Tuesday 21 May 2024

'ISLAND SHOTS' KJ CHOI SET SOUTH KOREAN RECORD ON 54TH BIRTHDAY


 Former world number five KJ Choi became the oldest golfer to win a tournament on the Korean PGA Tour (KPGA) at the weekend, when he prevailed on the second playoff hole at the SK Telecom Open on his 54th birthday.

Sunday's victory broke a 12-year drought on his home tour for Choi, who won eight titles on the PGA Tour between 2002 and 2011 and was heading straight back to Texas on Monday to resume life on the U.S. senior tour.

Choi started the final day at Pinx Golf Club with a five-shot lead that was whittled down through the day, and a bogey at the last meant he was forced into a playoff with Park Sang-hyun.

The 2011 Players' Championship winner thought his hopes of a fourth SK Telecom Open and 17th KPGA title had sunk in the greenside water at the first playoff hole.

"I thought my second shot had gone into the water, but seeing the gallery's reaction made me feel like the ball might still be alive," Choi told reporters on the holiday island of Jeju.

"The ball was on a small island. The shot I took there, the 'island shot', is something I will never forget. I really wanted to win this tournament."

Choi punched the ball off the rocky island and onto the green with a wedge to rescue par, which he matched on the second playoff hole to clinch the title as Park slumped to a bogey.

Asked for any suggestions for middle-aged golfers, Choi recommended that they follow the lifestyle changes he has made in recent years.

"First of all, you need to eat well and quit drinking," he said.

"And you need to sleep well. You should never do anything that is harmful to your body. Regular exercise is also necessary."

-Reuters

AUBURN RB BRIAN BATTIE CRITICAL AFTER SHOOTING, BROTHER KILLED

USA TODAY Sports 


 Auburn kick returner and running back Brian Battie remains in critical condition after a shooting early Saturday morning in Florida that claimed the life of his brother, Tommie Battie IV.

Tigers head coach Hugh Freeze said Monday that Brian Battie had a "setback" Sunday night and that he remains on a ventilator.

The shooting occurred in Sarasota. Police said there were multiple shooting victims when they arrived at a plaza. Tommie Battie IV was pronounced dead at the scene. Four others were transported to area hospitals.

Brian Battie averaged 23.0 yards on 28 kickoff returns in 2023, his first season at Auburn. He was also fourth on the team in rushing yards (227), scoring a touchdown. He played his first three seasons at South Florida, rushing for 1,185 yards during the 2022 season.

- Reuters 

NOTHING SET IN STONE FOR COPA AMERICA ROSTER, SAYS US COACH

USA TODAY Sports 


 Veterans Christian Pulisic and Weston McKennie headline the United States' 27-man training camp roster ahead of Copa America but coach Gregg Berhalter said on Monday that nothing was set in stone for the tournament.

The United States host Colombia on June 8 and five-times world champions Brazil on June 12 for a pair of friendlies, before Copa America kicks off on home soil on June 20.

"The messaging was very clear that although a large majority of this roster will make up Copa America, nothing's set in stone," said Berhalter.

"That's the important thing. We want to have a good training camp, we want to have some good performances against Colombia and Brazil and we have to monitor a couple players for their fitness standpoint and a couple others for how (they're) performing."

A number of familiar faces from Berhalter's 2022 World Cup team will return, including captain Pulisic, Juventus midfielder McKennie, goalkeeper Matt Turner and his Nottingham Forest team mate Gio Reyna.

Forward Josh Sargent returns for the first time since the 2022 World Cup in Qatar, after he withdrew from the Nations League Final camp with injury earlier this year, while Tyler Adams got the call after missing the final game of an injury stunted season with Bournemouth.

"Trying to get Tyler and Josh in a place where they're healthy, they feel great going into Copa America," said Berhalter.

"Josh has a little bit of foot swelling going on that we want to get control of. Tyler has been training... we want to build him up again in the right way to get them ready."

The Copa America runs from June 20 to July 14 with 16 participating teams, 10 from CONMEBOL and six from CONCACAF.

- Reuters 

DHL FASTEST PIT STOP AWARD | EMILIA -ROMQGNA | IMOLA


 

GET UP | T-WOLVES WILL BE NEXT GIANTS


 

THE INSIDE GUYS REACT TO TIMBERWOLVES AMAZING GAME 7


 

VICTOR WEMBANYAMA, CHET HOLMGREN HEADLINE NBA ALL-STAR ROOKIE TEAM


 NEW YORK -- The San Antonio Spurs' Victor Wembanyama was a unanimous selection for the NBA's All-Rookie team this season, the league revealed Monday.

It was no surprise, given that Wembanyama also was the unanimous choice for Rookie of the Year from the same panel of 99 voters who cast ballots for the league's awards this season.

Joining Wembanyama on the first team were the Oklahoma City Thunder's Chet Holmgren, Charlotte Hornets' Brandon Miller, Miami Heat's Jaime Jaquez Jr. and Golden State Warriors' Brandin Podziemski.

Holmgren -- the runner-up to Wembanyama in the Rookie of the Year race -- was also a unanimous first-team choice.

Miller, Jaquez and Podziemski were third, fourth and fifth, respectively, in the ROY balloting that was announced earlier this month. That was also the order they finished the All-Rookie team voting in, with Jaquez joining Wembanyama and Holmgren as the only players to appear on all 99 ballots.

The Dallas Mavericks' Dereck Lively II was a second-team All-Rookie selection, along with the Houston Rockets' Amen Thompson, Utah Jazz's Keyonte George, Thunder's Cason Wallace and Memphis Grizzlies' GG Jackson. Jackson got the last spot by one vote over the Warriors' Trayce Jackson-Davis.

The All-Defensive team selections will be revealed Tuesday, and the All-NBA team will be unveiled Wednesday. Wembanyama is a likely first-team All-Defense player -- he was No. 2 in the Defensive Player of the Year race to Minnesota's Rudy Gobert -- and surely got All-NBA consideration as well.

If Wembanyama makes the All-Defense or All-NBA team, or both, he would be the first rookie to do so since San Antonio centers Tim Duncan (1998) and David Robinson (1990), who both, like Wembanyama, were No. 1 draft picks.

Only five rookies have made All-Defense: Duncan, Robinson, Washington's Manute Bol (1986), Houston's Hakeem Olajuwon (1985) and the Milwaukee Bucks' Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (1970).

And if Wembanyama makes All-NBA, he would be the 22nd rookie to do so in NBA history. Of those, only four have done it in the past 45 seasons: Duncan, Robinson, the Chicago Bulls' Michael Jordan (1985) and the Boston Celtics' Larry Bird (1980).

VERSTAPPEN RADIO | FORMULA 1


 

Monday 20 May 2024

THE HIGHEST 2ND PLACE PREMIER LEAGUE FINISHES 🫣


 

MAN CITY FANS PARTY AS GUARDIOLA'S DORMIANANT TEAM WINS A RECORD FOURTH STRAIGH PREMIER LEAGUE TITLE

 

AP Photo

MANCHESTER, England (AP) — Manchester City fans could hardly stand the wait for the final whistle.

Not because they feared a last-minute twist and the unlikeliest of comebacks from West Ham.

The tension during the dying moments of the Premier League season at Etihad Stadium was simply because fans couldn't wait to get the party started after a record fourth straight English top flight title for Pep Guardiola's dominant team.

A 3-1 win on the day made certain of that and soon a sea of light blue shirts flooded the field. Flares and the smell of sulphur filled the air and delirious fans danced, posed for selfies and simply savored the moment - ignoring the futile pleas from the stadium announcer and messaging on the big screens instructing them to return to their seats.

Winning has become a familiar feeling in these parts. And there is no sign of it getting old.

“It feels just as amazing as the first one. We worked so hard for it,” City midfielder Kevin De Bruyne said. “It has been a tough battle with Arsenal and Liverpool this year, and you know to be here again doing something historic is amazing.”

Four titles in a row is also six in seven seasons for Guardiola, who has won 17 trophies and counting since heading to the blue half of Manchester in 2016. That number could rise to 18 as soon as next week when City plays Manchester United in the FA Cup final.

In all, Guardiola has won 38 trophies as a coach at Barcelona, Bayern Munich and City to strengthen the case for him to be considered the greatest manager of his era. By comparison, Carlo Ancelotti has won 28, including a record four Champions League titles — one more than Guardiola — and the chance to make that five when Real Madrid meets Borussia Dortmund in this year's final of European club soccer's most prestigious competition.

“Everyone in football is in awe of his (Guardiola's) coaching but there is more to it than that," outgoing West Ham manager David Moyes said. “Four in a row is incredible.”

Another question that will be debated long and hard is whether this City team should be considered English soccer's greatest of all time.

No other English team has won four titles in succession. Not during Liverpool's dominant era in the 1970s and 80s - and not during United's in the 90s and 2000s.

That alone sets City apart - and by winning the Champions League last season, it has also completed a full set of major trophies during an era of unprecedented success.

“In terms of numbers, nobody has been better than us - the records, the goals, the points and four in a row,” Guardiola said. “If I land here tomorrow and you say I will win six Premier Leagues in seven years, I would say ‘Are you crazy?’ It’s impossible. We have done something unbelievable.”

Guardiola took over a team that was already among the wealthiest in the world after being bought by the ruling family of Abu Dhabi in 2008 and had won two Premier League titles before his arrival. He has gone on to create a near-unstoppable force domestically and continues to hold off the challengers to City's throne.

Arsenal has taken up the fight, previously offered by United and then Liverpool - and pushed City to the wire this season, having fallen away during the run-in a year earlier.

Still, Mikel Arteta's team couldn't quite get over the line and finished two points behind the champion after a 2-1 win against Everton in its final game on Sunday.

Arsenal looks likeliest to push City closest in the coming years, especially now that Jurgen Klopp has stepped down at Liverpool, while Man United looks set for a period of more upheaval.

Whether Arsenal will be able to go one better in the future remains to be seen, given City's financial power to strengthen further and the age of key players like footballer of the year Phil Foden and back-to-back Premier League golden boot-winner Erling Haaland.

“We got the message from Mikel and his players. We have to make the right decisions in the next years because they are here to stay,” Guardiola said. “They are so young and have experience in the Champions League. For two years (they) were close.”

How long Guardiola stays on could have a big bearing on City's continued rule. His contract runs until the end of next season.

The outcome of the 115 charges made against City for alleged financial wrongdoing could also be significant. City denies wrongdoing.

That fight is off the field and still to come.

Right now, as far as City's fans are concerned, another party has only just begun.



SO CLOSE

Arsenal could do no more. A 2-1 win against Everton at Emirates Stadium meant City had to beat West Ham to retain its title. It also meant the Gunners lost just once from the turn of the year to the end of the season.

That 2-0 home defeat against Aston Villa proved to be decisive though, giving City an advantage it never relinquished.

“What can I say? I feel sorry for all the Arsenal fans. We gave our best but it wasn’t enough,” Arsenal forward Kai Havertz said. “Maybe in two or three months we can say it was a good fight. Right now I feel like we deserve more.”

Having spent $138 million on Declan Rice and also recruiting Havertz ahead of this season, Arteta will have to weigh up how to improve his team further.

A prolific striker may be his priority, but his team only scored five fewer goals than City and ended with the same goal difference.

“Now we have to be more determined, very courageous, very ambitious, and we need to go to a different level. We need to deliver,” Arteta said.


UNITED PAIN

Manchester United must beat City in Saturday’s FA Cup final to secure European soccer for next season.

Even a 2-0 win over Brighton couldn’t prevent Erik ten Hag’s team from finishing eighth in the standings — United’s lowest in the Premier League era.

“It is not good enough by far,” Ten Hag said. “Although we had less than 60 points two years ago, 58 points, eighth is the worst performance. It is the truth, but we should have done better.”

Newcastle finished seventh, above United on goal difference, after a 4-2 win at Brentford.

Chelsea beat Bournemouth 2-1 and finished sixth in the table, with Moises Caicedo scoring a goal from just past the halfway line.

Mauricio Pochettino has managed to salvage a troubled season by qualifying for Europe, yet his future has become a source of increased speculation.

“That is a question for the owners and the sporting director,” he said.


KLOPP’S FAREWELL

Jurgen Klopp’s Liverpool reign ended with a 2-0 win against Wolves.

While his farewell campaign ultimately ended in disappointment as Liverpool’s title bid fizzled out, Klopp’s status as an Anfield and Premier League icon is secure.

The German is standing down after winning a full set of major trophies in more than eight years at the club.

“When you are in it, you forget sometimes how great it is,” Klopp said. “You take it for granted. Now I stand here, I’m just so happy I’m a part of the club’s history. It’s wonderful.”

With Champions League qualification already secured, fourth-place Aston Villa was routed 5-0 at Crystal Palace.

Tottenham, in fifth, ended the season with a 3-0 win at last-place Sheffield United.


LUTON RELEGATED

Luton's relegation was confirmed after a 4-2 loss at home against Fulham.

Nottingham Forest, which was one place above Luton, beat second from bottom Burnley 2-1.

- JAMES ROBSON

TIMBERWOLVES VS. NUGGETS: NBA WORLD REACTS TO MINNESOTA'S 20-POINT GAME 7 COMEBACK VICTORY

DENVER, COLORADO - MAY 19: Anthony Edwards #5 and Karl-Anthony Towns #32 of the Minnesota Timberwolves celebrate after winning Game Seven of the Western Conference Second Round Playoffs against the Denver Nuggets at Ball Arena on May 19, 2024 in Denver, Colorado. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by C. Morgan Engel/Getty Images 


 The basketball world was in shock as the Minnesota Timberwolves climbed back from a 20-point deficit to defeat the Nuggets, 98-90, in Denver during Sunday's winner-take-all Game 7. The Western Conference series saw its fair share of lopsided games and it looked like this would be another blowout. However, Denver had a disastrous third quarter and the Timberwolves stayed poised, despite Anthony Edwards having a slow start. 

Patience and determination led to the Timberwolves' first Western Conference Finals since 2004, as well as plenty of great reactions on social media. 

Philadelphia 76ers' star Joel Embiid kept it short and simple when describing what most of us were feeling when the comeback was completed: "WOW"

The win was a full team effort with six Timberwolves reaching double-digit scoring. They were deeper than the Nuggets, who relied on Nikola Jokic and Jamal Murray scoring 69 of Denver's total points. Atlanta Hawks star Trae Young was impressed with Minnesota as a whole.

"Wolves got a SQUAD man!" he said.

Edwards did not have a great offensive game as he got 16 points on 6-for-24 shooting. However, he contributed with eight rebounds, seven assists and two steals while also doing a better job locking in Murray in the second half. 

Utah Jazz guard Jordan Clarkson was one of many praising the young star.

Meanwhile, Karl-Anthony Towns put up 23 points, going 8-of-14 from the field and completed a double-double with 12 rebounds. NBA icon Jamal Crawford approached the Timberwolves star duo after their win. He did not say what he told them, but he did share a video of the moment on social media. 

Crawford was not the only one impressed with them. Milwaukee Bucks point guard Patrick Beverly praised Towns' clutch performance.

"I don't wanna hear anymore bad talk about Kat ever. He has been locked in," Beverly wrote.

He also compared Edwards and Towns to the Chicago Bulls' legendary duo of Michael Jordan and Scottie Pippen.

Jaden McDaniels also had outstanding stats with 23 points on 70% shooting, along with six rebounds, two steals and one block. 

One of his (almost) highlights was a dunk attempt with 20 seconds remaining. It was unsuccessful, but many still appreciated his killer instinct. Orlando Magic star Paolo Banchero said the "bounce lob attempt was crazy" and shared a post that described McDaniels as a "psychopath."

Sunday was not the first time the Nuggets blew a large lead while playing a Game 7 at home. They were up by 17 points against Portland in 2019 in the conference semifinals, and former Trail Blazer Evan Turner has not forgotten.

"This look like game 7 in back in 2019 tbh," Turner said.

The Timberwolves will now have to battle Luka Doncic and the Dallas Mavericks for a spot in the NBA Finals. Bulls shooting guard Alex Caruso is already looking forward to the upcoming series.

"Luke or Ant coming out of the west," he wrote.

The Timberwolves will be hosting the first two games, and Edwards told NBA legend Charles Barkley that it was time for him to make a trip to Minnesota.

"Bring ya ass," Edwards told him.

Game 1 of the Western Conference Finals is set for Wednesday, May 22 at 8:30 p.m. ET.

- Isabel Gonzalez


SILENCING DOUBTERS, XANDER SCHAUFFELE TAKES CONTROL OF HIS NARRATIVE WITH WIRE-TO-WIRE PGA CHAMPIONSHIP WIN

Getty


 LOUISVILLE -- Narratives change because people never stay the same. That was evident Sunday at Valhalla Golf Club as Xander Schauffele won the 106th playing of the PGA Championship while Bryson DeChambeau, who finished second by a shot, simultaneously won over an entire city with his antics and his play.

It was about this time last week that Schauffele was licking wounds Rory McIlroy inflicted upon him when the latter went out and ran away with the Wells Fargo Championship. But it is Schauffele who had the last laugh -- at least for now -- as he passed McIlroy in the Official World Golf rankings, moving to No. 2 overall after his victory at Valhalla.

It was not a win many predicted. 

Even when Schauffele led after 18, 36 and 54 holes, old stories persisted of him being allergic to major championship leads and cowering from the lights when they at their most luminous. How could they not? 

Schauffele had sat in first or second entering the final round of a major or The Players Championship three times in his career; he lost all three opportunities. Even worse, he had entered such third rounds inside the top three on the leaderboard three times; he lost all three of those opportunities, too.

"I don't think I'd ever look at it as lacking," Schauffele said of past bruisings. "I looked at it as someone that is trying really hard and needs more experience. All those close calls for me, even last week, that sort of feeling, it gets to you at some point.

"It just makes this even sweeter. I know it's a major, but just winning in general, this is as sweet as it gets for me."

Peers and those around Schauffele's circle have insisted that he had what it takes to win the biggest events; still, evidence to the contrary began to pile up. Such criticism is a privilege, of course. It's not like Tom Hoge, Alex Noren nor Thomas Detry get criticized when they come up short. Just the players who are perceived to be otherwise great; the ones we believe are good enough to be champions.

That is how narratives work.

Others have gone through similar struggles early in their careers. Phil Mickelson comes to mind. Though Lefty has won six major championships, he entered his 34-year-old season on the PGA Tour with a cacophony of hot takes that he simply could not win the biggest events. In retrospect, it makes the murmurs around Schauffele, who is only 30, seem more like whispers.

The question with Schauffele at these big events often became, "How will he lose this one?" After a stunning 31 on the front nine Sunday, it seemed like we got our answer when he made bogey at the second-easiest hole on the course, the 590-yard par-5 10th, after a series of poor decisions and possibly even poorer shots.

But narratives change because people do.

Schauffele birdied the next two holes to regain control of the tournament. Five pars later, and he stood on the 72nd hole knowing that, two pairings ahead of him, DeChambeau had delivered the moment of the tournament to that point. Tying Schauffele at 20 under with a birdie at his 72nd hole, DeChambeau responded with what looked like it was going to be a cartwheel that turned into a hammering fist pump.

Changing a narrative is a hell of a way to describe DeChambeau's week, too. The irony of him leaving the PGA Tour to take Saudi Arabian millions only to become the most beloved he has ever been by golf fans is as amusing as it is confusing. 

Yet here we are. 

It is impossible to overstate how pro-Bryson the Louisville crowds were this week. On Sunday, they poured into every crevice of the property and hollered encouragement after each of his shots. Resounding shouts of, "Try to shoot 50 today, Bryson!" and "world's greatest YouTuber!" replaced what used to be jeers when he teed off.

(I did not hear, as Bryson purported at the Masters earlier this year, anyone yelling that they are grateful for what he does online. But the shouts were not far off.)

DeChambeau delivered the Valhalla crowd a show because he is, at his heart, a showman. His narrative has changed because he has changed. He understands now that he has two gifts: He is amazing at golf, and he is a world-class entertainer.

DeChambeau now has an outlet for both -- the former at major championships and the latter on his YouTube channel where he often tries to do crazy things like hit 215 miles-per-hour ball speed or break 50 from forward tees.

"It's actually funny; YouTube has helped me understand that a little bit more," DeChambeau explained about his altered mentality of embracing big moments and delivering joy to fans. "When the moment comes, knowing what to do, what to say, how to act is really important. You know, when I was younger, I didn't understand what it was. Yeah, I would have great celebrations and whatnot, but I didn't know what it meant and what I was doing it necessarily for. Now, I'm doing it a lot more for the fans and for the people around and trying to be a bit of an entertainer that plays good golf every once in a while."

That is how careers go. They ebb and flow. You learn how to play majors and how to celebrate them, too.

Schauffele's tee shot on No. 18 did not get a great result. With his feet in a bunker up the left, he had a hanging lie from which the ball could have flown a number of different directions. Instead, he hit a big, hooking rope that ended up in a perfect spot to get up and down for birdie, the all-time major scoring record and the PGA Championship.

He stepped into a stunning silence given the size of the crowd on Sunday and drove a low, spinning chip right up next to the hole. It was a dagger into the championship itself.

That is how narratives die.

"Definitely a chip on the shoulder there," Schauffele said of the narrative surrounding his play. "It just is what it is at the end of the day. You guys are asking the questions, probing, and I have to sit here and answer it. It's a lot easier to answer it with this thing sitting next to me now, obviously. It's just fuel, fuel to my fire. It always has been growing up, and it certainly was leading up to this."

One day we may look back at Schauffele's career and laugh at anyone ever believing he was unable to close out a big-time tournament. He might win three or four or five of these. That's how good he is.

But there will only ever be one victory that ended the narrative. Schauffele doing it with a 65 when the player ahead of him -- potentially breaking a narrative of his own -- shot 64 makes it even more satisfying and legitimate.

"It's just noise," Schauffele concluded. "That's what I think. I thought I was [good enough to win a major]. Not that people saying it made me think that. I just felt like I've done enough work, I'm good enough to do it. I just needed to shut my mind up and actually do it."

All major winners are champions. That's how majors work. Not all of them flip narratives like Schauffele did Sunday at Valhalla. In 18 holes of golf, he went from "best who can't win the big one" to "actually, maybe he's going to win a lot of them."

That's how drastically this major result shifted the trajectory of Schauffele's career. 

His narrative changed because he did something he's never done before. He closed out the best in the world when it mattered the most. 

It's hard to imagine erasing a narrative any more definitively than that.

- Kyle Porter

WHAT THE IMPROBABLE ANTHONY EDWARDS MEANS TO THIS MINNESOTA TIMBERWOLVES


 IN HIS ROLE as the executive director of USA Basketball, it's not often Grant Hill has a hard time contacting players he's considering for the team. Even in non-Olympic years, that's a call virtually every NBA superstar will take or return quickly.

But, in his attempts to assemble the 2023 FIBA World Cup squad, there was one star Hill couldn't reach.

"I couldn't get ahold of Ant," Hill told ESPN of the then-21-year-old who has taken the league by storm. "I talked to [Minnesota Timberwolves president] Tim Connelly. I talked to all these people around him. But I just kind of got the vibes that he was on the fence about it and didn't really know why."

Anthony Edwards was young and had little experience with the FIBA game, having participated in a pair of training camps, but never playing for the national team. Not in a million years did Hill believe Edwards might actually be questioning whether he belonged on Team USA.

"I think it was the uncertainty of doing something outside of his norm," Edwards' longtime manager, Justin Holland, told ESPN. "He'd never been out of the country. He'd always liked to work out by himself in the summers. So it was more about putting himself into an environment he's not all the way in control of."

Such introspection is difficult to reconcile with the ultra-confident, effervescent young star who has become the face of this season's playoffs. But it's a reflection of just how far Edwards has come in a year: suffering from imposter syndrome to the poster child for this new generation of NBA superstars.

Just two weeks ago, the Timberwolves swept one of Edwards' idols, Kevin Durant, and the Phoenix Suns in the first round. The Wolves have pushed the defending champion Denver Nuggets further than any opponent has in two years -- to a Game 7 on Sunday (8 p.m. ET on TNT).

Not only did he become, in head coach Steve Kerr's words, "the man" for Team USA last summer, he's breathed new life into a Timberwolves franchise that has toiled in mediocrity and dysfunction since trading Kevin Garnett in 2007.

Throughout this season, the 22-year-old Edwards has been, despite his youth, Minnesota's unquestioned leader on the court and off, in moments public and private, and he has fueled his team to within one game of its first Western Conference finals appearance in 20 years.

IT DIDN'T SEEM like there was a single moment during Minnesota's 45-point Game 6 win Thursday night that ESPN's cameras weren't trained on Edwards. From his 11 points during what proved to be a decisive 24-2 run in the first quarter. To his gestures throughout the game, egging the crowd on to keep cheering "Wolves in 7!"

They also caught a handful of moments that captured something far more subtle -- something team insiders and those close to Edwards say has not only cemented the team's culture, but has also led to Minnesota's most wins since 2003-04, when the Wolves made their one and only appearance in the Western Conference finals. It's these displays of leadership, despite turning 22 just 10 months ago and still being on his rookie contract.

"I've never seen a leader who was able to just ... he acts like he's 30," Timberwolves center Naz Reid told ESPN. "You would think he's 30."

When the Wolves built their lead to 26-11 with 2:53 remaining in the first quarter of Game 6, Edwards ran into the team's huddle during a timeout. Karl-Anthony Towns, Nickeil Alexander-Walker, Jaden McDaniels and Reid were sitting on the bench, looking up at Edwards. Kyle Anderson and Rudy Gobert were at his side, doing the same.

"This is what I was talking about the other day," Edwards told them. "We get a lead and get comfortable."

Holding an NBA playoffs towel and a water bottle in his left hand, he gestured powerfully with his right, emphasizing each word.

"Keep your foot on the gas," he implored.

And they did. The lead never shrunk to fewer than 12 points, and extended to 50 midway through the fourth quarter.

"Just the way he's grown from, I always say my second year, his rookie year, just from the way he's grown as a basketball player and that person," Reid said, "It's completely night and day."

Afterward, Edwards, who scored a game-high 27 points, used his postgame interview to compliment Jaden McDaniels for what he said was the team's best performance of the night.

"This guy right here," he said, pointing at McDaniels. "He led us tonight. Everybody on our team is a leader, and he was a leader tonight. He stepped it up big time."

McDaniels, who had 21 points on 8-for-10 shooting, responded in kind. "My teammates give me confidence. Ant gives me the most confidence."

He's not alone.

In the postgame news conference, Edwards praised Towns for his defense on Nikola Jokic and provided a glimpse into how he's tried to lead the foul-prone Towns.

"He's been guarding him the whole series. He's been doing an outstanding job," he said. "The main thing today was his ass stayed out of foul trouble, like I told him in the Phoenix series. ... I cussed him out. I cussed him out every chance I got. Stop f---ing fouling. I think you guys see it. If KAT don't foul, we pretty much can win the game, every time. Tonight, he had three fouls. But he only had three. He didn't have five.

"I told him today, 'We're thankful you didn't foul ... because if you foul, we lose. You're the best matchup we have for Jokic.'"

These are but a few of the public moments, from one singular game, which show Edwards guiding his teammates, young and old. But there are many more that happen off camera, heavy lifting behind the scenes.

Like when he texted his teammates after Game 1, saying he didn't like the way he shot the ball and was going to a local college to shoot the night before Game 2. Anyone who wanted to join him was welcome, he said. Reid, McDaniels and Alexander-Walker received the invitation. But it wasn't exactly optional.

"That's what you want, right?" Reid told ESPN. "For your best player to lead by example, not words? ... We're all super young, but we all know that the sky's the limit for all of us, especially him obviously, but he wants to bring us along and that's dope."


EDWARDS HEARD THE chatter -- and knew it had to stop.

When Towns was out for five weeks following surgery on his meniscus in March, the Timberwolves went 12-6. Questions began percolating about whether the team might be better off without him.

As soon as the anti-Towns narrative began, Edwards shut down anyone who dared suggest it.

"He's an uplifter," assistant coach Micah Nori told ESPN. "Everything he does is to try to uplift."

Edwards stayed in close touch with Towns while he was out, making sure he felt included -- and needed -- while he was rehabilitating, and publicly celebrated his return.

Towns was touched.

"I've always strived to be the best teammate I could possibly be," Towns told ESPN. "From day one, I've made everything about winning here in Minnesota, as much as people have tried to discredit it.

"So to have someone come in here and immediately see who I am as a person and as a teammate and respect that and never diminish it is humbling."

Towns has had a long, often frustrating history since the Wolves drafted him No. 1 overall in 2015 and struggled to find him the right co-star. First he was paired with fellow No. 1 overall pick Andrew Wiggins. Then there was the soul-crushing Jimmy Butler experience. And finally the personal palette cleanser with his close friend and former No. 2 overall pick, D'Angelo Russell.

None of those pairings worked, which left Towns frustrated and sometimes forgotten as the Wolves struggled for relevancy in a stacked Western Conference.

When the Wolves drafted Edwards No. 1 in 2020, it was essentially their last chance to get it right with Towns. It has worked out better than anyone could have imagined.

"It's led to a friendship and a relationship that I don't think many people get to have," Towns said. "I don't know many NBA players that get to have the kind of relationship where you truly know that it's purely love for each other. As much as he wants to see me win is more. I want to see him win even more."

- Ramona Shelburne, ESPN Senior Writer

KLOPP ERA ENDS WITH VICTORY AS LIVERPOOL WAITS FOR ARNE SLOT

Klopp's farewell was filled with emotion and joy, as you'd expect, and he did his best to prime the raucous Reds faithful for their new coach, Arne Slot. John Powell/Liverpool FC via Getty Images


 LIVERPOOL -- Doubters. Believers. Conquerors. These three words on a banner at Anfield's Kop End, with each separated by an array of trophies, succinctly summed up Jurgen Klopp's 8½-year reign as Liverpool manager. As the curtain fell on his time at the helm, Klopp did his best to convince every supporter inside the stadium following the 2-0 win over Wolves that nothing will change once he walks out the door. However, once the euphoria of his emotional farewell subsides, reality might bite hard.

Arne Slot, the Feyenoord coach, has been chosen to fill the void left by Klopp, but the 45-year-old should probably avoid sitting down to watch how his predecessor's final day at Anfield played out unless he fancies waking up in the middle of the night in a cold sweat, wondering what on earth he is about to walk into when he starts his new job.

Make no mistake: managing Liverpool is an incredible honour. They are one of the biggest clubs in the world, a team with a huge fanbase and a history that only Real Madrid can truly put in the shade. They have a team of stars, led by the likes of Mohamed Salah, Virgil van Dijk, Trent Alexander-Arnold and Alisson Becker, and emerging talent in the form of Jarell Quansah, Curtis Jones and Harvey Elliott.

But here is the catch. The fans are utterly in love with Klopp because he restored Liverpool to greatness, made them a club that the best players wanted to play for again and delivered the biggest trophies. Slot has plenty of advantages to look forward to when he walks into Klopp's office and sits behind his desk, but if he saw and heard the adulation directed at Klopp before, during and after Sunday's victory, he might just think he has accepted an impossible job.

Few managers enjoy the privilege of leaving on their own terms. Football is such a ruthless business that even the most successful are fired when results take a nosedive. Both Jose Mourinho (Chelsea) and Claudio Ranieri (Leicester) were dismissed within months of winning the Premier League title and Klopp hasn't delivered that trophy to Anfield since 2020. But because he has rebuilt Liverpool and restored the club's pride and belief since arriving in Oct. 2015, Klopp has become perhaps the most popular manager of any club during the Premier League era.

For weeks now, since he announced his decision to step down from his role in January, the Liverpool fans have sung Klopp's name and also dreaded this day. As the fans' song goes, "I'm in love with him and I feel fine," though this was the day when it all came to an end. The banners -- "Danke Jurgen," "Jurgener Believers," "Boss" -- illustrated the affection for the former Borussia Dortmund coach, and so did the singing.

"Thanks for ignoring my request not to sing my song completely for the last six weeks," Klopp said after the game, when he addressed the crowd from the centre-circle. "If you sing it next year, that would be funny."

If Liverpool fans are singing Klopp's name next season, it probably won't be funny for Slot. The new man needs everyone to fall in line behind him -- from players and club staff to the supporters -- just as they have done for Klopp, but the danger for Slot is that he is judged alongside Klopp and that seems an unfair measuring stick for any future Liverpool manager, as a coach and as a personality.

But Klopp did his best for his successor. When Sir Alex Ferguson retired after 27 glorious years as Manchester United manager in 2013, he delivered a message to the club's fans saying, "The most important thing now is to get behind our new manager." That was David Moyes, who was fired within 10 months; United have been chewing up and spitting out managers ever since.

Will it be different at Anfield? Time will tell, but Slot can at least rest assured that he has the backing, and blessing, of the outgoing coach. "The new manager, I want you to sing his name," Klopp said. "Arne Slot, na na na na na!



"When the next season starts, go full throttle into it with the new manager. When you start, you keep believing. Don't stop believing. I saw a lot of people crying, same to me too, but change is good. If you go with the right attitude, everything will be fine."

The fans did sing Slot's name, just as Klopp said, but they quickly reverted to sing Klopp's. They wanted one last fist pump to the crowd, which he delivered, and he lingered on the pitch to make sure he soaked up every final bit of love and affection.

By that stage of the proceedings after full-time, he had changed into a red hoodie with "I'll never walk alone again" on the back. He said he was now "one of you" when talking to the fans and insisted that the future can be bright.

"It doesn't feel like an end, just feels like a start," Klopp said. "People told me I turned you from doubters to believers. That's not true. Believing is what you do yourself, you did it. Nobody tells you to stop believing.

"This club is in a better moment than for a long time. We decide if you believe or don't believe, trust or don't trust. Since today, I am one of you and I believe in you."

Fans were crying in the stands as Klopp gave his address and then walked around the pitch before heading up the tunnel for the final time, after soaking in the atmosphere and emotions on display for nearly two full hours after the game had ended.

It has been an unforgettable 8½ years, perhaps unsurpassable, but that is the task he has handed down to Arne Slot.

Good luck, Arne. You will really need it.

- Mark Ogden, Senior Writer, ESPN FC

DENVER NUGGETS VS. MINNESOTA TIMBERWOLVES | GAME 7 HIGHLIGHTS | NBA PLAYOFFS 2024


 

'FURY GOT HUMBLED' | BOXING PROS REACT TO USYK VS. FURY FIGHT


 

MAN CITY MAKE HISTORY WITH FOURTH STRAIGHT PREMIER LEAGUE TITLE



 MANCHESTER, England -- There was no drama at the Etihad Stadium. There was no repeat of Queens Park Rangers in 2012 or Aston Villa in 2022. Instead, in keeping with a run-in which has seen Manchester City showcase just why relentless consistency remains their most impressive characteristic, West Ham United were dispatched 3-1 with minimal fuss on the final day as Pep Guardiola's team lifted a record fourth successive Premier League title.

It didn't matter that, 200 miles away in north London, Arsenal beat Everton 2-1. In truth, it hasn't mattered much what Arsenal have done since the turn of the year. Mikel Arteta's side have dropped just five points in 2024 and it still wasn't good enough. City last lost a league game in December and their record over the final stretch reads: played six, won six, 20 goals scored and two conceded. No wonder Arsenal found it so hard to keep up.

"In terms of numbers, nobody has been better than us: the records, the goals, the points and four in a row," said Guardiola after the match. "If I land here tomorrow and you say I will win six Premier Leagues in seven years, I would say 'are you crazy?' It's impossible. We have done something unbelievable.

While 115 Premier League charges for alleged breaches of financial rules hang over City, there will always be questions about how all of this has come together. But what's not in doubt is the genius of Guardiola and the ruthless efficiency of his players

Other clubs have spent similar amounts of money on transfers and wages, but no one else has come close to winning six titles in seven years. It's domination that not even Liverpool of the 1970s and 1980s and Manchester United of the 1990s and 2000s can match, and with Guardiola insisting he's intent of seeing out the final year of his contract, you wouldn't bet against City making it five in a row next season. Taking in spells at Barcelona and Bayern Munich, Guardiola has now won the league title in 12 of his 15 top-flight seasons as a manager.

One of his hallmarks is a constant drive to do more and after Phil Foden had put City 2-0 up inside the first 20 minutes, he dragged Rodri over for a chat. As a party atmosphere erupted around the Etihad, Guardiola grabbed the midfielder's arm to vigorously pass on more instructions. Rodri argued back and was eventually ushered away by Bernardo Silva. It was a moment which encapsulated Guardiola's drive to succeed. Even standing on the brink of history and the title party warming up, he still wasn't satisfied.

It was fitting that Foden and Rodri scored the goals to get City over the line, undoubtedly Guardiola's two best players this season. If the treble campaign was all about Erling Haaland, this one was about Foden. The 23-year-old scored his 18th and 19th league goals -- the first after just 78 seconds -- and if it hadn't been for some committed West Ham defending, he would have walked off with another hat-trick. The Premier League player of the year is a champion for the sixth time.

"I never get bored of it, you want this feeling every time," said Foden. "When you win something there is no better feeling. I want to keep winning as much as I can.

"It's so hard to put into words what we've done today. No team has ever done it and we've put ourselves into the history books.

"To win the Premier League four times, no team has ever done it before, so to do it means we're up there with the best teams of all time.

Guardiola said he knew from the first preseason training session in Japan that there would be no treble hangover and he's been proved right. When Arsenal and Liverpool both dropped points on the same day in April, he told his players they couldn't pass up the opportunity to capitalise and from that point on, they were perfect.

"[To win] six Premier Leagues in seven years, in this country with the modern football and the teams and everything," Guardiola reflected post-match. "The team and the organisation surprises me: it is an incredible club."

No other team in the history of English football has won four top-flight titles in a row and City could yet become the first team to win back-to-back league and cup doubles if they beat Manchester United in the FA Cup final at Wembley next Saturday (stream LIVE at 10 a.m. ET on ESPN+).

The inevitable question, after the trophy presentation table has been dismantled and the streamers cleared from the pitch, is how much more can they win? Arsenal's form -- winning 28 games and amassing 89 points -- has presented the illusion of a title race, but City have been so consistent that even in the crucial moments there has been remarkably little jeopardy.

While Arsenal were pushed to their limits, City's fourth title in a row was achieved without Kevin De Bruyne for five months and Haaland for two. Guardiola will strengthen his squad again over the summer and the challenge laid down to the rest of the Premier League will grow again.

On three occasions, City have had to come from behind to win a game on the final day to lift the title. There was none of the same drama against West Ham but the ending was familiar; Guardiola and his players on the pitch with the trophy.


Sunday 19 May 2024

MANCHESTER CITY MAKES HISTORY | PREMIER LEAGUE 2023-24


 

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LIVERPOOL BIDS FAREWELL TO JÜRGEN KLOPP


 

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MANCHESTER UNITED COULD WIN THE PREMIER LEAGUE | MEME

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MANCHESTER UNITED MEME 😄🤣

 


*FACT FILE*🤌🏽😹


*1. Man city - 88points*

*2. Arsenal - 86 points*

*4. Liverpool- 79 points*

*5. Aston Villa - 68* points*

*6. Man U - 54 points*


*Man U can't get top 4 in epl so we took them to laliga😂😂😂😂*

*1. Real Madrid - 93 points*

*2. Barca - 76 points*

*3. Girona- 75 points*

*4. Athletico Madrid - 70 points*

*5. Athletic club - 62 points*

*6. Man U - 54 points*


*Man U can't get top 4 in laliga so we took them to serie A*😂😂😂

*1. Inter millan - 92 points*

*2. AC millan - 74 points*

*3. Bologna - 67 points* 

*4. Juve - 67 points*

*5. Atalanta - 63 points*

*6. Roma - 60 points*

*7. Lazio - 59 points*

*8. Man U - 54 points*


*Man U can't get top 4 in Serie A, so Let's take them to Ligue 1 😂😂😂*

*1. PSG - 70 points*

*2. Monaco - 64 points*

*3. Lille - 58 points*

*4. Brest - 58 points*

*5. Man U - 54 points*


*Man U can not make it to top 4 even in the french legue, Let's take them to the Portuguese league*😂😂😂

*1. Sporting - 87 points*

*2. Benfica - 79 points*

*3. Porto - 69 points*

*4. SC Braga - 68 points*

*5. Man U - 54 points*


*Now that they can't make it to top 4 even in Portuguese league, Let's take them to our Uganda league.*

*1. Villa 57*

*2. Bul 56*

*3. Vipers 56*

*4. Kitara 55*

*5. Man U 54*


*Now that they can't make it to top 4 even in Uganda league, Let's take them to Zambian league*😂😂

*1. Red arrows - 64 points*

*2. Zesco united - 55 points*

*3. Man U - 54 points*

*4. Power dynamos- 51 points*


*Huraaayyyyy!!!!! Finally Man U got a place in the Zambian Super league*🏃🏃🏃😂😂😂😂

SUPERSTARS GRACED THE TYSON FURY VS. OLEKSANDR USYK BOUT IN RIYADH

 




















TYSON FURY MEME | TYSON FURY VS. OLEKSANDR USYK


 

TYSON FURY VS OLEKSANDR USYK RIYADH FIGHT | PICTURE'S