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Tag: Eastern Conference

  • ‘On to the next’: Atlanta Hawks are off for Thanksgiving, back on Fri. vs Cavs

    The Atlanta Hawks will be off tonight and Thursday night before hosting the Cleveland Cavaliers on Friday night at State Farm Arena, where the Hawks are 3-4 this season. Photo by Donnell Suggs/The Atlanta Voice

    First-year Atlanta Hawks guard Nickeil Alexander-Walker sat down in front of the reporter’s cameras, voice recorders, and notebooks after practice on Wednesday afternoon. From the look of his body language, the veteran Canadian guard was looking forward to having the next couple of nights off.

    Asked if he was looking forward to having Wednesday and Thursday night off before the Hawks host the Cleveland Cavaliers at State Farm Arena on Friday night, Alexander-Walker confirmed what his body was already giving off.

    “For sure,” he said. “You get time to relax, and it’s always good to mix in rest. You feel a lot lighter.”

    Alexander-Walker hasn’t gotten much rest this season, as he has played in 17 of the Hawks’ 19 games. Primarily a starter, Alexander-Walker is averaging 31.6 minutes per game to go along with nearly 19 points, three rebounds, and just over three assists per game.

    He added that it would be good to “get away from the X’s and O’s for a bit.”

    On Tuesday, the Hawks played like they were ready for Thanksgiving break, falling behind by 20 points to the Washington Wizards en route to a 19-point loss to one of the worst teams in the National Basketball Association (NBA).

    Atlanta, 11-8 overall, is currently in sixth place in the Eastern Conference and will have a tough string of games coming up. Along with hosting Cleveland, the Hawks will play back-to-back road games at Philadelphia and Detroit on Sunday and Monday, respectively.

    The Hawks will return to Atlanta to host the Denver Nuggets on Friday, December 5, before traveling to the Nation’s Capital to face the Wizards again on Saturday, December 6.

    Second-year Hawks forward Zaccharie Risacher (above) is averaging 11.7 points per game. He scored 17 points in the Hawks’ loss at Washington on Tuesday, Nov. 25, 2025. Photo by Donnell Suggs/The Atlanta Voice

    On Wednesday, Hawks second-year forward Zaccharie Risacher could be seen working on his three-point shot with coaches. Risacher was coming off screens and catch-and-shoots, trying to get his stroke back. A night earlier in Washington, he scored 17 points during what would be a blowout loss and one of the many mundane regular-season games in the NBA. The game wasn’t meaningless to Risacher, who broke a single-digit scoring streak he had been going through. Risacher scored just five points against the Charlotte Hornets the last time the Hawks were at home last Sunday, and eight points at New Orleans last Saturday. The Hawks won both games, but are a better team when Risacher, who averages 11.7 points, 2.8 rebounds per game, and shoots 44.6% from the field, adds his two cents.

    Risacher scored just two points in the Hawks’ loss in San Antonio a week ago.

    The Atlanta Hawks are 3-4 at home this season, but Alexander-Walker understands that the NBA season is indeed a marathon.

    “On to the next,” he said. “You’ve got to learn from your wins and your losses.”

    Donnell Suggs

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  • Philadelphia Union Crash Out of the MLS Cup Playoffs – Philadelphia Sports Nation

    Union

    There are three guarantees in life: Death, taxes, and the Philadelphia Union’s season ending heartbreakingly. Unfortunately, the Union fell to rivals NYCFC 1-0, bringing the 2025 campaign to a close.

    Frustratingly Sloppy

    If the Philadelphia Union looked like a team that sat idle for 22 days, that is because they were. Whether the long hiatus is to blame or not, the Union performed uncharacteristically sloppily on Sunday. Ultimately, the Union sent 18 shots but only mustered 5 on goal. 

    From the start, it seemed the Union was doomed. The club played right into NYCFC’s hands, which is exactly what their rivals from New York wanted. In typical fashion, the Union would once again be sent home by the foot of Maxi Morales. In their 4 playoff matches against one another, Morales has contributed 6 goal contributions. 

    Union centerback Olwethu Makhanya was phenomenal in his first season as a starting CB. However, NYCFC was able to pull him out of position multiple times throughout the game. To make matters worse, goalkeeper Andre Blake had to leave in the 60th minute after reaggravating his hamstring injury.

    Ultimately, what did the Union in was the offensive woes. Throughout the entirety of the match, the Union never built a truly threatening attack. They were able to create 3 truly threatening chances. First, Danley had a free header 3 yards in front of the goal and ultimately whiffed on his header. On the other two, Frankie Westfield had the game-tying goal on his foot. One, Westfield sent into the Delaware River. The other, the Union’s former backup and homegrown stud goalkeeper, Matt Freese, would snuff out.

    This was not the first time a Union homegrown keeper would break the fan base’s hearts. In 2022, John McCarthy would close down the Union in the MLS Cup, winning MVP for the game.

    Where Do the Union Go Now?

    In a season that was supposed to kick off a new era, the Union shockingly found themselves adding to their thin trophy case. Unfortunately, the Union will have to take a look at the older pieces of their team. Alejadro Bedoya has likely played his last minutes with the team. Simultaneously, while Andre Blake is still a top goalkeeper in MLS, perhaps it is time to look into his inability to stay healthy.

    Ultimately, the Union brought home the Supporters Shield, which by default makes 2025 a roaring success. While losing in the MLS Cup playoffs once again will sour a great season, it pushes the focus to 2026. Now, Union and 2025 MLS Coach of the Year, Bradley Carnell, has built a solid foundation.

     

    Featured Image: Wes Shepherd/PHLSportsNation

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    I am a Graduate Student at Goldey-Beacom College in Delaware. Having earned my Business with … More about Ryan Hall

    Tags: Eastern Conference Major League Soccer (MLS) MLS MLS Cup Playoffs NYCFC Philadelphia Union Union

    Categorized: Union

    Ryan Hall

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  • What to make of the Sixers-Knicks regular season series ahead of playoff matchup

    What to make of the Sixers-Knicks regular season series ahead of playoff matchup

    In several recent seasons, the Sixers dominated the New York Knicks in the regular season. There was a multi-year span in which the Knicks failed to notch a single victory over the Sixers. Things changed in 2024, though, when the new-look Knicks took three out of four contests against the Sixers, with two of those wins coming in Philadelphia and all three of them occurring in blowout fashion. This past regular season was the first in which the Knicks won the season series over the Sixers since the 2015-16 campaign in which the Sixers finished 10-72.

    Season series results are often not emphatic indicators of playoff series outcomes, and this is an example of that: Sixers superstar center Joel Embiid only played in one of the four games these two teams faced off in this season. But across the four games, spanning from the beginning of January to the second week of March, there are some lessons we can learn.

    Just so you would not have to, I spent my Thursday afternoon and evening rewatching all four Sixers-Knicks contests looking for any sorts of tells that may indicate how the playoff series will turn out. Here is what I found:

    Tyrese Maxey will see a lot of different looks — but one more than most

    Like the Sixers and the Miami Heat team they just defeated, the Knicks have faced a tremendous amount of adversity this season, mostly in the form of injuries, and they have faced that adversity better than the Sixers or Heat all year long. Even now, as the dust settles before the playoffs begin, the Knicks will be without three-time All-Star forward Julius Randle, who has been ruled out for the remainder of the season with a shoulder injury.

    There are many obvious negatives to dealing with a massive amount of injuries, but there are some silver linings. One of those is that it enables many players to prepare to fill several different roles throughout a season, so that no matter what challenges are thrown their way in the postseason, they do not have to enter uncharted territory. 

    The Knicks’ All-Star point guard, rising superstar scorer Jalen Brunson, finished this regular season 10th in the NBA in total minutes played. But two Knicks actually played in more contests than Brunson: fellow Villanova products, workhorses Josh Hart and Donte DiVincenzo, who each logged 81 games. Hart is one of the game’s best rebounders; DiVincenzo is one of the game’s best three-point shooters. But both are tried and true defensive forces. Hart uses his incredible strength to take on bigger assignments, while DiVincenzo is more reliable against guards.

    The Knicks, however, swung a significant trade at the end of December, acquiring wing OG Anunoby from the Toronto Raptors. Because of his late arrival and ensuing injuries, Anunoby has only played 23 games in blue and orange — but when he has suited up, the Knicks have been dominant: New York went 20-3 in the regular season when the two-way threat was available. Part of the reason why was that he immediately stepped in as one of head coach Tom Thibodeau’s most trusted perimeter defenders. 

    At 6-foot-7 and 232 pounds, Anunoby can guard big wings and even some big-men. But because of his tremendous athleticism and foot speed, he may profile as the Knicks’ best chance to slow down Maxey, the Sixers’ first-time All-Star guard who may be in line to win the NBA’s Most Improved Player Award after averaging 25.9 points per game — 11th-best in the NBA — in his fourth professional season.

    Anunoby only played in two of the four Sixers-Knicks games this season — though Sixers head coach and former Toronto shot-caller Nick Nurse’s former trusted wing did play against the Sixers twice in the early portion of the season as a member of the Raptors. But when Anunoby did suit up for New York against the Sixers, he was often Thibodeau’s first choice to defend Maxey. When one glances at Maxey and notices his frame, they would not expect someone who looks like Anunoby to be his primary defender over the course of a playoff series. But the Knicks’ starting wing figures to draw the assignment more than any of his teammates.

    This is where we must circle back to the Knicks’ bumpy journey, though. Because they have had to live life without Anunoby on plenty of occasions, the Knicks have both Hart and DiVincenzo more than prepared to take on the Maxey assignment at any given moment. Anunoby’s superior speed likely makes him Thibodeau’s choice to open things, but if either of Hart or DiVincenzo need to step into that role, they can. The Knicks’ rotation also features an x-factor of sorts: 23-year-old guard Miles “Deuce” McBride, whose ability to defend his position at a high level while also knocking down 41 percent of his three-point attempts on significant volume has made him a fan favorite in New York. 

    Things did not go perfectly for Maxey against Miami. Unfortunately for him, they are not going to get much easier against New York. The time for him to step up is now.

    The Sixers do stand a chance against Brunson

    Brunson is, as Maxey referred to him after Wednesday night’s Play-In Tournament victory, New York’s “head of the snake.” The Villanova product who was born in New Brunswick, NJ put together an absolutely stellar season featuring yet another massive leap. Brunson received his first All-Star nod in the first half of the season and only got better from there, ultimately averaging 28.7 points per game — the fourth-highest average in the NBA over the course of the season.

    As you have probably heard by now, Sixers veteran wing Nico Batum had the game of his life to save the Sixers’ season Wednesday night: he scored more points (20) than he had in any game in over a calendar year, put on a defensive clinic and came through in every single important spot. 

    The Sixers did a good job limiting Brunson as a scorer across their four contests against the Knicks this season, holding him to 22.3 points per game on subpar efficiency (Brunson posted a true shooting percentage of 53.6). One of the primary reasons was Batum, who by my eye spent more time defending Brunson than any other Sixer. Batum may continue to come off the bench in this series — the Sixers’ starting lineup of Maxey, Kyle Lowry, Kelly Oubre Jr., Tobias Harris and Embiid has generally been quite successful since Embiid’s return from injury, and starting lineup changes this time of year are rare. But Batum’s ability to not just pressure Brunson, but do so across all 94 feet of the floor, make it easy to pencil him in as an integral part of the Sixers’ rotation in this series, perhaps even more than usual.

    But, like the Knicks, the Sixers have plenty of trustworthy defensive options on the perimeter as well. Lowry and Oubre were both stellar on that end of the floor against Miami, and will both see some of Brunson (Oubre would be my pick to open games defending him). Maxey lacks the physicality to counter the immense strength that helps make Brunson so lethal, but his defensive strides in recent weeks have been noticeable, culminating in an impressive outing in that department against the Heat. He can take on difficult assignments these days, even if for brief spurts of time. Harris is not the ideal defender against a point guard, but has enough reps in similar matchups that he would not be a terrible option against Brunson if needed.

    Slowing down Brunson may be even more challenging for the Sixers than slowing down Maxey will be for the Knicks. But in addition to the strategic advantages that come with having a coach as creative as Nurse, the Sixers do have the requisite personnel to make the fellow first-time All-Star guard’s life difficult.

    Hart attacks are on the way to Philadelphia

    By the end of any good playoff series, each fanbase has a newfound hatred for a player on the opposing team who they simply did not realize would frustrate them so much. Heat fans may never forget The Nico Batum Game. One reason the Sixers won that game is because Miami was without renowned Sixers Killer Terry Rozier. 

    Hart’s exploits have always been respected because he played at a high-profile school and won a national championship. His abilities have become even more appreciated in recent months as he stars in a significant role for one of the league’s flagship teams in one of its largest markets. He is even a viral podcaster these days. But at his core, Hart is simply a killer who will always find a way to torture his opponents and their fans.

    I do not say this lightly: Hart has the chance to frustrate Sixers fans more than any opposing role player has since Marcus Smart’s peak of annoyance with the Boston Celtics.

    First of all, the way the Sixers play on defense and their tendency to attempt to suffocate stars allow capable but imperfect three-point shooters to take big shots. One of the reasons they beat Miami is that someone like former Sixers developmental project Haywood Highsmith missed all four of his three-point tries. Hart fits the exact profile: he is not a good enough shooter that the Sixers will always stick to him when Brunson drives — Hart made just 31 percent of his three-point tries this season — but as a 34.4 percent three-point shooter for his career and a genuine big-game player, he has more than enough ability to knock down a crucial shot in a pivotal situation.

    Then there is the defense. Hart will likely get some cracks at Maxey; as a 6-foot-4 player that is the kind of matchup one might expect him to take on. But he will also see a lot of time — perhaps the majority of his minutes — against wings. Hart is extremely physical, enough to hang with guys who may have much better frames like Batum or superior athleticism like Oubre. 

    But Hart is also cerebral. There will absolutely be times when he goads Harris into making avoidable blunders. His timing on double-teams against Embiid will be pristine, and he will likely force the reigning NBA MVP to commit some turnovers that look like head-scratchers. Hell, he and Thibodeau are both so maniacal that he could end up guarding Embiid one-on-one at certain junctures. That is the kind of versatile athlete the Sixers will have to deal with here.

    This is perhaps all without mentioning the part of Hart’s game that will anger Sixers fans the most: his uncanny rebounding ability. Despite that 6-foot-4 listed height, Hart averaged 8.3 rebounds per game this season. He finished the season 16th in the NBA in total rebounds, an absolutely ridiculous feat for someone of his size. What is as impressive as Hart’s rebounding ability is the timeliness of his rebounds. He seems to come up with every single 50-50 ball, will revive possessions with offensive rebounds at crucial junctures of games, and is simply able to come away with the ball on occasions when he has absolutely no business doing so. 

    Prepare for at least one Knicks win in this series where Hart makes a defining play or has a signature moment or performance. It feels inevitable.

    Adam Aaronson

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  • Mike Lupica: In a brutal New York sports season, the Nets might end up being the most interesting team in town

    Mike Lupica: In a brutal New York sports season, the Nets might end up being the most interesting team in town

    You know how the sports year has gone around here since the basketball season ended last spring. The Yankees and Mets didn’t make the playoffs, Buck Showalter barely made it to the Mets’ last game, the Yankees didn’t actually get interesting again until the other day, when Brian Cashman didn’t just play the part of a profane and professional victim, and made you think, for the first time, that he doesn’t have a job for life if the Yankees aren’t a real contender again in 2004.

    The Giants? They’re in the midst of one of the great freefalls in their history, like it’s the ’70s all over again, to the point where you wonder if they might win another game before next season. Everything that can go wrong has gone wrong for just about everybody involved, the general manager, the coach, the quarterback, the shine coming off all of them at record speed.

    The Jets? They still have a shot, though it looks like more of a longshot every time they try to move the chains, to make the playoffs. But if the Raiders do to them on Sunday night what they did to the Giants last Sunday afternoon, then you can stick a great big fork in the Jets, too, as Jets fans start pondering what kind of future they really have if it’s built around a 40-something quarterback coming off an Achilles injury.

    We no longer care that the Jets are going to win the Jersey state football championship. But now that it is basketball season again, it is very much worth talking about whether it’s going to be the Knicks or the Nets winning the city basketball title.

    That is good basketball talk right there, even about whether the Nets could end up being better than the Knicks this season if they can ever stay healthy. That means even after trading Kevin Durant and Kyrie Irving and everybody, seemingly, except Julius Erving last season; whether the Nets might turn into the most interesting team in town. Nobody would have thought that could be possible this close to the immediate rebuild after Durant and Irving were gone, and Sean Marks, who runs the show at Barclays Center, had to admit in front of his own fans and in front of the world that the big shot he took with not just Durant and Irving but James Harden, as well, had gone bust.

    But guess what? The Nets are suddenly young and deep, with talent at all of their rotation spots. On top of that, they are fun to watch again now that they are no longer the drama kings of the National Basketball Association. You want to start someplace, start here:

    Raise a hand, at least if you’re not a Nets fan, if you know that the leading scorer in basketball New York right now, either side of the river, is a 22-year old kid from LSU named Cam Thomas. That is, however, exactly what Thomas was through the first eight games his team has played, 26.9 a game, until he rolled his ankle the other night and it was announced that he was going to have to miss two weeks just when he was running this hot.

    The Nets’ record sat at a modest 4-5 after getting boxed around by the Celtics in Boston Friday night. Nobody is saying that they are going to end up with a higher seed than the Knicks come playoff time, or that they could be the city team even getting one of the top four seeds in the Eastern Conference. Still: When you watch them play, when they are pushing the ball and Thomas and Mikal Bridges and Cam Johnson and Spencer Dinwiddie and Nic Claxton (when healthy) are sharing it, it’s hard not to see the possibilities, especially as well coached as they are by Jacque Vaughn.

    Even Ben Simmons has shown signs of life this season, managing to score five baskets in a game twice and being in double figures in rebounds (high of 15) in five of his team’s first eight games.

    Think back to what we all thought had become of the Nets when Durant was on his way to Phoenix and Irving was on his way to Dallas and that experiment has ultimately failed the way Durant-Irving-Harden had failed in the end after it felt like the three of them had been together for about three games total. Then look at where they are right now, with all these young guys getting after it the way they are. It sometimes seems that it has taken Marks about half-a-season to do what it has taken Leon Rose years to do at the Garden.

    The Nets are never going to be the big game in New York, just because the Knicks are always going to be that. The Knicks are coming off a season during which Jalen Brunson became a star, and Knick fans will always wonder how Knicks vs. Heat would have played out in the end of Brunson had any help at all in Game 6, when he scored 41 points, which was more than Julius Randle and RJ Barrett and Josh Hart combined.

    You see how good they can look when Randle still looks like an All-Star. We are told now that Randle started the season hurt, and there is no reason to think that he wasn’t, just off the numbers he was putting up early. But there is also no reason at this time, and this far into his Knicks career, to believe Randle will ever stop being this consistently inconsistent.

    And Barrett? There is still no way of knowing just exactly where his ceiling is, no matter how many times we want to give him the game ball when he looks as great as he did against the Spurs the other night at the Garden.

    Somehow, after everything that happened to the Nets and with the Nets a year ago, it is the Nets who seem like the deeper team of the two right now. Marks tried it the modern NBA way, you bet, with big stars, and the Nets came up short, even if it happened the way it did one Game 7 night against the Bucks because Durant’s sneaker was about a couple of inches too long. Now Marks tries things differently on his side of the river.

    We don’t get the first Knicks vs. Nets game of the season until Dec. 20, at Barclays. If both our teams stay reasonably healthy, and remain where they are in the middle of the pack in the conference, that will be something else to talk about, a game to watch in what we very much need to be season to watch in basketball New York.

    If not, we might need the Rangers carrying us all the way to baseball this time.

    BELICHICK AND BRADY BY THE NUMBERS, CASHMAN OWES AN APOLOGY & JETS DIDN’T HAVE A BACK-UP PLAN …

    OK, here are your fun football facts for today from my pal John Labombarda of the Elias Sports Bureau (they know everything):

    Bill Belichick’s won-loss record when Tom Brady has been his quarterback in regular season games — 219-64.

    Belichick’s record without Brady, first in Cleveland and now New England — 81-95.

    Brady’s regular season record without Belichick — 32-18.

    Belichick’s postseason record with Brady — 30-11.

    His postseason record, Cleveland and New England, without Brady — 1-2.

    Brady’s postseason record in Tampa Bay after he left the Patriots — 5-2.

    Now obviously they needed each other over all those years with the Patriots, they were as formidable a coach/quarterback team as their sport has ever seen.

    And, to be fair, it was Belichick who saw enough in Brady to give him the ball, and a chance, in the first place.

    But you have to say, all in, that Touchdown Tom doesn’t miss the hoodie guy nearly as much as the hoodie guy misses him.

    Right?

    My friend Barry Stanton points out that the Texans sure have done better taking C.J. Stroud with the second overall pick than the Jets did with Mrs. Wilson’s son, Zach.

    Big Ten commissioner Tony Petitti was in a rock-and-hard place with Jim Harbaugh — and his merry prankster of a sign stealer — even before Petitti suspended Harbaugh from coaching Michigan’s last three regular season games.

    But in the end, and no matter how many high-powered lawyers Michigan sends after him, Petitti had the high ground here.

    And, I’m sorry, if you believe that Harbaugh had no idea what this guy Connor Stalions was doing on his tour of Big Ten stadiums, you believe that Brian Cashman’s Yankees really were victims of life’s circumstances, as opposed to a series of wrong-headed decisions.

    Speaking of which?

    Cashman did a significant disservice to himself, and to the Yankees, with that hour-long meltdown in front of the media in Arizona the other day.

    And if he couldn’t see his way to apologizing afterward, the owner of the team should have done it for him.

    In the end, Cashman performed about as well as his baseball team did last season.

    By the way?

    If it wasn’t analytics that got Cashman to give Aaron Hicks a 7-year contract, what was it — he thought Hicks looked really good in pinstripes?

    You want some analytics?

    The Yankees have won one World Series in the last 23 years.

    It is worth asking, and not for the first time, how the Jets didn’t have a real quarterback in place behind Zach Wilson when this season started.

    They had a back-up to Rodgers, no question.

    Just no back-up plan.

    How’s that working out for Joe Douglas?

    Seriously: Did they really think that nothing could ever possibly happen to Aaron Rodgers, who turns 40 in December?

    The news isn’t really getting much better for the mayor or New York City, is it?

    Maybe even Angel Reese was impressed with Caitlin Clark putting 44 on Virginia Tech the other night.

    The world was a much simpler place when it didn’t seem as if we had a tracking device on a tight end for the Kansas City Chiefs.

    Chris Kreider continues to prove that you really can never go wrong with a Boston College man.

    Mike Lupica

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