Connect with us

Sports

Clippers working Kawhi Leonard back into fold, visit Hornets

NBA: Los Angeles Clippers at San Antonio SpursJan 29, 2025; San Antonio, Texas, USA; LA Clippers forward Kawhi Leonard (2) dribbles in front of San Antonio Spurs forward Harrison Barnes (40) in the first half at Frost Bank Center. Mandatory Credit: Daniel Dunn-Imagn Images

The Los Angeles Clippers and Charlotte Hornets are in adjustment mode, but right now things seem to be working better for the Clippers.

When the teams meet Friday night in Charlotte, Los Angeles should have forward Kawhi Leonard for his 10th game of the season, while the Hornets will have to make do without leading scorer LaMelo Ball.

The Clippers won 128-116 against the host San Antonio Spurs on Wednesday night. They’re 3-1 in their past four games and 7-3 in their last 10.

The offense flowed through the starting unit in the San Antonio game, with four players eclipsing the 20-point mark. That included 27 points apiece from Leonard and Norman Powell, who secured his 19th game with at least 25 points. Powell has posted 20 or more points in 11 of the last 12 games.

The Clippers continue to work Leonard back into the flow. Coming off a late beginning to his season, he has a restriction of 28 minutes, so coach Tyronn Lue said part of the plan has been to save some of his availability for late in games.

“It has been a little difficult,” Lue said. “We just got to figure it. Just continuing to keep building until guys get comfortable. … We’ve just got to stay with it. We’re trying to get Kawhi back as fast as we can.”

James Harden committed six turnovers Wednesday, all in the first half. Lue said the Clippers finally adjusted and did better dealing with full-court pressure in the second half.

But Harden has been charged with six turnovers in three of the past four games.

Charlotte has lost four of its last five games after Wednesday’s 104-83 defeat to the Brooklyn Nets. That was the Hornets’ lowest-scoring game of the season despite Miles Bridges providing 23 points.

Ball left Monday’s game against the Los Angeles Lakers with an ankle sprain and sat out Wednesday. The Hornets announced that he will be re-evaluated in one week, which seemed like positive news regarding the oft-ailing standout.

“You never know what could come from some of the evaluation, it could be a longer timetable,” Charlotte coach Charles Lee said. “And so to hear a week, I think that is a good thing to hear. I’m glad to hear that’s the best news of a bad case.”

The Hornets still have to sort out how they’re going to compensate from Ball’s absence along with a season-ending injury to swingman Brandon Miller.

Charlotte is counting more heavily on Bridges, who’s averaging 22.1 points per game across his last nine outings.

The Hornets also have been without center Mark Williams in recent games. They’ve received a good lift from Moussa Diabate on the boards.

“I’m just trying to play hard and give everything I have,” Diabate said.

It’s a return to Charlotte for Clippers forward Nic Batum, who spent five seasons with the Hornets from 2015-20. He’s averaging a career-low 3.3 points per game, mostly as a reserve. His 12 points Wednesday night matched his season-high total.

This was supposed to be the second meeting of the season between the teams. But a Jan. 11 matchup was postponed because of the wildfires in the Los Angeles area. It will be made up March 16.

The Hornets are 1-3 so far on a nine-game homestand.

–Field Level Media

source

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Sports

Gavin Williams fans 11 in gem as Guardians stifle O's

MLB: Baltimore Orioles at Cleveland GuardiansApr 18, 2026; Cleveland, Ohio, USA; Cleveland Guardians starting pitcher Gavin Williams (32) throws a pitch during the first inning against the Baltimore Orioles at Progressive Field. Mandatory Credit: Ken Blaze-Imagn Images

Brayan Rocchio hit a three-run homer and Gavin Williams pitched seven strong innings to lead the Cleveland Guardians to a 4-2 victory over the visiting Baltimore Orioles on Saturday.

Bo Naylor also homered for the Guardians, who won for just the second time in the past five games. Cleveland had just three hits.

Williams (3-1) struck out 11 and allowed one run, three hits and one walk. It marked the second time this season and sixth time overall that he has struck out 10 or more in a game.

Cade Smith fanned the side in the ninth for his fifth save.

Leody Taveras and Gunnar Henderson (two hits) hit solo homers for Baltimore, which had just four hits while losing for the fourth time in the past five games.

Dean Kremer (0-1) pitched six innings for the Orioles and gave up three runs and two hits. He struck out seven and walked two.

Baltimore’s Pete Alonso and Colin Cowser struck out in all four at-bats. Dylan Beavers fanned three times as 16 Orioles went down on strikes.

Taveras came up with one out in the fourth and drilled a 1-0 curveball from Williams over the fence to right for the game’s first run.

Meanwhile, Kremer tossed 4 1/3 no-hit innings and his walk to Rhys Hoskins was followed by Daniel Schneemann’s line single to right. After Naylor fanned, Rocchio jumped on a 2-2 fastball from Kremer and deposited the ball over the fence in right to give the Guardians a 3-1 lead.

Williams picked up where he left off after the Taveras homer by retiring the final 11 batters he faced.

Hunter Gaddis replaced Williams and Henderson touched him up for a one-out solo shot to right in the eighth.

But Naylor got the run back leading off the bottom of the inning when he launched a 1-1 changeup from Albert Suarez into the bleachers in right.

Smith fanned Beavers, Cowser and Taveras while closing it out as Cleveland gained a 2-1 edge in a series that concludes Sunday.

–Field Level Media

source

Continue Reading

Sports

Tyler Reddick rules AdventHealth 400 qualifying, collects another pole

NASCAR: AdventHealth 400May 11, 2025; Kansas City, Kansas, USA; NASCAR Cup Series driver Tyler Reddick (45) races during the AdventHealth 400 at Kansas Speedway. Mandatory Credit: Scott Sewell-Imagn Images

KANSAS CITY, Kan. — A fourth victory from the pole position would suit Tyler Reddick just fine after the driver of the No. 45 23XI Racing Toyota prevailed in Saturday’s highly competitive qualifying session at Kansas Speedway.

Reddick toured the 1.5-mile speedway in 29.142 seconds (185.300 mph) to claim his third pole of the season, his second at Kansas and the 14th of his career.

In doing so, Reddick edged his car owner, Denny Hamlin (185.179 mph), by 0.019 seconds for the top starting spot in Sunday’s AdventHealth 400, the ninth NASCAR Cup Series race of the year.

The pole was the fifth in the last six Kansas races for Toyota drivers.

The 2026 season already has been a remarkable one for Reddick, who won the first three races and added a fourth victory March 22 at Darlington Raceway. Reddick’s last three wins have come from the pole position: at EchoPark Speedway near Atlanta (starting on metrics after a qualifying rainout), Circuit of the Americas in Austin, Texas, and at Darlington.

Should Reddick win on Sunday, he would become the fourth driver in Cup Series history –and the first since Dale Earnhardt in 1987 — to win five of the first nine events of a season. Reddick tops the series standings with a 62-point edge over second-place Ryan Blaney.

“We had a lot of good handling in our car for Atlanta,” Reddick said of his and his team’s ability to convert qualifying speed into race wins. “COTA, obviously I felt like the 12 (Blaney) and Shane (van Gisbergen) were really strong. I think just good handling, handling that you can trust, handling that stays with you in the long run (really helps). So, Darlington, same thing.

“Here, the speeds were a bit higher, and I didn’t know if we’d be able to get the pole, but it was really nice to see that the handling that we have, the short-run speed that we have, appears to be all there today.”

Bristol winner Ty Gibbs and defending series champion Kyle Larson posted identical times (29.192 seconds for 184.982 mph) and will start third and fourth, respectively, with Gibbs getting the nod on owner points. Larson is the two-time defending winner of the spring race at Kansas.

Chase Briscoe qualified fifth at 184.938 mph as Toyotas claimed four of the top five starting positions. Carson Hocevar was sixth, followed by Chris Buescher, Daniel Suarez, Blaney and Bubba Wallace.

–NASCAR Wire Service

source

Continue Reading

Sports

Experience vs. Youth: Golden Knights take on Mammoth in 1st-round series

NHL: Utah Mammoth at Vegas Golden KnightsMar 19, 2026; Las Vegas, Nevada, USA; Utah Mammoth right wing Dylan Guenther (11) slashes the stick of Vegas Golden Knights defenseman Brayden McNabb (3) during the second period at T-Mobile Arena. Mandatory Credit: Stephen R. Sylvanie-Imagn Images

Following a topsy-turvy season that saw them fire their head coach with just eight games left in the regular-season, the Vegas Golden Knights appear to be peaking at just the right time.

The Golden Knights (39-26-17, 95 points) sprinted to a 10-game point streak down the stretch to claim their fifth Pacific Division title in nine seasons and will host the Utah Mammoth in the first round of the Stanley Cup playoffs beginning Sunday night in Las Vegas.

Vegas didn’t clinch the Pacific Division until it defeated Seattle, 4-1, in its regular-season finale. The Golden Knights, who won the 2023 Stanley Cup under Bruce Cassidy, captured 15 of a possible 16 points (7-0-1) down the stretch under the guidance of John Tortorella, who replaced Cassidy as head coach on March 29.

Before the coaching change, Vegas had won just five times (5-10-2) since the Olympic break and saw a four-point first-place lead disappear, falling to just four points above the Western Conference playoff bubble.

“Kind of a weird year for sure, especially in the Pacific,” defenseman Brayden McNabb said. “A lot of ups and downs. We were on top there for a while, and then we were in third flirting with the wild card. And then we found our game at the right time and were able to win the division. That’s what we wanted to do and we did it.”

Barely. Edmonton, which finished in second place with 93 points, lost four of its last six games (2-2-2), including a 5-1 home loss to the Golden Knights, while Anaheim, which finished third three points behind Vegas with 92 points, lost eight of its final 10 games (2-6-2).

Tortorella, who guided Tampa Bay to the 2004 Stanley Cup title, is credited with rebuilding confidence in a more relaxed locker room that appeared to have tuned out Cassidy.

“All I know is that since I’ve been here, they have played at a level and played as a team, consistently,” Tortorella said.

Utah (43-33-6, 92 points) finished fourth in the rugged Central Division but captured the top Western Conference wild-card spot, the franchise’s first playoff berth since moving from Arizona to Salt Lake City two years ago. Prior to that, the then-Arizona Coyotes last made the playoffs in 2020, losing in five games in the first round to Colorado.

Mammoth defenseman Nate Schmidt was a member of the inaugural “Golden Misfits” Vegas team in 2017-18 that went all the way to the Stanley Cup final before losing in five games to Alex Ovechkin and the Washington Capitals. He believes Utah, which won two of the three regular-season meetings with the Golden Knights, has the potential to do well in its first playoff series.

“I love the idea that our guys are quick, they’re fast, they’re in this time of year for the first time,” Schmidt said. “The youthfulness is going to be something I’m excited to see. When we put pressure on teams and continue to roll over them and roll onto them, get our puck in and kind of let our speed kind of dictate the pace and how we want to play, it makes it really hard to play against us.”

“We did our job getting there, and now it’s on to the next milestone here — getting some wins, getting some experience, and doing what we came here to do,” forward Michael Carcone said.

Tortorella said he’s excited to see how his new team responds to the challenge.

“It’s the most exciting time because everybody’s playing at a different level, and it’s a good test to see how high you can get as a team,” Tortorella said. “Everything is going to be amped up. As each game goes by in the series, it’s going to be harder and harder. So it’s a great challenge for the players.”

–Field Level Media

source

Continue Reading