A new team leads the USA TODAY Sports NCAA Re-Rank 1-136 after the college football regular season finished and the playoff field was announced.
CFP bracket hot takes, from upset pick to committee flub to champion prediction
NRL proposes heavy bans for Tonga doctors and trainer over Eli Katoa head knocks
Head doctor, assistant doctor and head trainer issued breach notices
Storm player to sit out 2026 season after surgery for bleeding on brain
The NRL is proposing to ban three members of Tonga’s medical staff for two years, claiming serious concerns over the handling of Eliesa Katoa’s multiple head knocks.
More than a month after Katoa required surgery for bleeding on the brain following seizure activity, the NRL handed down findings into the matter on Monday.
Continue reading...Jimmy Butler reveals why he has connected well with Bay Area amid Warriors stint
Jimmy Butler reveals why he has connected well with Bay Area amid Warriors stint originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area
Jimmy Butler has loved his time in the Golden State after being traded to the Warriors from the Miami Heat at the 2024-25 NBA trade deadline in February.
The six-time NBA All-Star elaborated on his joyous Northern California experience in an exclusive interview for NBC Sports Bay Area’s “Dubs Talk” with Monte Poole and Raj Mathai.
Butler first discussed his strong connection with the Warriors and their fanbase.
“Besides the fact that everybody works so hard and is so humble around here, I think they just want to win — this organization, their fanbase and myself,” Butler told Mathai and Poole. “We all just want to win. We don’t care how we get there; we don’t care [about] what it takes; we just want to win.
“I’ve always been for that. And I’ll do whatever it takes, if we can just win.”
Golden State has run the league for the majority of Butler’s 15-year NBA career.
So, as someone who craves victory, it makes sense why Butler fits in with the Warriors and their proven winners such as Steph Curry, Draymond Green and Steve Kerr.
But that’s not all Butler has loved about his Bay Area journey. He also admires how grounded the region is in the present, day-to-day.
“Everybody’s like … here … in the present time,” Butler told Mathai and Poole. “You know, you’re in Miami, everybody’s down there for vacation, and then they leave, and then they come back, duh duh duh. Everybody here — [at] the games cheering, getting coffee, walking their dog, talking to everybody — they’re living in the moment. And they won’t let that moment pass them, which is a good thing.
“So when I get to walk around … I get to see people, and I get to talk — and they’re here; they’re in the moment. ‘How are you?’ … love that. I get to go to a coffee shop and sit down and have coffee, and we’re talking about whatever we’re talking about — that’s in the moment. That’s being here.”
Enjoying the Warriors’ passionate basketball atmosphere — and making fun of Buddy Hield — is just the surface for Butler.
At his core, he loves a good cup of coffee and engaging with authentic locals, which really makes the Bay the perfect place for the 36-year-old.
“That’s what it is about the Bay Area — everybody’s here.”
It is unknown whether Butler will one day finish his tenure with Golden State as an NBA champion. But he certainly appreciates the moment, as do his new neighbors.
Big Boo Nation: Kentucky fans let Cats hear it, 3 teams have case for No. 1
Warriors reportedly expected to explore Jonathan Kuminga trade market soon
Warriors reportedly expected to explore Jonathan Kuminga trade market soon originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area
Jonathan Kuminga’s tenure with the Warriors soon could come to an end.
Golden State’s young forward, who was a DNP-CD (Did Not Play — Coach’s Decision) in Sunday’s 123-91 win over the Chicago Bulls at United Center, has seen decreased playing time in recent weeks after a hot start to the 2025-26 NBA season, and could be traded soon.
ESPN’s Anthony Slater reported, citing league sources, in a story published Monday that the Warriors are expected to explore Kuminga’s trade market in the coming weeks, with the possibility of a split before the NBA’s Feb. 5 trade deadline remaining “strong.”
Kuminga spoke to reporters in the locker room after Sunday’s game, and was asked about his benching and if it’s something he expects to continue moving forward.
“I’m not really sure [how long it lasts],” Kuminga said. “But as long as things are working out there and we winning, I don’t see the point of switching anything, changing. Whenever my number get called, I’ll be ready.”
“We’ve been doing good,” Kuminga said. “Things are working. So, I don’t see the point of taking certain people out of the rotation when we doing good, and things are going well.”
The 23-year-old also reiterated that he has no issues with coach Steve Kerr.
“We have a good relationship,” Kuminga said when asked about Kerr. “We talk and figure out things. We don’t have any problem. I don’t have any problem. Just didn’t go my way. I’m going to stay happy, stay locked in, stay focused, stay positive.”
“I don’t have any problems. I’m going to work out every day, stay ready, because you never know how these things works. I believe in my game and feel good about my game. I just got to be a professional. Things happen. It has happened before.”
Kuminga’s tumultuous restricted free agency over the summer came to an end when he signed a two-year, $46.8 million contract with Golden State on Sept. 30.
He turned heads in the first two weeks of the season, averaging 17.2 points with 7.1 rebounds and 3.1 assists in the first nine games before suffering bilateral knee tendonitis four games later in the Warriors’ win over the San Antonio Spurs on Nov. 12 that sidelined him seven games.
Since his return to the court on Nov. 29 against the Pelicans, Kuminga is averaging 7.7 points, 5.2 rebounds and 2 assists per game in just 19 minutes on the court.
It remains to be seen if, or when, Kuminga will be traded, but the odds are appearing increasingly likely by the week.
One of Sharks' winning formulas on display in bounce-back win vs. Hurricanes
One of Sharks' winning formulas on display in bounce-back win vs. Hurricanes originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area
- Editor’s note: Sheng Peng is a regular contributor to NBC Sports California’s Sharks coverage. You can read more of his coverage on San Jose Hockey Now, listen to him on the San Jose Hockey Now Podcast, and follow him on Twitter at @Sheng_Peng.
Collin Graf called it.
Not his game-opening goal for the Sharks on Sunday, 33 seconds in, leading the way to a 4-1 victory over the Carolina Hurricanes in Raleigh, which Macklin Celebrini, who was incredible in all three zones in a three-point night, had a lot to do with.
“Honestly, I didn’t really see it at first. I was going to the net, and it hit me on the tape,” Graf said of his centerman’s pass. “Pretty impressive.”
Instead, it was something that the mature-beyond-his-years winger said after the Sharks’ 4-1 loss to the Dallas Stars on Friday, when asked what San Jose did right in the middle part of that tilt, to hang tough with Cup-contending Dallas.
Read the full article at San Jose Hockey Now
Jimmy Butler sets record straight on his lengthy history of NBA bridge-burning
Jimmy Butler sets record straight on his lengthy history of NBA bridge-burning originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area
SAN FRANCISCO – Considered by some the NBA’s most notorious burner of bridges, Jimmy Butler III says he is delighted to be in a region known for its bridges. And not because he has so many targets to set ablaze.
It’s because Butler senses the Golden State Warriors possess an unrelenting quest for victory that matches his own.
Though Butler did not say his previous stops within the league – Chicago Bulls, Minnesota Timberwolves, Philadelphia 76ers and Miami Heat – were comfortable with losing, the insinuation is that non-basketball issues and less dedicated circumstances have rubbed him the wrong way.
“I’m always about winning, winning at all costs,” Butler tells NBC Sports Bay Area on the latest episode of the “Dubs Talk” podcast, which debuted Monday. “So, when it doesn’t stay about winning, it can become about many different things. If it ain’t about winning, I’m telling y’all right now, I’m not here for it.
“It’s got to be about winning. Everything we do, it’s got to be about winning.”
Consider that a warning. If things start getting political or subjective within the Warriors, or if they tolerate unseriousness on the roster, Butler might reach for his lighter and start scouting the Golden Gate.
Butler need not worry. All evidence seen and heard during the 15 years that Joe Lacob and Peter Guber have owned the Golden State franchise is that winning is both everything and the only thing. Consider, for example, their early moves, notably bringing in Jerry West and Rick Welts. And their wonderfully executed recruitment of Kevin Durant. And their investment in the cash cow that is Chase Center.
Consider, too, the expensive acquisition of Butler in February.
“We had to get better on the basketball court,” general manager Mike Dunleavy told NBC Sports Bay Area in March. “But we needed to get better, emotionally. We’d lost our way. And to be able to accomplish those two things, there’s not many players out there that can do that. And I felt like Jimmy was one of those guys. It’s tough in this league to make trades because there’s very few really good players that are available. And in this case, Jimmy was.”
Butler was available because, turned off by criticism of Heat shot-caller Pat Riley and the lack of a contract extension, he had burned his bridge in Miami. Butler twice led the Heat to the NBA Finals during his five-plus seasons in Miami. The epilogue to his fourth NBA team was a fourth bridge torching.
“If it’s about winning, if it’s about winning it – the championship – I’m all for it,” Butler says. “If it’s not, and there are any other agendas, y’all won’t like it. Because I don’t care. I’m literally just here to win. That’s it. I don’t care about anything else.”
The Warriors, with a disappointing xx-xx record (PLEASE UPDATE), are not meeting their standard. They also are not meeting Butler’s standard and goal. As it stands, he’s a six-time NBA All-Star and very probable Hall of Famer. What he is not is an NBA champion.
That is, as he says, why he is a Warrior. And, yes, he believes it is possible.
“(It’s) the practice,” Butler says. “The work that everybody’s putting in afterwards, and how they care about doing right. It doesn’t always go our way, and we make mistakes, but that’s just the game. That’s just human nature. Nobody’s perfect.
“But the intent is what really matters. If you’re trying to do right, you’re trying everything that you have to win, it’s going to work out more days than not. And I see that amongst our group. I see that in the coaches. They work relentlessly at trying to figure it out. And then we’ve got to go out there and we got to actually do it. But they’re putting us in all the correct situations.”
If there is anything Butler has more faith in than those in the locker room, it is those in the executive suites upstairs. It’s Dunleavy, Butler’s teammate for three seasons in Chicago, who has shown a willingness to make big moves. And it’s Lacob, whose ambition always operates at the speed of light.
Butler has bought into the ways of the Warriors, starting with those at the top. Andrew Wiggins, who went to Miami in the swap that brought Butler to the Bay, never wanted to leave, partly because he won a championship with Golden State and partly because he marveled at the “top-notch” management of the franchise.
Butler, in his 10th month as a Warrior, is in full agreement.
“They would do anything and everything for you to just make sure that you can compete at a high level – whatever it is,” he says. “When your kids are here, your kids are going to be well taken care of. My daughter got every allergy known to humankind, probably, and just to make sure that when she’s around, all her allergy needs or like taken care of goes a long way for me, goes a long way for anybody.
“. . . They have the most incredible people throughout this organization and it’s just always a good place to come into work. You want to be here. You’re smiling. You’re having fun. And then whenever you leave, you’re like, ‘OK, it’s a good day today at work. Can’t wait to go back tomorrow.’ That’s when I knew. I was like, ‘Yo, this place is legit.’ It’s special.”
A joyful Jimmy means the Bay Area bridges are safe, at least for now. But that winning thing, well, it has a lot of work ahead to start fulfilling the promise in which Butler believes.
James and Doncic inspire Lakers victory
LeBron James and Luka Doncic scored 60 points between them to fire the Los Angeles Lakers to a 112-108 win against the Philadelphia 76ers.
James scored 29 points, along with seven rebounds and six assists, and 12 of his tally came in the fourth quarter.
The 76ers had levelled the match at 105 apiece with one minute and 29 seconds remaining before James scored five consecutive points as the Lakers went on to seal the victory.
Doncic had returned to the Lakers line-up having missed the previous two games in a run of three on the road following the birth of his child.
He registered a triple-double of 31 points - which was a game high - 15 rebounds and 11 assists.
"The end of a road trip, there can be a lot of tired legs," said James, who missed his side's previous game.
"I felt great. I had the opportunity with some pretty good legs to try to assert myself a little offensively."
Tyrese Maxey top scored for the 76ers with 28 points as team-mate Joel Embiid, who made just four of 21 shots, added 16 points.
The Lakers are second in the Western Conference, while the Philadelphia 76ers are seventh in the Eastern Conference.
Premier League: 10 talking points from the weekend’s football
Arsenal feel effects of defensive injuries, Liverpool rue Konaté’s mistakes and Brentford struggle on the road
When the team sheets landed at Villa Park, Arsenal’s matchday squad again appeared imperious. Their bench included a £64m striker in Viktor Gyökeres, a trio of tricky wingers in Leandro Trossard, Noni Madueke and Gabriel Martinelli and arguably England’s most exciting teenagers in Myles Lewis-Skelly and Ethan Nwaneri. But Arsenal arrived top-heavy, the only centre-back among the substitutes the 16-year-old Marli Salmon. By the time Emiliano Buendía clinched victory for Aston Villa with almost the final kick, it was clear Arsenal lacked the defensive solidity behind their pace-setting start; this defeat was only the fourth time since the start of 2022-23 that Mikel Arteta’s side began a league game without Gabriel Magalhães or William Saliba – and it showed. Cristhian Mosquera, potentially sidelined until the new year, was also absent. The good news for all parties – which probably extends to second-placed Manchester City – is that Arsenal and Villa will duke it out again on 30 December in the reverse fixture. Ben Fisher
Continue reading...Warriors molding identity, building momentum after eye-opening road trip
Warriors molding identity, building momentum after eye-opening road trip originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area
Returning from a six-game road trip where they dropped two straight games before coming back to San Francisco, the Warriors laid an egg and wasted 38 points from Steph Curry to open a five-game homestand with a loss to the Portland Trail Blazers on Nov. 21.
Those five games where it felt like the Warriors needed to win four, ended with more losses (three) than wins (two). But there were plenty of signs of life in the finale, which wound up being a 12-point loss to the nearly unbeatable Oklahoma City Thunder. The Warriors found a new gear and scored 44 points in the third quarter against the Thunder. They even took the lead three and a half minutes into the fourth quarter.
The opening scenes to the Pat Spencer movie that is playing in front of our eyes began rolling in the second half of that loss to the Thunder when he scored 15 of his then new career-high 17 points. There was a bigger story to that loss, too.
Jimmy Butler did not play the entire second half, making the Warriors’ comeback attempt that much more impressive. An injured Butler also is a bigger deal than two positive quarters playing the best team in basketball. The Warriors already didn’t have Curry, who sustained a quad contusion two games prior in a bad loss to the Kevin Durant-less Houston Rockets.
Then it was Draymond Green’s turn to limp down the tunnel and back to the Warriors’ locker room in Philadelphia when his right foot/ankle was rolled on in the second quarter against the 76ers. Doomsday looked right around the corner for a team that went on the road with an 11-11 record and could have come home three games under .500 if a depleted Warriors squad dropped three straight.
That isn’t the story as the Warriors now have four days between their next game. The Warriors again responded to adversity by picking themselves up and fighting even harder, winning two of their three games on the road, and losing the other by one point in the final second.
“You can feel the energy,” Warriors coach Steve Kerr said Sunday night in Chicago. “We’re playing with a different level of energy the last few nights.”
Golden State’s battery pack has been on the back of the Wayne Gretzky of college lacrosse.
Spencer followed his huge game against the Thunder by scoring 16 points – 12 in the fourth quarter – with four rebounds and four assists in a 99-98 loss against the 76ers while letting the whole world know he is that motherf–ker. Kerr rewarded Spencer by giving him his first career start and he was even better, finishing with a new career-high 19 points – and another 12 in the fourth quarter – in a huge upset win against the Cleveland Cavaliers where the Warriors were without Curry, Butler and Green, and only had 10 healthy players.
That kind of performance brought Kerr and Gui Santos into the Pat “That Motherf–ker” Spencer lore at the postgame podium. Spencer started again Sunday in the Warriors’ 123-91 win against the Chicago Bulls where they never trailed and was a plus-30 in 27 minutes.
Everything about Spencer is what Kerr wants from his team regardless of status as a star, as a former top draft pick or as someone who has earned it all like his 29-year-old point guard on a two-way contract: Tough, fearless and ready to attack the moment.
The Warriors averaged 340 passes per game during their three-game road trip, increasing the number each game. Their goal always is at least 300. Spencer led the Warriors with total passes in all three games, averaging 58. Those kinds of numbers indicate the kind of offensive flow Kerr dreams of.
Same with the defensive stats the Warriors strung together in that span.
Defensively, the Warriors held their opponent to under 100 points in all three games on the road and have done so in four of their past five games in total. The 76ers, Cavs and Bulls averaged 94.7 points per game. Playing on a string, the Warriors’ defense held them 38.4-percent shooting and 25.8 percent from 3-point range.
“All in all, I think we’re finally starting to figure out who we are,” Butler said Sunday night. “It’s never too early to do that. It’s never too late either. So we just need to keep stringing these things together.”
Just like that, the Warriors have the third-best defensive rating in the NBA (110.7) after producing a 99.0 defensive rating on their 2-1 road trip.
They’re becoming healthier at the right time, and a handful of secondary players have newfound life. Butler returned Sunday from knee soreness after missing the last two games and was as good as always. He was a plus-29 in 29 minutes with 19 points, eight rebounds and six assists, taking over and putting the game out of reach in the fourth quarter.
Resting Green and Horford on Sunday was considered precautionary. Both are expected to play Friday against the Minnesota Timberwolves. So is Curry. De’Anthony Melton made his season debut from ACL surgery on Thursday in Philadelphia and needed two more hands to wipe the smile off his face after playing 21 minutes off the bench and scoring 14 points.
The Warriors are taking Monday and Tuesday off. They will then practice Wednesday and Thursday ahead of Friday’s game, and play six games over the next 20 days, as well as nine the rest of the calendar year.
Instead of dropping below .500, the Warriors now are one game above. At 13-12, the Warriors are the No. 8 seed in the Western Conference, making them four games back of the No. 4 seed and three back of the No. 6 seed.
Going on the road could have turned to catastrophe for the Warriors. The outcome was an identity being molded and momentum mounting with the hardest part of their schedule behind them.
“We’re starting to feel like the team we’re supposed to be,” Kerr said. “But we have to back that up and follow the momentum we have right now with a good stretch.”
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Peterson returns from injury with 17 points, leading No. 21 KU past Mizzou despite flu-like symptoms
Mike Sullivan Is ‘Disappointed For The Players’ After Rangers' Overtime Loss To Golden Knights
It was another overtime heartbreaker for the New York Rangers on Sunday night in their 3-2 loss to the Vegas Golden Knights.
Going into this matchup, the Rangers were coming off a 3-2 overtime loss to the Colorado Avalanche, where they were happy with how they played and competed against the NHL’s best team.
That same effort level and momentum did not translate into the first period against Vegas, as the Blueshirts came out lackadaisical, giving up a goal less than one minute into the contest, while being bombarded with pressure from the Golden Knights.
“We clearly didn't have our legs or energy in the first,” Mike Sullivan said.
The Rangers flipped the script in the second period. The offensive charge was led by the line of Artemi Panarin, Mika Zibanejad, and Alexis Lafrenière.
While J.T. Miller, Vincent Trocheck, and Conor Sheary have taken the shutdown-defensive role, it has been Panarin, Zibanejad, and Lafrenière who have transformed into the Rangers’ most dangerous offensive trio.
Goals from Zibanejad and Lafrenière in the middle frame gave the Rangers a 2-1 lead and newfound momentum.
Lafrenière had two points on the night and his play caught the eye of Sullivan.
“I thought it was one of his better games that he had all season for us, and that is what he’s capable of,” Sullivan said of Lafrenière. “I thought he was strong on pucks. He was hanging on pucks in the offensive zone. The goal he got was a goal scorer's goal. It was more than just that.
“I thought he was around the net. He was winning puck battles. He was in the battle areas. He was challenging people by hanging on pucks, and that's what he's capable of. He's a real good 1-on-1 player, and we've been trying to encourage him to challenge people down under the hash marks, and force people to have to take the puck away from him, because he's big and strong, and he's got a lot of really good puck skills. I thought tonight was one of his better nights.”
The Rangers did a good job of maintaining their narrow lead up until disaster struck in the third period when offsetting roughing penalties to Will Borgen and Brett Howden gave the Golden Knights a 5-on-4 advantage once they pulled their goalie, ultimately leading a Tmomas Hertl goal with 51.3 seconds remaining.
“There's a big difference between a 6-on-5 and 5-on-4 and trying to defend it. It had a huge implication,” Sullivan emphasized. “We got to do a better job, obviously, in that situation, and kill it off.”
Vegas scored another last-second goal in overtime with about eight seconds remaining from Jack Eichel, as the Rangers came away with just one point instead of two.
“I'm disappointed for the players, for the guys because I thought we competed hard,” Sullivan said. “I thought we've had a pretty hard week against some of the best teams in the league, and these guys are competing. They're competing extremely hard. I think we put a game on the ice that I think the guys should be proud of. I'm disappointed for them.”
Sullivan is right, the Rangers have had a tough stretch of games this week, playing the Dallas Stars, Ottawa Senators, Avalanche, and Golden Knights.
In that stretch, the Blueshirts came away with 6 out of 8 points, which Sullivan believes is a sign of the growth this team has continued to show.
"We're moving towards the identity that we're trying to build and the game that we're trying to play,” Sullivan said. “We've just got to continue to stay hungry and continue to work at it. I think, once again, when you play some of the better teams in the league like we have most recently and the guys perform the way they have, I think it provides a lot of evidence, and I think that reinforces belief in what we're doing and how we're going about it, so I think that should help us moving forward.”
The Rangers will be back in action on Wednesday night against the Chicago Blackhawks.