Sports
Matthew Tkachuk talks Trump phone call
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President Donald Trump talked to the U.S. men’s hockey team and invited them to his State of the Union address after their gold medal victory over Canada at the Winter Olympics.
American Olympian Matthew Tkachuk reflected on the president’s phone call as he arrived at Miami International Airport a day after the team secured a gold medal.
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United States’ hockey player Matthew Tkachuk signs autographs after arriving at Miami International Airport from the Milan Cortina Olympics, Monday, Feb. 23, 2026, in Miami. (AP Photo/Marta Lavandier)
“It was super cool,” he told reporters as he walked into the terminal. “It’s an honor hearing from the President of the United States. Hearing that he was supporting us and all the other athletes wanting us to bring home as many gold medals as we can. We’re definitely honored to represent him and the hundreds of millions across the country and to bring a gold medal back.”
The Florida Panthers star was also asked how winning a gold medal compared to winning the Stanley Cup.

United States’ Matthew Tkachuk (19) celebrates after the United States defeated Canada in a men’s ice hockey gold medal game between Canada and the United States at the 2026 Winter Olympics, in Milan, Italy, Sunday, Feb. 22, 2026. (AP Photo/Petr David Josek)
Tkachuk and the Panthers are back-to-back reigning Stanley Cup champions. He pointed out the major difference was what the win meant to the country as a whole.
“It’s almost more meaningful to everybody else in the sense of it’s a way to unite the whole country,” he said. “When you go through the two-month grind and the 82-game grind in the NHL season, you don’t compare that. That’s as hard of a trophy as you’re going to win in sports, the Stanley Cup.
“But when it comes to bringing together Americans, whether they like hockey or not, the Olympics, an Olympic hockey player at that stage against Canada, that’s as high as it’s gonna get.”

United States’ Matthew Tkachuk (19) celebrates after the United States defeated Canada in a men’s ice hockey gold medal game between Canada and the United States at the 2026 Winter Olympics, in Milan, Italy, Sunday, Feb. 22, 2026. (AP Photo/Petr David Josek)
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Tkachuk didn’t confirm whether the team will be at the State of the Union, but suggested that they will party in Miami on Monday night and then head to D.C. on Tuesday.
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Sports
Youth movement leading Wizards into matchup with Hawks
Feb 3, 2026; Washington, District of Columbia, USA; Washington Wizards center Alex Sarr (20) grabs a rebound in front of New York Knicks guard Josh Hart (3) during the first quarter at Capital One Arena. Mandatory Credit: Rafael Suanes-Imagn Images The Atlanta Hawks continue their five-game homestand on Tuesday with the first game of a back-to-back series against the Washington Wizards.
The Hawks are coming off a 115-104 win over the Brooklyn Nets on Sunday. Atlanta erased an 11-point fourth-quarter deficit to collect the much-needed win and remain in ninth place in the Eastern Conference.
The Wizards had their two-game winning streak broken on Sunday when they lost 129-112 to the Charlotte Hornets.
Many Atlanta fans had the two-game series with Washington marked as the return of Trae Young, who was traded to the Wizards before the trade deadline. Young spent the first seven-plus seasons of his career as the face of the Hawks, but he remains sidelined with an MCL sprain in his right knee and has not played since Dec. 27.
The Wizards said last week that Young and Anthony Davis, also acquired at the deadline, are not quite ready to return. Washington announced on Thursday that Young would miss at least one more week and that Davis, out with ligament damage in his left hand, will be re-evaluated in two weeks.
“You just follow the process. That’s what we always do,” Washington coach Brian Keefe said.
The Hawks are trying to follow a process, too. They added CJ McCollum, Corey Kispert, Jock Landale, Gabe Vincent, Buddy Hield and Jonathan Kuminga ahead of the trade deadline. Only two players remain from the roster that coach Quin Snyder inherited when he took the job in 2023, leaving the team with the ongoing task of finding the right formula.
McCollum moved into the starting lineup on Sunday, and Kispert and Landale have become important bench pieces. The Hawks are still waiting for Kuminga to return from a left knee bone bruise. “It’s part of development,” Snyder said. “Part of that is evaluating the mix between playing and working. The competition that you’re involved in at a high level is able to show you the things that you need to work on, but we want to win, make no mistake about that, and everybody’s got to contribute at the level that they’re capable of right now.”
Meanwhile, the Wizards continue to lean on their youngsters until Young and Davis return. Second-year players Bub Carrington (10.1 points, 3.6 rebounds, 4.5 assists), Kyshawn George (14.9 points, 5.3 rebounds, 4.6 assists) and Tre Johnson (12.8 points) all played in the Rising Stars Game during All-Star Weekend, and Alex Sarr was on the first-team All-Rookie player last season.
The game will also showcase the top two picks from the 2024 NBA Draft. Atlanta’s Zaccharie Risacher was the No. 1 pick and Sarr was No. 2. Sarr averages a team-leading 17.2 points, 7.8 rebounds and 2.0 blocks in 41 games, while Risacher averages 10.3 points and 3.5 rebounds.
Risacher has struggled since missing 11 games with a left knee bone contusion. In the nine games since his return, Risacher is averaging 6.8 points and 4.2 rebounds. He was replaced in the starting lineup by McCollum on Sunday. This will be the third meeting between the two clubs. They split the first two games, both in Washington. The Wizards will remain in town and play Atlanta again on Thursday.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Getta Good Feeling eyes 2026 Inglis Sprint return
In her most recent start, Getta Good Feeling jumped as the odds-on elect in the 2500-metre VRC Oaks, however, she makes her seasonal reappearance over a much shorter trip this Saturday at Flemington.
Trainer Danny O’Brien plans to leverage the $525,000 purchase from the Easter Yearling Sale’s qualification for the Inglis Race Series, kicking off in the $1 million Inglis Sprint at 1200m.
Classy frontrunners Raging Force and Alpha Sophie lead the potential opposition for Getta Good Feeling, yet O’Brien expects a sharp performance on debut after placing third narrowly in an 800m gallop at Flemington last Friday.
“There are not many options for her to kick off, but it’s a nice starting point; 1200 metres down the straight at Flemington, it gets a good gallop into her and sets her up for the rest of the campaign,” O’Brien said.
“She’s obviously more effective at 1400 and a mile, but she’s a preparation older now, she’s sharper, her work so far has been very good and her trial Friday was very good.
“She seems to have come back in really good shape.”
Her first triumph came in the Group 2 Edward Manifold Stakes (1600m), then third in Group 1 Thousand Guineas (1600m), victory in Group 2 Wakeful Stakes (2000m), and ultimately sixth in the Oaks to Strictly Business when the trip stretched her.
As such, O’Brien passed on entering her for the Group 1 ATC Australian Oaks (2400m) up north, and she bypasses the vital warmup, Group 1 Vinery Stud Stakes (2000m), even as the second favourite.
Everything points to the $1 million Group 1 Australasian Oaks (2000m) at Morphettville on April 25 as the key objective.
“After Saturday, she’ll then go probably three weeks and run over a mile (at Caulfield) at what was the old Moonee Valley meeting in the three-year-old fillies mile,” O’Brien said, referring to the $200,000 Group 3 Alexandra Stakes (1600m).
“We’ll just space her runs through to the Australasian Oaks.
“There’s an option to go to Brisbane after that. The Oaks in Brisbane is 2200 and we just thought the 2500 in the spring found her out for stamina late.”
Fans can find competitive betting sites offering value on the Inglis Sprint with Getta Good Feeling back in action.
Sports
Gauff cries out after Dubai Semi Final Defeat
After her semi-final defeat in Dubai, Coco Gauff did not hide her frustration.
The world No 4 fell 6-4, 6-7(13), 6-4 to Elina Svitolina in a three-hour battle at the WTA 1000 event, but it was her struggles on serve and her emotional reaction that drew attention.
Gauff was broken six times, hit 12 double faults, and won just 43 percent of her second-serve points. After double-faulting at 3-3 in the second set, she turned toward her box and directed her frustration at her biomechanics coach.
“I’ve been doing everything you wanted for six months… I’m not better at all,” she said.
The serving issues have followed her across seasons. Gauff recorded the most double faults on the WTA Tour in 2024 (430) and 2025 (431), and the pattern resurfaced at critical moments against Svitolina.
Despite the setbacks, Gauff showed resilience. She recovered from 3-1 down in the first set, saved four match points in a 28-point second-set tiebreak, and forced a decider. She even broke to start the third before losing serve twice as Svitolina closed it out.
In her post-match press conference, Gauff struck a calmer tone.
“It’s tough to be on the losing end of a match like this, but there’s a lot of positives to take from it,” she said. “Elina played great, I thought I played great and it came down to the wire. I’ll definitely learn from this match in the future.”
She added:
“I started off the week just trying to win one match here, and so I’m glad to have made it to the semis and I was really close to making it to the final. Entering a tournament not in my best form and still making the semis means a lot, so hopefully I can take this momentum into Indian Wells and Miami.”
Sports
Welsh Open: Defending champion Mark Selby beaten by Jiang Jung in first round
It was an excellent first day for the Welsh players, as Jak Jones, Dylan Emery and Mark Williams all won their first-round matches.
Jones took a comfortable 4-1 win over England’s Liam Highfield, while Emery shocked China’s Lei Peifan with a deciding-frame victory.
Home favourite Williams – who was the last Welsh player to win the title back in 1999 – overcame Michael Holt to win 4-2 and set up a second-round match against Martin O’Donnell.
O’Donnell upset 25th seed Tom Ford 4-2 later on Monday.
England’s Robbie Williams knocked out world number 16 Si Jiahui with a 4-2 win.
Williams will face last year’s runner-up and former Welsh Open winner Stephen Maguire in the second round after his come-from-behind win over Ricky Walden.
Barry Hawkins was forced to go the distance against fellow Englishman David Lilley, though the 12th seed came out on top with a 4-3 win, sealing his win with a 108 break in the decider.
In Monday’s evening session there were comfortable wins for Joe O’Connor, Wu Yize and two-time Welsh Open winner Neil Robertson.
The final two games of the day both produced surprise results, as David Grace knocked out eighth seed Mark Allen – who has not reached a Welsh Open final in his career – with a 4-2 win.
And Anthony McGill beat the 2009 Welsh Open champion Ali Carter in a deciding frame to book his place in the second round.
The pair will face Monday’s Welsh winners, with Grace playing Emery and McGill taking on Jones in the second round in Llandudno.
Sports
Troy Deeney’s Team of the Week: Gyokeres, Jimenez, Eze, Van Dijk, Gomez, Fleming, Hall
Nico O’Reilly (Manchester City): The player of the weekend for me, and the player of the month by a country mile. Since O’Reilly has moved into that midfield, Rodri has looked better, Manchester City have looked better, he has looked amazing and the job he has done for the past 18 months at left-back shows his versatility. What a player. Both his goals against Newcastle were great and totally different. He offers so much to Manchester City and is a shoo-in for the England squad. We were looking at him as a left-back but does he now play midfield?
Anton Stach (Leeds): I thought Leeds might falter and fall away. I think they have to be careful with these draws but he was a really good performer against Aston Villa – and that free-kick he scored against a World-Cup winning goalkeeper in Emi Martinez means he goes in my team.
Eberechi Eze (Arsenal): He has to go in this week with his two goals against Spurs on Sunday. He has scored five goals against them now in two games – so Spurs are obviously his team to face. Good for him and good for Mikel Arteta to pick him. He has been up and down this season, in and out of the team, but this will be a real confidence booster for him and Arsenal.
Diego Gomez (Brighton): He got a goal in the win against Brentford, but it was also an important midfield performance from him. Brentford weren’t at their best, with injuries in the squad, but you have to be able to break through the lines and he did that a lot. He was fantastic. It was Brighton’s first win in seven league games and they needed it.
Sports
NBA Highlights (Feb. 23)
NBA Highlights (Feb. 23)
Sports
Benjamin Sesko and Senne Lammens give Man Utd real hope of Champions League return
If Sesko broke Everton’s hearts at one end of the field, another summer recruit, Senne Lammens, did it at the other.
The Belgian goalkeeper kept out a blockbuster strike from Michael Keane, which Moyes felt sure was going in, then dealt superbly with a series of corners dropped under his crossbar as Everton literally tried to force an equaliser.
“Their goalie was brilliant tonight,” was Moyes’ blunt reaction.
“The save he made from Michael, the way he dealt with corner kicks. The pressure we had. For me, their goalkeeper was the best player.”
Carrick is the one who benefits though, just as he is benefiting from the decision of United’s recruitment department to block Amorim’s calls to bring in Emi Martinez from Aston Villa on summer transfer deadline day and instead place their faith in a relatively young £18.1m goalkeeper with just one full season of senior football in Belgium behind him.
Lammens is 23. Sesko is 22. United might not quite be winning trophies with kids, but they have a young generation that is beginning to blossom.
It was brought to Carrick’s attention after the Everton game that his former United team-mate and all-time great goalkeeper Edwin van der Sar was analysing the game on TV with Carragher.
Carrick skilfully navigated the question of whether there are comparisons to be drawn between the two men.
“I’ve got to be careful what I say,” he said.
“I don’t want to be comparing them because I don’t think it’s fair to Senne. But there’s definitely similarities.
“You want a goalkeeper to be reliable and trustworthy. Instead of creating a chaos, you want him to take the chaos away and calm things down. I think Senne is that.
“He’s quite quiet at times and unassuming, but he’s got real steel. It’s a big role for some, and it’s about being comfortable in your environment.
“Sometimes it takes time, sometimes not, but he has that calmness and composure. It helps those in front of him an awful lot.”
At the start of the season, United’s stated aim was to get back into Europe.
Even internally, it was felt reaching the Europa League was the most realistic target, and financial estimates were created around that.
However, in the wake of Amorim’s exit, director of football Jason Wilcox spoke to the players about reaching the Champions League.
The difference in status and finance is huge.
United have now gone 10 consecutive Premier League games without defeat for the first time since a run of 14 between January and May 2021 under Ole Gunnar Solskjaer.
From their current position, with no European distractions, which is something Villa, Chelsea and Liverpool all have, it would be a major disappointment for them if United were not to seal a return to European football’s top table.
“Manchester United are now virtually guarantees for one of the Champions League places,” said Carragher. “I can’t see them not making it.”
Sports
‘Adversity is always good’: Canucks’ Buium navigating rookie growing pains
VANCOUVER — Despite his natural swagger and remarkable international success with Team USA, Zeev Buium assures us he has failed before.
“It’s funny — nobody knows this — but I was never, like, the top guy on every team I was on,” the Vancouver Canucks’ 20-year-old rookie told Sportsnet after Monday’s practice. “It took me a long time to really kind of get my feet going and become who I am becoming. You know, it wasn’t an easy path whatsoever. I think college was kind of the first time I really got that spark.”
In two seasons at the University of Denver, under coach David Carle, Buium sparked like all those NASA rockets on Cape Canaveral.
The defenceman from San Diego recorded 98 points in 83 games for Denver and led the Pioneers to a national championship as a freshman. He also won a pair of world junior titles and, in 2024, was the Minnesota Wild’s first-round draft pick, 12th overall.
By the time he left school last spring, Buium was regarded as one of the top prospects in hockey and touted as a potential rookie-of-the-year in the National Hockey League.
After 14 points in 31 games (and a minus-five goal differential at five-on-five), Buium was the centrepiece of the Canucks’ return in the Quinn Hughes trade on Dec. 12.
Since then, Buium has six points in 20 games (and a minus-four differential), been on and off Vancouver’s top power play, was healthy-scratched Jan. 12 in Montreal, and 13 days later suffered a facial fracture when hit by the puck during a home game against the Pittsburgh Penguins.

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None of this is to say that Buium, who remains one of the top prospects in hockey, has had a poor season. But his status and pedigree have not exempted him from the same first-year growing pains that afflict and sometimes ambush nearly all NHL rookies.
As coaches say, development is not linear.
“It’s definitely been a learning curve,” Buium said after being the last player off the ice at the University of British Columbia. “But I think there’s been instances when I was in Minnesota and here where I feel comfortable with my game and what I can do out there. It kind of suck getting hurt (because) I felt like I was starting to pick up something, and I felt confident. I mean, it’s definitely been tough, but I think there’s positives in everything.
“I’d be lying if I thought it was going to be easy, right? But I think adversity is always good. Like I said, I think I’ve been in situations like this where it’s tough (and) things maybe aren’t going your way. I just think the way you look at it is you can’t beat yourself up about it all the time. Just keep working at it, keep getting better. I try to, like, sometimes just take a step back and think, ‘You know, I’m here (in the NHL).’ If I would have told myself that when I first started playing hockey, I wouldn’t have believed it.”
The timing of the NHL’s Olympic break couldn’t have been better for Buium, who had three weeks to heal and spent time at home in San Diego and during a visit with his girlfriend to Phoenix, where they attended the PGA Tour’s annual circus stop.
He is practising with a full cage on his helmet, but is expected to play Wednesday when the last-place Canucks open the final seven weeks of their season with a game against the Winnipeg Jets at Rogers Arena.
Marco Rossi, the second-line centre acquired from the Wild, is also fully healthy for the first time since suffering a lower-body injury in Minnesota on Nov. 11. The third player acquired in the blockbuster, 22-year-old winger Liam Ohgren, has been one of the pleasant surprises in a dismal Canucks season and before the break was part of Vancouver’s best forward line alongside Teddy Blueger and Conor Garland.
But neither Rossi nor Ohgren, although key pieces in the Canucks’ future, face the pressure Buium does to develop into a top-pairing, offensive defenceman capable of replacing Hughes, the 2024 Norris Trophy winner and newly crowned Olympic gold medallist.
“He has the potential to be a great player in this league,” veteran defenceman Tyler Myers, a former Calder Trophy winner himself, said of Buium. “I’m really excited to see what he does going forward, especially the next few years, and see how he grows as a player. But it’s important for everybody — the fans, the media, Zeev himself — that just because he was part of that trade, doesn’t mean he should be compared to Quinn or any other player. He just needs to be himself. Highly skilled, tons of potential. It’s going to be fun to watch him.”
Even with Buium’s uneven season, of the five defencemen drafted ahead of him in 2024, only second overall pick Artyom Levshunov of the Chicago Blackhawks has more NHL games and points so far than the Canuck, who is averaging 20:25 of ice time in Vancouver.
“I think I said it to you when we first met, but I just want to be myself,” Buium said. “I want to write my own story. I’m not going to look like Quinn Hughes, I’m not going to skate like him, not going to stickhandle like him. But I’m going to do things in my own way that hopefully, you know, kind of matches something that he was able to do here. That’s my goal — to be the player I am, bring what I know I can bring to the game, and hopefully make the fans happy with that.”
He is eager to play the Canucks’ final 25 games.
“I’m really excited,” Buium said. “I mean, I think these games are so important to all of us. Regardless of whether you make the playoffs or don’t make the playoffs … I think for us as a team, especially us younger group of guys, the really important thing is trying to build that confidence, trying to build that game. The way I look at it is if I can play these next 25 games, making them my best games, (getting) better and better and feel really good by the end of it, that’s something that you can build on in the summer. You can build on it going into next year.
“I think that’s important for the older guys, too. I feel like there’s a lot of noise around our team all the time, and especially with what happened with Quinn. I wasn’t here, obviously, but I was in college, and I was hearing about (ex-Canuck) J.T. Miller and all this stuff. It’s like these guys have been through a lot. For us (young players), it’s helping bring a new light to the team, right? Bring a new energy. Kind of forget about all the bull—- that happened, honestly, and just get past that.”
• With a winter storm in the U.S. Northeast causing travel chaos for athletes returning from the Olympics in Italy, Canucks coach Adam Foote said Monday that goalie Kevin Lankinen, a bronze medallist as a backup on Team Finland, likely won’t be ready to play Wednesday. The Canucks four other Olympians, Czechs Filip Hronek and David Kampf, Swede Elias Pettersson and Blueger of Team Latvia, had their second practice back with the Canucks. Winger Brock Boeser, concussed by Pittsburgh Penguin Bryan Rust’s headshot on Jan. 25, practised in a non-contact jersey.
Sports
Predicting Team USA’s 2028 Olympic basketball roster: Who joins Kevin Durant?
The 2026 Winter Olympics concluded on Sunday, and the NBA is already looking ahead to the 2028 games. Recently, four-time Olympian Kevin Durant said that he wants to play for a historic fifth gold medal in Los Angeles. “Hell yeah, I want to play,” Durant said. “I would love to, but I’ve got to stay on top of my game. I’m not expecting, I want to produce on the floor and make Grant (Hill) and whoever is making the decisions, want to put me on the team. I don’t want — not just for seniority. I want to still prove I can help the team win.”
Durant may ultimately deserve a spot on merit — 2028 is still a ways away for a 37-year-old, but he is still an All-Star-caliber NBA player — but if he wants a spot, it’s his on seniority. He is the greatest Olympic basketball player of all time, and his skillset should age well enough and fits so smoothly next to other elite players that, short of significant injury- or age-related decline, it’s hard to envision a scenario in which he wouldn’t be able to help Team USA.
But that exacerbates a first-world problem for Team USA: after years of fear about the American developmental pipeline, we’re in the middle of a talent boom. The last handful of drafts have been very kind to American prospects, and when you consider all of the great existing American players who have already worn the red, white and blue, it suddenly gets very difficult to trim the roster down to 12 players. With Durant in place, there are really only 11 spots.
So… who do we think is filling those other slots? We’re going to take a shot at filling in the rest of the team. Keep in mind that we’re still more than two years away here, so aging will be a factor. So will the stylistic differences between the NBA and FIBA game. Remember, FIBA has no defensive three-second rule, no goaltending and a shorter 3-point line, so shooting is at an absolute premium. Officials tend to call fewer fouls as well, allowing for more physicality defensively. We still have a ways to go before 2028, but for now, these are the players who make the most sense four Team USA’s next Olympic roster.
The stars
Yes, yes, I know, almost everyone who plays for Team USA is going to qualify as a “star.” But every Olympic cycle reminds us this process is a bit more complex than slapping the 12 biggest names together. We just watched Jayson Tatum ride the bench in the 2024 run to gold while his less-accomplished NBA teammate, Derrick White, played a vital rotation role. The idea here is to grab a handful of the best players in the NBA and then use the rest of the roster to round out the team with specialists.
Now, Durant will be on the team, but he will be 39 when the Olympics arrive. He’s probably coming off of the bench. We’ll address the bigs separately. Fortunately, the four other starters appear to be relatively straightforward at this point.
- Cade Cunningham is, at worst, the fourth-best point guard in the NBA. Shai Gilgeous-Alexander is Canadian, Luka Dončić is Slovenian and Stephen Curry likely won’t be back as a 40-year-old in 2028. That leaves Cunningham as the obvious choice as our starting point guard. His playmaking should fit in quite well on an Olympic roster with far more offensive firepower than his Pistons, and his size and defensive versatility ensure he won’t get picked on. This one’s a no-brainer.
- Anthony Edwards won gold in 2024, has improved markedly as a shooter and post player since then and will turn 27 soon after the 2028 Olympics. He should be at the peak of his powers at this point and could easily be the best American player in the NBA. Once again, this one is obvious.
- Jayson Tatum really should have been one of the core members of the 2024 team. American Olympians usually only play once or twice before handing the baton to the next generation. Durant and LeBron James didn’t do that last time, so that forced Tatum to the bench, where Steve Kerr seemingly determined that despite being a jack of all trades, he was not enough of a master at any single one to justify consistent specialist minutes off the bench. Well, with James presumably done competing for gold and Durant headed for the bench, Tatum’s versatility alongside other stars suddenly looks a lot more valuable. Assuming he doesn’t significantly decline as a result of his torn Achilles, he should still be a deserving starter. He was the best American forward in the NBA before he got hurt, and arguably the best overall American player.
- Cooper Flagg rounds out our core. We’re admittedly doing some projecting here, but it feels relatively safe to do so. He’s just the fourth rookie in NBA history to average 20 points, six rebounds and four assists. The first three were Michael Jordan, Larry Bird and Luka Dončić. Odds are, he’ll be a special player by his third season. His defensive versatility and competitiveness should fit in quite well here.
So let’s take stock here. In Cunningham, Edwards, Tatum and Flagg, we have an enormous set of starters in which our smallest player, Edwards, is 6-foot-4. Defensively, this foursome should be stellar and capable of pretty much any scheme Erik Spoelstra wants to run. There’s plenty of playmaking here too. Cunningham currently trails only Nikola Jokić for the NBA lead in assists, and Tatum and Edwards have both averaged at least five assists per game in a season despite not playing point guard. Throw in Flagg’s passing and you have a really balanced group that can all set one another up.
If it’s lacking anywhere, it’s probably shooting, and that’s only a minor blemish. Cunningham is roughly a 34% shooter from deep, Flagg is at around 30%, and while Tatum is typically a reliable shooter, his jumper seemingly abandoned him during his last run with Team USA. Fortunately, we have a wide pool of American players to choose from to fill in that “gap” and round out the rest of the team. Let’s start with the big men, who deserve their own category. Fortunately, there isn’t really a shortage of American bigs who can shoot.
The bigs
Our first center choice is easy. We want a big who can shoot? Chet Holmgren is roughly a 37% 3-point shooter. Problem solved. That he’s also a perpetual Defensive Player of the Year candidate is a nice bonus. He’s not a great rebounder, but having Tatum and Flagg at forward should help offset that minor deficiency, and besides, we have two more big slots at our disposal here. We can stylistically cherrypick from this point on.
Rebounding largely fits into the broader need for physicality. Serbia gave Team USA its biggest test in 2024, so winning in 2028 means having an answer for Nikola Jokić. Alperen Sengun, Domantas Sabonis and Giannis Antetokounmpo loom as possible opponents here as well, and though he plays differently, Team USA needs as many stylistic options as it can find to throw at Victor Wembanyama. So for our second big slot, we’re looking for a bit of heft.
This isn’t something the American hoops pipeline tends to deliver much anymore, but we fortunately have a pretty straightforward choice here. It’s Jalen Duren. He comes with baked in chemistry with Cunningham, he rebounds, and although the sample in the modern NBA is always going to be fairly small, his numbers defending the post have by and large been excellent. Over the past three seasons, he has been in the 75th percentile or better at post up points allowed per possession. Again, tiny sample, but it checks out. When you’re as strong as Duren, you’re probably going to be tough to score on near the basket.
The third spot comes down to two names, and they’re pretty similar players. Both Bam Adebayo and Evan Mobley are enormously versatile defensive big men who have improved meaningfully as shooters in recent years and can create some of their own looks. The standard aging curve would suggest that Mobley, who will be 27 when the Olympics roll around, is likely to be better at that point than Adebayo, who will be 31. He might even be better now. But Erik Spoelstra is coaching this team, and he’s probably going to lean toward the player he’s more comfortable with, which would surely be the one he’s coached in Miami for almost a decade now. It wouldn’t hurt to have a bit more Olympic experience on this roster, so Adebayo’s 2024 run is a plus as well. If it’s a tie or close to it, he’s probably going to win. If he’s declined at all by then, though, Mobley is ready to go.
The supporting cast
So right now, we have eight spots locked up: Durant, Cunningham, Edwards, Tatum, Flagg, Holmgren, Duren and Adebayo. There are three pretty straightforward roles we need to fill with our four remaining slots: backup point guard, designated shooter and designated defender.
- Tyrese Maxey is our backup point guard. His speed and shooting contrasts nicely with the bigger Cunningham, giving Team USA a curveball to throw at opposing bench lineups. The name of the game here is versatility, and Cunningham and Maxey just complement each other perfectly.
- Kon Knueppel is the clear designated shooter choice. He’s leading the NBA in made 3-pointers as a rookie. He’s averaging eight 3-point attempts per game, and the only players to shoot a higher percentage from deep on that volume in a season are Stephen Curry and Duncan Robinson. He’s on track to succeed Curry as the best shooter in the NBA, so if we’re looking for one, pure shooter for the roster, he’s our guy.
- Amen Thompson is our defensive specialist. This was the trickiest choice. He just checked the most boxes. He’s perhaps the NBA’s best athlete, he’s 6-foot-7 with a seven-foot wingspan so he’s positionally versatile, and FIBA’s whistle should be very kind to him given how physically he likes to play.
We’ll get into some of the other players I considered for those slots in the snub section, but for now, we have one last slot to fill. It’s a tricky one. There’s no specific need we’re looking to address here. We’ve checked every positional box, and because of how big some of our guards are, there’s not really an impetus to seek out size here either. It’s just a matter of picking the best available American player.
Now, this could change in the next two years, but I believe at this point the best available American player is Donovan Mitchell. He’ll be closing in on his 32nd birthday by then, so decline is a real possibility, but he still hasn’t played and 2028 will probably be his last realistic chance. He’s a seven-time NBA All-Star. Every other active player to be chosen to that many All-Star teams has at least been chosen by Team USA, though Kawhi Leonard dropped out due to injury. He finished fifth in MVP voting last year and just ranked seventh in ESPN’s latest MVP straw poll for this season. Only two Americans finished above him, Cunningham and someone we’ll get to in a moment. Purely as an individual, he is the most accomplished American player without a gold medal.
So Mitchell is the pick to round out the roster. That leaves us with the following 12-man team…
The final roster
|
Point guard |
Cade Cunningham |
|
Shooting guard |
Anthony Edwards |
|
Small forward |
Jayson Tatum |
|
Power forward |
Cooper Flagg |
|
Center |
Chet Holmgren |
|
Guard |
Tyrese Maxey |
|
Guard |
Donovan Mitchell |
|
Guard |
Kon Knueppel |
|
Forward |
Amen Thompson |
|
Forward |
Kevin Durant |
|
Center |
Bam Adebayo |
|
Center |
Jalen Duren |
The snubs
So, we mentioned one other American player who just outranked Mitchell in the MVP straw poll. That would be Jaylen Brown. In pure basketball terms, he would be a reasonable choice. He’s having the best season of his career, he played for Team USA in the FIBA World Cup, and our roster does lean a bit more toward guards than forwards.
Ultimately, the prediction was informed by two factors. The first is that I simply think Mitchell is slightly better. In the best year of Brown’s career, he and Mitchell are still basically even in terms of scoring volume. Brown is the better defender given his size, but Mitchell is a better playmaker, is more efficient and beats Brown in most of the all-in-one metrics pretty meaningfully. They’re close enough that if there was a specific need for something Brown did, he’d be a fair choice. But if that were the case, we would have carved out a specialist slot for him and we didn’t.
The other factor was politics. Brown criticized Team USA in 2024 for his belief that it allows Nike influence over roster decisions. Whether that’s true or not, it’s a headache Team USA would probably prefer to avoid. If we were talking about a foundational part of USA Basketball, that would be one thing, but for one of the last slots on the roster, the tie is probably going to go to someone else.
The other candidate for the final, “best available American player” slot was Jalen Williams. He’s not the individual creator Brown is, but he’s a better defender and on the right side of the aging curve. He’s having a down year as he recovers from a wrist injury, but it’s reasonable to assume that he’ll at least bounce back to the level he played at last season, when he was an All-NBA choice. If USA Basketball wants a forward for this last slot, he’s the easy pick. But in a tie, I’m giving the edge to the older player. Williams will have more chances.
Backup point guard was a nightmare. Tyrese Haliburton was on the 2024 team, though he barely played. Jalen Brunson missed the cut, and he reportedly wants another shot in 2028. Either would have been worthy choices. But the guard pool is so deep that, with two years out, I’m inclined not to gamble on what Haliburton looks like post-Achilles tear. I’m a bit more comfortable with Tatum, a forward, looking mostly like himself after that injury compared to Haliburton, a guard. Brunson is the oldest of the three, right in the same range as Mitchell, but his playing style is a bit more tailored to the NBA given his mid-range mastery and defensive vulnerability at his size. Both were agonizing cuts, especially given how well Haliburton’s passing fits into the FIBA game, but we only have 12 spots.
Devin Booker didn’t really fit into a neat box, but he was another brutal cut considering how well he played in 2024. But Mitchell has outplayed him for several years now, and we’ve now had two full seasons of subpar 3-point shooting out of Booker, so he wasn’t going to get any consideration in the designated shooter slot. He’s not beating players off of the dribble quite as easily anymore either, so I’d be a bit concerned with how he’ll look in two-and-a-half years.
I could have gone in so many different directions for the designated defender slot. Jalen Suggs isn’t durable enough. Herb Jones doesn’t do enough offensively. Alex Caruso is too old. Cason Wallace is too small. The two players that most seriously challenged Amen Thompson were his brother Ausar and Stephon Castle. In the end, Amen’s offensive advantage over his brother and his slight size advantage over Castle were the tiebreakers. Castle is certainly better on offense than Thompson, though, and if either of them can just get to passable as a 3-point shooter, that would make picking a winner easier. Speaking of shooting, that was what kept Scottie Barnes off the team. He could qualify as a defensive specialist, though he’s obviously more well-rounded than that overall. This team just already has enough of what he does offensively, and Thompson is an easier fit in the on-ball defensive role we’re looking to fill.
The only other big man I gave any consideration to was Walker Kessler. He hasn’t played much this season due to injury, but he played for Team USA in the 2023 World Cup and he checks the same size and physicality boxes that Duren does. Duren’s growth into an All-Star this season made him the clear choice for this role on the team, but I’m keeping an eye on Kessler just on the faint hope that his experiments with 3-point shooting ever bear fruit. If he ever learns to shoot at his size, he’d be a great FIBA player, so watch out over the next two years.
And then there are the youngsters. I don’t think Reed Sheppard is going to catch Knueppel, but he was a similarly gifted college shooter. The 2025 draft class is promising enough that some of these players, like Cedric Coward or Derik Queen, may be heard from in the years to come. And of course, we have three enormously promising American youngsters coming in June in Darryn Peterson, AJ Dybantsa and Cam Boozer. Making the team after only two years as a professional is rare, but not unheard of. Keldon Johnson made the cut after his rookie season in 2020, and Anthony Davis played for Team USA before he even played in the NBA. Neither played major roles in the Olympics, but both won gold medals, so we can’t rule the upcoming rookies out.
Sports
Michael Carrick hails attitude of Manchester United match-winner Benjamin Sesko
Manchester United head coach Michael Carrick praised match-winner Benjamin Sesko’s attitude after the striker came off the bench to score for the third time in four matches in the 1-0 victory at Everton.
The Slovenia striker has yet to start in Carrick’s six matches in charge, but has contributed two winners and a late equaliser to maintain the former midfielder’s unbeaten start following his initial short-term appointment.
Sesko has scored six in his last seven appearances, but has still not managed to force his way into the starting line-up and, while Carrick said there was maybe some frustration for the £66million summer signing, the 22-year-old was not complaining.
“I get why everyone’s talking about it and making a bigger deal of it, but I’ve got a really good relationship with Ben,” said Carrick.
“I’ve got no problem with Ben and he hasn’t got an issue. He obviously wants to play, but I can’t speak highly enough of how he’s been and the work he’s putting in and his attitude to come on and do what he’s done again.
“We’ve had some really good conversations and he’s in a really good place, and part of us is helping him take his steps in development and growing him as a player.
“Sometimes that’s little steps, sometimes that’s bigger steps and he’s taken some huge steps recently. That’s great to see.”
Carrick also had praise for Senne Lammens, who kept United’s first league clean sheet away from home since last March.
“For me a goalkeeper has to be reliable, be trustworthy,” he said. “Instead of creating a chaos, you want him to take the chaos away and calm things down. I think Senne does that.”
Everton tried to put Lammens under pressure by stationing a number of players near him at a series of corners in the second half, but to no avail.
Toffees boss David Moyes conceded it was a plan that failed.
The Scot said: “The goalie was bloody brilliant. The save he made from Michael Keane, the way he dealt with the corners.
“We hoped somewhere we’d have got a nick on one of them with the pressure we had in those situations. I thought we would get one, but we didn’t. For me he was the best player on the pitch.”
Everton have won just four of their 14 Premier League games at their new stadium and Moyes accepts his side are still adapting.
He said: “I think there is probably a change – other teams come here and enjoy it.
“There are things about it which are different and we have to get used to.
“But I think our games are better than at Goodison. Our team is better this year and it wasn’t as if we were winning every game at Goodison, to be honest.”
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