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Portis set to return from his 25-game suspension as Bucks host Timberwolves

Portis set to return from his 25-game suspension as Bucks host Timberwolves

Yahoo08-04-2025

FILE - Milwaukee Bucks' Bobby Portis reacts during the second half of an NBA basketball game against the Los Angeles Clippers Monday, March 4, 2024, in Milwaukee. (AP Photo/Morry Gash, File)
MILWAUKEE (AP) — Bobby Portis is coming back from his 25-game suspension as the Milwaukee Bucks continue their push toward the playoffs.
The 30-year-old forward is expected to dress for the Bucks' game Tuesday night against the Minnesota Timberwolves and make his first game appearance since the All-Star break. Portis was suspended on Feb. 20 after testing positive for the painkiller Tramadol, violating the league's anti-drug program.
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Portis has indicated he took Tramadol unintentionally. His agent, Mark Bartelstein, said Portis believed he was taking Toradol, which is approved and is something that he has taken before.
"When (the suspension) first came, I was mad,' Portis said on a video he posted Monday night on X. 'I was angry that I was getting suspended. I didn't really understand. Why me? It's always a thing. Why me? Why is this happening to me? Why is this happening to me?'
The suspension continued a difficult stretch for Portis in which his grandmother died and his home was burglarized. He reacted by counting his blessings, relying on the people closest to him and taking comfort in continuing to play basketball on his own.
'I'm thankful I get a chance to wake up every day,' Portis said. 'I'm thankful I've got a great support system around me each and every day to keep me going. I'm thankful that I am able to still go play basketball. Obviously I can't play in front of 20,000, 15,000 fans every night, but I still get a chance to get up and grind every day, to get better. I'm really just kept my head down, staying ready, so when it's time to get back on the floor, I can be the best I can be.'
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That time has arrived as the Bucks enter the final week of the regular season.
'Really excited to have him back,' teammate Kyle Kuzma said after the Bucks' Tuesday morning shootaround. "I think that he is a huge part of our identity, our mood and feeling out there on the court. I think he's somebody that has just a certain amount of aura to him, tenacity that can ignite a group."
Portis lost $2,858,701 in salary because of the suspension. He has averaged 13.7 points, 8.3 rebounds and a career-high 2.2 assists in 46 games. His overall (.463) and 3-point (.364) shooting percentages are his lowest since 2019-20, his last season before joining the Bucks.
Milwaukee was 29-24 at the time of Portis' suspension and went 15-10 in the 25 games he missed while enduring plenty of ups and downs.
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The Bucks went 7-1 in the first eight games of Portis' suspension, then lost nine of their next 13 games as their lack of frontcourt depth was exposed. During that slump, the Bucks also lost seven-time all-NBA guard Damian Lillard, who is out indefinitely as he deals with blood clots in his calf that leave his potential return uncertain. Lillard last played on March 18.
Milwaukee has since won four straight, though all those victories have come against teams with losing records. The Bucks are fifth in the Eastern Conference, the same position they held when Portis' suspension began.
The Bucks are three games behind fourth-place Indiana with four games left in the season, though Milwaukee does have the head-to-head tiebreaker if the two teams finish with the same record. The top four teams in each conference earn home-court advantage for the first round of the playoffs.
Because the Bucks have only four games left in the regular season, they won't have much of an opportunity to get accustomed to playing together before the playoffs start. Milwaukee had added Kuzma as part of a series of moves at the trade deadline. Kuzma and Portis only were on the floor together for four games before Portis' suspension.
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Kuzma was asked if that would be enough time to establish cohesiveness before the postseason.
'I don't know if that's enough, to be honest — it's four games — but it's up to us to figure it out,' Kuzma said. 'There's no crying on the yacht, as they say. For us, we've just got to figure it out, go out and compete every night and make it make sense out there.'
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Seven takeaways from Eagles minicamp: Offense remains a force, Tyler Steen a front-runner, and more
Seven takeaways from Eagles minicamp: Offense remains a force, Tyler Steen a front-runner, and more

New York Times

time25 minutes ago

  • New York Times

Seven takeaways from Eagles minicamp: Offense remains a force, Tyler Steen a front-runner, and more

PHILADELPHIA — The summer has officially arrived. After six workouts during OTAs, the Eagles fielded perfect attendance in their one-day mandatory minicamp on Tuesday. The reigning Super Bowl champions will break for just over a month before training camp begins in late July, kick-starting the official beginning of their title defense. Advertisement A series of important questions awaits a franchise seeking to extend its golden era. Nick Sirianni, whose contract was recently extended, oversees a coaching staff managing two major transitions. First-time offensive coordinator Kevin Patullo is still fleshing out his first system with a pool of assistants that includes new-hires Parks Frazier and Scot Loeffler. Vic Fangio, who's entering his 22nd season as an NFL defensive coordinator, is still sorting out those who'll replace eight key members of a top-rated defense that helped win the city's second Super Bowl. Tuesday's viewing of minicamp afforded indications of the answers. 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Saquon Barkley at age 28 still embodies the strength of what has been a run-oriented attack, and, as if not to be forgotten, Hurts unfurled a long touchdown to DeVonta Smith along the left sideline (with rookie linebacker Smael Mondon Jr. chasing) during Tuesday's 7-on-7 drills to demonstrate the potency that still remains in the passing game. The only apparent hiccups were in the offense's roster holes. Right guard is the only position without a returning starter, and starting center Cam Jurgens is still sidelined while recovering from offseason back surgery. During team situation drills, backup center Brett Toth skipped a snap to Hurts, killing the play, and, on the first-team rep, right guard Tyler Steen was flagged for a false start. The seniority of this unit suggests it will remain a substantial force. 2. Speaking of Tyler Steen… It's evident Steen is the front-runner to start at right guard for yet a second summer. He was the first-team right guard throughout OTAs and in minicamp. Will Steen hold onto the job this time? I asked two-time All-Pro right tackle Lane Johnson what he's seen from Steen this offseason, and Johnson was quite complimentary of how much Steen has developed, particularly with his strength. 'He's just a physically gifted dude, man,' Johnson said. 'He's a lot stronger than what he was when he first arrived. So, I think his playing strength is starting to show, and I know he's ready for camp to start. And yeah, man, he's just been putting in work, and I think you've seen traits of him where he can be a dominating player.' Johnson has started beside 10 different right guards in the last five seasons. Steen, a 2023 third-round pick, has started in two games next to Johnson. Steen's top competition appears to be Matt Pryor, who started in five games next to Johnson in 2020. Pryor took second-team snaps at right guard on Tuesday. Kenyon Green, the player portion of the C.J. 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Mukuba to the slot in dime? 5. Jihaad Campbell wore a helmet during individual drills for the first time. This was a notable sign for the No. 31 overall pick, who has been gradually increasing his workload since undergoing pre-draft labrum surgery. He still hasn't yet participated in 7-on-7 or team drills, but he'd only before observed individual drills during OTAs. Tuesday didn't suggest that Campbell is ahead of schedule in his recovery. (Fangio said last week that Campbell 'won't hit the practice field' until 'sometime in August'; Sirianni wouldn't offer a timeline on Tuesday.) But it's important to discuss how Campbell's recovery is different from DeJean's last year. DeJean, drafted as a corner, suffered a hamstring injury while working out in the summer, and returned Aug. 13 on a learning track that took him until Week 6 to start at nickel — 'a drastically different position' from outside corner, according to Fangio. Campbell's focus has only been at inside linebacker. 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(He had 35 snaps in his Week 18 debut against the New York Giants.) Steen is the apparent front-runner at right guard, and Pryor offers the Eagles versatility as a seventh-year veteran who can also play offensive tackle. What else can Keegan add as a reserve lineman? Long-time position coach Jeff Stoutland regularly cross-trains his linemen. While not new in general, it's interesting involving Keegan. Three-time Pro Bowl left guard Landon Dickerson has been Philadelphia's backup center. Could Keegan distinguish himself from other linemen, like Brett Toth, and offer reliability behind Jurgens? 7. Do the Eagles have a No. 4 WR? The Eagles may be weary of the years-long discourse about whether they've secured a No. 3 wide receiver behind A.J. Brown and DeVonta Smith. General manager Howie Roseman increased depth by acquiring Jahan Dotson in a training camp trade last year. 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Jermaine O'Neal returns to take in Pacers' run: 'I'm hoping this is the storybook ending'
Jermaine O'Neal returns to take in Pacers' run: 'I'm hoping this is the storybook ending'

Indianapolis Star

timean hour ago

  • Indianapolis Star

Jermaine O'Neal returns to take in Pacers' run: 'I'm hoping this is the storybook ending'

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That's what I told my wife: If I had to say one thing I miss about playing and playing there, it's the energy. I felt like I was in the game. I was sweating, and I'm like, 'Why am I sweating?' I had one of the equipment guys get me a washcloth. I was sweating like that." Re-live the Pacers' unbelievable run to the NBA Finals with our commemorative book The 46-year-old is now 11 years removed from his NBA career and 17 from his eight-year run with the Pacers. He arrived at age 22 in a splash trade fresh off Indianapolis' loss to the Lakers in the 2000 Finals, and he went on to reach six straight All-Star appearances and became the franchise's all-time leader in blocked shots until Myles Turner surpassed him last season. O'Neal's teams never got back to the Finals, though, falling one round short against the Pistons in 2003-2004 in Rick Carlisle's first season as coach before a fallout related to the Pacers-Pistons brawl broke up a title favorite the very next season. But O'Neal felt something when he ran into Carlisle before Game 4 against the Knicks and realized the symmetry in his coach returning to this moment. MORE: 25 years later, Pacers back in NBA Finals: 'It's almost a replay of the way it felt in 2000' 'He's one of the greatest coaches I've ever been around," said O'Neal, who is now coaching Dynamic Prep Academy in Irving, Texas. "He's just smart, man. You let a guy like Rick Carlisle to script against the same team in a seven-game series, he's probably going to win a lot of those battles, if you give him talent to go with his basketball mind." Now in his second stint with the Pacers, Carlisle has hit this kind of ceiling in the playoffs before, like when he led the 2010-2011 Mavericks to an NBA Finals upset of the Heat. "I remember we used to be in timeouts and the first horn would go off and he's kind of sitting there like, 'We're going to do this.' And then we go out there and run it," O'Neal said. "He has that type of mind where he can draw up things on the fly. "And he's not a rah-rah-rah, in-your-face type of coach, but he says things and he says things in a way where you know when he's upset and you know when he's about his business. But he's so smart, man. He finds a way to hit the right button and the right strings with these players." Carlisle's presence is the one similarity O'Neal sees between this year's Pacers, who are tied 1-1 with the Thunder in this year's NBA Finals, and the talented group he played with that fell short. O'Neal's early teams were led by an aging but clutch Reggie Miller to go along with O'Neal and Ron Artest as the budding stars. "We were a very physical, defensive-minded team first. We would just wear you down defensively. We were kind of unique because we had an inside-outside presence," O'Neal said. "But (this year's Pacers) are a pace, speed, side-to-side, ball gotta work. I thought we were deep, too, but we didn't have to go deep to win the game. "I think they have to go deep to win games because right now as (Tyrese) Haliburton is trying to define himself as a true, true star where you can throw him the ball and he's going to get you a bucket. SGA (Shai Gilgeous-Alexander) is that guy. There's a handful of those guys. I think Haliburton has a chance to be that." O'Neal shared a moment with Haliburton before Game 4, where he told the star point guard to become more selfish. He said Haiburton told him, "I've got you, OG." 'You can tell he's a basketball savant," O'Neal said. "He works to set the table for other people, and sometimes that unique skillset can impact your ability to impact the game offensively if you keep passing, keep passing and keep going. I think his next step will probably come next year, which is probably why he didn't make the All-Star Game this year because he had too many games where he wasn't aggressive. I think he can still get 30 and 10. He has to take that next step." MORE: Mission Impossible: Finals reckoning. Pacers do it again. 'We never give up, until the buzzer sounds' O'Neal's evaluation came days before Haliburton hit a fade-away jumper with less than 2 seconds left to beat the Thunder 111-110 in Game 1 on Thursday. With a game-tying or game-winning shot in all four playoff rounds so far, it's possible that Haliburton's next step is happening right now. That possibility kept O'Neal from counting out the Pacers against the heavily favored Thunder. And he certainly knew what his heart wanted to happen.

Angel Reese Grabs Attention for Her Outfit Before Chicago Sky Game
Angel Reese Grabs Attention for Her Outfit Before Chicago Sky Game

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Angel Reese Grabs Attention for Her Outfit Before Chicago Sky Game

Angel Reese Grabs Attention for Her Outfit Before Chicago Sky Game originally appeared on Athlon Sports. The Chicago Sky may be struggling, but Angel Reese is not letting it stop her from making a statement off the court. Advertisement Chicago has already lost five of its seven games so far this 2025 WNBA season. The team has one of the worst offenses in the league, ranking 12th (out of 13 teams) in points per game with 77.4 and 11th in field goal percentage with 39.9. Their only wins so far have come against the Dallas Wings, a team that has only won one game this campaign. Entering Tuesday's game against the New York Liberty, the Sky are not expected to win at all. In fact, ESPN's Matchup Predictor gave them just a 12.1% chance to emerge victorious. Chicago Sky forward Angel Reese (5) looks on during a Krzaczynski-Imagn Images While the odds are stacked against them, it doesn't look like Reese and the rest of the team are bothered or discouraged. That much is clear as the team arrived at Barclays Center in style, showing their own fashion sense. Advertisement Reese, for her part, turned a lot of heads as usual with her business-yet-stylish attire. The WNBA All-Star was seen wearing a black oversized blazer that covered what appeared to be a black dress. The 23-year-old embellished it with a long pearl strand necklace, while also wearing sheer stockings and black pointy stilettos to complete her ensemble. Sure enough, fans loved Reese's attire and took to the comment section to heap praise on her overall look. "Queen Barbie let's go Angel," a commenter wrote on Instagram. Another one said, "They all so pretty, Angel facecard is insane." "Becca and Hailey are giving casual calm and Angel is giving Vogue with a mixture of Old Hollywood," a fan remarked. Advertisement A supporter added, "Barbie is giving Rich Girl Vibes." "Ok sportswomen of the year #ar5," a follower shared, referring to Reese's recent win as Sportswoman of the Year at the 2025 BET Awards. A sixth social media user posted, "Love you Angel! I don't care @angelreese5 what they say!! You are that Barbie." Related: Angel Reese, Chicago Sky Predicted to Suffer Sixth Loss of the Season This story was originally reported by Athlon Sports on Jun 10, 2025, where it first appeared.

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