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Luka Doncic Is Determined To Get Back At The Mavericks For Betraying Him After Blockbuster Trade

Luka Doncic Is Determined To Get Back At The Mavericks For Betraying Him After Blockbuster Trade

Yahoo07-07-2025
Luka Doncic Is Determined To Get Back At The Mavericks For Betraying Him After Blockbuster Trade originally appeared on Fadeaway World.
Lakers star Luka Doncic is in the middle of a critical offseason as he nears the start of his first full season in Los Angeles. Months after the trade that paired him with LeBron James, Doncic is doing whatever it takes to keep himself in shape and is using the words from his former team to help him push through his most transformative summer yet.
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'Doncic remains motivated by how the Dallas Mavericks treated him in the aftermath of the trade and how the Lakers' season ended, and has committed to an offseason training and nutrition program," sources told ESPN's Dave McMenamin.
In the aftermath of their shocking decision, the Mavericks were looking for any reason to justify the trade and called out his work ethic and conditioning as the primary reasons for his departure. According to the Mavericks, Doncic struggled to stay in shape and hold himself up to a higher standard. Now, Luka is using those words to help inspire him to greatness.
Besides elite talent and a solid support system, Doncic will also have every resource available to help him reach new heights in his training and physical fitness journey.
"Doncic will also have a direct conduit to the Lakers' coaching staff with him this summer. Lakers assistant coach Greg St. Jean will serve as an assistant coach with the Slovenian national team, sources told ESPN, as Doncic competes for his home country in the FIBA EuroBasket tournament."
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Like the rest of us, Doncic was blindsided by his trade to the Lakers. He thought he'd be in Dallas for a long time, especially after leading them to the NBA Finals in 2024. So it's no surprise that he felt betrayed when the Mavs decided to send him to Los Angeles completely out of the blue. The betrayal increased tenfold when the Mavs blamed his character as part of the reason.
To this day, Doncic's reputation has yet to recover, and it's something he's actively seeking to rectify. Sadly, even with averages of 28.2 points, 8.2 rebounds, and 7.7 assists per game last season, it wasn't enough for Doncic to silence the haters.
The only way to prove them wrong and restore his reputation is to win it all with the Lakers while keeping himself in the best shape of his career. Thanks to the Mavericks' harsh betrayal of Luka, he's going to be playing with a chip on his shoulder and some added motivation to show that the Mavs made a huge mistake in letting him go.
Already, fans have noticed Doncic looking exceptionally slimmer, and he hasn't even started playing in this year's EuroBasket tournament. If he continues this trajectory, Doncic could be in store for a career-high season, and the Lakers will need every bit of it to challenge NBA elites such as the Thunder, Timberwolves, Nuggets, and Rockets.
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As for the Mavericks, Nico Harrison doesn't yet have any regrets over making the trade, and he believes his team is primed for success in the years to come. But if Luka makes a run and proves that he's capable of being a champion, it will forever make them look foolish for giving him up so easily.
Related: Former Mavericks Head Coach Says He Would Take Cooper Flagg Over Luka Doncic
This story was originally reported by Fadeaway World on Jun 28, 2025, where it first appeared.
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Venus Williams wins a doubles match at Washington in her first tournament in more than a year

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Venus Williams wins a doubles match at Washington in her first tournament in more than a year

WASHINGTON -- Competing at a tournament for the first time in more than a year, and in doubles for the first time in nearly three, Venus Williams hit a big serve on her initial delivery at the DC Open on Monday and, curiously, it was wiped out by a foot-fault call. The 45-year-old Williams, an owner of 21 Grand Slam titles across singles and doubles, smiled incredulously, as did the other three players involved in the match in front of a full crowd that eventually included NBA star Kevin Durant. And then Williams carried on, displaying her trademark power on some strokes while teaming with Hailey Baptiste for a 6-3, 6-1 victory against 2014 Wimbledon runner-up Eugenie Bouchard and Clervie Ngounoue. 'It's just nice to be able to play. Where I am at this year is so much different where I was at last year. It's night and day, being able to be here and prepare for the tournament as opposed to preparing for surgery a year ago,' said Williams, who spoke in an interview with NBC earlier this month about having a procedure to remove fibroids from her uterus. 'At the end of the day, it doesn't really matter if your health is not there. So it definitely put it in perspective for me and maybe made it easier to make the decision to maybe come back out here and maybe play even freer.' Her most recent match had been at the Miami Open in March 2024, and she said Sunday she had two goals in Washington: to have fun and to win. She did both — winning, yes, and contributing plenty to the cause, but also having a good time, high-fiving or fist-bumping Baptiste after some of their best points, laughing after others and waving to an appreciative group of fans that roared over and over for Williams. She and Baptiste hugged when it ended. 'The crowd was insane. From the moment we stepped out of the players area, you could kind of feel the buzz. Walking onto the court, just felt all the love for the both of us,' said Baptiste, a 23-year-old from Washington. 'I was obviously very nervous to play with her. I didn't want to let her down, first match back and everything." It was full at 3,000-seat John Harris Court, where Durant showed up late in the first set, while across the way at the 7,500-capacity main stadium, only a few dozen spectators were scattered in the stands for an all-American singles match in which Reilly Opelka defeated Murphy Cassone. Asked to comment about the court assignments, tournament director Daniel Vallverdú said: 'The tournament works to balance full singles and doubles ATP and WTA schedules, while coordinating with broadcaster requests for court assignments.' When Williams, wearing a white visor as she so often has, was introduced before participating in doubles for the first time since the 2022 U.S. Open — when her partner was younger sister Serena — the stadium announcer mentioned that Venus has 'one of the best serves in the history of the game,' that she 'turned pro in the last century' and 'has won everything.' That includes seven major singles trophies — five at Wimbledon, two at the U.S. Open — and an additional 14 in doubles with Serena, plus four Olympic gold medals. 'She's 14 years older than me and still plugging away,' said Bouchard, 31, a former top-five player who announced that next week's tournament in Montreal will be the last of her career. 'I have nothing but respect for her. She's such a legend. That was a pretty cool crowd for a doubles match.' They sure were into it Monday, standing with phone cameras raised high when Venus first appeared at the court — and again when it ended. There will be other opportunities to see her this week: In singles, Williams was scheduled to play Tuesday night against Peyton Stearns, a 23-year-old American currently ranked No. 35 who won NCAA singles and team championships at the University of Texas.

What's the answer to college football's playoff problem? Big Ten commish points at 'play-in games' for his rationale
What's the answer to college football's playoff problem? Big Ten commish points at 'play-in games' for his rationale

Yahoo

time28 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

What's the answer to college football's playoff problem? Big Ten commish points at 'play-in games' for his rationale

LAS VEGAS — A month ago, as he tuned into a College Football Playoff meeting through Zoom, Big Ten commissioner Tony Petitti felt a wave of sudden enlightenment wash over him. As he watched CFP staff members share potential changes to the criteria and data used by the selection committee, as he witnessed mathematicians deliver ideas on adjustments, Petitti pulled away from the Zoom and had a thought. What the heck are we doing? 'I found myself sitting there thinking that play-in games seem so rational as we look at folks talk about points and subtracting numbers and adding numbers. I'm thinking, 'This is the rational system and the one where we play games is radical?' 'I admire the work they're putting into it and all the stuff they're talking about and adding and subtracting and listening to mathematicians and scheduling experts. But all of that is more valuable than two teams playing on the field? OK.' In an interview on Monday with Yahoo Sports from the site of this week's Big Ten football media days, Petitti emphasized that his league's position on a future playoff format remains unchanged — a position, he says, that is unlikely to change until the power conferences agree to play the same amount of conference games (nine) and until the selection process is rectified. The conference continues to support a playoff structure with more automatic access spots as opposed to the so-called '5+11' format that features more at-large selections. The Big Ten's long-discussed playoff format — a '4-4-2-2-1' model — would grant four automatic qualifiers to the SEC and Big Ten, two each to the ACC and Big 12, one to the highest-ranked Group of Six champion and three at-large selections. The model, vehemently opposed by the ACC and Big 12, would reduce the subjectivity of the selection committee, incentivize more perennial non-conference matchups and, Petitti says, provide an avenue for inner-conference play-in style games pitting, for instance, the third-place Big Ten team against the sixth-place finisher and the fourth vs. the fifth for spots in the playoff. Any format with a bigger at-large pool such as the 5+11 — it grants qualifiers to the top five conference champions and 11 at-large spots — relies too heavily on a subjective selection committee, he says. Petitti believes proposed alterations to the data used by selection committee members to seed teams and determine at-large selections remains 'incredibly incomplete' and, he suggested, may never reach the point of satisfying his membership. 'I've heard my colleagues around other leagues say that a lot of work has to be done to the selection committee and that's where I have a hard time on what that actually means,' Petitti said. 'In talking to some of the folks in our room, our ADs that have been on that (selection) committee, I've yet to hear someone say they need more data or stuff to look at. You can come up and make metrics, but ultimately it's just people evaluating what's put in front of them.' While acknowledging that his league must agree with the SEC on a playoff format in order for it to advance forward — the two conferences control the matter — Petitti says he's OK with the playoff remaining at 12 teams next season instead of the proposed 16-team expanded model. 'Earlier on, we felt expansion would be a good thing, but we're not going to expand unless we really feel like the format and access makes sense,' Petitti said. 'It has to make the regular season better. If it doesn't do that, why are we doing it?' Such a possibility — remaining as a 12-team playoff in 2026 — is growing more likely by the day as the two conferences remain at an impasse, both with one another over the number of conference games they play (SEC eight and the Big Ten nine) and with the CFP's selection process. The SEC is yet to decide on whether it is moving from eight conference games to nine in 2026, though signs point to the conference remaining at eight games at least for next year, especially if the selection committee process is unsatisfactory. Even SEC commissioner Greg Sankey said last week during his media days there's 'not a lot of warmth' from the football coaches in adding an extra conference game. The head coaches hold sway in the conference. In fact, their pushback to the Big Ten's 4-4-2-2-1 model in May shifted the league's consideration of that format. Meanwhile, neither league seems necessarily agreeable to proposed alterations to data changes in the selection process. The CFP staff proposed to commissioners an adjustment to the committee's strength-of-schedule ranking that gives more weight to games played, for instance, against the top 30-40 programs in the country. Secondly, a new data point, 'strength of record,' has been created that grants more weight to good wins and doesn't penalize as much a program for losses against ranked or top teams. Petitti is unmoved. He is against widening the at-large pool from seven to 11 teams as it gives the 12-member selection committee — a rotation of mostly athletic directors and former coaches — more authority. 'It's not that we think the selection committee does a poor job. I'm just not sure how you make it better. The more teams you add, the more tough decisions you create,' he said. 'We're going to give the committee more to do? What's the reason to do that? Giving them more work to do and more discretion?' Despite the disagreement with the SEC, both commissioners say that they continue to speak regularly and the two leagues remain close. Petitti hopes the conferences can hold a third joint athletic director meeting soon. 'Anybody who is writing that the fact we might not be on the same page today on format changes means we don't have a great working relationship is in the wrong place,' Petitti said Monday. Said Sankey last week: 'There is no rift between the SEC and Big Ten commissioners. We have different views. That's OK.' They disagree on something else too: the timing of the transfer portal. A committee of power conference football administrators and athletic directors is expected to make a formal recommendation on the portal soon. The expectation is for a single portal in January. The Big Ten remains the only FBS conference that is against such a move. Big Ten coaches and administrators are pushing for an April portal. 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College football viewer's guide: Here are all the new coaches, including UNC's Bill Belichick
College football viewer's guide: Here are all the new coaches, including UNC's Bill Belichick

Yahoo

time28 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

College football viewer's guide: Here are all the new coaches, including UNC's Bill Belichick

The coaching carousel was relatively quiet after the 2024 season. Nearly every school in the Big Ten and SEC retained their coaches for the 2025 college football season, while there are just six new coaches at power conference schools overall. There was, however, a fair amount of movement elsewhere in college football. Here's your quick guide to every school with a new coach this season. ACC Bill Belichick, North Carolina: We'll start with the most famous — and infamous — new coach in college football. The six-time Super Bowl winner was hired to replace Mack Brown as the Tar Heels' head coach. Belichick has brought North Carolina the attention it sought after it hired him … but not in ways UNC could have imagined. Belichick has been a major offseason storyline thanks to his personal and professional relationship with 24-year-old Jordon Hudson. Belichick has said Hudson is not involved with the UNC football program and all eyes will be on the Tar Heels' opener against TCU on Labor Day. Jake Dickert, Wake Forest: The former Washington State coach headed east to replace Dave Clawson after Clawson stepped down after 11 seasons with the Demon Deacons. Dickert led Washington State through two seasons of turmoil as the Pac-12 dissolved and other schools left the Cougars in the dust. Wazzu went 8-4 in 2024 as it scrambled to piece together a schedule following the conference's demise. Frank Reich, Stanford: The ex-Colts and Panthers coach will be one-and-done in Palo Alto. Reich was hired as the team's temporary coach when Stanford fired Troy Taylor after news broke of the school investigations into his treatment of staffers. Reich was brought in by former Stanford QB Andrew Luck, as the former No. 1 overall draft pick is now the GM of the Cardinal. Luck has a big task ahead of him as Stanford has gone 3-9 in each of the past four seasons. American Scott Abell, Rice: The Owls hired Abell from FCS-level Davidson. Over seven seasons, Abell's Wildcats went 47-28 and didn't have a losing season. Tim Albin, Charlotte: Three straight seasons of 10 or more wins at Ohio led Albin to Charlotte, where he replaces Biff Poggi. Charlotte has big dreams in the AAC as it looks for just the second winning season in school history and its first bowl victory. K.C. Keeler, Temple: The Pennsylvania native is tasked with turning the Temple football program around after a bunch of success at Sam Houston. Keeler's teams won at least 10 games six different times before Sam Houston moved to the top level of college football. The Bearkats were 3-9 in their debut season in 2023 before going 9-3 in 2024. Zach Kittley, Florida Atlantic: The 33-year-old takes over at FAU for former Texas coach Tom Herman after leading the Texas Tech offense for the past three seasons. After working as a graduate assistant at Tech, Kittley led high-powered offenses at Houston Baptist and Western Kentucky with QB Bailey Zappe. Tre Lamb, Tulsa: The former Tennessee Tech QB has been an FCS head coach for the past five seasons. Lamb's Gardner-Webb teams were 20-20 over four seasons and East Tennessee State went 7-5 in 2024. Big Ten Barry Odom, Purdue: Odom takes over for the man who worked for him as an assistant at Missouri. Purdue went just 1-11 in 2024 as the Boilermakers were the worst power conference team in the country. After a 25-25 record in four seasons at Mizzou, Odom was Arkansas' defensive coordinator before UNLV hired him ahead of the 2023 season. The Rebels went 19-8 over the past two years and were 12-3 in Mountain West play. Big 12 Scott Frost, UCF: We'll see if a happier Frost can lead the Knights back to the success they had in his first tenure. UCF went 13-0 in 2017 and beat Auburn in the Peach Bowl. Frost left after that game to head back to Nebraska, where he was a quarterback during his college playing days. That stint famously didn't go well, as Nebraska failed to have a winning season and Frost was fired after a Week 3 loss to Georgia Southern in 2022. Rich Rodriguez, West Virginia: It's a season of homecomings in the Big 12 as Rodriguez is back at the school that he brought to national relevance. Rodriguez's spread-option offense powered West Virginia to a 32-5 record from 2005-2007 and got him the Michigan job. The Wolverines were just 15-22 in three seasons before Rodriguez was fired and became Arizona's head coach in 2012. After parting ways with the Wildcats after the 2017 season. Rodriguez took over at Jacksonville State in 2022 and the Gamecocks won nine games in each of the past three seasons. Conference USA Charles Kelly, Jacksonville State: The longtime college football assistant has his first head coaching job as he tries to sustain the success JSU had under Rodriguez. Kelly was the co-defensive coordinator at Auburn in 2024 after he was Colorado's defensive coordinator in 2023. Prior to joining Deion Sanders' staff in Boulder, he was a defensive assistant at Alabama for four seasons. He's also coached at Tennessee, Florida State and Georgia Tech. Phil Longo, Sam Houston: Longo is back at Sam Houston after he was the team's offensive coordinator from 2014-2016. Since then, he's been the coordinator at Ole Miss, North Carolina and at Wisconsin for the past two seasons. Jerry Mack, Kennesaw State: Mack comes to Kennesaw State after a season as the Jacksonville Jaguars' running backs coach. He coached Tennessee's running backs for three seasons before going to Jacksonville and was the head coach at North Carolina Central from 2014-2017. Willie Simmons, Florida International: Simmons was hired to replace former Colorado coach Mike MacIntyre at FIU. Simmons spent the 2024 season as the running backs coach at Duke after a six-year stint as Florida A&M's head coach. The Rattlers were 45-13 in his tenure. MAC Mark Carney, Kent State: Carney is the Golden Flashes' interim head coach following Kenni Burns' firing. Burns was fired in April after he was placed on administrative leave. Kent State never officially said why Burns was fired, but an independent investigation revealed Burns had taken over $100,000 in loans from a Kent State booster who was also a vendor for the school. Getting multiple wins in 2025 will be a big success for Carney. Kent State was 1-23 in Burns' two seasons. Matt Drinkall, Central Michigan: The former Army offensive assistant was hired to replace Jim McElwain after McElwain retired. Drinkable had coached tight ends and the offensive line for Army since joining Jeff Monken's coaching staff in 2019. Eddie George, Bowling Green: The Heisman winner and former Ohio State star was hired in March by the Falcons after Scot Loeffler took a job with the Philadelphia Eagles. George coached FCS-level Tennessee State for the past four seasons and had a career record of 24-22 with the school after a 9-4 campaign in 2024. Joe Harasymiak, UMass: Harasymiak has been an assistant at the top level of college football after a three-year stint as Maine's head coach from 2016-2018. After three seasons at Minnesota, Harasymiak was the defensive coordinator at Rutgers for the last three years. Brian Smith, Ohio: Smith was promoted to replace Albin after Albin left for Charlotte. Smith has worked at Hawaii and Washington State and was the Bobcats' assistant head coach and offensive coordinator in 2024 in his third season with the school. Mike Uremovich, Ball State: Uremovich comes to Ball State from Butler, where the Bulldogs were 23-11 over the past three seasons. Before coaching at Butler, Uremovich was an assistant at Northern Illinois and Temple. Mountain West Jason Eck, New Mexico: Eck was the head coach at Idaho for the past three seasons. The Vandals were 26-13 in his time with the school and went 10-4 in 2024. Before heading to Idaho, Eck was the offensive line coach and offensive coordinator at FCS powerhouse South Dakota State for six seasons. Matt Entz, Fresno State: The former North Dakota State coach parlayed a move to USC as an assistant into a head coaching job. After going 60-11 in five seasons at NDSU, Entz spent the last two seasons as a senior defensive assistant with the Trojans. He takes over for Jeff Tedford after Tedford was forced to step down because of health reasons. Bronco Mendenhall, Utah State: Mendenhall is back in the state of Utah and the Mountain West after a year as New Mexico's head coach. He returned to coaching in 2024 after two years off following his departure from Virginia after the 2021 season. Before heading to Virginia, Mendenhall was the head coach at BYU from 2005-2015 and the Cougars had a 99-43 record. Dan Mullen, UNLV: The former Florida and Mississippi State coach is back on the sidelines after working as a commentator for ESPN. Florida was 34-15 in Mullen's time from 2018-2021, but was 5-6 in 2021 before he was fired ahead of the last week of the season. Hiring Odom, another former SEC coach, worked out brilliantly for the Rebels. We'll see if the formula can be replicated with Mullen. Pac-12 Jimmy Rogers, Washington State: Rogers moves up to the top level of college football after a national title with South Dakota State. The former SDSU linebacker was a defensive assistant with the Jackrabbits from 2013-2022 before taking over as the team's head coach in 2023. That season, SDSU went 15-0 on the way to the FCS title and was 12-3 in 2024 after losing in the semifinals. Sun Belt Tony Gibson, Marshall: Gibson needs to rebuild the Marshall roster after a player exodus following the departure of Charles Huff. Marshall opted out of the Independence Bowl at the end of the 2024 season because the team said it didn't have enough players to play Army. That resulted in a six-figure fine from the Sun Belt conference. Gibson is a longtime defensive assistant who was most recently at NC State. He's also coached at Michigan, Pittsburgh, Arizona and West Virginia. Charles Huff, Southern Mississippi: Huff left Marshall after his contract expired. It was a unique situation; Huff's four-year contract wasn't extended after winning seasons in his first two years and the school didn't move to retain him despite a 10-4 season in 2024. Southern Miss was 1-11 in 2024 after going 3-9 in 2023. Dowell Loggains, Appalachian State: The former South Carolina offensive coordinator parlayed the Gamecocks' successful season into his first college head coaching job. Loggains was at South Carolina for two seasons after he was Arkansas' tight ends coach in 2021 and 2022. Before that, he was an NFL assistant from 2008 through 2020 and worked for the Titans, Browns, Bears, Dolphins and Jets.

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