ReportWire

Tag: inside sports

  • San Jose Sharks goalie exits game vs. New Jersey Devils

    San Jose Sharks goalie exits game vs. New Jersey Devils

    [ad_1]

    SAN JOSE – San Jose Sharks goalie Mackenzie Blackwood exited Tuesday’s game with the New Jersey Devils late in the first period and was later ruled out from returning.

    The Sharks did not provide an official reason why Blackwood left the game, but it appeared the goalie was injured making a save on Devils center Jack Hughes.

    Blackwood stopped on a Hughes shot with 2:28 left in the first period, got up, and then skated toward the Sharks bench during a television timeout. After he reached the bench, Blackwood walked toward the Sharks dressing room and threw his stick down.

    Blackwood was credited with 13 saves in the first period before he left the game. Kaapo Kahkonen came off the bench to replace Blackwood for the final 2:26 of the first period but did not have to make a save.

    The Sharks took a 1-0 lead shortly after Blackwood left the game, as Nico Sturm scored his fourth of the season off an assist from Alexander Barabanov at the 18:17 mark of the first.

    Kahkonen started the second period as Blackwood did not come out of the Sharks’ dressing room.

    On its third shot of the period, New Jersey tied the game, as a bad change by the Sharks led to a Devils 2 on 1. Jesper Bratt then took a pass from former Sharks winger Timo Meier and scored his 22nd of the season at the 3:29 mark.

    Just 37 seconds later, Jack Hughes took advantage of a Sharks turnover and beat Kahkonen for his 19th goal of the season as the Devils took a 2-1 lead.

    Blackwood was playing in his 35th game of the season Tuesday as he had remained mostly healthy for the first four months of the season.

    Beset by injuries the last two years, Blackwood hadn’t played in this many games in one season since 2020-2021, when he went 14-17-4 for the Devils in a non-playoff year for the organization.

    Please check back for updates to this developing story. 

    [ad_2]

    Curtis Pashelka

    Source link

  • CIF Norcal soccer 2024: Top storylines heading into regional playoffs

    CIF Norcal soccer 2024: Top storylines heading into regional playoffs

    [ad_1]

    CIF Norcal Regional championships

    Boys: Top storylines

    Archbishop Mitty is playing its best soccer at the right time. After winning the Central Coast Section Division I title against St. Francis, Mitty was awarded the No. 2 seed and will play No. 7 McClatchy from Sacramento. The Monarchs are 10-0-3 in their last 13 matches and have not lost since Jan. 11. Mitty lost to Jesuit High School — this year’s No. 1 seed in Division I — last year in the Division II Norcals. If seeds hold, the two could see each other in this year’s Division I championship match. The trio Jaxson Bettencourt, Guiseppe Sigala and Isaac Castillo will look to lead the Monarchs to their first CIF Norcal championship in school history. … St. Francis was given the No. 4 seed in Division I and will have an interesting matchup with No. 5 Berkeley. The Yellow Jackets were the Cinderella team of the North Coast Section Division I bracket, beating Monte Vista and Dougherty Valley en route to the section title. St. Francis has been dominant all year, but will look to bounce back after losing its first match of the season to Mitty in the section title on Saturday. … Dougherty Valley earned the No. 1 seed in Division II. Tristan Casella’s 16 goals this season has led the Wildcats to being one of the hottest teams in Northern California. Dougherty Valley should be the favorites to make a run at the title in Division II. They have proven to be a top team in NCS, beating the likes of De La Salle, Clayton Valley and Granada in the past month … After winning the NCS Division II crown, Las Lomas was given the No. 6 seed in Norcal Division II. Las Lomas hasn’t lost since Dec. 22 and won the Diablo Athletic League title earlier this season. … After being upset in the NCS Division I semifinal by Maria Carrillo, Newark Memorial will get a shot to win CIF Norcal Division III title as they were awarded the No. 1 seed. The Cougars will be heavy favorites, having home field advantage throughout the playoffs. They will face No. 8 Everett Alvarez at home Tuesday. 

    Archbishop Mitty’s Guiseppe Sigala (14) shows the California Interscholastic Federation Central Coach Section Division 1 boy soccer trophy to the fans in the grandstands after winning their championship game against Saint Francis High 2-0 at Santa Clara University in Santa Clara, Calif., on Saturday, Feb. 24, 2024. (Doug Duran/Bay Area News Group) 

    Girls: Top storylines

    Kamryn Rosa and No. 1 seed St. Francis will look to capture its second consecutive CIF Division I Norcal championship. Rosa has been on a tear as of late, scoring eight goals in the Lancers’ last three matches including a midfield goal that helped lift St. Francis over Mitty in the CCS Division I championship match Saturday. St. Francis’ first round matchup will be against No. 8 Carondelet who the Lancers beat in the CIF Norcal championship last year. … Mitty was given the No. 4 seed and will play Davis Senior High School in its first round matchup. If St. Francis ends up winning its first round match and the Monarchs get a win over Davis, it will set up a CCS Division I championship rematch between the two rival schools in the second round of CIF Norcals. … Two East Bay Athletic League schools made it to the Norcal regionals. No. 3 San Ramon Valley, who won NCS the NCS Division I title over Carondelet with a late goal, will play host to visiting No. 6 Leigh. The Wolves will be led by Ella Beardslee who shot the winning goal Saturday. Amador Valley was given the No. 7 seed and will play at Del Oro on Tuesday. NCS Division II runner up Las Lomas was placed as the No. 6 seed in Norcal Division II. The Knights will travel to No. 3 Sequoia High School for its first round matchup.

    St. Francis' Kamryn Rosa (9), center, celebrates with the team after scoring her second goal against Archbishop Mitty during the Central Coast Section Division I girls soccer championship at Santa Clara University in Santa Clara, Calif., on Saturday, Feb. 24, 2024. (Shae Hammond/Bay Area News Group)
    St. Francis’ Kamryn Rosa (9), center, celebrates with the team after scoring her second goal against Archbishop Mitty during the Central Coast Section Division I girls soccer championship at Santa Clara University in Santa Clara, Calif., on Saturday, Feb. 24, 2024. (Shae Hammond/Bay Area News Group) 

    [ad_2]

    Nathan Canilao

    Source link

  • CIF NorCal basketball 2024: The matchups are set. Here’s what to know

    CIF NorCal basketball 2024: The matchups are set. Here’s what to know

    [ad_1]

    CIF NORCAL REGIONALS

    First-round schedule: Boys, girls

    Boys: Top storyline

    Salesian has been the No. 1 team in Northern California for much of the season. Sunday, the Richmond powerhouse was rewarded with the No. 1 overall seed in the CIF Northern California regionals. The Pride are back in the Open Division for the first time since 2019 after beating De La Salle for the North Coast Section Open Division title on Friday. Being the top team in the Open is not uncharted territory for the Pride. They also were the No. 1 seed in 2013, 2018 and 2019. Let’s just say those were forgettable regionals for Salesian. The Pride lost their first game on all three occasions, to Sheldon-Sacramento in 2013, Folsom in 2018 and Modesto Christian in 2019. Salesian also made the Open as a No. 8 seed in 2016 and No. 5 seed in 2017. The Pride lost their first game in those years, too, to De La Salle. This time around, Salesian has a bye in the first round on Wednesday, then will play No. 4 seed De La Salle or No. 5 seed Modesto Christian on Saturday night (probably at Contra Costa College) in the regional semifinals. The winner will move on to the final. If the seeds hold, Archbishop Riordan will be waiting in the championship game. The San Francisco school received the No. 2 seed after capturing the Central Coast Section Open Division title with a victory over Archbishop Mitty on Friday. The Crusaders are the only team from the CCS in the NorCal Open. Mitty, which normally has a spot reserved in the top bracket, is the No. 3 seed in Division I. The Monarchs will be at home on Tuesday night to play 14th seeded Dougherty Valley, the NCS’s Division I champion which, like Mitty, was in the Open last season. — Darren Sabedra

    Girls: Top storyline

    Archbishop Mitty’s McKenna Woliczko takes a shot in the CCS Open final against St. Ignatius on Friday at Santa Clara University. (Shae Hammond/Bay Area News Group) 

    Archbishop Mitty, as expected, received the top seed in the Open bracket. It’s well-earned. The Monarchs are 28-0 and have defeated every California team on their schedule by at least 25 points. They won their four Central Coast Section playoff games by an average of 42 points on their way to a 32nd section title. MItty’s all-star team, which has super sophomore McKenna Woliczko and future college players Elana Weisman and Belle Bramer, might be tested against the region’s other elite teams in its quest for the program’s first Open state title. The Monarchs will play Folsom (25-5) or Cardinal Newman (28-2) in the semifinals on Saturday night. The good news for Mitty is that it has a bye on Wednesday, which will give UConn-bound McDonald’s All-American Morgan Cheli even more time to prepare for her return after missing the past few weeks with a leg injury. Coach Sue Phillips said she expects Cheli to be good to go Saturday. If the seeds hold, Mitty will face Clovis West at home on March 5 for the NorCal championship. Mitty beat Clovis West 63-43 in the first round last season. –– Joseph Dycus

    Boys: Luck of the draw

    The San Ramon Valley bench celebrates a 3-point basket in front of Granada's Damien Miles (21) in the fourth quarter of their first round of the North Coast Section Open Division playoff game at San Ramon Valley High School in Danville, Calif., on Thursday, Feb. 15, 2024. (Nhat V. Meyer/Bay Area News Group)
    The San Ramon Valley bench celebrates a 3-point basket against Granada during the NCS Open Division playoffs on Feb. 15. (Nhat V. Meyer/Bay Area News Group) 

    No doubt there were a few teams smiling and slapping high-fives after the brackets were unveiled a little after 4 p.m., starting with the San Ramon Valley boys. It’s always a guess to figure out how many teams the CIF will put in the Open Division. Last year, it went with five. In some years, it has gone with the maximum eight. This year, it has six. San Ramon Valley was seventh on the board. As such, the Danville school was seeded No. 1 in the 16-team Division I bracket instead of being the seventh seed in the Open, which would have meant a trip across the Bay Bridge to play the Open’s No. 2 seed, Riordan. For those of you new to the seeding process, here is a quick primer: The CIF does not use enrollment to divide its teams. It instead ranks them. The top five to eight teams are placed into the Open Division. The next 16 are in Division I and on down the line through Division V. Like SRV, Branham and Santa Teresa benefitted from the luck of the draw. The San Jose public schools received No. 1 seeds, Branham in Division II, Santa Teresa in Division IV. Their path to a state final will include only home games through the regionals. Branham was the sixth-ranked team out of the CCS, Santa Teresa the 15th. Athenian, a small school in Danville, also was on the fortunate side of the draw. The NCS Division V runner-up is the No. 1 seed in the NorCal D-V bracket. Athenian has a first-round bye before playing its regional opener in the quarterfinals at home on Thursday. –– Darren Sabedra

    Girls: Luck of the draw

    DUBLIN - Oakland Tech forward Jhai Johnson (5) grabs a rebound against Edge Academy-Canada. Oakland Tech and Edge played in a high school basketball game at Dublin High School in Dublin Calif. on Friday, Dec. 29, 2023 (Joseph Dycus/Bay Area News Group)
    DUBLIN – Oakland Tech forward Jhai Johnson (5) grabs a rebound against Edge Academy-Canada. (Joseph Dycus/Bay Area News Group) 

    Pinewood went from the No. 4 seed in the CCS Open to the top seed in NorCal’s Division I bracket, which is a best-case scenario for longtime coach Doc Scheppler. The Panthers are seeking a sixth state title, their first since 2014. Pinewood’s road to Sacramento will run through its home court in Los Altos Hills. That should give an edge to Pinewood’s deadeye shooters, who make 37 percent of their 3-pointers on 29 attempts per game. Branham won the CCS Division I title on Saturday, and instead of being penalized for its success with a low seed in Division I, the Bruins received the top seed in Division II. Few teams at that level can match up with 6-foot-4 post Quinn Godfrey, who scored 32 points and grabbed 19 rebounds against Evergreen Valley in the title game. Oakland Tech is on that short list of teams that have the height to match up with Branham. A year after winning the D-I state title, Oakland Tech (11-16) had to forfeit six non-league games after playing an ineligible player this season. The Bulldogs cruised through the Oakland Section to clinch a NorCal spot, and even though their own coach Leroy Hurt insisted that his team should play in Division I, the state seeded Tech No. 10 in Division II. Future major college basketball wings Jhai Johnson, Terri’A Russell and Taliyah Logwood have already proven they can thrive against Division I competition, and are now playing a step down while a year older and wiser. — Joseph Dycus  

    Boys: Short end of the stick

    Dougherty Valley's Aadi Malali (34) reacts after defeating Dublin during their NCS Division I Championship game at Dublin High School in Dublin, Calif., on Saturday, Feb. 24, 2024. Dougherty Valley defeated Dublin 64-61. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group)
    Dougherty Valley’s Aadi Malali reacts after his team defeated Dublin for the NCS Division I title on Saturday. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group) 

    Let’s be clear. Even for teams that didn’t get the best seed, it’s not all bad. We’re sure there are hundreds of eliminated teams across the region that would trade places with them without any hesitation. But things could always be better. Dublin left its home gym on Saturday night trying to pick up the pieces after falling to rival Dougherty Valley in the NCS Division I final. Sunday, the Gaels came within a whisker of being the No. 1 seed in Division II. Instead, they are the No. 16 seed in Division I and will travel to the Central Valley on Tuesday to play top-seeded Clovis West. Head-Royce might have even gotten a shorter piece of the stick than Dublin. The Oakland school celebrated winning an NCS Division V title on Friday over league rival Athenian. Head-Royce was given a No. 16 seed in Division III. It will open the regionals on the road against top-seeded Santa Cruz. To make a state final, Head-Royce will have to win four road games. Athenian, the top seed in Division V, can make it to the state finals in Sacramento with three wins, all at home. Los Gatos also didn’t get the best of draws either after winning the CCS Division I title on Saturday. The Wildcats were seeded 13th in Division II and will open on Tuesday at No. 4 Bishop O’Dowd, which lost in the NCS Division I semifinals to Dougherty Valley.  The path for Dougherty Valley isn’t that great, either, as the 13th seed in Division I. — Darren Sabedra

    Girls: Short end of the stick

    San Ramon Valley watches as Cardinal Newman receives their first place medals after their NCS Open Division Championship game at Dublin High School in Dublin, Calif., on Saturday, Feb. 24, 2024. Cardinal Newman defeats San Ramon Valley 61-55. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group)
    San Ramon Valley watches as Cardinal Newman receives its first-place medals after the NCS Open Division title game  (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group) 

    After losing to Cardinal Newman in the NCS Open final, San Ramon Valley coach John Cristiano hoped that his team would be the top seed in Division I. CIF didn’t grant his wish, seeding the Wolves sixth in the Open. San Ramon Valley is a talented team that has won 28 of its 30 games, but it lacks the top-end talent and size that it will see in the Open. Even if SRV somehow wins on the road Wednesday against St. Mary’s-Stockton, it will only get tougher in the semifinals on Saturday at Clovis West, which has a bye on Wednesday. … Salesian got off to a slow start after graduating several key contributors from last season’s NorCal Open runner-up but has rounded into form down the stretch. Saturday, the Pride defeated California 56-48 in the NCS Division I title game. Instead of being a high seed in Division II, the perennial power from Richmond was saddled with the No. 12 seed in a challenging Division I bracket. … Northgate had a good regular season as a solid team from the Diablo Athletic League, and then pulled off a couple of upsets in the NCS Division II bracket before falling 50-41 to No. 1 seed Redwood in the championship game. The Broncos reward for their great run? The No. 16 seed in Division III and a visit to No. 1 University-San Francisco. How good is University? The Red Devils were comfortable scheduling Archbishop Mitty this season. Does it matter that Mitty pounded them by 62? We’re about to find out. – Joseph Dycus

    [ad_2]

    Darren Sabedra, Joseph Dycus

    Source link

  • Blood, sweat and tears: San Ramon Valley girls fall just short in intense NCS Open title game

    Blood, sweat and tears: San Ramon Valley girls fall just short in intense NCS Open title game

    [ad_1]

    DUBLIN  –  San Ramon Valley forward Avery Knapp was exhausted, bruised and bitterly disappointed after Cardinal Newman outlasted the Wolves 61-55 in a thrilling North Coast Section Open Division championship game at Dublin High. 

    But she also left the locker room proud of her team, who pushed the Cardinals to the limit over 32 minutes of gritty defense and tough shotmaking. 

    “We were up to the challenge and matched their physicality,” Knapp said.

    The Wolves led 50-46 with four minutes left in the game, and appeared to have everything going for them.  

    Cardinals forward Taissa Queiroz, who the Wolves had held in check by sending double and triple-teams at every time she touched the ball, was on the bench holding a towel to her lip after hard contact drew blood. 

    She returned a few possessions later, and instead of being tentative, the Brazilian sensation broke a 50-50 tie by drawing contact to earn two free throws and then power through SRV defenders for another layup and a 54-50 lead. 

    “When I got hit in the lip, it was like ‘Now, I need to go hard,’” said Queiroz, who scored 13 points. “I can’t take it easy.”

    San Ramon Valley watches as Cardinal Newman receives their first place medals after their NCS Open Division Championship game at Dublin High School in Dublin, Calif., on Saturday, Feb. 24, 2024. Cardinal Newman defeats San Ramon Valley 61-55. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group) 

    Sofia Bowes answered by going right at Cardinal Newman’s superstar junior, playing through an injured ankle to make a layup against Queiroz and draw the foul. Bowes led the team with 16 points.  

    Janelle Pena shut down any ideas of a Wolves rally with under two minutes when she scored on a fastbreak layup and then drove in for a hook shot to put the Cardinals back up by five. 

    Bowes scored one more layup with a minute remaining to cut the lead to three, but Queiroz powered in a putback layup and hit a free throw to keep the game out of reach. 

    “We knew it would be a one- or two-possession game, and that’s what it was,” SRV coach John Cristiano said. “We were hoping we’d be the ones on top at the end, but theat was a good team. I’m very proud of our girls.”

    San Ramon Valley head coach John Cristiano watches his team play Cardinal Newman in the first quarter of their NCS Open Division Championship game at Dublin High School in Dublin, Calif., on Saturday, Feb. 24, 2024. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group)
    San Ramon Valley head coach John Cristiano watches his team play Cardinal Newman in the first quarter of their NCS Open Division Championship game at Dublin High School in Dublin, Calif., on Saturday, Feb. 24, 2024. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group) 

    The loss stung for SRV’s players, some of who shed tears during the trophy ceremony, but it may end up a blessing in disguise. Had the Wolves won the game, they would have been a lock to play in the NorCal Open bracket, which includes the unstoppable Archbishop Mitty juggernaut. 

    Instead of having to compete against the best girls basketball team in America with two five-star college prospects, San Ramon Valley may end up in Division I. 

    Winning that wouldn’t be a cakewalk by any means, but it wouldn’t be impossible. SRV’s coach wouldn’t complain if that’s how things shake out for the Wolves. 

    “I think they should go with five teams (in the Open), bring Clovis West up and push us down into the No. 1 (seed) in Division I,” Cristiano said. 

    Cardinal Newman jumped out to a 32-23 halftime lead, as both Pena and Kate Schat drilled multiple 3-pointers. A couple of Knapp threes and a flurry of layups by 13-point scorer Tera Chen kept SRV around. 

    SRV’s offense came alive in the third quarter, scoring 19 points as the Wolves flew around screens and ran in transition to get open looks. Cardinal Newman took a 46-42 lead into the fourth. 

    San Ramon Valley completed the comeback with six minutes remaining in the fourth quarter, taking a 48-46 lead after Chen cut into space and finished the play with a layup. 

    San Ramon Valley's Sofia Bowes (42) drives past Cardinal Newman's Janelle Pena (24) in the second quarter of their NCS Open Division Championship game at Dublin High School in Dublin, Calif., on Saturday, Feb. 24, 2024. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group)
    San Ramon Valley’s Sofia Bowes (42) drives past Cardinal Newman’s Janelle Pena (24) in the second quarter of their NCS Open Division Championship game at Dublin High School in Dublin, Calif., on Saturday, Feb. 24, 2024. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group) 

    But once re-energized Quieroz re-entered the game, SRV had no answer for Cardinal Newman’s unstoppable post. Even when they cut off her drives, Quieroz fired accurate bullet passes to open teammates like an oversized point guard. 

    Quieroz’s Cardinal Newman (28-2) and Knapp’s San Ramon Valley (28-2) will both learn where they’re seeded in NorCal on Sunday. 

    “I’m ready for anything,” Knapp said. “We can’t control where we’re going to be placed, but we’re going to put up a fight either way.”

    San Ramon Valley's Sofia Bowes (42) shoots past Cardinal Newman's Leah Mauritson (21) in the second quarter of their NCS Open Division Championship game at Dublin High School in Dublin, Calif., on Saturday, Feb. 24, 2024. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group)
    San Ramon Valley’s Sofia Bowes (42) shoots past Cardinal Newman’s Leah Mauritson (21) in the second quarter of their NCS Open Division Championship game at Dublin High School in Dublin, Calif., on Saturday, Feb. 24, 2024. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group) 
    Cardinal Newman players celebrate with the first place plaque after defeating San Ramon Valley during their NCS Open Division Championship game at Dublin High School in Dublin, Calif., on Saturday, Feb. 24, 2024. Cardinal Newman defeats San Ramon Valley 61-55. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group)
    Cardinal Newman players celebrate with the first place plaque after defeating San Ramon Valley during their NCS Open Division Championship game at Dublin High School in Dublin, Calif., on Saturday, Feb. 24, 2024. Cardinal Newman defeats San Ramon Valley 61-55. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group) 
    Cardinal Newman head coach Monica Mertle hugs Taissa Queiroz (12) after defeating San Ramon Valley during their NCS Open Division Championship game at Dublin High School in Dublin, Calif., on Saturday, Feb. 24, 2024. Cardinal Newman defeats San Ramon Valley 61-55. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group)
    Cardinal Newman head coach Monica Mertle hugs Taissa Queiroz (12) after defeating San Ramon Valley during their NCS Open Division Championship game at Dublin High School in Dublin, Calif., on Saturday, Feb. 24, 2024. Cardinal Newman defeats San Ramon Valley 61-55. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group) 
    Cardinal Newman head coach Monica Mertle holds up the first place plaque as her players celebrate after defeating San Ramon Valley during their NCS Open Division Championship game at Dublin High School in Dublin, Calif., on Saturday, Feb. 24, 2024. Cardinal Newman defeats San Ramon Valley 61-55. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group)
    Cardinal Newman head coach Monica Mertle holds up the first place plaque as her players celebrate after defeating San Ramon Valley during their NCS Open Division Championship game at Dublin High School in Dublin, Calif., on Saturday, Feb. 24, 2024. Cardinal Newman defeats San Ramon Valley 61-55. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group) 

    [ad_2]

    Joseph Dycus

    Source link

  • Steph Curry leads Warriors past LeBron-less Lakers to jump-start playoff push

    Steph Curry leads Warriors past LeBron-less Lakers to jump-start playoff push

    [ad_1]

    SAN FRANCISCO — Steph Curry was so magnificent in the first three quarters, a scoreless fourth had no bearing on the collapse-prone Warriors.

    Curry dropped 32 points before the fourth, helping Golden State build a comfortable enough lead to coast to a 128-110 win over the Lakers. LeBron James, who sat out with an ankle injury, wasn’t available to match Curry’s offensive brilliance to open the second half.

    Every game is crucial for the Warriors (28-26), who are currently in 10th place in the West but are openly eyeing the sixth seed for ideal playoff positioning. They have now won nine of their past 11 games, coming together at the right time.

    “I think we have a shot to really make some hay in terms of the conference standings,” Warriors coach Steve Kerr said pregame.

    This game in particular carried more importance than even a typical glamor matchup between the league’s two glossiest West Coast franchises. Given that they’re bunched up at the bottom of the Western Conference playoff picture, their head-to-head matchup could decide a crucial tiebreaker. With the victory, the Warriors can claim the tiebreaker with two more wins in the season series.

    Curry started the game shooting like he did in the Steph vs. Sabrina shootout. He drilled four of his first five 3-pointers, opening with 16 points in his first 10 minutes. With Golden State’s downsized starting lineup, they dealt a heavy dosage of Curry-Draymond Green high pick-and-rolls. Austin Reaves had trouble fighting through screens to stick on Curry and even more issues containing him in isolations. After one 3, Curry displayed his patented shimmy while jogging back on defense.

    To further set the tone for the final stretch of the season in the first quarter, Curry added a gorgeous behind-the-back, no-look dime to Andrew Wiggins for a transition dunk. But Anthony Davis out-muscled the smaller Warriors, keeping the Lakers within three after the first period.

    The question for the Warriors then, as it’s been at various points of the season, was who could emerge as a secondary scorer behind Curry. In a rapid five-minute burst, Trayce Jackson-Davis delivered. The rookie center was a rim-to-rim presence, scoring 13 points — four of which were assisted by Klay Thompson — and hauling in two offensive rebounds as Curry got his scheduled rest.

    “Before the game, he actually came up to me, he said, ‘Come get me on pindowns, on ball screens in transition — you’re either going to get a dunk or a shot,’” Jackson-Davis said postgame.

    When he returned, Curry fueled a 17-5 run to end the half, capped by an Andrew Wiggins tip-in bucket at the buzzer. Just before the All-Star break, he set an NBA record with four consecutive games of seven 3-pointers, and he showed no signs of cooling off. At half, Curry registered 25 points on 9-for-12 shooting, including 5-for-7 from 3.

    [ad_2]

    Danny Emerman

    Source link

  • Kurtenbach: Once dead to rights, the Warriors are making a push. But we’ve seen this move before

    Kurtenbach: Once dead to rights, the Warriors are making a push. But we’ve seen this move before

    [ad_1]

    I can’t help but think we’ve seen these Warriors before.

    And no, it wasn’t during a championship season.

    I imagine many of you have blissfully forgotten the Dubs’ 2021 campaign, but it’s evident that Warriors coach Steve Kerr hasn’t.

    Amid a season heading off the rails, he has stolen the blueprint of that ’21 season to return the Warriors to respectability.

    But ultimately, respectability seems like the extent of what can be achieved.

    The 2021 Warriors started their COVID-shortened sprint of a regular season with a 23-27 record. That was an improvement from the year prior, when the Warriors were the worst team in the league, but it was still a major disappointment for a team that had Draymond Green and Steph Curry and had traded for Andrew Wiggins the previous February.

    Those Dubs lacked a rhythm, an identity, and any sense of cohesion. James Wiseman, the No. 2 overall pick in the prior year’s draft, wasn’t a fit. Kelly Oubre a late offseason acquisition signed to fill the vacancy left by Klay Thompson, who was missing a second consecutive season to injury, was a disaster. Things were falling apart in the critical stretch of the season — the Warriors lost all but five of 18 games between March and early April (the season ended in mid-May.)

    Desperate times called for desperate measures. With roughly a month to play, Kerr made three significant moves.

    He shortened his rotation to eight players, ostensibly dumping Oubre (Wiseman was injured) and replacing him with Mychal Mulder and a kid named Jordan Poole.

    He inserted Juan Toscano-Anderson into the rotation, as well.

    But the most crucial change was making Green the team’s starting center. The Warriors were going to play small-ball down the stretch.

    Remind you of anything?

    That Warriors team looked good down the home stretch, going 15-5 to end the regular season, including six straight wins at home to end. Curry went thermonuclear, averaging 37 points over his final 22 games.

    The Warriors made the play-in tournament, but lost both games.

    They ran out of gas.

    And that’s my fear with this season’s Warriors, too.

    Now, it should be noted that these Dubs are in a much different situation. They’re deeper. They’re more talented.

    But they started sprinting on Jan. 27 — the game Kerr made Green the team’s starting center — and they need to make it to mid-April to merely make the postseason. And we saw some sputtering this week.

    The Warriors’ loss to the Clippers on Wednesday and near-loss to the Jazz on Thursday showed a team pushing up against its limits. This, like the 2021 team, is a one-trick pony. It’s a hell of a trick, but can it get them to the finish line?

    And if it can, will it take them any further?

    [ad_2]

    Dieter Kurtenbach

    Source link

  • SF Giants finalize 3-year deal with free-agent slugger Jorge Soler

    SF Giants finalize 3-year deal with free-agent slugger Jorge Soler

    [ad_1]

    SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. — Nearly a week after the news of their agreement was first reported, the San Francisco Giants on Sunday afternoon officially announced their three-year, $42 million pact with free-agent slugger Jorge Soler.

    The deal will pay the outfielder/designated hitter $7 million in 2024, $13 million in 2025 and another $13 million in 2026. He’ll also receive a $9 million signing bonus.

    [ad_2]

    Evan Webeck

    Source link

  • Bay Area soccer playoffs: A game that needed to be seen to believe

    Bay Area soccer playoffs: A game that needed to be seen to believe

    [ad_1]

    Serra coach Mike Keller was on the bus ride home to San Mateo as he recounted all that unfolded on the soccer field against Aptos on Saturday.

    The twists and turns were gut-wrenching, thrilling and perhaps even maddening, to say the least, but Serra ultimately survived after 80 minutes of regulation, 20 minutes of overtime and five rounds of penalty kicks.

    The Padres will move on to the Central Coast Section Division II semifinals on Wednesday after winning the penalty-kick shootout 4-3. The teams played to a 2-2 tie in regulation and were even 4-4 after two 10-minute overtime sessions.

    “Man, that was a barnburner,” Keller said. “What a game. The fans got more than their money’s worth today, I’ll tell you that.”

    Let’s pick up the action at the start of the second half.

    Trailing 1-0, Serra pulled even 1-1 on a goal by Will Hirsch.

    After Aptos reclaimed the advantage, Nate Coughlin scored on an assist by Edward Velazquez to tie it at 2-2 with about 15 minutes left.

    The score didn’t change for the remainder of regulation, sending the match to overtime.

    Aptos scored in the first OT period to take a 3-2 lead. But Serra answered again, this time on a goal by Velazquez in the second OT session.

    The visitors took the lead, 4-3, with four minutes left in OT on another goal by Coughlin.

    But just when it looked as if the final chapter had been written in this thriller, Aptos scored on the final play of OT to force penalty kicks.

    “Both teams played excellent,” Keller said. “I’ve been in a couple of OT games like that. I don’t think I’ve been in one where they scored in the last second to send the game to PKs. I don’t think I’ve been involved in one of those.”

    How did Serra regroup for PKs?

    “You know, we practiced penalties a lot this week,” Keller said, adding that the team prepared senior goalkeeper Jacob Kohlmeister specifically for PKs. Rafael Steinberger handled the goal keeping duties during the game.

    “He was ready,” Keller said about Kohlmeister. “He saved the first two and that gave us a lot of confidence. The guys knew they had to do their best to make one. Due credit to our guys for being really mentally strong and to Jacob for jumping into the penalties and making saves.”

    Justin Hollister’s PK ended the match, sending Serra into the semifinals on Wednesday against top-seeded Westmont or eighth-seeded Hollister.

    Serra will think about the next round later. The Padres wanted to celebrate the win Saturday first.

    “This time of the year, these guys have fought so hard through our league, we want to let them enjoy the moment,” Keller said. “They fought so hard today against a good opponent. Got to enjoy these moments.”

    Girls soccer

    CCS Division I

    No. 2 Archbishop Mitty 3, No. 7 Sacred Heart Prep 2

    Senior Jordan Geis scored two goals and Kiki Vostermans had one as perennial powerhouse Mitty opened the CCS playoffs at home on Saturday with a victory over Sacred Heart Prep.

    The Monarchs advance to the semifinals Wednesday against third-seeded Leigh or sixth-seeded St. Ignatius.

    Saturday’s soccer scores, schedule

    Central Coast Section

    Division I boys

    No. 6 Carlmont at No. 3 Archbishop Mitty

    No. 7 Alisal at No. 2 Mountain View

    No. 5 Leigh at No. 4 Burlingame, 5 p.m.

    No. 8 Lincoln-San Jose at No. 1 St. Francis

    Division I girls

    No. 6 St. Ignatius at No. 3 Leigh, 5 p.m.

    No. 2 Archbishop Mitty 3, No. 7 Sacred Heart Prep 2

    No, 4 Sequoia 3, No. 5 Los Altos 1

    No. 1 St. Francis 4, No. 8 Burlingame 0

    Division II boys

    No. 6 Fremont-Sunnyvale at No. 3 Los Gatos, 7 p.m.

    No. 7 Aragon at No. 2 Menlo School

    No. 5 Serra 4, No. 4 Aptos 4 (Serra 4-3 PKs)

    No. 8 Hollister at No. 1 Westmont

    Division II girls

    No. 6 Homestead at No. 3 Salinas, 5 p.m.

    No. 7 Aptos at No. 2 Leland, 5 p.m.

    No 5 Aragon at No. 4 Woodside

    No. 8 Pioneer at No. 1 Mountain View, 6 p.m.

    North Coast Section

    Division I boys

    No. 8 Clayton Valley Charter at No. 1 De La Salle, 7 p.m.

    No. 5 Bishop O’Dowd at No. 4 Dougherty Valley, 7 p.m.

    [ad_2]

    Darren Sabedra

    Source link

  • Ryan Pettis, ignited by his slam dunk, leads Serra to CCS playoff win over Sacred Heart Prep

    Ryan Pettis, ignited by his slam dunk, leads Serra to CCS playoff win over Sacred Heart Prep

    [ad_1]

    SAN MATEO — It took a while for Ryan Pettis to get it going. But once he did, he made a big difference in Serra’s 59-49 victory Friday over Sacred Heart Prep in the Central Coast Section Open Division Pool A playoffs.

    Pettis, a 6-foot-3 senior headed to play college ball across the country at Fordham, didn’t score until midway through the second quarter when he ripped home a slam to cap a 10-0 run that gave Serra a 19-16 lead.

    He went on to score a game-high 22 points.

    “Ryan was huge tonight,” Serra coach Chuck Rapp said. “Once we started moving the ball better, we got some better looks. Then Ryan made some plays, kind of took over the game a little bit. Did everything but sweep up the floor after. He was the D-I guy on the court today, and you could tell.”

    No. 5 seed Sacred Heart Prep (20-5) jumped out to a 16-9 lead after one quarter. The Gators shot 50 percent that quarter (6 of 12) with point guard Drew Wagner knocking down two 3-pointers and scoring eight points.

    Serra’s Andrew Mcdowell #1 drives on Sacred Heart Prep’s Alex Osterloh #22 and Tyler Hogan #34 in a CCS basketball playoff game, Friday, Feb. 16, 2024, at Serra High School in San Mateo, Calif. (Karl Mondon/Bay Area News Group) 

    But No. 4 seed Serra (18-7), long known for a fierce defensive approach and a physical style of play, turned the game all around at the outset of the second quarter, forcing the Gators to miss their first seven shots.

    “Not push them around, per se, but yeah, the more physical the better,” Rapp said. “If it ain’t rough it ain’t right. The WCAL prepares us for that. It’s a grind and iron sharpens iron. Get out of that WCAL cauldron, you’re battle-tested, battle-hardened, and I think you saw that tonight.”

    To go along with that defensive effort, the Padres scored on five consecutive possessions. Mikey Ballout hit a pair of buckets, Alex Naber made two free throws, Andrew McDowell scored down low and then Pettis put the finishing touch on that 10-0 run with the dunk that brought the house down.

    “When you start missing shots it affects your defense a little bit,” SHP coach Tony Martinelli said. “I thought our energy level dipped, we got a little frustrated missing those shots that went in early. It started showing up on an extra rebound here and there, second and third opportunities for Serra. You can’t give a good team extra opportunities. They’re going to hurt you.”

    Sacred Heart Prep's JP Kerrigan #3 gets kicked in the chest by a Serra player while passing into the land during a CCS playoff game, Friday, Feb. 16, 2024, at Serra High School in San Mateo, Calif. (Karl Mondon/Bay Area News Group)
    Sacred Heart Prep’s JP Kerrigan #3 gets kicked in the chest by a Serra player while passing into the land during a CCS playoff game, Friday, Feb. 16, 2024, at Serra High School in San Mateo, Calif. (Karl Mondon/Bay Area News Group) 

    Sacred Heart Prep may have been a bit down at that point, but certainly not out. TJ O’Brien hit a 3-pointer in the final minute of the first half to tie the score 24-24 before McDowell made a 3 at the buzzer to give Serra a 27-24 halftime lead.

    SHP gained its last lead of the game at 33-32 after an offensive-rebound basket by Alex Osterloh. Serra scored the last six points of the third quarter as Pettis connected on back-to-back jumpers, and that was the start of a 19-5 run, culminating on a fastbreak layup by Angelo Ghattas, that put the game away.

    Wagner led the Gators with 15 points. In addition to the 22 scored by Pettis, Ballout had 11 for Serra.

    [ad_2]

    Glenn Reeves

    Source link

  • After career year, 49ers WR Aiyuk set for major extension — or surprise departure

    After career year, 49ers WR Aiyuk set for major extension — or surprise departure

    [ad_1]

    SANTA CLARA – Brandon Aiyuk is going from No. 1 wide receiver to No. 1 offseason priority for the 49ers.

    Six months from now, Aiyuk should have a contract extension in hand, the latest edition of the 49ers’ annual payout for a homegrown star.

    Until then, things could get tense, social media posts could get curious, and feelings could get hurt.

    Aiyuk’s career-best season did not end with the result he envisioned: a 25-22 overtime loss in the Super Bowl to the Kansas City Chiefs.

    It did not end with the production he wanted: three catches for 49 yards on six targets, none of which came as he broke free toward the end zone as Brock Purdy’s final pass fell incomplete toward Jauan Jennings in overtime, setting up a field goal that would prove not enough to thwart Patrick Mahomes’ and the Chiefs’ ensuing touchdown drive for their third championship in five years.

    Aiyuk wasn’t one on the 2019 team that lost to the Chiefs in Super Bowl LIV. He looked absolutely crushed Tuesday, two days after their Super Bowl LVIII defeat.

    He struggled to speak in front of his locker. His right hand gripped a football autographed by teammates. His black sunglasses hid his misty eyes. Complementing the look were a black sweatshirt and a trapper ski hat.

    Asked if he hoped to remain with the 49ers, AIyuk replied: “If that’s the right move, yeah.” What would make it right? “A championship.”

    He played a huge role in delivering the NFC Championship, making a 51-yard catch to spark their comeback over the Detroit Lions in the conference finale. He has made several other big plays since being drafted in the 2020 first round (No. 25 overall) out of Arizona State, by way of Sierra College (the franchise’s training camp home in their 1980-90s heydays).

    This season, he earned his first Pro Bowl selection and an AP Second-Team All-Pro nod after producing a career-high 1,342 yards and the NFL’s second-best average with 17.9 yards per catch.

    Last spring, the 49ers exercised the fifth-year option in his rookie contract, setting him up to make $14.1 million in 2024. The typical move in such situations is to not step foot on a field until an extension is in place, and while that is a reasonable business practice, missing the offseason program would hinder Aiyuk’s chance to develop better chemistry with Purdy, who’ll be participating as a healthy starter for the first time.

    Hammering out a new contract is the greatest challenge that awaits the 49ers’ front office this offseason, which has annually accomplished such feats: Arik Armstead (2020), George Kittle (2020), Fred Warner (2021), Kyle Juszczyk (2021), Trent Williams (2021), Samuel (2022), and, Nick Bosa (2023).

    “It’s all one big puzzle,” general manager John Lynch said. “We’ve developed a good cadence over the years, Kyle and I, where he focuses on the season. We do all the planning and then we present things to him and we work through it. That’s what we’ll continue to do.

    “But of course you want a guy like Brandon Aiyuk to be a part of you going forward.”

    San Francisco 49ers’ Brandon Aiyuk (11) reaches to catch a deflected pass in the third quarter of their NFC Championship Game at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, Calif., on Sunday, Jan. 28, 2024. The San Francisco 49ers defeated the Detroit Lions 34-31. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group) Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group

    On Wednesday, Aiyuk reshared an Instagram post in which he has his back to the camera, captioned: “I guess we gone see.”

    The going rate for a top-tier wide receiver is between $23 million annually and the $30 million Tyreek Hill commands from the Miami Dolphins at the top of the pay scale.

    The thing is, Aiyuk’s teammate, Deebo Samuel, is making $23.9 million annually as part of the deal (three years, $71.1 million) he wrestled from the 49ers after a contentious 2022 offseason, complete with a trade request and a brief holdout into training camp.

    Samuel is due a $21 million salary next season, with a $28.6 million charge on the salary cap. Tight end George Kittle has a $13.4 million salary ($22 million cap charge). Running back Christian McCaffrey checks in at $11.8 million salary ($14.1 million cap number).

    Those are pricey numbers for elite skill-position players. Don’t forget about left tackle Trent Williams ($20 million salary) and fullback Kyle Juszczyk ($5.8 million).

    Your team is comprised of guys, veterans who’ve been paid very well, of guys who want to be paid very well,” Lynch said. “We’ve got one guy on our team who is pretty prominent who can’t be paid real well right now because the CBA doesn’t allow.”

    [ad_2]

    Cam Inman

    Source link

  • NHL trade deadline: Where things stand with Sharks’ pending free agents

    NHL trade deadline: Where things stand with Sharks’ pending free agents

    [ad_1]

    The looming NHL trade deadline in three weeks has the potential to be an anxious time for a handful of San Jose Sharks players – and others around the league on non-playoff-contending teams — who are pending unrestricted free agents.

    Anthony Duclair, though, isn’t stressing out. The Sharks winger has been traded four times in his 10-year NHL career, including in 2015 and 2019 when he was shipped from one team to another on the eve of the deadline.

    “For me, it’s just another year. I just try to have fun with it now,” Duclair said. “I don’t get nervous or anything like that. I just try to enjoy the process and whatever happens, happens.”

    Now in 2024, the speedy Duclair is a prime candidate to be on the move again, as the Sharks, in next-to-last place in the NHL’s overall standings, try to recoup assets for a handful of players who are pending UFAs.

    “Where we are, we don’t — if we can avoid it — (want to) let UFAs walk for nothing,” Sharks general manager Mike Grier said last month. “So if we can get something back that will help us down the road, we’ll definitely look to try and do that.”

    Here’s a look at where things stand for some of the Sharks’ pending unrestricted free agents.

    Anthony Duclair, winger

    CONTRACT STATUS: In the final year of a three-year, $9 million contract

    AGE: 28

    CAREER NHL STATS: 131 goals, 147 assists in 537 games (has 17 points in 47 games this season before Thursday’s game in Calgary)

    THE SKINNY: Duclair, who represents himself in contract negotiations, said earlier this week that he and the Sharks have not had any discussions regarding an extension. “I haven’t heard anything at all. I’m sure a conversation will happen soon,” said Duclair, who, now on his seventh NHL team, is looking for a contract with some term.

    “Obviously, everybody knows I’m looking for a home where I can spend the next few years. That would be my ideal situation,” he said. “But I also know that I have to earn that right, so obviously these next three weeks are pretty important. The way I play, the way I conduct myself, so I just want to focus on that.”

    Duclair is keeping all options available, including re-signing with the rebuilding Sharks should that opportunity arise. San Jose will have some cap space available and Duclair has fit in well with a team in transition.

    Still, Duclair will be 29 in August, and Grier will be wary of giving out a contract that takes a winger into his mid-30s considering where the franchise is at right now.

    “I’m open to anything,” he said. “Obviously, I have to do what’s right for myself and we’ll go from there, but I’m definitely open to anything right now.”

    Kaapo Kahkonen, goalie

    CONTRACT STATUS: In the final year of a two-year, $5.5 million contract

    AGE: 27

    CAREER NHL STATS: Record of 48-58-14, .900 save percentage, 3.27 goals against average in 127 games (is 6-15-2, with a .905 save percentage, 3.43 GAA in 25 games this season)

    THE SKINNY: Kahkonen, like Duclair, said he has not heard of any discussions with the Sharks regarding a contract extension.

    “Nothing new, really, from my end. I’m just kind of focusing day by day on practice and games, trying to get ready and be as good as I can. We’ll see what happens.”

    Kahkonen has shown this season that he can be a contributor to a playoff-contending team, either as a capable backup to an established No. 1 goalie or as a 1A-type netminder.

    Kahkonen’s record is unsightly, but he has only received an average of 1.92 goals in support per game so far this season, lowest among all goalies who have played at least 10 games. Wednesday, Kahkonen, in his 25th game, made 39 saves in a 1-0 Sharks loss to the Winnipeg Jets.

    Among the 34 NHL goalies who have played at least 25 games this season, Kahkonen is sixth in goals saved above expected per 60 minutes. The top five are Winnipeg’s Connor Hellebuyck, Calgary’s Jacob Markstrom, Boston’s Linus Ullmark and Jeremy Swayman, and Vancouver’s Thatcher Demko. Pretty good company.

    If he isn’t traded, Kahkonen said he’s keeping the door open to re-signing in San Jose.

    “I haven’t thought about that yet. I’m not saying no, I’m not saying absolutely,” Kahkonen said. “I don’t want to close any doors because I don’t think you ever want to do that. But we have to go through this month first because then everything will be much more clear after that.”

    Kevin Labanc, winger

    CONTRACT STATUS: In the final year of a four-year, $18.9 million contract

    AGE: 28

    CAREER NHL STATS: Has 82 goals, 141 assists in 464 games (Has seven points in 32 games this season)

    THE SKINNY: Labanc, who will be a healthy scratch for an eighth straight game Thursday, wants a change of scenery and it would not take much for another team to pluck him off San Jose’s roster.

    [ad_2]

    Curtis Pashelka

    Source link

  • NCS basketball playoffs 2024: Wednesday’s top storylines, surprises, game recaps

    NCS basketball playoffs 2024: Wednesday’s top storylines, surprises, game recaps

    [ad_1]

    TOP STORYLINE: AMERICAN’S SHOCKER

    For anyone who thought the Mission Valley Athletic League was a one-team league this season — i.e. Moreau Catholic and no one else — here is a score that badly contradicts that notion: American 61, Redwood 58, overtime. That’s right, the 14th-seeded American boys traveled to Marin County on Wednesday and returned home to Fremont with a victory over third-seeded Redwood, a result that sends the Eagles soaring on cloud nine as they advance to play at sixth-seeded Benicia in the North Coast Section Division II quarterfinals on Saturday night. Kiratraj Sanghera (19 points), Jordan Bucko (17 points) and Sahaj Bahia (12 points) were American’s leading scorers. Bucko had nine points in overtime. Redwood beat San Ramon Valley in December, a fact that did not escape the Eagles as they made the drive home. SRV is the fourth seed in the NCS Open Division. “I’ve got some kids in the car and they just brought that up a little bit ago,” said American coach Ed Villatoro, whose team improved to 18-9. “They were talking about that.” Villatoro has coached the varsity program at American for 10 years. The playoff berth this season was the team’s first under the coach. Now, the Eagles will have two NCS games in one week. How did the they pull it off against Redwood? “We got off to a good start,” Villatoro said. “It kind of gave us some confidence to get off to a good start. Our seniors played well. It was close all the way.” The teams were tied 17-17 after one quarter. American led 28-25 at halftime and 37-35 heading into the fourth period. The score was 47-47 at the end of regulation. So … what did the Eagles do to celebrate? A nice dinner before the drive home? “Not tonight,” Villatoro said. “It’s been a long day. They had to get out of school early. It’s more of get them home, get them some rest, let them finish any homework they’ve got. That’ll have to wait. We have another game to play Saturday.” — Darren Sabedra

    SURPRISES

    The one upset in the girls Division II bracket saw No. 10 College Park throttle No. 7 Irvington on the road 65-40 behind Taylor Ochoa’s 22 points. A mild surprise unfolded in girls Division IV as No. 9 St. Mary’s-Berkeley edged out No. 8 Lick-Wilmerding 64-60. — Nathan Canilao

    GAME DETAILS

    Division II boys

    No. 4 Moreau Catholic 76, No. 13 Ukiah 55: Moreau cruised at home behind 16 points from Dominic Walker and 15 from Kevin Chapman. The Mariners also got 12 points from Cole Loud and 10 each from Spencer Shonnard and Tyler Bailey as they stretched their winning streak to 15 games. Moreau (20-7) advances to play host to fifth-seeded Alameda on Saturday. Alameda beat No. 12 seed Las Lomas 64-55. Ukiah finished 12-7.

    No. 6 Benicia 43, No. 11 Petaluma 31: Jacob Edwards and Jackdan Eyike each scored 11 points as Benicia, playing at home, advanced to the quarterfinals with a victory over Petaluma. The visitors led 24-21 at halftime but managed just five points in the third quarter as Benicia took charge. Benicia (19-10) advances to the quarterfinals on Saturday at home against No. 14 seed American. Petaluma finished 21-8. 

    No. 9 Tamalpais 75, No. 8 Northgate 72: Northgate’s season came to an end on its home court as the Broncos fell to Tamalpais in a first-round game. Auvin Cole (16 points), Jace Peterson (14 points) and Logan Raven (12 points) were the leading scorers for Tamalpais, which advances to play at top-seeded Montgomery on Saturday. Northgate fell to 18-11.

    Division II girls 

    No. 4 Moreau Catholic 68, No. 13 Hayward 35: Mahlaysia Atkins and Elisa Ortega each had 14 points to lead the Mariners past crosstown rival Hayward. Moreau put the game away early, holding a 43-15 lead at halftime. Evalynn Jimenez led Hayward with 18 points. 

    No. 5 Foothill 53, No. 12 Antioch 39: Riley Young and Beti Terpstra each had 18 points in a 14-point win over Antioch. The Falcons were clicking from the jump, scoring 35 points in the first half. Foothill didn’t allow Antioch to score more than 14 points in a quarter in a solid defensive performance. 

    No. 3 Miramonte 67, Rancho Cotate 46: Karena Eberts turned in another high-scoring performance as she dropped 28 points in a blowout win over Rancho Cotate. The Matadors scored 60 points in three quarters to advance to the quarterfinals, where they’ll face Diablo Athletic League foe Northgate.

    — Darren Sabedra and Nathan Canilao

    [ad_2]

    Darren Sabedra, Nathan Canilao

    Source link

  • What the 49ers said after losing to the Chiefs in the Super Bowl

    What the 49ers said after losing to the Chiefs in the Super Bowl

    [ad_1]

    The 49ers lost Super Bowl LVIII to the Chiefs 25-22 in an overtime heartbreaker on Sunday at Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas.

    Patrick Mahomes threw the winning three-yard touchdown to Mecole Hardman with three seconds left in the extra period. The 49ers got the ball first in overtime and drove the ball to the five-yard line, where Jake Moody made his third field goal of the game.

    Receiver Jauan Jennings was involved in both of the 49ers’ touchdowns. He threw a 21-yard touchdown to Christian McCaffrey on a trick play in the second quarter, and then caught a 10-yard pass to give the 49ers the lead midway through the fourth quarter.

    Purdy completed 23 of 38 passes for 255 yards and one touchdown. Christian McCaffrey ran 22 times for 80 yards and caught one touchdown.

    After the defense held Patrick Mahomes and the Chiefs offense in check for the first half, he helped give the Chiefs the lead in the third quarter with a touchdown pass to Marquez Valdez-Scantling.

    Kicker Jake Moody made a 53-yard field goal with 1:53 left in the game to give the 49ers a 19-16 lead, and Mahomes and Travis Kelce led the Chiefs on a drive downfield to tie the game and force overtime.

    Here is what the 49ers said after the game.

    Kyle Shanahan

    At media podium

    General reaction:

    “Those were two real good teams and it went back and forth the whole game. Both teams played their asses off, and in the end, they got it done.”

    What are your emotions after the game?

    “We all hurt, and no one knows how it feels, and I don’t have a lot of words for it, but obviously we’re hurting and our team is hurting. But that’s how it goes when you put yourself out there. I’m real proud of our guys, and I have no regrets with my team. I thought the guys played so hard today. Not everything was perfect by no means, but if I’m going to lose with a group of guys, it’s going to be with those guys any time. It’ll take some time, but we’ll get over this, and we’ll come back next year ready to go.”

    With the way your offensive possession in overtime went, obviously you wanted a touchdown. What went wrong where you guys couldn’t get through there?

    “On the third down? It looked like there was a protection bust up the middle. We were going to Jauan, and it looked like Jauan killed them pretty good. But Chris Jones got loose up the middle. I think there was a mistake, and I’m not sure. But he’s a hard guy to block.”

    Had you thought about it on fourth down in OT, maybe going for it there instead of the field goal, or was there no hesitation?

    “We never thought about it there, fourth and four. Even if we score there, they could still go down and match it. So no there, there was no thought there”

    With the new rules for overtime (both teams get the ball), what goes into the decision to take the ball first there?

    “It’s just something we talked about there with none of us having a ton of experience with it. But we went through all the analytics and talked with those guys, and we decided it would be better and that we wanted the ball third. If both teams matched adn scored, we wanted to be the team with the chance to go and win. We got that field goal, so we knew we had to hold them to at least a field goal and if we did, we felt it was in our hands after that.”

    It looked like your defense was pretty gassed at that point in the game. Did that factor into your decision-making at all, to give them a little bit of a rest?

    “No. We decided that before.”

    How are Kittle and Dre Greenlaw and the guys who had to come out of the game?

    “Greenlaw tore his Achilles, and I’m not sure about George. It was a shoulder thing and he couldn’t go, at the end he was off and on. He was playing through a lot of pain.”

    You went out to try to shake Andy’s hand and didn’t. Is that because you saw it would take some time?

    “No, we talked on Monday and last year, when we played each other last time, it took 25 minutes to shake his hand last time. So we both talked on Monday, and regardless of who won, I love Andy and am tight with Andy, but we talked and we were both going to do that because it was too hard to get to each other after these Super Bowls.”

    How do you think Brock Purdy played? He was moving around, using his legs. Was that an emphasis to get him outside?

    “Um, no. I mean we called a couple bootlegs and stuff, which you do that on that. But that’s what Brock does. He scrambles, he makes some plays, and we knew it would be like that. That’s the toughest defense we’ve been against this year, and we knew it going into the game. That’s a good group. The way they mix up the blitzes, and two-shell coverages against the run, and the man coverage they played was tough. That was why they haven’t given up more than 27 this year. We had our chances, and needed to score a couple of touchdowns and didn’t. But I was happy with Brock.”

    Kyle, this is three times now, with the Falcons and now with the 49ers, three double-digit leads in the Super Bowl. People will talk about that. Why do you think this keeps happening?

    “This is my second game as a head coach, but I think when you go against guys like Tom Brady and Patrick Mahomes, you never feel comfortable with a lead. Those are two of the greatest players to ever play this game. That’s why whether you have a lead or are down points, those guys are always in it. You watch them do stuff like that all the time.”

    Brock Purdy

    General thoughts:

    “Shot ourselves in the foot with just penalties and the operations and stuff. So I’ve got to be better in terms of leading the guys and how I handle things in the huddle and telling them what to expect and stuff like that. At the end of the day, I think we have the team, the offense to score touchdowns and I think I failed to put our team in position to do that.”

    Problems to start to the second half?

    “I’m still trying to figure it out. I’m not going lie. I think first and second down, we’ve just got to be better. You get in these third and longs and it’s tough to convert those kinds of situations. So just got to be better on first and second down. There’s a couple of plays, the defense got the stops like they needed to, and then our first couple plays were just either negative or we’re not moving the ball so it’s as simple as that.”

    On the overtime:

    “At that moment in overtime it was pretty quick, just, we came down here, let’s get points, take a field goal and then trust our defense to do what they can do. So that’s where our mindset was at. “I think earlier in the game, we needed to score in that moment, and so we were aggressive with it and went for it.”

    On the emotions for Kyle:

    “I mean, obviously, it sucks, man. You want to win it for that kind of guy. And he’s a great coach. Everybody wants to go to war with that guy. The way he handles himself and carries himself like we all just want to win for him. And obviously the older guys, the vets, Trent Williams, Aric Armstead, all the guys that have been through it, man, you want to win for him. But it starts with Coach man, that’s who I hurt for, and I hurt for all the other guys, our whole team. What we’ve been through the last year hasn’t been easy and for it to go like that, where it’s close at the end, it’s tough. I’m still trying to wrap my mind around it.”

    On Mahomes:

    “I think he’s one of the best to ever do it, honestly. Makes plays and obviously he’s got a great arm and stuff, but I just feel like the way he moves and his pocket movement and being able to run the ball when his offense needed it. And more than anything, he’s a competitor and like we said going into this game, man like you just don’t want to let him have the ball, because he can obviously do a lot of damage with it. He’s a baller.”

    Takeaways?

    “The first thing that comes to mind is when you have an opportunity like we did to really put some points up on them and take it, you got to take it. It’s the Super Bowl, you’ve got a good team in the Chiefs on the other side. I think we had opportunities to do that and we all fell short of it. I think that’s what eats at me is I feel like we had we had our opportunities to sort of lap them and get up on them and I think we failed to do that. So moving forward with my career, if you get blessed enough to get this in kind of position again, you have to understand that and not learn the hard way.

    On the Chiefs’ defense:

    “I feel like they play a little bit more man than we thought. We just didn’t know exactly how they were going to play us and we thought maybe just play zone, two show, like a lot of teams do. But they did a good job I think of stopping the run when they needed to and then man up … they did their job on third down so I think they did a pretty good job of playing man.”

    On getting back to the Super Bowl?

    “Yes, 100% I mean, that’s the mindset every year I think we have the team to do it. That’s what’s tough about all this, is it’s a long, long season and there’s a lot of stuff that you go through and but at the end of the day, we all have the mindset of being able to do it.”

    Christian McCaffrey

    On his first-quarter fumble:

    “I think that I can’t put the ball on the ground on the first drive. That’s gonna sting, and I put that on me.”

    On losing the Super Bowl: 

    “I’m still a little numb and angry and going through all of the emotions. I just have to wake up tomorrow, and try again.”

    Brock Purdy talked about missed opportunities. Did you feel like you guys had opportunities to score?

    “Definitely. One that keeps coming back in my mind is that first drive. I can’t put the ball on the ground.”

    Is there anything the Chiefs did that surprised you guys?

    “I think it was more about execution.”

    You’ve been playing in this league for a long time. How does this heartbreak compare to anything else you’ve experienced in your football life?

    “Yeah, it hurts the most. Yup.”

    There’s a little bit of confusion surrounding the decision to take offense first in the overtime period … 

    “I was just thinking that we had to down there and score.”

    Can you talk a little bit about Jauan Jennings? A touchdown pass to you, a touchdown reception himself, the second guy to ever do that in a Super Bowl. Just his talent to do so many different things?

    “Yeah, he’s unbelievable, man. He’s extremely gifted, but he plays with so much heart. You see it in the run game, in the way he finishes plays. I’m just lucky I get to play with him.”

    There’s a lot of attention on your young quarterback, a lot of spotlight on him. How do you think he held up on the big stage?

    “I thought he did great. You go look at the self-inflicted wounds we had, and I think we just beat ourselves.”

    Arik Armstead

    On losing the Super Bowl.

    Ah … sadness. 

    How tired do you feel like the defense got? You were on the field a lot.

    We gave it all we had. It’s a hard task to chase around Mahomes, so it puts a lot of pressure on you to keep from getting fatigued. But we gave it our all, and I’m proud of our guys. 

    Are you surprised that Kyle sent the offense out there to start overtime instead of the defense? Did he check with you guys?

     

    I didn’t even know about the new overtime rules, so it was a surprise to me. I didn’t even really know what was going on in terms of that. They put it on the scoreboard, so everyone was like “Oh, even if they score, we still get a chance to do something.”

    Had the staff ever approached you about that this week, to let you know that there is a time when it goes to OT that the rules are different?

    I wasn’t aware of it. 

    On the disappointment of losing in 2020 versus now. 

    The first time around, it being our first Super Bowl I was a part of, it was tough to lose. After, we were all younger. It was a little different feeling. We all had some great years ahead of us and some more opportunities. This time around, I feel like we have some opportunities, but we were just fighting so hard to get it done, and once it’s over, the hardest part is that you have to restart.

    Fred Warner

    On Greenlaw’s injury:

    “He just been dealing with that same Achilles injury for the last few weeks, and so we ran out on the field together and I see him drop down and I knew exactly what happened.”

    On the Chiefs last drive:

    “We had to find a way to get to get a stop. There’s no perfect call there, we’ve got to execute. We got to find a way to get off and we just couldn’t do it.”

    What happened on the final play?

    “I’m not sure. I’ve got to see. I’m not sure who was supposed to be on (Hardman).”

    On Mahomes:

    “He’s a great player man. He’s a gamer. in those situations he knows when to throw it, when to run it. He’s a really great player.”

    George Kittle

    “You train all season, all offseason, every day you put in for work. You go to OTA’s. It’s a long, long season. It’s a long year, and we’re on week 27. We’ve been playing football since late July. To come up short of achieving our goal and dream, it’s not fun.”

    On Greenlaw:

    “That’s depressing. To get injured in the Super Bowl, hopefully he hits up Aaron Rodgers and figures out how to heal that quickly. Besides that, Dre’s a heartbeat of our defense, him and Fred in there. I know they feed off each other. And I think (Oren Burks) and (Demetrius Flannigan-Fowles) stepped in. I think they did a really good job, but we lose a guy like Dre, it’s just, it’s tough and he’s just such a fantastic football player. He’s everything that the Niners stand for. So to lose him, it really, really sucks for him.”

    Jauan Jennings

    On how it felt to throw that pass:

    “That feels awesome. It felt like I was back at the University of Tennessee throwing to Josh Dobbs. To make that play, I just think about my quarterback coach from high school. I know he’s so proud right now and man, I thought we were gonna win.”

    On the pain he’s feeling:

    “How much does it hurt? Man, anybody got a nail he can step on? Probably about that much.”

    Chiefs

    Here is what Chiefs receiver Hardman said to CBS on the championship stage about his winning touchdown catch:

    “I blacked out when I caught the ball.”


    Check back for updates for more reaction. 

    [ad_2]

    Joseph Dycus, Curtis Pashelka

    Source link

  • Nine numbers that define 49ers-Chiefs Super Bowl LVIII

    Nine numbers that define 49ers-Chiefs Super Bowl LVIII

    [ad_1]

    LAS VEGAS — It all comes down to this: America’s biggest annual sporting event that is bound to change lives and legacies forever.

    The 49ers earned a trip to Super Bowl LVIII by cruising through the regular season and completing stunning comebacks against the Green Bay Packers and Detroit Lions. Kansas City, meanwhile, is on the verge of becoming the first team since the New England Patriots 20 years ago to win back-to-back Super Bowls.

    After the Super Bowl, the only numbers that will truly matter will be the score.

    But here are nine statistics, trends, and data points that could tell the story of Super Bowl LVIII between the 49ers and Chiefs.

    19.9 

    The 49ers use the tight formation more than anyone since at least 2017, since Next Gen Stats started tracking. Their offense lines up 19.9 yards wide, on average.

    By aligning their receivers on the numbers instead of outside toward the sideline, they open up passing lanes over the middle and force defenses to respect both the pass and run. At this point, condensed formations could be the most defining trait of Kyle Shanahan’s offense.

    31st 

    In the regular season, Kansas City ranked 31st of 32 teams in yards per carry allowed on zone runs. San Francisco was the best zone running offense in the league. Something’s got to give.

    7.3% 

    The game could come down to whether or not the Chiefs’ receivers can actually catch the ball. Patrick Mahomes is transcendent, but playing quarterback requires teammates who make plays. Kansas City’s 7.3% drop rate ranked 31st in the NFL and their receiving corps had a league-worst 28 catch score grade, per ESPN.

    21

    Christian McCaffrey’s 21 total touchdowns led the league and helped him earn the AP Offensive Player of the Year Award. Then he found the end zone twice in each of San Francisco’s first two playoff games. To beat the Chiefs, the 49ers might need McCaffrey to be the most explosive offensive player on the field.

    87.3 

    Travis Kelce averaged 65.6 receiving yards per game in the regular season, his worst mark since 2015. The nine-time Pro Bowler is in a different stage of his career than when he was running over safeties, but he turned up the past three weeks with Kansas City’s season on the line. In these playoffs, the legendary tight end moved into first-place all-time in playoff touchdowns and is averaging 87.3 yards per game. The 49ers have the most feared linebacker duo out there, but can their shaky secondary contain Kelce?

    113 

    Brock Purdy led the NFL with a 113 passer rating, steering Kyle Shanahan’s offense as well as anyone could have hoped. He takes risks when necessary, extends plays with his legs, excels in the middle of the field and processes quickly. Skeptics remain, but a Super Bowl ring would be the ultimate trump card for the second-year quarterback.

    8.9 

    Deebo Samuel’s 8.9 yards after catch per reception is the highest average in the NFL. Nobody’s better with the ball in his hands than the versatile weapon.

    The Super Bowl actually features the top three YAC/reception players in the league: Samuel, Chiefs rookie Rashee Rice (8.4) and Niners tight end George Kittle (7.7).

    48.79% 

    [ad_2]

    Danny Emerman

    Source link

  • College basketball: UCLA holds off Cal Bears 61-60

    College basketball: UCLA holds off Cal Bears 61-60

    [ad_1]

    BERKELEY — Cal fought back from a 14-point second-half deficit but could not close out a season sweep of UCLA on Saturday afternoon in the final meeting of the in-state rivals before they head off to new conferences next season.

    The Bruins (13-11, 8-5 Pac-12) prevailed 61-60 in a game that had four lead changes in the final 1:05, preventing the Bears (10-14, 6-7) from winning for the fifth time in their past six games in front of 9,280 fans at Haas Pavilion.

    UCLA won its fifth straight game and is 7-2 since losing to the Bears at Pauley Pavilion on Jan. 6.

    Cal has not swept both games in a season against the Bruins since the 2011-12 season, and won’t get the chance anytime soon. The Bears will play in the ACC next season while UCLA moves to the Big Ten.

    Fardaws Aimaq put the Bears in front 55-53 on a putback of his own miss with 1:05 left before the Bruins called timeout. They went right to big man Adem Bona, who scored from the post and converted a free throw for a 56-55 lead with 50.4 seconds left.

    Aimaq then tipped in a miss by Jaylon Tyson, giving the lead back to Cal with 45 seconds left. But guard Dylan Andrews sunk a mid-range jumper and UCLA was back in front 58-55 with 25.3 seconds left.

    Tyson, who led the Bears with 16 points, missed on a contested drive to the basket and Lazar Stefanovic made two free throws for a 60-57 lead with 16.4 seconds left. Sebastian Mack inched the lead to four points by making the second of two free throws with 4.5 seconds to play.

    Cal’s Jalen Celestine made a running 3-pointer with 0.1 seconds left.

    The Bears trailed 50-41 when Tyson triggered an 8-0 run that pulled them within a point.

    He scored on a backdoor dunk off a pass from Aimaq then returned the favor, assisting Aimaq on a 3-point basket. Finally, he fed Jalen Celestine for a 3-pointer that made it 50-49 with 5:56 to play.

    Tyson’s jump shot with 3:05 left put the Bears up 51-50, their first lead since 7-3. Stefanovic answered with a 3-pointer or the Bruins but two free throws by Aimaq tied the score at 53-all with 2:20 remaining.

    The Bruins led 35-24 at halftime as the Bears shot just 36 percent (8 for 22) in the opening 20 minutes. Tyson scored 10 points for Cal but his teammates combined to make just 5 of 17 shots as the Bears wound up with their lowest-scoring first half of the season.

    UCLA erased an early 7-6 Cal lead with an 11-0 run during which time the Bears missed three shots and turned the ball over three times against pressure. The lead swelled to 19-10 when Andrews made two free throws, capping a 15-2 surge with 11:42 left.

    The Bears pulled within 22-16 on a layup by  Aimaq with 8:36 left but the Bruins built their advantage to 29-16 with an 8-0 run that included a 3-pointer by Stefanovic.

    [ad_2]

    Jeff Faraudo

    Source link

  • Mills honors late coach Dave Matsu with league title

    Mills honors late coach Dave Matsu with league title

    [ad_1]

    ATHERTON — When the buzzer sounded, the Mills girls basketball team gathered at mid-court to celebrate a gusty 46-40 win over Menlo-Atherton Friday.

    The sound of cheering screams from the players and parents in the stands could be heard from the parking lot. The Vikings had just captured the Peninsula Athletic League Bay Division title in a game where it looked like they were going to come up empty handed.

    As both teams walked through the handshake line, Mills coach Justin Matsu congratulated the Menlo-Atherton coaches, walked to the end of the his team’s bench and broke down.

    With his team hugging and cheering with each other near midcourt, the 5-foot-10 head coach took off his thin-framed black glasses and wiped away tears from his eyes.

    When he looked up, his mother Julia was waiting to embrace him. As they both shed tears of joy, she told Matsu how proud she was that he got his team here.

    Friday’s win for Mills meant a lot more than just winning the league title. For the Vikings, the win was in honor of Justin’s father Dave Matsu — the long-time Mills coach who died of a stroke in October.

    “These girls have done such a great job of playing with a fire from within that my dad fueled,” Matsu said.

    “They’ve helped me out more than I have helped them. Just getting through this whole process, we’re gonna try to keep this thing going.”

    Mills head coach Justin Matsu instructs his team during a timeout in the fourth quarter at Menlo Atherton High School Friday, Feb. 9, 2024, in Atherton, Calif. (Photo by Jim Gensheimer) 

    Dave and Justin Matsu led Mills to its first Central Coast Section Title since 1985 last season. When Dave died, Justin Matsu took over as head coach before this season started.

    The stakes were high for both teams coming into Friday’s game. If Menlo-Atherton had won, the title would have been shared between Mills, Menlo-Atherton and Carlmont as all three teams would have had a 6-3 record in league play.

    The pressure of the game looked to have caused some nerves early for the Vikings. Mills didn’t score a basket until the 1:04 mark of the first quarter and went into the second quarter with just four points total.

    Mills trailed by as much as eight in the second quarter, struggling to find a rhythm offensively.

    “I think nerves played a part in the slow start,” Matsu said. “It’s a tough place to play and shoot, so I knew we just had to find our groove on the offensive end.”

    With the Vikings down 19-14 at halftime, they needed a spark on both ends.

    Matsu felt that an adjustment or big halftime pep talk didn’t need to be made. Instead, he believed he just needed to lean on the players that got the team to this point.

    Mills' Sofia Kwan (15) shoots under pressure from Menlo Atherton's Janiya Moss (15 ) in the second quarter at Menlo Atherton High School Friday, Feb. 9, 2024, in Atherton, Calif. (Photo by Jim Gensheimer)
    Mills’ Sofia Kwan (15) shoots under pressure from Menlo Atherton’s Janiya Moss (15 ) in the second quarter at Menlo Atherton High School Friday, Feb. 9, 2024, in Atherton, Calif. (Photo by Jim Gensheimer) 

    After a relatively quiet start to the game, junior guard Sophia Kwan put the team on her back in the second half. Kwan didn’t miss a shot in the third quarter and made a curling mid-range jumper that gave the Vikings their first lead of the game at 26-24 with just under two minutes left in the third.

    Kwan finished the game with 23 points with 16 coming in the second half.

    After three, Mills was down 30-29. An 8-0 run from the Vikings to start the fourth quarter gave them a comfortable seven-point lead with five minutes left in the game.

    It was a shift in mentality for the Vikings who looked timid early. But with each made shot in the second half, their confidence continued to grow.

    “We just knew we could do much more than what we showed (in the first half),” Kwan said about the Vikings’ second half run.

    Mills' Michelle Tang (4) looks to maneuver after grabbing a rebound over Atherton's Janiya Moss (15 ) in the fourth quarter at Menlo Atherton High School Friday, Feb. 9, 2024, in Atherton, Calif. (Photo by Jim Gensheimer)
    Mills’ Michelle Tang (4) looks to maneuver after grabbing a rebound over Atherton’s Janiya Moss (15 ) in the fourth quarter at Menlo Atherton High School Friday, Feb. 9, 2024, in Atherton, Calif. (Photo by Jim Gensheimer) 

    But Menlo-Atherton wasn’t going away just yet. The Bears cut the lead to just two with under 30 seconds left in the game.

    With the league title on the line, it was the Vikings’ two best players who sank the biggest shots of the night. Senior Michelle Tang, who finished the game with 12 points, went to the free throw line and sank both of her foul shots to make the score 44-40 with 15 seconds left.

    Kwan closed the game, hitting the final two free throws of the night as Mills pulled off the win.

    “We didn’t want a shared title,” Tang said. “To get this win for Dave means more than anything for us.”

    For Mills, winning the PAL Bay is just the start of what the Vikings hope to accomplish this season. After winning a CCS title last season, the team said they came into this year expecting to do a lot more.

    “Right before the season we had a coaches meeting with my dad and he wrote out our goals in a notebook,” Matsu said. “All he wrote was league, CCS and Norcal. We have a long way to go before we get to the last two, but it’s just so nice to get one of these for him.”

    Mills High School players celebrate their 46-40 victory over Menlo Atherton at Menlo Atherton High School Friday, Feb. 9, 2024, in Atherton, Calif. (Photo by Jim Gensheimer)
    Mills High School players celebrate their 46-40 victory over Menlo Atherton at Menlo Atherton High School Friday, Feb. 9, 2024, in Atherton, Calif. (Photo by Jim Gensheimer) 

    [ad_2]

    Nathan Canilao

    Source link

  • SF Giants utilityman wins salary arbitration case

    SF Giants utilityman wins salary arbitration case

    [ad_1]

    SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. — Utilityman J.D. Davis became the seventh straight player to win in salary arbitration, beating the San Francisco Giants on Thursday and getting a raise from $4.21 million to $6.9 million rather than the team’s $6.55 million offer.

    Joshua Gordon, Margaret Brogan, and Brian Keller made the decision one day after listening to arguments.

    Players lead teams 7-2 with eight cases pending.

    Davis, an Elk Grove native, hit .248 with 18 homers and 69 RBIs last year in his first full season with the Giants, who obtained him from the New York Mets on Aug. 2, 2022. A third baseman, first baseman, and outfielder, Davis, 30, is eligible for free agency after this year’s World Series.

    AL Championship Series MVP Adolis García and the World Series champion Texas Rangers avoided a Thursday hearing when they agreed to a $14 million, two-year contract.

    [ad_2]

    The Associated Press

    Source link