Sports
Jazz look for revenge vs. Timberwolves
Feb 26, 2025; Salt Lake City, Utah, USA; Utah Jazz guard Jordan Clarkson (00) controls the ball while being guarded by Sacramento Kings guard DeMar DeRozan (10) in the second half at Delta Center. Mandatory Credit: Jamie Sabau-Imagn Images Jordan Clarkson called it “wild,” and his coach referred to it as one of those strange moments in an NBA season.
“There are a couple games usually every season that are just kind of weird,” Jazz coach Will Hardy said. “You can’t quite put your finger on it.”
They were referring to Clarkson’s unusual shooting performance on Wednesday night against the Sacramento Kings: He missed his first 13 shots and finished with only two points.
“My teammates were like, ‘Keep shooting, keep shooting,’ ” Clarkson said. “I was like, ‘Bruh.’ “
Those descriptions could be used for the Jazz’s most recent game against the Minnesota Timberwolves, who come to Salt Lake City on Friday. Utah had a “bruh” outing when the two teams matched up in late January, with the Jazz going up by 15 points early, only to lose by 25 points at home.
“It’s a great win for us, especially on a back-to-back,” Minnesota coach Chris Finch said after that meeting. “Our energy was there, and we executed at a high level. That third quarter was the difference – our defense turned into offense.”
Minnesota doubled up Utah in that pivotal quarter, 44-22.
The weirdness of the night was punctuated when the seemingly loudest cheer of the night inside the Delta Center happened when a seldom-used reserve player from Minnesota subbed in for a brief appearance. This wasn’t just any T-Wolves end-of-the-bench player for Jazz fans. It was Utah legend Joe Ingles, who was a beloved player in the Beehive State for eight seasons (2014-22) before being traded as the team entered rebuild mode three years ago.
Utah fans chanted for him to enter the game – a request graciously fulfilled by Finch, whose team also features former Jazz players Rudy Gobert, Mike Conley and Nickeil Alexander-Walker.
“That’s fire. I mean, he’s a legend,” Clarkson said of Ingles. “All the guys, they come back and feel a lot of love, especially from the home crowd that we’ve got here. We’ve got the best fans, so I didn’t expect anything less. But Joe’s a legend, man, always and forever. He’s engraved in Utah culture and Utah basketball.”
Clarkson was more like himself in that Jan. 30 game, finishing with 16 points on 6-of-13 shooting. Two nights ago, he hit just 1 of 14 field goals while missing all eight 3-point attempts.
“You guys are going to ask about Jordan going 1-for-14,” Hardy said. “I don’t know – people get struck by lightning, too. I’ve never seen that in my life. I don’t think we’ll ever see it again.”
Another wild element in the loss to Sacramento: Jazz center Walker Kessler drained all 10 shots he attempted — though he did miss 2 of 7 free throws — en route to 25 points, 14 rebounds, five assists, two steals and zero turnovers in a sensational 34-minute performance.
Like their January game, the Timberwolves had to fly into Utah during a back-to-back set. Minnesota lost to the Los Angeles Lakers 111-102 on the second leg of their four-game road trip Thursday night.
Terrence Shannon Jr. led the team with 25 points, but Minnesota couldn’t overcome falling behind 33-17 after the first quarter or putting the Lakers on the free-throw line 46 times.
Friday’s game is one of three remaining between the Jazz and Timberwolves.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Team Vitality, Team Spirit to clash in IEM Rio grand final
A backlit keyboard is part of the gear online video game streamer Jordan Woodruff uses in his Gilbert home.
Jordan Woodruff
Team Vitality and Team Spirit advanced to the grand final with semifinal victories Saturday at the $300,000 Intel Extreme Masters Rio event in Brazil.
Vitality blanked FURIA and Spirit did the same to Team Falcons. FURIA and Team Falcons will meet in the third-place match on Sunday before Vitality and Spirit face off in the grand final.
Sixteen Counter-Strike 2 teams have been competing this week for a top prize of $125,000.
The double-elimination group stage began with two groups of eight teams, with all matches best-of-three. The group winners advanced to the playoff semifinals, with the group runners-up entering the quarterfinals as high seeds and the third-place teams entering the quarterfinals as low seeds.
In the single-elimination playoffs, all matches have been best-of-three until Sunday’s best-of-five grand final.
On Saturday, Vitality took out FURIA 13-10 on both Overpass and Ancient. Mathieu “ZywOo” Herbaut of France paced the winning side with a 49-27 kill-death differential. For FURIA, Kaike “KSCERATO” Cerato of Brazil posted a 36-28 K-D differential.
Spirit cruised past Team Falcons 13-7 on Dust II and 13-4 on Mirage, led by Russian Boris “magixx” Vorobiev’s K-D differential of 31-17. Ilya “m0NESY” Osipov of Russia led Falcons with a 28-27 K-D differential.
Play continues Sunday with the final two matches:
–Team Vitality vs. Team Spirit (grand final)
–FURIA vs. Team Falcons (third-place match)
IEM Rio prize pool:
1. $125,000
2. $50,000
3. $30,000
4. $20,000
5-6. $12,500 — MOUZ, Natus Vincere
7-8. $7,000 — G2 Esports, Aurora Gaming
9-12. $5,000 — RED Canids, 3DMAX, B8, HOTU
13-16. $4,000 — Gentle Mates, Team Liquid, Passion UA, Legacy
–Field Level Media
Sports
Team Falcons, BetBoom Team start fast at Wallachia Season 8
Xtreme Gaming, PARIVISION, Team Falcons and BetBoom Team won in sweeps as the PGL Wallachia Season 8 group stage opened on Saturday in Bucharest, Romania.
Other winners, by 2-1 scores, were Team Spirit, Team Liquid Aurora Gaming and HEROIC.
The $1 million Dota 2 tournament began Saturday with the 16-team group stage, which concludes Wednesday. Eight teams advance to the double-elimination playoffs on April 23-26. All matches are best-of-three until the best-of-five grand final.
Xtreme Gaming knocked off Natus Vincere in 44 and 34 minutes, both on green. PARIVISION took down MOUZ in 26 and 43 minutes, both on green.
BetBoom Team swept Virtus.pro in 34 and 40 minutes, both on green. Team Falcons dispatched Team Yandex in 49 minutes on green and 36 minutes on red.
Team Spirit dropped its opening map on green in 33 minutes to Vici Gaming, then rallied with wins in 58 minutes on red and 38 minutes on green.
Team Liquid won in 46 minutes, fell to GamerLegion in 39 minutes, then won the deciding map in 48 minutes — all winning teams on red.
Aurora Gaming took the opener in 41 minutes on red, then South America Rejects drew even with a 24-minute victory on green before Aurora triumphed in 32 minutes on red.
HEROIC started fast in 32 minutes on green, then Tundra Esports won a marathon of 65 minutes on green before HEROIC won in 39 minutes on red.
Sunday’s Round 2 schedule for 1-0 teams:
–Xtreme Gaming vs. Aurora Gaming
–Team Liquid vs. BetBoom Team
–Team Spirit vs. Team Falcons
–PARIVISION vs. HEROIC
Round 2 for 0-1 teams
–Vici Gaming vs. Natus Vincere
–MOUZ vs. GamerLegion
–Team Yandex vs. South America Rejects
–Tundra Esports vs. Virtus.pro
PGL Wallachia Season 8 prize pool:
1. $300,000 — TBD
2. $175,000 — TBD
3. $120,000 — TBD
4. $80,000 — TBDt
5-6. $60,000 — TBD
7-8. $40,000 — TBD
9-11. $20,000 — TBD
12-14. $15,000 — TBD
15-16. $10,000 — TBD
–Field Level Media
Sports
Surge, Gentle Mates unbeaten in CDL Stage 3 Major qualifying
A backlit keyboard is part of the gear online video game streamer Jordan Woodruff uses in his Gilbert home.
Jordan Woodruff
The Paris Gentle Mates and Vancouver Surge are atop the standings at 2-0 after Saturday, the second day of qualifying for the Call of Duty League’s Stage 3.
The Surge outlasted the Carolina Royal Ravens 3-2, while Paris topped G2 Minnesota 3-1.
FaZe Vegas swept Boston Breach 3-0 to open play, and Toronto KOI got the better of the Riyadh Falcons 3-1 in the other match of the day.
The 12 Call of Duty League teams are playing a full qualifying round robin to determine seeding for the third major of the season, to be held May 15-17 as part of the DreamHack Atlanta event.
On Saturday, FaZe Vegas dominated Boston Breach, winning 250-98 on Sake Hardpoint, 6-3 on Fringe Search and Destroy and 3-2 on Scar Overload.
Toronto KOI started strong, winning 250-183 on Den Hardpoint and 6-2 on Plaza Search and Destroy before the Riyadh Falcons notched a 4-3 decision on Exposure Overload. Toronto closed out the match with a 250-179 victory on Sake Hardpoint.
The Paris Gentle Mates opened with a narrow 250-230 win on Sake Hardpoint before G2 Minnesota responded with a 6-4 win on Scar Search and Destroy. Paris edged Minnesota 6-5 on Den Overload before taking Colossus Hardpoint 250-157.
The Vancouver Surge emerged from a back-and-forth battle with the Carolina Royal Ravens. The Surge won on Sake Hardpoint (250-233) and Fringe Search and Destroy (6-1), then the Royal Ravens drew even with victories on Scar Overload (3-2) and Gridlock Hardpoint (250-223). Vancouver secured the victory with a 6-1 triumph on Plaza Search and Destroy.
Sunday’s schedule:
–Toronto KOI vs. Boston Breach
–Riyadh Falcons vs. FaZe Vegas
–OpTic Texas vs. Cloud9 New York
Call of Duty League Stage 3 Major qualifying, with match record and map differential
T1. Paris Gentle Mates, 2-0, 6-2
T1. Vancouver Surge, 2-0, 6-2
3. FaZe Vegas, 1-0, 3-0
T4. Los Angeles Thieves, 1-0, 3-1
T4. Toronto KOI, 1-0, 3-1
T6. Cloud9 New York, 0-0, 0-0
T6. OpTic Texas, 0-0, 0-0
T8. Miami Heretics, 0-1, 1-3
T8. Riyadh Falcons, 0-1, 1-3
T10. Boston Breach, 0-1, 0-3
11. Carolina Royal Ravens, 0-2, 3-6
12. G2 Minnesota, 0-2, 1-6
–Field Level Media
