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Rutherford says Canucks ‘should be OK’ as GM job opens, duties shift

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VANCOUVER – Authority, like water, flows downward.

In the history of the National Hockey League, a general manager has never fired a president. 

Sometimes an owner may fire both. But since Luigi Aquilini’s family, which owns the Vancouver Canucks, still trusts Jim Rutherford to preside over the entirety of hockey operations, there was an inevitability to Thursday’s dismissal of general manager Patrik Allvin after one of the worst National Hockey League seasons in franchise history.

Widely varying insider reports in recent weeks had the Canucks poised to fire everybody — or nobody. But as the team burned to the ground in mid-winter, the most likely scenario was always that Rutherford, the Hockey Hall-of-Famer, would stay, and Allvin, his hand-picked, first-time GM, would go.

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Head coach Adam Foote? Well, Rutherford said during his enthralling press conference Friday that the next general manager will eventually decide on the coaching staff — and almost everything else in hockey-ops.

Assistant general manager Ryan Johnson, a holdover from previous GM Jim Benning’s regime who impressed Rutherford long before Johnson built the Canucks’ minor-league team into a Calder Cup champion, is the frontrunner to replace Allvin. 

As with the probable dismissal of Allvin, the potential promotion of Johnson has been whispered about for months.

Rutherford told reporters the Canucks did not refuse the Nashville Predators’ permission to interview Johnson for their own vacant GM job. Because they never asked.

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“Somebody made that story up,” he said.

And no, the Canucks won’t grant permission for Johnson to talk to other teams until Rutherford concludes his own GM search.

In the meantime, Rutherford told Allvin, highly respected around the NHL for his scouting and player-development chops, that he is welcome to stay with the Canucks in a lesser capacity.

“I’ll give him a little time to make that decision,” Rutherford said. “It’s very emotional now.”

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Other than the marketing impossibility of bringing back everyone after a 58-point season in which the Canucks won nine of 41 home games for their season-ticket holders, there wasn’t any one reason to fire Allvin.

Even if you aggregated the reasons, listing all of management’s biggest errors over the last four years, it would still be difficult to separate Allvin from Rutherford for blame.

This reality was not lost on Rutherford Friday.

“I think that’s a fair comment,” Rutherford said. “In my position, I do have to make some decisions, but he was in charge of most of the things in hockey, making the trades and deciding who’s getting called up and down, and working with the coach and all those things. (But) I take full responsibility for the season. I head up the hockey department, but I don’t make decisions for other people. And Patrik had the opportunity to make his own decisions.”

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Asked near the end of his 33-minute press conference to grade himself, Rutherford said: “I’m not going to put a letter on it. I’m telling you that I’m disappointed. And, you know, I’m disappointed that I couldn’t have done a better job in some areas and made this work a little bit quicker. But I will say we’ve dealt with some situations over the last couple of years that I did not expect to deal with when I came here, and we’ve worked our way through it. They’re behind us now, and I don’t foresee any of those big issues to deal with going forward. So the team should be OK.”

Interestingly, the 77-year-old president also made it clear he will be less involved in hockey decisions with the next GM. Rutherford mentored and promoted Allvin, 51, when he was managing the Pittsburgh Penguins to a pair of Stanley Cups a decade ago.

And four years ago, shortly after Canucks managing owner Francesco Aquilini showed up on Rutherford’s doorstep in Raleigh, N.C., and convinced him to come out of “retirement,” Rutherford poached Allvin from the Penguins and made him the first Swedish general manager in the NHL.

“He’s a friend of mine,” Rutherford said. “I think Patrik’s a great hockey guy, but we felt it was time to make a change and give somebody else the opportunity to sit in that chair.

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“Quite frankly, I had a lot of sleepless nights, and I thought a lot about this in many different ways. It wasn’t easy, and it took me a long time to get to this point.”

As for the working dynamics Rutherford envisions with his next GM, he said: “I’m available for somebody, to anybody, in the organization to ask me questions, ask me for help. But I want the new GM to make all hockey decisions. Now, he may not make decisions about the practice rink because nobody wants to make that decision… or where training camp is or some of the things that a president would do. But as for hockey… he will make those decisions.”

Candid and unvarnished as always, Rutherford dropped a bunch of news grenades during his press conference.

• On $92.8-million centre Elias Pettersson, who just had his second straight 15-goal season: “It’s the same as anything people do in life; preparation is the key to success. And I don’t believe he’s put enough preparation in at this point to be the player he needs to be. But he’s young enough, he’s capable of doing it, and if he does the things he’s told to do, he has a chance to succeed here. But if he doesn’t, you know, the GM is going to have to make a decision.”

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• Discussing the urgency to trade Quinn Hughes in December, which turned the organization sharply towards a rebuild, Rutherford effectively fed the former captain into a wood-chipper: “Some people think Quinn left here because the team wasn’t any good; he was leaving anyways, OK? The best example I can give you is Matthew Tkachuk. He was in Calgary. They had a good team. He wanted to go back to the U.S. and he went. And this is not going to be the last guy, Quinn Hughes, that decides he’s going to leave. And I think I’m close to him; I really like him. I respect what he did in Vancouver. He put on a good show for a lot of years. But guys work towards free agency, and we should respect the fact that he had that option.”

• Rutherford reiterated how poor the Canucks’ dressing-room culture had been, and praised the new one forming since the team came together after the March 6 trade deadline: “It was really bad. The chemistry and the culture in the Canucks dressing room over the last five weeks is the best it’s been since I’ve been here. This team has a chance to move forward, and let every player enjoy coming to the rink and not have to worry about somebody barking at them in practice or picking on them in the room or whatnot. This group is tightly knit. (There are) good veterans left here, good mentors, very good young character players, we’ve got a number of good young players coming. So this team is going in the right direction.”

Rutherford expressed gratitude to Canucks fans, who seem to have embraced the early stages of the rebuild and kept Rogers Arena full most nights despite the 25-win season.

He said there will be “no shortcuts” on the rebuild.

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Someone else will have to take over the transition Allvin began, and Rutherford may not be around when it is finished.

“Despite the way things look right now… I believe this organization’s in a very good place to move forward,” Rutherford said. “I feel that I haven’t done as good a job as I would have liked to, and I would have wished we were in a stronger place by now. But look, where I’m at in my life now, I can do whatever I want and be very comfortable. And I like this franchise a lot, and I want to do what’s right for them. So if I feel comfortable that when we have a good, strong person in place and maybe even potentially two people over time, I would feel comfortable making a decision to leave.”

It is the Canucks first rebuild this century, coming 15 years after the team’s last run to a Stanley Cup Final.

Even before news of Allvin’s firing came overnight from a report in Sweden, Friday was scheduled for player exits. There were six formal press conferences involving waves of Canuck players, many thousands of words spoken.

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“I think it’s really important to learn from this year,” veteran goalie Kevin Lankinen said. “We can’t just wrap this thing and move on. We have to sit down and learn — older guys, younger guys, doesn’t matter — because these are the kind of experiences that if you turn them the right way, you can bring fuel for not just next year but for your whole career. Because this is obviously something that we don’t want to go through again. 

“You know, the best time to start a change was probably 15 years ago. But the next best time is right now.”

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Duncan Scott powers to impressive medley win in London

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Double Olympic champion Duncan Scott won the men’s 200m individual medley title in style as the Aquatics GB Swimming Championships continued in London.

Scott, 28, has won silver medals in the event at the last two Olympics and showed he remains a class act, winning in a time of 1:56.08 to qualify for this summer’s European Aquatics Championships in Paris.

He saw off Evan Jones in second, while Max Litchfield took bronze.

Scott said: “It was pretty good, I think.

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“In terms of my technique, my strokes and transitions between them felt pretty good, and I’m happy – that’s a good place for me to be at this time of the season.”

The Scottish swimmer won gold in the men’s 4x200m freestyle relay at both Tokyo 2020 and Paris 2024..

Earlier on Friday evening Oliver Morgan won the 50m backstroke and Eva Okaro became champion in the women’s 50m butterfly.

Morgan set a new personal best of 24.36, and Okaro claimed her second title of the week with a PB of 25.95 to break the sub-26-second mark for the first time.

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She said: “I’m really happy with that. The 50m is a bit of a fun one for me, but I really enjoyed that race.

“I wanted to race the event to break up the meet a bit, but I’m also quite good at a splash and dash, so why not!”

British titles are being awarded in 36 medal events across the meet in London this week., external

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Matt Fitzpatrick’s superb round of 63 puts him in Heritage lead

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Former US Open champion Matt Fitzpatrick hit a superb, bogey-free 63 to claim a one-shot lead over Viktor Hovland after a punishing second round at the RBC Heritage in South Carolina.

On a day of sweltering heat and unpredictable wind, the Englishman moved to 14 under par with an impeccable round helped by a stroke of fortune at the par-three 14th.

After pulling his tee shot towards the trees, Fitzpatrick’s ball struck a cart path, ricocheted back on to the green, and was only prevented from trickling into the water by a well-positioned sprinkler head.

He capitalised fully, holing the subsequent 30-foot putt for an improbable birdie.

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“Yeah, it was lucky, there’s no two ways about it,” Fitzpatrick said. “Sometimes you need that in a week, so it’s nice to get, and then even nicer to take advantage of it.”

The 2023 champion followed up with two further birdies in his final three holes to surge ahead of the field.

Norway’s Hovland remains his closest challenger after a stunning birdie at the 17th kept him in the hunt.

“I wouldn’t say I striped it today, but at least I kind of kept the ball in front of me, and that’s what you’re trying to do on this golf course,” Hovland said.

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World number one Scottie Scheffler, playing alongside Fitzpatrick, produced a characteristically disciplined 67. Despite hitting every fairway, the American struggled to convert several birdie opportunities and sits seven shots adrift.

Jordan Spieth was among those to suffer in the tricky conditions, carding three double bogeys in a frustrating 72, while Akshay Bhatia hit 11 birdies in a round of 63 to climb back to -6.

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Surge shine in CDL Stage 3 Major qualifying opener

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ESports: Call of Duty League FinalsJul 21, 2019; Miami Beach, FL, USA; A general view of gaming controllers on display during the Call of Duty League Finals e-sports event at Miami Beach Convention Center. Mandatory Credit: Jasen Vinlove-Imagn Images

The Vancouver Surge recorded the lone sweep as qualifying for the Call of Duty League’s Stage 3 got underway on Friday.

The Surge topped G2 Minnesota 3-0, albeit in three tight maps. In the opening day’s other results, the Paris Gentle Mates downed the Carolina Royal Ravens 3-1, and the Los Angeles Thieves topped the Miami Heretics 3-1.

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 Friday, Vancouver eked past Minnesota 250-249 on Gridlock Hardpoint, 6-4 on Raid Search and Destroy and 7-5 on Scar Overload.

Carolina opened with a 250-138 victory on Gridlock Hardpoint, but Paris responded by capturing Den Search and Destroy 6-3, Den Overload 4-1 and Sake Hardpoint 250-188.

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The Thieves began by claiming Sake Hardpoint 250-137 and Fringe Search and Destroy 6-5. The Heretics extended the match by taking Scar Overload 5-3, but Los Angeles wrapped up the win by prevailing 250-197 on Colossus Hardpoint.

The weekend schedule:

Saturday

–FaZe Vegas vs. Boston Breach

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–Toronto KOI vs. Riyadh Falcons

–Paris Gentle Mates vs. G2 Minnesota

–Vancouver Surge vs. Carolina Royal Ravens

Sunday

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–Toronto KOI vs. Boston Breach

–Riyadh Falcons vs. FaZe Vegas

–OpTic Texas vs. Cloud9 New York

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Call of Duty League Stage 3 Major qualifying, with match record and map differential

1. Vancouver Surge, 1-0, 3-0

T2. Los Angeles Thieves, 1-0, 3-1

T2. Paris Gentle Mates, 1-0, 3-1

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T4. Boston Breach, 0-0, 0-0

T4. Cloud9 New York, 0-0, 0-0

T4. FaZe Vegas, 0-0, 0-0

T4. OpTic Texas, 0-0, 0-0

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T4. Riyadh Falcons, 0-0, 0-0

T4. Toronto KOI, 0-0, 0-0

T10. Carolina Royal Ravens, 0-1, 1-3

T10. Miami Heretics, 0-1, 1-3

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12. G2 Minnesota, 0-1, 0-3

–Field Level Media

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Steve Kerr acknowledges his Warriors future is unclear after loss to Suns

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Steve Kerr has coached the Golden State Warriors for a dozen of the most successful seasons in franchise history. Kerr took the helm in 2014 and four championships, six Finals berths and 600 wins later, he is seriously considering what comes next. After Golden State’s season-ending loss to the Phoenix Suns on Friday, Kerr told reporters that he has not decided whether he will return to coach the Warriors next season, but will do so after taking some time and consulting team management.

“My plan is to take a little time. I don’t know, take a week or two. Eventually, sit down with [owner] Joe [Lacob] and [general manager] Mike [Dunleavy]. We’ve always had a great partnership and collaboration, and just see where they are, and I’ll tell them where I am, and we’ll talk about what’s next for the Warriors, what the plan is this offseason, and we will come to a collaborative decision on what’s next,” Kerr said. 

“I don’t know what’s going to happen. I still love coaching, but I get it. These jobs all have an expiration date. There is a run that happens and when the run ends, sometimes it’s time for new blood and new ideas and all that.”

Kerr signed a two-year, $35 million extension in 2024 that just expired after Friday’s loss. That technically makes him a coaching free agent, able to consider other jobs, but he confirmed that the Warriors are the only team he’d consider coaching next season.

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Earlier this season, Kerr told The Athletic that he “will never leave Steph Curry.” Curry and Draymond Green are the only two players who have been on all 12 of his Warriors teams. Curry is under contract only through next season. Green has a player option for next season that he could pick up to align with Curry or decline to seek a longer-term deal. After Friday’s loss, Green confirmed that he does not plan to retire and would like to be back next season. “I hope I’ve done enough to still be here.”

Several key figures from the Warriors’ dynasty have departed over the course of their run. Executive Jerry West left for the Clippers in 2017 after the first two Warriors titles. Kevin Durant, who joined the team in 2016, left in 2019 for the Brooklyn Nets. General manager Bob Myers stepped down after the 2022-23 season, and team legend Klay Thompson signed with the Dallas Mavericks after the 2023-24 campaign.

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Kerr, Curry and Green are the three remaining pillars of the dynasty, one that Kerr himself acknowledged is “fading.” The Warriors will do everything in their power to extend this run no matter who their coach is, but at some point in the very near future, this era of Golden State’s history will be over. For now, Kerr and Green will mull their futures and make decisions in the weeks and months to come.

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Warriors coach Steve Kerr uncertain about his future: ‘These jobs all have an expiration date’

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PHOENIX — Golden State coach Steve Kerr isn’t sure about his future, saying after the Warriors’ season ended Friday night that he’ll take some time to decompress before gathering with the team’s leadership and figuring out what’s next.

“It might still go on. It may not,” Kerr said after the Warriors lost in Phoenix and were eliminated from the play-in tournament, marking the fourth time in the last seven seasons that Golden State — which has won four NBA titles with Kerr as a coach — has missed the playoffs.

He shared an embrace with Stephen Curry and Draymond Green, the team’s two constants from those title runs, in the final moments of Friday night and appeared to mouth the words “thank you.”

Kerr wouldn’t reveal what he said in that moment.

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“None of your business,” he said, smiling.

The 60-year-old Kerr just finished his 12th season with the Warriors. He’s 604-353 in that span, led Golden State to the NBA Finals in each of his first five seasons — and once since then as well — plus guided USA Basketball to Olympic gold at the Paris Games in 2024.

He said he’ll meet with Warriors owner Joe Lacob and general manager Mike Dunleavy eventually, to chart a path for what’s next. He suggested that might come in a week or two.

“We’ll talk about what’s next for the Warriors, what the plan is this offseason,” Kerr said. “And we will come to a collaborative decision on what’s next. I don’t know what’s going to happen. I still love coaching. But I get it. These jobs all have an expiration date. there’s a run that happens, and when the run ends, sometimes it’s time for new blood and new ideas and all that.

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“And, if that’s the case, then I will be just nothing but grateful for the most amazing opportunity any person could have to coach this franchise, in front of our fans in the Bay and to coach Steph Curry, to coach Dray and the whole group.”

The Warriors were 37-45 this season, dealing with injuries the entire way. They rallied Wednesday from a 13-point fourth-quarter deficit to beat the Los Angeles Clippers and move into Friday’s play-in finale, but fell short against the Suns.

And now, the Warriors wait to see what’s next.

“This was as tough a season as you can have, with the injuries, with all kinds of adversity,” Kerr said. “And they battled, and they battled the entire season. They kept going the other night just to, you know, continue the season, to show that kind of fight. And then tonight, we just didn’t have it. But the competitive desire was there. And I’m proud of the group for finishing the season the right way by continuing to fight and trying to win every game.”

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“We’re Short Of Runs”: Jemimah Rodrigues’ Honest Admission After Loss vs SA In 1st T20I

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Indian batter Jemimah Rodrigues admitted they were short of runs in the opening women’s T20I but said the series presents a valuable opportunity for the batting unit, especially the allrounders, to prepare for the upcoming World Cup. India failed to build sustained momentum and finished with 157 for seven, a total that South Africa chased down comfortably to seal a six-wicket win in the series opener here on Friday. “I feel, starting off in batting, we were around 15-20 runs short. With the kind of start we got, I think Shafali Verma, the way she batted was great,” Rodrigues told reporters.

“Then two wickets falling in two overs, but then Harmanpreet Kaur and I getting that partnership back. I think when we had built that momentum and removed the difficult part of it, when time came to capitalise, we were not able to capitalise.

“And also, the conditions were a little bit tricky in the first innings. There was slight hold on the wicket. But yeah, definitely we were 15 runs short.” Harmanpreet Kaur (47 not out off 33 balls) and Rodrigues (36; 29b) shared a 71-run stand (51b) in the middle overs to steady the innings.

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However, Rodrigues and Richa Ghosh (5) fell in quick succession, denying India a late flourish.

“I know Harman and I could have gone deep.

“Even Richa, little here and there, it was a six. So, sometimes when you come in, in such a position, you need to back yourself. It is like 1 out of those 10 times where it will go for a catch,” Rodrigues said Richa’s dismissal.

“But I know 9 out of 10 times, she will hit it in the stands. So, I think we can definitely work on that because coming to the World Cup, we have batting till the end, a lot of all-rounders.

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“But also, the all-rounders coming later have not got so much match time and experience. So, I think playing here in South Africa is going to be really great for us as a preparation also for the World Cup and for our entire batting order too.” India were also sloppy with the ball, conceding 14 wides as South Africa overhauled the target in 19.1 overs.

Laura Wolvaardt (51 off 39) laid the foundation for the chase.

Annerie Dercksen (44 not out off 34) then powered the hosts home with an authoritative finish.

“Coming in the second innings, I think our bowlers did really well to get it to the last over. Like Shreyanka Patil bowled really well, Shree Charani bowled really well,” Rodrigues said.

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“A little more better execution and I think we are going to come back stronger in the next game.” Rodrigues said the wicket was tricky and stressed the need to capitalise on good starts.

“I felt in the first innings, the ball was gripping a bit. It was not coming as nicely on the bat. I feel Harman and I, the partnership we had was really good. It was just that when the time came for us to capitalise, I got out at the wrong time,” she said.

“Because for set batters, it is easier to bat through and take it deep. So, in the next match, I will come back and take that responsibility again.” Looking ahead, Rodrigues said the team would focus on better execution.

“In the next game, for us as a batting unit, I think in the day, again we know what the conditions will be like. We know that this pitch might have slight turn and slight hold. And in the day time, it is also going to play the same in both the innings.

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“So, that is one positive where it is not much on the toss. And the second thing would be, as a bowling unit, we will work a lot more on our execution and come back stronger.”

(This story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)


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Draymond Green, Devin Booker ejected after hard foul late in Warriors-Suns Play-In game

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The 2026 Play-In Tournament has been something of a greatest hits album for Draymond Green. In Wednesday’s win over the Los Angeles Clippers, Green turned back the clock and delivered one of the better postseason defensive performances we’ve seen in years. He locked down Kawhi Leonard in the fourth quarter and came up with multiple huge steals to help secure a Golden State Warriors victory.

But Friday’s loss to the Phoenix Suns represented the other constant of Green’s career: his battles with the officials. With Golden State trailing by double digits with 1:06 remaining on the clock, Green sent Devin Booker to the line with a tough foul. Green subbed out of the game after the foul, but the two kept talking afterward, because crew chief Scott Foster ejected both with 1:04 on the clock. 

As Green left the court, he egged the crowd on by signaling for more noise.

Green has quite a history of postseason discipline. He was infamously suspended for Game 5 of the 2016 NBA Finals for accumulating too many flagrant foul points over the course of the playoffs. In 2022, he was ejected from Game 1 of Golden State’s second-round series against the Memphis Grizzlies for committing a flagrant-2 foul on Brandon Clarke. In 2023, he was suspended for Game 3 of Golden State’s first-round series against the Sacramento Kings for stomping on the chest of Domantas Sabonis.

Friday’s ejection was the least consequential instance of Green getting punished for his on-court conduct. The game was decided. The season was functionally over for the Warriors, as this was an elimination Play-In game. 

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Yet the league could easily look at this, given his track record, and consider a possible fine for his conduct as he exited the game. Getting ejected is one thing. Making a spectacle of the situation is another. 

The NBA has made it clear that it considers his prior disciplinary history in more serious cases, so it wouldn’t be terribly surprising if Green heard from the league office following his early exit.

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IPL Orange Cap 2026: Shubman Gill dethrones Virat Kohli, takes Orange Cap lead with 251 runs | Cricket News

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IPL 2026: Shubman Gill dethrones Virat Kohli, takes Orange Cap lead with 251 runs
Shubman Gill leads orange cap list (Screngrab/X)

Gujarat Titans captain Shubman Gill tops the Orange Cap chart in IPL 2026 after playing a match-winning knock of 86 runs against Kolkata Knight Riders on Friday in Ahmedabad. Gill now leads with 251 runs in four matches, striking at 154.94 and averaging 62.75. His innings powered his team to chase down 181, as Gujarat Titans registered their third win of the season and moved into the top four of the points table.Meanwhile, Virat Kohli has slipped to second place in the Orange Cap race in IPL 2026, with 228 runs from five matches. The Royal Challengers Bengaluru star has been in sublime form, averaging 57.00 at a strike rate of 158.33, with 25 fours and eight sixes, anchoring the innings while maintaining steady aggression. He is set to play against Delhi Capitals today and could reclaim the top spot in the race.

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What Ryan Cook said after LSG taste another defeat

Close behind is Heinrich Klaasen of Sunrisers Hyderabad, who has accumulated 224 runs. Klaasen has delivered consistent performances, averaging 44.80 at a strike rate of 142.67, playing a key role in the middle order with two half-centuries. At No. 4 is Kohli’s teammate Rajat Patidar with 222 runs. Patidar has been one of the most explosive batters this season, boasting a remarkable strike rate of 213.46. His power-hitting stands out, with 21 sixes, the most among the top five, alongside two fifties.Ishan Kishan sits fifth with 213 runs for SRH, continuing his aggressive approach at the top. With a strike rate of 190.17, he has dominated attacks, smashing 22 fours and 12 sixes, including a highest score of 91. With the tournament heating up, the Orange Cap race remains tightly contested, with each of these batters playing a crucial role for their teams.Here are the top 10 leading run scorers of IPL 2026:

Rank Player Name Team Runs Matches (M) Innings (Inn) Strike Rate (SR) Average (Avg)
1 Shubman Gill GT 251 4 4 154.93 62.75
2 Virat Kohli RCB 228 5 5 158.00 57.00
3 Heinrich Klaasen SRH 224 5 5 143.00 44.80
4 Rajat Patidar RCB 222 5 5 213.00 55.50
5 Ishan Kishan SRH 213 5 5 190.00 42.60
6 Prabhsimran Singh PBKS 211 5 4 173.00 70.33
7 Shreyas Iyer PBKS 203 5 4 188.00 67.67
8 Jos Buttler GT 201 5 5 160.00 40.20
9 Vaibhav Sooryavanshi RR 200 5 5 263.00 40.00
10 Angkrish Raghuvanshi KKR 190 6 6 157.00 38.00

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IPL 2026: Will Virat Kohli play as Impact Player again today vs Delhi Capitals? | Cricket News

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IPL 2026: Will Virat Kohli play as Impact Player again today vs Delhi Capitals?
Virat Kohli (Image credit: BCCI/IPL)

NEW DELHI: Defending champions Royal Challengers Bengaluru are set to take on Delhi Capitals in their IPL 2026 encounter at the M. Chinnaswamy Stadium on Saturday. In their last outing against Lucknow Super Giants, star batter Virat Kohli was deployed as an Impact Player.Kohli had sustained an ankle injury during the win over Mumbai Indians and did not take the field in the second innings, but still contributed 49 runs against LSG.That raises the key question – will Kohli once again feature as an Impact Player against Delhi Capitals?RCB have been in impressive form this season, suffering just one defeat, which came against Rajasthan Royals. Apart from that, they have recorded dominant wins over Sunrisers Hyderabad, Chennai Super Kings, Mumbai Indians and Lucknow Super Giants, placing them second on the points table.A victory in this game could see them climb to the top. RCB also have a favourable head-to-head record, having won 20 of the 33 matches played against Delhi Capitals, who have 12 wins, with one match ending without a result.As far as team combination is concerned, Kohli is expected to be fully fit and likely to return as a regular player. However, if the team opts to manage his workload, he could once again be utilised as an Impact Player.Following the win over LSG, Kohli admitted he is still regaining full fitness after a knee issue and a brief illness, though he was satisfied with his batting effort.

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Bombay Sport Exchange: Munaf Patel on Gautam Gambhir, Virat vs Bumrah & Indian bowling.

“Much better than the last game. I’m still not 100%. My knee was a bit sore in the last game. Even health-wise, I’ve been under the weather for four or five days now. So, just getting back up to my best. I started well today, so I was happy with my intensity. Again, would have liked to carry on and finish the game off. Sometimes you have to take the conditions into account as well. The pitch slowed down considerably, and I just wanted to keep going in the same manner. But yeah, in the end, should have probably finished that one off as well,” Kohli had said after the match against LSG.Squads:Royal Challengers Bengaluru: Philip Salt, Virat Kohli, Devdutt Padikkal, Rajat Patidar(c), Jitesh Sharma(wK), Tim David, Romario Shepherd, Krunal Pandya, Bhuvneshwar Kumar, Jacob Duffy, Suyash Sharma, Rasikh Salam Dar, Venkatesh Iyer, Jacob Bethell, Swapnil Singh, Mangesh Yadav, Josh Hazlewood, Jordan Cox, Nuwan Thushara, Vicky Ostwal, Vihaan Malhotra, Abhinandan Singh, Kanishk Chouhan, Satvik Deswal.Delhi Capitals: KL Rahul(wk), Pathum Nissanka, Nitish Rana, Sameer Rizvi, Axar Patel(c), Tristan Stubbs, David Miller, Vipraj Nigam, Lungi Ngidi, Kuldeep Yadav, T Natarajan, Mukesh Kumar, Ashutosh Sharma, Auqib Nabi Dar, Dushmantha Chameera, Karun Nair, Mitchell Starc, Kyle Jamieson, Ajay Jadav Mandal, Prithvi Shaw, Tripurana Vijay, Abishek Porel, Sahil Parakh, Madhav Tiwari

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How Manchester United should line up vs Chelsea in Premier League fixture

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Man Utd play Chelsea in the Premier League on Saturday and this is how our writers think they should line up.

Manchester United take on Chelsea in the Premier League on Saturday evening. United suffered a 2-1 defeat to Leeds at the beginning of the week and must bounce back from that disappointing result.

Leeds are fighting to maintain their Premier League status, but they had a two-goal cushion by the interval. Lisandro Martinez was shown a straight red card in the second half, meaning he will be unavailable.

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Harry Maguire will also be suspended after receiving an additional one-game ban for allegedly acting in an improper manner towards a fourth official against Bournemouth. Michael Carrick was expected to pick Leny Yoro and Ayden Heaven in central defence at Stamford Bridge, but there are injury fears over the former after he was not spotted travelling to London on Friday afternoon. If he is not part of the matchday squad Carrick will be left with just one fit centre-back.

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Chelsea are sixth in the Premier League, they were hammered 3-0 by Manchester City last weekend, and there are already question marks around their inexperienced manager, Liam Rosenior.

This is how our writers think United should line up:

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Steven Railston

Shaw impressed when playing at centre-back for Erik ten Hag, but I would start Mazraoui and Heaven in the centre of the defence to prevent two left-footed players playing together in the heart of the backline.

Mainoo must be recalled to the starting XI if he passes a late fitness test to feature in the capital. The groans from United fans were loud and clear when Ugarte misplaced a few passes against Leeds. The midfielder has started 10 games this season, and he’s won just once (against Newcastle on Boxing Day).

Mbeumo was named on the bench at the beginning of the week and it’s a no-brainer to start him against Chelsea. Amad looked bright in moments against Leeds, but I would bring Mbeumo into the team for him.

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Ross Jackson

A centre-back pairing of Heaven and Yoro seemed nailed on until the latter wasn’t seen travelling with his teammates to London.

If Yoro isn’t fit then Shaw needs to move into the middle alongside Heaven. That would mean Mazraoui starts at left-back, with Dalot coming in at right-back.

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Ugarte has never looked like making the grade at United and his confidence must be shot after another poor display on Monday night, but if Mainoo wasn’t fit enough to even make the squad against Leeds then it would possibly be an even bigger risk to start him than Ugarte. The Uruguay international can start alongside Casemiro in the middle.

Liam Rosenior knows his side need to produce a big performance today and so expect Chelsea to play on the front foot. That could open up gaps for United to exploit on the counter so a fluid forward line spearheaded by Mbeumo could work well. Benjamin Sesko’s performances off the bench have been good this season and he can be an option late on if United need one.

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Sky has upgraded its Ultimate TV and Sky Sports bundle to now include HBO Max, Netflix, Disney+, discovery+ and Hayu, as well as 135 channels and full Sky coverage of the Premier League and EFL.

Sky broadcasts more than 1,400 live matches across the Premier League, EFL and more with at least 215 live from the top flight alongside Formula 1, darts and golf.

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