The Chargers moved quickly to announce agreements with a large group undrafted rookies on Saturday night.
Wild Drop Game 4 With A 4-3 Overtime Loss To Vegas
ST. PAUL - For the fifth time in franchise history, the Minnesota Wild have failed to turn a 2-1 series lead into a 3-1 series lead. In 2022, the Wild had a 2-1 series lead over the St. Louis Blues. In 2023, the Wild had a 2-1 series lead over the Dallas Stars.
They lost both those series in six games. They also had 2-1 series leads in 2008 and 2015.
But this team feels different. The way the Wild have played this season, it doesn't seem like this is the team that is capable of blowing a 2-1 series lead.
"Yeah, I mean, I like our group. I liked the experience that we have from those previous playoff rounds. We’re right there, right? We had the lead and penalties. It is what it is," Marcus Foligno said. "We worked really hard tonight, and the way we answered and came back after their goal was the mental toughness that we've been showing all year. So, 2-2 doesn't scare us."
Shea Theodore got Vegas on the board early in the first after he scored on the power play. The goal on the power play was a result of a Vinnie Hinostroza high-sticking penalty on Brett Howden.
The penalty came five seconds after Hinostroza was dumped into the boards from behind by Howden. Vegas got the power play and scored.
Marco Rossi scored just a few mintues later to tie it. It was his second goal in back-to-back games. Rossi scored in game 3 and now in game 4.
Despite that, Rossi only played 4:40 in the first two periods. He did not play the last 13 mintues on the secod period.
Wild head coach John Hynes was asked why Rossi's line played only 4:40 in two periods and if it is something Rossi is doing to warant no ice time.
"No, I think some of it goes into special teams and comes into matchups," Hynes said. "In different situations. So, we'll take it game by game here."
The Wild got the lead in the second period after Marcus Foligno scored his third of the playoffs. Mats Zuccarello fired a shot on net and Foligno grabbed it out of the air and down to his feet.
The puck trickled to the point and Hartman fired a shot on net before Foligno banged home the rebound.
FOLIGNO MADE THE LEAPING CATCH THEN SCORED ON THE REBOUND 😱 pic.twitter.com/5bMK9WBFoV
— B/R Open Ice (@BR_OpenIce) April 26, 2025
Vegas got a power play chance in the third period after Zeev Buium caught Mark Stone up high with his stick. Stone was bleeding bad and Buium was given a four mintue penalty for high-sticking.
The Golden Knights had a few chances but couldn't convert. Later, Jake Middleton was defending Tomas Hertl in front of the net. Nicolas Roy then came in and hit Middleton in the face. Middleton was slow to the bench after taking Roy's stick to the chomps.
No call.
Moments later Roy scores on the power play to tie the game 2-2.
About five mintues later, Hartman and Hertl were in a wrestling match out in front of the net. Hertl then falls on top of Hartman and Stone fires a shot off the two and into the back of the net.
Mark Stone just pinballed? the puck off Hertl and Hartmann, who were wrestling in front pic.twitter.com/Qa3FaktVJr
— Shayna (@shaynagoldman_) April 26, 2025
"That’s something we talked about, wasted energy there," Wild captain Jared Spurgeon said on the non-calls. "Nothing we can really control. If we get frustrated with that, it bleeds into your game. To be able to just let it be as it is and work through it is something we’re trying to do."
But just 54 seconds after the Roy goal, Spurgeon scored on a wraparound goal to tie the game at 3-3.
After a back-and-forth overtime, Ivan Barbashev was able to captilize on a mistake by the Wild in the defensive zone.
Middleton got the puck behind the net and tried to clear the puck. He put it on the stick of Reilly Smith who found Barbashev in the slot. Game over.
VEGAS HAS TIED THE SERIES! ⚔️
— NHL (@NHL) April 26, 2025
Ivan Barbashev wins Game 4 in @Energizer overtime for the @GoldenKnights! #StanleyCuppic.twitter.com/DQGSoCldst
Say what you want about the penalties that were and weren't called in the game. Could the Wild have gotten a few more power plays then they did? Sure. But that doesn't stop the fact that they were out-shot 46-32.
"Yeah, I didn't have to do much. I mean, our guys are dialed in," Hynes said on non-calls. "We’ve got strong belief in how we're playing and nothing really rattles us whether you win a game, lose a game, you know our team’s been resilient all year. One of the main reasons why we're here is because a) we’ve got a great team and b) we’re resilient. We just play. And that's part of what it is, so we'll move on."
The Wild have won in Vegas already. They will have to win at least once in Vegas to move on to the second round.
"It gives us a lot of confidence," Foligno said on winning in Vegas before. "I mean, we got to understand that we got to play the same way and play like we did in spurts of game one and majority of game two. So, yeah, we have a have a chance to go there. And, the road doesn't faze this team."
It is hard not to think about the last two playoff rounds the Wild have had a 2-1 series lead that turned into a 2-2 series lead and eventually two more wins for the oppenets.
That being said, this is a different team then the one in 2022 and in 2023. At least the Wild think so.
"We all mature as a group, right? So those guys gain confidence after years like that, and understand," Foligno said. "The way Kirill and Bolds have been playing, it's just who they are as players. And the reason why they're top elite players. So, yeah, we're in a great series. We got our guys going. And, yeah, we feel confident going into game five."
Hynes added: "Oh man, we're in a good spot. Hard-fought battle, played well again. The game was right in our hands. Both teams competed hard. We knew it was going to be a hard series. Love where we’re at. I mean, we knew it was going to be a hard-fought series, really like our game, you know? We're here, man. We'll just keep grinding."
Vikings announce signing of 19 undrafted free agent
Nuggets beat Clippers in Game 4 with a buzzer-beating tip-in dunk
The goal for the Clippers was to not give the Denver Nuggets any hope in Game 4 and in the process take complete control of the seven-game playoff series.
For any of this to happen, both teams had to maintain their composure, which both sides lost late in the second quarter, resulting in technical fouls being called on six players but no ejections.
The Clippers found a calmness amidst it all, even when they got down 22 points in the fourth quarter, keeping their emotions in check until Aaron Gordon dunked in a missed three-pointer by Nikola Jokic as time expired to give the Nuggets a thrilling 101-99 win.
The best-of-seven series is tied 2-2.
Game 5 is Tuesday night in Denver.
The Clippers went on a 32-9 run to take a 97-96 lead after Bogdan Bogdanovic got an offensive rebound and scored.
But Jokic (36 points, 21 rebounds, eight assists) made a free throw to tie the score with 58.6 seconds left. After Kawhi Leonard (24 points) missed a shot, Jokic scored to give the Nuggets a 99-97 lead.
James Harden (15 points, 11 assists) missed on a drive, but Ivica Zubac (19 points, 12 rebounds) tipped the ball in to tie the score at 99-99 with 8.0 seconds left.
Jokic shot a three-pointer that missed, but Gordon (14 points) dunked it for a game Denver thought it had won.
But the officials had to review the play, eventually deciding that the basket was good.
The ruckus began after Christian Braun fouled Harden with 6.6 seconds left in the second quarter, causing a lot of pushing and shoving.
Harden took exception with the foul and pushed Braun, then Jokic came over and pushed Harden followed by Gordon pushing Harden, who then pushed the Nuggets' forward back. Zubac grabbed and pulled Gordon away. But Norman Powell ran over and pushed Gordon and Braun, and Kris Dunn then ran in and pushed Gordon.
The officials finally got things settled down and issued technical fouls on Harden, Powell and Dunn as well as Gordon, Braun and Jokic.
And then when both teams came out to start the second half, both having been given a chance to calm down in their locker rooms and resume playing a tense basketball game, the Nuggets were the aggressors and the Clippers were not.
The Clippers fell behind 85-65 at the end of the third quarter, their offense struggling and their defense unable to control the Nuggets in the early going of the second half.
Denver scored 35 points in the third quarter by shooting 56% from the field and 50% (five for 10) from three-point range.
Meanwhile, the Clippers scored just 17 points in the third quarter, shooting 27.8% from the field.
Before the game, Clippers coach Tyronn Lue talked about his team’s approach to the game.
“We got to be locked in to start defensively,” he said. “They’ve come out really aggressive, really scoring the basketball in that first quarter. So we just got to come out with a defensive mindset to start the game and not give them any life to start the game because they are a really good team. Their starting five is amazing and like I said, they won a championship two years ago so we got to be locked in.”
The Clippers were mostly locked into the game at the outset, their defense forcing the Nuggets into two 24-second violations in the first quarter and that allowed L.A. to trim a Denver lead from nine to two points.
But the Clippers ended the first with a turnover when Harden’s long pass to Zubac sailed out of bounds with 1.9 seconds remaining.
That left the door open for the Nuggets, and they stepped into it when Jokic drilled a 28-foot three-pointer as the buzzer sounded to end the first half that put the Clippers down five points.
The Nuggets were without reserve guard Russell Westbrook (left foot).
This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.
Alex de Minaur sounds warning with ruthless victory at Madrid Open
- Australian No 1 seals 6-2, 6-3 win Lorenzo Sonego
- Djokovic suffers third straight loss in 6-3, 6-4 defeat
While Alex de Minaur looks more comfortable and impressive on the clay with every passing match, the great Novak Djokovic seems to be losing his magical powers on the red stuff.
For while Australia’s No 1 kicked off his Madrid Open quest with a clinical 6-2, 6-3 victory over Italian Lorenzo Sonego on Saturday, all the talk at the Caja Magica surrounded another dismal first-round defeat for Djokovic, whose quest for 100 titles took another savage hit.
Continue reading...Former Hurricanes Star Has Huge Playoff Game
During this past off-season, the Carolina Hurricanes traded Jake Guentzel's UFA signing rights to the Tampa Bay Lightning for a 2025 third-round pick. Quickly after, the star forward signed a seven-year, $63 million contract with the Lightning.
Given how well Guentzel played during his time as a rental with the Hurricanes, their hope was to keep him around. However, they could not come to terms on a deal, so they got an asset for him rather than losing him for nothing in free agency.
Guentzel had plenty of success in his first regular-season with the Lightning in 2024-25. In 80 games with the Atlantic Division squad, he posted 41 goals, 80 points, and a plus-18 rating. Now, he is making an impact for Tampa Bay in the playoffs.
Guentzel had a big performance in the Lightning's Game 3 matchup against the Florida Panthers, as he recorded one goal, two assists, and a plus-4 rating. The Lightning undoubtedly benefited from Guentzel's strong night, too, as they defeated the Panthers by a 5-1 final score.
Guentzel's multi-point game came at a great time for the Bolts, too. If the Lightning had lost this matchup against the Panthers, they would have been down 3-0 in the series. Instead, they are now only down 2-1 in the series after this win and have the chance to tie it up again in Game 4.
Guentzel showed during his short stay with the Hurricanes that he is a star offensive talent. In 17 regular-season games with the Hurricanes this past season, he had eight goals, 25 points, and a plus-16 rating. He then followed that up with four goals and nine points in 11 playoff games for Carolina.
Recent Hurricanes News
Auckland clinch ALM premiership as City held to draw by Adelaide
- Auckland clinch A-League Men premiership in maiden season
- Melbourne City held to 0-0 by Adelaide United at AAMI Park
Auckland FC have claimed the A-League Men premiership in their first season, while Melbourne City will lick their wounds and turn their focus to locking in second place after falling short.
Second-placed City were held to a 0-0 draw by Adelaide United at AAMI Park on Saturday night. The draw also means City could yet let second place slip - and with it an Asian Champions League Elite berth and the first week of finals off - while Adelaide’s finals hopes are all but over.
Continue reading...Francisco Alvarez's home run lifts Mets to 2-0 win over Nationals
Francisco Alvarez's first home run of the season was enough for the Mets' pitching staff, as New York shut out the Nationals, 2-0, on Saturday afternoon in Washington, D.C.
The start of Saturday's game was delayed by about 25 minutes before a rain delay in the bottom of the first added another 46 minutes.
Here are the takeaways...
-It took the Mets seven innings to score against the Nationals on Friday, but New York didn't waste much time on Saturday. After a two-out single by Jesse Winker, Francisco Alvarez -- in just his second game off the IL -- went the other way and deposited a Brad Lord slider just inside the right field foul pole to give the Mets an early 2-0 lead.
Alvarez finished with 1-for-3 with a strikeout.
-That Alvarez home run was all Clay Holmes needed on this day, but it was an inauspicious start for the reliever-turned-starter. After getting one out in the first, the heavens opened up and the game was delayed for a total of 46 minutes. Holmes returned to the mound and promptly got the next two batters out to finally complete the first frame. Holmes would settle in after that disrupted first inning, retiring nine straight Nats at one point.
Holmes was never in trouble, cruising through five scoreless innings. He probably could have gone longer, if it wasn't for the long rain delay. The right-hander threw 70 pitches (44 strikes), allowing just four hits and no walks while striking out two. He lowered his ERA to 2.64.
It's the 14th consecutive start a Mets starter hasn't allowed a home run.
-The Mets' bullpen was great after blowing the save on Friday. The combination of Danny Young and Reed Garrett pitched two scoreless innings before A.J. Minter came out to start the eighth. After getting the first out, Minter was in a 3-1 count to James Wood before he had to leave with an apparent injury. Similar to the series finale against the Phillies, Max Kranick was called upon to sub in on an injury. After walking Wood -- which was charged to Minter -- Kranick got the next two Nationals batters to get through the eighth.
Edwin Diaz returned for the ninth inning, his first appearance since leaving Wednesday's game with a hip cramp. He struck out his first batter but threw five straight balls before Alvarez came out to talk to Diaz. Diaz came back to strike out Dylan Crews and Jose Tena to nail down the win.
-Jeff McNeil started in center for the first time this season, and it was his first time playing in that position since 2023. He played six innings in the field without much doing and was 1-for-3 at the plate. Tyrone Taylor took over at center in the seventh inning.
-The Mets had eight total hits and Francisco Lindor had three of them. It was his fifth three-hit game this season, tied for the most in MLB.
Game MVP: Francisco Alvarez
The whole pitching staff should be applauded, but Alvarez's blast gave the Mets enough to come away with the win.
Highlights
TIME TO PAY THE TROLL TOLL.
— SNY (@SNYtv) April 26, 2025
FRANCISCO ALVAREZ'S FIRST HOME RUN OF THE YEAR! pic.twitter.com/jD2EUrCceZ
Five shutout innings for Clay Holmes! pic.twitter.com/uwmZKmGiXg
— SNY (@SNYtv) April 26, 2025
Three strikeouts for Danny Young in the 6th 🔥 pic.twitter.com/hzAKb9w3K4
— SNY (@SNYtv) April 26, 2025
Max Kranick comes in for A.J. Minter and gets two HUGE outs to get the Mets through the 8th 👏 pic.twitter.com/HffjM0adQy
— SNY (@SNYtv) April 26, 2025
What's next
The Mets continue their series against the Nationals on Sunday afternoon. First pitch is scheduled for 1:35 p.m.
Tylor Megill (3-2, 1.09 ERA) will be on the mound, opposite Nationals lefty Mitchell Parker (3-1, 1.39 ERA).
Flyers' Jett Luchanko Thriving in First True Playoff Experience
Top Philadelphia Flyers forward prospect Jett Luchanko is coming into his own during his first postseason experience as a pro player.
Luchanko, 18, is far from a finished product, especially offensively. It may very well take him until his mid-20s to reach his ceiling in that department, but we'd be remiss to ignore the very obvious flashes the Flyers' 2024 first-round pick is displaying in the Lehigh Valley Phantoms' Calder Cup playoff run.
Believe it or not, Luchanko has made the OHL playoffs with the Guelph Storm before. Twice, in fact. The first time was his D-1 season in 2022-23, and the second was in his D0 (draft year) season in 2023-24.
The 18-year-old had only 14 points in 46 games in the 2022-23 season, which was his first season in the OHL. Luchanko and the Storm lost to the Sarnia Sting in six games in the first round, wherein the then-fledgling had one assist.
The Storm allowed no fewer than four goals in five of the six games, and lost the first three games by scores of 5-0, 5-4, and 8-4. And, it is worth noting that Luchanko went without a shot on goal in each of the last three games of the aforementioned series against the Sting.
Despite the two wins, it was really not much of a competition.
Last year, Luchanko's Storm saw the Soo Greyhounds come in and sweep them in four games, notwithstanding Luchanko's three assists in three games to start the series.
Now, after having already made his NHL debut with the Flyers, Luchanko is in the midst of his first real playoff experience. One where Luchanko and the Phantoms have something to play for, and where games flat-out mean more for everyone.
Many of these AHL players, on the Phantoms and on other teams, are fighting for jobs. Those jobs may be in the NHL or the AHL, but they are jobs.
Luchanko himself is a candidate to make the Flyers outright again next season, but he, like his teammates, has to earn that and fight for that. This Calder Cup run is the best place for the Flyers' top forward prospect to strut his stuff before the real fun begins in training camp a few months from now.
So far, the London, Ontario, native is taking advantage in a big way.
In two playoff games with the Phantoms, Luchanko has racked up four assists, hastily surpassing the three assists he had in nine prior AHL regular season games.
Sure, the eight penalty minutes in two games is a minor issue, but everyone would rather Luchanko be involved in plays than not, for better or for worse.
Aside from his readily apparent blazing speed, Luchanko has consistently flexed his playmaking chops.
In a 5-2 Game 1 win against the Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins on April 23, Luchanko showed one of the many things he can do at the peak of his powers.
Picking off a Penguins defensive zone turnover at his offensive blueline, Luchanko took possession of a loose puck and wheeled down the right wing boards, eventually gaining the zone 1-on-4.
After using his speed to circle deep into the zone and behind the net, Luchanko pulled up at the left circle, whipping a pass through five Penguins defenders and teammate Garrett Wilson to find Anthony Richard at the right circle for a one-timer goal.
JETT LUCHANKO OH MY GOODNESS. WHAT A CROSS ICE FEED TO ANTHONY RICHARD.#LetsGoFlyerspic.twitter.com/icv5wbWgMF
— Flyers Clips (@Flyers_Clips) April 24, 2025
This element of Luchanko's game has been a strength of his since the Flyers drafted him in June, but the two question marks that need the most work are his shooting and consistency.
In 15 professional games between the Flyers and Phantoms, Luchanko has yet to find his first pro goal to complement his seven assists.
For instance, Luchanko failed to record a shot on goal in the Game 1 against the Penguins referenced above despite recording two assists on the evening.
In Game 2, Luchanko picked up another two assists, including the secondary helper on the game-winner scored by defenseman Helge Grans, while also adding three shots on goal.
Before this, Luchanko had gone three games in a row without a shot on goal.
Good or bad, this is all useful information for the Flyers. The more Luchanko plays, the easier it will be to pick up on his habits and pick things out to improve or continue.
In Game 2, for example, Grans enters the zone on his own before executing a drop pass to a trailing Luchanko. After pivoting inside, Luchanko makes a nice heads-up play to find Richard cutting to the back post.
Some players might opt to pull up and shoot a puck through heavy traffic, but it is clear that Luchanko's first offensive instinct is to defer and look for another pass.
Grans backhand no look game winner from HIS KNEES?! Are you SERIOUS?!#RallyTheValley | #LVvsWBS | #LVPhantomspic.twitter.com/2wIGAEq6hy
— Lehigh Valley Phantoms (@LVPhantoms) April 26, 2025
This works out for Luchanko, as he has the skill to pull off such a high-difficulty pass to create a big scoring chance for his teammate. He gets bonus points for the assist, as Grans was able to turn around and swat a juicy rebound into the goal to win the game.
At the NHL level, Luchanko will have to add more wrinkles to his game to thrive on the stat sheet, but at the AHL level, his vision, speed, and passing abilities are too hot for the average player to handle.
Luchanko's processing speed and decision-making have shown clear progress, and perhaps the Flyers' top forward prospect is willing himself to an even higher gear in these playoff games.
These are the kind of things a Flyers organization starved of playoff hockey wants to see from its up-and-coming players. Which players want to be here and want to succeed here? Who can push themselves and their teammates to another gear when the stakes are raised?
Right now, it looks like Luchanko is indeed a prospect capable of accomplishing this in Philadelphia, and that has to be an encouraging feeling for this Flyers front office.
NFL Draft: 10 players to know ahead of the 2026 class, led by Texas QB Arch Manning
Jimmy Butler officially ruled out for Warriors in Game 3
Golden State looked vulnerable this season before Jimmy Butler arrived, but it's going to need to find a way to win a game without him Saturday.
After going through warmups, Butler has been ruled out of Game 3 against the Rockets at the Chase Center on Saturday.
Jimmy Butler is officially OUT with a left pelvic contusion. He’s currently getting up shots right now on the Warriors’ practice court. Absence isn’t expected to be a long one @NBCSWarriors
— Dalton Johnson (@DaltonJ_Johnson) April 26, 2025
Butler suffered a deep glute muscle contusion from a fall in Game 2, and his status for Game 3 was always in question. The important news is that there is no structural damage, but the injury was enough to sideline him Saturday night.
Jimmy Butler hit the ground hard after being undercut by Amen Thompson pic.twitter.com/Icd2wBF50U
— Warriors on NBCS (@NBCSWarriors) April 24, 2025
Quinten Post will get the start for Golden State with Butler out.
Butler's solid defense and role as another shot creator alongside Stephen Curry, someone opponents must respect, has turned the Golden State season around. In the playoffs, the Warriors have outscored the Rockets by 6.4 points per 100 possessions when he is on the court, but have been outscored by 8.6 points per 100 without him. With Butler out for much of Game 2, the Rockets loaded up their defense on Curry and with that dragged down the Warriors' offense and got the win.
Mets' A.J. Minter leaves Nationals game with triceps tightness; IL stint likely
The Mets' bullpen has been great this year, but one of their best arms had to leave Saturday's game against the Nationals.
A.J. Minter was called upon in the eighth inning and after getting the first out, was in a 2-1 count to Nationals slugger James Wood when he threw a ball but seemed to tweak something coming off the mound.
Manager Carlos Mendoza and the athletic training staff approached Minter, and after a short conversation, he was pulled from the game.
The Mets announced Minter left with left triceps tightness.
"Felt it on the pitch there," Mendoza said after the game. "He's going to get an MRI tomorrow and then we'll see what we're dealing with."
Mendoza said that it's likely Minter will go on the IL, just because it involves a pitcher's throwing arm.
"When you have a pitcher coming out of the game because of an arm, even if we get good news, you have to be careful. I don't want to get ahead of myself, we have to wait and see what we're dealing with here."
"I can't remember what pitch it was, but about two pitches or a pitch before you can see me move my tricep a little bit, it tightened up," Minter said afterward. "I'm just glad it wasn't my elbow. That's what I was 'happy' about. We're probably looking at an IL stint. Come back, get this thing fixed and continue to help the team."
Minter said he's never had a triceps injury before, so it's all new to him, and that's "super frustrating" considering how well he was throwing and how well the team is playing.
The inevitable loss of Minter will deal a big blow to the Mets' bullpen. Entering Saturday, Minter had a 1.69 ERA in 12 appearances with 13 strikeouts over 10.2 innings.
A.J. Minter leaves the game with the Mets' athletic trainer in the 8th inning pic.twitter.com/T57KqeHL4K
— SNY (@SNYtv) April 26, 2025
Thunder beat Grizzlies to reach Conference semis
The Oklahoma City Thunder became the first side to advance from the first round of the NBA play-offs as they completed a 4-0 sweep over the Memphis Grizzlies in their best-of-seven series.
Shai Gilgeous-Alexander starred again, scoring a play-off career-high 38 points in a 117-115 victory to help send the Thunder into the Western Conference play-off semi-finals.
Gilgeous-Alexander averaged more than 32 points per game in the regular season, in which the Thunder won 68 games.
Jalen Williams added 23 points as the Thunder led for almost the entire second half, despite Scotty Pippen Jr equalling his career-high score with 30 points for the Grizzlies, who were missing injured star guard Ja Morant.
The top seeds in the West will next face the Denver Nuggets or the Los Angeles Clippers.
Earlier, Eastern Conference top seeds the Cleveland Cavaliers demolished the Miami Heat to take a 3-0 lead in their series.
The Heat's 124-87 defeat was their worst play-off loss in franchise history.
Jarrett Allen scored 22 points and D'Andre Hunter added 21 as six Cavs players reached double figures.
Game four takes place on Monday.
Thunder complete sweep of Grizzlies, reach Western Conference semifinals with 117-115 victory
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) — Shai Gilgeous-Alexander scored 38 points and the Oklahoma City Thunder advanced to the Western Conference semifinals by beating the Memphis Grizzlies 117-115 on Saturday to complete a four-game sweep.
Jalen Williams added 23 points for the top-seeded Thunder, who led the NBA with a 68-14 record this season and became the first team to reach the second round. They will await the fourth-seeded Denver Nuggets or No. 5 Los Angeles Clippers in the next round.
The Grizzlies played without star guard Ja Morant, who bruised his left hip in a hard fall in Game 3. The Thunder erased a 29-point deficit after he left, the second-biggest comeback in a postseason game since detailed play-by-play began being kept in 1996-97.
Chet Holmgren, Isaiah Hartenstein and Isaiah Joe had 11 points apiece for the Thunder, with Hartenstein adding 12 rebounds.
Scotty Pippen Jr. matched his career high with 30 points and grabbed 11 rebounds. Desmond Bane and Santi Aldama had 23 points apiece.
The game was close through three quarters with neither team building a significant advantage. Oklahoma City led 88-85 entering the fourth. At that point, the Thunder were 4 of 29 from 3-point range.
Williams’ 3-pointer with 5:41 left in the game gave the Thunder a 102-92 lead, the first time either team reached a double-digit advantage. Memphis rallied and a 3-pointer from Bane with 7.1 seconds left cut it to 116-114.
Williams split a pair of free throws with 6 seconds left and the Thunder fouled Bane intentionally. He made the first but Memphis could not rebound his intentional miss of the second.
After six lead changes and five ties in the half, Oklahoma City led 60-59 at the break
Behind ‘Batman' Steph, Warriors prevail without his ‘Robin' in Game 3
Behind ‘Batman' Steph, Warriors prevail without his ‘Robin' in Game 3 originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area
SAN FRANCISCO – With Jimmy Butler III relegated to a well-padded seat on the bench, the Warriors on Saturday were forced to revisit the limitations of their offense. Their hopes rested on the improvisational brilliance of Stephen Curry and a prayer.
Curry accomplished his mission, Gary Payton II answered the prayer, and the Warriors closed out a 104-93 win over the Houston Rockets to take a 2-1 lead in their first-round Western Conference playoff series.
The Warriors are not exactly in command, not yet, but winning without Butler makes a statement to themselves and to the Rockets – one that was personally delivered by Curry: We want to win with Jimmy, but we’re capable of winning without him.
Curry finished with a game-high 36 points, 21 of which came in the second half when the Warriors outscored the Rockets 58-44. He also added seven assists and three rebounds after intermission.
All against a defense designed to send waves of punishment.
“This is what superstars do in playoff games,” coach Steve Kerr said. “You can’t win games without the great players in the league. When you go deep, the playoffs get tougher and tougher. The great players just give the whole team confidence, and that’s what Steph does.”
The Warriors trailed most of the first half, falling behind by as much as 13 points. The defense was keeping them within range, but the offense was being stifled. A 9-0 finish to the half allowed them to go into the locker room trailing by only three (49-46).
“There was just a moment in the second quarter where I had to kind of get a little bit more assertive and not let the double teams and the traps take me out of possessions,” Curry said. “I only had four shots in the first quarter, and usually that can work to our advantage if we are moving the ball and guys are getting open looks.
“But it didn’t seem like there was a lot of flow, so I kind of did kind of force the issue a little bit in the second quarter and got going. Thankfully hit some shots.”
Curry’s presence always gives the Warriors hope, but his third-quarter flurry, 12 points on 5-of-6 shooting, including 2 of 3 from deep, gave them – and the vociferous sellout crowd at Chase Center – a strong sense of belief.
There was, according to longtime teammate Draymond Green, an inspirational element to what Curry was doing.
“We all follow him just with that type of tenacity,” Green said. “You’re not going to be the guy to let him down when he’s playing like that. I think anybody wants to be that guy where he’s coming out, he’s given that type of effort. Oftentimes I try to bring that energy, and I didn’t have it. He found it, and then I followed him, and we all followed him.
“I thought it was beautiful, you know, he realized that it wasn’t there, and he took it upon himself to, you know, bring that type of force to the game, and we all fell in line and followed.”
Houston took its last lead, 84-83, on a Dillon Brooks 3-ball with 5:47 remaining. Curry fed Payton for a layup 20 seconds later, followed by two more Curry dimes to Payton in the next 58 seconds. That spurred a 20-9 closing run.
Curry’s 36 points came on 12-of-23 shooting from the field, including 5 of 13 from beyond the arc. He added a team-high nine assists and seven rebounds to finish plus-18 over 41 minutes.
“He’s Steph Curry,” Kerr said. “He’s one much greatest players of all time. He’s 37. He’s one of the most well-conditioned athletes I’ve ever seen in my life.
“To play 41 minutes against that kind of defense, to have a slow start and then find his rhythm, which we have seen him do countless times over the years, to hit big shots, to only turn it over twice against that kind of pressure, he was brilliant.”
With Curry leading the way, the second half was the first time this series when Golden State’s offense looked as designed, with testimony coming from 16 assists. The Warriors through the first 10 quarters averaged five assists per against Houston’s overtly physical defense.
And now they will try to assert themselves and take a 3-1 series lead in Game 4 on Monday night at Chase. The hope is that Butler will be able to play.
“Hopefully he’s back next game,” Curry said. “Or if he’s not, we can still play at a high level and we can win a tough physical playoff game. I think we all know, we’re trying to win 14 more of these. We need Jimmy to do that.
“But if there’s a situation where somebody is not available, next-man-up mentality, it’s got to be a belief and a confidence. Two months ago, I don’t know if we had that.”
The Warriors have it now. They backed it up by winning a game that, on paper, seemed ominous.