Hawks, Heat battle for play-in position in late-season matchup
A pair of likely Eastern Conference play-in teams will square off on Thursday, when the Miami Heat host the Atlanta Hawks.
The seventh-place Hawks (35-37) hold a four-game lead over the 10th-place Heat (31-41), while No. 8 Orlando sits a half-game behind Atlanta and No. 9 Chicago sits a game ahead of Miami.
Atlanta lost ground on Tuesday, as the Hawks fell in Houston to the Rockets, 121-114, and Orlando picked up a seven-point road win over the Charlotte Hornets and Miami topped the Golden State Warriors, 112-86.
The Hawks trailed by as many as 25 points late in the third quarter Tuesday before seeing their three-game winning streak come to an end. Atlanta's rally cut its deficit to four in the final quarter, showing a fight that it hopes will carry over into Thursday.
"We were right there," Hawks head coach Quin Snyder said. "(Houston) had to make plays to beat us down the stretch. I thought we found some real rhythm, which was good for us tonight and will be good for us going forward."
In defeat, Trae Young finished with 19 points and 12 assists, marking his third straight double-double and increasing his league-leading assists count to 11.4 per game. Young, who paces Atlanta with 24.1 points per game, became the first player in the NBA to reach 1,500 points and 750 assists in a single season since Russell Westbrook in 2019.
On the other side of the ball, Atlanta's budding star Dyson Daniels continues to set franchise and league marks, defensively. Daniels leads the league with 3.1 steals per game, an overwhelming edge on second-place Kris Dunn's 1.8. With his four thefts on Tuesday, Daniels is on pace to become the first player since Alvin Robertson in 1990-91 to average three steals per game over a season.
After losing 10 straight games -- the Heat's longest skid since 2007-08 -- Miami enters play winners in two in a row as it hopes to muster a late season run to the playoffs. Tuesday marked the return to Miami for former disgruntled star Jimmy Butler, but the night belonged to the Heat, who allowed a season-low 86 points.
Miami's Bam Adebayo's 27 points were paired with stifling defense on the smaller Butler, which came as no surprise to head coach Erik Spoelstra.
"That's not even something that we did just for this game," Spoelstra said of the matchup. "Over the last six weeks, Bam has been guarding whoever the best wing is, and he has taken on this challenge. It's a new defensive chapter in his prowess, but we haven't been winning so nobody notices. But it's about his commitment to doing a lot of the tough things."
Tyler Herro has scored 20 points or more in four of five games and leads Miami with 23.4 ppg. Andrew Wiggins follows with 20.2 ppg, while Adebayo chips in 17.6 points and 9.7 rebounds per contest.
Atlanta has taken two of three against Miami this season and will look to clinch its first season-series over the Heat since the 2020-21 campaign.
--Field Level Media
Field Level Media 2023 - All Rights Reserved

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Washington Post
43 minutes ago
- Washington Post
‘Inside the NBA' was perfect. Now let it rest in peace.
It felt as if viewers attended a six-game wake for the 'Inside the NBA' brand last week. The final run at times seemed more like a long farewell to Ernie, Chuck, Shaq and Kenny than a showcase for the Eastern Conference finals. Still, someone must have cracked open the lid to the coffin, because its presence lives on. Which explains how, on Thursday night, Shaquille O'Neal could crash the set of ESPN/ABC's 'NBA Countdown' in Oklahoma City before Game 1 of the NBA Finals. 'Hello, Malika. Hello, Bob,' Shaq said in his baritone murmur to half of the crew. Then he gave his handheld microphone to Stephen A. Smith: 'Hold this,' he said, and pretended to throw body blows at former nemesis Kendrick Perkins. Through the surprised — and likely relieved — cackles from the personalities on set, viewers couldn't exactly make out what Perkins was yelling over his own laughter. Shaq's cameo caught everyone off guard and provided the most pure and authentic moment of ESPN's pregame programming. It happened live on air, of course, and reminded basketball fans of the kind of unscripted chaos that TNT had perfected over the decades. But, please, let it die already. The show and its concept worked for that four-man crew. Nobody plays the straight man quite like Ernie Johnson. No former athlete tells the truth as savagely as Charles Barkley. No analyst has the chops to play along with the gags but also provide a measure of sobriety like Kenny 'The Jet' Smith. And there is no showman like Shaq. They turned game nights into comedy hour with a side of NBA, and we ate up our sweet dessert every Thursday. But thanks in part to those years of treats, sports broadcasting too often now just wants to feed viewers the gooey stuff. For the French Open, TNT has rolled out the 'MacZone' with brothers John and Patrick McEnroe, offering a hint of the 'ManningCast' with Peyton and Eli but also a needy attempt to re-create 'Inside' on red clay. With John McEnroe playing the role of a country club version of Charles Barkley, 'MacZone' has produced a mixed bag. Some viewers clearly love the brotherly banter. Others would prefer their tennis commentary with a bit more, say, tennis (and less musing about the New York Knicks, John's favorite NBA team). In another obvious 'Inside' effort, 'NHL on TNT' feels desperate at times to create buzzy moments, with former player Paul Bissonnette as equal parts jester and analyst. Some of the biggest 'Inside' imitators are found on NBA podcasts because it seems the majority of the empty calories in sports props up the NBA conversation. It's not just that the discourse feels negative rather than celebratory, a complaint among some current players. The talk is often so shallow. How this guy couldn't play in the golden age of ball. Or that guy needs to step up and score 30 a night. Maybe the average NBA fan has a weak palate for substance, explaining why the most popular podcasts feature ex-pros offering little about the NBA game, just spoonfuls of dated takes and sophomoric jokes. Or perhaps, the success of 'Inside' has influenced sports broadcasting too much. 'Inside' was gold. But the show was intended as entertainment, not education about the game. Perkins, a former player and now a paid analyst for one of the league's broadcast partners, even called out 'Inside the NBA' for its casualness around the league it covers. 'Obviously they don't watch basketball,' Perkins said back in April. Those fighting words continued a rivalry between himself and Shaq and Charles. However, with the 'Inside' format moving to ESPN, they're kissing and making up in public. But Perkins's opinion, shared only a few months ago, rang with truth. 'Inside' pulled off the irreverence and even ignorance because of the co-stars and their unmatched chemistry. In the wrong hands, however, we're left with former jocks just spilling tea from their glory days or mispronouncing the names of the current somebodies. And yet that hasn't stopped analysts or the networks they work for from trying to reproduce the inimitable and creating bad dupes that feel like Guccis found at a flea market. During ABC's pregame show, Stephen A. Smith set the scene for viewers, explaining the teams in the most rudimentary fashion for the viewers who might not have known that the Oklahoma City Thunder remained in existence after Kevin Durant left. Then, still near the top of the telecast, the talk shifted to what makes a superstar. Nothing on Tyrese Haliburton and the zombie Indiana Pacers who keep coming back from double-digit deficits (which would have been a prelude for things to come in that exciting Game 1), nor a deeper dive into Shai Gilgeous-Alexander's MVP season. Just more fluff about a topic that matters only to the talking heads who need to fill segments with … something. 'Countdown' waited until its final segment to show clips explaining how Gilgeous-Alexander creates separation for his midrange scoring — about six minutes before the show went off the air. That was followed by the news that the Thunder was moving Cason Wallace into the starting lineup — like, real actual news. Bob Myers, the former Golden State Warriors executive who rarely looks comfortable in ESPN's contrived attempt at on-set chemistry, tried explaining why he didn't like this adjustment, made before the teams even played one minute of the Finals. He was cut off by Perkins because there needed to be a fake debate — and for all the criticism, the 'Inside' arguments never felt contrived. 'Let me ask you this: Is Cason Wallace a setback? Absolutely not,' Perkins said. Perkins must have studied at the College of Chuck because he spends most segments trying to sound like the most resolute — and provocative — person on set. Although Perkins clearly does watch NBA basketball, his analysis can be overshadowed by his hot takes. During the Western Conference finals, Perkins gave Minnesota Timberwolves star Anthony Edwards unsolicited advice about his personal life, claiming he needed to find a wife and settle down as a family man to become the face of the league. The statement went as viral as he intended. Charles would cross the line — and often — but he could get away with it. Why? Because his show was about having fun — old NBA veterans respecting the game just enough but never taking it or themselves too seriously. That was their pattern, and it worked. With the 'Inside' crew, the audience knew what it was getting. Forget game analysis; we watched the most influential basketball show on television for the laughs. We didn't tune in to soak up Kenny's halftime analysis. We wanted to see whether Shaq would spin around and race Kenny to the big screen. We watched to find out whether Charles would finally know what team Garrett Temple plays for and to laugh along with him as the butt of the joke. There will never be another 'Inside,' and sports broadcasting should stop trying to create the next one.
Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
Tyrese Haliburton Says It Feels Like Stats Are Being Invented To Make Him Look Better
Tyrese Haliburton Says It Feels Like Stats Are Being Invented To Make Him Look Better originally appeared on Fadeaway World. Tyrese Haliburton has always let his game do the talking, but after his historic Game 4 performance in the Eastern Conference Finals, even he couldn't help but laugh at how outlandish his numbers looked. Advertisement 'I feel like we're making up stats at some point to make me look better,' Haliburton joked after notching 32 points, 15 assists, 12 rebounds, four steals, and zero turnovers in the Indiana Pacers' 130-121 win over the New York Knicks. In that one sentence, Haliburton managed to capture the absurdity of his night, a performance so pristine that it felt fictional. No player in NBA playoff history had ever posted a 30-15-10 line without a single turnover. And yet, here was Haliburton, playing with total composure, dictating tempo, and embarrassing defenders with passes and pace, all while keeping the box score cleaner than a freshly waxed hardwood floor. Despite the staggering stat line, Haliburton didn't want the focus to be on numbers. 'It's about winning,' he said multiple times during his postgame presser, repeatedly crediting his teammates for their efforts. Advertisement In a span of 11 minutes with reporters, he used the word 'we' 28 times. For Haliburton, the only stat that mattered was 3-1, the series lead Indiana now holds as they inch closer to their first NBA Finals appearance since 2000. Indeed, Haliburton's unselfish brilliance has become his trademark. While Jalen Brunson continues to carry the Knicks with sheer shot-making and individual heroics, Haliburton orchestrates the Pacers like a maestro. His 44-to-6 assist-to-turnover ratio in the conference finals is not just elite, it's historic. And it's come while pushing the tempo, initiating plays early, and feeding teammates in rhythm from all angles. What's perhaps most striking is how Haliburton has reshaped the expectations of what a superstar looks like. He doesn't fit the mold. His jump shot is quirky. He wears his glasses with pride. He smiles as much as he scores. Advertisement And yet, with performances like Game 4, he's proving that a new archetype of greatness exists, one that values pace, IQ, and precision over iso-heavy domination. His humility also stands out. Rather than basking in the glow of his own numbers, Haliburton shifted praise to Bennedict Mathurin's bench explosion, Aaron Nesmith's gritty defense, and the energy of his teammates. He even shared a meaningful sideline moment with former Pacer George Hill, a nod to those who paved the way. For Haliburton, it's not about padding stats. It's about impacting winning. But if the statkeepers keep inventing new metrics to measure his brilliance, well, who can blame them? He's making history look routine. Related: "This Man Is A Straight Up Menace": Fans Go Wild As Tyrese Haliburton Mocks Jalen Brunson In Game 4 Of East Finals This story was originally reported by Fadeaway World on May 28, 2025, where it first appeared.


Washington Post
2 hours ago
- Washington Post
The Club World Cup has faced pushback in Europe but FIFA is banking on its big bet
The Club World Cup. A bold new era for the world's most popular sport — or a major inconvenience, shoe-horned into a soccer calendar that is already at saturation point? FIFA's newly expanded tournament kicks off June 14 in Miami against the backdrop of legal challenges in Europe , strike threats and repeated concerns over players' mental and physical welfare due to the increased number of games. There has been no shortage of pushback from Europe since the bumper new addition to soccer's landscape was announced in December 2023 . Voices of dissent from the continent that will be sending the most teams to the tournament have continued virtually right up to its big launch. 'We want to protect football,' David Terrier, president of players' union FIFPRO Europe, said. 'It's a big problem and it's not just about the workload. The question is about the governance because the calendar is a consequence of the governance of football.' That sentiment is not shared universally. In many other parts of the world, there is a buzz of anticipation among fans about the opportunity of going up against the giants like Real Madrid in the biggest ever global tournament for clubs. The biggest sales of tickets outside of the United States have come from Brazil, Argentina, Mexico. The brainchild of FIFA president Gianni Infantino , soccer's world governing body is banking on its tournament rivaling the Champions League and Premier League in terms of status, wealth and popularity — describing it as its 'prime club competition.' Featuring 32 teams — expanded from seven — and staged in the U.S. through June and July, it will be played on a four-yearly basis. It means many top players face the prospect of offseason tournaments in three out of every four years going forward, with the Club World Cup sandwiched between the men's World Cup for national teams, the European Championship and Copa America. The lack of enthusiasm in Europe was striking when the new format was announced. 'I am not against new competitions, I am against the lack of time to recover year by year,' Manchester City manager Pep Guardiola said. Jürgen Klopp, the former Liverpool manager and now head of global soccer for Red Bull, called it 'useless' as recently as January. 'It means you have no summer break,' he said. 'Who wins the tournament, wow, is the poorest winner ever because you have to play through the whole summer.' A legal complaint by FIFPRO Europe and the association of European Leagues fed into a general sense of negativity from the continent. Javier Tebas, president of the Spanish league, called for the Club World Cup to be withdrawn. Last year there were doubts whether Real Madrid — the most famous franchise in soccer — would even accept its invitation to play after then-coach Carlo Ancelotti reportedly suggested the record 15-time European champion would boycott over appearance money. Madrid soon confirmed it would be involved after all. Despite the criticism, the tournament is backed by the European Club Association, which represents the majority of its top teams. And those participating are not taking it lightly. Europe will be represented by some of the biggest clubs like Madrid, Manchester City, Bayern Munich and Champions League winner Paris Saint-Germain . Superstars including Kylian Mbappé, Vinícius Júnior and Erling Haaland are expected to play. Madrid has signed Trent Alexander-Arnold early to ensure he is available. Also, midfielder Jude Bellingham will reportedly delay a shoulder operation in order to play. While City forward Phil Foden said he and his teammates were 'mentally drained' after a troubled season when the once-dominant Premier League club ended up trophyless, he did not doubt its determination to win the Club World Cup. 'Some clubs will take it more seriously than others, but I know City and the club we are. We'll definitely take it seriously,' he said. PSG coach Luis Enrique was also enthusiastic. 'I think it is an incredible competition. Maybe not now in its first edition, but it will become an incredibly important competition to win,' he said. The potential for the winner to take home $125 million from a total prize pot of $1 billion has also likely helped fuel interest from clubs participating. Europe's leagues and players' union say it was a lack of talks that put them on a collision course with FIFA over the tournament. Both of those bodies want to be consulted about new competitions being added to the calendar and that was the basis of their case with the European Commission, said Mathieu Moreuil, vice president of European Leagues. 'I mean we sent in letters, we tried to engage, there was no real consultations through any kind of committees or anything,' he said. Moreuil spoke at a briefing held in Munich ahead of the Champions League final last month, which The Associated Press attended. It was evidence of the intention to continue to apply pressure to FIFA even in the final weeks before the Club World Cup kicks off. 'FIFA is the one dealing with world football and is the governing body and they should take care of the game,' Moreuil said. FIFA didn't reply to requests for comment. Coaches and players in Latin America have not complained about having to play more matches. In Argentina there is huge expectation. According to FIFA, Boca Juniors was the first team to sell out tickets for its three group stage matches, likely helped by two games in Miami, where there is a large Argentine community. 'I'm going to the Club World Cup with the highest expectations,' said new Boca head coach Miguel Ángel Russo. 'I dream big.' Latin American teams have also been active in the transfer market, making marquee signings in preparation. Former Madrid captain Sergio Ramos joined Mexican team Monterrey. In Argentina, River Plate signed seven new players and Brazilian club Palmeiras paid 18 million euros ($20 million) for striker Paulinho. In the host nation, there were joyous scenes when LAFC secured the last place in the tournament after a playoff victory against Club America of Mexico last month. It will join Lionel Messi's Inter Miami and Seattle Sounders representing the U.S. In Japan thousands of fans unfurled a huge flag saying 'Grab the World Cup' ahead of Urawa Reds' last domestic game before heading to the U.S. For South Korea, represented by Ulsan HD, it is a case of national pride to take part. 'This is not just the journey of one club, but a message that the entire K-League sends to the world,' said local news outlet Asia Today. For Saudi Arabia, the Club World Cup is the chance to show the rapid growth of its Pro League following the oil-rich kingdom's drive to become a major player in soccer , which has included luring Cristiano Ronaldo and winning the right to host the 2034 World Cup. It will be represented by its most successful team, Al-Hilal, which failed in an attempt to sign Manchester United captain Bruno Fernandes in the weeks leading up to the tournament. ___ AP reporters Mauricio Savarese in Sao Paulo, Debora Rey in Buenos Aires, Argentina, and John Duerden in Seoul, South Korea, contributed. ___ James Robson is at ___ AP soccer: