
Los Angeles Sparks riding five-game winning streak as 2nd half of season is underway
The team has won five straight games, including three on the road, heading into Tuesday night's matchup with the Las Vegas Aces. It's only the third time in the past five years that the team has won five or more games in a row. The Sparks had a nine-game winning streak in 2020 and a six-game one in 2023.
Los Angeles has scored 90 or more points in all five games for the first time in franchise history and has put up consecutive 100-point efforts — again a first for the team.
'We've been playing better in the last month, part of that is getting bodies back,' Sparks coach Lynne Roberts said. 'We're playing with more pace, so they're figuring it out. We don't play a traditional style, there's a lot of freedom.'
The Sparks have been getting strong contributions from all five of their starters. Kelsey Plum and Dearica Hamby are averaging 20.8 points each. Rickea Jackson and Azura Stevens are right behind at 18.2 points and 17.0, respectively. Jackson torched the Liberty on Saturday for 20 points in the first-half and hit the game-winning shot at the buzzer.
Los Angeles will also welcome back Cameron Brink on Tuesday. She's been sidelined for 13 months with an ACL injury.
Power poll rankings
Minnesota remained the No. 1 team in the poll with Atlanta jumping up to the second spot. New York was third and Phoenix fell to fourth. Seattle was fifth and Indiana sixth, with Las Vegas next. The Sparks moved up two spots to eighth. Washington and Golden State followed Los Angeles. Dallas, Chicago and Connecticut rounded out the poll.
Clark health update
Caitlin Clark is still sidelined with a right groin injury and there's no timetable yet on her return. Indiana's star guard had a second opinion on the injury when the Fever visited New York last week. The team announced there were no signs of additional damage and that maintaining her long-term health was the focus in her recovery.
Player of the week
Kelsey Mitchell of Indiana was the AP player of the week after averaging 28.3 points, four assists and 1.7 steals to help the Fever go 2-1 last week. Other players receiving votes included Napheesa Collier of Minnesota, Kelsey Plum and Dearica Hamby of Los Angeles and Alyssa Thomas of Phoenix.
Game of the week
___

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
18 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Curt Cignetti and Indiana are STILL HUNTING
Welcome to Andy & Ari On3 - it's Thursday and today, we are going to answer some of your great questions in our Dear Andy & Ari segment, but first, we have a great interview with Indiana head coach Curt Cignetti. After surprising the entire college football world last season, Curt Cignetti and the Indiana Hoosiers are no longer considered America's darling team. Now, people know about the Hoosiers. Listen here as Curt Cignetti details his mindset and how he plans to consistently keep Indiana relevant as long as he is there. 0:00 Intro 3:00 Curt Cignetti joins 15:42 Furthering Indiana Discussion 23:20 Dear Andy & Ari: Could Ohio State take a step back? 34:25 A scheduling round robin? 39:13 How many losses is too many to get in the CFP? 44:18 Short list of Kirby Smart's replacement 53:52 Conclusion: Newest addition to the On3 network introduced tomorrow! Now it's time for your great questions, and we kick off with a very interesting thought from Dylan on the Buckeyes out of Ohio State. Later, the guys get into questions on scheduling, CFP criteria, and potential replacements at UGA for Kirby Smart.


Chicago Tribune
37 minutes ago
- Chicago Tribune
Jed Hoyer ‘the right guy' to guide Chicago Cubs future, Tom Ricketts says — with or without Kyle Tucker
In the 16 years since his family took ownership of the Chicago Cubs, Chairman Tom Ricketts has regularly walked around Wrigley Field interacting with fans during games. It's a way to connect with a fan base that lately has been making its feelings known about wanting the organization to re-sign impending free-agent slugger Kyle Tucker. 'l admit it's been a theme of the summer for the fans here,' a smiling Ricketts told the Tribune on Friday. 'But we'll just pick up that at the end of the season. Kyle's had a solid season and we've had a great year thus far. We've got some more guys coming in (from the trade deadline) to help us for the rest of the year, and I'm just really excited about the next two months.' Friday's festivities at Wrigley Field were a mix of somber and celebratory. The Cubs were officially awarded the 2027 All-Star Game before their 1-0 win over the Baltimore Orioles, and throughout the game they honored franchise icon and Hall of Fame second baseman Ryne Sandberg, who died Monday. Among the many ways the Cubs recognized Sandberg throughout the day: A pregame tribute video of his stellar career played on the video board, followed by 23 seconds of silence in honor of Sandberg's retired number, while '23' was painted on the field behind home plate. The Cubs will wear their royal blue road jerseys — all with No. 23 and no name on the back — as another tribute to Sandberg during Saturday's game. MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred formally announced the All-Star Game will come to Wrigley for the fourth time. Of course, that might require the 2027 season not being affected by a work stoppage after the collective bargaining agreement with the players union expires at the end of the 2026 season. Manfred has been meeting with every team this year in an effort to build a bridge between the sides. But it hasn't been a completely smooth process. Two-time MVP Bryce Harper recently confronted Manfred during the Philadelphia Phillies players meeting with the commissioner, reportedly telling Manfred, 'You can get the f––– out of our clubhouse,' if owners want to discuss a salary cap. 'Look, I don't talk about those player meetings,' Manfred said Friday in Wrigley's home dugout. 'Let me say this: I think more has been made out of this than needs to be made out of it. Bryce expressed his views. At the end of the meeting we shook hands and went our separate ways. Just not all that significant. 'It was an individual picking a particular way to express himself, and I don't think you need to make more out of that than that.' As much as Manfred seemingly has downplayed the possibility of a work stoppage in 2027, baseball fans' concern, and perhaps even resignation, over that looming possibility is undeniable. 'It is natural that when you get to the end of a collective bargaining agreement, people who are glass-half-filled people have trepidation about what's going to happen,' Manfred said. 'I'm optimistic that we'll find a way to make a deal.' Friday's events capped a busy week for the Cubs that started with a pivotal series in Milwaukee, before which the team announced a multiyear extension for president of baseball operations Jed Hoyer, who was in the final year of his contract. 'I'm thankful to be here for a long time,' Hoyer said Thursday. 'Obviously I'm really happy to give stability to the staff. You guys always ask me those questions, but I'm not the only person that was wondering about that. So obviously I'm thrilled it got done. I couldn't imagine a better place to work.' Hoyer and Ricketts had been discussing an extension three to four weeks before it became official Monday. 'Jed's done a really nice job over the last few years in increasing our overall organizational health,' Ricketts told the Tribune on Friday. 'It's not just the wins on the field. It's the quality of our minor-leaguers. It's the quality of our draft the last handful of years. He and his team are committed to getting better every day, and I just feel confident he's the right guy to take us forward.' Hoyer's extension came three days before Thursday's trade deadline. While his new deal erased any uncertainty about his future beyond the season, it also created a perception that without the unknown hanging over him, Hoyer would be able to make trades and not worry about their impact on his job security. Asked whether that was a consideration in the timing of Hoyer's extension, Ricketts said: 'I'm not sure it mattered that much, to be honest. It just seemed like if we know what we're going to do, let's just get it over with.' From Hoyer's perspective, his decision-making at the deadline wouldn't have played out differently had he still been working on his expiring deal. 'This isn't about me, it's not about my contract and not about those guys,' Hoyer said. 'It's about what we feel like is the right thing to do. For the organization, the goal is to be good every year. That's the goal. The goal is not to have massive up and down cycles. 'That's been the focus is to try to build something that's sustainable, that we can do this year after year. And we can certainly do that. So my contract status didn't change that. That's the goal.'


New York Times
38 minutes ago
- New York Times
Notre Dame's quarterback competition: How will Irish decide CJ Carr vs. Kenny Minchey?
SOUTH BEND, Ind. — At some point, probably during the next two weeks, Marcus Freeman will need to find answers on the practice field. Whether they're in the form of CJ Carr or Kenny Minchey doesn't matter, at least not yet. For now, the priority for Notre Dame's coaching staff is making sure they're asking the right questions of their potential quarterbacks. Advertisement Sometimes that means pushing that pair to failure, seeing how these quarterbacks without a meaningful snap to their name respond. Other times, that means putting them under classic pressure, why Notre Dame worked its two-minute offense on opening day. Every data point matters, and there's hardly a limit to the information Notre Dame wants to track before coming to a quarterback decision. 'To me, it's 50-50,' quarterbacks coach Gino Guidugli said. 'Whoever the next two weeks has the best practices will be the starting quarterback. There isn't one guy that's coming in saying like, 'Right now, he's got the edge. Right now, he would be the guy.' It's a wide-open competition. 'The reps are going to be split right down the middle. Whoever puts together the most consistent training camp's gonna be the guy Week 1.' No pressure, but this August decision might set the ceiling for January, whether the Irish can repeat last year's run through the College Football Playoff or whether they make it at all. That could overwhelm a young quarterback without game film, which is why no one inside the program wants to focus on a competition that could burn all of training camp's oxygen. The staff could rather not consider a competition at all, acknowledging that the hyperfocus on who's QB1 probably isn't healthy for either of the contenders. During opening day, Carr threw three interceptions compared with Minchey's one, with some of those decisions 'catastrophic,' offensive coordinator Mike Denbrock said. For quarterbacks whose spring practices felt like jazz, that debut was a needle scratching the record. Maybe it's putting a silver lining on a brutal stat line, but there can be progress in that failure. 'I think that's what fall camp is for, to come out here and push the ball down the field, see if you can fit a ball into a tight window, see if you can make the throws, see which guys can come up for you big time and make a big play on the outside, which DBs you can attack,' Carr said. 'Coming out of day one, I thought that although we had a bunch of turnovers and didn't protect the ball, and we need to continue to get better at that, I thought it was a really good day, explosively. We pushed the ball on the field. Guys were getting open. Advertisement 'From the outside looking in, it's a different narrative than I think we feel.' That depends on whom you ask. 'These last two days we've struggled,' Guidugli said. 'But we've got nowhere to go but up.' If all goes to plan, Notre Dame's starting quarterback will reveal himself before training camp wraps and Miami prep begins in full. Freeman has a habit of saying the players decide position battles and consistency usually casts the deciding vote. There's also the matter of Carr's ability in the pass game being a cut above Notre Dame's recent quarterbacks, and the fact Minchey offers a mobility Denbrock has weaponized in recent playbooks. As much as Notre Dame wants an honest competition, Carr and Minchey are different quarterbacks who can push Denbrock's offense in different directions. Nobody is ready to go there quite yet, though. 'Right now, it's more of, 'Hey, let's put them all in as many high-pressure, volatile, chaotic situations as we possibly can, and let's watch how they respond and then make sure we're picking the right guy,'' Denbrock said. 'We have full confidence in whichever one of those guys wins the job to lead this football team and do a good job of doing it.' Among the tightropes Notre Dame will walk during camp with both quarterbacks is how much leeway the staff gives each. Denbrock said Carr and Minchey can make checks at the line, basically taking a good play and potentially making it a great one. The issue is that doesn't happen every time, and if it doesn't click on a Friday morning in South Bend, expecting it to happen on a Sunday night in Miami Gardens is a big ask. There's a science to the perfect play call, but there's an art to knowing when it's better to accept good enough and just snap the ball. 'I think they understand how to fix certain problems,' Denbrock said. 'I think now it's an opportunity for us to put them in positions where they make a better decision as to whether to actually fix it or leave it be. Advertisement 'And there's always a tendency — when you get into a little bit of a competition, especially at quarterback — where guys try to be too perfect at what they do instead of just letting it rip and let's just play.' Working for Minchey and Carr as they rotate through the first team is the talent surrounding them. The offensive line should be among the better ones nationally. The running backs room might be the best. And the receivers group appears to be the best of Freeman's tenure, even if that's not a bold statement. How all that talent supports the quarterback might help decide who is QB1. 'Our quarterback hasn't started a college football game. And we've got a lot of guys that are surrounding him that have,' Guidugli said. 'And I think early in the season we gotta lean on those guys and not put all the pressure on the quarterback. Just not making every snap life or death on a quarterback decision.' During Notre Dame's opening practice, it felt like every snap by Carr and Minchey held that kind of gravity, which isn't healthy for anybody. Then again, the quarterback job at Notre Dame with a CFP-talented roster surrounding it doesn't come open very often. And how Carr and Minchey perform during the next two weeks will determine QB1 and set the course for where this season is headed. Again, no pressure. Other than all the pressure. 'I hope CJ goes out and plays his best. And I also hope that I go out and play my best. So it's not so much me versus him. We're both trying to be the best us that we can be,' Minchey said. 'It's less on me focusing about someone else and, trying not to sound selfish, but focusing on how I can be the best me I can be.' 'It doesn't really matter to me (when it's decided). Just hopefully before Miami.' (Top photo of Marcus Freeman: Justin Casterline / Getty Images)