
The NBA's All-Star Game quagmire, plus new accusations against Tucker
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Good morning! Break a record today.
I am tired of bashing All-Star games. We have belabored the weird place these games, which feel more like corporate functions, sit in this era. A golf clap to the players who make it, but many fans don't want any part of watching this stuff. Sigh.
The NBA's version did happen last night, which drew plenty of voices online (mostly critics). I am more curious about a simpler notion: Did you watch?
Two points before we get to the actual good part of the night:
Steph. Curry. 😱
🎥 @NBA pic.twitter.com/RujtYi4uRe
— The Athletic (@TheAthletic) February 17, 2025
If I wasn't working in this industry, I doubt I would've watched. Thus, I want your input for the next Pulse Poll — tell us if you flipped it on, even for a second.
Make your voice heard here. We'll publish the results tomorrow.
Once again we are approaching March and, to me, the women's college game is more compelling than the men's side at this juncture. There is simply more star power and more drama across the board. Just consider yesterday's slate:
See the NCAA's current top 16 seeds here, released yesterday. There are at least eight teams, if not more, with legitimate title chances. Fun!
Half marathon record shattered
Ugandan runner Jacob Kiplimo ran a half marathon in 56:42 yesterday, demolishing the previous world record by 48 seconds. Kiplimo averaged about 4:19 per mile over the race, which is just bonkers. Imagine if the Eagles had scored 72 points in the Super Bowl. This is bigger than that. He was shocked by the performance, too.
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Seven more accusations
Ravens kicker Justin Tucker is facing seven new allegations of sexually inappropriate behavior from Baltimore-area massage therapists, according to a report in The Baltimore Banner yesterday. The new batch of accusations brings the total to 16. The Ravens continue to decline comment on the matter. More details here.
Dallas assistant arrested
Mavericks assistant coach Darrell Armstrong was arrested over the weekend on a charge of aggravated assault with a deadly weapon, which prompted the organization to place Armstrong on administrative leave. According to a report, Armstrong is accused of hitting a woman with a gun around 3:45 a.m. Saturday. Read our full story for more.
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📺 Hockey: Canada vs. Finland
1 p.m. ET on TNT/truTV/Max
Strap in, it's a full hockey day. The 4 Nations Face-Off has been fantastic, and this is the last day of games before the final. Either team can clinch a spot in the championship game against Team USA with a win in regulation here, but if it goes to overtime/a shootout, the winning team needs the Americans to win their next game …
📺 Hockey: USA vs. Sweden
8 p.m. ET on TNT/truTV/Max
… which is this one. The Swedes need a win and for the previous game to extend past regulation. I dig it.
Get tickets to games like these here.
🎧 Would you take the Bills or the Ravens if you could have only one for the next three seasons? The Athletic Football Show has answers to these and other mailbag questions today. Fun episode you can watch here.
It's that time again: We have potential salary-cap cuts for all 32 NFL teams. Some big names in there, too.
I loved this on Ludvig Åberg, whose win at Torrey Pines yesterday was another sign he's actually taking over golf. The dude is a machine.
The Phillies arrived in camp without a flashy offseason addition for the first time in a while. Bryce Harper and Kyle Schwarber know the pressure ahead, too. Harper also talks about his TikTok turn in here.
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Something I did love from NBA All-Star Weekend: Marcus Thompson II's stirring story about the NBA — and, notably, Steph Curry — briefly returning to Oracle Arena in Oakland. It felt like magic to all involved.
Want a Victor Wembanyama card? We have the best places to look.
Most-clicked in the newsletter yesterday: The details on UConn's horrendous — and historic — loss to Seton Hall on Saturday.
Most-read on the website yesterday: Pierre LeBrun's column on the 'absolute bedlam' in the first nine seconds of the Canada-USA 4 Nations game. I hope we get a rematch.
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USA Today
33 minutes ago
- USA Today
Tyrese Haliburton NBA postseason heroics renew debate. Does 'clutch' play exist?
Tyrese Haliburton NBA postseason heroics renew debate. Does 'clutch' play exist? Show Caption Hide Caption Thunder's panic meter after Game 1 The Thunder's Game 1 collapse was wild. How concerned should Oklahoma City be going into Game 2? The For The Hoops crew gives a panic meter rating on a scale of 1 to 10. Tyrese Haliburton has triggered discussion and renewed a debate. The discussion: Does the Indiana Pacers star deserve to be ranked among the most clutch shooters in NBA playoffs history? The debate: Does 'clutch'' play even exist? Well, one problem, according to a 2019 research paper entitled, "Clutch performance in sport and exercise: a systematic review,'' is the following: "Multiple, conflicting definitions of clutch performance were identified in the literature, which consequently led to the adoption of two distinct approaches to examining clutch performance ...'' So, for the purposes of this story, let's stick with the conventional definition: making big shots with the game on the line. 'When we looked at the data, we couldn't find real evidence of clutch players,'' Dan Ariely, a behavioral economist at Duke who disclosed his findings in 2010, told USA TODAY Sports. 'But we found lots of evidence that people believed that clutch exists.'' That evidence is mounting thanks to Haliburton. 'One of the most clutch players we've seen in the postseason ever,'' declared ESPN's Steven A. Smith after Haliburton made the game-winning shot with 0.3 seconds in Game 1 of the NBA Finals between the Pacers and Oklahoma City Thunder. It was the fourth time Haliburton has made the game-winning shot or the game-tying shot with less than 1.3 seconds left in regulation or overtime in this year's playoffs. While Duke's Ariely is no more convinced of the existence of clutch play, his position is hardly unanimous. 'Earlier studies, particularly those focusing on statistical consistency, often concluded that players do not significantly improve during high-pressure moments …'' Vangelis Sarlis of International Hellenic University in Greece told USA TODAY Sports. 'Our work suggests that while not all players elevate their performance in clutch situations, a distinct subset consistently exhibits traits — like high true shooting percentage, low turnovers, and impactful defensive plays — that do materially influence game outcomes. 'Haliburton appears to exemplify many of these traits.'' Coach K's role in clutch play research Fifty-five years ago, Jerry West made a 60-foot shot after the buzzer to force overtime in Game 3 of the NBA Finals between the Los Angeles Lakers and New York Knicks. Mr. Clutch, they called him. In 2023, the NBA began giving out the Jerry West Trophy to the league's top clutch player as measured by the league's statistical formula - possessions in the final five minutes of the fourth quarter or overtime when the score is within five points - and voted on by 100 media members. None of which Ariely would find persuasive. More than a decade ago at Duke, Ariely has said, he set out to study clutch play and enlisted the help of the school's legendary and now retired basketball coach, Mike Krzyzewski. Krzyzewski helped assemble a group of pro coaches to identify clutch NBA players, according to Ariely, who worked with Rachel Barkan, a professor at Ben-Gurion University of the Negev in Israel. The study involved comparing clutch players and non-clutch players in low-stress moments and high-stress moments. (Ariely has written that "high stress is when the outcome of a game is hanging by a thread.'') 'We found that the non-clutch players scored more or less the same in the low-stress and high-stress moments, whereas there was actually a substantial improvement for clutch players during the last five minutes of the games,'' Ariely wrote in an essay for the Huffington Post. '… As it turned out, the clutch players did not improve their skill; they just tried many more times. 'Their field goal percentage did not increase in the last five minutes (meaning that their shots were no more accurate); neither was it the case that non-clutch players got worse.'' In discussing the findings, Ariely cites research of the 'hot hand,'' the streaky shooting performance fueled by consecutive baskets. 'Research basically showed that people's belief in hot hand is very strong, but the data for it is very weak,'' he said. 'And the same is true for clutch play.'' 'Contributions under pressure' Lorena Martin, an assistant professor of clinical data sciences and operations at Southern California's Marshall School of Business, worked for the Lakers during the 2016-2017 season. Her role: director of sports performance analytics. That season, Martin said, they researched the games' final two minutes to determine the player best equipped to take the final shot. A believer in clutch play, Martin said of debunkers, 'A lot of individuals who are very good in the math and statistics have not played sports. If you look at it mathematically, then you think, 'Oh, it's just random.' But if you play sports, you know that there is an inertia, there is momentum.'' As an example of compelling research, Martin cites "A Data Science and Sports Analytics Approach to Decode Clutch Dynamics in the Last Minutes of NBA Games,'' the study co-authored by Sarlis at International Hellenic University. In that study, Sarlis said, he and his research team focused exclusively on the absolute impact players have during clutch scenarios instead of comparing performance in clutch vs. non-clutch moments. By analyzing 20 seasons of NBA data and applying advanced machine learning techniques, according to Sarlis, they developed the Estimation of Clutch Competency (EoCC) metric. 'A novel formula that captures both offensive and defensive contributions under pressure,'' Sarlis said. 'In terms of application to Tyrese Haliburton, while our dataset formally ends before his breakout years, his current performances — especially his composure, shot selection, and assist-to-turnover ratios in final minutes — align with several key indicators we found to be strongly correlated with winning outcomes in clutch moments,'' Sarlis added, 'If evaluated using our EoCC framework, Haliburton would likely score highly, given his ability to create efficient scoring opportunities and minimize costly errors under pressure.'' Expanding the measure of clutch play Measuring clutch performances strictly by game-winning shots is flawed, according to researcher Franklin Mixon Jr., a professor of economics at Columbus State University in Georgia. 'This approach is subject to confirmation bias as fans will remember these game-winning baskets but tend to forget late-game turnovers and missed shots (free throws) by who they consider to be clutch players,'' Mixon wrote in an email to USA TODAY Sports. Mixon is co-author of a 2013 study – 'Homo certus in professional basketball? Empirical evidence from the 2011 NBA Playoffs'' – he says supports the notion that 'clutch performance" is generally a myth. The study compared players' average productivity per quarter for the first three quarters of their playoffs games to their fourth-quarter performances in those games. 'We found that productivity during the first three quarters generally exceeded that during the fourth quarter of these games,'' Mixon said. With the same variables from the study, Mixon ran Haliburton's numbers from Game 1 of the NBA Finals. That included field-goal attempts per minute, field goals made per minute, field-goal percentage and points scored per minute. He also factored in defensive rebounds and assists. 'Haliburton's late-game productivity was slightly lower during Game 1 compared to what he did during the first 3 quarters,'' Mixon wrote. 'Again, however, the differences aren't significant. Based on our approach, his performance was typical of NBA players.'


USA Today
33 minutes ago
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Jalen Williams: Shai Gilgeous-Alexander has similarities to Kobe
Jalen Williams: Shai Gilgeous-Alexander has similarities to Kobe Even though the Oklahoma City Thunder lost Game 1 of the NBA Finals in stunning fashion to the Indiana Pacers, 111-110, they are still very much in the series. Many still expect them to win the championship, even though Indiana has proven to be an extremely dangerous team, especially in crunch time and especially on the road. The biggest thing Oklahoma City has going for it, other than perhaps its withering defense, is Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, this year's league MVP. He scored 38 points in Game 1, and he will likely have a few big outbursts before this series ends. With Game 2 approaching, he said that Kobe Bryant is probably his favorite player ever and that he hopes to approach the heights the late Los Angeles Lakers legend attained. Teammate Jalen Williams, who is a budding star in his own right, said there are similarities between the games of Gilgeous-Alexander and Bryant. "There are a lot of similarities there… If you are really paying attention to basketball & watch the way he plays… He can pick certain aspects of his game… [And] add his own touch to it." The most striking similarity between the two is the mid-range game. Gilgeous-Alexander seems to have mastered the ability to attack off the dribble, pull up from the mid-range area and nail jumpers, which was something Bryant made a living off of throughout his 20 seasons in the NBA. Gilgeous-Alexander is also what some may call a free-throw magnet. He attempted 8.8 free throws a game during the regular season and made 89.8% of those attempts, which is even more remarkable when one considers that he's 6-foot-6 and just 195 pounds. Bryant was very adept at tricking defenders into fouling him, and he was also an excellent free throw shooter who had a lifetime mark of 83.7% from the charity stripe. Of course, the best way Gilgeous-Alexander can become more similar to Bryant is to win an NBA championship. It was something Bryant did five times with the Lakers.
Yahoo
an hour ago
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With the NBA draft right around the corner, now is the time to look at some past drafts and see what the Philadelphia 76ers have done in their history. The Sixers have selected some big-time players in the past who have become an important part of the fabric of the franchise's history. This next edition stays in 2015 as the Sixers continued to build a roster and find pieces in the midst of their rebuild. After selecting Jahlil Okafor with the No. 3 pick in this draft, they selected another big in Round 2 with the pick of Richaun Holmes with the No. 37 overall pick. Advertisement Holmes spent three years in Philadelphia averaging 7.4 points and 4.2 rebounds serving as the backup big man to Okafor and Joel Embiid during his time. The Sixers then sent him to the Phoenix Suns in the 2018 offseason. Overall, Holmes is still in the league as he just finished up his 10th season while playing for the Washington Wizards. Along with the Sixers, Suns, and Wizards, Holmes has also played for the Sacramento Kings and the Dallas Mavericks with career averages of 8.5 points and 5.3 rebounds. This article originally appeared on Sixers Wire: Sixers draft history: Richaun Holmes selected No. 37 overall in 2015