San Antonio’s Victor Wembanyama wanted the ball for the final couple seconds of the first half. He got it, 65 feet from the basket.
He had three Oklahoma City defenders in front of him. He took three dribbles. He got three points.
And he made it look easy, too.
A swished three-pointer from the midcourt stripe to close the first half brought maybe the loudest roars of his night, but it was hardly the only moment in which Wembanyama was unstoppable in Game 4 of the Western Conference finals on Sunday.
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He got most of the fourth quarter off and still finished with 33 points, eight rebounds, five assists and three blocked shots as the Spurs beat the Thunder 103-82 to tie the West title series at two games apiece.
“The truth is that we had never been in this kind of situation before,” Wembanyama said. “It was our first deficit in a playoff series and we just responded. It was nothing amazing. It wasn’t magic. We just did what we needed to do.”
In other words, he wasn’t surprised. A 62-win team in the regular season — and a team that has now beaten Oklahoma City six times in nine opportunities this season — shouldn’t be surprised by anything anymore.
Game 5 is Tuesday in Oklahoma City.
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It was Wembanyama who pointed the finger of blame at himself following San Antonio’s loss in Game 3, saying that the Spurs were “going to see what we’re made of” in Game 4 and that he had to do more to get teammates involved.
He delivered on every level.
“I saw a lot and I’m not surprised,” Spurs coach Mitch Johnson said. “I think our competitive response all year has been pretty good — and he’s been at the forefront of that more often than not. I think tonight, not speaking for him, he felt an obligation to set a tone for us in a variety of ways.”
Wembanyama had 11 points in the first quarter, 11 more on 10 shot attempts in the second quarter and capped all that with the beat-the-clock 3-pointer going into halftime.
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And on the other end, he might have been even better.
The unanimous Defensive Player of the Year — who was announced on Sunday night as a first-team All-NBA selection for the first time — led an effort that held Oklahoma City to a season-low in points and a season-high-tying 20 turnovers.
The Thunder had at least 108 points in every game in these playoffs entering Sunday.
“We’ve played 12 playoff games. When you play 12 playoff games, they’re not all going to be masterpieces,” Thunder coach Mark Daigneault said. “As much as you want to win, there’s nights where you just don’t have it for whatever reason.”
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On Sunday, that reason might have been Wembanyama. The Thunder were outscored by 29 points when he was on the floor. They shot 18 of 41 inside the paint, with Wembanyama a big reason for that, so more things got forced outside — where they shot 12 of 50.
He was asked how the Spurs bottled up the Thunder so well.
“I’m not going to get into details, but in general, being more disciplined and just trusting the game plan even more,” Wembanyama said.
There’s a flight for the Spurs to Oklahoma City on Monday for a game on Tuesday, and the winner of that contest will be one game away from the NBA Finals. It’s clear that Wembanyama knows that even after a big win, the job only gets tougher now.
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“The series is far from over,” Wembanyama said. “We’ve got six more wins before we can rest.”
An emotional Emma Raducanu was at a loss to explain her horror start at the French Open as she crashed to a first opening-round loss in Paris.
The British number one failed to win a game in a one-sided opening set against Argentina’s Solana Sierra, hitting zero winners and making 15 unforced errors.
Raducanu looked like she could be heading for one of the worst defeats of her career when she trailed 4-1 in the second set but she found a belated foothold, fighting back to force a tie-break before losing 6-0 7-6 (4).
“It was difficult,” said the 23-year-old, who made 42 unforced errors in total. “I don’t think I’ve fully processed it yet, so it’s hard to speak about the match right now.
“But I have to at least take the fact that, from a set and 4-1 down, I came back and made it competitive in the second set. I’m pretty disappointed. Obviously I wanted to do better.
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“I went on the court, I felt like the conditions were extremely lively and I felt like I wasn’t able to trust my shots and didn’t feel like I had control over the ball.
“I think probably just a bit light on matches, a bit light on confidence coming into the tournament.
“The first set happened super quickly, and it’s not a nice feeling when the points and the games are going very, very fast. I’m glad at least in the second set I was able to get a few games on the board.”
Raducanu had looked eager and confident in practice having reunited with US Open-winning coach Andrew Richardson earlier this week but she arrived in Paris having played only one match in two-and-a-half months after struggling with a post-viral illness.
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Emma Raducanu was beaten in straight sets (Aurelien Morissard/AP)
She is still bothered by a lingering cough that was aggravated by the clay blown up off the court, and it will clearly take time for Raducanu to find a groove again after this latest break from the tour.
The weight of everything she has been through since her life-changing win in New York in 2021 has taken a toll, and tears welled up in her eyes when she was asked how she had kept picking herself back up.
“It’s very difficult,” she said. “I think you need a lot of resilience. I think I’m trying my best each day, and I think that’s all I can ask of myself.”
Raducanu will now turn her attention to the grass-court season, where she has traditionally performed strongly, and the build-up to the HSBC Championships at Queen’s Club starting on June 8.
But she insisted she did not regret coming back for the end of the clay season, saying: “In hindsight, after the two matches I’ve played, it could have been nice to have saved yourself the match like today.
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“I think it will help me. I think I haven’t played matches, and it’s obviously very difficult coming in not having had any matches towards the back end of the clay season and these girls having tournament after tournament of confidence and wins. So I think that was pretty tricky for me.
“I didn’t necessarily do as well as I’d like to this year but I think the only way to face and improve how I’m feeling is to go through the tough parts, to go through the pain of it, and hopefully come out on the other side better and stronger.”
Man City, Man United, Aston Villa and Liverpool qualified for next season’s Champions League, while Bournemouth and Sunderland reached the Europa League, and Brighton will play in next season’s Conference League. Here are the Independent Sport’s awards from the 2025/26 season:
Player of the season
Miguel Delaney:Declan Rice – I have also gone back and forth on David Raya and Bruno Fernandes a few times but, now that the title is secured, I’d pick Rice for pushing through under immense pressure.
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Richard Jolly: Rice – I actually voted for Bernardo Silva for Footballer of the Year but it was when it looked like Manchester City could do the treble. So I will switch to Rice, who has been Arsenal’s outstanding individual.
Lawrence Ostlere: Fernandes – His ability to create chances was a world apart from every other player in the league and made a huge contribution off the ball too (he completed the same number of tackles as Rice).
Kieran Jackson: Rice – Those with short memories quickly forget how talismanic he was for Arsenal as they built a top-of-the-table lead in the first half of the season which, ultimately, proved insurmountable. Faded towards the end of the season, sure, but has been back to his monstrous self in the past few weeks. A proper leader.
Will Castle: Fernandes – You can easily give this to Rice and I’d have no complaints, but for me, Fernandes’ ability to remain a constant light for Manchester United even through the dark final days of Ruben Amorim makes him the league’s individual best this term. He was integral to their resurgence under Michael Carrick and his title of all-time assist king makes his season one for the books.
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Manchester United’s Bruno Fernandes celebrates scoring against Brighton (Reuters)
Manager of the season
MD: Mikel Arteta – I could easily have Keith Andrews, Andoni Iraola or Unai Emery here, but I think the scale of Arsenal’s long-term overperformance is being overlooked. And Arteta did show true management – especially dispelling doubts – at key moments.
RJ: Emery– At the start of the season, Aston Villa looked like they could go into decline. They end the campaign having qualified for the Champions League twice and won their first trophy in 30 years, and a first in Europe in 44 years. At the risk of recency bias, John McGinn’s strike against Liverpool might be my goal of the season.
LO: Regis Le Bris – Sunderland’s newly compiled team quickly gelled and racked up points via Le Bris’s gameplan built on defensive solidity. To finish in the top half of the Premier League is a phenomenal achievement, but qualifying for the Europa League, and delivering European football to the Black Cats for the first time in more than 50 years is incredible.
KJ: Andrews – The Irishman has made a mockery of the “most likely to be sacked” tag at the start of the season, steering Brentford so close to Europe. As the antics at Arsenal will attest to, perhaps the “set-piece coach” really is the way forward.
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WC: Arteta – You just can’t give it to anyone else, can you? Yes, Arsenal aren’t the most enjoyable team to watch, hence Arteta-ball regularly being the subject of resentment. But his philosophy has been justified; Arsenal are Premier League champions for the first time in 22 years. It’s not come without its real tests of fortitude, either – Manchester City’s fightback threatened to bring about a four-peat of second-place finishes. Arteta managed to drag his side out of the darkness; now he’s potentially 90 minutes away from the best double in football.
Keith Andrews, Manager of Brentford, applauds the fans after keeping the Bees in the Premier League (Getty)
Moment of the season
MD: “After review…” Very far from the best football moment, but the theatre around Chris Kavanagh’s VAR review of Callum Wilson’s goal was among the most exquisite tension I’ve experienced in the Premier League, and decided so much. There’s also a symbolism in how the fact it was a VAR review of a set-piece also summed up so much. Not necessarily for good.
RJ: It may be off the field, albeit about 30 yards from it – Mohamed Salah’s remarkable interview at Leeds. It feels like quite a bit of the drama has come off the field, whether Ruben Amorim’s press conference at Elland Road or Pep Guardiola standing down.
LO: Declan Rice’s “It’s not over” at full-time in Arsenal’s defeat by Manchester City. He was mocked for showing supposed weakness, but in truth it was a glimpse of a defiant mentality that proved so integral to Arsenal’s season. That phrase will be repeated for years to come.
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KJ: Max Dowman’s goal against Everton. The 16-year-old came on, conjured a key assist late on, before gliding sumptuously through desperate defenders to score into an empty net, becoming the Premier League’s youngest-ever goalscorer in a statement victory for Arsenal. Of course, understandable given his age, but it’s felt like a shame we’ve barely seen him since.
WC: “After review…” Stockley Park shenanigans take the cake on this one; you truly hate to see it. But the magnitude and significance of this sole moment in the title race – and the relegation race – cannot be denied.
West Ham are contacting PGMO over their concerns regarding the decision to disallow a Callum Wilson equaliser against Arsenal (PA Wire)
Game of the season
MD: Newcastle United 2-3 Liverpool – It feels like it was almost from a different campaign, not least in how it touched football levels that the season didn’t always reach.
RJ: Newcastle 2-3 Liverpool – Astonishing drama, plenty of plotlines and a 100th-minute winner from a 16-year-old Rio Ngumoha.
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LO: Manchester United 2-0 Manchester City – Michael Carrick’s first game in charge was a masterclass, and it sparked a transformation of the team’s season.
KJ: Liverpool 1-2 Manchester City – One stunning free-kick from Dominik Szoboszlai and a City fightback which extended the title race by two months. Farcical VAR scenes at the end were, perhaps, a sign of things to come.
WC: Fulham 4-5 Manchester City – Do not assume anything as given in this league. This had the look of a classic City rout when they went 3-0 up before half-time, then 5-1 by 53 minutes. By 77 minutes, Fulham had reduced their deficit by three and looked on a collision course for one of the greatest comebacks this league has ever seen. Alas, it didn’t happen, but those minutes of edge-of-your-seat action were unmatched.
Rio Ngumoha has signed his first professional contract with Liverpool (PA Wire)
Signing of the season
MD: Senne Lammens – A personification of Manchester United’s recently-found stability.
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RJ: Dominic Calvert-Lewin – Plenty of clubs spent a fortune on strikers last summer. Leeds got a free transfer who kept them up.
LO: Calvert-Lewin. A free signing who scored the goals (15) that kept Leeds in the Premier League.
KJ: Granit Xhaka. The Swiss midfielder, signed for £13m, was quickly named captain by Regis Le Bris and has been the key cog in Sunderland’s remarkable season, as they push for Europe on the final day. At 33, he’s still got it.
WC: Antoine Semenyo – Who knows how much earlier Arsenal would’ve won the league if not for City’s January business, signing the two most sought-after players in the league. Semenyo was on fire at Bournemouth and only got hotter under Pep Guardiola.
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Dominic Calvert-Lewin of Leeds United celebrates victory against Brighton & Hove Albion (Getty)
Surprise of the season
MD: Brentford – To think there was expectation Keith Andrews could be sacked in a nosedive.
RJ: How well (two of) the promoted teams have done. It has been a welcome surprise, too, to see Sunderland and Leeds excel. It wasn’t healthy if the same three teams that came up went down. But with Sunderland and Leeds doing well, it rather caught out Wolves, West Ham and Tottenham.
LO: I genuinely thought this would be the season when VAR clicked and began to become the smooth background operation it was meant to be. Somehow, it got worse.
KJ: Tottenham. Thomas Frank was highly rated and seemed a shrewd pick in the early weeks. How rapidly did that optimism plummet? Their battle against relegation was the story of the campaign.
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WC: Brentford – The Bees lost their manager, captain and two best attackers last summer. Predicting the drop for them was hardly a hot take. Shows how much we know.
What are you looking forward to next season?
MD: More open football, hopefully from some rule changes.
RJ: Some managerial changes are confirmed (Xabi Alonso at Chelsea, Marco Rose at Bournemouth), some very likely (Enzo Maresca to Manchester City) and some remain to be determined (Crystal Palace). It will be interesting to see how they get on and how that changes the Premier League pecking order.
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LO: Alonso at Chelsea is a great storyline and it will be fun to see how he gets on in the Premier League.
KJ: Manchester City. End of an era with Pep Guardiola leaving – how will Maresca (we assume) fare? It’s some figure to follow.
WC: Alonso to Chelsea is very intriguing – partly because of how unbothered a lot of Blues fans are at the appointment. A quick reminder that ‘failing’ at this Real Madrid team is not the be-all and end-all. What he did at Bayer Leverkusen was truly remarkable – this looks like a coup.
Xabi Alonso’s appointment as Chelsea manager has been confirmed (PA)
The design seamlessly integrates traditional banknote elements with imagery directly referencing McTominay’s crucial World Cup qualifying goal for Scotland against Denmark.
This historic moment saw the team secure their place at the men’s international tournament for the first time since 1998, following a dramatic 4-2 victory over Denmark at Hampden Park in Glasgow last November, where McTominay scored the opening goal with his spectacular overhead kick.
Reflecting on the achievement, the midfielder stated: “Reaching the biggest stage of world football is something every player dreams of, and I know it means everything to our fans. Moments like that belong to everyone who follows the team, so seeing my goal featured on a Scottish banknote feels incredibly special. Being able to work with Bank of Scotland to turn it into something that also supports Crisis, and the work they do to tackle homelessness, makes me even more proud.”
Fans will have a chance to win one of just 100 brand new notes in the coming weeks. (PA)
Emma Noble, chair of the Scottish executive committee at the Bank of Scotland, highlighted the note’s significance: “Securing qualification in such dramatic fashion is a moment fans will never forget, and we wanted to mark it in a way that’s rooted in Scottish identity. Like football, banknotes have long been part of our country’s story, and this limited edition £20 note combines those two traditions with a modern, creative twist.
“Scott’s overhead kick is already regarded as one of the nation’s greatest ever goals. It’s been a privilege to work with him to bring it to life in such a unique way, and we’re grateful for his support in helping raise funds for Crisis as they work to end homelessness across Scotland.”
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Only 100 of these special notes have been printed, with 50 available to the public through a combination of collector auctions, a prize draw, and two pop-up “vaults”. Proceeds from the auction and prize draw will directly benefit Crisis Scotland, the national charity dedicated to supporting individuals experiencing homelessness. The online auction is currently live and concludes at 11am on Friday, 26 June, the same deadline for entering the prize draw. Additionally, pop-up vaults will appear in Glasgow and Edinburgh, offering fans a chance to crack a code and secure one of these highly sought-after notes.
Maxwell Jacob Friedman protected his head of hair and recaptured the AEW World Title at Double or Nothing 2026. Interestingly, The Devil witnessed a fan-favorite turn to the dark side in a shocking post-match angle at the end of the pay-per-view.
Last month at Dynamite: Spring BreakThru, Darby Allin squashed MJF in a massive upset to become the new AEW Men’s World Champion. Since then, the self-proclaimed “generational talent” has been obsessed with reclaiming his prized “Triple B”, and repeatedly demanded a rematch for the belt from his long-time rival. The latter, however, refused all of Friedman’s offers for a World Championship bout, stating that he would grant him a rematch only if he agreed to put his hair on the line in return.
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Despite his initial reservations, MJF eventually agreed to Darby’s stipulation for AEW Double or Nothing. Their PPV bout started off hot, with Allin immediately attempting to pin Friedman- the latter turned the tables, however, by dodging the World Champion’s dive and then rattling him with an apron powerbomb. MJF tried to maintain his dominance over Darby, but the daredevil fought back valiantly, although he was once again incapacitated by a missed apron Coffin Drop, after which he destroyed his opponent with a package piledriver on the ringside steps.
However, Allin landed a low-blow on Friedman when the referee’s back was turned, and the matchup continued with both stars countering every move the other dished out. At a key point during the bout, The Wolf of Wrestling pulled a cameraman in the way of Darby’s dive, taking out both. He then carried the AEW World Champion and sat him down on a chair on the entrance ramp to try and shave his hair. Allin thwarted Friedman’s efforts, however, choking his challenger out with a guillotine hold.
He then set MJF up on a table and hit him with a Coffin Drop from the top of the entrance stage scaffolding- however, nothing could keep Friedman down for the count. Afterwards, Allin tried submitting Friedman with the Scorpion Death Lock, but once again passed out due to the exhaustion of his recent punishing schedule. His weariness opened the door for Big Hebrew to deliver an avalanche tombstone on Darby and pin him to regain the World Title.
Post-match, Friedman was looking to humiliate Darby by celebrating his victory standing over his foe as the latter was recovering on a stretcher. However, Kevin Knight arrived to chase him off, only to then shockingly hit Allin with a UFO splash on the stretcher, seemingly turning heel.
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What this means for the future of the TNT Champion and his relationship with his tag partner Speedball Mike Bailey remains to be seen.
Match results for AEW Double or Nothing
All Elite Wrestling hosted this year’s iteration of Double or Nothing in the Louis Armstrong Stadium in Queens, New York. The event featured a star-studded card comprising of a number of high-stakes matches, the results of which have been listed out below:
Christian Cage and Adam Copeland defeated FTR (c) [World Tag Team Title “I Quit” Match]
Konosuke Takeshita defeated Kazuchika Okada (c) [International Title Match]
Athena defeated Mina Shirakawa [Women’s Owen Hart Cup Quarterfinal Match]
Jon Moxley (c) defeated Kyle O’Reilly [Continental Title Match with no time limits]
Will Ospreay defeated Samoa Joe [Men’s Owen Hart Quarterfinal Match]
The 2025/2026 Nigeria Premier Football League season finally comes to an end on Sunday and, without doubt, it has been one of the most dramatic campaigns in recent years.
From the title race to the battle for continental tickets and relegation survival, almost every position is still open ahead of the final day.
For me, Rivers United are favourites to win the league title despite Rangers International currently sitting top of the table. Rangers probably deserve the title more because of their consistency this season, but their final game against Ikorodu City looks very difficult.
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Ikorodu City are fighting for a possible third-place finish and a continental ticket, while Rangers need at least a positive result to keep their title hopes alive. Both clubs have already mobilised fans for the game, which shows how important the encounter is to both sides.
I expect Rivers United to beat Katsina United comfortably in Port Harcourt. That is why I feel the title could eventually swing in favour of the Pride of Rivers if Rangers fail to win in Lagos.
Ikorodu City have impressed me this season and I strongly believe they can finish third. They have shown character throughout the campaign and look ready for continental football.
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Shooting Stars are still in the race, but their away trip to Niger Tornadoes will not be easy because the hosts are also battling for survival. The pressure in Minna could affect both teams.
The relegation battle is another area that will attract plenty of attention. Wikki Tourists and Bayelsa United are already down, but I believe El-Kanemi Warriors and Remo Stars could join them.
Remo Stars have struggled badly this season after winning the title last term and their trip to Bendel Insurance is far from straightforward. El-Kanemi Warriors are also in a difficult position and may not get the results needed to survive.
I see Enyimba, Plateau United, Warri Wolves and Kun Khalifat using their home advantage to secure safety. Clubs fighting relegation usually become very dangerous at home on the final day.
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In the race for the Golden Boot, Rangers striker Godwin Obaje remains my favourite to finish as the top scorer. However, Victor Mbaoma, Joseph Arumala and Jonathan Mairiga are still close enough to cause a late surprise.
No matter how the season ends, one thing is certain — the NPFL has once again delivered drama, excitement and unforgettable moments. Sunday could still produce another shocking twist before the curtain finally falls on the campaign.
Chelsea are going to be selling players this summer, and one who could go is midfielder Andrey Santos, according to Matt Law.
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The London is Blue podcast have been speaking to Matt Law about which players might leave the club this summer, and he mentioned one interesting name:
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“I wonder where things stand for Andrey Santos at the moment. He was the player who looked like he ould be the huge beneficiary of the Liam Rosenior appointment – and he was for a little bit,” Law mused.
“We know that Chelsea are looking at midfield options in the transfer market. We know that if Alonso plays his three at the back, he likes two sixes. I am wondering Santos is a little bit left on the sidelines within all this.”
You can see Law speaking in the clip embedded here:
Santos a prime candidate to be sold if Blues buy in midfield
We’ve had similar thoughts about Santos. He’s a solid player who could easily stick around in the squad, but perhaps his versatility is also his downfall. He’s not enough of a number 10 or a number 6 to really have an obvious spot in Alonso’s team, and the fact he could be sold for a big profit will surely tempt Chelsea if they decide to spend in midfield.
CAIRO, EGYPT – MAY 23: Oleksandr Usyk celebrates after beating Rico Verhoeven in their WBC World Heavyweight Title during the Glory in Giza – Fight Night at The Pyramids Of Giza, on May 23, 2026 in Cairo, Egypt. (Photo by Mark Robinson/Getty Images).
Oleksandr Usyk survived a massive scare before stopping Rico Verhoeven in the 11th round to retain his WBC heavyweight title in Egypt.
The fight, held in front of the Pyramids of Giza, turned into a much tougher night than many expected for the unbeaten champion.
Verhoeven, competing in only his second professional boxing match, repeatedly pressured Usyk and appeared to trouble him throughout the middle rounds.
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But late in Round 11, Usyk finally found the breakthrough with a huge right uppercut that dropped Rico before the referee stopped the fight with just one second left in the round.
Despite the defeat, Verhoeven earned respect across the combat sports world for pushing one of boxing’s best fighters to the limit.
LAS VEGAS — For a fleeting 20 minutes, it looked like the return of Cale Makar might actually be the answer.
The spark. The jolt. The lifeline the Colorado Avalanche desperately needed to salvage a series that has spiralled into something bordering on surreal.
Instead, it became the cruelest tease of all.
Because after a 3–0 first‑period burst that had the Presidents’ Trophy winners looking every bit like the powerhouse they were supposed to be, a nine‑minute collapse to open the second period somehow has them staring down a 3–0 series deficit they have absolutely no answers for.
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And the knockout blow didn’t come from the returning superstar in burgundy.
It came from the one in gold.
Makar’s return was supposed to be the story. And early on, it was. He played more minutes than anyone on the ice in the opening frame, looking like the same dynamic, downhill‑attacking force who tilts the ice in every rink he steps onto.
“It felt like it took me a little bit to get back in the rhythm, but overall the body felt great,” said Makar, who missed the first two games of the Western Conference Final with an upper-body injury.
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“I wish I could have done a little bit more. Definitely was a passenger for a bit tonight,”
Because 19 seconds into the second period, the building shook.
Mark Stone, playing his first game since May 8, parked himself at the side of the net and redirected a gorgeous Mitch Marner feed past Scott Wedgewood with a power-play kick starter.
T‑Mobile Arena roared back to life, and the Golden Knights, who have looked downright unstoppable since John Tortorella took over, fed off it instantly.
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They’re now 18‑4‑1 under him. And if you think that’s a coincidence, coach Tortorella would like a word.
“This is a game where we showed some (guts),” said Tortorella, basking in the glow of a 5-3 comeback win that will ultimately be remembered for burying the Avalanche.
“This team, in the short time that I’ve been with them, has shown me nothing but (fearlessness). They’re not afraid. It’s something we’ve tried to stress, don’t be afraid to make a mistake. I think they just have an uncanny ability to stay together.”
Stone’s goal was the spark. William Karlsson’s first of the playoffs was the accelerant. And then came the moment that sucked the oxygen out of the Avalanche bench.
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With eight minutes left in the period, Nathan MacKinnon stepped in front of a Shea Theodore blast and took it flush off the right kneecap. He crumpled instantly, stayed down for half a minute, then hobbled off in visible agony.
As he hung his head on the bench, trying to process the pain, the crowd erupted less than a minute later — this time for Keegan Kolesar’s tying goal. Tie game.
MacKinnon spent the rest of the night unsure if he should be out there, playing sparingly in a desperate attempt to stop the momentum before Tomas Hertl undressed Sam Malinski and lifted a backhand in to score the eventual game winner eight minutes into the third.
“It’s tough,” said Makar of MacKinnon’s injury.
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“He sells out for a shot block. Unfortunately it’s because of a bad turnover from us. Shouldn’t happen.”
As far as Makar goes, he did everything he could. His skating, his poise, his blue‑line manipulation — all of it was there, as he recorded three shots on goal in a game-high 27 minutes of ice time.
But, as the coach reiterated, “You get a nine‑minute stretch that costs you the hockey game.”
And that’s the story of this series. Colorado hasn’t been outclassed for 60 minutes. They’ve been undone in pockets — five minutes here, nine minutes there — and against a team this opportunistic, that’s fatal.
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Bednar wasn’t ready to sugarcoat anything when asked about resiliency as they look to save their season Tuesday.
“We’re not there yet, I don’t know,” he said of the mood following the team’s first first loss of the season after holding a multi-goal lead.
“Everyone’s down in the dumps right now and that’s what the next 36 hours are for, to get our team back and make sure our focus is in the right place. It seems like a tough hill to climb too, obviously especially against a tough team like Vegas.”
He’s right. With MacKinnon banged up, with Valeri Nichushkin injured, with a goalie change inevitable, and with their confidence shaken, the Avalanche look like a team searching for something that isn’t there.
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When push comes to shove, the Avalanche don’t have any answers.
The Golden Knights do. They have Stone. They have swagger. They have Tortorella. And they have a 3–0 stranglehold on a series that feels, for all intents and purposes, over.
Regis Le Bris expressed his pride as Sunderland secured a spot in next season’s Europa League by beating Chelsea 2-1.
Trai Hume opened the scoring before Malo Gusto’s own goal early in the second half doubled the Black Cats’ advantage.
Cole Palmer pulled one back for Chelsea but they had Wesley Fofana sent off just after the hour mark and Sunderland held on for the three points.
Victory at the Stadium of Light along with other results ensured the Black Cats finished seventh in the Premier League standings, capping off a remarkable return to the top flight.
Asked about his emotions, Le Bris said: “Proud. I’m proud of the lads, proud of the atmosphere in the stadium, the connection we had once again today to create something special.
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“We had to win. I think we were really focused.
“The way we wanted to play this game, showed good control, scored when it was on and finally the last part of the game was well-managed with maturity.”
Victory comes one year to the day since Sunderland were promoted with a Championship play-off final triumph over Sheffield United at Wembley and Le Bris believes a strong finish this term is the “continuity” of their journey.
“It’s different, Wembley was fantastic as well, a special place in English football,” he said.
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“Here today, it’s the continuity of our journey and the journey is really special because we feel the alignment in the club with our fans and finally it’s a tribute to our collective work and it’s really nice.”
Looking ahead to the prospect of playing in the Europa League, Le Bris added: “It’s hard to realise at the minute.
“It’s going to be a new challenge, but we don’t want to set a limit.
“We know it’s going to be tough in the Premier League, first of all, because the second season is hard as well.
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“Let’s start with this idea to be strong in the Premier League. After that we’ll have the Europa League which is another challenge, another story, we’ll see.”
Calum McFarlane believes Chelsea should be finishing “a lot higher up”.
Defeat on Wearside ended a flat campaign for the Blues, who had started the day in eighth but slipped to 10th.
The game was McFarlane’s last before Xabi Alonso takes over on July 1 and he said: “A disappointing end to the season.
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“We should be finishing a lot higher up the league – for me, with this group of players, the talent we have, we should be in the Champions League.
“We haven’t been, we’ve been too inconsistent at times this year.
“The feeling in the dressing room is obviously of disappointment. We wanted to win today and make the best of a bad situation and get into the Europa League.
“We didn’t get the performance we wanted or the result. The message to the fans, we’re as disappointed as them, we’re gutted we couldn’t do it for them.
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“They’ve been brilliant this year, they’ve really supported us, especially in the last couple of weeks when we’ve needed to win games.
“Unfortunately we’ve let them down today, we weren’t able to put the performance in that they deserve.”
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