game was really fast and well executed by both teams up and down the ice early,” Maurice said. “There was lots of really good execution in that for both teams, so getting the first one was important. I thought it flat lined a little bit after that for us, and then probably, where the game doesn't break, is Sergei Bobrovsky. He made saves on two or three breakaways tonight night, so I think he was the pivot point in the way that game went.”

LATEST STORIES FROM THE HOCKEY NEWS - FLORIDA

Brad Marchand Hilariously Reacts To Maple Leafs Fans Chirps

Bobrovsky, Panthers push Maple Leafs to brink with dominant Game 5 victory

Pat Maroon Says This Matthew Tkachuk Chirp Is Best He Ever Got

Panthers Key Forward Out For Game 5 vs. Maple Leafs

Panthers look to keep grinding Maple Leafs down as series shifts back to Toronto

Oilers' Stuart Skinner Had 'Feeling Of Peace' As His Back-To-Back Shutouts Eliminated Vegas

Stuart Skinner (Stephen R. Sylvanie-Imagn Images)

The Edmonton Oilers are headed back to the Western Conference final for the third time in four years.

And the goalie the Oilers swapped out early in the first round got two straight shutouts to help the team move on.

Stuart Skinner made 24 saves against the Vegas Golden Knights in Wednesday night's Game 5, which was tied 0-0 after regulation. At the other end of the ice, the Oilers' Kasperi Kapanen found the puck in a scramble and jammed it into the net just over seven minutes into overtime to win the game 1-0 and the series 4-1.

Skinner returned to the lineup in Game 3 after Calvin Pickard was ruled out day-to-day with an injury.

Pickard is 6-0 in this year's playoffs with a 2.84 goals-against average and .888 save percentage. Skinner, meanwhile, had an .810 SP and 6.11 GAA after losing Games 1 and 2 in the first round against the Los Angeles Kings, leading coach Kris Knoblauch to change netminders.

Skinner allowed four goals on 24 shots in Game 3 against Vegas, including one with 0.4 seconds left in the match. But in Game 4, Skinner stopped all 23 shots he faced to extend the series lead to 3-1 instead of a potential 2-2 tie. 

With Game 5's shutout performance out of the way, the 26-year-old Skinner said Wednesday night was the least nerve-wracking of the three matches he's played in the series.

"I had a feeling of peace tonight," Skinner told Sportsnet's Gene Principe post-game. "My job's just to give the team a chance to win. I can't really do too much else, so just trying to do my best out there, and whatever happens happens."

There was a lot of mental and emotional resolve to end the series the way he played compared to being on the bench at the start of it.

"It's hard. It's very difficult, to say the least," Skinner said. "It's definitely been a grind, lot of work – lot of work just to try to stay sane in all of it, too, and obviously a moment where we were able to step up.

"I got so much to thank for my teammates with all their support even through that and then also how they've been playing since I've been in."

'He Just Loves The Pressure': Evander Kane Showed The Oilers Exactly What To Do Against Vegas'He Just Loves The Pressure': Evander Kane Showed The Oilers Exactly What To Do Against VegasEdmonton Oilers left winger Evander Kane should give a tutorial on irritating the Vegas Golden Knights.

The Oilers limited the Golden Knights to 24 shots in Game 3, 23 in Game 4 and 24 in Game 5. That average of 23.67 would be the lowest in the NHL this post-season if they were like this the whole time.

That said, Skinner still had to stand tall, and he did.

He logged 1.98 goals saved above expected, which accounts for the quality of the scoring chances, according to moneypuck.com. In Game 4, he had 2.23 goals saved above expected in a 3-0 Oilers win. His play was a big step up from Game 3, when his minus-1.69 rating may have been the difference-maker in a 4-3 loss.

Skinner's stats improved to a 2-3 record, 3.05 GAA and .884 SP in five playoff games. He and the team now get to rest as they await the winner of the Winnipeg Jets and Dallas Stars series. The Stars lead 3-1 with a chance to eliminate the Jets on Thursday night.

Get the latest news and trending stories by following The Hockey News on Google News and by subscribing to The Hockey News newsletter here. And share your thoughts by commenting below the article on THN.com.

Even without Jayson Tatum, Knicks know clinching Celtics series will be difficult and Game 5 proved that

When the Knicks took a commanding 3-1 series lead, they knew it wouldn't be easy to get that clinching win, especially against the defending champion Boston Celtics.

But when perennial All-Star Jayson Tatum was lost for the rest of the postseason with an Achilles tear, many outside the Knicks locker room felt the series was in the bag, but Game 5 showed exactly why it's going to be hard to get win No. 4 even with Tatum not in the lineup.

Six Celtics scored in double figures, and the NBA Finals MVP from last year, Jaylen Brown, had his best game of the series to lead Boston in their dominant 127-102 win on Wednesday night.

"They're defending champions, so obviously losing Tatum is a big blow for their team but we know they're more than capable of beating anyone on any night," Karl-Anthony Towns said. "We just didn’t do enough to win tonight."

The Celtics won thanks to two factors. First, there is their balanced offense.

Derrick White led all scorers with 34 points while hitting seven threes. Brown posted a near triple-double of 26 points, eight rebounds and 12 assists while starters Jrue Holiday and Al Horford scored in double figures. They also got big points from Payton Pritchard (17) and Luke Kornet (10) off the bench.

They shot 52 percent (45 percent from three) while winning the fastbreak and points-off-turnover battles. Those numbers trickled up at the end of the second quarter, but jumped in a "terrible" third quarter that saw defensive lapses left and right from the Knicks.

"They're the defending champs. Jayson Tatum went down, you thought they were just going to lay down? Nah," Josh Hart said. "You knew they were going to come out swinging. They came out with extreme confidence like they do every game. They came out with aggression. We didn’t do enough in the first half to end the half right and the third quarter was a failure."

And then there was the defense.

Boston forced the Knicks into 10 turnovers and 36 percent shooting for the game. But while a lot of the attention goes to the prolific three-point shooting up and down the Celtics' bench, New York recognizes how Boston's defense feeds into their offense, and they played into their hands on Wednesday night.

"They have a lot of shooting on the floor, that’s going to remain the same," coach Tom Thibodeau said. "The thing about their team is they are a great defensive team as well. We can’t be slow getting back and you can’t give open shots to them. We have to be closer with our closeouts and be better with our communication."

Jalen Brunson was asked after Game 3's rout if the fact that they were up 2-0 going into that game last Saturday affected the team's mentality and energy. The All-Star guard was candid and said he believed it subconsciously did. He was asked a similar question after Game 5's loss and if the team's energy was affected by the fact Tatum wasn't playing.

Brunson said no and put the onus on his team to find a way to beat the Celtics no matter what.

"Yes, they're missing a big piece but they're a team, a well-oiled machine, that has been in situations where they've played without him and they've played well," Brunson said. "We need to understand that. Trust the gameplan and play accordingly. It's that simple."

After Wednesday's win, the Celtics are 10-2 without Tatum this season. Two of those wins have come in the postseason, so this group can win without their superstar and the basketball world is on notice.

"It's easy to kind of write things off. Obviously unfortunate what happened to JT, but we've still got basketball to be played," Brown said after the game. "I believe in this group. Don't count us out just yet."

Joseph-Aukuso Suaalii injury not as bad as feared as Wallabies get boost for Lions tour

  • Player still needs surgery but fractured jaw is on lower scale
  • ‘Just a four-week injury,’ says NSW Waratahs coach Dan McKellar

Wallabies fans can breathe easier after NSW Waratahs coach Dan McKellar allayed fears of Joseph-Aukuso Suaalii missing any Tests against the touring British & Irish Lions.

Despite Suaalii requiring surgery for a broken jaw, McKellar on Thursday said the injury was of a lower scale and the 21-year-old was already back in the gym working out to maintain his conditioning.

Continue reading...

Mookie Betts and Max Muncy power Dodgers' late surge in win over Athletics

Max Muncy runs the bases after hitting a three-run home run in the eighth inning of the Dodgers' 9-3 win.
Max Muncy runs the bases after hitting a three-run home run in the eighth inning of the Dodgers' 9-3 win over the Athletics at Dodger Stadium on Wednesday night. (Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times)

Mookie Betts flexed his arms and began to shout. Max Muncy simply looked to the sky and strolled slowly out of the batter’s box.

In the eighth inning Wednesday night, both hitters erased some recent frustrations in the Dodgers’ 9-3 win over the Athletics, delivering the key hits in a five-run rally that turned a close game into a laugher.

With one out, and Kiké Hernández standing at second base after being bunted over by Miguel Rojas following his leadoff single, the Athletics decided to intentionally walk Shohei Ohtani. They wanted right-handed Tyler Ferguson to face Betts instead.

After showing some improvements with his slumping swing on last week’s road trip, Betts entered the at-bat back in another cold spell, stuck in a 0-for-7 rut to start this homestand that included a fly out that left two runners stranded in his previous at-bat in the sixth.

Read more:Dodgers call up catcher Dalton Rushing, designate Austin Barnes for assignment

This time, however, Betts crushed a double in the right-center gap. A 4-3 lead suddenly blossomed to a 6-3 cushion. And as Betts pulled into second, he turned toward the first-base stands (the same direction as the A’s dugout) and screamed with an animated celebration.

Three batters later, Muncy put the game away, clobbering a three-run homer that was a no-doubter off the bat. It was just Muncy’s second home run of the season, and snapped his own 0-for-8 skid to begin this homestand. As the ball sailed around the right-field foul pole, Muncy gave it a long look, admiring the kind of swing that has eluded him for much of the opening two months of the season.

In the bullpen, closer Tanner Scott took a seat. In a game that had been close for eight innings, his services wouldn’t be needed.

The Dodgers had broken a 3-3 tie in the sixth inning, when Miguel Rojas drove Michael Conforto home from first with a pinch-hit double.

Dodgers pitcher Yoshinobu Yamamoto delivers during the first inning Wednesday against the Athletics.
Dodgers pitcher Yoshinobu Yamamoto delivers during the first inning Wednesday against the Athletics. (Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times)

Moments before that, Andy Pages had run into an out on the bases, getting overaggressive on a Conforto single by trying to go first-to-third. Thus, when Rojas hit his line drive the other way, it briefly seemed like the blunder would come back to cost the Dodgers a chance to go in front.

Instead, A’s center fielder JJ Bleday had trouble getting a grasp.

As Bleday booted his cut-off attempt, the ball bouncing off his glove as he slid along the outfield grass, Dino Ebel immediately put his arm in helicopter mode, the third base coach giving Conforto — chugging hard all the way from first — a green light to race to the plate.

Hyeseong Kim, right, celebrates with Shohei Ohtani after hitting his first career home run in the Dodgers' win Wednesday.
Hyeseong Kim, right, celebrates with Shohei Ohtani after hitting his first career home run in the Dodgers' win Wednesday. (Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times)

Conforto beat the delayed relay. The Dodgers had their first lead since the third inning. And with their full stable of high-leverage relievers available (the ones currently not on the injured list, anyway), they never looked back again.

The Dodgers (28-15) did all of their early scoring the same way Wednesday, hitting three leadoff home runs in three innings against Athletics rookie starter Gunnar Hoglund.

Ohtani got things started in the first, belting his 13th homer of the season (and third to lead off a game) on a scorching line drive that carried over the right field wall.

The next inning, Pages walloped one the other direction, lifting his seventh blast of the season to the left-field bullpen.

In the fifth, Hyeseong Kim got his first MLB big fly, lofting a wallscraper to right for career home run No. 1.

The Athletics (22-21) got to Dodgers starter Yoshinobu Yamamoto with their own long ball, Tyler Soderstrom hammering a two-run blast with two outs in the third when Yamamoto tried to steal a first-pitch strike with a curveball over the plate.

Outside that, however, Yamamoto was effective in a six-inning, three-run outing that left his ERA at 2.12 on the season. The only other score he allowed came in the fourth, when a leadoff walk to Shea Langeliers set up Miguel Andujar for an RBI double.

Sign up for more Dodgers news with Dodgers Dugout. Delivered at the start of each series.

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Oilers Now Wait For Their Next Opponent

Kasperi Kapenen (Stephen R. Sylvanie-Imagn Images)

EDMONTON – That’s all she wrote.

They battled until the end, but the Edmonton Oilers came out on top when the final buzzer sounded. They take their series against the Vegas Golden Knights 4-1 after winning Game 5 by a 1-0 final score.

Bookmark The Hockey News Edmonton Oilers team site to never miss the latest newsgame-day coverage, and more

Stuart Skinner was brilliant for the Oilers, stopping every shot he faced in the overtime victory.  Kasperi Kapanen scored the game-winning goal off a great play by Leon Draisaitl.

Trending Oilers Stories

4 Reasons There Needs To Be A Connor McDavid Biopic4 Reasons There Needs To Be A Connor McDavid BiopicEDMONTON – Movies are forever.

Oilers Injury Report: Mattias Ekholm & Calvin Pickard

10 Worst Oilers' Trades & Signings By Ken Holland

Oilers Coach Shows Love For Leon Draisaitl

Oilers Now Face Mark Stone-Less Golden Knights

Sexiest Edmonton Oiler Alive

'Remarkable': Messier On How Unique Oilers' McDavid & Draisaitl Really Are'Remarkable': Messier On How Unique Oilers' McDavid & Draisaitl Really AreEDMONTON – “Edmonton, since its inception in ‘79, have had some pretty good teams and some pretty good players to cheer for as fans.”

Oilers' Next Opponent Will Be The Stars or Jets

With the Golden Knights in the rearview mirror, the Oilers now look ahead. They will face the winner of the Dallas Stars vs Winnipeg Jets series.

Oilers fans are familiar with both, considering all three teams reside in the Western Conference. But they will remember the Stars well from last year’s playoff run.

They came face-to-face with the Stars in the Western Conference final. The Oilers would do away with the Stars in six games and book their ticket to the Stanley Cup Final.

In the 2021 playoffs, the Oilers found themselves on the wrong end of a sweep at the sticks of the Jets. If these two teams meet again in the postseason, the Oilers will look for retribution for that failure.

Game on.

Add us to your Google News favourites, and never miss a story.

Timberwolves beat Warriors in Game 5 to reach Western Conference finals for 2nd straight year

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) Anthony Edwards approached for a handshake during Julius Randle's postgame TV interview, the duo putting a seal on another dominant series for Minnesota in these NBA playoffs.

Randle scored 29 points on 13-for-18 shooting to send the Timberwolves to the Western Conference finals for the second straight year with a 121-110 victory over the Golden State Warriors in Game 5 on Wednesday night.

“I just try to do my best to read the game in the best way I can,” Randle said. “They threw different coverages at us all series long.”

Edwards had 22 points and 12 assists for the sixth-seeded Wolves, who will face the Denver-Oklahoma City winner next. They could get five days off, if the Nuggets beat the Thunder on Thursday to force a Game 7 in the other West semifinal series.

Brandin Podziemski had a playoff career-high 28 points for the Warriors, who again played without star Stephen Curry because of the hamstring strain that forced him out of the second quarter in Game 1 and took the heart out of their entire offensive operation.

“I don’t want to take anything away from what Minnesota just accomplished,” coach Steve Kerr said. “No sense in even talking about Steph.”

Jonathan Kuminga provided another energy boost off the bench with 26 points, but Podziemski’s performance came too late and the production from Jimmy Butler and Buddy Hield was consistently too little after they led the series-opening win.

Golden State presented far more of a defensive challenge than the Los Angeles Lakers did for Minnesota during their five-game series in the first round, but the collection of every-level scorers the Wolves can throw at an opponent when they’re moving the ball and pushing the pace simply wore down the Warriors over the course of the series.

Rudy Gobert was a force around the rim with 17 points, Mike Conley had 16 points and eight assists, and Donte DiVincenzo snapped out of a slump with 13 points as the Wolves shot a staggering 77% on 2-pointers (36 for 47). They set franchise postseason records for assists (36) and field goal percentage (62.8%).

Series close-out games can sometimes be the toughest to win, but the Wolves played with a ferocity paired with their shooting touch that all but portended victory. Randle kept up his superb postseason, providing a constant source of energy and production.

The Wolves stretched their lead as high as 25 points in the third quarter, large enough to withstand a late Warriors push that pulled them to 99-90 with 7:11 left. But Edwards answered with a 3, and the crowd started mixing “Wolves in 5! Wolves in 5!” chants in with the roars for each made basket that got them closer to advancing.

“There is no satisfaction,” Edwards said. “We just got here.”

---

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