Apr 12, 2026; Toronto, Ontario, CAN; Toronto Raptors guard Garrett Temple (17) dribbles against the Brooklyn Nets during the second half at Scotiabank Arena. Mandatory Credit: Kevin Sousa-Imagn Images
Scottie Barnes had 18 points, 12 rebounds and 12 assists Sunday, and the Toronto Raptors defeated the visiting Brooklyn Nets 136-101 to clinch their first playoff spot since 2022.
In recording his third triple-double of the season and the ninth of his career, Barnes helped the Raptors (46-36) secure the No. 5 seed in the Eastern Conference playoffs. They face the fourth-seeded Cavaliers in the first round, beginning on Saturday in Cleveland.
RJ Barrett scored 26 points, and Brandon Ingram added 25 points for Toronto. Ja’Kobe Walter and Jakob Poeltl each scored 11 points, while A.J. Lawson chipped in with 10 points. Immanuel Quickley had four points and five assists for Toronto and did not return for the second half because of a tight hamstring.
Chaney Johnson had 16 points and 13 rebounds for the Nets (20-62), who are in a lottery spot. Tyson Etienne scored 20 points, and E.J. Liddell had 17 points. Ben Saraf scored 15 points and also picked up six fouls.
76ers 126, Bucks 106
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Tyrese Maxey scored 16 of his team-high 21 points in the third quarter as the host Philadelphia 76ers pulled away from Milwaukee in the second half to win what could be Hall of Fame coach Doc Rivers’ last game at the helm of the Bucks.
The club and Rivers are discussing a possible move to the front office for 2026-27, according to sources, after he has coached for parts of three seasons with the team. Rivers, 64, will be inducted as a coach into the Naismith Memorial Hall of Fame in August. Quentin Grimes had four 3-pointers and scored 20 points for Philadelphia, which won its second straight and is locked into the play-in tournament. The seventh-seeded 76ers will host the eighth-seeded Orlando Magic on Wednesday. Center Joel Embiid was out again while recovering from an appendectomy.
AJ Green made five 3-pointers for Milwaukee (32-50) to finish the season with 232 treys, breaking Ray Allen’s single-season franchise record of 229 in 2001-02. Green was 7 of 10 from the field and 5 of 8 from 3 in the first half for 19 points; he failed to score after halftime.
Celtics 113, Magic 108
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Baylor Scheierman tossed in a career-high 30 points to lead Boston to a victory over visiting Orlando in the final regular-season game for each team.
The Celtics, who had already secured the No. 2 seed for the Eastern Conference playoffs, rested eight players, including their top seven scorers. Boston’s first playoff opponent will be the team that earns the No. 7 seed in the play-in tournament, either the Magic or the Philadelphia 76ers. Boston’s starting lineup was Ron Harper Jr., Max Shulga, Jordan Wash, Luka Garza and Scheierman.
The loss ended Orlando’s five-game winning streak. The Magic had won three in a row on the road. They will be the eighth seed in the play-in tournament and visit the seventh-seeded 76ers on Wednesday. The winner faces the Celtics, and the loser will host the winner of the 9/10 matchup on Friday.
Heat 143, Hawks 117
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Bam Adebayo produced 25 points and 10 rebounds, leading host Miami to a win over Atlanta in the regular-season finale for both teams.
Miami also got 26 points and five assists from Jaime Jaquez Jr. and 25 points from Norman Powell, who returned from a groin injury. The Heat next will play at the Charlotte Hornets in the first game of the play-in round. The Heat, 5-10 over their past 15 games, are in the play-in round for the fourth straight year.
Atlanta, which had already clinched its first playoff berth since 2023, sat its entire starting lineup plus three reserves. Veteran Buddy Hield led the Hawks with a game-high 31 points, and Corey Kispert added 21 points.
Rockets 132, Grizzlies 101
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Clint Capela produced a double-double in his third start of the season while Tari Eason and Reed Sheppard combined for 39 points as host Houston closed the regular season with a victory over short-handed Memphis.
The Rockets concluded the schedule with nine victories in their last 10 games. With the fifth seed in the Western Conference playoffs already secured, Houston rested four starters in its finale: Kevin Durant, Alperen Sengun, Amen Thompson and Jabari Smith Jr. Capela paired a season-high 23 points on 9-for-11 shooting with 13 rebounds and three blocks. Eason added 20 points and eight rebounds while Sheppard posted 19 points.
Memphis had only seven players available. Dariq Whitehead scored a career-high 26 points; Rayan Rupert (21 points, 12 rebounds) and Jahmai Mashack (11 points, 11 assists) added double-doubles for the Grizzlies, who closed the season with 21 losses in 23 games.
Nuggets 128, Spurs 118
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Denver’s Nikola Jokic scored 23 points and grabbed eight rebounds in 18-plus minutes of court time — all in the first half — as the visiting Nuggets rolled to a win over San Antonio in the regular-season finale for both playoff-bound teams.
The Nuggets clinched the third seed in the Western Conference and will host sixth-seeded Minnesota for the first two games of their best-of-seven first-round playoff series. Denver ended the regular season with 12 straight wins and took three of the four games against the Spurs this year. Jokic played the necessary minutes to reach the league’s 65-game threshold for postseason award consideration.
Victor Wembanyama sat out the game for San Antonio, which already clinched the No. 2 spot in the West and had little to gain from Sunday’s game. The Spurs will host the winner of Tuesday’s 7/8 play-in tournament game between Phoenix and Portland in the opening two contests of a best-of-seven first-round playoffs series. The Spurs had a three-game winning streak snapped but finished the campaign with a 62-20 mark, their best since the 2015-16 season in which they won 67 games.
Cavaliers 130, Wizards 117
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Nae’Qwan Tomlin scored a career-high 26 points and rookie Tyrese Proctor collected 22 points, 11 rebounds and eight assists as playoff-bound Cleveland beat visiting Washington.
Jaylon Tyson had 18 points and rookie Tristan Enaruna had a season-best 15 points for Cleveland, which is the fourth seed in the Eastern Conference. Cleveland will have home-court advantage over the fifth-place Toronto Raptors in their first-round series.
Rookie guard Jamir Watkins scored a career-high 24 points for the Wizards, who finished with the worst record in the league. Bub Carrington scored 20 points and dished out nine assists, and Sharife Cooper had 20 points and six assists off the bench. Cleveland had eight players reach double digits in points.
Pistons 133, Pacers 121
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Eastern Conference leader Detroit closed out just the third 60-win regular season in franchise history, leading wire to wire in a defeat of Indiana in Indianapolis.
With the East’s No. 1 seed in the upcoming NBA playoffs also secured, Detroit limited its entire starting five to fewer than 26 minutes in the regular-season finale. That was plenty of time for Paul Reed to make some Pistons history, as he became the organization’s first player ever to score 25-plus points on a perfect field-goal shooting performance. Reed scored a game-high 26 points on 11-of-11 from the floor.
The Pacers finished the worst season by won-loss record in franchise history. Quenton Jackson and Obi Toppin led the Pacers with 21 points each, Kobe Brown added 20 and Ethan Thompson 18. Micah Potter finished with a 15-point, 11-rebound double-double.
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Hornets 110, Knicks 96
Brandon Miller, LaMelo Ball and Coby White each scored 19 points as visiting Charlotte earned the ninth seed in the Eastern Conference play-in tournament with a win over New York.
The Hornets will host the Miami Heat in a No. 9 vs. No. 10 play-in game on Tuesday. Kon Knueppel finished with 14 points, six rebounds and five assists.
New York had nothing to play for after already clinching the East’s No. 3 seed. With most of their regulars sitting out, the Knicks started Miles McBride, Jose Alvarado, Mikal Bridges, Mohamed Diawara and Ariel Hukporti. Bridges’ consecutive games played streak reached 638 — the eighth longest in NBA history — with his 23-second appearance. New York will face the Atlanta Hawks, the East’s No. 6 seed, in a first-round series beginning Saturday.
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Mavericks 149, Bulls 128
Ryan Nembhard notched the second-most assists in a game in franchise history as Dallas beat visiting Chicago.
Nembhard fell narrowly short of a triple-double in the season-ending clash, chalking up 15 points, nine rebounds and 23 assists. Only current Dallas coach Jason Kidd, with 25 assists in a two-overtime game in February 1996, has registered more for the Mavericks. Cooper Flagg scored 10 points, his stellar rookie campaign ending with 10:11 left in the second quarter after spraining his left ankle on a bad landing while leaping for an offensive rebound.
Rob Dillingham scored 25 for the Bulls. Collin Sexton contributed 19, Leonard Miller had 17 and Lachlan Olbrich added a triple-double, finishing with 10 points, 15 rebounds and 10 assists.
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Timberwolves 132, Pelicans 126
Rookie big man Joan Beringer recorded career highs with 24 points and 13 rebounds, and Minnesota held on for a victory over New Orleans in Minneapolis.
Terrence Shannon Jr. scored 26 points for the Timberwolves, who relied on young players and reserves in their final game of the regular season. Zyon Pullin scored 19 points off the bench, and Joe Ingles capitalized on a rare start to notch a double-double with 15 points and 10 assists. The Timberwolves already were locked into the No. 6 playoff seed in the Western Conference and will face the third-seeded Nuggets, beginning Saturday in Denver.
Rookie Jeremiah Fears scored 36 points on 12-for-29 shooting to lead the Pelicans. Fellow rookie Derik Queen finished with 30 points and 22 rebounds, and Micah Peavy scored 21 points.
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Suns 135, Thunder 103
Jamaree Bouyea scored a career-high 27 points to help Phoenix close the regular season with a road win over Oklahoma City as both teams, with their playoff positions secure going into the game, sat the majority of their starters and major rotational players.
The Suns’ Ryan Dunn scored a season-high 20 points, shooting 8 for 11 from the field with a career-high tying 11 rebounds and a career-high five assists. Koby Brea added 20 points off the bench for Phoenix. Brea had scored just 25 points total in his first 11 NBA games. Rookie center Khaman Maluach had a career-high 18 points and tied his career high with 14 rebounds off the bench as well.
Branden Carlson tied his career high with 26 points to lead the Thunder. He also had 10 rebounds. Payton Sandfort added 23 points off the bench. Oklahoma City is the top overall seed in the NBA playoffs. Phoenix is the No. 7 seed and will open the play-in tournament at home Tuesday against eighth-seeded Portland.
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Lakers 131, Jazz 107
Rui Hachimura and Deandre Ayton each posted 22-point, 10-rebound double-doubles to help Los Angeles down visiting Utah in their regular-season finale.
LeBron James completed his 23rd regular season, finishing with 18 points in 17 minutes for the Lakers, who will be the No. 4 seed in next week’s Western Conference playoffs and face the Houston Rockets in the first round. Dalton Knecht scored 17 points, Nick Smith Jr. added 12 and Bronny James chipped in 11 for Los Angeles, which finished with its most victories in a season since the 2010-11 campaign (57).
Oscar Tshiebwe led the Jazz with 29 points and 17 rebounds, while Ace Bailey and Brice Sensabaugh added 15 points apiece. Cody Williams and Bez Mbeng both scored 14 points and Blake Hinson had 10 for Utah, which recorded its second 60-loss season in franchise history and second in as many years.
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Clippers 115, Warriors 110
Los Angeles sent a message to it play-in opponent, riding Bennedict Mathurin’s 20 points and a stingy defense to a home win over Golden State in what turned out to be an otherwise meaningless regular-season finale.
The Clippers lost a tiebreaker with eighth-place Portland and were relegated to ninth for play-in purposes, where they’ll get a home game Wednesday against the 10th-place Warriors. The loser will be eliminated from playoff contention.
John Collins backed Mathurin with 18 points, and Mathurin and Collins each collected a game-high nine rebounds, while Mathurin also found time for a game-high eight assists. In just his third game after missing 27 straight with a sore right knee, Stephen Curry paced Golden State with a game-high 24 points.
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Trail Blazers 122, Kings 110
Deni Avdija recorded 25 points, 10 assists and six rebounds and Portland secured the No. 8 seed in the Western Conference with a win over visiting Sacramento in the regular-season finale for both teams.
Jrue Holiday added 23 points and seven rebounds for Portland, which will play beyond the regular season for the first time since the 2020-21 campaign. The Trail Blazers will visit the No. 7 Phoenix Suns on Tuesday in the play-in round. The winner goes directly to the Western Conference playoffs against the No. 2 San Antonio Spurs while the loser will have a second opportunity on Friday.
Precious Achiuwa registered 27 points and 11 rebounds and Nique Clifford added 24 points and seven rebounds for the Kings. Maxime Raynaud had 21 points and nine rebounds for Sacramento (22-60), which finished with the second-most losses in franchise history. The Kings went 17-65 in 2008-09.
Rory McIlroy carried the weight of expectations, the burden of grand dreams, for 14 years. It was crippling at times, and then in a moment of catharsis last April, it all melted away. The long road to his dreams finally ended when he rolled in a 4-foot putt to win the 2025 Masters and crumpled to the ground, having been released from years of torment.
But what Rory McIlroy found at the place where his dreams became reality was something he didn’t expect. Shedding those ghosts as the sun set on Augusta National didn’t bring him self-fulfillment but instead sent him in search of something else. What now? McIlroy wondered in the months after he finally caught the car he’d spent his entire life chasing. A malaise known as post-achievement depression ensued. It’s a common psychological phenomenon in which people suffer emotional emptiness after achieving a long-term goal. For McIlroy, he was stuck in a purgatory between celebrating and wandering.
“Look, you dream about the final putt going in at the Masters, but you don’t think about what comes next,” McIlroy said at last year’s U.S. Open.
Human beings are, by nature, dreamers, searchers. Self-actualization is not found in completing one quest. We lust for more, for the next peak, the next challenge. What McIlroy found in the wake of his defining achievement, in the glow of his forever moment, was an existential question that humans have long tried to solve: If there can always be something else to chase, how can you ever be truly fulfilled? A summer of media squabbles and mediocre finishes followed as McIlroy tried to navigate his new reality. Things turned during a home Open at Royal Portrush, and he won the Irish Open and an away Ryder Cup. He arrived as the defending champion at this year’s Masters, liberated at a place he has long wanted to love him back — one that used to bring him only pain.
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That’s the thing about weight: put too much in one place, and you can’t move; remove it all, and you’ll float; but shift the location and amount of load, and it becomes beneficial.
Rory McIlroy’s 2025 Masters win was an unburdening. The freedom it provided him at Augusta National was evident during the early rounds when he built a six-shot lead, and on the weekend when he weathered a collapse and responded to become the fourth player in history to win back-to-back green jackets. McIlroy’s Augusta freedom was not the removal of doubt or anxiety. It was not the disappearance of fear. Instead, it was the liberation that comes from being willing to accept that you might fail — that pain might return and you might only leave with a new set of scars — but you’re willing to jump with conviction because you’ve already proven to yourself that you can fly.
“Good things come to those who wait, maybe. Just keep going,” McIlroy said on Sunday night after winning his sixth major and second Masters. “Just keep going. Keep your head down and keep it going. If you put the hours in and work on the right things, eventually it will come good for you.”
After surviving a rollercoaster weekend at Augusta National to capture another green jacket, McIlroy found another question. This one, he believes, he has the answer to after last year’s search for meaning: Will this win lead to a similar rut?
“I said at the start of the weekend here, I felt like the grand slam was the destination, and I realized it wasn’t. I’m on this journey.” McIlroy said. “I feel like this win is just — I don’t want to say a stop on the journey, but yeah, it’s just a part of the journey. I still have things I want to achieve. But I still want to enjoy it as well.
“I’ve waited so long to win the Masters, and all of a sudden I win two in a row. So I still want to enjoy it. I’ve got a couple of weeks off before I go back to play competitive golf, but I don’t think I’ll go through that lull of motivation or the sort of things that I was feeling last year, post-winning this tournament.”
One scene Sunday evening at Augusta National suggests that this time McIlroy won’t find himself listless in the emerald radiance of his latest achievement.
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When he won last year, Rory McIlroy folded onto the perfectly manicured 18th green at Augusta National, put his head in his hands and began to sob. The tears freely flowing, he let out a primal scream signaling only relief that he had finally slayed the dragon, that his long battle with himself and this tournament was over. Relief that after that Sunday, the mental agony of the weight of time and expectation was over. Overcome with the realization that his dreams had finally arrived, McIlroy sobbed uncontrollably as he made his way back to the clubhouse, hugging friends and family along the way. It was a blur.
On Sunday, as McIlroy readied to tap in for a closing bogey to beat Scottie Scheffler by one stroke, the tears started to arrive again, but everything else about this moment was different.
This time, McIlroy didn’t collapse. His head didn’t drop in disbelief that the long journey had ended. Instead, he lifted his head immediately to the sky and let another scream, not one of catharsis but one of pure jubilation. A huge smile stretched across his face and he laughed as he hugged caddie Harry Diamond. As he walked to the clubhouse after hugging his wife, daughter, parents and some friends, Rory McIlroy lifted both of his arms in the air and soaked in a moment of pure, unadulterated joy.
This time, Rory McIlroy’s system wasn’t in shock. He wasn’t shedding anything. There was no recalibration needed. The ghosts have long gone.
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There was just Rory McIlroy, a two-time Masters champion, reveling in a victory that hit similar themes but meant something different. He did so with his eyes forward, locked on the horizon, not in search of the finish line but with his soul’s compass pointing in the only direction humans can go: forward.
Injury woes continue for the Houston Astros, exacerbating a 6-10 start that currently has them sharing the worst record in Major League Baseball. The Astros have lost seven consecutive games going into Monday’s matchup with the Seattle Mariners.
Shortstop Jeremy Peña was placed on the 10-day injured list with a Grade 1 right hamstring strain. Pitcher Tatsuya Imai is joining several starting pitchers on the IL with right arm fatigue.
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Peña left Saturday’s 8-7 loss to the Mariners in the fourth inning with what was described as tightness at the back of his right knee. He underwent an imaging exam on Sunday to determine the severity of the injury and a mild strain was discovered.
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Houston Astros shortstop Jeremy Pena was off to a slow start due to a fractured right ring finger during the spring. (Photo by Jack Compton/Getty Images)
After batting 1-for-3 on Saturday, Peña’s triple-slash line is .256/.304/.349 with four extra-base hits in 46 plate appearances. Though it’s early in the season and Peña has only played in 10 games, those numbers are a notable decline from the .304 batting average and .840 OPS he posted last year.
However, his preparations during the spring were sidetracked by a fractured right ring finger that prevented him from playing for the Dominican Republic in the World Baseball Classic.
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The 28-year-old was also limited to 125 games last season with a fractured rib (sustained when he was hit by a pitch) and left oblique injuries.
Tatsuya Imai is third Astros starting pitcher to go on IL
The Astros feared that an IL stint for Imai was imminent when he was sent back to Houston on Saturday to evaluate what the team called “right arm fatigue.”
Houston has already placed starting pitchers Hunter Brown and Cristian Javier on the injured list, both with strained right shoulders. Brown is expected to be out until May, while Javier will be re-evaluated in two weeks. Going back to Friday, the Astros play 13 straight games without a day off, putting more pressure on an undermanned pitching staff.
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Imai faced the Mariners on Friday for his third start of the season but lasted only one-third of an inning. Pitching against eight batters, the right-hander allowed three runs on one hit and four walks in an eventual 9-6 defeat. He threw only 17 of his 37 pitches for strikes in the performance.
Following the game, Imai complained of the hard mound at T-Mobile Park and the cooler weather than he was accustomed to pitching in Japan. The temperature was 64 degrees at first pitch in Seattle.
In his three starts, the 27-year-old has walked 11 batters in 8 1/3 innings, adding 13 strikeouts. He’s allowed seven runs on seven hits, resulting in a 7.27 ERA. The Astros were hoping for better production from a pitcher signed to a three-year contract that could pay him up to $63 million.
However, Imai showed what he was capable of in his second start, throwing 5 2/3 scoreless innings against the Athletics with nine strikeouts.
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During his eight seasons pitching for the Seibu Lions in Nippon Professional Baseball, Imai compiled a 3.15 ERA and 58-45 record in 159 appearances with a strikeout rate of 8.5 per nine innings. But his walk rate of 4.4 hinted at the concerns that have manifested thus far in his MLB career.
Kobbie Mainoo has not been named in the Man United squad against Leeds due to injury and Michael Carrick spoke about the knock suffered by the midfielder ahead of kick-off against Leeds.
Michael Carrick described the knock picked up by Kobbie Mainoo in training this week as a “small issue” and doesn’t believe the injury is serious. Mainoo has not been named in the United squad tonight as they look to strengthen their grip on a Champions League spot by beating Leeds.
United interim head coach Carrick has made four changes for the game, with Noussair Mazraoui coming in for Diogo Dalot, Lisandro Martinez replacing the suspended Harry Maguire, Benjamin Sesko replacing Bryan Mbeumo and Manuel Ugarte starting in place of Mainoo.
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Carrick spoke to Sky Sports ahead of the game and he was asked to give an update on Mainoo’s situation.
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“Over the last day or so in training, he just picked up a small issue,” he said. “So it seems not too bad, but it wasn’t worth pushing it tonight with the games coming up. Manu (Ugarte) came on against Bournemouth and did really well at the end of the game and played for Uruguay so he’s in good shape and we took that decision to take Kobbie out of it.”
When asked whether bringing Ugarte in for Mainoo had influenced the decision to start with Benjamin Sesko up front, Carrick said: “No, that’s not something that we spoke about. Just bringing Ben in, we’ve got a choice of forwards and it’s a nice position to be in.
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“Bryan’s the one tonight that will come on and help us finish the game strong. He gives us good flexibility, so it wasn’t to do with that, Kobbie’s (injury) was a little bit later than that so it doesn’t change how we approach the game.”
Sky Sports, HBO Max, Netflix and Disney+ with Ultimate TV package
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Sky has upgraded its Ultimate TV and Sky Sports bundle to now include HBO Max, Netflix, Disney+, discovery+ and Hayu, as well as 135 channels and full Sky coverage of the Premier League and EFL.
Sky broadcasts more than 1,400 live matches across the Premier League, EFL and more with at least 215 live from the top flight alongside Formula 1, darts and golf.
United will move 10 points clear of sixth-placed Chelsea if they can beat Leeds this evening. With the Premier League set to receive five spots in next season’s Champions League, United would be on the brink of securing qualification for the competition if they can win this evening.
That is because of a potential showdown with unified three-belt champion, Dmitry Bivol, who holds all of the required titles in order for WBC ruler, Benavidez, to claim the undisputed crown.
Additionally at 175lbs, Benavidez may finally a secure a clash with perennial rival, Canelo Alvarez, and wants a fan-friendly barnstormer with former undisputed champion Artur Beterbiev for good measure.
In an interview with ESPN KnockOut, the Mexican-American was quizzed on which of those three fights he deemed to be the toughest, but declared that he is capable of knocking out each of those men on the same night before saying at least one, Canelo, doesn’t want the challenge.
“I knock out all three on the same night … All of those fighters are tough. That is the highest level in the entire sport, but I believe 100% in what I can be.”
Canelo boasts one of the best chins in the business, while Bivol’s elite movement makes it hard for opponents to even test his. Though skillful in his own right, Beterbiev’s offence is often his defence, getting to opponents with fearsome power before they can reach him. If ‘El Monstro’ managed to deliver on the promise above, he would be in the argument for being the best active fighter in the world.
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Benavidez – who has 25 knockouts from 31 wins, the most recent being a relentless battering of Anthony Yarde – first faces ‘Zurdo’ on Saturday May 2, at the T-Moblie Arena in Las Vegas. Another standout performance will see fans demand the big fights keep coming.
Scottie Scheffler finished just behind Rory McIlroy at the Masters this weekend, finishing just a stroke behind the back-to-back green jacket winner.
Scheffler took issue with the conditions at Augusta National Golf Course and expressed as much after wrapping up the fourth round of the tournament on Sunday evening, telling reporters he wasn’t “in charge of the course setup.”
Scottie Scheffler walks to the green on the 18th hole during the Masters at Augusta National Golf Club in Augusta, Ga., on April 11, 2026.(David J. Phillip/AP)
“I would’ve liked it to have been a little bit more equal in terms of the firmness on Thursday and Friday. I was a bit surprised at how soft things were on Friday afternoon, especially as it got late in the day. But the weather also changes, like it was a bit windy on Thursday,” he said, via Golf.com.
“So who knows, it’s just that’s part of the game. We play an outdoor sport, and you don’t know how conditions are gonna change — especially course conditions. Overall, like I said, just Friday for me, going out early, not being able to shoot an under-par round, that definitely hurt my chances. I think I started the weekend maybe 12 back, so to get within one was a pretty good run.”
Scheffler said his second round “probably hurt” his chances of winning the tournament the most. He shot a 74 that day with four bogeys before storming back into contention.
Scottie Scheffler finishes his final round of the Masters at Augusta National Golf Club on April 12, 2026.(David J. Phillip/AP)
“We went out on Thursday, Thursday afternoon were some of the most challenging conditions we had all week,” he said. “I didn’t see many birdies out there Thursday afternoon, so going out on Friday, whatever they did to the greens to soften them up, they did some stuff, and I just wasn’t able to take advantage of that going on early on Friday.
“And then you saw the barrage of birdies that Rory made and Cam Young and a bunch of guys made on Friday late in the day, and I think I finished maybe two over par on Friday. So that day probably hurt the most in terms of my chances to win.”
Scheffler made 12 birdies and two eagles in the tournament. But he also settled for five bogeys over the four rounds.
Scottie Scheffler watches a shot during the Masters at Augusta National Golf Club on April 10, 2026.(Gerald Herbert/AP)
April has rarely been a quiet month for Formula One (F1). This year, it has been forced into one. The cancellation of the Bahrain and Saudi Arabian Grands Prix amid the ongoing war in West Asia has reduced the calendar to 22 races and, more unusually, created a five-week gap before the season resumes in Miami on May 1.
For a sport that rarely pauses, the break has shifted attention away from immediate results and towards the early shape of the season, and what those first few races are beginning to indicate rather than simply produce.
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At the centre of that shift is Andrea Kimi Antonelli.
At 19 years and just over seven months, the Mercedes-AMG Petronas Formula One Team driver became the youngest championship leader in Formula One history after his victory at the Japanese Grand Prix on March 29. The record, built on back-to-back wins early in the season, is easy to isolate. What it reflects is less a spike in performance than a profile that already appears suited to how the current grid is operating. Mercedes team principal Toto Wolff has been quick to temper expectations, noting after Antonelli’s early win that it was “too early” to frame the season in championship terms and pointing instead to the need for consistency across a full campaign.
Mercedes team principal Toto Wolff was quick to temper expectations, noting after Antonelli’s early win that it was “too early” to frame the season in championship terms and pointing instead to the need for consistency across a full campaign
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Antonelli’s early races have not been built on dominance across every phase of the weekend. If anything, they have exposed a split profile. Over a stint, his pace has remained controlled, with minimal correction, stable tyre usage and an ability to hold the racing line rather than fluctuate within it. It is the kind of repeatability that usually arrives with experience, but here appears pre-conditioned.
The opening phase of races, however, tells a different story. Revised power unit behaviour has made starts less predictable. Without the MGU-H, which earlier helped smooth power delivery, and with greater reliance on hybrid systems, getting off the line is now less controlled, making traction trickier and early position changes more common. Across the opening rounds, Ferrari-powered cars have collectively gained positions on the opening lap, while Mercedes-powered entries have struggled to consistently hold ground, underlining how sensitive the start phase has become under the new configuration. Antonelli has mirrored that trend, frequently losing positions in the run to the first corner even when starting from the front.
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The contrast is instructive. Modern F1 is increasingly operating across two distinct phases. The start has become compressed and high-variance, shaped by reaction time, clutch performance and energy deployment within a few seconds. The race that follows rewards something else: control, tyre management and the ability to operate within narrowing margins over a sustained run. Increasingly, it is the latter that determines outcomes.
Antonelli already appears more fluent in that second phase.
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The margins have tightened in both directions. If Antonelli’s control has stood out, so have the consequences of error. Oliver Bearman’s high-speed crash earlier in the season, described as “frightening” and followed by an FIA defence of its safety procedures, brought renewed attention to how the current regulations are playing out in race conditions, even as some drivers and teams have raised concerns over how they are behaving under pressure. With power delivery and car balance shifting more abruptly in certain phases, particularly under braking and initial acceleration, small misjudgements can escalate quickly, leaving limited room for recovery once control is lost.
Hass-Ferrari F1 Team driver, Bearman’s high-speed crash earlier in the season, described as “frightening” and followed by an FIA defence of its safety procedures, brought renewed attention to how current regulations are playing out in race conditions
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That alignment is not incidental. Antonelli’s progression has been tightly managed within Mercedes’ development system, combining early identification with accelerated movement through the junior ladder, including a direct step into Formula 2, the category directly below F1. More significantly, it has been supported by extensive simulator work and private testing in older F1 machinery. The programme has included substantial mileage in previous-generation cars across multiple circuits, effectively replicating race conditions away from competitive weekends.
By the time Antonelli reached the grid, much of what once defined a rookie adjustment period had already been internalised. The result is a driver who does not appear to be learning the category in real time, even if certain phases, most visibly the start, remain in development.
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That profile begins to align closely with how recent championships have been constructed. Drivers such as Max Verstappen have built success on sustained race pace and error minimisation rather than isolated bursts of speed, a model that increasingly defines the modern title fight.
Antonelli’s early performances sit within that framework. His gains have not depended on overextension, and his losses have tended to stabilise rather than compound. That balance, control over volatility rather than its absence, is already visible and increasingly valuable in a field where margins are narrowing.
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The gap in April has allowed that pattern to come into clearer focus. It does not resolve into a conclusion. It does, however, suggest something more immediate. Antonelli’s rise is not only a function of speed or circumstance. It reflects a point of alignment between how drivers are now prepared and what Formula One is beginning to demand of them.
In a season still taking shape, that alignment may prove as significant as any early result.
The Minnesota Vikings employ a speedy cornerback named Isaiah Rodgers, and he used to work with a guy who’s now on the trade block: Indianapolis Colts cornerback Kenny Moore II. Rodgers wasn’t shy this week about recruiting Moore II on social media to join the Vikings.
Minnesota still needs cornerback help, and Moore checks the experience box fast.
Moore II won’t be too difficult to get, and if Minnesota is in the mood, he could serve as CB depth in 2026.
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Moore Might Make Sense as a Short-Term Secondary Fix
Get to know Moore II, who now lives in the trade rumor mill.
Indianapolis Colts cornerback Kenny Moore II (23) jumps a route and races downfield for a pick six, flipping early momentum during a divisional matchup. Sep 21, 2025 showcased his instincts at Nissan Stadium in Nashville, where Moore read the quarterback cleanly and finished the play with speed and awareness. Mandatory Credit: Steve Roberts-Imagn Images.
Colts to Trade Moore II
Moore II’s days in Indianapolis are numbered, and with the draft just 10 days away, he’ll be shipped elsewhere before too long.
NFL.com’s Kevin Patra wrote Friday, “Kenny Moore’s nine-year career in Indianapolis appears to be at an end. The Colts and Moore mutually agreed to seek a trade, ESPN reported Friday. Turning 31 in August, Moore has long been an underrated slot defender able to stick with shifty receivers, jump short routes and stick his nose in against the run.”
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“He’s coming off a down season, in which he missed three games due to injury. There were also scheme-fit concerns in Lou Anarumo’s system. The Colts have spent the offseason looking to get younger on defense, which aligns with the decision to seek a trade for Moore. 2025 third-round pick Justin Walley, who missed his rookie campaign due to a training camp ACL tear, would be first in line to replace Moore’s nickel reps.”
Nine years was quite the run with Moore II in Indianapolis. For context, he was a rookie the same year as former Vikings running back Dalvin Cook (2017).
The Rodgers Recruitment
Rodgers turned pro in 2020 as a 6th-Round selection by the Colts. He stayed in Indianapolis for three seasons before a gambling suspension rattled his career. He later landed with the Philadelphia Eagles and then the Vikings.
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But Rodgers crossed paths with Moore II for three seasons, between 2020 and 2022, and the two are evidently pals.
Rodgers rolled around this recruiting pitch on Instagram:
The Vikings signed James Pierre from the Pittsburgh Steelers in March, and for now, he’s on deck to hold the CB3 job. But if Minnesota prefers more CB depth than previous years, a trade for Moorre II cannot be ruled out, especially with Rodgers pounding the table for him.
Moore II’s Production
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Moore is a career-long starter and earned a Pro Bowl appearance in 2021. Here’s his passer rating allowed resume:
Think of it this way: had the Vikings not signed Pierre in March, a Moore II trade would feel perfect right now.
Indianapolis Colts cornerback Kenny Moore II (23) walks off the field following an overtime victory, capping a hard-fought divisional battle at Lucas Oil Stadium. Jan 5, 2025 captured the aftermath as the Colts secured a 26-23 win over Jacksonville, with Moore contributing steady coverage throughout the tense finish. Mandatory Credit: Christine Tannous-Imagn Images.
Horeshoe Heroes‘ Lee Vowell on a Moore II trade: “Moore’s cap hit next season is $13,110,000, per Over the Cap, and trading him would save the team $7,060,000. That doesn’t mean Ballard has a plan for what to do with the savings. The Colts have cash to spend as the Jones and Pierce deals have a lower cap hit in year one. With the newly created cap, Ballard has done very little.”
“Kenny Moore has remained among the better nickelbacks in the NFL. He could be upgraded, maybe, but the team has no obvious replacements of his quality. Moore being available in a trade makes two players the Indianapolis Colts are open to shopping.”
The Colts and Vikings actually have a lot of defensive back overlap: Rodgers plays for the Vikings, while Camryn Bynum and Mekhi Blackmon are on Indianapolis’s roster.
Vowell added, “Quarterback Anthony Richardson is the other, but has had no takers yet. As for what the Colts can get for Moore? Likely, not a lot. He is now 32 years old and is restricted to a position. Should the team get a fifth-round pick for him, that might be a massive win.”
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The Trade Price
Moore II will turn 31 in August, and his production last year showed dependability and a decent overall baseline. He’s not a hot commodity anymore; nobody is sprinting to the phone to acquire a 31-year-old cornerback, especially when a general manager can sign free agents like Trevon Diggs and L’Jarius Sneed without the hassle of donating a draft pick to Indianapolis.
Indianapolis Colts cornerback Kenny Moore II (23) celebrates after getting to the quarterback, highlighting his versatility as a blitzing defender early in the game. Oct 26, 2025 featured an aggressive defensive start at Lucas Oil Stadium, where Moore helped disrupt Tennessee’s offense with pressure and timely playmaking. Mandatory Credit: Robert Goddin-Imagn Images.
Still, after the draft, a team will realize it didn’t quite get what it wanted at cornerback, and a 6th-Round pick can probably get the Moore II trade over the finish line.
Otherwise, Moore II will be a free agent in 2027. He can finish his career with a team of his choosing.
Praful Hinge caused mayhem in the Rajasthan Royals batting lineup on Monday. Playing his first IPL match, the Sunrisers Hyderabad pacer picked up the wickets of Vaibhav Sooryavanshi on the second ball, Dhruv Jurel on the third ball, and Lhuan-dre Pretorius on the final ball of the first over. Hinge could hardly have imagined a better debut in the IPL. With SRH’s bowling in the doldrums, the side drafted in the youngster, and he repaid the faith in emphatic fashion. Hinge was not done after his first over outburst. In his second over, Hinge took the wicket of RR captain Riyan Parag too. So far. Hinge has played 10 first-class matches (27 wickets), six List A games (five wickets).
“Praful Hinge is a young right-arm seamer from Vidarbha who has steadily built his reputation in red-ball cricket. In just 10 first-class matches, the 24-year-old has claimed 27 wickets at an average of 26.7, highlighting his ability as a workhorse. His exposure to T20 cricket has been limited so far, but he made a tidy impression in his only appearance. Opening the bowling alongside Umesh Yadav, Hinge returned figures of 1 for 23 in four overs against Andhra,” according to iplt20.com.
“Sunrisers Hyderabad brought him in for INR 30 lakh ahead of IPL 2026, adding him as a backup pace option,” it added.
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Earlier, in the match, skipper Ishan Kishan blazed away to a scintillating 44-ball 91 before a late charge by Nitish Reddy and Salil Arora lifted Sunrisers Hyderabad to 216 for six against Rajasthan Royals in their Indian Premier League match here on Monday.
SRH skipper Kishan looked in sublime touch during his stay in the middle, hitting eight fours and six sixes while sharing 88 runs with Heinrich Klaasen (40 off 26 balls).
Towards the end, Reddy smashed a 13-ball 28 and Salil Arora remained not out on 24 off 13 balls to prop up SRH.
At the start of SRH innings, Abhishek Sharma looked to go for a big shot on the first ball and danced down the wicket, only to manage a slice off a Jofra Archer (2/37 in 4 overs) delivery for Ravi Bishnoi to complete a neat catch in the deep.
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Kishan flicked Archer over short fine leg for a four and then deposited one into the stands over deep mid wicket for a six.
In the next over, Kishan cleared third man for a maximum against Nandre Burger. He then whacked Sandeep Sharma over his head for a big six and followed that up with a four off Tushar Deshpande through the midwicket region.
Even as Kishan found the boundaries with ease, Travis Head was struggling to get going and his stay came to an end when RR skipper Riyan Parag had him caught in the deep by Donovan Ferreira for a rusty 18-ball 18. It was a bold move by Parag to bring himself in right after the powerplay, and it paid dividends.
Unperturbed by Head’s dismissal, Kishan went about his task with absolute clarity and reached his 50 in 30 balls, with a huge six over deep midwicket off leg-spinner Bishnoi.
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Thanks to the flurry of boundaries by Kishan, SRH’s 100 was up in 10.3 overs with Deshpande leaking 21 runs in that over.
Klaasen lofted Bishnoi over long-on for a six, following it up with a four off Archer.
Kishan then collected three successive boundaries off Archer to move to 91, even as the lights went off briefly inside the stadium.
Going for one too many, Kishan miscued an attempted pull and Sandeep held on to the ball off his own bowling despite a collision with wicketkeeper Dhruv Jurel.
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Sunrisers Hyderabad (SRH) batter Abhishek Sharma made an unwanted record, overtaking Rohit Sharma for the most ducks by an Indian batter in a calendar year, when he registered his seventh duck of 2026 during the Indian Premier League (IPL) clash against Rajasthan Royals (RR). Abhishek’s hot-and-cold run in IPL 2026 and T20Is this year continued with a golden duck against RR.
The explosive batter attempted to go big on a short ball from Jofra Archer but was caught by Ravi Bishnoi. This marked his seventh duck in 18 innings this year.
He surpassed Rohit Sharma’s record of six ducks in 32 innings in 2018, as well as Sanju Samson’s six ducks in 32 innings in 2024.
In five innings in the ongoing IPL, Abhishek has scored 129 runs at an average of 25.80 and a strike rate of 215.80, including one half-century. His best score is 74.
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Prior to this, he endured a poor debut at the T20 World Cup. The world’s No. 1 batter was unable to live up to sky-high expectations after a stellar run in 2025, scoring just 141 runs in eight innings at an average of 17.62 and a strike rate of 158.42, with two fifties – including one in the final against New Zealand in a winning effort.
In 18 T20Is this year, Abhishek has scored 452 runs in 18 innings at an average of 26.58 and a strike rate of 203.60, with five half-centuries and seven ducks. His highest score is 84.
Coming to the match, RR won the toss and elected to bat first.
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Mar 14, 2026; Phoenix, Arizona, USA; Chicago White Sox second baseman Lenyn Sosa against the Los Angeles Dodgers during a spring training game at Camelback Ranch-Glendale. Mandatory Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images
The Toronto Blue Jays acquired infielder Lenyn Sosa from the Chicago White Sox on Monday in exchange for minor league outfielder Jordan Rich and a player to be named later or cash.
To open a spot on the 40-man roster, the Blue Jays transferred right-hander Shane Bieber (elbow) to the 60-day injured list.
Sosa, 26, was batting .212 with three RBIs in 12 games for the White Sox this season. In parts of five seasons, all in Chicago, Sosa is a .245 career hitter with 37 home runs and 128 RBIs in 315 games. He hit 22 homers and drove in 75 runs, both career highs, last season.
Rich, 18, was drafted in the 17th round by the Blue Jays in 2025 out of high school in Florida. A left-handed hitter, Rich was assigned to the Arizona Complex League.
Canelo Alvarez has been named as the top dog at super-middleweight, but has been told he must face the next generation of contenders in order to retain his status.
It was a legacy-defining performance that saw ‘Bud’ move up two weight classes and claim all four major belts, before ultimately hanging up his gloves.
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But with Crawford now removed from the equation, many would regard Canelo as the division’s number one fighter, even though the Mexican is yet to reclaim any of his world titles.
That much could change this September, when he is set to headline in Saudi Arabia, while the current world super-middleweight champions include Christian Mbilli, Osleys Iglesias and Jose Armando Resendiz.
Hamzah Sheeraz, meanwhile, is scheduled to face Alem Begic for the vacant WBO world title on May 23, featuring on the undercard of Oleksandr Usyk vs Rico Verhoeven.
Sheeraz has not fought since last July, when he secured a fifth-round finish over Edgar Berlanga, but the 26-year-old is now on the cusp of becoming a world champion in only his second outing at super-middleweight.
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Acknowledging Canelo’s achievements, Sheeraz, who has yet to taste defeat and has 18 knockouts from his 22 victories, hopes to eventually prove himself against the four-division world champion, telling Inside the Ring that he is “gunning” for the opportunity.
“You could say he is [still No.1 at 168lbs], because of what he’s done.
“But, at the same time, you’ve got these young guns coming through, like myself, and I think it’s time for him to give us the opportunity against him to prove ourselves, and take over that No.1 spot.
“We’re all gunning for it, and hopefully I do get that opportunity one day.”
While Sheeraz represents a potential option, many believe that Canelo is more likely to face Mbilli, the WBC world champion, in his first fight since losing to Crawford.
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