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Sports on TV for Monday, May 12

Sports on TV for Monday, May 12

(All times Eastern)
Schedule subject to change and/or blackouts
Monday, May 12
IIHF HOCKEY (MEN'S)
10 a.m.
NHLN — 2025 IIHF World Championship Group Stage: U.S. vs. Switzerland, Group B, Herning, Denmark
2 p.m.
NHLN — 2025 IIHF World Championship Group Stage: Finland vs. Sweden, Group A, Stockholm
6:30 p.m.
MLBN — Regional Coverage: Boston at Detroit (6:40 p.m.) OR St. Louis at Philadelphia (6:45 p.m.)
9:30 p.m.
FS1 — Arizona at San Francisco
NBA BASKETBALL
7 p.m.
ESPN — 2025 NBA Draft Lottery: From New York
7:40 p.m.
ESPN — Eastern Conference Semifinal: Boston at New York, Game 4
10 p.m.
NHL HOCKEY
7 p.m.
TNT — Eastern Conference Semifinal: Washington at Carolina, Game 4
9:30 p.m.
SOCCER (MEN'S)
11:50 a.m.
FS2 — Saudi Pro League: Al Orobah at Al Hilal
1:45 p.m.
FS2 — Saudi Pro League: Al Nassr at Al Okhdood
3 p.m.
CBSSN — EFL Championship: Bristol City at Sheffield United, Semifinal - Leg 2
TENNIS
5 a.m.
TENNIS — Italian Open-WTA Round of 16, Italian Open-ATP Early Rounds
6 a.m.
TENNIS — Italian Open-WTA Round of 16, Italian Open-ATP Early Rounds
5 a.m. (Tuesday)
TENNIS — Italian Open-ATP Round of 16
6 a.m. (Tuesday)
TENNIS — Italian Open-WTA Quarterfinals; Italian Open-ATP Round of 16
_____

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Red Sox hit 5 home runs and overcome 2 by Judge in 11-7 win over Yankees
Red Sox hit 5 home runs and overcome 2 by Judge in 11-7 win over Yankees

Washington Post

time32 minutes ago

  • Washington Post

Red Sox hit 5 home runs and overcome 2 by Judge in 11-7 win over Yankees

NEW YORK — Carlos Narváez put Boston ahead with a three-run homer against his former team, and the Red Sox overcame two home runs by Aaron Judge in an 11-7 victory over the New York Yankees on Sunday night. Rafael Devers also went deep as Boston equaled a season high with five longballs to take two of three games at Yankee Stadium in the first series this season between the longtime rivals. Narváez signed with the Yankees in 2015 and broke into the big leagues with them last year, getting into six games before New York traded him to Boston in December. The rookie catcher gave the Red Sox a 5-3 lead in the sixth inning by lifting a fastball from Carlos Rodón (8-4) into the left-field seats. Judge hit a pair of two-run homers for his fourth multihomer game this season and the 43rd of his career. He connected in the first off rookie Hunter Dobbins (3-1) and again in the ninth, ending the night with a .396 batting average. Boston rookie Kristian Campbell hit a two-run homer to the short porch in right field off Rodón in the fifth. Abraham Toro and Trevor Story hit back-to-back solo shots in the eighth off Jonathan Loáisiga. Jarren Duran had a two-run single off Yankees reliever Tim Hill in the sixth. Toro added an RBI double in the ninth. Dobbins allowed three runs and four hits in five innings. A day after telling the Boston Herald, 'If the Yankees were the last team to give me a contract, I'd retire,' Dobbins heard little reaction from the crowd of 45,140. DJ LeMahieu homered in the fifth to give New York a 3-2 lead. Rodón permitted five runs and three hits in five-plus innings. The left-hander lost for the first time in eight decisions since April 13. Garrett Whitlock retired LeMahieu on a bases-loaded grounder to end the sixth after the Yankees had cut it to 7-5. … Aroldis Chapman, the seventh Boston reliever, fanned Anthony Volpe with two on for his 11th save. Boston scored 27 runs in the series, its most in a three-game set at Yankee Stadium since 2005. … Loáisiga has allowed four homers in nine appearances since returning from elbow surgery. Red Sox RHP Brayan Bello (2-1, 3.91 ERA) opens a three-game series in Boston against Tampa Bay RHP Shane Baz (5-3, 4.96) on Monday night. Yankees LHP Max Fried (8-1, 1.78 ERA) opposes rookie LHP Noah Cameron (2-1, 0.85) in the opener of a three-game series Tuesday at Kansas City. ___ More AP baseball:

LeBron James on critics saying he doesn't have scoring skills
LeBron James on critics saying he doesn't have scoring skills

USA Today

timean hour ago

  • USA Today

LeBron James on critics saying he doesn't have scoring skills

LeBron James on critics saying he doesn't have scoring skills LeBron James became the NBA's all-time leading scorer two seasons ago when he surpassed Kareem Abdul-Jabbar in February 2023 during a game between his Los Angeles Lakers and the Oklahoma City Thunder. Since then, he has surpassed 40,000 points, and he currently has 42,184 points for his career during the regular season, as well as 50,473 points in the regular season and playoffs combined. Still, some don't consider him an elite scorer. He isn't quite as skilled as some of the other leading scorers in NBA history, such as Abdul-Jabbar, Michael Jordan and Kobe Bryant, and it has even led some to downplay his accomplishment as the all-time leading scorer. According to critics, James doesn't have "a bag," meaning that he doesn't quite have the skill-based moves that other superstars possess. He has indeed always relied heavily on his athleticism and physicality, although he has greatly improved his 3-point shooting over the last two seasons. During a recent episode of his "Mind the Game" podcast, which he co-hosts with Hall of Famer Steve Nash, James reacted to those critics and tried to downplay the importance of having a highly refined skill set (h/t Lakers Nation). 'When I was growing up, it wasn't talked about. The least amount of dribbles to get to where you need to get to was what I grew up watching. Michael Jordan wasn't dribbling 1,000 times to get to his spot and raise. Isiah Thomas, as great of a handle as Isiah Thomas had, Isiah would get to his spot and raise. All these guys that I grew up watching, Grant Hill can get to his spot and bury you. [Glenn] Robinson, I get to my spot and I'm burying you. Allan Houston, all these great players that I grew up watching and admiring, Penny Hardaway. They could dribble the basketball, yes. Tracy McGrady, even as great as Tracy was, it was I'm bigger than you, I'm gonna get to the spot in the least amount of dribbles. Kevin Garnett, just good footwork and getting over the top, if I'm bigger than you and I get you on my shoulder or get you on my hip, I'm gonna use my size. I see it all the time, I be on social media and it's like 'LeBron has no bag.' LeBron has no bag and I'm sitting over there with 50 billion points… Just play the game the right way. And I hope that our younger generation doesn't get swamped by saying OK, I need a bag, I need a bag. Work on your game, know what you're gonna be good at in order to help the team and prove the next year to be a better player. You come in as a guy that's offensive game is not developed, you come in and you defend, you get extra possessions, you get extra rebounders for the guys. OK, then next year you work on your game in the offseason. It's only one or two, three guys maximum that's gonna be handling the [expletive] hold anyways. We don't need you to have a bag. We have the luxury of having three guys with us two and AR, but not many teams have three guys that's gonna be handling the ball like that anyways. You can make $200 million in the NBA if you defend and shoot a corner 3-pointer.' Even at age 40, and even without the same level of scoring skills as some others, James has continued to excel. He averaged 24.4 points, 8.2 assists and 7.8 rebounds a game while shooting 51.3% from the field and 37.6% from 3-point range. With Luka Doncic now by his side, one can easily see the game becoming a little easier for him now that he has been playing off the ball more often since Doncic's arrival. Many have wanted James to play off the ball for years in order to lessen his workload and increase his efficiency. No matter how skilled or unskilled one thinks James is, many feel his career scoring mark will never be surpassed.

Pacers vs. Thunder: Tyrese Haliburton can't repeat heroics in Game 2 of NBA Finals — 'It feels like there's five guys around'
Pacers vs. Thunder: Tyrese Haliburton can't repeat heroics in Game 2 of NBA Finals — 'It feels like there's five guys around'

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Pacers vs. Thunder: Tyrese Haliburton can't repeat heroics in Game 2 of NBA Finals — 'It feels like there's five guys around'

OKLAHOMA CITY — Perhaps Tyrese Haliburton's limp is nothing. The way he gingerly exited Oklahoma City's Paycom Center was far different than the confident stroll he came into the night with. It could be some WWE-style ploy to get the Oklahoma City Thunder to take him off their 'most wanted' list, to get them to let their guard down just a bit as the scene for the 2025 NBA Finals shifts to Indianapolis after OKC tied the series 1-1 with a 123-107 win in Game 2 on Sunday. Advertisement But by his own admission, Haliburton has had 'two really poor first halves' in the first two games of the Finals. You make up for it by capping off a late comeback with a game-winning jumper that takes the air out of a home building. There was no such elixir Sunday night, though, as the swarming Thunder defense played to its reputation in stymieing Haliburton and, thus, grinding the Pacers' offense to a halt. The stat sheet says Haliburton finished with 17 points and six assists — which is actually a better scoring output than Game 1, but most of those buckets came in the fourth quarter when the Pacers couldn't mount a cursory comeback. The Thunder never sweated in Game 2 because they kept Haliburton feeling the heat, holding him to three points in the first half, as they retook control and set the terms of engagement to tie the series. It's their physical style that kept Haliburton out of the paint and roaming the perimeter, probing and praying for a crack in an impenetrable defense. The paint was off limits in Game 2 and the Pacers were relegated to passing the ball around the perimeter — perhaps paying a bit too much respect to the Thunder's historical defense. Advertisement 'This is who they are defensively,' Haliburton said. 'A lot of guys who can guard the ball fly around.' In the aftermath of a drama-less Thunder win where the most compelling moment of the evening was Hall of Fame coach Don Nelson protesting the Luka Dončić trade by wearing Dončić's sneakers upon being honored with the Chuck Daly Lifetime Achievement Award, all eyes are naturally headed to Haliburton. Baked into the Thunder's scheme is giving up a lot of 3s, and giving up a lot in the corner, which is technically the easiest shot. But when their big people are flying around to those spots, you're not playing your game — it's actually going right into the Thunder's plans. 'I think you have to choose on getting 3s your way,' Haliburton said. 'We gotta do a better job of getting downhill and just playing from the inside out. You know, they are a team, like you said, it really takes away the paint, does a great job of swarming the ball. It feels like there's five guys around here every time we're in the paint.' Tyrese Haliburton, center, reacts during the second half of Game 2 of the NBA Finals on Sunday, June 8, 2025, in Oklahoma City. (AP Photo/Julio Cortez) (ASSOCIATED PRESS) There's an up-and-down nature to Haliburton's production in these playoffs, the sterling moments immediately followed by pseudo-disappearing acts. Or at least an inability to recapture magic two nights later. This isn't a referendum on his stardom or validation to the 'overrated' talk. It just shows how difficult it is to produce on-call. Advertisement Following the wild finish in Game 2 of the semifinals against Cleveland, Haliburton put up a stinker with four points and five assists in a blowout loss at home that temporarily gave the Cavaliers hope. After he painted his Mona Lisa in Game 4 of the East finals against the Knicks — that perfect 32-15-12 game — he followed it up with eight points and six assists in a 111-94 Game 5 loss. This one followed the exact same script, even if Game 1 wasn't a statistical marvel. The Thunder just applied extra attention and Haliburton was content in not forcing the action. 'They're really physical, force the officials to let us play a little bit more,' Haliburton said. 'Gotta do a better job of playing through there.' There was light hinting by the Pacers about the Thunder being given more leeway physically, but nothing close to anything being fine-worthy. Haliburton's words were the strongest on the matter. We haven't reached the 'plant a seed with the officials' stage of the Finals quite yet, although a similar performance in Game 3 could produce some crowing from veteran coach Rick Carlisle. Carlisle wanted to take the spotlight off the 25-year-old point guard and focus on the Pacers' lack of production as a whole. Advertisement 'There's a lot more to the game than just scoring, so everybody's gotta do more,' Carlisle said. 'It starts with the best players, with Tyrese and Pascal [Siakam] and Myles [Turner] and it goes from there. People shouldn't look at his points and assists and judge how he played, or judge how any of our guys played. 'We're an ecosystem that has to function together.' Haliburton is the biggest cog in the ecosystem, but is also the player the Thunder are best equipped to handle with physical play. Lu Dort and Jalen Williams are on the All-Defensive team, and Alex Caruso might as well be — there's no rest or easy matchup for Haliburton to pick at. And with Siakam struggling to create his own offense (3-for-13 shooting), the Pacers' options to get reliable shots dwindle. It sounds simple, but the Pacers do have to screen better to spring Haliburton while he's on the ball. Caruso and Dort navigate screens as well as anyone in the league, so the Pacers have to walk the line of being physical without drawing too much of the ire from the officials. Advertisement 'Screening, there's an art to it,' Turner said. 'You have to be able to set the guy up. It's a matter of timing it and getting on the same page. There's plenty of stuff we can do. But I don't think we did a good enough job of executing.' Haliburton was far more aggressive in the fourth quarter when he played off the ball a lot more, which might be what Carlisle was hinting at when referring to an ecosystem. He's not the point guard who needs to control every possession and it's a gift in not being in the same spot all the time. That's how the Thunder were able to corral Anthony Edwards in the conference finals. They knew exactly where he would be at all times. Advertisement 'We had some success in me playing off the pitch, flying around, rather than that high-ball screen, which I feel I'm really successful at,' Haliburton said. The problem is, the Thunder are excellent at defending that and, by playing smaller, they can switch and chase, matching the speed of the Pacers' offense with some of their own. 'That gives them a chance to load up, pack the paint," Haliburton said. "They got a couple steals in there, I had some really dumb turnovers tonight. They're giving me different looks.' He's not running from accountability or the moment. It's just the moment isn't as easy as it looks and it's doubly hard to repeat such rare feats. Problem is, the Pacers need three more of those rarities just to have a shot.

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