Louisville men’s basketball announces complete non-conference schedule
On Monday afternoon, University of Louisville Athletics announced the complete men’s basketball non-conference schedule for the 2025-26 season. The schedule will include 10 games at the KFC Yum! Center, five 2025 NCAA Tournament teams, and six games against power-conference opponents. The complete non-conference schedule Louisville head coach Pat Kelsey has publicly noted the importance of […]
Louisville men’s basketball announces complete non-conference schedule
On Monday afternoon, University of Louisville Athletics announced the complete men’s basketball non-conference schedule for the 2025-26 season. The schedule will include 10 games at the KFC Yum! Center, five 2025 NCAA Tournament teams, and six games against power-conference opponents. The complete non-conference schedule Louisville head coach Pat Kelsey has publicly noted the importance of […]
Mets place reliever Reed Garrett on IL with right elbow inflammation
The Mets announced a series of roster moves ahead of Monday’s series opener against the Philadelphia Phillies, highlighted by right-hander Reed Garrett landing on the 15-day IL (retroactive to Aug. 23) with right elbow inflammation.
According to manager Carlos Mendoza, Garrett has had a hard time recovering after his appearances over the last couple of weeks, and after playing catch on Sunday, he decided it was time to get things checked out.
And while an IL stint for an important reliever is never something a team wants to see happen, the good news is that it sounds as if Garrett will be ramped back up and ready to pitch by the end of the 15-day IL period.
"He got an MRI this morning, and we got relatively good news," Mendoza said. "The ligament is perfect. It just showed the inflammation, so he’s going to get a cortisone shot, shut down for a couple of days, and then we’ll get him going again."
Garrett last pitched on Friday night against Atlanta, allowing two earned runs on three hits in 1.0 inning.
The Mets also selected the contract of lefty Jose Castillo to add him to the major league roster, and moved right-hander Frankie Montas to the 60-day IL in what’s simply a paper move, as Montas has already been ruled out for the remainder of the season with a UCL injury.
Garrett, 32, has had an up-and-down season for the Mets while serving as a high-leverage reliever as part of the bridge to Edwin Diaz. Overall, Garrett has pitched to a 3.61 ERA with 62 strikeouts in 52.1 innings, though he has struggled a bit as of late, recording a 10.80 ERA over his last seven appearances.
The 29-year-old Castillo was originally acquired by the Mets in a trade with the Arizona Diamondbacks in May, and has been up and down between Triple-A Syracuse and the majors.
In 14 appearances as a Met, Castillo has pitched to a 2.19 ERA over 12.1 innings of work.
College football betting, odds, lines: Three early Week 1 bets to make right now
Top 10 Right Defensemen Revealed In NHL 26
EA SPORTS NHL has revealed the top 10 right defensemen in NHL 26.
NHL 24 cover star Cale Makar tops this list at 95 overall, five rating points higher than Adam Fox, the next closest right handed defender.
Makar is the tied with Quinn Hughes as the highest overall defensemen and comes in as the sixth-highest rated player in NHL 26.
The top 10 right defensemen are:
- Cale Makar - 95 overall
- Adam Fox - 90 overall
- Charlie McAvoy - 89 overall
- Evan Bouchard - 88 overall
- Colton Parayko - 88 overall
- Moritz Seider - 88 overall
- Dougie Hamilton - 88 overall
- John Carlson - 88 overall
- Noah Dobson - 88 overall
- Drew Doughty - 88 overall
Makar also tops this list with 95 acceleration, 94 speed, 95 deking, and 95 passing.
Seven of the 10 defenders on this list come in at 88 overall, showing the disparity between the depth of high end left and right defensemen.
Other highlights include, Evan Bouchard with 95 slapshot power and 93 passing, Noah Dobson with 92 acceleration, John Carlson with 93 wrist and slapshot power, and Moritz Seider with 92 body checking.
Each of these 10 players will come with an X-Factor.
The full list of the 20 highest rated defensemen in NHL 26 and their attributes can be seen here.
NHL 26 is set to release Sept. 12, those who pre-order the deluxe edition get access Sept. 5.
For more NHL Gaming news make sure you bookmark The Hockey News Gaming Site or follow our Google News Feed.
US Open: Home hopes hit as Madison Keys makes 89 unforced errors in first-round loss
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Australian Open champion beaten by Renata Zarazúa
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World No 6 suffers string of errors in loss
One of the main home hopes at the US Open has suffered an early exit from the tournament after Madison Keys lost in the first round on Monday.
There were early signs the world No 6, who won the Australian Open in January, faced a tough match against Mexico’s Renata Zarazúa. The American won the first set, but only after taking a marathon tiebreak 12-10. Zarazúa won the second set on another tiebreak (7-3) before closing out the match by taking the final set 7-5.
Can Matt Dumba Have A Bounceback Year In 2025-26?
If one thing is for certain when it comes to the Pittsburgh Penguins, it’s that their team defense has failed them in the three years since they’ve made the playoffs.
In a lot of ways, the entire backend needs to be reenvisioned and reinvented. General manager and president of hockey operations Kyle Dubas swung big in the summer of 2023 to acquire Erik Karlsson - which has come with mixed results - and with an aging Kris Letang and a whole lot of question marks in every other defensive slot, the Penguins need to both give younger guys opportunities and take chances on some blueliners in need of a change.
One of those blueliners is defenseman Matt Dumba, who the Penguins acquired from the Dallas Stars on Jul. 10. In 63 games with the Stars last season, Dumba put up one goal and 10 points and ended up a minus-5 while largely playing bottom-pair minutes.
It wasn’t all that long ago that Dumba, 31, was playing solid hockey with the Minnesota Wild, but the last few seasons have been somewhat disastrous.
Last season, Dumba had a minus-7.3 defensive rating according to HockeyStatCards, which is - to put it quite bluntly - not ideal. In fact, it was the 11th-worst defensive rating among NHL defensemen last season. He also didn’t do much at all to contribute offensively, but that is a bit more understandable since he was playing largely bottom-pair minutes against the third and fourth lines of opposing teams.
So, is the veteran capable of having somewhat of a bounceback season for the Penguins?
The reality is that there are a lot of elements factoring into it. Of course, the largest one is that Dumba will be playing in a vastly different setting with very different expectations, as Dallas is one of the league’s premiere cup-contending teams, while Pittsburgh is in the midst of a rebuild. Naturally, that drops some of the stakes and gives him a bit more wiggle room in terms of the pressure to perform. Perhaps playing a bit looser and with less of a chip on his shoulder would benefit Dumba.
There’s also the fact that Dumba was a large topic of discussion within the trade picture last season, something that can certainly affect player performance. Now that a trade is over and done with, he shouldn’t have to worry about that until at least around deadline time, at which point he is probably hoping to perform well enough to be dealt back to a contender in the final year of his two-year, $7 million contract.
Also, Dumba’s deployment with the Penguins will largely depend on whether or not a Karlsson trade happens at some point, which is something that has been swirling in and out of the rumor mill. If Karlsson sticks around for the entirety of the season - and even for most of it - Dumba won’t have much room to redeem himself in a bigger role because the Penguins’ right side will be blocked with Karlsson and Letang.
The Penguins also have an even bigger logjam on the right side, as they acquired Connor Clifton from the Buffalo Sabres on draft day this year and have younger guys like Jack St. Ivany and Harrison Brunicke in the mix during training camp, too. So it’s not just the two bigger names ahead of Dumba that he’ll have to worry about. In fact, with Karlsson in the picture, he'll likely find himself jockeying for playing time.
But even when considering his competition on the right side, his numbers - comparatively - don’t look all that terrible. For example - according to 2024-25 data from Natural Stat Trick - Dumba’s Corsi (51.44 percent), expected goals share (49.24 percent), and high-danger chances share (52.86 percent) were all higher than those of Letang’s (49.11, 46.87, and 48.29 percent, respectively).
Granted, Dumba played against lesser competition on a better, deeper team, which certainly counts for something. But his metrics are close to pretty much every other Penguins’ defenseman but Karlsson, who has skewed-positive offensive metrics.
Finally, there’s the coaching aspect. The Penguins have an overwhelmingly new coaching staff heading into 2025-26, and some of them - including new head coach Dan Muse and defensive coach Mike Stothers - specialize on the defensive side of the puck.
Although it remains to be seen how much the new staff will change the team’s current system, perhaps the Penguins’ coaches will be able to get more out of Dumba this season or, at least, identify and target some problem areas of his game. The same can be said for the entirety of the Penguins’ defensive corps, which can benefit from a new set of eyes.
At the end of the day, the Dumba trade was mostly about Pittsburgh taking on his salary for one season in order to receive a 2028 second-round draft pick in return. But, if he gets the right opportunity and finds some version of his older self, he can be a decent short-term addition to their right side - and a potential deadline trade chip - this season.
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London Knights Using Their Status In Signing Frenzy; Ex-NCAA Forward Leaves School To Play In The OHL
The London Knights arguably are the most coveted and highly sought-after organization in not just the OHL but the entire CHL. Young players hope to hear their name called every draft by the organization that has recently won back-to-back OHL Championships and the 2025 Memorial Cup. And now with the new NCAA rules in play, Americans are beginning to flock to the London powerhouse.
The Knights’ training camp is officially underway, and there are a ton of new faces. The new members aren’t just the young buds from the 2025 draft class, like first-rounder Alex Campeau. The Hunter brothers have been active in recruiting players who bring experience playing at the junior level. They are successfully leveraging their organization's reputation as one of the best teams for player development in junior hockey.
London has made four notable signings of late, which include a couple of towering Russians and two older American forwards.
As camp opened up, the Knights organization announced the signing of American forward Braiden Clark to an OHL Scholarship and Development Agreement. He is another overage free agent signing, just like Kaeden Hawkins was. They both played and developed in the USHL, but one difference between the two, Clark is coming from the NCAA.
We've signed Braiden Clark to an OHL Scholarship & Development Agreement.
— London Knights (@LondonKnights) August 25, 2025
DETAILS: https://t.co/ZrPTzbjOuApic.twitter.com/JQzhQJMohz
Clark, 20, played at Providence College last season. It wasn’t the freshman campaign he would’ve hoped for, playing only 16 games and registering three points (1 goal, 2 assists). The forward from Ohio was slated to return to Providence, but has made the tough decision to leave the NCAA in hopes that playing as an overage forward in London will be more beneficial for his development.
London’s overage core for the 2025-26 season now consists of three forwards: Braiden Clark, Kaeden Hawkins, and returnee Noah Aboflan.
The additional American free agent signing came just under a week ago. The Knights recruited forward Ben Wilmott away from the USHL’s Sioux Falls Stampede to join their brigade for the upcoming season before he leaves for Ohio State University.
We've signed free agent Ben Wilmott to an OHL Scholarship & Development Agreement.
— London Knights (@LondonKnights) August 19, 2025
DETAILS: https://t.co/amWLcdM1Bjpic.twitter.com/SnmL9Hajz8
Wilmott, 18, is one year younger than Clark and brings 101 games of USHL experience. He started with the Chicago Steel organization in the 2023-24 season and was traded to the Stampede at the onset of last year. In Sioux Falls, he recorded 33 points (16 goals, 17 assists) in 50 games during the 2024-25 season.
It was reported earlier in the month by Puck Preps writer Ryan Sikes that Wilmott was expected to sign with London. The depth the Knights have brought in to their forward corps will mask a bit of the blow of losing their all-stars — Easton Cowan, Denver Barkey, and Kasper Halttunen — from the past two seasons.
Fun fact, Wilmott and Knights defenseman Henry Brzustewicz were minor hockey teammates with the North Jersey Avalanche.
Another massive, pun intended, signing the Knights recently made was of 6-foot-8 defenseman Maksim Sokolovskii. The Petropavlovsk, Kazakhstan, native signed his OHL Scholarship and Development Agreement back on Aug. 20. He is committed to the University of Maine.
We've signed Maksim Sokolovskii to an OHL Scholarship & Development Agreement.
— London Knights (@LondonKnights) August 20, 2025
DETAILS: https://t.co/nlEJNpnMSspic.twitter.com/t9gypTFGFH
Sokolovskii, 17, was drafted 119th overall in the second round of the 2025 CHL import Draft. He came over from Russia last season to play for the Atlantic Coast Academy 16U AAA team, where he excelled, scoring 84 points (34 goals, 50 assists) in 65 games. The towering blueliner led all defensemen in points in the entire 16U AAA circuit in the USA.
Several other top European performers from that circuit have also signed with OHL clubs this summer: Andrei Gudin (Barrie), Vladimir Provorov (Sudbury), and Beksultan Makysh (Windsor).
Sokolovskii is eligible for the 2026 NHL Draft, and seeing the trend of how NHL teams are coveting size on the blueline again, scouts will be following the mammoth rearguard, whether he suits up primarily in London for the 2025-26 season or not.
Lastly, the Knights organization signed Russian forward Mikhail Zakharov to an OHL Scholarship and Development Agreement. The Tomsk, Russia, native grew up playing minor hockey in Russia, but has been playing hockey in Ontario since the 2023-24 season, when he suited up for the Toronto Red Wings U18 AAA team.
We've signed Mike Zakharov to an OHL Scholarship & Development Agreement.
— London Knights (@LondonKnights) August 21, 2025
DETAILS: https://t.co/tNk7J9y4zypic.twitter.com/0pl4g5QfKv
Zakharov, 18, is another player who brings size to the lineup. Standing at 6-foot-4 and 176 pounds, his presence down the middle of the ice provides London depth that they need. He played in the OJHL for the King Rebellion last season, recording 38 points (12 goals, 26 assists), and added five points (1 goal, 4 assists) in five playoff games.
Although he was just recently drafted 103rd overall in the fifth round of the 2025 OHL Priority Selection, Zakharov is two years older than the majority of his 2009-born class.
London understands they have an advantage in player recruitment, being who they are. Specifically, with the Americans they have signed this summer, an easy pitch is this: you will have more NHL scouts' eyes on you playing for our organization than you would anywhere else, even in the NCAA for a school like Providence.
Make sure you bookmark THN's OHL site for the latest news, exclusive interviews, breakdowns, and so much more. Also, be sure to leave a comment at the bottom of the page and engage with other passionate fans through our forum.
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Aaron Nola happy to feel ‘back to normal'
Aaron Nola happy to feel ‘back to normal' originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia
NEW YORK – As he sat at his locker at Citi Field, his practice jersey soaked with sweat and the moisture dripping down his face, Aaron Nola could only smile. That’s how good life is for him right now as he has finally made it back from two injuries that took away almost three months of his season.
His first start back, on August 17th didn’t go quite as planned for the veteran right-hander, as he allowed seven hits and six earned runs in just 2 1/3 inning of work in Washington. Facing the same Nationals team six days later, Nola was more himself as he held the Nationals to five hits and two earned runs in his six innings of a 6-4 Phillies win. He’ll be back on the mound Thursday at Citizens Bank Park when the Phillies host the Atlanta Braves.
“I feel good. Normal soreness,” Nola said. “It’s good to get to the routine or throwing and running and working out a little bit. Throwing bullpens again, normally. Overall, it went pretty smooth. It took a little while, but, yeah, back to normal.
“Being on the injured list is obviously tough. It was longer than I thought it was going to be. The ankle started feeling good then the rib came up so it was kind of a 2-on-1 bang right there. Something I’ve never had with the rib. Never had anything in that section, rib or lat or anything right there. It was new and different. It took me a little bit to get loose once I started throwing. I had to learn to throw soft out in the outfield when I started throwing. That’s something that I hadn’t done in a while cause usually, I feel pretty good and I can just fire it right off the bat and get into throwing pretty easily. But it was tough sitting around and watching. But the guys played awesome. I loved watching. They were playing really good baseball. Pitchers were dominating. It was fun watching our starting rotation go out and dominate.”
The emotions of being back to normal are one thing. But the emotions Nola went through rose even more when the news of teammate Zack Wheeler’s season-ending venous thoracic outlet syndrome was released.
“It’s good to be back, man. It really is,” Nola said. “I’m blessed to be able to get on that mound again. I just took in the stadium when I was walking into the dugout from center field. I never had that long off during the season and I want to cherish every moment as I can as a Phillie.
“Not to bring up Wheeler, but that’s a tough loss for us. You never know what can pop up. He’s having one of the best seasons he’s ever had. Something crazy pops up and it knocks him out for the year. After that I kind of sat back and told myself to cherish every single moment because you never know if your season will end. It was a blessing that my injury wasn’t one that knocked me out for a real long period of time so I’m grateful for that. It’s just good to be back and be healthy and be able to pitch again.”
Nick Castellanos sits in series opener vs. Mets
The outfield for the Phillies on Monday will consist of Brandon Marsh in left, Harrison Bader in center and Max Kepler in right against right-handed pitcher Kodai Senga. Sunday, Rob Thomson had said Nick Castellanos paid him a visit to find out the game-plan for the series. It didn’t include him in Game 1.
“He just wanted to know what the plan was moving forward,” Thomson said. “I laid it out for him and he was good. He just wanted to know, that’s all.”
Bader has been hitting well of late, as he’s gone four for his last six with a couple of walks.
“That’s why I’m trying to mix and match and keep a rhythm and keep them going,” Thomson said of the outfield platooning. “It’s difficult. It’s difficult to match people up. But so far, so good. I think Bades is doing great. I really like him. I like the presence about him, a little bit of swagger. And (defensively) he gets great jumps. I mean great jumps. It’s really impressive. He may not have the speed of Rojas but I would say the jumps are as good.”
The same but different
Just like last season, the Phillies are 76-54 after 130 games. The offensive numbers across the board are almost identical. But that’s really where the likeness stops, according to Thomson.
“For the most part we’ve been pretty consistent,” he said. “There’s times where we haven’t hit or haven’t pitched well. The Houston series (back in late June) where we just didn’t hit and that’s good pitching. I think overall we’ve played really well.
“We got off to such a hot start last year, it was just kind of ridiculous, and you can’t really maintain that hot streak over 162. So, consequently after the All-Star break we went into a slide. I think overall this team this year has been more consistent than last year. Last year we were hot in the beginning and then we cooled off. I think we sort of leveled out the peaks and valleys this year a little bit better.”
Newcastle 2-3 Liverpool: Premier League – as it happened
Ten-man Newcastle fought back from two goals down, only to succumb to a sensational 100th-minute winner from 16-year-old Rio Ngumoha
44 secs: Elanga chases down the right and wins the first corner of the game. From which …
A huge St James’ Park roar as the two teams huddle, then Liverpool get the ball rolling. Plenty of boos as they kick off. Then another roar as Burn heads clear. What an atmosphere!
MLB relief pitcher of the year award to honor an essential role — just ask the Dodgers
No role in baseball has undergone more of a transformation than that of a relief pitcher. What once was something a hurler became because he wasn't good enough to be a starter is now a vital role manned by a succession of the hardest throwers.
Anyone who doubts the importance of a quality bullpen hasn't been paying attention to the Dodgers lately.
Over the weekend the Baseball Writers’ Assn. of America announced it has established a relief pitcher of the year award — one in each league — beginning in 2026. It will become the fifth honor doled out by the BBWAA each year, joining the most valuable player, Cy Young, rookie of the year and manager of the year awards.
(Disclaimer: I am a BBWAA member of more than 20 years and voted for creating the relief pitcher of the year awards. However, The Times doesn't allow its reporters to vote for the yearly awards or Hall of Fame election to avoid potential conflicts of interest.)
Why did the BBWAA decide to create another award? Well, as Hall of Fame baseball writer and relief pitcher award advocate Jayson Stark wrote in the Athletic, "It's about time."
Read more:Plaschke: Dodgers' inability to improve bullpen at trade deadline haunts them again
Stark pointed out that since Oakland Athletics closer Dennis Eckersley won the American League Cy Young Award and MVP in 1992 when he notched 51 saves, only one reliever has won a Cy Young and no reliever has finished even in the top three in MVP voting.
That one Cy Young winner? Dodgers fans can only wish for a current closer as dominant as Eric Gagne was in 2003 when his performance — admittedly illegally enhanced — resulted in 55 saves and a 1.20 earned-run average.
Otherwise, Stark notes, "voters have decided the MVP is a position player’s award, the Cy Young is a starting pitcher’s award and 'None of the Above' is a relief pitcher’s award."
Relievers were never considered superstars, but for a brief period after saves were introduced as an official statistical category in 1969, closers were routinely honored.
The Dodgers' Mike Marshall became the first relief pitcher to win the Cy Young Award in 1974 when he made a staggering 106 appearances and went 15-12 with 21 saves. Three years later, Sparky Lyle of the New York Yankees became the first American League reliever to take home the honor.
Read more:Doing away with traditional leagues could be in MLB's not-too-distant future, Rob Manfred says
The recognition didn't end there. Bruce Sutter won the NL Cy Young Award in 1979 and Rollie Fingers became the first reliever to win the Cy Young and MVP awards in 1981. Three years later, Willie Hernández of the World Series champion Detroit Tigers became the second.
Steve Bedrosian and Mark Davis also won Cy Young Awards in the 1980s, but Eckersley taking home the Cy Young and MVP in '92 marked the abrupt end of relievers winning either award. Why? The save became regarded as a flawed statistic, and the workload of a closer paled in comparison to starters, who then still regularly exceeded 200 innings a year.
Relievers were honored for 50 years beginning in 1960 by the Sporting News with what became known as the Fireman of the Year award. It coincided with the introduction of a rudimentary version of the save, created by longtime Sporting News and Chicago baseball writer Jerome Holtzman.
Before then, relievers were especially anonymous. Occasionally one made headlines for an odd accomplishment, such as Roy Face of the Pittsburgh Pirates posting an 18-1 record in 57 relief appearances in 1959. Holtzman was particularly irked that baseball writers were sufficiently impressed to elevate Face to seventh in NL MVP voting.
Read more:Hernández: Repeat champions or October duds? Dodgers identity crisis keeps everyone guessing
Years later somebody went back and determined that 10 of those wins were credited in games Face had blown the lead, with the Pirates coming back while he was the pitcher of record. When it comes to stats, it turns out, saves might be less flawed than wins.
So it's been a love-hate relationship between relievers and writers for decades. Billy Wagner was voted into the Hall of Fame this year in his 10th and last year on the ballot, the eighth pure reliever to be inducted, joining Mariano Rivera, Trevor Hoffman, Lee Smith, Goose Gossage, Hoyt Wilhelm, Fingers and Sutter.
Eckersley was a starter for 12 seasons before moving to the bullpen and notching 390 saves, and John Smoltz started for 12 seasons then became an exceptional closer for four years before moving back to the rotation for the last five years of his Hall of Fame career.
Without an award from the BBWAA, MLB in 2005 created the Delivery Man of the Year Award, which honored one best reliever. Nine years later MLB created an award for each league named after Rivera and Hoffman, the only two pitchers to reach 600 career saves.
The winners every year have been closers, typically the league leaders in saves. With the increasing value of setup relievers in an era when starters average only 5.3 innings, perhaps the new relief pitcher of the year awards will reward more than ninth-inning specialists.
Stark, who chaired the BBWAA committee that studied the new awards before presenting it to membership for a vote, would like to think so, rattling off the following reasons the awards are needed.
"Because the evolution of the sport has led us to this moment. Because the debates should be so much fun. Because we have the chance to do something special — and not just count up the saves but to 'get this right.'"
This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.
13 NBA players to watch during 2025 EuroBasket
We're still a month away from even NBA media days before training camp, let alone real basketball. Which is why if you're looking for meaningful games at the end of summer, it's time to turn your gaze toward Europe.
EuroBasket, the European championship, starts this Wednesday, Aug. 27, and will run through Sept. 14. It will feature France (the silver medal team from the Paris Olympics), Serbia (the bronze medal winners) and Germany, which won the last national European competition and finished fourth in Paris.
EuroBasket also will feature many of the NBA's biggest stars — MVPs and players shaping and changing how the game is played.
18 NBA teams have players in line to suit up in EuroBasket 2025:
— Keith Smith (@KeithSmithNBA) August 24, 2025
Hawks (3)
Vit Krejci - Czechia
Kristaps Porzingis - Latvia
Zaccharie Risacher - France
Celtics (1)
Neemias Queta - Portugal
Bulls (1)
Nikola Vucevic - Montenegro
Nuggets (2)
Nikola Jokic - Serbia…
Here are 13 NBA players to watch as play tips off this week (group play will be contested in Cyprus, Finland, Latvia and Poland, with Riga, Latvia, hosting the knockout rounds).
Nikola Jokic (Serbia)
The three-time MVP and consensus best player in the world leads a stacked Serbian squad that is the betting favorite to win the tourney. Jokic is coming off a Nuggets' season where he averaged a triple-double — 29.6 points, 12.7 rebounds and 10.2 assists a game — while being hyper efficient, even shooting 41.7% from 3. He is at the top of his game.
Serbia as a team looks ready, they went 7-0 in tune-up games including a 106–72 thumping of a dangerous Slovenian team. This is a team deep with talent and guys who know how to play the international game, allowing Jokic to play to his strengths — look for him to dominate games with his playmaking more than scoring.
Luka Doncic (Slovenia)
Doncic will be the player with the most eyes on him heading into EuroBasket because people want the answer to this question: "How good does 'skinny' Doncic look?" In tune-up games for the tournament, he has looked elite, with one of his teammates telling the European media that this is the most athletic they have seen Doncic in an international tournament.
A scare shot through Lakers' nation after a teammate fell into Doncic's knee during one of the exhibition games leading up to EuroBasket.
Luka Doncic’s teammate fell into him and the Lakers star appeared to injure his knee.
— ClutchPoints (@ClutchPoints) August 16, 2025
Doncic asked out of the game and went back to the Slovenia locker room. pic.twitter.com/RLSDjpeQkS
Fortunately, he was diagnosed with simply a knee contusion and was back practicing and playing with the Slovenian team in the following days. He is good to go for EuroBasket and will be in the mix for tournament MVP if Slovenia has a strong showing.
Giannis Antetokounmpo (Greece)
Antetokounmpo thrives in international basketball — he was the leading scorer at the Paris Olympics last summer, averaging 25.8 points along with 6.3 rebounds, 3.5 assists across four games. He was the leading scorer at the 2022 EuroBasket, averaging 29.3 points, 8.8 rebounds and 4.7 assists a game.
Last summer, Antetokounmpo and Greece advanced out of group play at the Paris Olympics but were knocked out in the quarterfinals of the knockout round by Germany. Their goals for this tournament are higher.
Kristaps Porzingis (Latvia)
Porzingis is a prototypical European stretch five, a player who can protect the rim on defense but on offense can space the floor and force other team's bigs out of the paint. When healthy he is a force. He was a critical part of Boston's title run in 2024 and even last season averaged 19.5 points and 6.8 rebounds a game shooting 41.2% from beyond the arc for the Celtics, but health limited him to 42 games.
Porzingis is at the heart of a remaking of the Hawks roster for this season, they will need him on the court. Which means Atlanta fans will be watching and hoping Porzingis comes out of EuroBasket unscathed.
Alperen Sengun (Turkiye)
Sengun was an NBA All-Star last season who averaged 19.1 points, 10.3 rebounds and 4.9 assists a game. That said, he didn't seem to catch the eye of casual fans — something that may be about to change. Sengun is poised for a breakout season as the hub of a Houston Rockets attack featuring Kevin Durant and Amen Thompson. That breakout could start at EuroBasket, especially if Sengun keeps playing like he did in tune-up games.
Alperen Sengun did it all in Türkiye 96-85 win. 26 points 11 rebounds 3 assists 4 steals and a block. pic.twitter.com/BwdKM5NRao
— Lachard Binkley (@BinkleyHoops) August 23, 2025
Lauri Markkanen (Finland)
The Utah forward — who likes it in Salt Lake and isn't looking to be traded, even if teams are calling about him and Danny Ainge is listening — had a couple of very impressive seasons for the Jazz before seeing his efficiency drop off last season on a rebuilding squad. He still averaged 19 points and 5.9 rebounds a game, but his true shooting percentage of .571 was about the league average, and well below his previous two seasons, and that was indicative of all his efficiency stats. Will we see a healthy and rejuvenated Markkanen at EuroBasket, and will that mean his efficiency bounces back?
Franz Wagner (Germany)
Brothers Franz and Mo Wagner — Orlando Magic teammates — will both suit up for Germany in this tournament, but Franz is the one ready for a breakout. He averaged 24.2 points, 5.7 rebounds, and 4.7 assists a game last season for the Magic, but missed out on the All-Star Game and postseason awards due to an oblique injury sidelining him for a chunk of the season. This season, as one of the offensive engines for a Magic team poised to break into the top four in the East and make a lot of noise (they are a great candidate for an Indiana-style postseason run), Franz is going to get a lot of shine. That could start at EuroBasket with a German team that is the No. 2 betting favorite to win the entire tournament.
Dennis Schroder, Germany
While the Wagner brothers may get the headlines, the rock-solid point guard play of Dennis Schroder on both ends of the court is what makes Germany so dangerous. He is going to get them in the right positions to make plays (and he may find it easier to do that with this German team than with the oddly built Sacramento Kings next season). Last season in the NBA, Schroder bounced between Brooklyn, Golden State and Detroit, and while starting for the Nets he averaged 18.4 points and 6.6 assists a game (with the Warriors he was playing behind Stephen Curry, and with the Pistons he was behind Cade Cunningham, so the roles were very different than with the Nets — his role with Germany is closer to Brooklyn).
Deni Avdija (Israel)
Not a lot of fans noticed the leap Deni Avdija made last season because not a lot of fans outside the Pacific Northwest were watching the Portland Trail Blazers. That said, he thrived in a larger role after being traded out of Washington and posted career highs in points at 16.9, rebounds (7.3) and assists (3.9). He had an impressive true shooting percentage of 60.5. Avdija has had some big games in youth international tournaments, we'll see if he can step up on this larger stage for Israel.
Guerschon Yabusele, France
France is a little thin along the frontline for this tournament, with Victor Wembanyama and Rudy Gobert both out for a team that won the silver medal at the Paris Olympics a year ago.
That puts a lot on Yabusele, who broke out at the Paris Olympics — 14 points and 3.3 rebounds a game — which got him back in the NBA with a contract in Philadelphia (this coming season, he will have a key bench role for New York). If you're questioning how much Yabusele can lift the French team, just remember what he did to LeBron James in Paris.
GUERSCHON YABUSELE ON LEBRON JAMES.
— NBC Olympics & Paralympics (@NBCOlympics) August 10, 2024
NBC and Peacock | #ParisOlympicspic.twitter.com/cjrH6Q9Epd
Nikola Vucevic, Montenegro
The veteran NBA center is the kind of floor-spacing five who thrives in international basketball, he shot 40.2% from beyond the deeper NBA 3-point line last season. He averaged 18.5 points and 10.1 rebounds a game for Chicago last season and is going to put up numbers for Montenegro as their best and go-to player.
Santi Aldama, Spain
There is pressure on the Spanish side, which is the defending EuroBasket champions and has won four of the last six of these tournaments, but now is in a generational transition and may not have the talent to compete at the highest levels. A lot of that pressure falls on Aldama, one of the best players of the generation coming up (with brothers Willy and Juancho Hernangomez as the other big names). The Grizzlies' stretch big averaged 12.5 points and 6.4 rebounds a game in the NBA last season.
Bogdan Bogdanovic, Serbia
It is the veteran wing Bogdanovic, not Jokic, who is the Serbian captain, which speaks to the level of respect for the sharpshooter. In the Paris Olympics last summer, Bogdanovic averaged 17.7 points, 3.7 rebounds, and 4 assists per game, helping lead Serbia to the bronze medal (and almost upsetting the USA in the medal round). He sets the tone for a Serbian team thinking gold this summer.
Sabres Prospect Profile – Topias Leinonen
The Buffalo Sabres have been considered to have one of the deepest prospect pools in the NHL, which is in part due to them selecting high in recent drafts because of their not qualifying for the playoffs. The Sabres have displayed an eye for talent, but the organization’s developmental model has not yielded enough results.
Leading up to the opening of training camp in mid-September, we will look at the club's top 40 prospects. All are 25 years old or younger, whose rights are currently held by the Sabres or are on AHL or NHL deals, and have played less than 40 NHL games.
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#18 - Topias Leinonen – Goaltender (Mora IK - Allsvenskan-SWE)
The Sabres selected Leinonen in the second round after picking three centers (Matthew Savoie, Noah Ostlund, and Jiri Kulich) in the first round of the 2022 NHL Draft in Montreal. Similar to his countryman and fellow second-rounder Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen, the 6’4″, 214 lb. Leinonen is the physical package that NHL clubs are looking for in a goaltender.
After putting up excellent numbers in Junior (2.28 GAA and .916 save percentage), he played internationally for Finland at the World Junior Under-18’s in 2022, but the next two seasons at the junior, second-level pro Mestis, and pro-level SM-Liiga, Leinonen was plagued by injury and the results have been mixed at best.
Leinonen shifted to Sweden to play for Mora IK last season, and the 21-year-old seemed to find his stride with a 2.31 GAA and .910 save percentage in 25 games. After being signed to an ELC in March, the Sabres will be looking for him to put together a consistent season in North America, but the question is whether it will be in Rochester or ECHL Cincinnati with Devon Levi, and 2023 draftee Scott Ratzlaff battling for playing time with the Amerks.
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Angela Mortimer-Barrett, 1961 Wimbledon champion, dies aged 93
Mortimer-Barrett won three grand slam singles titles
All England Club says it is ‘deeply saddened’
The former Wimbledon champion Angela Mortimer-Barrett has died at the age of 93. Mortimer-Barrett defeated fellow Briton Christine Truman to win the 1961 ladies’ singles title, three years after losing her first final against Althea Gibson.
Mortimer-Barrett won three grand slam singles titles, including the 1955 French Championships and the Australian Championships three years later. She also won the Wimbledon ladies’ doubles title in 1955, teaming up with Anne Shilcock to clinch an all-British final against Shirley Bloomer and Pat Ward.
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