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Tag: head coach

  • Victor Wembanyama unconcerned about knee as Spurs prep for Pacers

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    (Photo credit: Daniel Dunn-Imagn Images)

    In what easily could have been an NBA Finals preview between two of the best teams in the league, the San Antonio Spurs rallied from a 19-point first-half deficit for a 134-132 win over the New York Knicks on Wednesday.

    But as thrilling as the win was, the postgame focus was on the health of Victor Wembanyama. The Spurs superstar left the game with 10:32 remaining with a hyperextended left knee.

    ‘I have not been able to talk to the medical staff yet, but I saw what everybody else saw,’ said Spurs head coach Mitch Johnson. ‘There’s a visual there, but he finished the game on the bench with his teammates so that made me feel good. I have no idea what to say, but it was good to see him walk back out and finish the game with his teammates.’

    Wembanyama said he was sore after the game, but ‘very confident’ he won’t have to miss any time with the injury. Still, given how important Wembanyama is to the future of the Spurs, the team will be cautious with their superstar. That puts his status in question when San Antonio travels to face the Indiana Pacers on Friday.

    ‘I was this close to coming back into the game, but they had to hold me back,’ Wembanyama joked. ‘The good thing was that it was just a hyperextension, so it should be minimal. We’re going to do everything tomorrow and make sure everything is OK.’

    Regardless of whether Wembanyama suits up on Friday, the Spurs will look to build off Wednesday’s momentum.

    The Spurs trailed the Knicks by 10 at the half and by nine heading into the fourth quarter, but outscored New York 41-30 in the final 12 minutes to close out a much-needed home win and snap a two-game losing streak.

    ‘I thought we were not very good for a lot of stretches in the first half and the competitive response and the energy we were putting as the game went on into the right areas, we felt it,’ Johnson said. ‘I was extremely proud of guys who stepped up tonight, especially those guys in the fourth quarter.’

    Nobody stepped up more than Julian Champagnie, who set a franchise record with 11 3-pointers on his way to a career-high 36 points. The fourth-year pro took all 17 of his shots beyond the 3-point arc and converted five more than he ever had before.

    ‘I think we’ve been there before when it comes to a guy going down and someone having to step up and figure things out,’ Champagnie said. ‘For us (Wednesday), it was one of those things where we dropped two at home, Utah and Cleveland, but we want to protect our home court.’

    The Pacers, on the other hand, are trying desperately to find answers in what has been a challenging season. Indiana has battled injuries all year and comes into Friday’s game on a 10-game losing streak, including a 112-110 defeat against the Orlando Magic on Wednesday. They enter 2026 with the worst record (6-28) in the league.

    ‘The real question should be why did we give up 68 points in the first half and only 44 in the second half?’ said Pacers head coach Rick Carlisle. ‘And that’s because in the second half, we played like a together team that was supporting each other and not like strangers. That’s how this has got to be. We’re having too much pity nonsense going on during games that needs to go away.’

    –Field Level Media

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  • Over 30 charged in mafia-linked sports betting and poker schemes

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    PORTLAND/MIAMI: Portland Trail Blazers head coach Chauncey Billups and Miami Heat guard Terry Rozier are among more than 30 people charged in connection with illegal sports betting and rigged poker games tied to organized crime, authorities said on October 23.

    According to federal prosecutors, Rozier and others were part of a sports betting scheme that used insider NBA information, while Billups is accused in a separate case involving poker games backed by Mafia families.

    The indictment lists nine unnamed co-conspirators, including a Florida-based NBA player, an Oregon resident who played in the league between 1997 and 2014 and became a coach in 2021, and a relative of Rozier.

    Both men are well-known in the basketball world. Billups, a five-time NBA All-Star and Hall of Fame inductee, became Portland’s head coach in 2021 and signed a multi-year extension this year. Rozier, drafted in 2015, has played for Boston, Charlotte, and Miami.

    Prosecutors allege Rozier and others used private information — such as player injuries or team strategies — to place or assist in bets that could affect the outcome of NBA games. In return, they allegedly received payments or a share of profits.

    New York Police Commissioner Jessica Tisch said players sometimes altered their performance or left games early to influence bets. In one case, Rozier allegedly told others he would leave a game with a “fake injury” while playing for the Charlotte Hornets, helping his associates win thousands of dollars in wagers.

    U.S. Attorney Joseph Nocella Jr. called the operation “one of the most brazen sports corruption schemes since sports betting became legal in much of the U.S.” Six people were accused of a betting conspiracy, which authorities say relied on confidential NBA information to profit illegally.

    The second case involves 31 defendants accused of running a nationwide network of underground poker games, mainly in the New York area. Prosecutors say the games were fixed using hidden technology that allowed players to cheat victims out of millions of dollars. Mafia families and former professional athletes allegedly supported the poker network.

    Attorney Jim Trusty, representing Rozier, criticized the arrest, saying his client had cooperated with prosecutors. “Instead of allowing him to surrender, they staged a photo op,” he said, calling the arrest a “public embarrassment.”

    Federal investigators said the cases involve “tens of millions of dollars” in fraud, theft, and crypto-related schemes. “Everyone will be held accountable,” said Assistant U.S. Attorney Raj Patel.

    Authorities confirmed that 31 people are in custody, and others are expected to surrender in the coming days.

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  • Hopeful Hawks, Magic set for early-season division matchup

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    (Photo credit: Nathan Ray Seebeck-Imagn Images)

    A pair of Southeast Division rivals with lofty expectations will meet for the first time on Friday, as the Orlando Magic play host to the visiting Atlanta Hawks.

    Both consensus picks to make the postseason out of the Eastern Conference, Orlando and Atlanta last met in the 7 vs. 8 play-in tournament game in April, a 120-95 Magic victory. With each team returning its core nucleus while adding key newcomers, neither side wants to return to the play-in.

    Orlando began its season with a 125-121 victory over the Miami Heat on Wednesday, debuting its revamped offense spearheaded in part by offseason trade acquisition Desmond Bane.

    The former high-scoring Memphis Grizzlies guard was shipped to the Magic in June and began his Orlando career with a 23-point output.

    ‘It felt good, I’m not going to lie,’ Bane said of his first game in Orlando. ‘It’s going to be a good place to call home, for sure. … We’ve got work to do. It’s always good to come out of here with a win, but we’ve still got a long way to go. It’s the first of 82 (games). It’s a long journey. It doesn’t happen overnight.’

    Bane should provide a lift to an Orlando team that made the postseason despite averaging just 105.4 points per game (28th in the league), while shooting a league-worst 31.8% on 3-point attempts.

    Paolo Banchero and Franz Wagner chipped in 24 points apiece in the season-opening win. Looking to complement last season’s No. 1 scoring defense (105.5 points per game allowed), Orlando is embracing the challenge of its newfound offensive balance.

    ‘Those are very good problems,’ Magic head coach Jamahl Mosley said. ‘ … The beauty of this team is our depth, our togetherness and the focus that we have to continue to work for one another.’

    Atlanta’s highly-anticipated season began with a whimper on Wednesday, as the Hawks were uncompetitive in a 138-118 home loss to the Toronto Raptors. As new faces debuted in Kristaps Porzingis, Nickeil Alexander-Walker and Luke Kennard, Atlanta trailed by as many as 29 points in the season opener, allowing the Raptors to score 86 points in the paint.

    ‘A lot of things we need to clean up, stating the obvious,’ Hawks head coach Quin Snyder said. ‘ … It’s tough to have this on your home opener. The enthusiasm we have needs to get channeled correctly into the things that are going to help us win games.’

    Wednesday marked the return of Jalen Johnson, who saw his 2024-25 season end in January after a torn labrum in his left shoulder. Johnson and Trae Young had 22 points each, while Porzingis chipped in 20, but the good news ended there for the Hawks, who look to rebound on Friday.

    ‘I don’t think there’s too many positives you can take from tonight,’ Young said after the 20-point loss. ‘It’s embarrassing the way we started it. A lot of it comes from the preseason, obviously it carried over, we didn’t play all five of us. You could tell by the continuity we had out there, it wasn’t right. But the cream always rises to the top. We got some time to make it up and got to get going.’

    –Field Level Media

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  • theCHIVE Exclusive: Eagles Head Coach Nick Sirianni No Stranger to Big Game Experience

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    Hailing from the Western side of Pennsylvania, folks like me are born and raised to hate the Philadelphia Eagles. It’s sort of a rite of passage. However, my love for the game of football trounces my hatred for Philly, so here we are.

    After winning his first Super Bowl earlier this year, Eagles head coach Nick Sirianni has his team in the driver’s seat atop the NFC East. Sure we’re only a few weeks into the season, but 2-0 is a pretty good way to stop the ‘Super Bowl Hangover’ narrative in its tracks.

    But how did the birds get here? I was fortunate enough to catch up with Sirianni before Super Bowl LIX, and I asked about his experience in big games.

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    Zach

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  • Vegas Odds for First NFL Head Coach Fired — Four Best Bets

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    If you readers know anything about me, you know that I love a nice wager. Also, if you know anything about me, you know that I’m willing to wager on almost anything. For every conventional wager on a college football or NFL game, I’ve placed a sizable wager on the Nathan’s hot dog eating contest. For every MLB game on which I dip my toe, I’ll cobble together a parlay for predicted Oscar winners.

    Perhaps no “unconventional” wager piques my interest, though, quite like wagering on people’s employment, or perhaps more appropriately, their potential UNEMPLOYMENT. This brings me to one of my favorite wagers of the NFL season — who will be the first NFL head coach fired?

    The crazy thing about this wager is that the favorite rarely hits. In the last five seasons, these have been the winning ticket cashers:

    2020: BILL O’BRIEN, Texans
    2021: URBAN MEYER, Jaguars
    2022: MATT RHULE, Panthers
    2023: FRANK REICH, Panthers
    2024: ROBERT SALEH, Jets

    Of those five, the only favorite (or near favorite) that hit was Rhule in 2022. The other four were all fairly long shots. The one thing they all had in common was some level of internal franchise dysfunction (O’Brien, Saleh), a train wreck owner (Rhule, Reich), or massive personal, self destructive issues (Meyer).

    So, if we are picking a winner, it’s less about schedule and matchups, and more about finding (a) a potentially bad team with (b) a rotting culture and rotten ownership. Before I lay out my four best bets, here are the full odds:

    Mike McDaniel (MIA) 2/1
    Brian Daboll (NYG) 4/1
    Shane Steichen (IND) 7/1
    Dave Canales (CAR) 15/2
    Kevin Stefanski (CLE) 15/2
    Jonathan Gannon (ARI) 8/1
    Zac Taylor (CIN) 9/1
    Brian Callahan (TEN) 18/1
    Raheem Morris (ATL) 18/1
    Todd Bowles (TB) 20/1
    Mike Tomlin (PIT) 28/1
    Kyle Shanahan (SF) 33/1
    Kevin O’Connell (MIN) 40/1
    Matt LaFleur (GB) 40/1
    Sean McVay (LA) 40/1
    DeMeco Ryans (HOU) 50/1
    Sean McDermott (BUF) 60/1
    Mike Macdonald (SEA) 66/1
    Sean Payton (DEN) 66/1
    John Harbaugh (BAL) 75/1
    Ben Johnson (CHI) 100/1
    Brian Schottenheimer (DAL) 100/1
    Dan Campbell (DET) 100/1
    Dan Quinn (WAS) 100/1
    Jim Harbaugh (LAC) 100/1
    Aaron Glenn (NYJ) 150/1
    Kellen Moore (NO) 150/1
    Liam Coen (JAX) 150/1
    Pete Carroll (LV) 200/1
    Mike Vrabel (NE) 250/1
    Andy Reid (KC) 500/1
    Nick Sirianni (PHI) 500/1

    Okay, so let’s lay out four decent selections:

    MIKE McDANIEL, Dolphins, 2/1
    The favorite deserves to be the favorite. Listen to McDaniel speak, and you’d think that Stephen Ross has been letting a stoned teenager run the team for their last three years. Over the course of the offseason, McDaniel has had Three Hill agitate for a trade and Jalen Ramsey successfully lobby to get traded. The team is widely viewed as a punchline around the league for being soft. McDaniel’s time has run out in South Beach.

    DAVE CANALES, Panthers, 15/2
    Credit to Canales, as he got a nice stretch of football out of QB Bryce Young down the stretch last season, easily the best Young has played during his two seasons in the NFL. However, if I’m putting together an article touting multiple best bets, how can I not include the head coach on the team who’s owner has given us the winner in two out of the last three seasons?

    KEVIN STEFANSKI, Browns, 15/2
    This whole situation is ripe for people to lose their jobs. After the whole Deshaun Watson experience ended in catastrophe, the Browns have now created a second QB controversy by drafting two rookie quarterbacks in the same draft class, with one of them being Shedeur Sanders. Oh, and neither of the rookies will start, because the Browns signed 40-year-old Joe Flacco, who stinks. This feels like a “let’s just blow the whole thing up and start over” situation, potentially, and Kevin Stefanski would for sure get smoked under this scenario.

    BRIAN CALLAHAN, Titans, 18/1
    I can’t just cherry pick off the top of these odds, so I’ll dip slightly lower in the 18/1 range on this one. The rumor mill in the offseason was saying that the Titans almost moved on from Callahan after one season. As the former OC with the Bengals, the hope was that Callahan would fix second year QB Will Levis. That didn’t come close to happening, so if rookie Cam Ward gets off to a slow start, perhaps Titans owner Amy Adams Strunk decides to head off any long term damage to the rookie by moving on from Callahan.

    Listen to Sean Pendergast on SportsRadio 610 from 6 a.m. to 10 a.m. weekdays. Also, follow him on Twitter at twitter.com/SeanTPendergast, on Instagram at instagram.com/sean.pendergast, and like him on Facebook at facebook.com/SeanTPendergast.

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    Sean Pendergast

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  • Man accused of killing the brother of ex-Laker Michael Cooper is charged in two more violent crimes

    Man accused of killing the brother of ex-Laker Michael Cooper is charged in two more violent crimes

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    The man suspected of gunning down the brother of former Lakers star Michael Cooper at a park in Pasadena on Saturday also has been charged with attempted murder and assault with a semiautomatic firearm in two other recent incidents in the city, the Los Angeles County district attorney’s office said Wednesday.

    Aaron Miguel Conell, 24, was charged Monday in the fatal shooting of Mickey Cooper, 64, at Washington Park, the same site where he allegedly shot another man in the neck. Authorities have charged Conell with one count of attempted murder in the earlier incident, which occurred around 2 a.m. on Oct. 29. Officers responded to gunshots and found a man with life-threatening injuries, authorities said.

    Seven days later, around 9:30 p.m., Conell is accused of walking up to a car at a Pasadena gas station and pointing a gun at a man in the driver’s seat. He is charged with one count of assault with a semiautomatic firearm in that incident.

    Conell was arrested Saturday, the same day he’s accused of killing Cooper at the park that is “10 houses away” from where Michael Cooper, 67, said he and his younger brother grew up.

    “The reason my brother was there is that it was a safe haven for him, a place where he felt comfortable and safe,” Michael Cooper said. “And it had been until that tragic night.”

    Conell faces 50 years to life in state prison if convicted on each count of murder, attempted murder and assault with a semiautomatic firearm. His bail has been set at $4.25 million.

    Pasadena Police Department detectives said at a news conference Wednesday that Conell also is a suspect in two additional shootings.

    Police said that none of the incidents are connected and that Conell — who has never been convicted of a felony and no gang affiliation — seemed to commit the alleged violent acts without a motive.

    “Aaron Conell is diabolically evil, that’s the only motive we’ve come up with so far,” said Pasadena police Lt. Keith Gomez, who’s in charge of the robbery-homicide unit.

    Michael Cooper expressed his appreciation to the Pasadena Police Department for the swift identification and arrest of Conell. He said he’d been part of the Pasadena community his entire life.

    “This was the park where my brother and I would play basketball in the late ’60s and through the ’70s and ’80s,” said Cooper, who won five NBA championships during his 12-year career with the Lakers that ended in 1990.

    He said Mickey was a gentle, loving person who was addicted to drugs. Mickey would sleep at Washington Park because it was so familiar to him.

    Cooper said his brother was welcome to stay with him or at their grandmother’s home but that he often preferred the park.

    “We are going to miss Mickey, but I like to feel he’s in a better place,” Cooper said. “My brother had an addiction he just couldn’t shake. Over the last year, we tried to get him a lot of help. He may have appeared homeless, but he wasn’t. He had a home up in Altadena at my grandmother’s house.

    “I tried to bring my brother to my house several times. But that’s still not a reason for him not to go to that park, go to sleep and wake up and find himself in this situation.”

    Michael and Mickey were raised in Pasadena primarily by their grandmother, Ardessie Butler, after their parents, Marshall and Jean, divorced when the boys were young. Jean, who had 10 siblings, worked as a registered nurse, and the boys grew up in a hectic household.

    They attended Pasadena High School and Michael was drafted by the Lakers out of the University of New Mexico. He was named the NBA Defensive Player of the Year in 1986-87 and later became an assistant coach with the Lakers, the head coach of the WNBA Sparks, the head coach of the USC women’s basketball team and head coach of the Culver City High boys’ basketball team.

    “I want to express deep condolences to the family of the individual who died and unwavering support for the wounded victim,” L.A. County Dist. Atty. George Gascón said. “These violent senseless acts have no place in our communities, especially at a public park where families could be present.

    “We continue in our commitment to combating gun violence and will vigorously pursue justice for the victims and their families, while ensuring the safety and security of all of our residents.”

    Gomez said that a 9-millimeter semiautomatic firearm was recovered from Conell’s vehicle, and that evidence indicated it was the gun used in both Washington Park shootings. City officials said the park is relatively safe during daylight hours but that it has become increasingly dangerous at night.

    Justin Jones, the Pasadena City Council member who represents the Washington Park area, said he grew up a block from the park and that “recently residents have expressed concern about activities occurring in the park.”

    City and law enforcement officials have scheduled a town hall meeting Tuesday at 6:30 p.m. to discuss ways to improve safety at the park. Michael Cooper said that, as a native of the city, he deeply appreciated the efforts of law enforcement and that Mickey’s being killed for seemingly no reason was difficult to process.

    “I remember back in the ’80s when we won, we had a championship parade here,” Cooper said. “And today I stand here [grieving]. … Mickey didn’t bother anybody. He loved everybody.”

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    Steve Henson

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  • A soccer game in Irvine, America’s safest city, ends with a brawl and police investigation

    A soccer game in Irvine, America’s safest city, ends with a brawl and police investigation

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    Club Garrafones, an undefeated soccer team from South Los Angeles, arrived in Irvine on Saturday ready to play.

    The opposing team, Irvine Zeta FC II, was younger and lower ranked but managed to pull an upset. A red card gave Zeta a penalty kick in the second half, and they scored, ultimately winning 2 to 1.

    After the game ended, a back-and-forth between opposing players turned into a dispute, an outright fight and, eventually, a brawl.

    Players pushed one another. Parents, family and spectators descended onto the field. Kicks, shoves and punches came in waves over the next few minutes.

    “One of their players came up and punched my player,” said Bryan Wallace, head coach of Irvine Zeta, “and that started the entire thing. Their team and their parents and a bunch of guys on their bench just started attacking.

    “One of their coaches attacked the goalkeeper. One of the other coaches attacked and kicked a parent. That to me is mind-blowing,” Wallace said. “We are supposed to set an example of how to act.”

    The fight resulted in one of Wallace’s 17-year-old players suffering a broken nose; a player’s dad was kicked in the head; several players left with split lips, and another had a chipped tooth.

    “They are on paper better than us, and they lost the game,” Wallace said. “And they were really triggered by that.”

    The brawl lasted at least four minutes. The incident is under investigation, said Sgt. Karie Davies of the Irvine Police Department. The inquiry will entail poring over cellphone footage by witnesses, which was broadcast by Fox11.

    “I reviewed the video, and it’s very chaotic,” Davies told The Times. “It will take time to sort out what happened and get people identified.”

    United Premier Soccer League, the professional development league with more than 400 clubs, including Zeta and Garrafones, announced this weekend it was investigating the dispute. Late Monday, the organization expelled Club Garrafones “effective immediately.”

    “As a result of a senseless and violent, post-game altercation on Saturday, Club Garrafones has been removed from the UPSL and a lifetime ban has been put in place for the organization and its coaching staff,” the league said in a statement. “All their remaining games will be declared a forfeit.”

    Reached Monday, the head coach and owner of Club Garrafones said he and his players felt maligned by the swift expulsion and what he called a rush to judgment.

    The coach, Roger Navarro, and his wife, Evelyn, told The Times that the opposing team — Wallace’s players — started the dispute. In their telling, one of Garrafones’ players fouled one of Wallace’s players near the game’s final moments.

    Instead of walking away, the Zetas player “went and tried to attack the player that fouled him,” Navarro said. Another Garrafones player tried to intervene and break up the scuffle, only to get hit from behind.

    “That’s how it started. That was the first brawl — but it wasn’t recorded,” Evelyn said.

    Navarro was more blunt: The Zetas “were whooping our a—” before the camera started rolling. His point was that once the cameras began recording, an act of self-defense appeared like needless aggression.

    Navarro conceded the sight captured by video cameras was not pretty.

    “Everything looks bad on our side. I know we look bad. But it wasn’t like they say it was,” Navarro said.

    Navarro and his wife said his players — nearly all Latinos from low-income backgrounds — faced repeated harassment and racial slurs from the opposing team in Irvine as the game pressed on Saturday night. The goalie, who wore a pink uniform, was taunted as “Peppa Pig” and shamed for his appearance, while other players were derided with slurs like “wetback” and “beaner.”

    “We didn’t start nothing, sir,” Navarro said. “We were defending ourselves.”

    Wallace, the coach of Irvine Zeta, rejected the accusation that his players uttered racial slurs.

    “That’s complete nonsense,” Wallace said. “My own players would be offended if any of my players said that.” He noted the several players on his team who hail from Mexico, Korea, and France. “My goalkeeper who got beat up is Mexican,” he added. “The rightback is Black from France. … It’s a mixture of people.”

    Police sirens brought the fight to an end. Navarro and his team left and returned to L.A.

    Wallace said he stayed behind to talk to police, and the officers collected statements from spectators who had observed the melee. The referees also drew up a report on what they witnessed, which was used to inform soccer league officials as they weighed whether to expel Navarro and his team.

    Wallace said the opposing coach left the scene quickly, and questioned why he would do so: “If you feel you are on the wrong side of anything that happened Saturday, stay. Speak to the police. Make your case. Speak up. Don’t run away. Show up, follow the rules, trust the system.

    “This type of behavior is unacceptable,” he later added.

    Navarro said the brawl and the elimination from the league were setbacks for him and his team. He contrasted his soccer club with other wealthier groups in the league, with parents typically paying hundreds of dollars and spending far more for their kids to travel and compete.

    “We’re not like every other academy that charges all these fees,” Navarro said. He and his wife said the team had offered a pathway for players to push themselves to complete their GEDs and go to community college. “We want to help keep these kids out of trouble.”

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    Matt Hamilton

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