Wembanyama stars as Spurs level NBA play-offs

Victor Wembanyama of the San Antonio Spurs drives to the basket against the Oklahoma City Thunder
Wembanyama played 31 minutes of Sunday's game [Getty Images]

The San Antonio Spurs bounced back in style with an impressive 103-82 home win over the Oklahoma City Thunder to level their best-of-seven NBA Western Conference finals series at 2-2.

Spurs star Victor Wembanyama, who had been critical of his performance in their game three defeat, led from the front with 33 points, eight rebounds, five assists, three blocks and two steals.

"We just responded," said the 22-year-old Frenchman. "It was nothing amazing. It wasn't magic. We just did what we needed to do."

"The series is far from over."

The Spurs built up an early 15-point lead before the Thunder cut the deficit to five with just over a minute remaining in the second quarter.

But the Spurs hit back with seven points before the break, topped by a mid-court three-pointer from Wembanyama.

It was also a solid defensive display from the Spurs with the Thunder's 38 first-half points their lowest of the season.

The reigning NBA champions' game total was also the fewest for the franchise since 2 December 2021, and the lowest in a play-off game since 2020.

With the result virtually decided, Oklahoma City's Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, who top-scored on 19 points, sat out the entire fourth quarter.

No other Thunder player scored more than 12.

Game five takes place on Tuesday (01:30 BST Wednesday) in Oklahoma City with game six back in San Antonio on Thursday (01:30 BST Friday).

In the Eastern Conference, the New York Knicks lead the Cleveland Cavaliers 3-0 and can wrap up that series in Cleveland on Monday (01:00 BST, Tuesday), with the NBA Finals starting on 4 June.

To the Wall: 3 Takeaways as Golden Knights ‘Show Some Balls’ in Game 3 Comeback

The Presidents’ Trophy-winning Colorado Avalanche have faced very little adversity so far this postseason. They swept the Los Angeles Kings without much ado, and dispatched the Minnesota Wild in just five games. But after blowing a three-goal lead in Game 3 to fall behind 3-0 to the Vegas Golden Knights in the Western Conference Final, the Avalanche are learning just how quickly snow melts in the deserts of Nevada.

This time last week, the Avalanche were a team destined for greatness, and for their second Stanley Cup in five years. Nearly every writer and analyst in the hockey world predicted this series going in the other direction, and for good reason.

What everyone failed to take into account is just how much the Golden Knights thrive on being counted out. 

Game 4 of the Western Conference Final is scheduled for 6:15 p.m. PST on Tuesday.

1. Had Us in the First Half, Not Gonna Lie…

When the Golden Knights were down 2-0, Pavel Dorofeyev scored on the power play to cut the Avalanche’s lead in half. Or, at least, he thought he did. Instead, the goal was waved off, and the officials upheld the call on the ice. Just 36 seconds later, Jack Drury scored shorthanded to give his team an insurmountable 3-0 lead.

As it turned out, that insurmountable three-goal lead wasn’t insurmountable in the slightest. 

“The period ends,” said Mark Stone following the win. “That’s probably the best thing that happened to us— the period ends.”

In a year where miraculous comebacks were the norm, the Golden Knights did something tonight that they failed to do all season: they came back from a three-goal deficit. And they did so against an Avalanche team that was 52-0-0 with a multi-goal lead.

2. Return of the Cap

Golden Knights Captain Mark Stone returned to the lineup for Game 3 after missing the previous five games with a lower-body injury. He slotted in on the third line with Tomáš Hertl and Colton Sissons and made his impact felt almost immediately. He threw four hits in his 15:45 TOI, jump-started the comeback with his power play goal, and assisted on Hertl’s game-winner.

“He does a lot for our team, on the ice and off the ice,” said Mitch Marner postgame. “His leadership, the intensity he brings to every game… It’s big to have 61 back. It’s great to have him in the locker room.”

Of course, no one is happier about Stone’s return to the lineup than Stone himself.

“I don't like watching, ever,” said Stone following the 5-3 win. “I want to play every game. It’s been an unfortunate part of my career, sitting out. But this time of year, it definitely is harder.”

3. Can We Say That?

Golden Knights head coach John Tortorella had just one thing to say about his team following the 5-3 comeback win.

“This was a game where we showed some balls,” Tortorella said postgame. “I want them to feel it for a little bit, as far as what they just did against a really good hockey club.”

Tortorella was absolutely right. Facing a three-goal deficit against the Presidents’ Trophy-winning Colorado Avalanche in the first period, the Golden Knights easily could have folded. They didn’t.

Instead, they chipped away at Colorado’s lead, gaining more and more confidence with every goal. The Golden Knights were an avalanche, and the Avalanche– who were such a powerhouse during the regular season and in the first two rounds of the playoffs– were powerless to stop it.

“We’re a team that doesn’t have any quit,” said Mitch Marner following the 5-3 win. “We want to make sure every game, regardless of the score, we’re fighting and trying to come back.”

Game 3 Recap: Avalanche on brink of elimination after 5-2 loss

LAS VEGAS, NEVADA - MAY 24: Keegan Kolesar #55 of the Vegas Golden Knights scores a goal past Scott Wedgewood #41 of the Colorado Avalanche. (Photo by Candice Ward/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Things were supposed to be different as the Western Conference Final series between the Colorado Avalanche and Vegas Golden Knights shifted to T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas. And for a period it appeared the visitors were back on track, but ultimately a collapse led to a 5-2 loss as the Avalanche are now in a 0-3 series deficit and on the brink of elimination.

The Game

First, the fun stuff.

Gabe Landeskog opened the scoring just three minutes into the game, giving Avalanche fans a sense of relief that the required fast start did, in fact, come to fruition. Four minutes later Nazem Kadri added to the lead on a slick pass from Martin Nečas.

On a Vegas power play it appeared that Pavel Dorofeyev scored as the puck hit off the shaft of his stick. The officials initially waived it off thinking the puck hit his hand. Apparently video evidence as in inclusive so the original no-goal call stood. A break for the Avalanche and they doubled down on it in short order as Jack Drury took the puck shorthanded and made a nice deke to beat Carter Hart to the post. A 3-0 lead and 16-7 shot advantage was just what the doctor ordered for Colorado after 20 minutes of play.

Unfortunately this game lasted longer than 20 minutes as the positives started unraveling almost immediately as the second period began. Mark Stone, just off the injured list himself scored on the power play just 19 seconds into the frame. No time to panic but William Karlsson scored for Vegas four minutes later to officially get back in the game. Keegan Kolesar tipped a Dylan Coghlan shot at the midpoint to tie the game at 3-3 and Vegas didn’t look back.

In the third period Colorado looked cooked as they could only muster seven shots on goal. Vegas got the go-ahead tally as Tomas Hertl walked Sam Malinski and shot the puck past Scott Wedgewood at the midpoint of the period. Colorado received their fourth power play late in the frame but looked laughably disjointed on it. Then, it was only a matter of time before Vegas cashed in on the empty net from Brett Howden to arrive at the 5-2 final score and 0-3 series deficit for the Avalanche.

Takeaways

Injuries will become a major talking point (excuse) moving forward. Despite getting Cale Makar back at clearly less than 100% this contest unfortunately saw Nathan MacKinnon take a puck off of his knee late in the second period. He tried to come back in the third but only lasted a shift until he was put on power play and extra attacker only duty. Val Nichushkin also was absent the entire third period with an undisclosed ailment. There was no update on either player in the post game.

This seemed like the game where things were going right for the Avalanche. With the three-goal lead and a crucial call that went their way, things were unfolding nicely to at least give the Avalanche some much-needed momentum if only for one game. The most alarming part is how that success was so short-lived, they couldn’t even get this game to overtime. Postgame Jared Bednar admitted morale is cratering. Can this team muster up enough moxie to make it a series or is it already over?

Upcoming

One more contest in Vegas for Game 4 as the Avalanche hope to begin the road to saving their season. Puck drop is at 7 p.m. MT on Tuesday, May 26th.

Salesian Sisters bless Spurs’ Luke Kornet ahead of Game 4 win against Thunder

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows Spurs center Luke Kornet recieved a blessing from the Salesian Sisters of St. John's before the Spurs' 103-82 win over the Thunder. , Image 2 shows The Salesian Sisters yelling

The Spurs may have had some divine help in their 103-82 win over the Thunder

Sitting courtside for Sunday’s Game 4 win were a group of catholic nuns known as the Salesian Sisters of St. John Bosco, who were decked out in Spurs jerseys and were seen interacting with several players before the game. 

Spurs center Luke Kornet even received a blessing from two nuns, which was captured on video and circulated on social media. 

Spurs center Luke Kornet recieved a blessing from the Salesian Sisters of St. John Bosco before the Spurs’ 103-82 win over the Thunder. X @CourtsideBuzzX

The team’s social media channels also posted a video of the basketball-loving nuns chanting “Go Spurs Go!”

The fandom of the “Spurs nuns” dates back to the 1990s, according to the San Antonio Express-News. 

The group of nuns used it to better understand and share a common interest with the students at St. John Bosco School. 

“Our ministry is with young people, and we need to be able to converse with them and talk to them,” Sister Bernadette Mota told the outlet. “I can talk basketball with the kids and it’s something that I’ve really enjoyed watching.”

The sisters have become tried and true fans since they began cheering for the team, and among some of their favorite players on this year’s squad include New Jersey native and former Rutgers star Dylan Harper, due to his attending a high school affiliated with the Salesian Sisters.

Kornet is also among their favorites.

The Salesian Sisters yelling “Go Spurs Go” before Game 4 on Sunday.

Sister Margaret Natal told the San Antonio Express-News that they pray for the Spurs regularly. 

“We keep them in prayer, and it’s not, you know, for them to win,” Natal said. “It’s about good sportsmanship, that they remember who they are. That they are role models. We pray that they play to the best of their ability. We pray that they understand their responsibility.”

Their prayers seemed to be answered on Sunday as the Spurs played to a series-tying victory over the Thunder. 

Kornet scored six points on 3-of-4 shooting in 13 minutes on the court. 

Spurs superstar Victor Wembanyama scored a game-high 33 points on 11-of-22 shooting, along with eight rebounds, five assists and three blocks.

Marcus Semien’s prolonged slump continues as concerns mount for Mets

An image collage containing 1 images, Image 1 shows Mets second baseman Marcus Semien (10) singles against the Washington Nationals during the ninth inning at Nationals Park

MIAMI — Marcus Semien’s season hasn’t had many highlights, and these days he stands among the symbols of the Mets lineup’s futility.

The veteran second baseman went 0-for-4 in the 4-0 loss to the Marlins on Sunday that completed Miami’s three-game sweep. Semien’s day was marked by the double play he grounded into in the sixth inning after Brett Baty drew a leadoff walk in a scoreless game.

Semien owns a paltry .552 OPS in May.

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He isn’t alone among the Mets who have underperformed, but the team at least received a semblance of life from Bo Bichette earlier this road trip when he delivered three homers over two games.

From Mark Vientos to Baty, right down the line, the Mets aren’t receiving production, other than Juan Soto’s hot bat. And Soto was scratched from Sunday’s lineup because of illness.

Semien, 35, arrived in the November trade that sent Brandon Nimmo to Texas.

The deal was orchestrated by president of baseball operations David Stearns largely to swap the five years and $102.5 million remaining on Nimmo’s contract for the three years and $72 million on Semien’s, but the Mets also expected some level of production from Semien.

They have not received it.

Mets second baseman Marcus Semien (10) singles against the Washington Nationals during the ninth inning at Nationals Park. Brad Mills-Imagn Images

“What I am feeling is that I am putting the ball in play, but I am not driving the ball,” Semien said. “I am just trying to do everything I can to be on time, to be ready for high velocity and handle the off-speed they throw.”

Semien overall owns a .214/.263/.297 slash line with three homers.

“It’s been hard for him, but this is a guy that continues to show up and put the work in, day in and day out,” manager Carlos Mendoza said. “You hope at some point that he’s going to come out of it. He’s been in this league a long time and there is a reason why we want to continue to run him out there.”

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Mendoza was asked for his concern level that Semien, at 35, simply doesn’t have it any longer.

“I am not worried, because I am watching him grinding behind the scenes,” Mendoza said. “How much he cares and he’s been a really good player, so we trust him. We have got to continue to keep going and support him.”

Aaron Boone expects Anthony Volpe to play ‘a lot’ on Yankees’ upcoming road trip

An image collage containing 1 images, Image 1 shows Yankees shortstop Anthony Volpe jumps over Blue Jays designated hitter George Springer during a double play

Anthony Volpe wasn’t in the lineup again for Sunday’s 2-0 win over the Rays in The Bronx as José Caballero manned shortstop, but Volpe should get more playing time on the upcoming road trip.

When the Yankees visit Kansas City on Monday, they’ll face Michael Wacha, a right-hander who is tougher on lefty hitters than on righties, followed by lefties Bailey Falter and Noah Cameron.

And in Sacramento, the A’s are scheduled to throw left-hander Jacob Lopez on Saturday.

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Volpe, according to manager Aaron Boone, just started working at second base, but Boone might keep him at short when he’s in the lineup, utilizing Caballero’s versatility around the infield.

“I expect Anthony to play a lot when we go to Kansas City, as well as [Caballero],’’ Boone said of the infield, which could land Ryan McMahon on the bench.

And while Boone said Volpe could just stay at short, he added, “I do want him working some at second, too.”

Volpe hasn’t played anything but shortstop in a game since 2021, when he was in High-A ball, although he did work a bit at second base before he won the starting job at short in 2023.

Anthony Volpe (11) jumps over Blue Jays designated hitter George Springer (4) as he competes a double play during the first inning of the Yankees and Toronto Blue Jays game at Yankee Stadium on May 20. Bill Kostroun/New York Post

The Yankees traded for Caballero last season with the idea of playing him at different spots, but he’s focused his work at short while filling in for Volpe, who was sidelined by offseason shoulder surgery.

Boone said he expected Caballero to be able to go back to his utility role successfully if called upon.

“That’s one of his superpowers, his ability to move around,’’ Boone said of Caballero. “I have a ton of confidence in José. Wherever we put him on any given day, he has a chance to impact us in a lot of different ways.”


Aaron Judge’s dramatics weren’t limited to his game-winning homer in the ninth.

He also made a diving catch in the eighth that helped keep Tampa Bay from scoring — and he made an uncharacteristic baserunning error in the first.



Judge singled with one out and Ben Rice followed with a shot to right field.

When Ryan Vilade caught it, Judge found himself almost at second base and he was doubled off first to end the inning.

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“Usually any time Ben Rice hits it in the gap, it’s gonna go a long way,’’ Judge said. “I’ve got to keep my head on a swivel. Off the bat, I think it’s gonna be in the gap, I know it’s gonna be a close game and you’re trying to either score or get to third. I peeked up and it was right at him. That was a bad look. I’ve got to clean that up.”


With the Yankees locked in a scoreless game in the ninth, Boone went with lefty Tim Hill instead of closer David Bednar.

With the bottom half of the lineup due up — starting with lefty-swinging Chandler Simpson — Hill whiffed Simpson and then pitched around a walk and a single.

It came after Hill gave up four runs in Friday’s loss.


Gerrit Cole reported no issues after making his first start Friday since his March 2025 Tommy John surgery.

The right-hander was able to play catch and is scheduled to make his next start Wednesday in Kansas City, with Will Warren going Monday and Cam Schlittler on Tuesday.

Cody Bellinger impresses Yankees with ‘game-changing’ throw in win

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows Yankees left fielder Cody Bellinger (35) reacts after he flies out during the second inning against the Tampa Bay Rays at Yankee Stadium, Sunday, May 24, 2026, in Bronx, NY, Image 2 shows A baseball player in a New York Yankees uniform with a glove on the field

Since joining the Yankees prior to last season, Cody Bellinger has drawn praise from his coaches and teammates for his defense.

There have been highlight-reel worthy plays and the catch and throw to double off Francisco Lindor at first base during the Subway Series last July that helped end a five-game losing streak — and begin a five-game winning streak.

There’s no telling what lasting impact Bellinger’s heads-up play in Sunday’s 2-0 win over Tampa Bay will have, but it clearly changed the course of a game the Yankees could hardly afford to lose.

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With the Yankees locked in a scoreless game and having lost three straight — as well as all four previous meetings against the Rays this season — pinch runner Oliver Dunn was on second base and Junior Caminero on first with two outs.

With the runners going on a 3-2 pitch from Fernando Cruz, Ryan Vilade singled to left, and Tampa Bay was on the verge of taking the lead before Bellinger — instead of firing home — threw to Ryan McMahon at third base.

It was in time to get Caminero at third, and the tag was applied before Dunn got to the plate, so the game remained tied.

“That was a game-changing throw,’’ said Aaron Judge, who won the game in the ninth with a home run. “It was heads up.”

And it was heads up from several people.

Aaron Boone credited outfield coach Luis Rojas for bringing Bellinger in slightly before the play “with something like that in mind.”

Then Bellinger had to get to the ball quickly and fire to third off the wet grass, and McMahon picked the ball and finished the play.

Bellinger said it was “all [McMahon]. I picked my head up and Mac had a huge target at third. I threw a pretty nasty sinker. He did a great job to pick it and tag him. Once he tagged him, I didn’t think the run had scored.”

Yankees left fielder Cody Bellinger (35) reacts after he flies out during the second inning against the Tampa Bay Rays at Yankee Stadium, Sunday, May 24, 2026, in Bronx, NY. Corey Sipkin for the NY POST

A review confirmed the out at third, and that the tag beat Dunn to the plate.

Bellinger called the play “huge” and added he didn’t consider throwing home, knowing the runners would be going on the pitch with a full count.

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“You really don’t have a chance at home,” Bellinger said. “I tried to throw the ball to [McMahon] as best I could. It wasn’t easy out there.”

McMahon called the play “all reactionary.”

“I started to run in to cut off the throw home, and as I was going there, I remembered they were on the run, so I had to go back to third,” McMahon said. “I felt [Bellinger] was pretty close and I was able to get the ball. Knowing we should be down 1-0 and was still tied instead was big.”

The Yankees didn’t score in the bottom of the inning, but Tim Hill tossed a scoreless ninth before Judge ended it with his 17th homer.

“It was a really heads-up, great play by a great defender,’’ Boone said.

Spurs’ defensive adjustment suffocates Thunder’s offense in Game 4 blowout win

OKLAHOMA CITY, OKLAHOMA - MAY 20: Shai Gilgeous-Alexander #2 of the Oklahoma City Thunder drives around Stephon Castle #5 of the San Antonio Spurs during the first quarter in Game Two of the NBA Western Conference Finals at Paycom Center on May 20, 2026 in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Alex Slitz/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Spurs looked like a veteran team in Game 4 of the Western Conference Finals. They faced a Thunder squad missing two key pieces and made sure they never gave them hope for an upset en route to a 103-82 blowout win. Victor Wembanyama led the way with 33 points in 32 minutes while Shai Gilgeous-Alexander only had 19 in the losing effort.

It was clear from the start which team was playing with more urgency. Staring down the possibility of heading back to Oklahoma City down 3-1, the Spurs looked more focused and energized early on. Victor Wembanyama hit a three, which is always a good omen, but the Silver and Black were also mixing in some pick-and-rolls to get the big man going. While the offense was solid in the halfcourt, which is never a given, it was the defense that allowed San Antonio to carve out a 15-point lead in the first quarter for the second game in a row. With the Thunder lacking secondary creators, Mitch Johnson and his staff decided to dial down the pressure on Shai Gilgeous-Alexander to prevent him from finding finishers. Great individual defense from Stephon Castle limited SGA, and it took Isaiah Hartenstein hitting four long floaters for the visitors to reach 19 points for the frame.

Victor Wembanyama was on the floor for most of the first instead of resting with a lead, so the bench with Luke Kornet started the second. The subs have been outplayed all series, but once again, there was no secondary creator for the Thunder while SGA rested. The second unit still struggled to score but held its own on defense until Wembanyama could return. The low-scoring start of the frame was a harbinger of things to come, as the pace slowed down, and constant stoppages took both teams out of rhythm. It was an ugly stretch in which the Spurs’ defense did a terrific job on Gilgeous-Alexander while not allowing anything easy to anyone else, but the offense got stagnant and too many possessions ended up with one-on-one play and few passes. Still, thanks to the efforts of Vassell and Wembanyama, who hit a half-court shot at the buzzer, San Antonio held a 12-point lead at the half.

Normally, the Thunder would adjust after the break to fix an offense that couldn’t reach 20 points in either of the first two quarters, but there was not much they could do on Sunday. They tried to have Cason Wallace and Alex Caruso initiate plays with SGA off the ball, but the defense remained suffocating, and the Spurs continued to force tough shots from the MVP or turnovers that led to transition opportunities. Mark Daigneault tried to go five-out with two shooting bigs on the floor instead of going back to Hartenstein, but the Thunder’s role players couldn’t buy a three after sinking one after the other in Game 3. Stephon Castle and Devin Vassell were stellar on defense, Wembanyama looked for his shot from inside and out, and the reigning champions simply didn’t have any answers. A decent stretch to close it out couldn’t make up for a terrible quarter for the visitors, who trailed by 18 heading into the final frame.

Gilgeous-Alexander was not on the floor to start the fourth, and it was hard to determine whether Daingeault was waving the white flag early or trying to find a spark elsewhere before sending his superstar back to deal with physical defense. It was probably a bit of both, and since no unexpected hero led a run, the MVP never checked back in. The Spurs managed their lead and gave minutes to players who needed them to get going before both teams emptied their benches. It was a dominant performance by a San Antonio team that made adjustments, took advantage of absences, and rediscovered its identity to tie the series at two each.

Game notes

  • The two biggest factors in the win are related. The Spurs wisely changed their approach to guarding Gilgeous-Alexander, showing him a crowd but being more selective on when to double or trap him. With Wembanyama in the paint, SGA settled for jumpers and made a few, but couldn’t feed role players for open looks. The second factor was the Thunder’s lack of a secondary ball handler. It was SGA or nothing, basically, as both Jalen Williams and Ajay Mitchell were out. When SGA passed, the target wasn’t always open, and the offense stagnated. Injuries are beyond a team’s control, but credit to the Spurs’ coaching staff for their defensive adjustment.
  • Devin Vassell and Stephon Castle had 13 points each, which is not bad but far from their career highs, but they made a tremendous impact on defense. The entire team played with toughness and purpose, but those two were terrific at limiting Gilgeous-Alexander and flying around as help defenders.
  • De’Aaron Fox had a double-double with points and rebounds, not assists. It was an all-hands-on-deck effort for the Spurs on the glass and on defense. Fox was the only one in double digits in rebounds, but other five San Antonio players had four or more.
  • The bench struggles have been well documented, and while the second unit didn’t exactly impress, the effort was there. Luke Kornet had some good stints, Dylan Harper made plays on both ends, and Harrison Barnes, who was on the floor for 16 minutes, all played with physicality and purpose while making few mistakes. Keldon Johnson continued to struggle with his shot, and Carter Bryant had some rookie moments, but overall, the bench did better.
  • The Thunder shot 6-for-33 from beyond the arc. Some of their struggles can be attributed to the Spurs’ defensive adjustment, but they also missed open ones that will probably go down in Oklahoma City. The good news is the Silver and Black also have plenty of room for improvement, since they went 9-for-33. Hopefully Julian Champagnie, who missed all five of his attempts on Game 4, can hit a few in the next one.

Play of the game

While the defensive adjustments will get more attention, the purpose with which the Spurs looked for Wembanyama at times inside was encouraging. Sometimes it feels like the Spurs forget that they can just run pick-and-rolls, but when they remember, good things tend to happen.

Game 5: at Oklahoma City on Tuesday

A pivotal Game 5 awaits. If the Thunder are still shorthanded, the Spurs must take advantage.

Former Islanders Turned Avalanche On Brink Of Elimination After Collapse In Game 3 Of Western Conference Finals

Former New York Islanders forward Brock Nelson and defenseman Devon Toews find themselves on the brink of elimination after the Colorado Avalanche fell 5-3 to the Vegas Golden Knights in Game 3 of the Western Conference Finals on Sundayn night. 

The Avalanche looked like they were going to make a big statement after going up 3-0 on Vegas after the first period, but Vegas flushed the bad period. 

They went on to score five unanswered goals to move within one win from advancing to the Stanley Cup Final for the second time in five years. 

Nelson played 19:02 in the loss, recording no shots on goal, winning 57 percent of his draws. Toews, who got his defense partner Cale Makar back after a two-game absence, recorded two assists with two shots on goal in 23:14. 

Nelson, who inked a three-year deal worth $7.5 million annually on June 4, 2025, has struggled in these playoffs with just two goals and one assist in 12 games. 

On the flip side, Toews has had a fantastic postseason, with 11 points (two goals, nine assists) in 12 games. 

Game 4 of these Western Conference Finals comes your way on Tuesday night at 9 PM ET on ESPN. 

Golden Knights Complete UNBELIEVABLE Comeback, on Verge of Western Conference Sweep

Following Friday’s Game 2 win, head coach John Tortorella took the podium and guaranteed that his Vegas Golden Knights would be ready for Game 3. He spoke with a steady confidence, swearing that his team wouldn’t get caught up in having a 2-0 lead over the Presidents’ Trophy-winning Colorado Avalanche in the Western Conference Final.

“I guarantee you, we won’t,” said Tortorella following the 3-1 win. “I don’t have to say anything to them. They just understand the situation.”

It sure didn’t look that way at first. But, as it turned out, Tortorella was right.

The Avalanche broke the ice at 3:21 in the first period. Nathan MacKinnon chipped the puck out, taking advantage of a pinching Rasmus Andersson. Devon Toews won the footrace, blew around Noah Hanifin, and drove the net. The puck rolled off his stick, but Gabriel Landeskog crashed the net and got it to go on the second attempt. 

The Avalanche doubled their lead at 7:03 in the first. Josh Manson sent a stretch-pass up the middle of the ice, springing Martin Nečas on a breakaway. Nečas pulled off, curled up, and found Nazem Kadri in the high slot. Without breaking his stride, Kadri fired off a wrister that beat Carter Hart blocker-side.

The Avalanche extended their lead while shorthanded at 13:15 in the first. Parker Kelly flipped the puck out, and it got free to Jack Drury in the neutral zone. Drury sped in, drove the net, and finished off a nifty move in close. 

The Golden Knights got on the board on the power play just 19 seconds into the second period. Mitch Marner found Mark Stone driving the net, and the Captain chipped it past Scott Wedgewood’s glove in his return to the lineup. 

When down 3-0, the Golden Knights showed no panic. The same cannot be said of the Avalanche when their three-goal lead began to evaporate. From that point on, it was all Vegas. The Avalanche were on their heels, and the Golden Knights kept them there.

The Golden Knights pulled to within one at 4:05 in the second. Scott Wedgewood made the save on Mitch Marner’s shot from the point, but Parker Kelly couldn’t get the clear. The puck bounced over to William Karlsson, who ripped it home for his first goal since October 26th. 

The Golden Knights tied the game at 12:46 in the second. Keegan Kolesar batted down Dylan Coghlan’s fluttering shot from the point and poked the puck home after it hit the post. 

The Golden Knights took their first lead of the night at 12:46 in the third. Mark Stone chipped Kaden Korczak’s stretch-pass over to Tomáš Hertl, who entered the zone with speed. Hertl danced around Sam Malinski and beat Scott Wedgewood with a heavy backhand. 

The crowd inside T-Mobile Arena resembled a morgue when Jack Drury scored to give the Avalanche a three-goal lead. The volume level increased every time the Golden Knights cut into that lead; after Hertl’s goal, that building was close to the loudest it’s ever been.

They grew even louder when Brett Howden hit the empty net to seal a 5-3 victory in Game 3 of the Western Conference Final.

“It’s a find-a-way league,” said head coach John Tortorella following the 5-3 win. “We found a way.”

Knicks Notes: Mike Brown pushes all the right buttons as NY nears NBA Finals breakthrough

CLEVELAND -- You might remember back in October, when one quote from Karl-Anthony Towns set off a loud alarm for the fan base.

Towns was asked about his role in Mike Brown’s offense.

“Honestly, I don’t know,” Towns said a couple days before the regular season. “I just don’t know. But we figuring it out. It’s just different. It’s different. So we’re still figuring it out.”

It wasn’t just the words Towns used. It was the way he delivered them. You didn’t need to be a body language expert to see that Towns wasn’t in love with his role in the new offense.

Fast-forward to Saturday night in Cleveland. About 90 minutes after the Knicks beat the Cavs to take a 3-0 series lead, Towns was asked to assess the job Brown has done this season.

Towns’ answer told you a lot about the connection between these Knicks players and their head coach and how it’s grown over the past seven months.

“With Mike, he had to learn us and adjust to us,” Towns said after the Knicks’ Game 3 win over Cleveland. “On the flip side, we had to do the same as well. Now, we are at a point where we are both working seamlessly. We understand each other’s language. He is getting the best from us and we are getting the best from him.

“I think that speaks to a season, especially a first season with a new coach and a new system and a new philosophy. It’s a testament to the players to do an amazing job coming together and showing that unity that made us special last year. But the coaching staff being receptive to the players and adjusting with us and finding the way to get the most out of us.”

It's always difficult to assess how well a coach is doing. We don’t get to see 90 percent of the work that they do behind the scenes. But what we have seen over the past month has been remarkable.

From the offensive adjustments to the big nights from role players, Brown has pushed nearly all of the right buttons during the Knicks’ 10-game win streak.

“He was put in a tough situation with a lot of expectations but he’s handled that unbelievably,” Josh Hart said. “He’s coaching us in his way, his style. He’s taking input from everybody. His ability to lead us to adapt to things has been great. That’s just the kind of person he is. He’s a high-character, and a great person first and foremost.”

Throughout the current streak, Brown has reminded his group to maintain their edge.

“It’s human nature to kind of get comfortable sometimes,” Landry Shamet said late Saturday night. “So he’s always checking us on that. Reminding us of fighting that off. It’s a lot of intangible stuff like that that I think he’s spectacular at. Keeping us in the right headspace. Obviously Xs and Os, the gameplan. He communicates with everyone. Just a great coach.”

Brown, as you know, was saddled with incredibly high expectations this season.

The Knicks reached the Eastern Conference Finals for the first time in 25 seasons last year under former coach Tom Thibodeau. Leon Rose, James Dolan and the Knicks concluded that the Knicks couldn’t take the next step under Thibodeau.

After a lengthy coaching search, they landed on Brown. Every game this season, in some way, was a referendum on that decision.

Now, with Brown and the Knicks one win away from their first NBA Finals trip in 27 years, the decision is validated. Not fully validated. But it certainly seems to be working out the way Rose and company had hoped when they made the change.

Would the Knicks have reached this point in the season -- up 3-0 in the Eastern Conference Finals -- under Thibodeau? Who knows? They’re here under Brown. They’ll have a chance to clinch a trip to the NBA Finals on Monday night.

LEANING ON THE BENCH

One of Brown’s edicts coming into the season? Establish a reliable bench. He’s checked that box this postseason, getting contributions from Shamet, Jordan Clarkson and Jose Alvarado alongside maintstays Miles McBride and Mitchell Robinson.

Here's Brown on his philosophy with bench players:

“I’ve been fortunate, blessed, lucky to be a part of some good coaching staffs and be with some great coaches. Steve Kerr, Gregg Popovich, they were guys that went deep into their bench. And they both always used to say, it’s not about now; it’s about the postseason. It’s not about now; it’s about the postseason. And you keep guys engaged by doing that, and you do develop not just a bench but the team, as well, because guys get used to playing with other guys, just in case something goes down.

“And so, again, it’s something I stole from them. Very few things I came up with on my own. I’ve seen it work in the past, and that’s kind of what I thought I wanted to do here. Tried to do it in Sacramento, too. So again, you’ve kind of been through it. You learn.

“You develop a philosophy from what you learn from and you believe in it, you try to stick with it as best you can, and that’s what we try to do here. Our guys, they’re doing a nice job getting rest, taking care of their bodies and their minds and trying to play as hard as they can. Every second they’re out on the floor, we have to keep doing that.”

Shamet, who is 6-for-7 from beyond the arc against Cleveland, has been in and out of Brown’s rotation at different points in the season. Shamet offered interesting insight into the makeup of the Knick locker room on Saturday night.

“Everybody wants to see each other do well genuinely,” Shamet said. “I mean that. If you guys write that in your report, it's not some locker room banter or BS. It’s like spiritual with this group. You know, we’ve got a lot of guys who are more than capable of being in certain situations, and we cheer each other on. Next man up. It's a beautiful thing, and it's what we have, and this locker room. So it's special.”

INTENSE FOCUS

Brown was asked about the Knicks’ identity on Saturday night.

“They’re so resilient,” Brown said. “We hit adversity during the regular season, which was fantastic. I embraced it. I wanted it to happen. We hit it numerous times. And our guys were tested then, and they stayed connected. And to see the ups and down, especially early in these playoffs against Atlanta and to see them stay connected while trying to sacrifice and believe, it’s fantastic. You don’t know if there’s gonna be carryover with those things in the postseason until you go through it, and going through it with these guys, these coaches and seeing it gives you hope for a lot of things, because the group has been fantastic.”

Both Brown and the players have cited a higher level of focus since their Game 3 loss in Atlanta.

“They’ve been fantastic trying to pay attention to all the details that we’ve been throwing at them. And we’ve thrown a lot of adjustments offensively and defensively at them throughout the course of these playoffs,” Brown said on Saturday. “And to still see them locked in and try to be focused on the details at hand, again, that just speaks volumes of my coaching staff and the way that they’re presenting and changing and all that stuff. But more so about these players and their want to go try to get a ring.”

Golden Knights stun Avalanche with three-goal comeback to move one win from latest Stanley Cup Final

Vegas Golden Knights player Tomas Hertl celebrates a goal with teammates while Colorado Avalanche player Parker Kelly skates by.
The Golden Knights celebrate a goal during their May 24 win against the Avalanche.

LAS VEGAS — There are a number of adjectives that could be applied to how the Golden Knights have found various ways to win in the regular season and playoffs.

Vegas coach John Tortorella had his own description.

“This is a game where we showed some balls,” the man known as Torts said after the Golden Knights’ latest Houdini act.

Tomas Hertl weaved his way toward the slot and broke a tie at 8:21 of the third period as the Golden Knights overcame a three-goal deficit Sunday night to beat Colorado 5-3 and move within a victory of their third Stanley Cup Final appearance in nine years.

“It obviously feels really good right now, but we’re playing a hell of a hockey team,” Golden Knights forward Mitch Marner said. “We know that the next game is going to be even tougher now. Enjoy this for the next 10 minutes, 30 minutes, go home and then try to take care of yourself, and do what you got to do to be ready tomorrow.”

The Golden Knights celebrate a goal during their May 24 win against the Avalanche. AP Photo

The Golden Knights go for what would be a stunning sweep over the Presidents’ Trophy winners on Tuesday night. Chicago in 2013 was the last team to win the Presidents’ Trophy and the Stanley Cup in the same season.

Colorado will try to become just the fifth team to win a series after falling behind 3-0. Los Angeles in 2014 was the most recent team to accomplish that in eliminating San Jose in their first-round series.

Vegas, which trailed 3-0 after the first period, was 0-19 in the playoffs when behind that many goals. The Avalanche were 74-1 when holding such a lead.

“As low as it can get,” Avalanche coach Jared Bednar said of the team’s emotions. “It’s a big hill to climb. The next 24-to-36 hours is for … you’ve got to find a way to get over it, regroup and go again.”

Colorado has other concerns because front-line center Nathan MacKinnon might not be fully healthy going forward. MacKinnon, who has 15 points this postseason and led the league in the regular season with 53 goals, took a puck to his right knee in the second period and played through the injury.

That comes just as the Avalanche got back star defenseman Cale Makar, who missed the first two games this series because of an upper-body injury.

Tomas Hertl celebrates a goal during the Golden Knights’ May 24 win. Imagn Images

Vegas keeps finding aways, going this deep into the postseason despite being outshot in 11 of 15 games, including now nine in a row. The Golden Knights erased deficits the past two games against Colorado, though Game 2 was just 1-0.

“We’ve been all season long many times down,” Hertl said. “We’ve come back so many times. Even after the first when we were down 3-0 we knew we could do it.”

Hertl, Mark Stone and William Karlsson each had a goal and assist. Keegan Kolesar and Brett Howden scored the other Golden Knights goals, and Mitch Marner and Kaedan Korczak each tallied two assists. Carter Hart made 32 saves.

Cale Makar looks to move the puck during the Avalanche’s May 24 loss to the Golden Knights. AP Photo

Stone’s goal came on his first appearance since suffering a lower-body injury in Game 3 of the second-round series against Anaheim. Kolesar, who had gone 37 playoff games without a goal, picked up his first point of the postseason.

Gabriel Landeskog, Nazem Kadri and Jack Drury scored for the Avalanche, and Devon Toews had two assists. Scott Wedgewood stopped 18 shots.

The Avalanche dominated the first period by taking a 3-0 lead, but the Golden Knights thought they had cut the deficit to 2-1 when Pavel Dorofeyev appeared to score a power-play goal with 7:26 left. Officials immediately waved it off and the decision was upheld on video review.

Colorado then made the Golden Knights pay when Drury found himself alone on a breakaway, deking Vegas goalie Hart to score the short-handed goal with 6:45 left for the three-goal lead.

But the Golden Knights didn’t let the two-goal swing trouble them too much, with Stone’s power-play goal 19 seconds into the second period sparking a three-goal answer to tie the game heading into the final period of regulation.

Then Hertl broke the deadlock — and now the Golden Knights just need to win one of four games.

“I want them to feel it for a little bit, as far as what they just did against a really good hockey club,” Tortorella said, “but then we get back to work tomorrow.”

There was a moment of silence before the game for two-time NASCAR champion driver and Las Vegas native Kyle Busch. He died Thursday at 41 after severe pneumonia developed into sepsis, according to a statement from Busch’s family.

Avalanche Blow 3-0 Lead As Knights Come Back To Win 5-3 And Take 3-0 Series Lead

It was the perfect start for the Avalanche heading into Game 3. Cale Makar is returning, and they set the tone early by going up 3-0 in the first period. Though things turned for the worse, as we might have seen the Avalanche's worst meltdown this season, as they crumbled, blew a lead, and fell 5-3 to the Vegas Golden Knights, now facing the prospect of being swept heading into Game 4.

Period 1:

The Avalanche start strong, just three minutes into the period as Devon Toews makes a strong move to the net to draw a penalty, but it's captain Gabriel Landeskog who follows up right behind him to clean up the loose puck rebound and in to make it 1-0. 

Avalanche keep their foot on the gas pedal as Josh Manson sends a great stretch pass to Martin Necas entering the offensive zone, who makes a pretty behind-the-back pass to Nazem Kadri and rifles it in to make it 2-0. Cole Smith takes the first penalty of the game as he is called for tripping, but the Avalanche can’t convert on their first power play.

Nazem Kadri is called for high-sticking Jack Eichel; it's only a minor. The Knights would convert on the play as Pavel Dorofeyev would track down his round and bat it in, but the referees immediately called the play dead as they motioned that the puck was pushed in with his glove.

The Avalanche continue on the penalty kill but manage to capitalize short-handed. Parker Kelly clears the puck, and it goes over the heads of the Knights players, leading to a Jack Drury short-handed breakaway, and he converts with a nifty backhanded shot to make it 3-0. Brock Nelson would take a tripping penalty just under a minute left in the period, giving the Knights a power play heading into the second.

Period 2

It takes just 19 seconds into the period as Mark Stone taps in Mitch Marner's pass to quickly get the Knights on the board to make it 3-1. The Knights, early in this period, start as the more aggressive team, and it doesn’t help that the Avalanche are making a bunch of errors and giving the Knights more chances to get back into the game.

The Knights' continued pressure is rewarded as William Karlsson finds a bobbling puck and rifles it past Wedgewood to make it 3-2 just four minutes after Stone got them on the board. Brent Burns is called for cross-checking, but the Avalanche penalty kill continues to stand strong and kills it off.

Then disaster strikes, MacKinnon takes a shot from the blueline right to his knee and is down in pain, badly. He does need some help to get up and skate off the ice, but nothing too serious. He doesn’t head off into the dressing room immediately and tries to get some shifts in, but seeing him on the ice, he doesn't look good, no explosiveness, one bit.

The Avalanche get another chance on the power play when Cole Smith is called for high-sticking, but come up short. The Knights' pressure and the Avalanche's continued strong lead lead to more chances, and it continues to hurt them. Keegan Kolesar bats down Dylan Coghlan's shot from the point and pokes it past Wedgewood to tie the game with seven minutes left in the period.

The period ends, and it might go down as the Avalanche’s worst period in the playoffs, if not the season entirely. Defensive breakdowns, errors in their own zone, and just not putting more pressure when being up 3-0 entering the period in a series down 2-0.

Period 3:

Stone is called for slashing Wedgewood, but Ross Colton is called for roughing Stone, so both are sent off, and it's two minutes of 4-on-4 that go scoreless. On a Knights rush, Tomas Hertl dekes out Sam Malinski, who has been having a bad game, and sends a backhand shot past Wedgwood to give the Knights the lead at 4-3.

The Avalanche gets another chance to tie the game when Marner is called for tripping Necas, but the Avalanche's power play continues to fall flat. MacKinnon tries his best with a bad knee with the Avalanche to mount a comeback, with Wedgewood pulled with two minutes left in the period, but a Brett Howden goal seals the deal, and the Avalanche fall 5-3.

Despite the Avalanche getting Cale Makar back and going up 3-0 in the first period, disaster after mistake after error follows suit, and the Avalanche collapse, now trailing 3-0. History doesn't help them either, as the last time there was a reverse sweep in the playoffs was 2014, when the San Jose Sharks blew a 3-0 lead to the Los Angeles Kings.

Next Game

Game 4 falls on Tuesday, May 26th, which could either see the Knights sweep the Avalanche and advance to the Stanley Cup Finals or force a Game 5 back in Ball Arena.

Avalanche Collapse Late As Golden Knights Flip Western Final In MinutesAvalanche Collapse Late As Golden Knights Flip Western Final In MinutesJack Eichel and Ivan Barbashev scored just 2:07 apart in the third period as the Vegas Golden Knights erased a late deficit and stunned the Colorado Avalanche 3–1 in Game 2 to take a commanding 2–0 series lead.

NetsDaily Off-Season Report – No. 5

DETROIT, MICHIGAN - DECEMBER 12: The Brooklyn Nets logo is pictured during the second quarter against the Detroit Pistons at Little Caesars Arena on December 12, 2021 in Detroit, Michigan. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Nic Antaya/Getty Images) | Getty Images

So the Knicks are one win away from their first NBA Finals in 27 years. They’ve also matched the Nets mark of 10 straight post-season wins, set in 2003. Good for them.

Moving on.

We are in a bit of a news lull right now, between the Lottery and the Draft, to be followed by the Nets two summer leagues and free agency, During the news lull, a lot of the hard work on the Draft gets done. There’s the workouts and interviews; results from the NBA Combine; medical data; interviews with everyone the prospects have ever come in contact with: high school, AAU and college coaches, community leaders etc; as well as video clips, media, social media offerings, and if applicable, police reports. All of it gets pumped into the scouting database to be mulled by the front office as they make their decisions.

Again, part of the lull is due to the Nets historic unwillingness to share much about the process, particularly who’s been in for workouts. Hoopshype keeps a list of who’s been in around the league and as of this week, the list has only one Nets entry: Keba Keita a 6’8” 22-year-old big who played with both Egor Demin and A.J. Dybantsa at BYU.

As a senior last season, Keita averaged 6.2 points and led the team in rebounds (7.2) and blocks (1.8), a complementary piece for Brigham Young.’s stars. He’s on nobody’s Big Board of top 100 prospects but workouts aren’t just about the Draft. The Nets are looking at players for their two Summer League rosters, training camp and finally, the Long Island Nets. There could be other motivations as well. Did Demin recommend him? The native of Mali in west Africa does have a great story.

If you’re looking for hints as to who might have been in, the Hoopshype list includes 19 prospects who’ve been seen by the Knicks at their Greenburgh, N.Y. facility. Agents will schedule visits to give their clients as little travel time and as much rest as they can … and the Nets and Knicks facilities are about an hour apart.

So who’s been in for the Knicks, who hold the 24th, 31st and 55th picks? The big names New York has looked at, per Hoopshype, include Morez Johnson, the 6’9” 20-year-old power forward from Michigan who looked good at the Combine, as well as Zuby Ejiofor, the 6’9” 22-year-old PF from St. John’s and Malachi Moreno, the 7’0” 19-year-old big from Kentucky. Of course, we don’t know. With the Nets holding that sixth pick, top prospects are likely to accept an invitation for Brooklyn.

May is also around the time that the Nets scouting staff gathers at HSS to debate prospects, as the Nets excellent docu-series, SCOUT, showed us last year.

So, we wait. Not long. But we wait.

Waiting on Aspiration

At some point, presumably soon, the NBA will release its report on the Clippers reported manipulation of the NBA’s salary cap by using a company named Aspiration to illegally funnel as much as $28 million to Kawhi Leonard. In the last month, Pablo Torre, the freelance podcaster, has won both the Pulitzer Prize and National Magazine Award for his groundbreaking reporting on the scandal.

The league hired outside counsel Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz, a powerhouse New York law firm with its fair share of former federal prosecutors, to investigate. Its progress remains a closely guarded secret. Once the report is in the hands of Adam Silver, it will be up to him to assess penalties which if he follows history could include heavy fines and other sanctions for the team and the league’s richest owner, Steve Ballmer, but also a loss of future picks.

In a similar circumstances back in 2000 involving the Minnesota Timberwolves and Joe Smith, David Stern fined the Minnesota Timberwolves $3.5 million in cash, voided Smith’s deal with the Timberwolves and stripped the T’Wolves of first first round picks. One was later restored. Owner Glen Taylor was suspended for a year and GM was forced to take a leave of absence.

Virtually any fine for Ballmer, worth $132.9 billion as of Friday’s Forbes estimate, would amount to pocket lint and there’s informed speculation that the league will not tinker with Leonard’s contract. That leaves the draft picks.

Let’s say Silver follows his predecessor’s precedent and vacates some Clippers first round picks. It’s complicated. The Clippers don’t have clear title to their own first rounder till 2029. Their 2026 first is owed to the Thunder but they hold the Pacers pick at No. 5. Their 2027 pick may have to be swapped with the Thunder and their 2028 selection is owed to the 76ers. It seems that a penalty docking them picks starting in 2029 and running through, say, 2033, would likely be greeted by a sigh of relief inside the Intuit Dome. Three years is plenty of time to adjust to new realities.

Could the penalties affect the Nets plans in this year’s Draft? For example:

  1. Might the Clippers decide to resist trade offers for the fifth pick, understanding their cache of picks will be diluted and so, hang on to what they got? That would limit the Nets ability to move up.
  2. Might they decide to trade the fifth pick for future firsts to lessen the pain of future losses? With the Nets having the most draft assets in the NBA by far, could that provide an opportunity for Brooklyn?
  3. Might they decide to use the fifth pick in a trade for a star like say Giannis Antetokounmpo, forgetting any semblance of an organic route contention, knowing how constrained that route will become? That would also eliminate the possibility of a trade and add a new player and new needs to the mix at the top of the Draft.

Yes, we are deep in the weeds and yes, it’s all speculation and yes, we don’t know when the league will move — it will be after the Finals, that’s for sure! Before the 2026 Draft which takes place days after the Finals conclude? But every team, particularly the Nets, wants to know what the commissioner is planning and how the Clips will respond to whatever law he lays down.

A final bit of speculation: Silver seems ornery of late. The proposed anti-tanking rules would permit to pull picks from teams that continue to lose on purpose. That was a bit of a shocker. Unlike Stern, he cajols and threatens rather than lowering the hammer. Maybe he plans to assert himself in general.

Joe Tsai’s sports empire expands

Back in July of last year, we catalogued Joe Tsai’s burgeoning sports empire, centered on Brooklyn Sports & Entertainment properties, but noting that he’s gone well beyond the NBA and WNBA, citing ownership positions in the NFL’s Dolphins, both lacrosse leagues, the LAFC of the MLS, e-sports, the Asian University Basketball League and chunks of various sports services like Fanatics, Michael Rubin’s $30 billion digital sports empire that has its hands in everything from apparel to gambling; and Genius Sports, which supplies sports data to virtually every pro league and owns Second Spectrum, every crazed basketball fan’s go-to site for analytics.

Since then, we’ve noted a few changes in his thinking. He sold his stake in LAFC, exiting a group of investors that included mostly Hollywood celebrity types, while adding two interesting new sports. Last month, Sportico noted that his family office, Blue Pool Capital, has invested in the NFL’s growing flag football program. No details on how much or how it’s structured, but the league is putting a lot of money in the league. Sportico explained why:

Flag football comes with many benefits when compared to traditional football. It doesn’t carry the same head injury concerns that worry many parents, it’s easier to adapt to smaller rosters and it’s grown popular among young women who wouldn’t otherwise play the sport. Participation in the U.S. grew 15% from 2019 through 2024, according to data from the Sports & Fitness Industry Association…

The league successfully pushed to have the sport added to the 2028 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles and has granted players approval to play in the Olympics. NFL teams have also issued grants to help launch collegiate programs.

He also joined David Blitzer, managing partner of the Philadelphia 76ers and New Jersey Devils, and Ralf Reichert, founder of the e-sports league ESL, in investing in the new international catamaran-racing league, SailGP, now in its fifth year. According to reports in Yacht Magazine, Tsai et al are part of the group that owns the German team license.

Blitzer has also joined Tsai and other sports investors in the Asian University Basketball League which Tsai helped found, as we reported earlier this year in another story on his ambitions to help revive Chinese basketball. Per Sportico. the group includes Tsai, Blitzer, former Bucks principal owner Marc Lasry and Yao Ming, the basketball Hall of Famer who previously headed the Chinese Basketball Association.

A valuation of the league, featuring colleges across greater Asia, isn’t known, but a person familiar with the fundraise characterized it as being at least eight figures. The Tsai family office, Blue Pool Capital, led the round, on top of the seed funding it provided AUBL last year.

The investments will allow the league to expand from 12 to 16 university teams and from six to eight countries, including basketball hotbeds of Australia and the Philippines.

As we noted when we wrote about Tsai’s sports investments last year, they are now roughly equal to his Alibaba holdings.

Why does this matter to Nets (and Liberty) fans? It shows that Tsai and his wife Clara Wu Tsai are more and more committed to sports and particularly BSE which among their sports investments is the cash cow.

Beyond their investments in catamarans and Asian basketball and flag football, the Tsais are mid-way through a $150 million enhancement of Barclays Center, in the early stages of the Liberty’s $80 million practice facility in Greenpoint and working on plans for an arena-centric entertainment district in Brooklyn. The latest iteration of that master plan is an announcement this week that BSE is converting the bottom floor of One Hanson Place, formerly the Williamsburgh Savings Bank, to yet another high-end restaurant. Appropriately, among those reporting on it was Brooklyn Magazine, also part of BSE.

Draft Sleeper of the Week

We’ve written about Mikel Brown Jr. on the site. Now it’s his turn to be featured here. Increasingly, the draftniks see him as the Nets pick at No. 6 if indeed that’s where the Nets pick on the night of June 23 at Barclays Center. Brown, who played for Louisville this past season, seems to tick off more boxes than his rival lead guards. He’s just short of 6’5” and although on the skinny side, he’s athletic and plays on both ends of the court.

Among the four guard prospects, he finished second in height (6’3.5”), first in standing reach (8’ 4.5”), wingspan (6’ 7.50”) in anthrometric measurements; second in both the shuttle run (2.89 seconds), third in 3/4-court sprint (3.24 seconds), and max vertical (39.5 inches). Kingston Flemings finished first in most of the athletic testing.

Among Moreover, Brown is high character. He knows what to say, too, about the prospect of playing in Brooklyn…

“It would be a great opportunity right there,” Brown told Brian Lewis at the Combine about being drafted by the Nets. “Just continuing to build relationships with them as the time goes on and continue to talk to my family and my circle and my agent and the people behind me.

“It’s something that we’re definitely interested in, and looking forward to building a relationship with [the Nets].”

“I honestly don’t pay attention to the mock drafts,” Brown said. “You never know where you’re going to go on draft night. If you want me to be honest with you, it’s all about which team fits you the best. … I just know what I can bring to a team right now. I’m more focused on myself rather than trying to compete with [others]. I’m competing with myself at this point.”

He’s also highly likeable, as Corey Taluba of No Ceilings told our Collin Helwig on the Brooklyn Podcast…

Perfect. A little touch of humility amid the promise of star power.

As a freshman, Brown averaged 18.2 points and 4.7 assists per game for the Cardinals. He scored 45 points during a 118-77 win over N.C. State, breaking Cooper Flagg’s ACC freshman single game scoring record. A troublesome back injury kept him out of the NCAA Tournament.

The 45-point explosion showed a wide variety of offensive skills including a quick release on his three and a willingness to drive the lane, a refreshing trait for a Nets guard.

He hits 10 threes and grabbed nine board as well. He tied the Louisville single-game scoring record as well as breaking the ACC’s rookie record.

The back injury is troublesome, although Brown says he feels fine and looked fine at the Combine. As ESPN reported at the time of the injury, his back bothered him more than once during the season. He missed four games prior to March Madness after missing eight earlier in the season.

That said, he did well in big games. N.C. State was 18-6 when he exploded for 45. He also scored 29 vs. Kentucky and 20 each in back to back vs. Baylor and SMU. As Taluba also told Helwig, he’s got that Trae Young/Steph Curry combo of 3-point shooting and high-level passing.

Will be there? That could indeed be an issue.

Final Note

No, the Nets are not moving back to New Jersey. Not now. Not ever. Period, end of story. The state of New Jersey, now headed by Governor Mikie Sherrill, did not support the Nets while in New Jersey.

It’s particularly bothersome since the Tsais are spending more than $140 million of their own money in upgrades at Barclays Center after renovating the abandoned Modell’s store across the street into a community basketball center. More millions. Then there’s the Liberty’s $80 million practice facility in Greenpoint. That’s commitment, one that New Jersey never ever made.

Brooklyn is home.

Hertl’s late winner caps Golden Knights’ wild 5-3 rally, giving them a 3-0 series lead on Avalanche

COLORADO AVALANCHE VS VEGAS GOLDEN KNIGHTS, NHL WESTERN CONFERENCE FINAL

LAS VEGAS , NV - MAY 24: Josh Manson (42) of the Colorado Avalanche defends Tomas Hertl (48) of the Vegas Golden Knights during the second period of Game 3 of the NHL Western Conference Final at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada on Sunday, May 24, 2026. (Photo by AAron Ontiveroz/The Denver Post)

Denver Post via Getty Images

LAS VEGAS — Tomas Hertl weaved his way toward the slot and scored the winner at 8:21 of the third period to rally the Golden Knights from a three-goal deficit Sunday night and defeat the Colorado Avalanche 5-3 and move to within one game of their third Stanley Cup Final appearance in nine years.

The Golden Knights go for what would be a stunning sweep over the President’s Trophy winners on Tuesday night. Chicago in 2013 was the last team to win the President’s Trophy and the Stanley Cup in the same season.

Colorado will try to become just the fifth team to win a series after falling behind 3-0. Los Angeles in 2014 was the most recent team to accomplish that in eliminating San Jose in their first-round series.

Vegas, which trailed 3-0 after the first period, was 0-19 in the playoffs when behind that many goals. The Avalanche were 74-1 when holding such a lead.

Colorado has other concerns because front-line center Nathan MacKinnon might not be fully healthy going forward. MacKinnon, who has 15 points this postseason and led the league in the regular season with 53 goals, took a puck to his right knee in the second period and played through the injury.

That comes just as the Avalanche got back star defenseman Cale Makar, who missed the first two games this series because of an upper-body injury.

Hertl, Mark Stone and William Karlsson each had a goal and assist. Keegan Kolesar and Brett Howden scored the other Golden Knights goals, and Mitch Marner and Kaedan Korczak each tallied two assists. Carter Hart made 32 saves.

Stone’s goal came on his first appearance since suffering a lower-body injury in Game 3 of the second-round series against Anaheim. Kolesar, who had gone 37 playoff games without a goal, picked up his first point of the postseason.

Gabriel Landeskog, Nazem Kadri and Jack Drury scored for the Avalanche, and Devon Toews had two assists. Scott Wedgewood stopped 18 shots.

The Avalanche dominated the first period by taking a 3-0 lead, but the Golden Knights thought they had cut the deficit to 2-1 when Pavel Dorofeyev appeared to score a power-play goal with 7:26 left. Officials immediately waved it off and the decision was upheld on video review.

Colorado then made the Golden Knights pay when Drury found himself alone on a breakaway, deking Vegas goalie Hart to score the short-handed goal with 6:45 left for the three-goal lead.

But the Golden Knights didn’t let the two-goal swing trouble them too much, with Stone’s power-play goal 19 seconds into the second period sparking a three-goal answer to tie the game heading into the final period of regulation.

Then Hertl broke the deadlock — and now the Golden Knights just need to win one of four games.

There was a moment of silence before the game for two-time NASCAR champion driver and Las Vegas native Kyle Busch. He died Thursday at 41 after severe pneumonia developed into sepsis, according to a statement from Busch’s family.