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Harden bags 39 as Clippers edge Warriors to clinch playoff spot

Harden bags 39 as Clippers edge Warriors to clinch playoff spot
LA Clippers guard James Harden drives to the basket against Golden State Warriors guard Moses Moody during the third quarter of an NBA game Sunday. (Imagn Images)
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Updated 14 April 2025

Harden bags 39 as Clippers edge Warriors to clinch playoff spot

Harden bags 39 as Clippers edge Warriors to clinch playoff spot
  • The defeat for Golden State means the Warriors must now secure their place in the playoffs via the four-team play-in tournament starting this week, hosting Memphis on Tuesday
  • Denver clinched the fourth seed in the West with a 126-111 victory over the second-seeded Houston Rockets

LOS ANGELES: James Harden scored 39 points as the Los Angeles Clippers defeated the Golden State Warriors 124-119 in overtime to clinch the final playoff spot in a thrilling last day of the NBA regular season on Sunday.

Harden’s superb display in San Francisco helped the Clippers bag the fifth seed in the Western Conference and sets up a first-round postseason series with the fourth-seeded Denver Nuggets.

The 35-year-old Harden’s points tally included two crucial back-to-back three-pointers in overtime which ultimately proved decisive in a back-and-forth duel that saw the lead change hands 23 times.

The defeat for Golden State means the Warriors must now secure their place in the playoffs via the four-team play-in tournament starting this week, hosting Memphis on Tuesday.

Harden, meanwhile, praised the Clippers’ composure in closing out victory in front of the Warriors’ vociferous home support.

“We knew it was gonna be a hostile environment, and the main goal was just to win the game,” Harden told ESPN. “Whether it’s scoring, whether it’s playmaking...it’s whatever it takes at this point.”

The win was the Clippers’ eighth straight victory to close out the regular season, ensuring they will enter the playoffs as the form team in the Western Conference after a campaign where few gave them much hope.

“We know we’re a good team and we’re excited to show the world that we’re a good team,” Harden said.

Harden was backed with 33 points from Kawhi Leonard while Ivica Zubac added 22.

Stephen Curry led Golden State’s scoring with 36 points while Jimmy Butler added 30 points.

Golden State coach Steve Kerr praised the Clippers performance after a gripping contest.

“That was a big-time basketball game — they’re one of the best teams in the NBA, and so are we,” Kerr said. “It was a great, great game — high-level stuff, stars being stars. We came up short but not for lack of effort.

“There was a lot of great execution, and lot of stuff that was very impressive. But we couldn’t quite pull it off.”

In other games on Sunday, Denver clinched the fourth seed in the West with a 126-111 victory over the second-seeded Houston Rockets.

The win capped a tumultuous week for the Nuggets, who fired head coach Michael Malone on Tuesday with the playoffs beckoning in a move that stunned the NBA.

Denver were always in control of Sunday’s clash, leading by as many as 36 points in the fourth quarter after taking the lead midway through the first period.

Denver’s interim coach David Adelman reserved praise for Serbian star Nikola Jokic, who finished a regular season campaign in which he averaged a triple double with 18 points, seven rebounds and seven assists.

“I’ve been around special players, I’ve never seen any player like him,” Adelman said.

“The work he puts in away from it. Just how systematic he is, professional, no wasted steps. He is absolutely the most impressive basketball player I’ve ever seen.”

The Minnesota Timberwolves meanwhile snaffled sixth place in the West — the final automatic playoff berth — with a 116-105 defeat of the Utah Jazz.

Timberwolves head coach Chris Finch paid tribute to his team’s effort in muscling their way into the playoffs.

“I’m super proud of their body of work this year,” Finch said. “We didn’t make a big trade in the middle of the season to sort thing out, or fire coaches to try to sort things out — they sorted it out themselves. Those guys made the right adjustments and sacrifices and figured who they needed to be as a team. All credit to them.”

The win means the Timberwolves will face the third-seeded Los Angeles Lakers in the first round of the playoffs.


India-Pakistan javelin showdown: Neeraj Chopra, Arshad Nadeem meet for world gold Sept. 18

India-Pakistan javelin showdown: Neeraj Chopra, Arshad Nadeem meet for world gold Sept. 18
Updated 11 September 2025

India-Pakistan javelin showdown: Neeraj Chopra, Arshad Nadeem meet for world gold Sept. 18

India-Pakistan javelin showdown: Neeraj Chopra, Arshad Nadeem meet for world gold Sept. 18
  • Tokyo games will be the first time the two athletes meet after a war between their countries
  • Nadeem returns from calf surgery as Julian Weber and Anderson Peters tighten the medal race

NEW DELHI: India’s Neeraj Chopra and Arshad Nadeem of Pakistan will battle for javelin gold in Tokyo next week, the latest chapter in a brotherly rivalry which has soured since a deadly military conflict between their countries.

The Tokyo Olympic champion, Chopra, and his successor in Paris, Nadeem, will line up at the athletics world championships for their first encounter since the nuclear-armed neighbors engaged in a four-day conflict in May, their worst since 1999.

Chopra, who took Olympic silver behind his great rival a year ago, had often spoken about his friendly relations with Nadeem despite the tensions between their countries.

After Nadeem won gold and Chopra stood alongside him on the podium in Paris, Nadeem’s mother Raziah Parveen said: “Winning and losing is part of sport, but they are like brothers.”

Chopra’s mother Saroj said she took some solace in Nadeem beating her son because the Pakistani “is also our boy.”

But publicly at least that changed after the conflict, with high-profile figures from both countries under pressure to distance themselves from the other side.

The 27-year-old Chopra, who will defend his world title in Tokyo, said that they were “never really close friends.”

Nadeem, 28, also played down any friendship with Chopra.

“When he won, I congratulated him, and when I won the gold, he returned the same courtesy,” Nadeem told AFP by telephone en route to Tokyo.

“(Just as) in wrestling, one wrestler wins and the other loses — it’s part of the game.”

INVITATION WITHDRAWN

Nadeem, who is returning to competition after calf surgery in July, hails from a farming village.

He became an overnight sensation when he gave Pakistan their first Olympic gold in 40 years with a Games-record throw of 92.97m.

Nadeem has competed only once since Paris, winning the Asian Athletics Championships in South Korea in May when Chopra did not participate.

The last time the pair clashed was at the Paris Olympics.

In April, the Indian star invited Nadeem to India for his ‘Neeraj Chopra Classic’ javelin event but the Pakistani declined, saying it clashed with his training schedule.

Chopra then withdrew the invitation after an attack in Pahalgam in Indian-administered Kashmir on April 22 killed 26 people, mostly Hindu tourists.

India accused Pakistan of backing the attackers, a charge Islamabad denied.

In the conflict that followed more than 70 people were killed in missile, drone and artillery fire on both sides.

“I want to clarify that I don’t have a particularly strong relationship with Nadeem, we were never really close friends,” Chopra said afterwards.

“But because of the current situation, things will not be as they were. That said, if someone speaks to me with respect, I always respond in kind.”

FINE FORM

Chopra became a national hero in India after his Tokyo gold, earning million-dollar endorsement deals with his boyish charm, changing hairstyles and infectious smile.

He won the world title in Budapest in 2023 and has been in fine form since joining Czech javelin great Jan Zelezny’s coaching group ahead of the 2025 season.

He went past 90m for the first time when he threw 90.23m at the Doha Diamond League meeting in May, but finished second to German Julian Weber.

At the Zurich Diamond League last month, Weber once again stood on top of the podium, with a throw of 91.51m. Chopra was second with 85.01m.

Along with Weber, also in Tokyo will be two-time world champion Anderson Peters of Grenada.

The world championships start on Saturday, with the men’s javelin final on September 18.


Lyles will deliver sprint show — but not everyone will like it

Lyles will deliver sprint show — but not everyone will like it
Updated 11 September 2025

Lyles will deliver sprint show — but not everyone will like it

Lyles will deliver sprint show — but not everyone will like it
  • Lyles, 28, comes into the world championships bidding to emulate Usain Bolt’s four successive global 200m crowns
  • His track exploits and lively personality have gained Lyles the recognition he has long craved in the US

TOKYO: Noah Lyles revels in being a showman but the antics the Olympic 100 meters champion do on occasion upset rivals and officials. They will watch closely to see how the American behaves as he defends his 100m and 200m world titles in Tokyo.

Lyles, 28, comes into the world championships bidding to emulate Usain Bolt’s four successive global 200m crowns — and he was boosted by a thrilling win over Olympic champion Letsile Tebogo in the Diamond League final last month.

Lyles said he would head to Tokyo “with a lot of energy.”

His track exploits — the Zurich win sealed a record-breaking sixth Diamond League track trophy — and lively personality have gained Lyles the recognition he has long craved in the US.

A documentary series “Untitled: The Noah Lyles Project,” a prominent role in the Netflix series “Sprint” and an appearance on NBC’s “The Tonight Show” have raised his profile.

That kind of mainstream coverage is something which World Athletics chief Sebastian Coe said he hopes other American track and field athletes will attract with the Los Angeles Olympics just three years away.

Lyles loves putting on a show and before the Olympics in Paris last year he told GQ Sport the challenge for track and field was to persuade the public globally that the sport was also “entertainment.”

His predecessor as the dominant force in men’s sprinting, Usain Bolt, famously used his arms to replicate a lightning bolt before he raced.

The American goes way beyond that.

He even received a yellow card warning ahead of the Olympic 200m final last year for his over-exuberant entrance into the Stade de France, roaring like a lion and hitting his lane box so hard the number toppled to the ground.

Lyles — who left the track in a wheelchair after finishing third and later revealed he had COVID — also antagonized the usually imperturbable Kenny Bednarek at the US trials this year.

Bednarek was irked when Lyles turned his head to stare down his rival just before he took the tape in the 200m final.

Bednarek, a two-time Olympic 200m silver medallist, shoved Lyles in the back over that apparent taunt.

“That’s unsportsmanlike shit, and I don’t deal with that,” said Bednarek, who US team officials will hope has made up with Lyles as they pair up in the 4x100m relay team.

‘To give again’

Zharnel Hughes, who took bronze in the 2023 world 100m final, said “Sprint” proved saying Lyles had a “loose mouth.”

“This guy can talk!” the Briton said. “I knew he talked, but I didn’t know he talked that much. I was like, ‘this guy, man! Shut up.’“

Bednarek’s hackles may have been raised but Tebogo believes Lyles is more “humble” this year and “talks a lot less.”

That could be down to stress.

Lyles, who has had health issues throughout his life ranging from asthma to dyslexia and ADHD, has admitted to hiding away when he suffers from stress.

“I have to do what I love, which is like building Legos, making music, playing video games, you know, being with my friends,” he told GQ Sport.

“I need like four to five days of just that, and then the energy will naturally start coming back and then it’s like, OK, I’m ready to give again.”

His mother, former top college sprinter Keisha Caine Bishop, who brought up Lyles, his brother Josephus and sister Abby on her own, believes her son is making the most of being in the limelight.

She worries, though, about what happens once the new kid on the block arrives and replaces him.

“I was nowhere on his level,” she said in the same interview. “But... I know what it’s like to see yourself on TV, I know what it’s like to see your name in the newspaper constantly, and everybody recognizes your name.

“And then I know what it’s like when all of that goes away.”

Lyles has the chance in Tokyo to kick that moment further down the track.
 


Germany rallies to beat Doncic’s Slovenia 99-91 and set up EuroBasket semifinal with Finland

Germany rallies to beat Doncic’s Slovenia 99-91 and set up EuroBasket semifinal with Finland
Updated 11 September 2025

Germany rallies to beat Doncic’s Slovenia 99-91 and set up EuroBasket semifinal with Finland

Germany rallies to beat Doncic’s Slovenia 99-91 and set up EuroBasket semifinal with Finland
  • Germany guard Andreas Obst’s 3-pointer capped a 12-0 run to put the World Cup champions ahead 77-74 early in the fourth quarter

RIGA, Latvia: Luka Dončić’s 39 points were not enough for Slovenia as it lost 99-91 to Germany in a thrilling EuroBasket quarterfinal on Wednesday.
Orlando Magic guard Franz Wagner scored 23 points and captain Dennis Schröder added 20 points and 7 assists for Germany, which will face Finland in the semifinals on Friday.
Germany guard Andreas Obst’s 3-pointer capped a 12-0 run to put the World Cup champions ahead 77-74 early in the fourth quarter.
Slovenia took the lead 86-85 on a Dončić 3-pointer with 4:12 to go before Schröder sank his only 3-pointer — he missed eight other attempts — to make it 88-86, and Germany closed it out from there.
Dončić was assessed a technical foul early on and had 22 points as Slovenia led 51-45 at halftime. He picked up his fourth foul early in the third quarter yet kept on scoring, although he appeared inhibited at times by the prospect of fouling out with a fifth foul.
The Los Angeles Lakers star — five of 16 from 3-point range — had his fifth game of the tournament with at least 30 points scored. Dončić also had 10 rebounds and seven assists.
Wagner was 13 of 14 from the free-throw line for Germany, seeking its second European Championship title after winning as host in 1993.
Slovenia looked in control until Tristan Da Silva sank a 3-pointer with a halfcourt shot at the third-quarter buzzer, slashing Slovenia’s lead to four points.
The final is on Sunday in Riga, Latvia, which has hosted all the knockout matches.
Finland holds off Georgia
Earlier, the Finns held off a Georgia fightback to win 93-79 and reach the semifinals for the first time.
Mikael Jantunen led Finland with 19 points and Utah Jazz forward Lauri Markkanen contributed 17 points and six rebounds.
“It’s been the same group for a long time. It’s a very tight group, like coming back and playing with your friends,” Jantunen said. “That’s the kind of basketball culture in Finland.”
The Finns also showcased their depth by scoring 44 points from the bench to Georgia’s four.
Finland led by 20 points in the third quarter before Georgia cut the deficit to six with just under eight minutes left in the fourth.
Toronto Raptors forward Sandro Mamukelashvili led Georgia with 22 points.
Coming off an upset of Nikola Jokic and Serbia, Finland surged into an early lead on strong three-point shooting and doubled up Georgia 30-15 early in the second quarter.
Highly-rated 18-year-old forward Miikka Muurinen, who is projected to be a potential NBA first-round pick in 2027, scored 7 points off the bench.
It was the first time in the quarterfinals as an independent nation for Georgia, which knocked out Olympic silver medalist France in the round of 16 and beat defending EuroBasket champion Spain in the group stage.
Greece faces Turkiye in the other semifinal
In Friday’s other semifinal, it’s Greece against Turkiye. Both teams had advanced on Tuesday.
Giannis Antetokounmpo scored 29 points in Greece’s 87-76 win over Lithuania. Alperen Sengun’s triple-double helped unbeaten Turkiye to a 91-77 win over Poland.


Fan detained after racially insulting Kylian Mbappé during Spanish league game

Fan detained after racially insulting Kylian Mbappé during Spanish league game
Updated 10 September 2025

Fan detained after racially insulting Kylian Mbappé during Spanish league game

Fan detained after racially insulting Kylian Mbappé during Spanish league game
  • Police said Wednesday that the fan was taken into custody after being identified
  • He was accused of making monkey gestures and sounds toward Real Madrid star

MADRID: Spanish police have detained a fan accused of racially insulting Kylian Mbappé during a Spanish league game last month.
Police said Wednesday that the fan was taken into custody after being identified during an investigation launched following an official complaint by the Spanish league.
Police said the fan, who was not publicly identified, was accused of making monkey gestures and sounds toward Real Madrid star.
The insults came late in the first half of Madrid’s 3-0 victory at Oviedo on Aug. 24, after Mbappé scored the first goal.
There have been a series of racist insults from fans against Black players in Spain in recent years.
Last week, an Espanyol fan accused of racially insulting Athletic Bilbao forward Iñaki Williams during a Spanish league match five years ago accepted a deal to avoid prison time.
In May, five Valladolid fans who racially insulted Real Madrid forward Vinícius Júnior in 2022 were found guilty in the first ruling in Spain that condemned racist insults in a soccer stadium as a hate crime.
Last year, three Valencia fans were handed eight-month prison sentences after pleading guilty to racially insulting Vinícius in what was the first conviction for racism-related cases — not based on a hate crime — in professional soccer in Spain.


West Ham re-sign free agent Fabianski on one-year deal

West Ham re-sign free agent Fabianski on one-year deal
Updated 10 September 2025

West Ham re-sign free agent Fabianski on one-year deal

West Ham re-sign free agent Fabianski on one-year deal
  • West Ham decided to offer a one-year deal when they had only two senior goalkeepers
  • “The main factor is that he is still a top goalkeeper and a top professional,” Potter said

LONDON: Polish goalkeeper Lukasz Fabianski has rejoined West Ham United on a one-year contract after the 40-year-old left the London side as a free agent in the close season, the Premier League club said on Wednesday.
Fabianski, who made 216 appearances in a seven-year spell with West Ham, was one of many senior players who were released by the club when their contracts expired at the end of the 2024-25 campaign.
However, West Ham decided to offer a one-year deal when they had only two senior goalkeepers in the squad — Mads Hermansen and Alphonse Areola — after Wes Foderingham joined Cyprus side Aris Limassol on a permanent deal on Tuesday.


“Regardless of him being here previously, the main factor is that he is still a top goalkeeper and a top professional, and the perfect choice for the role we needed to fill,” West Ham coach Graham Potter said in a statement.
“It’s a signing that makes perfect sense for everyone. Lukasz knows the club extremely well, is very well respected and popular among everyone here. His personality and character will be a great example, especially to our younger players.
“He is someone who really cares about West Ham United and wants to help us in any way he can. We are very happy to have him back with us.”
West Ham have conceded a league-high eight goals this season with new recruit Hermansen in goal. They sit 16th in the standings ahead of Saturday’s London derby against Tottenham Hotspur.