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Nuggets leaning on experience, Thunder on road prowess in Game 3

NBA: Playoffs-Denver Nuggets at Oklahoma City ThunderMay 7, 2025; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, USA; Denver Nuggets center Nikola Jokic (15) drives to the basket against Oklahoma City Thunder guard Luguentz Dort (5) in the first quarter during game two of the second round for the 2025 NBA Playoffs at Paycom Center. Mandatory Credit: Alonzo Adams-Imagn Images

The Oklahoma City Thunder were stunned by the Denver Nuggets in Game 1 of their Western Conference quarterfinal series. Oklahoma City was stunning in a Game 2 romp.

The Thunder’s 43-point rout Wednesday night evened the series, which shifts to Denver for the next two games, starting with Game 3 Friday night.

Oklahoma City needs to win one of those road games to take back home-court advantage, which shouldn’t be a tough task for a team that went 32-8 away from home during the regular season and won its first two on the road in the playoffs.

To get at least one win, the Thunder need to bring the same energy they had in Game 2 when they led by 24 after the first quarter, scored 87 points in the first half and were up by as much as 49.

“Winning by a hundred or winning by two, it’s still 1-1, and I think that’s very important,” Oklahoma City guard Shai Gilgeous-Alexander said. “Like I said, especially in the series, every game’s going to look different. People are going to make adjustments. It’s going to be a different crowd, a different feel. You’re going to start hot, you’re going to start cold, everything’s going to look different. It’s important to turn the page.”

The Thunder will likely stick with their game plan to contain Nuggets center Nikola Jokic. They were physical with the three-time MVP and frustrated him before he fouled out late in the third quarter. He finished with 17 points, eight rebounds and six turnovers after putting up 42 points and 22 rebounds in Denver’s Game 1 win.

Jokic gave credit to Oklahoma City, saying only one team played the game, while Aaron Gordon came to his teammate’s defense.

“They are fouling Joker first. You know Jok is reactionary and they do get the second guy a lot of the times,” Gordon said. “But they are fouling him throughout the game — point blank. Period. And it’s a thing you can’t call every foul because you would be calling a foul every single play. But they are fouling him. They are a handsy team.”

Jokic wasn’t the only one who struggled. The Nuggets shot just 37.9 percent from the field, committed 21 turnovers and were outrebounded 44-38 after winning that category by 20 on Monday night.

Denver will lean on its championship experience to respond as it has in the past. The Nuggets were routed in Game 3 of the first round but came back to beat the Los Angeles Clippers in Game 4; last year they were down 0-2 to Minnesota before reeling off three straight wins.

Interim coach David Adelman said the players owned their performance after watching the game film on Thursday.

“A lot of guys had thoughts on what they felt (Wednesday) night,” he said. “And that allows you to move on and do things better (Friday).”

There is also concern about Michael Porter Jr.’s health. Though he is not on the injury report for Game 3, Porter has been dealing with a left shoulder sprain suffered in the first round and has struggled with his shot at times. He was on the bench in crunch time during Game 1, and Russell Westbrook has seen his minutes increase.

–Field Level Media

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Surge, Gentle Mates unbeaten in CDL Stage 3 Major qualifying

Syndication: Arizona RepublicA 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

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Cloud9 remains unbeaten in Week 3 opener of LCS Spring

Syndication: Democrat and ChronicleYMCA member Austin Manengu works the keyboard as he plays a game of Fortnite during the unveiling of the new gaming lab at the Maplewood Family YMCA in Rochester Thursday, June 20, 2024. YMCA of Greater Rochester in partnership with Metro Sports & Entertainment Group will open two gaming labs for youth and teens this year.

Cloud9 improved to 3-0 and Sentinels earned their first win to kick off Week 3 of the regular season of the LCS Spring event on Saturday.

Cloud9, one of just two unbeaten teams left, swept Disguised 2-0 as Sentinels came away with a 2-1 win over FlyQuest.

Eight teams will compete in best-of-three matches in the round-robin regular season before advancing to the playoffs of the League of Legends event, which will be contested in best-of-five matches in a double-elimination format. The top two teams will qualify for the Mid-Season Invitational.

Cloud9 didn’t face much interference in its third straight victory, winning both games in 25 minutes over Disguised, which fell to 1-2. Robert “Blaber” Huang and Denmark’s Jesper “Zven” Svenningsen led the victory with very similar kill-death-assist ratios of 12-1-18 and 12-2-18, respectively.

Sentinels won the opener vs. FlyQuest in 30 minutes, lost the second game in 31 minutes and won the deciding third matchup in 39 minutes. Cho “Rahel” Min-seong of South Korea led the victory with a 20-4-13 K-D-A ratio.

Week 3 concludes Sunday with LYON facing Shopify Rebellion and Dignitas versus Team Liquid.

Regular season standings (Win-loss total, map differential)

1. Cloud9, 3-0, 6-2

2. Team Liquid, 2-0, 4-1

3. LYON, 1-1, 3-3

4. Shopify Rebellion, 1-1, 2-2

5. FlyQuest, 1-2, 4-4

6. Sentinels, 1-2, 4-5

7. Disguised, 1-2, 2-5

8. Dignitas, 0-2, 1-4

–Field Level Media

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Yankees out to continue success vs. lefties, sweep Royals

MLB: Kansas City Royals at New York YankeesApr 18, 2026; Bronx, New York, USA; New York Yankees first baseman Ben Rice (22) and center fielder Cody Bellinger (35) celebrate after defeating the Kansas City Royals at Yankee Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Brad Penner-Imagn Images

The New York Yankees struggled in most of their encounters against left-handed pitching until Saturday. Then they dominated Kansas City southpaw Noah Cameron and rolled to their most lopsided victory of the season.

After their best showing at the plate, the Yankees seek a three-game sweep Sunday afternoon when they host the Royals.

The Yankees will face another left-hander in Cole Ragans (0-3, 3.78 ERA) after going 7-for-20 with three homers off Cameron. New York raised its batting average against left-handed pitchers 19 points to .179 after Saturday’s 13-4 win.

Cody Bellinger, who entered Saturday 3-for-17 off lefties, hit a pair of two-run homers and drove in five runs. Bellinger also is 10-for-28 (.357) over his past seven games.

Ben Rice homered for the third straight game for the first time in his career and is 5-for-16 (.313) off lefties after hitting .208 against southpaws last season. Rice will remain in the lineup Sunday along with Paul Goldschmidt while Giancarlo Stanton gets a scheduled day off ahead of Monday’s off-day before the start of a three-game series at Boston.

The Yankees scored their most runs all season after their previous five wins were decided in the final at-bat. Amed Rosario hit a two-run homer, drove in three runs and is hitting .293 off lefties since the start of last season.

“We’re a talented team that can win in many different ways,” Bellinger said. “Obviously these games are more ideal but I like where we’re at.”

Since their 6-5 win over the Yankees in Game 2 of the 2024 ALDS, the Royals are on a 10-game losing streak against New York. Kansas City has lost six straight and nine of 11.

The Royals were blanked until Carter Jensen hit a two-run homer in the seventh and also scored on a two-run double by Michael Massey in the ninth. Bobby Witt Jr. had one of Kansas City’s seven hits and is 5-for-20 on the road trip.

The Royals are coming off their most lopsided loss of the first 21 games after 10 of their previous 11 games were decided by two runs or fewer.

“It looks bad when you get your butt kicked like today, but every game this week has been a really close game,” Kansas City manager Matt Quatraro said. “Guys are running hard, they’re playing hard, they’re preparing hard. It just hasn’t worked out.”

After getting seven sharp innings from Will Warren and not using any high-leverage relievers, the Yankees will send lefty Ryan Weathers (0-2, 4.29 ERA) to the mound.

Weathers, who struggled at times with his fastball command Tuesday in a 7-1 loss to the Los Angeles Angels, makes his first career start against Kansas City. Weathers is allowing a .268 average to opposing hitters and allowed three homers in a span of five pitches on fastballs to Mike Trout, Jo Adell and Jorge Soler.

Weathers also gave up a homer to Oswald Peraza on his changeup but wound up with 10 strikeouts in five-plus innings when he allowed five runs. He also became the first Yankee and 17th pitcher all-time to get at least 10 strikeouts and allow four homers.

In four starts, Ragans (0-3, 3.78) has received four runs from his offense and is coming off his best start this season. Ragans allowed one hit in six scoreless innings in a no-decision during Kansas City’s 2-1 loss at Detroit on Tuesday.

Ragans does not have a decision and a 2.57 ERA in a pair of appearances (one start) against the Yankees.

–Field Level Media

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