
Report: Kyrie Irving will decline option, sign 3-year, $119M contract
June 25 - Nine-time All-Star point guard Kyrie Irving will decline his $43 million player option and instead plans to sign a three-year, $119 million contract to remain with the Dallas Mavericks, ESPN reported on Tuesday night.
Irving, who will have a player option for the 2027-28 season, per the report, is recovering from a torn ACL which ended his season in March. He spoke with ESPN on Tuesday night and said that there is a long-term commitment from himself and the Dallas organization and he wants to build a legacy with the Mavericks, believing the franchise can win a league championship.
Irving, 33, could return from the left knee injury as soon as January, per the report.
He averaged 24.7 points, 4.8 rebounds, 4.6 assists, 1.3 steals and 36.1 minutes in 50 games (all starts) last season.
In parts of three seasons with the Mavericks, Irving has averaged 25.5 points, 4.9 rebounds, 5.1 assists, 1.3 steals and 35.9 minutes in 128 regular-season games (all starts).
He averaged 22.1 points, 3.7 rebounds, 5.1 assists, 1.0 steals and 40.0 minutes in starting all 22 playoff games as the Mavs advanced to 2024 NBA Finals, where they lost to Boston Celtics in five games.
For his career, Irving is averaging 23.7 points, 4.1 rebounds, 5.6 assists, 1.3 steals and 34.5 minutes in 779 games (all starts) for the Cleveland Cavaliers (2011-17), Celtics (2017-19), Brooklyn Nets (2019-23) and Mavericks. (2023-present). He won an NBA title with the Cavaliers in 2016.
The Cavaliers selected Irving with the No. 1 pick of the 2011 NBA Draft after his freshman season at Duke. He was the NBA Rookie of the Year with Cleveland. Dallas has the No. 1 pick of the 2025 draft, which starts on Wednesday night, and is expected to pick All-America Cooper Flagg, a freshman out of Duke.
The Mavericks, who could build around Irving, Flagg and 10-time All-Star big man Anthony Davis, 32, will need a point guard while Irving is sidelined. ESPN reported that Irving's three-year deal could allow Dallas the financial flexibility to open up a $5.7 million taxpayer midlevel exception.
--Field Level Media
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The Independent
40 minutes ago
- The Independent
Thomas Muller rejects complaints over heat at Club World Cup: ‘No excuses'
Thomas Muller has rejected complaints of 'impossible' heat at the Club World Cup, citing his own age as a reason why younger players should have 'no excuses'. Bayern Munich failed to end their group stage on a good note as they slumped to a 1-0 defeat to Benfica, forfeiting top spot in Group C in the process. The temperature reached 36°C for the clash at the Bank of America Stadium in Charlotte, harsh conditions that were reflected by the far from optimum performances on the pitch from both sides. However, Muller has hit back at claims that his team should be excused for their shortcomings. 'We have to be in shape,' he said post-match. 'If an almost 36-year-old guy like me can run 90 minutes, then everybody should do it, so no excuses.' Numerous players and managers have made their grievances about the extreme weather known publicly, with Atletico Madrid midfielder Marcos Llorente among these as his side crashed out of the competition in the group stage. 'It's impossible, it's terribly hot,' he said. 'My toes were sore, even my toenails were hurting, I couldn't stop or start.' Chelsea manager Enzo Maresca also voiced his frustrations about the heat, telling reporters after his side's shock 3-1 loss to Flamengo: "It's an excuse when it's not hot and we say that it's hot. That is an excuse. But if hot, it's hot. It's difficult to work with these temperatures but we are here and we trying to do our best and we will try to win.' Muller has made his stance clear, however, and does not want to see any of his teammates making same complaints as they hope to become the inaugural Club World Cup champions. Such success would prove the perfect farewell for Muller, who after helping Bayern reclaim the Bundesliga will leave the club this summer after a decorated 17 seasons in Bavaria. He may stay put in the United States with a move to the MLS touted, following in the footsteps of fellow German great Marco Reus. However, he insists he is yet to make a final decision on next steps. 'There is a chance (of joining an MLS side) but I have to figure it out,' he adds. 'At the moment I am totally focussed on playing this tournament. Some talks, maybe in the background, but the focus is on this tournament now, I have no hurry, no stress to take my decisions, then we will see, but I don't know now.' Bayern Munich will take on Flamengo in the Club World Cup last 16 on Sunday 29 June.


The Guardian
an hour ago
- The Guardian
Warning shot for 2026: Club World Cup's brutal heat exposes a World Cup risk
In the 31 years since the United States last hosted the men's World Cup, a few things remain unchanged. Recent politics notwithstanding, the US population is diverse and air travel is relatively easy, so international games tend to attract supporters no matter where they live. As long as ticket prices are reasonable, a good crowd is a good bet. Also – it still gets really hot in the summer. This, of course, is not news. It was a major subplot of the 1994 World Cup, it will be a major subplot of the 2026 edition – which the US will co-host with Canada and Mexico as the climate crisis makes heatwaves more likely – and it's a major subplot of the Club World Cup this summer. The 19th-century Englishmen who wrote the first official Laws of the Game probably didn't anticipate the brutal heat that players often have to endure in a US summer, but everyone else should. Some rules of basic mathematics and climate are incontrovertible. A southern US venue plus a midday start time equals 22 players broiling in the sun, and it's odd that Fifa, in charge of the Club World Cup and next year's World Cup, does not appear to have foreseen that playing in blistering heat isn't much fun. So who benefits from this scheduling and heat? And who appears to worry about it the most? The answer to both questions: Europe. Games aren't starting at noon and 3pm local time on weekdays for the benefit of fans in the US. Those games land neatly in the evening for European viewers. Yes, Fifa could schedule more games to start at 9pm local time when temperatures are much cooler, but that's well past midnight in Europe, which makes fans, broadcasters and sponsors less happy. But European teams aren't quite as happy about those earlier kick-offs. Consider Chelsea, who cut short their training session in the run-up to their game against Espérance. They're not the first European squad to come to the east coast and notice, in the words of Jimmy Buffett, changes in latitude and changes in attitude. Philadelphia is 10 degrees closer to the equator than London – and Philly is one of the more northerly venues in this summer's Club World Cup. It is, in the organizers' defense, not usually this hot in Philadelphia or New York, and the one hot game in Pasadena was an aberration. Still, temperatures in the mid-30sC/mid-90sF are hardly unusual in Orlando or Charlotte. (Nor are they unusual in Atlanta, but teams assigned to play there are breathing comfortably in the air conditioning under the dome of Mercedes-Benz Stadium.) And even with cool Seattle in the mix, the median temperature through Monday's games was 81F (27C), with a median heat index of 87F (31C) and the dewpoint at a muggy 68F. This suggests European teams will have a problem with temperatures this summer and at next year's World Cup; that Chelsea were at a disadvantage against the Tunisian champions even before they kicked off. And that's the reason why teams from Brazil, where the state leagues play in the southern hemisphere's summer, have impressed so far in this tournament. Perhaps that could be a function of the long-held stereotype that Latin America plays possession football to conserve energy in the heat while Europeans run around like maniacs, afraid that they'll freeze if they stand still too long. But the limited data from major tournaments in the US doesn't support the notion that European teams are doomed to wilt in a North American summer. Seven of the eight quarter-finalists at USA 1994 were from Europe. Sweden helped themselves to a 3-1 win at high noon in Dallas against Saudi Arabia, a team, one would presume, who would cope a little better in the heat. Romania and Switzerland advanced from group play at the expense of a heralded side from Colombia. In all, 10 of the 13 European teams advanced to the knockout stage in 1994, while only two of the four South American teams made it out of the group stage. Concacaf, featuring the host USA and nearest neighbor Mexico, advanced both of its teams. Asia and Africa combined to have two of their five teams advance. That performance by Europe's best was an improvement from four years earlier on their home continent. In Italy, all four South American sides reached the knockout stage, along with Costa Rica and Cameroon. Eventual finalists Argentina were the only South American team in the quarter-finals, but Cameroon joined them. In group play, Scotland and Sweden found themselves eliminated by Brazil (expectedly) and Costa Rica (unexpectedly). Sign up to Soccer with Jonathan Wilson Jonathan Wilson brings expert analysis on the biggest stories from European soccer after newsletter promotion These games, along with the decidedly mixed results in Qatar in 2022, aren't a particularly convincing sample size. And we have very little to go on for club games, aside from the pre-season friendlies in which European clubs sleepwalk their way through steamy matches that rake in money from US fans drawn to the stadiums by celebrity and cosplay. This Club World Cup has seen a handful of notable upsets, but they don't seem attributable to the weather. Inter Miami beat Porto indoors in Atlanta. Botafogo stunned Paris Saint-Germain on a mild night in Pasadena, also the site of the Mexican side Monterrey's draw against Italy's Inter. Auckland City drew with Boca Juniors, but, if anything, it's the Argentinians who are more used to the heat. That leaves us with Chelsea, who lost to the Brazilian side Flamengo in warm Philadelphia. But is that a function of the weather, Flamengo being better than was first thought, or Chelsea not giving this tournament the same sense of urgency as their opponents? The heat also isn't hindering attendance, or teams' offensive power. PSG's four-goal outburst took place in the best-attended match, with more than 80,000 fans nearly filling the Rose Bowl in the one unusually hot Pasadena game. More than 70,000 fans gathered in Charlotte to see Real Madrid dispatch Pachuca 3-1 despite a temperature in the mid-90s fahrenheit. Plotting all of the games' scores, attendance figures and reported temperatures shows little to no correlation – if anything, attendance and scoring have gone slightly up as the temperature rises. It appears people turn up to watch good matches, and stay away from bad matches, no matter what the temperature. But it would be stupid to deny playing in extreme heat can be dangerous. At last year's Copa América, hosted by the US, an assistant referee collapsed during a match played in suffocating heat in Kansas City. Heat also limits players' ability to play full-throttle football. One vivid example was the 2008 Olympic men's soccer final, played at midday in the cauldron of Beijing's Bird's Nest so that the stadium would be cleared in time for the evening's track and field events. Temperatures in the heat-trapping venue soared well above 100F (38C), and players were granted hydration breaks, common today but novel at the time. The lone goal was assisted by one Lionel Messi, playing alongside his current Inter Miami manager, Javier Mascherano, which perhaps bodes well for Inter's chances in the knockout rounds. The scorer was Ángel Di María, who got another game with a heat index in the mid-100s on Tuesday in Charlotte with Benfica. At some point, southern heat overcomes southern hospitality, and organizers can surely do better with scheduling. Why play a game at 3pm local time in Charlotte? Surely Fifa can work with US organizers at next year's World Cup to make sure that afternoon games are played in cities such as Seattle, San Francisco or Vancouver (although the climate crisis means even those cities endure their share of sweltering days). And yet, after Benfica took a shock 1-0 lead against Bayern in the blistering heat Tuesday in Charlotte, both teams could be seen pressing far into the opposition half. Today's elite players can, mostly, endure harsh conditions. But that doesn't mean Fifa should keep requiring them to do so when alternative schedules exist.


Telegraph
an hour ago
- Telegraph
Golf betting tips: Rocket Classic 2025
Tournament: Rocket Classic When: June 26-29, 2025 Where: Detroit Golf Club, Michigan Course details: Par 72, 7,370 yards 72-hole record: 262 Tony Finau (2022) 18-hole record: 63 (multiple players) Weather forecast: Light rain Thursday; thunderstorms Friday; dry and warm over the weekend Total prize money: $9,600,000 (about £7m) Watch: Sky Sports Golf Rocket Classic outright odds (Courtesy of BoyleSports) Collin Morikawa 9/1 Keegan Bradley 12/1 Patrick Cantlay 12/1 Ben Griffin 16/1 Cameron Young 20/1 Wyndham Clark 25/1 Hideki Matsuyama 25/1 Harry Hall 28/1 Kim Si-woo 28/1 30/1 bar (E/W 1/5 odds 10 places; odds correct at time of writing; alternative prices and place terms available) Ron Wood's Rocket Classic tips Course overview Detroit Golf Club is medium length and flat, and the rough is forgiving. The fairways are tree-lined and the greens small, but it's a course that throws up countless birdie opportunities. If it plays soft – and rain is in the forecast for Thursday and Friday – it can favour the big hitters. Outright selections Collin Morikawa, the world No.5, is the highest-ranking player in the field and heads the outright betting. He tied for second in this tournament in 2023 but he has been in woeful form over the past couple of months. In particular, his putting has been letting him down, which doesn't bode well now. There's also Keegan Bradley, fresh from his win in last week's Travelers Championship, but he has no worthwhile course form and it will be a surprise if he enjoys back-to-back wins. Instead, preference is for Matt Fitzpatrick and Min Woo Lee. Let's start with the first name. The 2022 US Open champion, Fitzpatrick has been hinting at a return to form. He tied for 17th in last week's Travelers, where a slow start didn't help, but only three players bettered his third round of 63. The Englishman wasn't alone in finding Oakmont too demanding in the US Open on his penultimate outing, but he tied for eighth at the US PGA Championship in May. His last five tournaments have been signature events or majors and this is a notable drop in class. So while he has never played this course, he putts well, which gives him a chance. Min Woo Lee was joint-second, beaten one stroke, in this event last year, and his game suits this course. His recent form is ropey to say the least, but he is dropping out of elite company for the first time since winning in Texas in March. He appeals with 10 places on offer each-way. Fowler can finish as top American It's hard to know what you're going to get from Rickie Fowler, but he won this event in 2023 and has offered glimpses of form recently, notably his tied-seventh finish in the Memorial Tournament two outings ago. He doesn't appeal each-way outright (35/1) but is only slightly shorter to be the leading USA player, which looks generous enough for a speculative win punt in that market. Past Rocket Classic winners (US unless stated) World rankings Scottie Scheffler Rory McIlroy Xander Schauffele Justin Thomas Collin Morikawa Russell Henley Keegan Bradley J.J. Spaun Sepp Straka Viktor Hovland Get the best casino bonuses in the UK