WNBA Player Carried Off the Court With Concerning Injury After Just 41 Seconds
The Los Angeles Sparks kicked off their 2025 WNBA campaign on Friday night in a highly anticipated matchup against the Golden State Valkyries, who are playing their first-ever game after being added as an expansion franchise for this season.
Unfortunately for the Sparks, they got off to a troubling start in their first outing of the new year. This is after fourth-year guard-forward Rae Burrell had to be carried off the court in the first quarter of the game.
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Burrell came off the bench in the opening quarter, but she ended up playing just 41 seconds before suffering what appears to be a serious knee injury.
It did not take long before the Sparks announced on social media that Burrell had been ruled out for the remainder of the first half after being diagnosed with an injury to her right lower extremity.
The fact that the 6-foot-2 guard-forward could not put any weight on the leg and had to be carried to the locker room was not a good sign. The Sparks have not provided the details of her injury, but it's hard to deny that there is considerable concern for her status moving forward.
LA Sparks guard Rae Burrell posesKirby Lee-Imagn Images
Burrell could potentially join Sparks star Cameron Brink on the team's injury list as the 23-year-old continues to recover from a torn ACL. The latest news on Brink is that she could potentially return to action sometime in June--roughly one calendar year since she suffered the injury during her rookie year--which is a huge development for L.A. and their playoff hopes this season.
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For now, though, Sparks fans will have to hope that Burrell's injury is not as bad as initially anticipated.
Related: WNBA Reacts to Steph Curry's Exciting Message
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Washington Post
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Patrick Corbin finally got a fresh start. He's taking advantage of it.
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New York Times
30 minutes ago
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Steelers finally get their quarterback in Aaron Rodgers, but buyer beware
It feels like we just watched Aaron Rodgers on a weird, man-on-the-streets version of a reality TV dating show, one in which our dapper dude begrudgingly committed to someone after a far more arduous saga than anyone ever imagined. Resigned to the belief that a third-best option was better than no option at all, our bachelor talked himself into awarding the rose to the only partner left standing. Together, they awkwardly begin their new union, ignoring the signs that suggest this won't end well. Advertisement That's basically what happened between Rodgers and the Pittsburgh Steelers on Thursday. Some 85 days after the revamping New York Jets released him, after the Minnesota Vikings pledged loyalty to second-year pro J.J. McCarthy, and after the New York Giants signed Jameis Winston and Russell Wilson in free agency and drafted Jaxson Dart for good measure, Rodgers is officially a Steeler. 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Unhappy with the way team president Mark Murphy and general manager Brian Gutekunst were running the team and his lack of input, Rodgers was publicly critical of both and wanted Gutekunst fired. Fatigued by his antics and growing non-football interests, the Packers moved on with Rodgers in the dark. Did the Steelers forget how Rodgers criticized the dysfunctional ways of the Jets organization, eventually leading to head coach Robert Saleh and general manager Joe Douglas getting fired? Rather than accept accountability for New York's shortcomings during last year's 5-12 debacle, Rodgers regularly used his buddy Pat McAfee's show as a platform to call out teammates and Jets leadership. Pittsburgh officials are guilty of arrogance, viewing themselves as a far superior franchise to the Jets and immune to such a debacle. Perhaps they see more similarities to Green Bay and believe Rodgers will embrace a return to structure and simply play his role. 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However, he'll have to use every management and relationship-massaging trick he's got to prevent Rodgers from taking a stick of dynamite to the Steelers' near pristine culture if things play out poorly. Critics have long said that while Tomlin's avoidance of losing records is remarkable, his unwillingness to evolve in the areas of team operations, staff construction and talent evaluation actually holds the Steelers back. If losses mount and Rodgers makes the same observations about an antiquated approach, he'll certainly pull back the curtain on this boss, as he has on others, and subject a proud franchise to embarrassment. Speaking of relationships, one of the most important ones will be that of the quarterback and offensive coordinator Arthur Smith. Many league insiders believe that to avoid a combustible situation, Tomlin will give Rodgers freedom to operate as he pleases. It will take work for Smith to align his conservative, run-first philosophies with those of Rodgers, who still views himself as a gunslinger. The two have never worked together. Smith worked under Matt LaFleur, Rodgers' head coach in Green Bay, when LaFleur was the offensive coordinator in Tennessee. And Steelers quarterbacks coach Tom Arth had a brief stint as an offseason teammate of Rodgers' in 2006. But there are no pre-existing ties to ensure this thing remains on track. Blending existing concepts with those of a veteran quarterback isn't easy. Just ask Bruce Arians and Byron Leftwich, who spent half of the 2020 season trying to do so for Brady before finding the perfect mix late in that season. And that was while working with the laser-focused Brady and not a quarterback like Rodgers with meandering interests and a strong sense of entitlement. 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New York Times
34 minutes ago
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A glimpse into the secrets of the Tigers' Comerica Park ‘smart cage'
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In home games at Comerica Park, McKinstry has an otherworldly 1.250 OPS in left-on-left plate appearances. How do you explain that? Part of it could be opportunity. Part of it could be McKinstry's approach. Part of it could be the offseason sessions with a pitching machine to replicate lefty spin. But especially here during the season, at least a small part of the answer could lie beyond that green door. New staircase/room in Tigers' dugout that didn't exist in the last homestand. — Evan Woodbery (@evanwoodbery) June 21, 2024 The centerpiece of the Tigers' smart cage is the Trajekt Arc pitching machine. This technology is now used by at least 25 MLB teams. The machine, the brainchild of CEO Joshua Pope, projects an image of a pitcher's delivery and can spit out a replication of a pitcher's full arsenal, mimicking the near-exact release point, spin rate and movement of the pitch. The machines generally cost $15,000 to $20,000 a month as part of a three-year lease. McKinstry is one of the team's most avid users, known to exaggerate or condense his open stance against lefties depending on how he's feeling any given day. 'It think it helps with my timing, just making sure I'm on time with those guys,' McKinstry said. 'It helps with pitch recognition. You get to see the pitch shape before you actually have to face the guy.' For those in the deepest baseball circles, these machines are not new. McKinstry began using one when he was with the Chicago Cubs in 2022. But the machines were finally approved for in-game use before last season, hence the Tigers' construction plans for providing quicker in-game access to the cage. The way the Tigers and other teams use these machines peels back a layer to show how hitters are trying to catch up with the wicked pitching forces that rule today's game. Advertisement Justyn-Henry Malloy, who was optioned to Triple A earlier this week, is known to use the Trajekt daily. Before games. During games. You name it. Malloy hit only .215 in 93 mostly sporadic at-bats this season, but he also came through in several big moments, most notably his May 14 pinch-hit, walk-off single against the Red Sox. With the Trajekt, players can punch in Statcast data for the day's starting pitcher and look at his whole arsenal. Some players do not even take full swings, instead simply tracking and gaining a visual for where, say, a pitcher's slider begins and ends. Others, like Malloy and Andy Ibáñez, hit against the machine as much as they can. During games when Malloy was on the bench, he would retreat to the cage in the middle innings, often simulating at-bats against the opposing team's left-handed relievers. Like many teams, the Tigers load the machine with softer baseballs. This limits the potential for stinging hands, injuries if a ball is fouled off the foot or even broken bats. 'A lot of guys use it just to see the motion, see how a guy's delivery feels out of the stretch,' Malloy said. 'Some guys might have a really funky release. If we're facing a Joe Ryan, guys will want to just be in there because they want to see what that low release looks like from his motion.' There is not necessarily a direct correlation between access to the machine and the Tigers' success at home. The Tigers are 21-8 at Comerica Park but entered Thursday with a higher team OPS on the road (.741 vs. .723). The surface numbers also don't indicate any clear advantage that correlates to the Tigers' propensity for pinch-hitting. Detroit pinch-hitters have a .609 OPS in home games, ranking 17th in the league. It's also worth noting that not all hitters are fans of the machine. Riley Greene said he rarely uses it. Kerry Carpenter steps in against the Trajekt only to see a pitcher he's never faced before. Advertisement 'It's like the guy on the screen is right there, and then he does his windup, and the release is over here,' Carpenter said. 'It's just coming out of a black hole. It's a little weird for me. But some people love it.' Colt Keith, the Tigers' second-year infielder, said he uses the Trajekt every day, standing back and observing pitches for the digital version of the opposing starter. There are specific instances where it can be beneficial, too, like seeing how Guardians reliever Cade Smith's low-spin splitter differs from other splitters around the league. 'It really is different from the game, in my opinion,' Keith said. 'But I like to watch from behind and see the different pitches, the movement. You can still see how his motion is coming out, and you can see a slider, where it goes, does it pop?' Keith is among the players who have benefited from another aspect of the Tigers' smart cage: Force plates. For years, teams have put force plates underneath turf in cages or mounds to measure how players distribute their weight and generate force. The Tigers have had access to such technology since at least 2019. But the technology is still evolving, and so is the way teams apply the data. In simple terms, the plates measure the amount, direction and timing of force hitters put into the ground. That data can explain how hitters transition through their load, stride and swing. This data can help hitters better harness their kinetic chains and unlock greater power or exit velocity. So when Keith was slumping early in the season, he went to the force plates to better understand what was plaguing his swing. After a brutal April, Keith had an .838 OPS in May. 'I went on them to see how much force I was putting out compared to last year,' Keith said. 'It was a little bit lower. So we're trying some things out. I don't think that was a direct solution, but it definitely got us on the right path.' Perhaps just as important as helping iron out a slump, hitters can record their swings on the force plates to create a reference to turn to whenever things are out of whack. They can even compare their swings to others who have stepped on the plates. The Tigers still have a template for Miguel Cabrera's swing. Advertisement 'There's a baseline for good hitters and what they do,' Keith said. 'So you compare yours to them.' The Tigers have an expanded smart cage at their Lakeland spring training facility. There is now a Trajekt machine at Triple-A Toledo. Like most other teams, the Tigers are expanding and optimizing the ways they use technology and data points. 'Here at home, it's nice because you can develop a routine, you can get some visuals, get your normal routine in,' manager A.J. Hinch said. 'The big trick is it's not mobile so you can't do it on the road.' When the Tigers hosted a three-game series against the San Francisco Giants last week, for example, the Trajekt provided a way for hitters to get glimpses at pitchers they may have never seen before. It even exposed one limitation of the Trajekt: It can't fully replicate the delivery of Giants right-hander Tyler Rogers, the submariner whose hand nearly touches the ground as he throws. 'It's hard to get visuals for everybody,' Hinch said. 'But I like that our players are openly talking about their routines being impacted by the expansion and improvements.' Across Major League Baseball, none of this is revolutionary. But consider it a rare glimpse into the Tigers' process behind that green door. And another window that shows how hitters are punching upward in attempt to counter the nastiest pitchers in the league. 'I think it gives us a little more fighting power against pitchers who got a lot of horsepower,' Malloy said. 'I think it's a really nice tool for us to be able to get our work in.' (Top photo of Zach McKinstry:)