Connect with us
DAPA Banner
DAPA Coin
DAPA
COIN PAYMENT ASSET
PRIVACY · BLOCKDAG · HOMOMORPHIC ENCRYPTION · RUST
ElGamal Encrypted MINE DAPA
🚫 GENESIS SOLD OUT
DAPAPAY COMING

Sports

Donovan Mitchell’s Game 6 struggles continue with Cavs star getting shut down by particular Pistons defender

Published

on

Donovan Mitchell has never missed the playoffs. He’s also never made the conference finals. That remained true Friday when the Detroit Pistons crushed the Cleveland Cavaliers, 115-94, in Game 6 of their second-round series to keep their season alive and force a Game 7 back in Detroit on Sunday. 

Mitchell wasn’t the only Cavalier at fault Friday, but his no-show was the biggest reason why Cleveland lost at home for the first time in the playoffs, and highlighted not only his inconsistent play this postseason, but his Game 6 misery. Mitchell has now lost six consecutive Game 6s, including four close-out games, dating back to his time with the Jazz in the 2020 bubble. 

In 37 minutes, Mitchell had more shots than points and as many turnovers as assists, and the Cavaliers were outscored by 25 — the worst plus/minuts of anyone on the team. His final line: 18 points on 6 of 20 from the field, including 2 of 6 from 3-point range, four rebounds, three assists and three turnovers. This was the third time in 13 playoff games he’s been held under 20 points and the third time he’s shot worst than 40%. 

“I can’t dwell on it, you know what I mean? I missed shots tonight. Do I think some of them were tougher shots that I could have gotten better [looks]? Sure. But I could say that about every game. I’m not here to look at the fact that I missed shots,” Mitchell told reporters. “It’s just the overall force and impact of the game. Tonight I missed shots. I’ve been making them most every game this series and tonight I didn’t. I’m not worried about that. It’s more so everything else.”

Advertisement

“But yeah, we missed an opportunity,” Mitchell continued. “But we can’t do anything about it. We gotta go out there and win on the road.”

Mitchell’s inconsistent series

Mitchell was all over the map in the first round against the Toronto Raptors, but let’s stick to this series versus the Pistons. Here’s a look at Mitchell’s game-by-game numbers:

  • Game 1: 23 points (9 of 19 FG, 4 of 10 3FG), four rebounds, two assists, three turnovers
  • Game 2: 31 points (11 of 24 FG, 2 of 9 3FG), six rebounds, three assists, two turnovers
  • Game 3: 35 points (13 of 24 FG, 2 of 8 3FG), 10 rebounds, four assists, three turnovers
  • Game 4: 43 points (13 of 26 FG, 4 of 12 3FG), five rebounds, two assists, one turnover
  • Game 5: 21 points (7 of 18 FG, 1 of 8 3FG), four rebounds, three assists, two turnovers
  • Game 6: 18 points (6 of 20 FG, 2 of 6 3FG), four rebounds, three assists, three turnovers

Series averages: 28.5 points (45% FG, 28.3% 3FG), 5.5 rebounds, 2.8 assists, 2.3 turnovers

Even within games, Mitchell has been up and down. In Game 4, he had four points on 1 of 8 shooting in the first half and 39 points on 12 of 18 shooting in the second half. 

Ausar Thompson, one of the best and most versatile defenders in the league, deserves a ton of credit for the work he’s done to slow down Mitchell. He’s been shadowing him all series and using his length, athleticism and physicality to make Mitchell fight for everything, even just to catch the ball sometimes. Notably, on the very first possession of Game 6, Mitchell was called for an offensive foul for trying to shed Thompson. 

Advertisement

Per the NBA’s tracking data, Thompson had guarded Mitchell on 117 possessions in the first five games of this series, and Mitchell scored 15 points on 4 of 19 shooting, including 1 of 11 from 3-point range, and has turned the ball over three times. Tracking data can be wonky at times, but those numbers are stark. 

Mitchell, to no surprise, said he hasn’t been bothered by Thompson, nor does he feel worn down from dealing with the constant pressure. However, it’s worth noting that his last two showings have been his worst of the series. And, outside of Game 4, he’s shooting 32.4% in the fourth quarter, including 3 of 13 in the last two games. 

Regardless of individual matchups, Mitchell has also really struggled to finish at the rim this series and has been ice-cold from 3-point range. Mitchell says he’s just missing shots, and there’s truth to that, but the Pistons’ physicality has been a real factor. 

Regular season

Advertisement

4.4

65.6%

8.8

36.4%

Advertisement

Pistons series

4

54.2%

8.8

Advertisement

28.3%

Mitchell’s Game 6 misery

Mitchell has now lost six consecutive Game 6s, and while he was largely at fault for Friday’s defeat, that hasn’t always been the case. In fact, he’s often been a hard-luck loser. Notably, the Cavaliers lost Game 6 against the Magic in the first round in 2024 despite his 50-point effort, and they lost Game 6 to the Raptors earlier this postseason on an absurd buzzer-beating 3-pointer by RJ Barrett

Let’s take a closer look at Mitchell’s Game 6 history. 

2026

Advertisement

Pistons

Yes

18

30%

Advertisement

???

2026

Raptors

Yes

Advertisement

24

42.3%

Won

2024

Advertisement

Magic

Yes

50

61.1%

Advertisement

Won

2022

Mavericks

No

Advertisement

23

52.9%

Lost

2021

Advertisement

Clippers

No

39

44.4%

Advertisement

Lost

2020

Nuggets

Yes

Advertisement

44

56%

Lost

The good news for Mitchell and the Cavs is that they still have another chance, and they already have experience this postseason with a Game 7. 

Advertisement

How can Mitchell bounce back in Game 7?

Yes, Thompson has done an excellent job as the primary defender on Mitchell. Yes, Mitchell hasn’t shot the ball well even when he’s gotten clean looks. And yes, Mitchell’s inconsistency has been frustrating. But he’s had three 30-point games in this series and is still one of the most talented scorers in the league. 

It’s not inconceivable that he could have a big night in Game 7 and lead the Cavaliers to victory, but it will take a concerted effort from him and the team — and perhaps some help from the officials on how the game’s called. 

“Getting him in the open court more where they can’t get their hands on him,” Cavaliers coach Kenny Atkinson said, when asked how the team can get Mitchell going. “When it’s in the halfcourt, it’s clutch, grab, hold. We gotta get him in space, in the open court — kick aheads, kick acrosses, all that. But that was a logjam tonight. All of us, we had a tough time getting free. At the end of the day, that’s on us. This is how the game’s being called, we have to adjust.”

So far in the playoffs, the Cavaliers are 4-1 when Mitchell scores 30-plus points and 3-5 when he does not. He’ll likely have to get to that number, and maybe even higher, in order for the Cavaliers to win Game 7 on the road and advance to the Eastern Conference finals for the first time since 2018. 

Advertisement

“Everything you want is on the other side of hard. Nothing good comes easy,” Mitchell said. “That’s how you have to look at it. We could sit here and dwell on this and carry that into Sunday, but what’s that gonna do for us?”

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading
Click to comment

You must be logged in to post a comment Login

Leave a Reply

Sports

The Timberwolves are still behind the Spurs and Thunder, so what can they do to catch up?

Published

on

Always the bridesmaids, eh Minnesota? For the third straight season, the Timberwolves have outperformed playoff expectations. Their 2024 upset over the Denver Nuggets is one of the more memorable playoff series in recent memory. They reached the Western Conference Finals as a No. 6 seed a year ago, and they once again slayed Nikola Jokić in the first round this season before falling to Victor Wembanyama and the Spurs in six games in the second round. There is clearly something in the DNA of this team that translates to the postseason. As a group, they are playoff risers.

As a collection of individuals, they have lately seemed outgunned. Minnesota’s only legitimate shot at a championship came in 2024. They had home-court advantage in the Western Conference Finals. They’d played two overtime games against the eventual champion Celtics in the regular season and went 3-1 against Dallas in the regular season. But Karl-Anthony Towns had the most disastrously timed slump of his career. He shot 15 of 54 in Games 1, 2 and 3 against the Mavericks. That gave Luka Dončić enough room to squeak out three single-digit victories. Minnesota couldn’t recover. The Mavericks reached the 2024 NBA Finals.

Months later, Towns was gone. Julius Randle, Donte DiVincenzo and a first-round pick took his place in a move that was seemingly financially motivated. Minnesota was afraid of paying Towns supermax money with Anthony Edwards and Rudy Gobert making the max as well and a new Jaden McDaniels deal looming. The ups and downs of Towns’ journey with the Knicks have been well-chronicled. At various points, Minnesota has been widely declared the trade’s winner.

Yet they’ve had an undeniably Towns-shaped hole in their roster in their past two playoff defeats. The Timberwolves and Thunder played only two games in last year’s Western Conference Finals decided by less than 25 points in Oklahoma City’s favor. Randle scored 11 combined points in those two competitive games. Through the first five games of Minnesota’s loss to San Antonio this year, Edwards was the only Timberwolf to average more than 15.2 points per game. Randle, brought in to replace Towns, was at 14.8.

Advertisement

Beating Oklahoma City last year and San Antonio this year wasn’t really a reasonable expectation for the Timberwolves in either series, and you can’t boil down those defeats to any single factor more complex than “those teams were way more talented.” But if you were to point to the single thing Minnesota most lacked, it would probably be a second, genuine offensive star. Without one, those stout opposing defenses could key in further on Edwards. He averaged just 23 points in the Oklahoma City series and resolved to work on his mid-range and post games to give himself more ways to score tough, contested points. He improved significantly on those fronts this season, but played hurt against the Spurs. He surely would’ve been better healthy. He also probably would have benefitted from the presence of another All-Star level scorer.

Missing KAT?

The scorer the Wolves gave up is currently lighting the Eastern Conference on fire. The Knicks have won their last seven games by 185 combined points. Through 10 games, Towns has a playoff Box Plus-Minus of 14.4. Forget about leading this year’s postseason. According to Mat Issa, only three other players have ever done that across a postseason that included at least 10 games: 2009 LeBron James, 1991 Michael Jordan and 2017 Kawhi Leonard. Pretty good company!

The Wolves, again, chose depth. Circumstance has slowly chipped away at that depth. Nickeil Alexander-Walker walked after last season as the Timberwolves elected to duck the second apron. He immediately became the NBA’s Most Improved Player. Mike Conley will be 39 at the start of next season. He overperformed in this postseason, but he’s no longer a starting-caliber player. DiVincenzo tour his Achilles tendon against Denver. He’ll miss all or most of next season.

The Timberwolves have done an admirable job of recovering. Ayo Dosunmu proved a critical Alexander-Walker replacement. Terrence Shannon Jr., a late first-round pick, gave them good minutes this postseason. But without someone doing the heavy offensive lifting alongside Edwards, it’s just hard to imagine Minnesota ever really competing with the Spurs or Thunder. That’s where Tim Connelly’s two other big swings enter the equation.

Advertisement

The Rudy Gobert (and Rob Dillingham) trades in hindsight

The Rudy Gobert trade, in a vacuum, was good. It turned the Wolves into perpetual bridesmaids after decades of never getting invited to the wedding. It’s also the single biggest reason they may not get to be the bride.

Gobert has lived up to every reasonable expectation Minnesota could have had for him. This has been, bar none, the most successful era in franchise history, and Gobert’s defense is among the drivers of Minnesota’s “playoff riser” track record. He’s vital to their culture. He’s generated star-level value. And the cost of acquiring him was still simply too great.

That has less to do with the actual assets traded — though Walker Kessler becoming a reasonable Gobert facsimile at a tiny fraction of the cost certainly stings — than it does the opportunity cost of the deal. Having Anthony Edwards unlocks potential trade acquisitions that would otherwise be unfathomable to a market like Minnesota. Had the Timberwolves kept their picks, his recruiting power would have opened just about any star acquisition door in basketball. We got reports in February that Giannis Antetokounmpo wants to play with him. That door, at least without the inclusion of rising star Jaden McDaniels, is probably closed with those picks gone.

The Timberwolves made an all-in push when Edwards was 20. That push got him deep into the playoffs far earlier than many of his contemporaries and lifted the franchise to previously unreached heights. But the trade also nudged Towns out the door and seemingly placed a cap on the upside of the roster they’d be putting around Edwards in his mid-20s. He’s 24 right now, probably not even at his peak. Yet his next two highest-paid teammates are 33 (Gobert) and 31 (Randle), likely trending down, and his team has almost no draft capital with which to build around him. Without the tools to go get Edwards a genuine, star-level sidekick, Minnesota appears, at least for the time being, locked behind Oklahoma City and San Antonio in the Western Conference pecking order.

Advertisement

Lead Timberwolves executive Tim Connelly seemingly foresaw these potential issues and took a somewhat drastic step in order to try to avert them. In 2024, he traded his unprotected 2031 first-round pick and a top-1 protected first-round swap in 2030 to snag the No. 8 overall pick. He used it on Rob Dillingham

The concept was sound. Because of the Gobert trade, Minnesota no longer had the assets to trade for a traditional, veteran star when one would eventually become needed, and because of their salary crunch, they wouldn’t have been able to afford bringing in such a player anyway without slicing through the identity of the roster they’d already built. So they took a big swing on Dillingham, betting that they could develop him into the long-term No. 2 scorer that they would need, and thanks to the four cheap years on his rookie deal, they could do so without his presence interrupting the roster they already had.

That bet went bust. It’s too early to say that Dillingham simply isn’t that caliber of player, but he wasn’t in Minnesota. The Timberwolves didn’t trust him enough for a substantial role. He wound up becoming the bait to get Dosunmu as an Alexander-Walker replacement at this year’s trade deadline.

And that takes us to where the Timberwolves sit today. They are only around $26 million below next year’s projected second apron line, but with only 10 roster spots accounted for. One Dosunmu is re-signed, they’re probably going to come close to that line. Their only tradable future first-round pick this offseason is their 2033 selection. They are therefore mostly bereft of financial flexibility and draft capital to move with right as the second-best player in franchise history (at least) hits his prime. If the goal is merely to remain in the mix, the Timberwolves are fine where they are. If the goal is to improve enough to compete seriously with the Thunder and Spurs and ultimately win a championship, circumstances are getting quietly dire.

Advertisement

What’s next and potential targets

Connelly may take another run at Antetokounmpo. He’s among the most aggressive general managers in basketball, he’s not going to sit still. But the only asset Minnesota has that could seriously move that needle is McDaniels, and he’s the best player they have whose age is aligned with Edwards’. In addition to the depth you’d have to sacrifice in going after Antetokounmpo, you’d be giving up a chance for Edwards and McDaniels to be franchise pillars for the next decade. 

Given the offensive steps McDaniels took this season, that would be an awfully bitter pill to swallow. He’s not the No. 2 option they need, but he doesn’t need to be since his value is primarily derived from being one of the NBA’s best perimeter defenders. That he’s consistently creating his own shots and making 3s now is more than enough. He’s a star in his role even if he isn’t a star in the broader NBA context. Turn him and a bunch of other stuff into Antetokounmpo, and Minnesota would be left with perhaps the NBA’s best duo, but serious questions virtually everywhere else on the roster. 

Is that worthwhile for a 31-year-old with injury issues? It’s debatable, and would depend on how much faith Minnesota has in its ability to successfully fill in the margins around those two. As Antetokounmpo reportedly prefers to stay in the Eastern Conference, though, it may be out of their hands.

Here’s the likelier path. The Timberwolves elect to keep the basic foundation of their roster together: Edwards as the centerpiece, McDaniels and Gobert as the defensive cornerstones, Dosunmu and Naz Reid as their bench core. From there, they consider pooling their few remaining valuable assets — that 2033 first-round pick, the No. 28 pick this year, their rookie contracts like Shannon and Joan Beringer — into a high-risk, high-reward addition that could potentially become that second option. The matching money would ideally start with Randle and potentially include DiVincenzo simply because of his injury.

Advertisement

The obvious name in this regard would be Ja Morant. The fit here is iffy. Shooting was never quite Minnesota’s strength even with DiVincenzo. Morant needs the ball in his hands to provide offensive value, and he’s rarely contributed much of anything defensively. The Timberwolves pride themselves on their defensive culture, and they’re not going to be overly eager to take the ball away from Edwards. Whether it’s Minnesota or somewhere else, Morant is about as all-or-nothing as an acquisition gets. There is a well-below 50% chance he recaptures the enormous rim pressure that made him a star, stays healthy and stays on the straight and narrow. If he does? He’s a superstar again. If he doesn’t, given his lack of role player skills, he’s an overpaid and underqualified supporting piece.

If you’re looking for a better basketball fit, the swing would be Kyrie Irving. We don’t yet know what Masai Ujiri plans to do with him, but he’s indicated that aside from Cooper Flagg, virtually everything in the organization is up for evaluation. Dallas is similarly asset-thin, as it owes out its first-round picks between 2027 and 2030. Irving would be a chance to replenish that base for Flagg’s timeline. He shoots and is at least capable of scaling up defensively in big moments. He’s also 34 and coming off of a torn ACL. If Minnesota tries this and it doesn’t work, it’s a borderline disaster.

Here’s an under-the-radar option: now that San Antonio knows Dylan Harper is bound for future stardom… how eager would the Spurs be to get off of the four-year max contract it owes to De’Aaron Fox? That probably depends on how the rest of their postseason goes. Minnesota was reportedly interested in Fox at last year’s trade deadline. He comes with some of the same theoretical concerns that Morant does, but not to nearly the same extremes. He’s not a good shooter or defender, but he’s functioning just fine on a team that plays great defense and has plenty of other ball-handlers.

This is probably as good as it gets when it comes to win-now star additions that don’t completely alter the fabric of the roster. The Timberwolves just don’t have the firepower to trade for anyone too much more exciting. That’s the alternative path here. If Minnesota determines it has no path to beating Oklahoma City or San Antonio in the next year or two, maybe now is the time to retrench.

Advertisement

That obviously wouldn’t mean blowing up the roster, but there is a deceptively young core here. Edwards, McDaniels, Reid, Dosunmu, Shannon, Beringer, Bones Hyland and Jaylen Clark are all 26 or younger. Perhaps the move here is seek value for the older players — Gobert, Randle, DiVincenzo if someone wants to take a flier on him returning next year or just get his Bird Rights for 2027 free agency — so that in a few years, they’re better-suited to take another real, big swing.

How much value is really out there for those players? Gobert just played the best defensive series anyone ever has on Jokić. Even at 33, he’d likely fetch a decent first-round pick. Randle is harder to peg, but lottery reform probably helps him in this regard. He’s a regular-season floor raiser, someone who takes a lot of shots and needs the ball in his hands a lot. He’s not good enough to do that for a true contender, but now that there’s suddenly value in winning 35 games, more teams might be interested.

Minnesota probably won’t ever regain the asset flexibility it spent on Gobert. That ship has sailed. But if they take a step back for a couple of years, quite a bit could open up for them. Their 2033 pick becomes tradable this offseason, and their 2035 pick unlocks two summers from now. If they’re mediocre in 2028, they can benefit from lottery reform since that’s one of the few remaining picks of their own that they still control. They are two years below the second apron away from unfreezing their 2032 pick. By then, they’ll have accumulated enough tradable draft capital combined with whatever they get for trading the old guys to potentially dive back into the deep end of the star trade pool. 

Who knows? Maybe the NBA expands in the next few years and Minnesota gets to move to the Eastern Conference. There’s no shame in taking the back door into the Finals. Towns may do that in New York this June.

Advertisement

Getting Edwards on board with stepping back would likely be a tough sell. He’s extension eligible this offseason, though he likely won’t sign since he’s not yet supermax eligible. He needs to sign off on any plan. He’s both young enough to justify a step back and good enough to justify a step forward.

The Timberwolves will need to decide on one of those paths, because there’s no path to the top of the West for this group. They weren’t competitive with the Thunder last year, and they would’ve lost to the Spurs in five were it not for an outlier Wembanyama ejection this season. Their plucky playoff over-performance just isn’t enough to overcome the substantial talent gap between them and the two best teams in the NBA.

Advertisement

Source link

Continue Reading

Sports

FIFA finalises China broadcasting deal as 2026 World Cup nears kickoff | FIFA World Cup 2022

Published

on


China Media Group (CMG), the parent company of Chinese state broadcaster CCTV, has secured a major broadcasting agreement with FIFA for the upcoming World Cups, bringing an end to prolonged negotiations just weeks before the 2026 FIFA World Cup begins across the United States, Canada, and Mexico.

 


Under the newly finalised agreement, CMG has obtained exclusive media and sublicensing rights in mainland China for four major FIFA tournaments, the men’s World Cups in 2026 and 2030, along with the Women’s World Cups in 2027 and 2031.

 

Advertisement


The rights package covers free-to-air television, paid broadcasting, online streaming, and mobile distribution platforms. 
However, the financial details of the agreement were not officially disclosed.

 
 


China remains one of football’s biggest global audiences, with an estimated 200 million fans following the sport despite limited recent success for the men’s national team, which has only qualified for one World Cup back in 2002.

 

Advertisement


FIFA Highlights Importance of Chinese Market

 


FIFA Secretary General Mattias Grafström welcomed the partnership and highlighted the significance of the Chinese audience in global football.

 

Advertisement
“The Chinese market is of very big importance to the global football community. We know the passion of Chinese football fans and we’re very happy and proud of our partnership with CMG to bring the World Cup to all fans in China,” Grafström said in a FIFA statement. 

 


According to Chinese outlet The Paper, the broadcasting rights for the 2026 World Cup alone are reportedly valued at around $60 million.

 


Deal Trends Across Chinese Social Media

Advertisement

 


News of the agreement quickly became one of the most-discussed topics on Chinese social media platform Weibo, generating over 27 million views within 45 minutes of the announcement.

 


For previous editions of the World Cup, CCTV had typically finalised broadcasting agreements much earlier and launched extensive promotional campaigns ahead of kickoff.

Advertisement

 


Digital Streaming Expansion Expected

 


Reports suggest CCTV has approached China Mobile’s streaming platform Migu regarding a potential distribution partnership for the 2026 World Cup.

Advertisement

 


China has increasingly embraced digital streaming for major football events. During the 2018 World Cup, CCTV sublicensed streaming rights to Migu and Alibaba-owned Youku for the first time. In 2022, CMG further expanded distribution by partnering with Migu, Douyin, and regional television broadcasters.

 

Meanwhile, FIFA recently confirmed that broadcast deals for the 2026 World Cup have now been completed across more than 175 global territories, although negotiations for broadcasting rights in India are still ongoing. 
India still await a broadcast deal 
Advertisement


With less than a month remaining before the start of the FIFA World Cup 2026, Indian football fans are still awaiting clarity over the tournament’s official broadcaster in the country. Despite the uncertainty, the All India Football Federation (AIFF) remains optimistic that a television and streaming agreement will be finalised soon.

 


AIFF Deputy General Secretary M Satyanarayan had expressed confidence that India’s massive football audience and commercial value make it highly unlikely for FIFA and major broadcasters to overlook the market entirely.

 

Advertisement


The delay in securing a deal is believed to stem from ongoing disagreements over broadcasting rights valuation. According to reports, FIFA has already reduced its original pricing expectations, but Indian broadcasters are still reluctant to match the revised figures, resulting in continued negotiations as the countdown to the tournament continues.

 

Source link

Continue Reading

Sports

Former NFL player Josh Mauro’s cause of death ruled accidental overdose

Published

on

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

Former NFL player Josh Mauro died from a drug overdose, the California Post reported, citing the Maricopa County Medical Examiner.

The Post said that Mauro died from “acute combined fentanyl, cocaine, and ethanol intoxication.”

Mauro’s death was ruled accidental, the outlet added.

Advertisement

CLICK HERE FOR MORE SPORTS COVERAGE ON FOXNEWS.COM

Josh Mauro wearing Oakland Raiders uniform on football field at Lucas Oil Stadium

Josh Mauro of the Oakland Raiders is on the field before the game against the Indianapolis Colts at Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis, Indiana, on Sept. 29, 2019. (Justin Casterline/Getty Images)

Greg Mauro, Josh’s father, announced his son’s death in a Facebook post last month, saying he passed on April 23.

“With many tears and broken hearts, yet anchored in the unshakable certainty that our precious Josh Mauro is now healed and made new – live in the presence of the Lord – we humbly covet your prayers as our family walks through the devastating loss of our amazing son, brother, uncle, grandson and friend,” Greg Mauro wrote in the post.

“On Thursday, April 23rd, Josh breathed his last breath on this Earth and his first breath in heaven. The Lord has been our strength in this unimaginable moment. Your prayers for continued strength and comfort mean more to us than words could ever express.”

Advertisement
Quarterback Sam Darnold greeting defensive end Josh Mauro on football field

Quarterback Sam Darnold of the New York Jets greets defensive end Josh Mauro of the Oakland Raiders after the Jets’ 34-3 win at MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, N.J., on Nov. 24, 2019. (Sarah Stier/Getty Images)

WISCONSIN SENATOR SAYS ‘ENOUGH IS ENOUGH’ AFTER NFL PUTS PACKERS HOLIDAY GAME BEHIND NETFLIX PAYWALL

Mauro entered the NFL as an undrafted free agent out of Stanford, signing with the Pittsburgh Steelers in 2014. But the Steelers didn’t hold on to the 6-foot-6, 290-pound defensive end long, cutting him during final roster moves before the start of the season. 

However, Mauro landed with the Arizona Cardinals, and he would spend the next four seasons in the desert helping their defensive line. 

Over six seasons with the Cardinals, Mauro collected 83 combined tackles and four sacks across 55 games (29 starts). He worked himself into a starting role in 2016, when he saw seven tackles for loss across 15 games. 

Advertisement

Mauro also spent time with the New York Giants and then-Oakland Raiders before a return to the Cardinals for the 2020 and 2021 seasons.

Mauro was born in England, where his father was stationed for work. He would eventually move from England to Texas and work up a high school resume that allowed him to play Division I football at Stanford. 

Josh Mauro of the Arizona Cardinals preparing to play against the Dallas Cowboys at AT&T Stadium

Josh Mauro of the Arizona Cardinals prepares to play against the Dallas Cowboys during an NFL game at AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas, on Jan. 2, 2022. (Cooper Neill/Getty Images)

CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE FOX NEWS APP

Across 80 career games, Mauro had five sacks, 130 combined tackles (20 for loss), two forced fumbles and five passes defended.

Advertisement

Fox News’ Scott Thompson contributed to this report.

Follow Fox News Digital’s sports coverage on X and subscribe to the Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter.

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Sports

Rangers keen on Sunderland forward Finn Geragusian

Published

on

Rangers have serious transfer interest in Sunderland forward Finn Geragusian, according to the Sunderland Echo. Gers manager Danny Rohl wants to bolster his attack at the Scottish Premiership club and is keen on bringing Geragusian to Ibrox this summer. The 18-year-old England-born Rangers target has yet to make his senior debut for the Black Cats. However, Geragusian already plays for Armenia at senior level having qualified through his father, and the Light Blues could face stiff competition for his services.

Advertisement

He has been involved in 35 goals in his last 60 appearances for Sunderland’s under-18s and under-21s and the club are hoping he signs a new deal. Geragusian is out of contract this summer after signing a two-year scholarship deal with the club two seasons ago. Rangers and other suitors will have to agree a compensation fee with the Stadium of Light club for his services or face a potential tribunal process to determine a fee.

He has 13 goals and three assists in 29 appearances this term after ending last term with 12 goals and seven assists across 31 matches. Geragusian’s potential is huge and pipping others to him could be great for the Bears. The Light Blues are desperate to mount a stronger title challenge next term after four defeats in their last four games ended their race against Celtic and Hearts.

They need to improve in the final third and the Sunderland starlet could be a decent addition, albeit one for the future. Geragusian can also play on the right wing and the opportunity to move to Rangers could appeal to him if he is guaranteed first-team football. He has several attacking options ahead of him at Sunderland and is unlikely to break into the senior ranks anytime soon.

Advertisement

However, the Light Blues could offer him the chance to play senior football sooner rather than later.

Source link

Continue Reading

Sports

Zakouma chases 2026 Melbourne Cup exemption via Andrew Ramsden

Published

on

Jockey in green and white silks rides a brown horse with a purple 14 saddle cloth during a race, Lexus banners in the background.

Plans for Zakouma did not initially include the Flemington Melbourne Cup ballot race until his most recent effort on the course.

Boasting three wins in a row, Zakouma lined up at Flemington on Anzac Day, heavily favoured to dominate the 2000m benchmark 100 showdown.

The event quickly soured for the Grahame Begg runner, who was pinned on the inside trailing the field and only emerged late.

Bypassing a break for spring races, Zakouma will instead contest the Listed Andrew Ramsden (2800m) this coming Saturday at Flemington.

Advertisement

As the second in a series of 10 races, the Andrew Ramsden delivers a direct path into the Group 1 Melbourne Cup (3200m) at Flemington in November.

Begg described Zakouma’s last-start as akin to a 2000m workout, yet the set-weights format raises flags for Begg, especially with Zakouma allotted the same impost as Sydney Cup winner Changingoftheguard despite his latent distance prowess.

“He’s got to go the distance and he’s not well-weighted under the conditions,” Begg said.

“I don’t understand why it’s a set-weights race.

Advertisement

“Outside three-year-old Classic races, I can’t think of one, while the winner gets free passage into the Melbourne Cup and then goes back to a handicap, so why not make this a handicap.”

Zakouma has not ventured beyond 2000m in Begg’s camp, originating from Pat Carey and Harris Walker based at Mornington.

In his juvenile phase, the gelding finished second over 2200m at Bairnsdale and fourth at 2400m on Caulfield’s track before joining Begg.

Begg desires a moderate speed Saturday, allowing Zakouma to track quietly in his bid to handle the trip.

Advertisement

“Changingoftheguard rolls forward, Sir Kingsford rolls forward, so I think they’ll go a good enough clip and normally at the 700 (metres) in these races, the wave starts coming,” Begg said.

“What we’ll try to do is put him to sleep, give him some clean air, and give him one crack at them.

“Whether he’s up to the task and can run the journey, that’s something we’ll find out on Saturday.

“But he goes to the race in good order.”

Advertisement

For the Andrew Ramsden, punters can find attractive betting sites with specials on Zakouma’s performance.

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Sports

Falconets draw Spain and China for 2026 FIFA

Published

on

Nigeria women’s national under-20 football team has been drawn in Group F of the 2026 FIFA U-20 Women’s World Cup in Poland.

Nigeria will face Spain, China, and tournament debutants New Caledonia during the group stage.

The competition will run from September 5 to September 27 across four cities in Poland.

  • Caroline Weir leads Scotland push for World Cup SpotCaroline Weir leads Scotland push for World Cup Spot

Advertisement

The Falconets booked their place at the tournament after defeating Malawi 3-2 on aggregate in the African qualifiers earlier this year.

Nigeria already has a history against both Spain and China at previous editions of the tournament.

The Falconets defeated Spain 2-1 in 2016 before losing 2-1 to the Europeans in the quarterfinals two years later.

Advertisement

Nigeria also played out a dramatic 1-1 draw against China at the 2018 tournament, where Rasheedat Ajibade scored a late equaliser.

The Falconets remain one of Africa’s strongest teams at the youth level, having finished runners-up twice in the competition.

Preparations for Poland 2026 are expected to continue over the coming months ahead of the tournament in September.

Advertisement

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Sports

Bryson DeChambeau’s different. His PGA MC was another reminder

Published

on

Source link

Continue Reading

Sports

Atalanta vs Bologna Prediction and Betting Tips

Published

on

Atalanta welcome Bologna to the Gewiss Stadium in Bergamo for the penultimate round of Serie A games on Sunday. Following Inter Milan’s victory in the Coppa Italia, Atalanta know that a seventh-placed finish in the standings will guarantee them UEFA Conference League football next season.

La Dea are in seventh place on 58 points, and cannot catch sixth-placed Como on 65 points.

Interestingly, the team stopping Atalanta from having mathematical certainty of Conference League qualification are their next opponents, Bologna. The Rossoblu are in eighth place on 52 points, six behind Atalanta, and a draw or loss for Bologna would ensure their opponents finish seventh.

Atalanta are coming into this game on a high, having defeated AC Milan 3-2 at the San Siro on Sunday. The Nerazzurri raced to a 3-0 lead before late goals from the Milan giants cut the deficit, but Atalanta held on to win.

Bologna also impressed in their recent victory over second-placed Napoli away at the Diego Armando Maradona Stadium on Monday.

Goals from Federico Bernardeschi, Riccardo Orsolini, and Jonathan Rowe earned the Felsinei a 3-2 victory to remember. Giovanni Di Lorenzo and Alisson Santos scored the goals for Napoli.


Atalanta vs Bologna head-to-head stats and key numbers

  • In 129 matches between these rivals, the head-to-head record is evenly matched, with 47 wins each and 35 draws.
  • When the teams met earlier this season, Atalanta won 2-0 away at the Stadio Renato Dall’Ara, with Nikola Krstovic scoring a brace.
  • Atalanta’s defense has been excellent this season, conceding less than a goal per game on average, with 34 goals shipped in 36 matches. In comparison, Bologna conceded 43 goals in their 36 games.

Atalanta vs Bologna prediction

Atalanta coach Raffaele Palladino is one of the most promising young tacticians in Serie A, and he has done well in Bergamo. La Dea are defensively disciplined, but several of their center-backs are unavailable for this match, with Isak Hien suspended following a yellow card against Milan, and Berat Djimsiti and Giorgio Scalvini struggling with fitness issues.

Bologna will aim to exploit wide areas through wing maestro Riccardo Orsolini, who will try to benefit from the home side’s centre-back crisis by cutting inside and looking for shooting opportunities or final passes.

Advertisement

However, Atalanta are difficult to beat at home, and we expect them to emerge victorious against visiting Bologna.

Prediction: Atalanta 2-1 Bologna


Atalanta vs Bologna betting tips

Tip 1: Atalanta to win

Tip 2: Both teams to score

Advertisement

Tip 3: Over 2.5 goals