Sports
Blue Jays expected to recall Yariel Rodriguez on Monday
Rodríguez is expected to be selected to the Blue Jays active roster on Monday, according to a report from Sportsnet’s Ben Nicholson-Smith and Shi Davidi.
The 29-year-old right-hander was outrighted off Toronto’s 40-man roster in early December. The Blue Jays currently have an opening on their 40-man, but will need to make room on their active 26-man roster in order to activate Rodríguez.
After being outrighted, Rodríguez cleared waivers and reported to triple-A Buffalo after spending major-league spring training with the Blue Jays.
In 11 triple-A appearances this season, Rodríguez has posted a 2.63 ERA while recording 25 strikeouts and nine walks in 13.2 innings.
Rodríguez was one of Toronto’s most relied-upon relievers in 2025, posting a 3.08 ERA over 73 regular-season innings.
Despite the strong full-season totals, the six-foot right-hander struggled in the second half and post-season and threw just 2.2 innings for the Blue Jays in October.
Sports
CONCACAF Champions Cup: Toluca edge Tigres in penalty shootout for title
[US, Mexico & Canada customers only] May 6, 2026; Toluca, Mexico City, MEX; Toluca’s Luis Garcia celebrates their first goal scored by Toluca’s Helinho at Estadio Nemesio Diez. Mandatory Credit: Eloisa Sanchez-Reuters via Imagn Images Luis Garcia stopped Juan Purata’s shot in the seventh round of penalty kicks for a 6-5 edge, lifting host Toluca FC past Tigres UANL on Saturday night in the CONCACAF Champions Cup final after the Mexican teams played to a 1-1 draw through regulation and extra time.
Jorge Diaz’s goal for Toluca at the 104-minute mark in the first half of extra time had broken the scoreless tie, but Joaquim delivered for Tigres UANL in the 114th minute during the second half of extra time to pull even.
Toluca won the tournament for the third time and first since 2003.
For the 20th time in the past 21 years, a Mexican team lifted the trophy. The only exception in that span was the Seattle Sounders’ title run in 2022.
Garcia also made a save on Fernando Gorriaran’s shot in the third round of penalties, while Tigres goalkeeper Nahuel Guzman stopped Franco Romero in the fifth round.
Scoring in the penalty shootout for Toluca were: Pavel Perez, Santiago Simon, Federico Pereira, Diaz, Sebastian Cordova and Fernando Arce.
Scoring in the penalty shootout for the Tigres were: Andre-Pierre Gignac, Juan Brunetta, Angel Correa, Diego Lainez and Romulo.
Diaz was on target with a right-footed shot from the right side of the box to the bottom left corner of the goal off an Arce assist at the 104-minute mark. Moments earlier, Toluca’s Cordova took a shot from the right side of the box which Guzman saved. Joaquim’s header from very close range found the top left corner of the net off a set-piece crossing assist from Brunetta.
Garcia kept Toluca even with a save on Correa’s right-footed shot from the center of the box at the 117-minute mark.
The teams were scoreless through the first and second halves of regulation, including two extra minutes in the first half and seven more in the second half.
After regulation and the two halves of extra time, Tigres UANL had the edge in shots on goal (8-4), shot attempts (15-13) and corner kicks (7-4). Toluca had more fouls (24-14) and yellow cards (2-1). Toluca’s Garcia made eight saves and Guzman three.
The Tigres, based in San Nicolas de los Garza in Nuevo Leon, Mexico, were playing for their second Champions Cup crown and first since 2020. They also finished runner-up in 2016, ’17 and ’19.
In their most-recent meeting before Saturday, the teams played to a scoreless draw on Jan. 17 of this year with the Tigres as host.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Victor Wembanyama’s ‘greatest of all time’ trajectory is officially ahead of schedule
As Victor Wembanyama waited to learn the identity of his eventual NBA team ahead of the 2023 Draft, Adrian Wojnarowski shared a somewhat startling sentiment bubbling among teams hoping to secure the greatest prospect in basketball history during ESPN’s broadcast of the lottery.
“A number of executives who are in the room tonight, who are waiting on those bouncing balls in the lottery, they tell me that they believe Wembanyama could be the best player in the NBA on both the offensive and defensive ends by his third season in the league,” Wojnarowski said.
That simply does not happen, at least not under modern circumstances. Kareem Abdul-Jabbar was the MVP and a champion by his second NBA season, but he played a full collegiate career. Magic Johnson won Finals MVP as a rookie, but Abdul-Jabbar was by his side for all but the clinching game of the Finals and would remain the superior player for several years. LeBron James reached the NBA Finals in his fourth season, but got swatted away by a more experienced San Antonio Spurs team and wouldn’t return until his eighth season.
These words were spoken about Wembanyama mere months after his 19th birthday. He had no NBA experience. He didn’t come up through the traditional American collegiate system. He was more accomplished in Europe, winning the French MVP award in 2023, but he barely played in the EuroLeague. Luka Dončić won the EuroLeague MVP award at 19. Wembanyama averaged 6.5 points in 17.5 minutes against Europe’s best competition. It didn’t matter. His future was obvious to anyone who’d ever bounced a ball. He was going to be the best basketball player in the world. Health permitting, he might genuinely be the best basketball player who’s ever lived.
We usually don’t start with those conversations. Michael Jordan didn’t truly throw his name into the “GOAT” ring until his first three-peat. James was compared to him from the moment he arrived in the NBA, but he’s said himself that his 2016 championship over the 73-win Golden State Warriors was the moment, in his mind, when it really happened. That came in his 13th season.
2026 NBA Finals schedule: Knicks vs. Spurs odds, dates, game times
Sam Quinn 
But Wojnarowski’s prophecy came true. It’s Wembanyama’s third season, and he’s already claimed “best in the league” status. He and the Spurs just knocked off two-time reigning MVP Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and the defending champion Oklahoma City Thunder in the Western Conference Finals on the road in Game 7 on Saturday night. Gilgeous-Alexander was burdened with injuries to his secondary shot-creators, Ajay Mitchell and Jalen Williams, but Wembanyama was playing with two of his best teammates, De’Aaron Fox and Dylan Harper, also hobbled.
In the regular season, Gilgeous-Alexander averaged 5.4 shot attempts in the restricted area per game. In the first six games of the Western Conference Finals, that number was nearly cut in half, down to three. Without the rim, the MVP was mortal. He shot 32.1% in the non-restricted portion of the paint, 38.3% in mid-range and 26.1% on 3s. When he didn’t draw fouls, he just didn’t have an efficient means of attacking San Antonio’s Wembanyama-led defense. This is Wembanyama’s competition, and he erased him.
It usually takes a few tries to reach this point. Jordan lost to the Bad Boy Pistons three times. James lost to the Boston Celtics twice and got pushed to the brink against them in 2012. There’s a certain rhythm to these things. A young star ascends, loses a few times to the incumbent heavyweights and then finally gets over the top. There wasn’t even really a climb here. The Spurs faced the Thunder in five regular-season games and won four. They beat them in their first postseason matchup. Maybe Wembanyama is just so big that he could pull himself up the mountaintop from a standing start.
The Thunder aren’t going anywhere. They’ll presumably be among Wembanyama’s biggest threats moving forward. They’ll probably be healthier if there’s a rematch next season, and both sides are loaded with enough assets to improve on the trade market if they decide it’s necessary. The rivalry isn’t over.
But this is probably the worst Wembanyama’s ever going to be. He’s not close to his peak yet. One of the stories of the season was how effectively Oklahoma City’s defense kept Wembanyama away from the rim. He had 23 paint touches in Game 1, according to NBA.com tracking data. Then he had 33 in Games 2-6 combined. He still can’t quite assert his position near the rim as well as he’ll be able to in a few years, and his young guards will get better at entering the ball into him. He’s not going to completely bulk up, but he’ll probably add some muscle to better handle Oklahoma City’s physicality. His post-game is still developing. He worked with Hakeem Olajuwon last offseason. Odds are, he’ll check in with other legends in the summers to come. He’s still getting better.
He has a ways to go before he reaches those loftier ambitions. He’s not even a champion yet, and the New York Knicks pose a very real threat to his coronation. They beat the Spurs twice during the regular season, including the NBA Cup final, and that was before New York’s magical run through the Eastern Conference. He might still lose. He might face the same stumbles that Jordan and James did during their respective rises to power.
But the basketball world looked at Wembanyama before he’d even arrived in the NBA and reasoned that he would probably be the best player in the league by his third season. That theory, outlandish as it probably seemed to some in the moment, came to pass. And with that being the case, we probably can’t dismiss any other outlandish beliefs surrounding his future.
Who cares that he’s only played three years? We’re all watching him and thinking the same thing. There’s never been anyone like him before. Nobody has ever had his combination of size, skill and demeanor. He’s capable of things on a basketball court that no other human being ever has been.
It will take years for his resume to compare to Jordan’s or James’, but he’s ahead of where they were at this stage of their careers. If this goes the way we think it’s going to go, he’s going to be the greatest player in NBA history.
Sports
Dylan Harper, Jordan Clarkson carry PH heritage in NBA Finals
Dylan Harper #2 of the San Antonio Spurs drives to the basket against Tyler Kolek #13 and Jordan Clarkson #00 of the New York Knicks in the fourth quarter of the championship game of the Emirates NBA Cup at T-Mobile Arena on December 16, 2025 in Las Vegas, Nevada. Ethan Miller/Getty Images/AFP
MANILA, Philippines — The Philippines will be well represented in the NBA Finals featuring the San Antonio Spurs, who have fast-rising rookie Dylan Harper, and the New York Knicks with former Sixth Man of the Year Jordan Clarkson.
Harper’s mother, Maria, was born and raised in Bataan before moving to the United States when she was seven years old. Clarkson’s mom, Annette Davis, also has Filipino roots and was born in Angeles City, Pampanga.
Harper and the Spurs booked a title date with the Knicks, who swept the Cleveland Cavaliers in the Eastern Conference Finals, after dethroning the Oklahoma City Thunder on the road in Game 7 on Sunday (Manila time).
READ: Dylan Harper joins list of players with Filipino roots in NBA
“It’s a blessing to represent the Philippines, where I’m from. I think Jordan Clarkson and I are doing a great job doing that, but I think the biggest thing is what’s in front of me,” said Harper during the post-game press conference following the Spurs’ 111-103 victory.
The 33-year-old Clarkson, who has represented the Philippines in the Fiba World Cup and Asian Games, is making his second NBA Finals appearance since 2018 as part of the Cleveland Cavaliers.
Interestingly, this year’s finals is a rematch of the 1999 edition where the Spurs beat the Knicks in five.
San Antonio is back in the championship round for the first time since winning it all in 2014 with Tim Duncan, Manu Ginobili, Tony Parker and Kawhi Leonard as their core.
The NBA Finals tips off on Thursday in San Antonio.
Sports
Chess No. 2 Hikaru Nakamura arrives in PH for Bughouse tilt
FILE–US chess grandmaster Hikaru Nakamura. (Photo by BENJAMIN CREMEL / AFP)
MANILA, Philippines–Chess World No. 2 Hikaru Nakamura is in the country to compete in the inaugural WR Bughouse Championship, which kicks off Monday at Grand Hyatt Hotel in Bonifacio Global City.
The American Grandmaster arrived in Manila on Sunday with his partner, German Wadim Rosenstein, founder of WR Chess, which is staging the event with a total prize pool of $100,000 (around P6.1 million).
“Good morning from Manila,” Nakamura posted on social media. “Through chess, I’ve been able to travel around the world, and this is now the 63rd unique country I’ve been to.”
Nakamura headlines the two-day tournament featuring bughouse, or transfer chess, with 52 teams vying for the $50,000 top prize.
Also seeing action are American GM Awonder Liang, ranked No. 34 in the world, alongside Canadian Eilia Zomorrodian; Australian GM Anton Smirnov and American GM Timur Gareyev; and Indonesian GM Novendra Priasmoro and WGM Ardhiani Anastasia.
Leading the local challenge are GM Daniel Quizon and IM Eric Labog, GM Darwin Laylo and FM David Elorta, WGM Janelle Mae Frayna and WIM Ruelle Canino, and IMs Pau Bersamina and Jem Garcia.
The tournament opens with a 12-round elimination phase at 4 p.m., with the top eight teams advancing to Tuesday’s knockout stage.
Nakamura will also hold an autograph-signing session from 10 a.m. to noon on a first-come, first-served basis.
In bughouse, captured pieces are passed to a teammate for use on the adjacent board, with each player allotted five minutes and no increment.
Matches are decided by checkmate, resignation, or time forfeiture. Automatic checkmates using transferred pieces are prohibited, while pawn promotions are limited to pieces available from captured material.
Sports
The Strange Jake Golday Take, Lowly QB Room, Teddy Bridgewater
Some takes are best left in Drafts, and sometimes things just don’t work out as planned. For the Minnesota Vikings’ sake, we track those items weekly in an article of “Nopey Nopes” — Vikings-themed content that is absurd, false, or didn’t unfold as expected.
This week lassoed a weird theory about rookie linebacker Jake Golday, a take on the Vikings’ quarterback room, and the state of Florida trying to flex on Teddy Bridgewater.
Vikings Offseason Debates Stretch from LB to QB
The Nopedy Nope: Drafting Jake Golday was dumb because the Vikings already have Blake Cashman and Eric Wilson.
The Ringer‘s Diante Lee retweeted a posting about Golday, captioning, “I still struggle to see how Golday is going to find an outsized role on a defense where Blake Cashman and Andrew Van Ginkel are both better versions of what he can bring to the table. Minnesota didn’t need another downhill thumper or tweener type in its LB room.”
He then noted that Minnesota’s existing linebackers won’t be around forever: “They’ll all be phased out soon, I know. Still don’t know if it justifies Golday being picked where he was.”
The tweet flummoxed Vikings fans.
The Vikings didn’t draft Golday just because they were bored. Looking ahead to 2026, Minnesota’s top linebackers from last season will be the following ages: Blake Cashman will be 30, Andrew Van Ginkel will be 31, and Eric Wilson will be 32. Additionally, Cashman and Van Ginkel are both set to enter free agency after this season.
This situation is momentous. Three key linebackers are already on the wrong side of 30, and two of them could be leaving next March. From this perspective, it makes perfect sense why the Vikings would want to draft a linebacker early in April.
Lee’s point that Golday could fit into Brian Flores’ defense in 2026 is valid. While Golday may not have a prominent role immediately — rookies often take time to develop — the Vikings are not just focused on this season only for Golday. Golday’s career won’t be evaluated in January 2027. This pick is about preparing for 2027, 2028, and 2029, when Cashman and Van Ginkel may be gone, declining, or in different roles.
Minnesota didn’t draft Golday despite having older linebackers; they drafted him because the linebacker room is aging.
The Verdict: Nopedy nope on wondering why a team would draft a young linebacker when the other linebackers are age 30 or older.
The Nopedy Nope: The Vikings’ quarterback room is one of the worst in the NFL.
Garrett Podell of CBS Sports called the Vikings’ QB room the seventh-worst in football, explaining, “One would think the Minnesota Vikings’ signing of two-time Pro Bowl quarterback Kyler Murray would keep them off this list, but that’s not the case. Murray earned his Pro Bowl selections in 2020 and 2021. That’s a lifetime ago in NFL years. From 2022 to 2025, Murray missed 30 of his possible 68 games.”
“In the five games Murray played for the Cardinals in 2025, he averaged a career low 227.0 total yards per game. Recent first-round pick J.J. McCarthy was the worst quarterback in the NFL in 2025, which sparked the signing of Murray. McCarthy’s performance was simply incredible considering the offensive ecosystem under 2024 Coach of the Year Kevin O’Connell.”
Murray and McCarthy are on tap to battle for the QB1 job this summer.
“Despite an electrifying supporting cast, McCarthy ranked dead last in the league in completion percentage (57.6%), touchdown-to-interception ratio (11-12), and passer rating (72.6). Murray could rediscover his early career form with Minnesota,” Podell added.
“Murray is one of just four players in NFL history with 20,000-plus passing yards (20,460) and 30-plus rushing touchdowns (32) through his first seven seasons, joining Josh Allen, Cam Newton and Lamar Jackson. Week 1 starter: Kyler Murray.”
The world is not high on the Vikings’ quarterback room.
The Verdict: “QB Room Power Rankings” don’t really matter in May, but to suggest the Vikings have the league’s seventh-worst group is a little strange. When did the world decide that Murray is a terrible passer?
The Nopedy Nope: Teddy Bridgewater was the villain and culprit for helping high school football players.
Bridgewater won. Associated Press reported Saturday: “Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis signed the ‘Teddy Bridgewater Act’ into law Friday, meaning high school coaches in the state will now be able to use their own money to help their players with expenses such as food, transportation, physical therapy and rehabilitation services.”
“The Bridgewater Act is named for the Florida native and longtime NFL quarterback who coached his alma mater, Miami Northwestern High, to a state championship in 2024. But he was suspended for the 2025 season after revealing that he personally paid for meals, ride-share services and treatments for some players.”
All the Bridgewater fuss kicked up last summer, as the Florida High School Athletic Association (FHSAA) didn’t enjoy the fact that he accommodated his players to the utmost.
“There will be strict rules regarding how — and how much — coaches can spend. It would apply to a team’s head coach only, cannot be used in recruiting, must be reported in full to a state agency and is capped at $15,000 per team per year,” AP added.
Bridgewater, now a backup quarterback for the Detroit Lions, was vindicated, paving the way for his return to high school coaching if he so desires when his NFL career ends.
The Verdict: Nopedy nope on punishing Bridgewater for a righteous act.
Sports
Jake McCarthy (4 RBIs), Rockies extend Giants’ losing streak
May 30, 2026; Denver, Colorado, USA; The seam of the baseball rips on a swing from Colorado Rockies left fielder Sterlin Thompson (30) in the third inning against the San Francisco Giants at Coors Field. Mandatory Credit: Isaiah J. Downing-Imagn Images Jake McCarthy homered, singled twice and drove in four runs, Ryan Feltner returned to the rotation with six shutout innings and the Colorado Rockies beat the San Francisco Giants 8-3 in Denver on Saturday night.
Kyle Karros also went deep, and TJ Rumfield and Willi Castro had two hits each for Colorado, which has won consecutive games for the first time since May 7-8.
Drew Gilbert homered among his two hits, and Jung Hoo Lee and Matt Chapman also had two hits for San Francisco, which has lost five in a row.
Feltner (2-1) was activated from the injured list (right ulnar nerve inflammation) to make his first start since April 23. He retired the first five batters he faced before Chapman’s two-out double in the second, and he erased leadoff singles in the third and fifth innings with double-play grounders.
He left after scattering four hits and fanning two to earn his first win since April 6.
The Rockies, who used a five-run rally in the ninth inning to win 8-6 Friday night, built on that momentum in the first inning against Adrian Houser.
McCarthy led off with a walk and one out later, Goodman drew a base on balls to put runners on first and second. Castro followed with an RBI single, Ezequiel Tovar followed with a two-out single and Houser hit Sterlin Thompson with the bases loaded to make it 2-0.
McCarthy lined a two-run homer into the Colorado bullpen in the fourth inning, his third of the season, to double the Rockies’ lead. Houser (2-5) allowed four runs on eight hits in 3 2/3 innings. He struck out four and walked two.
The Rockies made it 5-0 on McCarthy’s RBI single in the fifth and then padded the advantage in the seventh.
Karros led off the inning with a pinch-hit homer, his third of the season, Tyler Freeman reached on a bloop double and scored on McCarthy’s single. McCarthy stole second and scored on Rumfield’s single.
Gilbert spoiled Colorado’s shutout bid with a two-run homer in the eighth, his third, and Chapman had a two-out RBI single in the ninth. –Field Level Media
Sports
Wembanyama, Spurs appear destined for greatness after statement win over OKC
The series got the finale it deserved.
The seventh game of the Western Conference Finals wasn’t a double-overtime nailbiter like the epic series opener. But, overall, one of the most anticipated matchups in recent NBA history delivered a memorable first chapter for what could be a long-running drama played out in late May for years to come.
The San Antonio Spurs dispatched the defending champion Oklahoma City Thunder 111-103 on Saturday to advance to the NBA Finals for the first time in the post-Tim Duncan era. They’ll face a New York Knicks team trying to win a title for the first time since 1973.
Either way, it will be the eighth straight season the NBA won’t have a repeat champion. For most of the season it looked like the Thunder were going to do just that. But there’s not much else to say other than this version of the Spurs was better than the Thunder, full stop.
As close as Game 7 was – and it was a roller-coaster with runs going back and forth and a high degree of tension throughout – it was San Antonio making the big plays when it mattered and it was the production the Spurs got from their supporting cast that made the difference.
It’s fair to wonder how much different the outcome would have been had the Thunder had their No. 2 all-around option Jalen Williams (hamstring) healthy, or even the kind of scoring and playmaking punch that Ajay Mitchell (calf) could provide, but the flip side is this: Spurs star Victor Wembanyama is in his third season and is just 22 years old,
Stephon Castle, the fierce guard whose defence gave Shai Gilgeous-Alexander so much trouble in the series, is in his second season and is just 21. Dylan Harper (12 points off the bench on eight shots) is a rookie point guard who turned 20 in March, but the second-overall pick was a responsible as anyone other than Wembanyama for the Spurs winning a Game 7 on the road against the defending champs.
The Thunder were short-handed, and it showed – especially in the way the Spurs were able to load up their defence on Gilgeous-Alexander for stretches of the series.
The two-time MVP was able to crack the code to the tune of 35 points and nine assists in 43 minutes on Saturday in what was probably his best game of the seven. But let’s repeat: this is the youngest and least experienced version of the Spurs we’re going to see over the next 10 years, or however long Wembanyama’s prime proves to be.
Let’s hope that OKC is at full strength a year from now in what feels like an almost inevitable Western Conference Finals rematch, but the Spurs also figure to be that much better, regardless of how they fare against the Knicks in the NBA Finals.
The championship series starts Wednesday in San Antonio.
Here are some takeaways from Game 7.
Luke Kornet, game breaker
There are so many moments in a game or even a series like this that can have an outsized influence, it’s always a bit foolish to pick one. But it’s hard not to look at a sequence with eight minutes left in the fourth quarter as crucial.
The Spurs were up 11 when Thunder big man Isaiah Hartenstein was fouled by Wembanyama on a back-door cut. He dunked it anyway and made the free throw and the lead was down to eight.
It was Wembanyama’s fifth foul and he was headed to the bench. A bucket by Gilgeous-Alexander cut the Spurs’ lead to six and momentum seemed to be shifting.
But the next few possessions went this way: a Hartenstein steal gave the big centre what looked like a wide-open dunk in transition, but backup Spurs centre Luke Kornet sprinted the floor and put himself on a forever highlight film with a spectacular chase-down block before the Spurs scored at the other end.
The Thunder then came down and turned the ball over with Cason Wallace and Hartenstein getting crossed up on what would have been an easy dunk for the latter. Instead, the Spurs came back and Justin Champagnie (20 points, including six threes) hit a triple to put San Antonio back up by 11 with 5:33 to play and Wembanyama back in the game.
All told, it was a nine-point swing at a crucial point of the series and perhaps the difference.
It’s not a matter of if, it’s Wemby
There are so many things that Wembanyama has already done that have him marked for greatness, not the least of which is averaging 27.3 points, 10.9 rebounds, 2.7 blocks and 1.4 steals in a seven-game conference final against the NBA’s top-ranked defence and a 64-win team defending a title.
Wembanyama put up 22 points and seven rebounds in Game 7, which was more than enough for him to earn the Western Conference Finals MVP trophy.
But he’s now poised to begin his fast-tracked rise to all-time status with his first NBA Finals appearance. Michael Jordan didn’t win the first of his six NBA championships until he was 27 and in his seventh season. LeBron James won the first of his four when he was 27 and in his ninth year. Kareem Abdul-Jabbar won the first of his six when he was in his second season at age 23 but didn’t win another until his ninth season at age 33.
There have been exceptions to the long-apprenticeship rule. Tim Duncan won the first of his five championships in his second season at age 23, but they were spread out over a 15-year span. Los Angeles Lakers legend Magic Johnson was a 20-year-old rookie when he won the first of his five titles, so maybe he’s the best comparison.
The point is that the Spurs advancing to the Finals opens the door to the NBA’s next great player beginning to write the opening chapters of his legacy at the soonest possible moment. There is nothing about this Spurs team that indicates it won’t be on the rise, and Wembanyama’s rapid year-over-year improvement alone seems to make that inevitable.
Very rarely is a generational talent surrounded by a team this young and this good. History could be unfolding at high speed.
The NBA-superstar-as-Superman myth is well established. In a sport where the best players are often able to summon otherworldly individual performances under the most difficult circumstances, there are plenty of examples to bolster the idea that they never fail and always save the day.
Gilgeous-Alexander had a spotlight on him going into Game 7 because the two-time MVP has been outplayed by Wembanyama, scored just 15 points in Game 6 and was shooting just 37.9 per cent for the series, a steep drop from his unfailing regular-season efficiency.
But these things do happen. At this stage of the playoffs, the best defences can overwhelm even the best players in the world. The way the Spurs defended Gilgeous-Alexander – rotating a trio of big, physical athletic defenders to pressure him 40 feet from the basket, confident that Wembanyama was lurking as the ultimate safety net – was a problem the Canadian struggled to solve throughout the series.
But he’s not alone. Remember the 2015 NBA Finals? Golden State Warriors wing Andre Iguodala was named Finals MVP in large part because he held peak James to 39.8-per-cent shooting, or 10 percentage points below his regular-season mark while making nearly four turnovers per game.
James being James, he still was dominant, putting up 35.8 points, 13.3 rebounds and 8.8 assists for a short-handed Cavaliers team, but the struggle was real.
Or how about Michael Jordan in the 1995-96 Finals? The Bulls won 4-2 over Seattle, but Gary Payton helped hold Jordan 27 points on 41.5-per-cent shooting after the then-four-time MVP had averaged 30 points per game on 49.5-per-cent shooting in the regular season. It was the ‘worst’ Finals performance of Jordan’s career, though it gets overlooked because the Bulls won and he still earned Finals MVP.
Steph Curry had some rough ones on his way to establishing himself as one of the greatest guards in NBA history. In the 2016 Finals, he was coming off his second consecutive MVP award and one of the greatest seasons ever as he averaged 30.1 points per game while hitting an NBA record 402 threes (that’s what happens when you hit 45.4 per cent on 11.1 three-point attempts per game).
But he went cold in the Finals and averaged just 22.6 points on 40.3-per-cent shooting overall as the 73-win Warriors blew a 3-1 lead and lost to James and the Cavaliers.
Gilgeous-Alexander deserves full credit for trying. He was as close to his usual standard in Game 7 as in any game in the series. He finished with 35 points on 12-of-21 shooting, while adding nine assists and three steals against just three turnovers in 43 minutes against a multi-pronged Spurs defensive approach that always featured Wembanyama shading over, shadowing or outright double-teaming him.
The Thunder had some success running screening actions to get Gilgeous-Alexander matched up against Champagnie, and it was enough to help the Hamilton native shake loose for 25 points combined in the second and third quarters. The Thunder trailed 80-77 to start the fourth.
But Gilgeous-Alexander couldn’t get the Thunder over the hump and he didn’t have enough help. It was a brilliant individual performance after a difficult six games, but proof that even a two-time MVP needs a partner against a defence as robust as San Antonio’s.
An aside: the biggest loser in this series was Chet Holmgren, who had a chance to make a name for himself on both ends.
Instead, he took just two shots and scored four points in 33 minutes. He averaged 10.1 points per game for the series, seven points below his season average. The Thunder needed something more and their other all-NBA player couldn’t deliver.
It could be a Luuuuuong off-season for Lu Dort
Timing is everything in sports. This time a year ago, Montreal’s Lu Dort was playing some of his best basketball in helping the Thunder to their first NBA championship. It was a crowning achievement for the rugged defender, who often is referred to as the organization’s heartbeat, having joined OKC as an undrafted free agent and working his way up to being a valuable starter on a championship team.
He shot a career-best 41.2 per cent from three in the regular season and 44.5 per cent from deep in the Finals as OKC won the title, but Dort struggled in the playoffs this year, especially against the Spurs.
Through six games he was shooting just four-for-22 from three (18 per cent). His defence never wavers but with the Spurs enjoying such relative success bottling up Gilgeous-Alexander, having wings that demand attention offensively is crucial.
Dort had some moments in Game 7 – his three tied the game with 2:17 to go in the second quarter after San Antonio had led by as much as 14 midway through the first, and he had a big steal on an inbounds pass with 43 seconds left in the fourth as the Thunder trailed by six, but OKC couldn’t convert the chance. Overall, Dort scored three points in Game 7 at home and finished the series shooting 5-of-25 from three and averaging 4.5 points per game. Not enough.
That Dort hasn’t developed a reliable counter when teams close him out or leave him alone doesn’t hurt the Thunder too much against lesser opponents; Dort’s defence is worth it. But against an opponent as good as the Spurs, every weak spot gets exposed – and Dort’s lack of punch was an issue.
It’s tough timing because the Thunder are holding a team option worth $18.2 million on the last year of Dort’s contract. They are also staring down the barrel of one of the most expensive rosters in NBA history, with a projected tax bill of $213 million. It seems inevitable that the Thunder will do something, and Dort’s performance might make the decision easier.
In my notes from the game, I include ‘lol’ alongside each of the plays that the seven-foot-five impossibility that is Wembanyama pulls off that make me laugh out load. There were ‘only’ four in Game 7, but they were astonishing, at least to me. In order:
• His pull-up jumper off glass to on his first touch of the game. Like sure, he’s hitting fadeaway jumpers high off the square now. Why not.
• He cuts back door, catches a pass and dunks all over Holmgren without jumping, it looked like. He may have jumped, but in the moment it looked like he dunked over a fellow seven-footer, one of the best shot-blockers in the NBA, without leaving his feet, or only barely. The game is three minutes old and we’re at two lols.
• At 10:07 of the third quarter, Wemby turned, split a double team and dunked without dribbling while starting from outside of the paint. It’s an eight-foot jumper for mortals. Hilarious.
• With 8:43 left in the fourth quarter, he hit a step-back three that would make Curry proud.
For the series, Wembanyama shot 40 per cent from three, 89 per cent from the free-throw line and had 29 steals and blocked shots compared to just 17 fouls. Good luck with that, Knicks.
Sports
PGA Tour veteran leads at Colonial, but now comes the hard part
No one had a better moving day at the Charles Schwab Challenge than Eric Cole. But now comes the hard part.
Cole, the 37-year-old PGA Tour veteran, shot a seven-under 63 on Saturday at Colonial Country Club in Fort Worth, Texas, to take a one-shot lead into Sunday’s final round. His 63 was two strokes better than the next-best round on Saturday (Nico Echavarria’s 65) and four better than a handful of others who shot 67.
This week is his 120th career start; he’s still looking for that elusive first victory.
“It’s not going to be an easy day tomorrow, I know that from my experience,” Cole said Saturday. “I know that it’s going to be difficult, but that’s why I practice really hard and that’s why I try and do everything the way I do so that I could be as prepared for whatever tomorrow brings.”
Cole started the day five off the lead but torched the classic country club well before the leaders teed off. He was four under on the front and added birdies on 10, 11 and 14 before his only bogey at 15. He bounced back with a birdie on 16 and parred the last two to take the clubhouse lead; a couple of hours later it was good for the 54-hole lead.
“Everything was kind of working well,” he said. “I got off to a really good start. I kind of knew going into it that it was going to be a harder course, firmer conditions. Getting off to that start and realizing how much harder the course was today was great. Then, yeah, just kept trying to hit good shots one after the next and make birdies when you can.”
Cole’s had runner-up and third-place finishes in his career (two of each) although all were in 2023. The closest he’s come to a victory was losing the 2023 Honda Classic in a playoff.
Cole sits at 12 under, one ahead of Ryan Gerard, who birdied the last two holes Saturday to shoot 68 and jump into solo second.
“That’s going to be big for tomorrow,” Gerard said of his finish. “Every shot really matters; any time you get a chance to capitalize on an opportunity you got to take advantage of it. And this course is going to play difficult, so you got to go out there with the right attitude and keep putting it in front of you and keep hitting it in the right spots.”
J.J. Spaun and Mac Meissner are tied at 10 under. Spaun, the 2025 U.S. Open champion, most recently won a month ago at the Valero Texas Open.
There’s also seven players tied at seven under, a group that includes Justin Thomas, Gary Woodland, Ludvig Aberg, Akshay Bhatia and Brian Harman.
“I think [Sunday] will play similar to today if there’s wind,” Cole said. “There’s no rain, so it’s not going to get any softer. So just be prepared for probably another difficult day that requires a lot of good quality shots.”
Sports
Former Nigeria U-23 Star Godspower Aniefiok Powers Tower Unity Cup Tournament in Uyo
The 2026 Tower Unity Cup will get underway on Sunday, May 31, at Primary School, Ikot Ntuen Oku, with an exciting opening fixture between Ibiono Ibom Pro and Mayflower All-Stars.
The grassroots football competition is sponsored by former Akwa United and Nigeria U-23 midfielder Godspower Aniefiok, popularly known as Tower, who currently plays abroad.

The opening match is expected to provide an entertaining start to the tournament as both teams boast a blend of experienced players and promising young talents.

Although this will be the first meeting between Ibiono Ibom Pro and Mayflower All-Stars, both sides are known for their attacking style of play and ability to score goals. With quality players expected to be on display, football fans can look forward to an open and competitive contest.
Tower, a product of Greater Tomorrow Football Academy, enjoyed two spells with Akwa United and also featured for several clubs in Nigeria and overseas during his playing career. He represented Nigeria at U-23 level and remains passionate about the development of grassroots football.
According to the organisers, the competition is aimed at promoting grassroots football development in Akwa Ibom State and creating opportunities for young footballers to showcase their talents.
Seven teams are participating in this year’s tournament. They include Tower & Friends, Ibiono Ibom Pro, Royalty FC, Dynamic SPMD, Mayflower All-Stars, Greater Tomorrow Academy and Immortality FC.
Following the opening game, Dynamic SPMD will face Royalty FC on June 2, while Greater Tomorrow Academy will take on Immortality FC on June 3.
The organisers disclosed that the competition will feature players currently playing both in Nigeria and abroad alongside emerging grassroots talents. They expressed confidence that the tournament will produce exciting football and help discover future stars.
The first-round matches will be played on a home-and-away basis, with teams battling for places in the next stage of the competition.
Football fans across Akwa Ibom are expected to turn out in large numbers as the Tower Unity Cup begins with what promises to be an entertaining showdown between Ibiono Ibom Pro and Mayflower All-Stars.
Sports
Gauff’s French Open title defense ends in 3rd-round loss, Osaka through | Other Sports News
Coco Gauff finally met a player in Paris who could match her court coverage in long baseline rallies.
Anastasia Potapova ended Gauff’s French Open title defense in the third round with a 4-6, 7-6 (1), 6-4 victory over the American on Saturday.
The match was played before mostly empty stands inside Court Philippe-Chatrier as French fans stayed away to watch the Champions League soccer final.
Gauff’s second Grand Slam title came with a victory over top-ranked Aryna Sabalenka in the final at Roland Garros a year ago.
The 30th-ranked Potapova, who was born in Russia but now represents Austria, improved to 3-2 in her career against Gauff. She’s having quite a clay season after reaching a final in Linz, Austria, and the semifinals of the Madrid Open as a qualifier.
The fourth-ranked Gauff was coming off a run to the Italian Open final. She waved to the crowd and quickly walked off court when the match was finished.
When Gauff shanked a forehand wide on Potapova’s first match point, Potapova fell on her back and covered her eyes as she stuck her feet up in the air in celebration.
Osaka’s fashion statementEarlier, Naomi Osaka beat 18-year-old American opponent Iva Jovic 7-6 (5), 6-7 (3), 6-4 after nearly three hours – in her 100th Grand Slam match – to set up a round-of-16 meeting with top-ranked Aryna Sabalenka.
Sabalenka beat Daria Kasatkina 6-0, 7-5.
For her second-straight match, Osaka wore a metallic gold bomber jacket over a sequined gold playing dress during her walk-on. But this time her outfit was offset by a tannish-gold colored train that stretched all the way down to the red clay on Court Suzanne-Lenglen.
For her opening match, Osaka walked on in a ceremonial black skirt and sleeveless beaded bodice before revealing her gold dress, which she said reminded her of the Eiffel Tower sparkling at night. Then she had on the bomber jacket and an ivory-colored train for her second match.
“It’s a surprise every time,” Osaka said of her fashion choices.
“For me, it would be weirder to wear a normal tennis kit, almost, at this point. It’s the fun of it. For a long time, I didn’t have fun for a little bit. And you guys know that period of time in my life,” Osaka added, referring to how in 2021 she withdrew from the French Open because of issues with anxiety and depression. “Now I just want things to be fun, and I want to make it exciting for myself.”
Osaka’s outfits are planned a year and a half in advance and require at least four fittings.
“We have so many fittings throughout the year because your weight can fluctuate or the fabric can change a little bit,” she said. “There is a lot of effort that goes into it.”
Heat wave endingFor the seventh straight day of the tournament, it was hot and humid, with the temperature rising to 34 degrees Celsius (93 degrees Fahrenheit). The heat is expected to break for Sunday and the second week.
Midway through Osaka’s victory, a spectator was carried out of the stadium on a stretcher because of an apparent illness.
On the court, French player Diane Parry beat 2019 semifinalist Amdanda Anisimova 6-3, 4-6, 7-6 (3), and Diana Shnaider of Russia defeated Oleksandra Oliynykova of Ukraine 7-5, 6-1 after Oliynykova accused her of liking Russian propaganda posts on social media amid the war between their countries.
In men’s action, Alejandro Tabilo ended the run of 17-year-old Frenchman Moise Kouame with a 4-6, 6-3, 6-4, 7-6 (9) victory; and 2021 Wimbledon finalist Matteo Berrettini required 5 hours, 13 minutes to defeat Francisco Comesana 7-6 (3), 5-7, 6-7 (4), 6-4, 7-6 (13).
Berrettini banged his chest after winning on his fourth match point when Comesana’s shot landed long. Then he cried.
Flavio Cobolli beat Learner Tien 6-2, 6-2, 6-3 and will next meet unsung American Zachary Svajda, who defeated Francisco Cerundolo 6-3, 6-4, 3-6, 4-6, 6-3.
Later, Felix Auger-Aliassime plays American opponent Brandon Nakashima. At No. 4, Auger-Aliassime is the highest-seeded player remaining in the top half of the draw after Jannik Sinner’s stunning defeat two days ago.
Organizers moved the small advertising boards at the back of the court to behind the line judges after complaints about safety. Turkish player Zeynep Sonmez had to retire from a doubles match after tripping over an advertising board on Friday.
-
Business7 days agoNYT Strands Answers May 24 2026 Revealed for Puzzle No. 812 Theme Summer Essentials
-
NewsBeat4 days agoIsrael says it has killed new Hamas military leader in Gaza City airstrikes
-
Tech4 days agoNASA taps Blue Origin to deliver lunar rovers for Moon Base initiative
-
Politics6 days agoBridgerton Season 5: Cast, Release Date And Everything We Know So Far
-
News Videos4 days agoXRP *JUST* SUCCEEDED!!!! CLARITY ACT EXPOSED!!! (SHE EXPOSED IT)
-
Sports5 days ago2026 NBA Finals schedule, odds: Knicks await Thunder or Spurs after winning East
-
Business4 days agoSelena Gomez Reportedly Upset Over Benny Blanco’s Comments on Her ‘Terrible’ Diet
-
Crypto World5 days agoMicron Crosses $1 Trillion Market Cap as AI Demand Reshapes Memory Sector
-
Crypto World7 days agoBrian Armstrong Outlines Crypto Vision for the Future Financial System
-
News Videos2 days agoThis is BROKEN! INSANE 5x MONEY CAR WASH WEEK! The NEW GTA Online UPDATE Today! (GTA5 New Update)
-
Business6 days agoBTS Sells Out Four Las Vegas Shows at Allegiant Stadium for ARIRANG World Tour
-
Tech5 days agoChina assigns ID codes to 28,000+ humanoid robots
-
NewsBeat6 days agoHottest May day ever as London hits 34.8C in 2C leap from previous records
-
Tech6 days agoMicrosoft’s quiet Claude Code retreat and the real cost of enterprise AI
-
Tech2 days agoWaymo dominates autonomous vehicle registrations as Tesla trails behind
-
Business6 days agoNikkei 225 Surges Past 65,000 for First Time as Iran Peace Hopes Fuel Record Rally
-
Tech4 days agoThe Samsung pay deal is the moment Korean unions changed register
-
Entertainment5 days ago‘Breaking Bad’ Star’s Easy-to-Binge 6-Part Crime Series Spin-Off Is Finally Heading to Free Streaming
-
Tech6 days agoWestone Audio and Etymotic Acquired by Fidelity Collective in Major IEM Market Move
-
NewsBeat6 days agoCrowds find riverside shade in York as temperatures soar


You must be logged in to post a comment Login