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Clippers, Suns vying to snap out of ruts

NBA: Minnesota Timberwolves at Phoenix SunsMar 2, 2025; Phoenix, Arizona, USA; Phoenix Suns forward Kevin Durant (35) shoots against the Minnesota Timberwolves during the second half at Footprint Center. Mandatory Credit: Joe Camporeale-Imagn Images

Two squads mired in skids at a bad point in the season meet Tuesday night when the Phoenix Suns host the Los Angeles Clippers.

The underachieving Suns have lost 11 of their last 14 games and sat four games out of the final Western Conference play-in spot entering Monday’s games.

The Clippers have dropped five of their last six games and shared the sixth-best record in the West with the Golden State Warriors entering Monday. The top six finishers earn a guaranteed playoff spot.

Los Angeles is completing a stretch of eight straight road games — the last two were losses to the Los Angeles Lakers — as it takes on perhaps the most disappointing team in the league.

Phoenix employs two big-time stars in Kevin Durant and Devin Booker and can’t seem to turn around their fortunes.

After the Suns fell five games below .500 with Sunday’s 116-98 loss to the visiting Minnesota Timberwolves, Durant was highly upset with his club’s play. He also cited his disappointment that Phoenix committed 22 turnovers that led to 40 Minnesota points.

“We didn’t play up to our standards at all,” Durant said. “We embarrassed the fans and we embarrassed ourselves the way we played. I want us to be better.”

Phoenix looked intent on being a contender when it ran out to an 8-1 start. But the Suns are just 20-32 since their strong opening stretch.

Now the odds are stacked against the Suns to reach the play-in round.

“We’ve got to go on a run, but it’s got to start,” Phoenix coach Mike Budenholzer said. “There’s no doubt that the standings, the circumstances that we’re in, there’s an awareness and we’ve got to do something to change it.”

Durant had 26 points and 10 rebounds against Minnesota but committed four turnovers. Bradley Beal (18 points, four turnovers) and Booker (17 points, six turnovers) also were sloppy with the ball.

The Clippers’ losses to the Lakers were by scores of 106-102 and 108-102, but the margin of the second setback was misleading.

The Clippers never led Sunday and trailed by 21 points late in the third quarter before narrowing the gap.

Clippers coach Tyronn Lue applauded the comeback bid as opposed to calling it a night.

“I liked our fight to come back, didn’t give in,” Lue said. “Being able to play through adversity. Being able to play through missed shots. So, I give our guys credit for that. But it’s a long season. It’s a hard season. Every night is going to be a tough game and we understand that.”

Kawhi Leonard was a bright spot Sunday with season-highs of 33 points and 10 rebounds. His 40 minutes also were a season-best.

But seeing another loss added to the ledger was-n’t pleasing to Leonard.

“Just got to get better,” Leonard said. “It’s not about individual accolades. We got to get a team win. And I think I said we got to limit our mistakes and hopefully the ball falls for us in the future.”

The Clippers also received a blow Sunday when Norman Powell departed with right hamstring soreness in the opening quarter. He has been ruled out against the Suns with what was described as a strain.

Powell had missed the previous five games with a left knee injury. He leads Los Angeles with a 23.8 scoring average.

Phoenix is 3-0 against the Clippers this season with the victories coming by a combined 11 points. One was decided in overtime.

Leonard missed the first two meetings. Booker scored 40 points in the second matchup.

–Field Level Media

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With new CBA, WNBA may be entering its golden era

WNBA: Finals-Las Vegas Aces at Phoenix MercuryOct 10, 2025; Phoenix, Arizona, USA; Las Vegas Aces center A’ja Wilson (22) celebrates with teammates after Game 4 of the 2025 WNBA Finals at Mortgage Matchup Center. Mandatory Credit: Joe Camporeale-Imagn Images

For the WNBA, the last few years featured a sudden growth in mainstream attention thanks to Caitlin Clark and her cohorts — coupled with heightened concerns whether that would translate into better salaries amid contentious collective bargaining negotiations.

That uncertainty is in the past. Warm-up T-shirts insisting owners “Pay Us What You Owe Us” are no longer necessary.

After a new CBA was struck in March, the WNBA may be set up for a golden era of burgeoning dynasties, big-name player rivalries and further expansion.

This new era for the 15-team league — two more than last year — begins with three season openers Friday night and four more Saturday.

“We were working tirelessly on the CBA, and while it probably went months too long, I’m happy that we were able to kind of hold out and get what we wanted,” New York Liberty star and WNBPA vice president Breanna Stewart said. “… I’m excited for the future, for what’s to come.”

That negotiation resulted in the players receiving 20% of the league’s gross revenue, a near-quintupling of the salary cap from $1.5 million to $7 million, supermax salaries hitting seven figures at $1.4 million and other union concerns being met.

Las Vegas Aces star A’ja Wilson cashed in, and deservedly so, following her record fourth Most Valuable Player award. After earning just $200,000 in 2025, Wilson signed a three-year supermax deal that will approach $5 million.

Wilson is the face of the reigning champion Aces as she makes her case as one of the greatest of all time. They’ve collected three WNBA titles during Becky Hammon’s four years in charge, and another ring would make Las Vegas just the third franchise to win four.

The Aces managed to retain Wilson and guards Chelsea Gray, Jackie Young and Jewell Loyd.

“The competition’s always going to be at a high, and when it comes to our core four, we understand that,” Wilson said. “So we don’t really let our guards down a lot, because we know what’s at stake for us.”

The New York Liberty, who knocked out the Aces en route to the 2024 title, still rate as their likeliest rival to the throne. They gave new multi-year deals to Stewart, Jonquel Jones and Sabrina Ionescu, but did not retain veteran guard Natasha Cloud (who signed Monday with Chicago). Ionescu suffered a foot injury during the preseason that will cause her to miss two weeks.

The Liberty’s biggest offseason move came shortly after their first-round playoff exit in September. New York dismissed accomplished head coach Sandy Brondello and hired Chris DeMarco, a former NBA assistant with zero WNBA experience.

Those around the league appear to like what the Atlanta Dream have done to vie for their first title. In a survey of WNBA general managers, Atlanta ranked a close third behind Las Vegas and New York on the list of teams most likely to win the title.

Adding to All-Star Allisha Gray and former No. 1 pick Rhyne Howard, the Dream made the trade of the offseason when they acquired All-Star center Angel Reese from the Sky. Reese’s two-year stay in Chicago ended unceremoniously; after the team suspended her a half-game for “statements detrimental to the team” for which she’d apologized, she sat out the remaining two games of 2025 citing back issues.

“How could you not be happy here?” Reese told ESPN about Atlanta. “It just feels great. I always wanted to come to Atlanta. When you think of championship culture, playing next to these players, the coach (Karl Smesko), it just made sense.”

As for Reese’s college-turned-WNBA rival, Clark is coming off an injury-tarnished second season with the Indiana Fever that saw her play just 13 games and shoot 27.9% from the 3-point arc.

Clark is ready for her return, and Fever coach Stephanie White plans for some schematic tweaks to give Indiana the best chance to shine.

“The way that people and teams play Caitlin is different than they play everyone else. It’s the nature of her skillset, of what she brings to the table. And it’s really the ultimate compliment,” White said.

“In order to alleviate how hard she has to work on every single possession, it’s important to get her off the ball sometimes. When you think about what are the ways you can rest while on the floor, that’s one way.”

WELCOME, PORTLAND AND TORONTO

The league expanded for the second straight season, now at 15 teams with the additions of the Portland Fire and Toronto Tempo.

When the Liberty dismissed Brondello, the Tempo snapped her up to be their inaugural head coach. Toronto also has the more intriguing roster of the expansion teams, anchored by veteran scorer Marina Mabrey and Canadian Kia Nurse.

Brondello, who hails from Australia, recognizes the Tempo are making history as Canada’s first WNBA franchise.

“(Players are) embracing everything about Toronto and obviously having new teammates and what we’re trying to build here, it shows the professionalism of all these players,” Brondello said. “It’s a very competitive training camp, just like every other training camp that I’ve had, so it doesn’t feel like an expansion team for me.”

ROOKIE CLASS

The Dallas Wings held the first overall pick for the second straight draft — and for the second straight draft, they used it on a national player of the year from collegiate power UConn.

Azzi Fudd joins the fold after averaging 17.3 points per game and shooting 44.7% on 3-point attempts at UConn last winter. She joins veteran Arike Ogunbowale and 2025 top pick Paige Bueckers.

Bueckers closed the door on questions about her personal relationship with Fudd — they publicized last July that they are dating — after the Wings made national news recently by shutting down a reporter’s question to Fudd about playing with Bueckers again.

“Me and Azzi have always been the utmost professionals,” Bueckers said. “We’ve always conducted ourselves as such. And we’ve never let anything that happens off the court carry onto the court.”

No. 2 overall pick Olivia Miles should make an immediate impact for the highly touted Minnesota Lynx, who only picked that high thanks to a prior trade with Chicago. Playoff contenders the past two years, the Lynx are hoping MVP runner-up Napheesa Collier can return in June from offseason surgery on both ankles.

–Adam Zielonka, Field Level Media

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Bryan Woo handcuffs Braves as Mariners take series

MLB: Atlanta Braves at Seattle MarinersMay 6, 2026; Seattle, Washington, USA; Seattle Mariners starting pitcher Bryan Woo (22) delivers in the second inning against the Atlanta Braves at T-Mobile Park. Mandatory Credit: Kevin Ng-Imagn Images

Bryan Woo allowed just one hit over six scoreless innings as the Seattle Mariners defeated the visiting Atlanta Braves 3-1 Wednesday afternoon.

Julio Rodriguez hit a solo home run for the Mariners.

The Braves, who have an MLB-leading 26-12 record, suffered their first series loss of the season by dropping two of three games at T-Mobile Park.

The only hit Woo (2-2) gave up was a two-out single to right by Mauricio Dubon in the fourth inning. The right-hander walked two and matched his season-high with nine strikeouts set in his opening start March 28 against Cleveland.

With Mariners closer Andres Munoz having worked the previous two nights, offseason acquisition Jose A. Ferrer was called on to convert the save. The lefty worked a 1-2-3 ninth for his second save of the season.

The Mariners took the lead in the bottom of the third. Jhonny Pereda lined a leadoff single to left and Leo Rivas, the No. 9 batter in the order, doubled to left off Braves starter Martin Perez (2-2). J.P. Crawford drew a walk to load the bases with no outs before Cal Raleigh grounded into a 6-4-3 double play that scored Pereda.

Rodriguez made it 2-0 with one out in the sixth, hammering a 3-1 changeup from Perez 436 feet to left-center field.

The Braves finally got on the scoreboard in the eighth against reliever Eduard Bazardo. Mike Yastrzemski and Sean Murphy opened the inning with line-drive singles to center to put runners on the corners. Yastrzemski scored on pinch-hitter Dominic Smith’s sacrifice fly to center. Bazardo picked off pinch-runner Jorge Mateo — a call reversed thanks to a successful video challenge by the Mariners — and struck out Ozzie Albies to end the frame.

The Mariners tacked on an insurance run in the bottom of the inning. With one out, Josh Naylor lined a single to center and stole second. Cole Young’s two-out double to right made it 3-1.

Perez went 5 2/3 innings and gave up two runs on five hits. The lefty walked one and fanned five.

Braves shortstop Jim Jarvis made his major league debut, going 0 for 2 with a strikeout.

–Field Level Media

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Angels rout White Sox for rare consecutive wins

MLB: Chicago White Sox at Los Angeles AngelsMay 6, 2026; Anaheim, California, USA; Los Angeles Angels catcher Travis D’Arnaud (25) hits a three-run home run during the second inning against the Chicago White Sox at Angel Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Kiyoshi Mio-Imagn Images

Travis d’Arnaud hit a three-run home run to highlight a five-run second inning and Walbert Urena allowed one run on two hits over six innings to pick up his first major league win as the Los Angeles Angels defeated the Chicago White Sox 8-2 in the rubber game of their three-game series on Wednesday afternoon in Anaheim, Calif.

It marked the first time since April 16-17 that Los Angeles has won back-to-back games. It also was just the third series win of the season and the first at home since April 3-5 against the Seattle Mariners.

Zach Neto tripled, scored two runs and had two RBIs, Bryce Teodosio doubled and had two hits, two stolen bases and two runs scored, and Jorge Soler reached base four times with a single, two walks and hit by a pitch and had an RBI for Los Angeles. Urena (1-3) struck out five and walked three.

Colson Montgomery doubled and scored a run and Chase Meidroth had two hits and a walk and scored a run for Chicago. Noah Schultz (2-2) suffered the loss in his fifth major league start, allowing seven runs on seven hits over 3 2/3 innings. He walked four and struck out three.

Chicago took a 1-0 lead in the second inning when Montgomery led off with a double that one-hopped the wall in left-center and scored on a bloop single by Meidroth.

Los Angeles answered with five runs in the bottom half of the inning. Soler and Oswald Peraza both singled and d’Arnaud delivered his first home run of the season, a 396-foot drive to left. Teodosio followed with a bloop double to right and scored when Neto tripled into the right field corner. Neto then scored when Meidroth lost Mike Trout’s high popup in the sun.

The Angels extended the lead to 7-1 in the fourth when Soler and Jo Adell were hit on back-to-back pitches with the bases loaded by reliever Osvaldo Bido.

The White Sox cut it to 7-2 in the seventh when Sam Antonacci also was hit by a pitch with the bases loaded by reliever Drew Pomeranz.

Los Angeles added an insurance run in the eighth on a sacrifice fly by Neto, driving in Nolan Schanuel, who had singled.

–Field Level Media

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