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Mavericks Send Strong Message After Winning Cooper Flagg Sweepstakes

Mavericks Send Strong Message After Winning Cooper Flagg Sweepstakes

Yahoo14-05-2025

The 2025 NBA Draft Lottery took place on Monday evening in Chicago as teams across the league crossed their fingers for the top pick.
While there are plenty of talented players like Rutgers' walking bucket Ace Bailey, Duke big man Khaman Maluach and Texas' sharpshooting Tre Johnson, the big prize in this year's class is Duke's Cooper Flagg.
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Widely regarded as the next great American prospect, Flagg can do everything on the floor and is expected to be the league's next superstar after a season where he won Naismith Men's College Player of the Year.
Although there were 10 teams with better odds for the No. 1 pick, it was the Dallas Mavericks—who had just a 1.8% chance—who secured the top pick in this year's class. It was a jaw-dropping turn of events for the team that traded away franchise cornerstone and five-time All-NBA guard Luka Doncic earlier in the season.
Following the results of the NBA Draft Lottery, the Mavericks took to X to celebrate the results.
"For the first time ever, we won the LOTTERY 💰," wrote the team.
Duke Blue Devils star Cooper Flagg.© Rob Kinnan-Imagn Images
While teams like the Washington Wizards, Charlotte Hornets and San Antonio Spurs are among those who are the most disappointed, it's likely no team feels as sick as the Miami Heat.
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They would have had the No. 11 lottery slot before they ultimately made the NBA playoffs. A team that comes in a close second in terms of being disgusted by the results are the Chicago Bulls, who lost out on the No. 11 slot via coin flip.
As for the Mavericks, they get a possible superstar that may be good enough to silence all of those who criticized them after they traded Doncic. While fans are already firing up the conspiracies, the Mavericks have to love how this unfolded.
Related: Fans Are Making Major Accusation About Knicks-Celtics After NBA's Scott Foster Announcement

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French Open: No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka ends Swiatek's reign and meets No. 2 Coco Gauff for the trophy
French Open: No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka ends Swiatek's reign and meets No. 2 Coco Gauff for the trophy

Fox Sports

time21 minutes ago

  • Fox Sports

French Open: No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka ends Swiatek's reign and meets No. 2 Coco Gauff for the trophy

Associated Press PARIS (AP) — Flecks of rust-colored clay dotted Aryna Sabalenka's back and caked her white shoes as she ripped big shot after big shot against Iga Swiatek on Thursday, the thud of racket-on-string reverberating off the closed roof at the main stadium at Roland Garros. So used to hearing — and believing — she was a fast-court specialist who couldn't succeed on the slower red clay used at Roland-Garros, the No. 1-ranked Sabalenka showed just how good she can be on the surface by ending Swiatek's 26-match unbeaten streak at the French Open and bid for a record fourth consecutive trophy with a 7-6 (1), 4-6, 6-0 win in Thursday's semifinals. Now Sabalenka will try to win her fourth Grand Slam title — and first not on a hard court — when she takes on No. 2 Coco Gauff in Saturday's final. It will be the first title match in Paris between the Nos. 1 and 2 women since 2013 and just the second in the past 30 years. 'It's going to mean everything to me and my team, because I have to say that almost (my) whole life, I've been told (clay) is not my thing, and then I didn't have any confidence,' Sabalenka said. 'In the past — I don't know how many years — we've been able to develop my game so much, so I feel really comfortable on this surface and actually enjoy playing on clay.' Gauff, a 21-year-old American who was the runner-up in 2022 to Swiatek, reached her second French Open final by beating 361st-ranked French wild-card entry Lois Boisson 6-1, 6-2 in a far-less-interesting, far-less-competitive semifinal. 'My first final here, I was super nervous, and I kind of wrote myself off before the match even happened,' said Gauff, who is 5-5 against Sabalenka and beat her for the 2023 U.S. Open title at age 19. 'Obviously, here, I have a lot more confidence just from playing a Grand Slam final before and doing well in one.' Much to the chagrin of the 15,000 or so locals pulling for their countrywoman at Court Philippe-Chatrier, Gauff vs. Boisson wasn't much of a contest, as might be expected from their rankings and relative experience. Then again, that didn't stop Boisson from eliminating both No. 3 Jessica Pegula and No. 6 Mirra Andreeva en route to becoming the first woman since 1989 to get to the semifinals in her Grand Slam debut. Loud as the crowd was, repeatedly singing Boisson's first name, Gauff's play spoke volumes, too, as she took 20 of the first 30 points for a 4-0 lead. That pattern held, and by the end, Gauff had claimed 34 of the 51 points that lasted at least five strokes. Most remarkable about Sabalenka's win was the way she dominated in crunch time, racing through the last set. 'I mean, 6-love,' she said. 'What can I say? Couldn't be more perfect than that.' Swiatek's explanation? 'I lost my intensity a bit,' she said. 'Just couldn't push back.' This stat says it all: The third set included 12 unforced errors off Swiatek's racket, and zero off Sabalenka's. This continues a rough stretch for Swiatek, a 24-year-old from Poland, who hasn't reached a final at any tournament since walking away with her third trophy in a row — and fifth Grand Slam title overall — from Paris 12 months ago. She recently slid to No. 5 in the rankings. Her rut includes a loss in the semifinals at the 2024 Paris Olympics. Later last season, she was suspended for a month after testing positive for a banned substance; her explanation was accepted that the result was caused by a contaminated medicine. Sabelanka is, unquestionably, as good as it gets in women's tennis right now. 'She didn't doubt,' Swiatek said. 'She just went for it.' Even though Sabalenka broke in the first game and soon led 4-1 — at which point Swiatek was glancing up at her coach, Wim Fissette, in the stands, hoping for some sort of insight that could change things — this was not one-way traffic. Swiatek ended up leading 5-4 in that set, but when they got to the tiebreaker, Sabalenka asserted herself. Did the same in the last set. 'It was a big match, and it felt like a final," said Sabalenka, who won the Australian Open twice and the U.S. Open once. 'But I know that the job is not done yet.' ___ AP tennis:

Can Small-Market NBA Finals Teams Punch Above Their Weight in the Ratings?
Can Small-Market NBA Finals Teams Punch Above Their Weight in the Ratings?

Yahoo

time34 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Can Small-Market NBA Finals Teams Punch Above Their Weight in the Ratings?

In the world of TV markets and sports ratings, the expression 'Bigger is better' usually applies. Yet after a pretty thrilling round of playoffs, the NBA Finals — a showdown between teams representing two of the smallest cities in the league — will put that assumption to the test. Tipping off Thursday, the Indiana Pacers and Oklahoma City Thunder both bring young superstars to the party, including recently anointed league MVP Shai Gilgeous-Alexander. But they also hail from Indianapolis and Oklahoma City, which rank No. 25 and 47, respectively, out of the more than 200 individually measured designated market areas (or DMAs) in the U.S., placing them among the bottom seven of the NBA's 30 teams. (Top-ranked New York, whose Knicks were just bounced from the playoffs, boasts a pair of franchises, as does No. 2 market Los Angeles.) Historically, major sporting events benefit from having larger-market teams squaring off, cashing in on the rooting interest in the home cities to boost the most recent examples, last year's World Series, pitting the New York Yankees against the L.A. Dodgers, delivered an average 15.8 million viewers, per Nielsen, Major League Baseball's most-watched Fall Classic since 2017, despite running only five games. That marked a 67% increase over 2023, the lowest-rated World Series ever, in which the Texas Rangers (considered part of the No. 4 Dallas-Fort Worth DMA) defeated the Arizona Diamondbacks (a.k.a. Phoenix, No. 12). Last year's NBA Finals, with the Boston Celtics edging the Dallas Mavericks, averaged 11.3 million viewers on ABC/ESPN, the league's worst performance since 2021. After a slow start, though, the NBA rebounded thanks to a slew of midseason trades, finishing just below overall regular-season results for the previous year. So are there any potential rays of hope for this year's matchup? one equalizer for any sports championship determined by a series (in the NBA and MLB's cases, a best-of-seven format) is for the contests to be competitive, with the series coming down to a Game 7 to determine the winner. Heading into the Finals, the playoffs have also put up solid results, up 3% overall, although that comes with a disclaimer: The Eastern Conference finals, featuring the Knicks, were up 10%, while the Western Conference (Oklahoma City vs. Minnesota) declined. Beyond the NBA and its TV partners (a roster that will shift, incidentally, with NBC taking a major package of games next season), several other entertainment players have a vested interest in the series, given that the NBA playoffs provide a platform to reach male viewers, especially, promoting blockbusters like 'Fantastic Four: First Steps' and 'Superman' heading into the summer movie season. Obviously, the interested parties can't make the host cities any bigger, but they can root for the series to be longer — and decided in the closing moments — in a way that might help a size-challenged Finals, to borrow from another sport, punch above its weight. Netflix's campy five-episode series 'Sirens' maintained its spot as Netflix's most-watched English-language show of the week with 18.2 million views during the week of May 26, up 9% from the 16.7 million it logged in its first four days on the platform last week. Meanwhile, buzzy U.K. crime series 'Adolescence,' which first debuted in March, finally surpassed 'Stranger Things 4' on Netflix's all-time most-popular TV English-language list, with 'Adolescence' standing in the No. 2 spot with 141.2 million views to date — behind just 'Wednesday' — while 'Stranger Things 4' ranks third with 140.7 million views. It's worth noting that viewers for 'Stranger Things 4' are likely to surge again ahead of the new season of 'Stranger Things' releasing this fall, as could views for 'Adolescence' given its potential Emmys buzz. The 2025 American Music Awards tacked on a considerable amount of delayed viewers to its original May 26 telecast, growing to reach over 10 million unique viewers across its CBS premiere, as well as encores on MTV, CMT and BET. After bringing in an initial live-plus-same-day viewership of 4.86 million, the Jennifer Lopez-hosted awards scored 5.2 million viewers after seven days of viewing, ranking as the show's biggest audience since 2019 and a 38% uptick from its last live telecast in 2022. Monday's finale of 'La Casa de los Famosos All-Stars' boosted Telemundo to rank as the most-watched primetime broadcast network, regardless of language, in the key demo among adults 18-49 as the network scored 559,000 viewers in that age bracket, according to Nielsen. The news comes as Telemundo celebrates its 14th consecutive week as the No. 1 most-watched Spanish-language broadcast network in weekday primetime among total viewers, as well as its third consecutive week winning the 18-49 demo. The post Can Small-Market NBA Finals Teams Punch Above Their Weight in the Ratings? appeared first on TheWrap.

Lois Boisson's dream French Open run ended in semi-final by Coco Gauff
Lois Boisson's dream French Open run ended in semi-final by Coco Gauff

Yahoo

time35 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Lois Boisson's dream French Open run ended in semi-final by Coco Gauff

Lois Boisson ran out of juice as her incredible French Open run was halted by Coco Gauff. France's Boisson, the world number 361, sent shockwaves around Roland Garros by becoming the first wildcard to reach the semi-finals. Advertisement The 22-year-old from Dijon proved she could cut the mustard having knocked out third seed Jessica Pegula and sixth-ranked Mirra Andreeva. But world number two Gauff managed to dilute the Paris crowd with a composed 6-1 6-2 victory to set up a final showdown with top-ranked Aryna Sabalenka. 'Lois is an incredible player and for her to have the tournament she's had, she's shown she's one of the best players in the world,' said the American. 'I hope we have many more battles in the future, especially here, Today it was just my day. 'I knew 99 per cent of the crowd would be for her. When they were chanting her name in my head I just chanted mine, to psyche myself up.' Advertisement It was a grand slam semi-final of enormous contrasts, Boisson's career earnings before this tournament totalled just over £100,000 while Gauff – a year younger – has amassed nearly £18million. However, Boisson will at least be £580,000 better off after her fortnight's work in the French capital. She can also console herself with a climb in the rankings of 296 places to 65 – she has gone from French number 24 to number one – and a likely wildcard for Wimbledon. Coco Gauff, right, consoles Lois Boisson (Lindsey Wasson/AP) Boisson was due to make her Roland Garros debut last year but suffered an ACL injury just before the tournament which left her fearing her career could be over. Advertisement 'We know that particular injury is very complicated, but at the beginning, yes, I kind of lost faith because I didn't know what was to come next, and I didn't know that things could go so well,' she said. 'I was really worried at one point, but as the rehabilitation progressed, I realised that things are getting better. Today I'm super happy with what's happening.' Gauff, the French Open runner-up in 2022, opened up a 4-0 lead before most of the Court Philippe-Chatrier patrons had retaken their seats – presumably they had been for a boisson or two – following Sabalenka's three-set win over Iga Swiatek. The heavy topspin forehands which previously accounted for five players were not firing, and even when she got a break back at the start of the second set, Gauff quickly snuffed out the mini French revolution. Victory was sealed in an hour and nine minutes to break French hearts while Gauff will get a second chance at glory in Paris on Saturday.

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