Nuggets aim to stun Thunder in Game 7New Foto - Nuggets aim to stun Thunder in Game 7

The Denver Nuggets are already at a depth disadvantage against the Oklahoma City Thunder. The Nuggets also could be without one of their biggest pieces Sunday when the teams square off in Game 7 of their Western Conference semifinal series in Oklahoma City. Aaron Gordon, who hit the game-winner in Game 1, is a "game-time decision" with a left hamstring strain. Gordon suffered the injury late in Thursday's 119-107 Denver win at home to force Game 7. Nuggets interim coach David Adelman said Gordon fully participated in Saturday's walkthrough. "If Aaron can play, he will play," Adelman said. If Gordon can't play or is limited, Denver figures to need to lean more heavily on Peyton Watson, who is averaging 4.7 points and 3.2 rebounds in 14 minutes per game in the series. Gordon is averaging 14.5 points and 9.2 rebounds in more than 37 minutes per game. Watson mirrored Gordon at Saturday's walkthrough. "AG is a soldier and we know he's going to try and tough it out," Watson said. After struggling early in the series, Nuggets star Nikola Jokic has been much better over the last two games, averaging 36.5 points, 14.5 rebounds and 1.5 turnovers per game and shooting 66.7 percent from the floor. In the first four games of the series, Jokic averaged 26.5 points, 14.8 rebounds and 5.8 turnovers while shooting just 39.1 percent from the floor. After winning 68 games during the regular season, the Thunder are on the brink of elimination. Sunday's will be the franchise's first Game 7 since falling to the Rockets in the 2020 first round. Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and Luguentz Dort are the only players who remain from that Game 7. Oklahoma City coach Mark Daigneault has made a habit of sticking with his game plan regardless of the situation. He's used a deep rotation all season and hasn't shortened it much, if at all, during the postseason. Daigneault's approach won't change for his first Game 7 as a head coach. "It's recurring themes that you just revisit in these situations," Daigneault said of his message heading into the game. "And if you need new material in these situations, then your material was wrong in the first place. Everything around the game is different. It certainly feels different because of the gravity of the outcome. But once the ball goes up, it's the same game." Daigneault's approach has bled over to his team. "You definitely have to understand what's at stake," Oklahoma City's Chet Holmgren said. "Obviously, this game means a lot, but you can't go into the game thinking about that. You have to go into the game thinking about what matters for winning." Oklahoma City's Jalen Williams is coming off a career playoff-worst six points on 3-of-16 shooting in Thursday's loss. He is 10-for-43 shooting (23.3 percent) over the past three games. Denver has much more experience in Game 7s, having beat the Clippers in the first round this season. The Nuggets fell to Minnesota in Game 7 of the second round last season. A Denver win would give the Nuggets their third series win in franchise history after falling behind 3-2 in a series. Both of the previous instances came in 2020, when Denver came back from 3-1 deficits to knock off Utah and the Clippers. --Field Level Media

Nuggets aim to stun Thunder in Game 7

Nuggets aim to stun Thunder in Game 7 The Denver Nuggets are already at a depth disadvantage against the Oklahoma City Thunder. The Nuggets...
Mets' Pete Alonso thinks ahead to possible Subway Series against Yankees, saying `It'd be sick'New Foto - Mets' Pete Alonso thinks ahead to possible Subway Series against Yankees, saying `It'd be sick'

NEW YORK (AP) — After listening to Yankees fans rail at Juan Soto for two days, New York Mets star Pete Alonso thought about the possibility of a Subway Series this October. "It'd be electric," he said following theMets' 3-2 win Saturday. "Any chance we can avoid the Van Wyck, that'd be great." Alonso would love the chance to play an environmentally friendly World Series entirely in New York and avoid the perpetually congested expressway leading to John F. Kennedy International Airport. Subway Series spark memories of Don Larsen's perfect game, clutch catches by Al Gionfriddo and Sandy Amoros, and David Cone coming out of the bullpen to retire Mike Piazza. With the Mets and Yankees leading their divisions a quarter of the way through the regular season, there's a chance of the first Subway Series since 2000 but a long way to go. Even for a regular-season meeting on a Saturday afternoon, the sellout crowd of 47,510 at Yankee Stadium was amped up — especially when booing Soto, who helped the Yankees reach the World Series last year and then bolted across town for a record $765 million, 15-year contract with the Mets. "Typically I do a pretty good job of blocking the noise out," Yankees pitcher Clarke Schmidt said. "There was a time where he was up I had to turn up the PitchCom because it was tough to hear." Winners of a record 27 titles but none since 2009, the Yankees lead the AL East at 26-19. The Mets, boosted by hedge fund owner Steve Cohen's fortune, top the NL East at 29-17 as they seek their third championship and first since 1986. Last year, the Mets lost in the National League Championship Series to the Los Angeles Dodgers, who beat the Yankees in the World Series. While there were 13 Subway Series from 1921-56 — six between the Yankees and Brooklyn Dodgers and seven between Yankees and New York Giants — there has been only one since. "It'd be sick," Alonso said. "That'd be probably the best postseason matchup ever because you don't have to go on the road. You have seven home games. ... You don't have to worry about dealing with all the great wall of traffic out of JFK." A day after the Yankees won theopener of six regular-season meetings 6-2, Francisco Lindor's ninth-inning sacrifice fly off Fernando Cruz broke a 2-all tie and Edwin Díaz ended the game by getting Aaron Judge to swing over a 98.6 mph full-count fastball. A runner on each team was thrown at the plate, and an umpire interference call on himself by James Jean negated a Yankees double steal. "That's what you call a big league game, big league matchup. Every pitch was intense, every play," Mets manager Carlos Mendoza said. "That's what you pay for, to come and watch a big league game when you got two teams with a lot of superstars." Soto went 1 for 4 with a walk and is 1 for 6 with four walks in his first two games back in the Bronx, booed noisily each time he walked to the plate or touched the ball defensively. He threw some shade two pitches into his first at-bat Saturday — he tossed his mirrored sunglasses on a perfect spring afternoon, deciding he'd see better without them. Sototipped his helmet to the crowd before his first plate appearance Fridayand provided another moment of levity in the fifth inning Saturday when he shook a "no" to Schmidt after the pitcher started to the dugout following a 2-2 knuckle-curve at the low, outside corner. Jean called ball three, and Soto wound up walking. "I thought out of the hand it was a ball and it was a ball," Schmidt said. Consistent throughout the season, the Mets are the only team that hasn't had a three-game losing streak. And while players and staff are focused on the next game, fans have the luxury to dream ahead to a 15th Subway Series. "I'm sure," Yankees manager Aaron Boone said, "it would be pretty cool." ___ AP MLB:https://apnews.com/hub/mlb

Mets' Pete Alonso thinks ahead to possible Subway Series against Yankees, saying `It'd be sick'

Mets' Pete Alonso thinks ahead to possible Subway Series against Yankees, saying `It'd be sick' NEW YORK (AP) — After listening ...
Red Sox RHP Walker Buehler expected to come of IL and start TuesdayNew Foto - Red Sox RHP Walker Buehler expected to come of IL and start Tuesday

BOSTON (AP) — Right-hander Walker Buehler is expected to come off the 15-day injured list and join the Red Sox rotation for a start on Tuesday, he said prior to Saturday's game at Fenway Park. The 30-year-old Buehler wasplaced on the IL May 2 with bursitisin his pitching shoulder. "I don't think if it was late in the year that we would necessarily have done the exact same things," Buehler said in the clubhouse before the game against the Atlanta Braves. "But just too early in the year to kind of try and push it." On Saturday, he threw 62 pitches over three innings in live BP. He figures he'll be able to throw 85 to 90 pitches in his return. "I don't think I'm going to go 110," he said. Buehler is 4-1 with a 4.28 ERA in his six starts sincesigning a one-year, $21.05 million contract with the Red Sox this past offseason. He spent the first seven years of his MLB career with the Los Angeles Dodgers, winning two World Series. ___ AP MLB:https://apnews.com/hub/mlb

Red Sox RHP Walker Buehler expected to come of IL and start Tuesday

Red Sox RHP Walker Buehler expected to come of IL and start Tuesday BOSTON (AP) — Right-hander Walker Buehler is expected to come off the 15...
Boy, 13, Dies Over a Month After Sustaining Brain Injury During Basketball Game: 'He Just Never Woke Up'New Foto - Boy, 13, Dies Over a Month After Sustaining Brain Injury During Basketball Game: 'He Just Never Woke Up'

GoFundMe A 13-year-old boy died over a month after sustaining a brain injury during a basketball game in March Shama'ar Jefferson suffered from a brain bleed that was caused by a ruptured blood vessel, doctors later confirmed "He was just doing something he loved, playing basketball," the teen's parents said A 13-year-old boy who was hospitalized after sustaining a brain injury during a basketball game in March has died. Shama'ar Jefferson died this month, weeks after being hospitalized for injuries he sustained during a sports tournament on March 30, according to aFacebook postfrom the organizationJust a Kid from Wichita. The group, which provides basketball camps for kids in Kansas, expressed condolences to Brandon Cornwall and Shaquela Cornwell, Jefferson's father and mother, respectively, along with his "family, friends, teammates and classmates." Jefferson began feeling unwell midway through the basketball tournament, according to local outletsKWCH-TV,KSNW-TVandKAKE-TV. The teen told coaches that his head had been hurting and he was suffering from blurry vision after the first half of the game, per KWCH-TV. Jefferson was then given a concussion test and passed, but he later collapsed when he stood up and moved to grab his bag behind the bench, KAKE-TV reported. GoFundMe Related:'Vibrant' High School Football Player, 16, Dies 2 Weeks After Sustaining 'Brain Injury' During Game The teen was taken to Wesley Children's Hospital, where doctors confirmed that he had been suffering from a brain bleed that was caused by a ruptured blood vessel, according to KAKE-TV. Jefferson underwent surgery and was then placed in the ICU. "He just never woke up from the injury," his mother Shaquela later told KAKE-TV. Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE's free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. GoFundMe Jefferson's family detailed in aGoFundMepage that they moved the teen to Children's Mercy Hospital in Kansas City, where they sought a "second opinion in his care giving" from a pediatric specialist team. "He was just doing something he loved, playing basketball," Shaquela told KAKE-TV. "It's hard to see him go from that to fighting for his life." Jefferson's parents told KAKE-TV and KSNW-TV that he was an eighth grade honor student at Stucky Middle School and had aspirations to make the Wichita Heights High School varsity basketball team the following school year. They also described him as someone who was easy to "love," stating, "If you met him, you [loved] him. If you know him, you love him." "He has touched so many people just by his smile, so just to know that so many people care, even people who don't know him," they continued. Read the original article onPeople

Boy, 13, Dies Over a Month After Sustaining Brain Injury During Basketball Game: ‘He Just Never Woke Up’

Boy, 13, Dies Over a Month After Sustaining Brain Injury During Basketball Game: 'He Just Never Woke Up' GoFundMe A 13-year-old boy ...
Last-place Orioles fire manager Brandon Hyde after falling 13 games under .500New Foto - Last-place Orioles fire manager Brandon Hyde after falling 13 games under .500

BALTIMORE (AP) — The Baltimore Orioles fired manager Brandon Hyde on Saturday after a dismal start to the season by a team coming off two consecutive playoff appearances. The Orioles are 15-28 and in last place in the AL East following a loss to Washington on Friday night. Hyde guided the team through an extensive rebuild and won manager of the year honors in 2023, but Baltimore's performance slipped noticeably during the second half of last year, and the Orioles have put themselves in a significant hole so far in 2025. "As the head of baseball operations, the poor start to our season is ultimately my responsibility," Orioles executive vice president and general manager Mike Elias said in a statement. "Part of that responsibility is pursuing difficult changes in order to set a different course for the future. I want to thank Brandon for his hard work, dedication and passion all these years, and for returning the team to the playoffs and winning an AL East championship." Third base coach Tony Mansolino will serve as interim manager. The Orioles also fired major league field coordinator/catching instructor Tim Cossins. Hyde is the third major league manager fired in the last 10 days, joiningPittsburgh's Derek SheltonandColorado's Bud Black. Hyde was in his seventh season as Baltimore's manager. He endured seasons of 108 and 110 losses early on, but by 2023, the Orioles won the AL East with 101 victories — and the future looked incredibly bright thanks to young standouts like infielder Gunnar Henderson, catcher Adley Rutschman and right-hander Grayson Rodriguez. Baltimore had other top prospects in the organization as well, but after a 49-25 start last year, the Orioles played sub-.500 baseball the rest of the way and settled for a wild card. For a second straight season, Baltimore was swept out of the playoffs in its first series. Then came an offseason in which ace Corbin Burnes left via free agency, and the front office tried to patch up the rotation with one-year stopgaps like Charlie Morton, Tomoyuki Sugano and Kyle Gibson. Sugano has pitched well but the other two haven't, and the Orioles have the worst ERA in the American League at 5.31. Meanwhile, an offense that was supposed to be the team's strength has been spotty. Rutschman is batting .214, Ryan Mountcastle is at .233 and Cedric Mullins has slumped all the way to .226 after a good start. The Orioles are hitting .192 with runners in scoring position, the worst mark in baseball. Friday's4-3 loss to the Nationalswas a microcosm of the season so far. Baltimore left 15 men on base and allowed the winning run to score from second on an infield single in the top of the ninth. Top prospects Heston Kjerstad and Coby Mayo haven't produced much, and injuries to Colton Cowser, Jordan Westburg and Tyler O'Neill have hurt the lineup as well. And the pitching staff could afford health problems even less. Rodriguez and reliever Andrew Kittredge haven't pitched at all this year, and Zach Eflin missed time as well. The team's poor start has put Elias under scrutiny after what looked like a very successful rebuild. If the Orioles don't climb back into contention this year, he will be under a lot of pressure next offseason to bring the team back to the path it appeared to be on less than a year ago. ___ AP MLB:https://apnews.com/hub/mlb

Last-place Orioles fire manager Brandon Hyde after falling 13 games under .500

Last-place Orioles fire manager Brandon Hyde after falling 13 games under .500 BALTIMORE (AP) — The Baltimore Orioles fired manager Brandon ...

 

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