Marcus Meloni's brilliant winner for Sharjah in ACL Two final
The For The Hoops crew make their picks for the NBA Finals. The Thunder vs. Knicks seem to be a popular pick, but are we counting the Timberwolves and Pacers out too early?

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


New York Post
9 hours ago
- New York Post
Stephen A. Smith says he and LeBron James have ‘no relationship' after bitter feud
Things did not end on a good note with Stephen A. Smith and LeBron James. During an appearance on former NBA All-Star Gilbert Arenas' 'Gil's Arena' podcast Friday, Smith said that he has zero contact with James and does not have any interest in ever speaking to him again. 'There's no situation and there's no relationship,' Smith said. 'He doesn't like me, and I don't like him.' Advertisement 3 Stephen A. Smith looks on during the game between the Indiana Pacers and the Oklahoma City Thunder during Game 2 of the 2025 NBA Finals on June 8, 2025 at Paycom Center in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. NBAE via Getty Images Smith's comments stem from his feud with the 21-time All-Star earlier this year, when the two threw jabs at each other during various appearances on ESPN, which ultimately led to an in-person confrontation during a game in March. The ESPN sports personality added that other things happened between him and James 'behind the scenes' that the public does not know about. Advertisement 'All I would say is people don't know the things that have happened behind the scenes,' Smith said. 'Things that have been said, who they've been said to. The kind of things that have been engaged in in an effort to hurt me, along with contemporaries and others.' Smith also mentioned how he did not appreciate how James came at him on 'The Pat McAfee Show,' which airs directly after 'First Take' on ESPN. 3 Los Angeles Lakers forward LeBron James arguing with the ref in the second half of a game against the Knicks. Charles Wenzelberg / New York Post 'There's a lot of s–t that I don't say. And there's a reason that I feel the way that I do. And the last straw was him approaching me and turning the Bronny thing into something about me attacking somebody's family, when it was him I was talking about. Not Bronny. Advertisement 'And then to go on 'The Pat McAfee Show,' which comes directly on after my show. On the channel that I work on. To insult me. Now, people can get into all kind of components that go into it and all that other stuff. I have nothing to say.' 3 Stephen A. Smith looks on before the game between the Oklahoma City Thunder and the Indiana Pacers during Game 3 of the 2025 NBA Finals on June 11, 2025 at Gainbridge Fieldhouse in Indianapolis, Indiana. NBAE via Getty Images Smith concluded by saying that he plans to only mention James in the context of NBA analysis going forward. Advertisement 'I'm never going to denigrate any employer, any partner, or myself by getting into anything excessively, unnecessarily, when it comes to him or anybody else,' Smith said. 'I'm going to do my job. I'm going to cover the game of basketball. 'But if I never, ever speak to him again in life, that will be OK. And I'm good with it.'


USA Today
12 hours ago
- USA Today
Complete 2025-26 OKC Thunder schedule team-by-team breakdown
Another step closer to action, the NBA recently announced its entire 2025-26 regular season schedule. The Oklahoma City Thunder will enter the campaign as a popular pick to repeat as NBA champions. They're running it back with mostly the same roster. Shai Gilgeous-Alexander is one of the league's best players. He won about every award imaginable last year, from MVP to NBA Finals MVP. Jalen Williams and Chet Holmgren have also become household names. All three players received contract extensions this past summer. Heavy is the head that wears the crown. The Thunder will lead the NBA in national TV games. That means expect them to get the best punches from the opposition. That comes with the territory of sitting at the throne and being viewed as the consensus choice to bring home the Larry O'Brien trophy again. The NBA announced 80 of the 82 games. The other two games will be announced once the 2025 NBA Cup group stage is completed. Let's break down the Thunder's team-by-team matchups for the 2025-26 regular season: Atlanta Hawks Boston Celtics Brooklyn Nets Charlotte Hornets Chicago Bulls Cleveland Cavaliers Dallas Mavericks Denver Nuggets Detroit Pistons Golden State Warriors Houston Rockets Indiana Pacers LA Clippers Los Angeles Lakers Memphis Grizzlies Miami Heat Milwaukee Bucks Minnesota Timberwolves New Orleans Pelicans New York Knicks Orlando Magic Philadelphia 76ers Phoenix Suns Portland Trail Blazers Sacramento Kings San Antonio Spurs Toronto Raptors Utah Jazz Washington Wizards
Yahoo
14 hours ago
- Yahoo
The NBA will have nationally televised games every day of the week
Yahoo Sports AM is our daily newsletter that keeps you up to date on all things sports. Sign up here to get it every weekday morning. 🏀 NBA SCHEDULE RELEASE The NBA released its full schedule for the upcoming season on Thursday, and it's no surprise which teams you'll be seeing most often when you turn on your TV. The defending champion Thunder have 34 games on national TV (or streaming), tied with the Lakers, Warriors and Knicks for the most in the league. The Timberwolves and Rockets aren't too far behind, at 28 each, followed by the Nuggets (26), Celtics (25), Cavaliers (24) and Mavericks (23) to round out the top 10. No love for Indy: The Pacers, a year after reaching the NBA Finals, have just nine national games. Rude. (I know, I know… Tyrese Haliburton is out for the year. Still.) How to watch: The biggest change this season is that the league's massive new 11-year, $76 billion media deal kicks in, which could take some getting used to for fans conditioned to watching mostly on ESPN and TNT. Here's where you'll watch: NBC/Peacock: Sunday, Monday and Tuesday … The NBA returns to NBC for the first time in 24 years. Most importantly, that means "Roundball Rock" is returning! ESPN/ABC: Wednesday, Friday, Saturday and Sunday … No change here. ESPN still gets Wednesday and Friday nights, while ABC gets Saturday nights and Sunday afternoons. Prime: Thursday, Friday and Saturday … Doubleheaders on Friday all season and on Thursday starting in January, plus select Saturday afternoon games. Big picture: Yes, that's a lot of different places to watch one league. But the biggest takeaway is this: Almost all season long, there'll be at least one nationally-televised (or streamed) game every. single. day. Let the countdown begin: The season opens with an NBC doubleheader on Oct. 21, when the Thunder host the Rockets in Kevin Durant's Houston debut and the Lakers host the Warriors in the latest chapter of LeBron vs. Steph. Just 67 days away. Can't wait. Go deeper: Schedule release highlights (Dan Devine, Yahoo Sports) 📺 WEEKEND WATCHLIST ⚽️ Premier League | Fri-Sun, USA/NBC/Peacock The Premier League campaign kicks off today with defending champion Liverpool — favored to run it back for their third title since 2020 (+175 at BetMGM) — opening the season at home against Bournemouth. But lurking, as always, are last year's runner-up Arsenal (+250), perennial contender Manchester City (+350) and reigning Club World Cup champion Chelsea (+800). Matchday 1: Liverpool vs. Bournemouth (Fri. 3pm ET, USA) Aston Villa vs. Newcastle (Sat. 7:30am, USA) Brighton vs. Fulham (Sat. 10am, USA) Sunderland vs. West Ham (Sat. 10am, Peacock) Tottenham vs. Burnley (Sat. 10am, Peacock) Wolves vs. Manchester City (Sat. 12:30pm, NBC) Chelsea vs. Crystal Palace (Sun. 9am, USA) Nottingham Forest vs. Brentford (Sun. 9am, Peacock) Manchester United vs. Arsenal (Sun. 11:30am, NBC) Go deeper: Team-by-team mega-preview (ESPN) ⚾️ Little League Classic | Sun. 7:10pm ET, ESPN The Mets and Mariners face off on Sunday in the eighth annual Little League Classic at Williamsport's Historic Bowman Field. In what's become a truly wonderful new tradition, the big leaguers will spend the day attending Little League World Series games and embracing their inner kid before playing in front of a crowd of mostly little leaguers and their families that night. Plus… The biggest series of the weekend is in Los Angeles, where the Dodgers and Padres meet for three games as they jockey for position atop the NL West. San Diego — which has won five straight and 14 of 17 — now has a one-game lead over L.A., marking the latest in a season they've held sole possession of first place since 2010. ⛳️ BMW Championship | Fri-Sun, ESPN+/Peacock/Golf/NBC Robert MacIntyre, have a day. The Scottish lefty went nuclear on the back nine on Thursday, birdieing his final six holes and making nearly 200 feet worth of putts for a career-best round of 62. At 8-under par, he holds a three-stroke lead over Tommy Fleetwood entering the second round. ⛳️ U.S. Amateur | Fri-Sun, Golf/Peacock Just eight golfers remain at San Francisco's Olympic Club, and none is more surprising than Jimmy Abdo, a sophomore from D-III Gustavus Adolphus College who sits at No. 4,292 in the world amateur rankings. The quarterfinals tee off today at 4:30pm, the semis are tomorrow and the 36-hole championship match is on Sunday. 🎾 Cincinnati Open | Fri-Sun, Tennis It's a rare Monday finish in Cincy, so they're still in the quarterfinals entering play today. Men: No. 2 Carlos Alcaraz vs. No. 9 Andrey Rublev (3pm) and No. 3 Alexander Zverev vs. No. 5 Ben Shelton (7pm). The winners will join No. 1 Jannik Sinner and Terence Atmane in the semifinals. Women: No. 3 Iga Świątek vs. No. 28 Anna Kalinskaya (11am); No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka vs. No. 9 Elena Rybakina (12:10pm); Varvara Gracheva vs. Veronika Kudermetova (4:30pm); No. 2 Coco Gauff vs. No. 7 Jasmine Paolini (8:30pm). 🏀 Storm vs. Dream | Fri. 10pm, ION It's taken 29 seasons, but the WNBA is finally playing its first regular-season game in Canada when the surging Dream (21-11, six straight wins) and struggling Storm (16-17, six straight losses) meet at Vancouver's Rogers Arena. And it's not a moment too soon as the league's first Canadian team, the Toronto Tempo, begin play next season. Other games to watch: The Lynx host the Liberty (Sat. 2pm, CBS) for their third Finals rematch in the past two weeks; A'ja Wilson and the Aces host Paige Bueckers and the Wings in Vegas (Sun. 3:30pm, ABC). More to watch: NFL Preseason: Chiefs at Seahawks (Fri. 10pm, NFL); Browns at Eagles (Sat. 1pm, NFL); Bills at Bears (Sun. 8pm, Fox) … Full Week 2 slate. Banana Ball: Savannah Bananas vs. The Firefighters (Fri. 8pm, ESPN2; Sat. 8pm, truTV) … At Rate Field, home of the White Sox. NWSL: KC Current vs. Orlando Pride (Sat. 4pm, CBS) … First-place KC puts its undefeated home record on the line against second-place Orlando. MLS: NY Red Bulls vs. Philadelphia Union (Sat. 7:30pm, Apple) … First-place Philly takes on New York just three days after beating the Red Bulls to reach the U.S. Open cup semis. UFC 319: Dricus Du Plessis vs. Khamzat Chimaev (Sat. 10pm, ESPN+ PPV) … Middleweight title fight at Chicago's United Center. LIV: Indianapolis (Fri-Sun, FS1/Fox) … The penultimate event of the season. NASCAR: Richmond Raceway (Sat. 7:30pm, USA) … Here's where things stand heading into the penultimate race before the playoffs. Full weekend slate → 🏀 WNBA AWARDS WATCH With one month until the playoffs begin, here are our picks for the WNBA's three major end-of-season awards, courtesy of Yahoo Sports' Maggie Hendricks. MVP Napheesa Collier, Lynx: Yes, she's missing some time right now with a sprained ankle; no, that shouldn't penalize her considering how fully she and her team dominated before the injury. Minnesota (27-5) has already clinched the playoffs and Collier leads the league in scoring with 23.5 points per game to go along with 7.5 rebounds, 3.5 assists, 1.8 steals and 1.6 blocks. Contender and dark horse: Dream guard Allisha Gray is averaging career-highs in points (19.0), rebounds (5.6) and assists (3.8); Liberty guard Sabrina Ionescu is top five in scoring (19.3) and top 10 in assists (5.4). Defensive Player of the Year A'ja Wilson, Aces: The three-time MVP may yet find herself in that race, too. But the two-time DPOY is already running away with this one as she leads the league in blocks (2.1), is second in rebounds (9.8) and seventh in steals (1.7). And, lest we forget, she trails only Collier in scoring (22.0). Contender and dark horse: The Mercury's triple-double queen, Alyssa Thomas, is third in rebounding (8.7) while playing suffocating defense; Storm forward Gabby Williams leads the league in steals by a wide margin (2.5). Rookie of the Year Paige Bueckers, Wings: The UConn legend is seventh in scoring (18.4), eighth in assists (5.4) and fourth in steals (1.8). That's not just among rookies, but across the entire league. Safe to say she's met her sky-high expectations. Contender and dark horse: The Mystics duo of Kiki Iriafen (12.5 pts, 8.3 reb) and Sonia Citron (14.8 pts, 4.5 reb) — both of whom, like Bueckers, were All-Stars this year — have Washington on the fringes of the playoff race. 📚 GOOD READS Ross Dellenger: What's the next 'arms race' in college sports? As the NCAA enters its revenue-sharing era, schools are busy finding ways to legally exceed the annual cap to increase the value of their rosters. Tennessee's new $100 million brand deal with Adidas, which includes a lucrative NIL component, could be the model moving forward. Jake Mintz: Pete Alonso assumes his rightful place as Mets' Home Run King Peter Alonso, as he was often called back then, entered professional baseball as a relative afterthought. The hulking slugger drafted 64th overall out of Florida had talent, of course, but also question marks as a middling athlete with a high offensive bar to clear. Consider it cleared. Elliot Worsell: The difficulty of containing and feeding Moses Itauma The 20-year-old British heavyweight takes the ring on Saturday for just his 13th pro fight. And after winning his first 12 in dominant fashion, he already looks like a future superstar. "I know what he's capable of," says his manager. "He is a Messi, he is a LeBron, he is a Phelps, he is a Tiger. He is a once-in-a-generation talent who will be a cultural sporting icon." 🏀 NBA TRIVIA The Lakers will unveil a statue of former head coach Pat Riley outside Arena in February, making him the eighth figure to be honored by the franchise in that way. Question: Can you name the other seven Lakers figures with such a statue? Hint: Three guards, two centers a forward and an announcer. Answer at the bottom. ⚾️ THE WIN STREAK THAT'S FEEDING A CITY Nothing brings a city together quite like a team on a hot streak. Add in some free food, and it's fair to say the vibes in Milwaukee have never been higher. Free burgers: The Brewers' 12th consecutive win on Wednesday triggered a free hamburger promotion from local restaurant chain George Webb for just the third time in nearly 80 years. Webb, who opened his first lunch counter in 1948, promised to give away free burgers if the Milwaukee Brewers — then a Triple-A team — won 17 straight games. When MLB's Boston Braves moved to Milwaukee in 1953, he reduced the requisite streak to 12. The Braves came and went without hitting the mark, but the Brewers — an expansion team that played one year as the Seattle Pilots before moving to Milwaukee in 1970 — did so in 1987 and 2018, earning fans more than 300,000 free burgers. This coming Wednesday it's all happening again, as fans will have four hours to claim their free sandwich at any of the 23 locations across Wisconsin. Or, for those who can't make giveaway day, vouchers will be available for pickup starting today. The last word: "I was nervous," said Brewers starter Brandon Woodruff, who got the nod with the streak on the line. "There was a little bit more at stake today. I wanted to win those burgers bad. Who doesn't want a free burger?" Who indeed, Brandon. Who indeed. Trivia answer: Jerry West, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Magic Johnson, Kobe Bryant, Shaquille O'Neal, Elgin Baylor and Chick Hearn We hope you enjoyed this edition of Yahoo Sports AM, our daily newsletter that keeps you up to date on all things sports. Sign up here to get it delivered to your inbox every weekday morning.