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Lakers realize they’ve got to do some quick work after Timberwolves’ blowout win in series opener

Lakers realize they’ve got to do some quick work after Timberwolves’ blowout win in series opener
When Luka Doncic scored 16 points in the first quarter of his playoff debut with his new team, the Los Angeles Lakers’ downtown arena crackled with excitement. (Mayne Kamin-Oncea-Imagn Images)
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Updated 20 April 2025

Lakers realize they’ve got to do some quick work after Timberwolves’ blowout win in series opener

Lakers realize they’ve got to do some quick work after Timberwolves’ blowout win in series opener
  • When Luka Doncic scored 16 points in the first quarter of his playoff debut with his new team, the Los Angeles Lakers’ downtown arena crackled with excitement
  • Doncic scored 37 points and eight rebounds, but it wasn’t nearly enough to counter the Wolves’ balanced scoring in their 117-95 victory

LOS ANGELES: When Luka Doncic scored 16 points in the first quarter of his playoff debut with his new team, the Los Angeles Lakers’ downtown arena crackled with excitement from fans probably imagining dream scenarios for their team and its new superstar this spring.
The Timberwolves made sure that dream got ugly quite quickly in Game 1. They also left the Lakers looking for ways to help Doncic before Minnesota runs away with this first-round series.
Doncic scored 37 points and eight rebounds, but it wasn’t nearly enough to counter the Wolves’ balanced scoring in their 117-95 victory Saturday night.
After an impressive start by their Slovenian superstar, the Lakers were comprehensively embarrassed during their first postseason Game 1 in front of a full home arena since 2012. Los Angeles didn’t demonstrate the toughness necessary to hang with the physical, veteran Wolves on defense — and only Doncic produced an impressive game on offense.
The combination led to a 27-point deficit in the second half and a laugher of a victory for the Wolves, who immediately seized homecourt advantage in the series after finishing just one win behind the Lakers in the regular season.
“They’re a great opponent,” JJ Redick said after losing his playoff coaching debut. “They’re one of the best teams in basketball. It’s not to say our guys weren’t ready to withstand playoff-level basketball. We were mentally ready, and I thought our spirit was right. ... I’m not sure physically we were ready, if that makes sense. When they start playing with a lot of thrust and physicality, we really just couldn’t respond to that.”
Minnesota’s superior physicality was obvious for long stretches, even with Rudy Gobert playing only 24 minutes. But the Wolves took control and kept it largely because they hit 21 3-pointers on only 42 attempts.
The Lakers lack a dominant big man after trading Anthony Davis, and Jaden McDaniels took advantage of that while scoring 25 points. But that doesn’t explain the Lakers’ poor effort on the perimeter, where they have enough athletes to guard most teams competently when they make the effort.
“I think it was physical, (and) they were hitting a lot of 3s,” Doncic said. “We have to limit their 3s, especially their lasers. We weren’t physical. They were running. They were getting anything they want, and we have to be better.”
Doncic knew that applied to him personally on the offensive end despite his gaudy point total: The gifted passer had just one assist, his lowest total since Game 1 of last season’s NBA Finals.
LeBron James also got off to an unimpressive start to his 18th NBA postseason, scoring 19 points and going 1 for 5 on 3-point attempts while producing only three assists and five rebounds in 36 minutes.
The 40-year-old James can’t be shaken by one loss, and he focused on clear areas for improvement in Game 2 on Tuesday. He particularly lamented the Lakers’ transition defense, which allowed 25 fast-break points.
“Throughout the whole season we did a great job of not allowing teams to get fast break point after fast break point,” James said. “We already know offensively how dangerous they are, so in giving teams an opportunity to get those easy points, it’s gonna be hard to make that up.”
The Lakers’ crowd stayed in the game throughout the night, but the huge second-half deficit obviously dampened the excitement. Minnesota star Anthony Edwards wasn’t exactly complimentary about that crowd after the Wolves cruised to victory, either
“An atmosphere like this, it’s easy for me, man,” Edwards said. “I’ve played in Denver, man. Denver is a tough place to play on the road. So I mean, it was nothing.”


FIBA Asia Cup 2025 kicks off in Jeddah on Tuesday

FIBA Asia Cup 2025 kicks off in Jeddah on Tuesday
Updated 36 sec ago

FIBA Asia Cup 2025 kicks off in Jeddah on Tuesday

FIBA Asia Cup 2025 kicks off in Jeddah on Tuesday

JEDDAH: Jeddah is gearing up to host the FIBA Asia Cup 2025 tournament from Aug. 5-17, featuring the best teams from across Asia and Oceania.

Sixteen teams will compete in the 31st event. Group A includes Australia, Lebanon, Qatar and South Korea. Group B includes Guam, Iran, Japan and Syria. Group C includes China, India, Jordan and Ƶ. Group D includes Iraq, New Zealand, the Philippines and Taiwan.

The FIBA Asia Cup tournament returns to Ƶ after it was held in Riyadh 1997 and will take place at King Abdullah Sports City Hall in Jeddah, which has a capacity of more than 15,000 seats.

The Saudi Basketball Federation announced on Sunday the official roster of the national team that will participate in the FIBA Asia Cup Ƶ 2025.

The squad will include 12 players. These are: Marzouq Almuwalad, Mohammed Almarawani, Muhammad Ali, Mathna Almarawani, Muhammed Alsaqer, Fahad Bilal, Khalid Abdelqader, Mohammed Alsuwailem, Ali Shubayli, Manaf Alsalem, Thamer Mohammed and Musab Qadi.

In preparation for the tournament, the Saudi national team began its preparations and camp at the end of last June in Jeddah, then moved to Istanbul to play several friendly matches against the national teams of Algeria (two matches), Kuwait, Tunisia and Iraq, where the team achieved victory against the national teams of Kuwait and Iraq.

Later, the Saudi national team completed its preparations in Doha by playing in the Lusail International Friendly Championship, where they faced the national teams of Qatar, Iraq and Japan. They had a mixed Lusail Cup — a confidence-boosting win over Iraq (91-76) but also losses to Qatar and Japan.


West Indies hold their nerves to beat Pakistan in T20 thriller

West Indies hold their nerves to beat Pakistan in T20 thriller
Updated 03 August 2025

West Indies hold their nerves to beat Pakistan in T20 thriller

West Indies hold their nerves to beat Pakistan in T20 thriller
  • Jason Holder takes four wickets, smashes boundary off final ball to hand West Indies win
  • It is the first T20 victory for West Indies in seven matches after they lost 5-0 to Australia 

LAUDERHILL, Florida: Jason Holder took four wickets and then smashed a boundary off the final ball of the game to lift West Indies to a thrilling two-wicket victory over Pakistan on Saturday and level the three-match Twenty20 cricket international series.

The veteran allrounder bowled an inspired spell to take 4-19 off four overs, as Pakistan struggled to 133 for nine after it won the toss and batted in Florida.

The West Indies reply also stumbled as Pakistan’s spinners kept scoring difficult but late cameos by Gudakesh Motie and Romario Shepherd kept West Indies just about in the contest before Holder’s heroics off Pakistan talisman Shahid Shah Afridi’s final delivery clinched it.

It is the first T20 victory for West Indies in seven matches, a span that includes a heavy 5-0 series defeat to Australia, on top of a test series sweep last month.

“Been a tough couple of weeks for us,” captain Shai Hope said. “We always try to get better, the guys have put in a lot of hard work.

“Hopefully today is the turnaround we are looking for.”

Earlier, Hasan Nawaz’s 40 from 23 balls and captain Salman Agha’s 38 from 33 deliveries led Pakistan from a precarious 53-4 in the 10th over, but 133 looked a vulnerable target at the innings break.

Fresh from taking three wickets in Pakistan’s 14-run win in the opening game at the same venue on Thursday, Mohammad Nawaz took another three Saturday, returning 3-14 from his four overs.

Like Thursday’s game, West Indies found scoring more than five-an-over difficult on the spin-friendly pitch and lost regular wickets.

When Roston Chase was teased into a big shot by Saim Ayub (2-20), West Indies had sunk to 70-5 in the 14th over and looking at a steep mountain to climb.

West Indies rally Motie got the innings moving with his quickfire 28 from 20 balls before Shepherd chipped in with 15 from 11 balls, including taking 10 runs off Hasan Ali in the second-to-last over to give West Indies a glimpse.

Needing eight runs from the final over, Afridi (1-31) removed Shepherd off the second ball, with Holder and new batter Shamar Joseph only able to score singles off the next three balls.

Afridi then bowled a wide to leave West Indies needing three runs from the final ball. Holder (16 from 10 balls) then found the gap at backward square to score the boundary they needed and end their six T20 match losing streak.

“We’ve had a fair bit of criticism which is warranted,” player-of-the-match Holder said. “We haven’t done justice to our potential.

“We can be a lot better, consistency has definitely plagued us.”

The third T20 will be held in Lauderhill on Sunday before an ODI series in the Caribbean.


Dubai, Abu Dhabi to host T20 Asia Cup matches

Dubai, Abu Dhabi to host T20 Asia Cup matches
Updated 03 August 2025

Dubai, Abu Dhabi to host T20 Asia Cup matches

Dubai, Abu Dhabi to host T20 Asia Cup matches
  • Arch-rivals India and Pakistan to meet in Dubai on September 14 for Asia Cup clash 
  • Group A includes Asia Cup defending champions India, Pakistan, UAE and Oman

Dubai and Abu Dhabi will be the host cities for the men’s Twenty20 Asia Cup, the Asian Cricket Council (ACC) said, with arch-rivals India and Pakistan to meet in Dubai on September 14.

The tournament in the United Arab Emirates, scheduled to run from September 9 to 28, will feature eight teams — two more than the last edition — with 11 matches in Dubai and eight in Abu Dhabi.

Abu Dhabi will host the opener between Afghanistan and Hong Kong, while the final will be held in Dubai.

“Hosting it in the UAE allows us to bring the excitement to one of the most vibrant cricketing hubs in the world,” ACC President Mohsin Naqvi said in a media release on Saturday.

“Dubai and Abu Dhabi are well equipped to deliver a seamless and world class experience for players, fans, and broadcasters alike.”

Group A includes defending champions India, Pakistan, UAE and Oman, while Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Afghanistan and Hong Kong are in Group B. 
 


Lionel Messi’s Leagues Cup injury confirmed as ‘hamstring discomfort’

Lionel Messi’s Leagues Cup injury confirmed as ‘hamstring discomfort’
Updated 03 August 2025

Lionel Messi’s Leagues Cup injury confirmed as ‘hamstring discomfort’

Lionel Messi’s Leagues Cup injury confirmed as ‘hamstring discomfort’
  • The 38-year-old Messi’s exit brings a halt to an exceptional run of clean health
  • Messi, an eight-time Ballon d’Or winner, has not scored in the Leagues Cup

Lionel Messi exited Saturday night’s Leagues Cup match against visiting Necaxa in the 11th minute due to a right leg injury. After Inter Miami completed its 2-2 draw, manager Javier Mascherano declared Messi felt “hamstring discomfort.”

The 38-year-old Messi’s exit brings a halt to an exceptional run of clean health, the longest since he joined Miami in July 2023.

He had played in every minute of 16 consecutive matches for Miami between MLS regular season and FIFA Club World Cup play before his failure to appear in the 2025 MLS All-Star Game resulted in a one-match suspension against FC Cincinnati a week ago.

He returned Wednesday night for Miami’s Leagues Cup opener against Atlas and provided two assists – one leading to the game-winner late – in a 2-1 victory.

Neither team scored prior to Messi’s exit Saturday, though Miami’s Telasco Segovia scored shortly thereafter to put Miami in front. Necaxa took a 2-1 lead with the Herons reduced to 10 men when Marcelo Weigandt was sent off for denying an obvious goal-scoring opportunity, but Inter Miami rallied for the equalizer in extra time. The Herons then won 5-4 on penalty kicks.

Messi, an eight-time Ballon d’Or winner, has not scored in the Leagues Cup. But in MLS play, he is tied for the league lead with 18 goals.

Messi’s run of consecutive appearances was in stark contrast to his first two MLS seasons, during which he missed significant portions of regular-season play.

After playing all seven matches of Miami’s run to the 2023 Leagues Cup title, minor ailments limited Messi to just six appearances among Miami’s last 12 regular-season games that year.

He also dealt with multiple issues in 2024, the most pronounced being an extended recovery from a torn leg muscle sustained while playing for Argentina during the 2024 Copa America final that July.

He played in only 19 games in his first full MLS season, but he still scored 20 goals and had 16 assists to earn the league’s 2024 MVP award.


McIntosh eases into 400 medley final, Marchand almost misses out

McIntosh eases into 400 medley final, Marchand almost misses out
Updated 03 August 2025

McIntosh eases into 400 medley final, Marchand almost misses out

McIntosh eases into 400 medley final, Marchand almost misses out

Summer McIntosh is on track to finish the world championships with a fourth gold medal after being fastest in the 400 meters individual medley heats while Leon Marchand nearly missed the men’s final on the eighth and final day in Singapore on Sunday.
McIntosh cruised to victory in her heat in four minutes and 35.56 seconds for the final later on Sunday, nearly 12 seconds shy of her world record (4:23.65) from Canadian trials in June.
The biggest cheers might have been for 12-year-old Yu Zidi, though, as the Chinese schoolgirl won her heat to qualify third for the final in 4:36.49, less than a second off the personal best (4:35.53) that clinched the national title in May.
Marchand, who took the 200m IM gold after setting a world record in the semifinals, led halfway through his 400 heat but slowed up almost too much in the breaststroke and freestyle legs as he qualified seventh for the final in the evening session.
While nearly three seconds behind Japanese top seed Tomoyuki Matsushita, Olympic champion and world record holder Marchand will be strongly backed to win his third 400 world title.
With American Carson Foster, the Olympic bronze medallist, pulling out of the heats with an ankle injury, the United States did not qualify a swimmer in the final for the first time in over 50 years of world championships.
New Zealand’s defending champion Lewis Clareburt also bombed out of the heats.
The US qualified fastest for the men’s 4x100 medley relay final with Jack Alexy swimming the anchor leg for the Paris Olympic silver medallists.
But Olympic champions China crashed out as the ninth quickest nation along with 11th-ranked Australia.
The US women also qualified fastest in the medley relay in 3:54.49, a second clear of second-ranked Australia, with Germany third fastest.
Eight gold medals will be contested in a packed program in the evening session, with German iron man Florian Wellbrock gunning for the men’s 1,500 freestyle title to boost his bumper haul after sweeping the open water events.
Lithuanian world record holder Ruta Meilutyte will bid for a fourth successive women’s 50 breaststroke world title since returning to the pool from a two-year ban for anti-doping rule violations in 2021.