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LAS VEGAS (AP) — Doyle Brunson, one of the most influential poker players of all time and a two-time world champion, died Sunday, according to his agent.

Brunson was 89.

Brian Balsbaugh, Brunson’s agent, posted a statement on Twitter from the family.

“It is with a heavy heart we announce the passing of our father, Doyle Brunson,” the statement read. “He was a beloved Christian man, husband, father and grandfather. We’ll have more to say over the coming days as we honor his legacy. Please keep Doyle and our family in your prayers. May he rest in peace.”

Brunson, called the Godfather of Poker and also known as “Texas Dolly,” won 10 World Series of Poker tournaments — second only to Phil Hellmuth’s 16. He also captured world championships in 1976 and 1977 and was inducted into the Poker Hall of Fame in 1988.

He wrote a book called “Super System” in 1979, which was one of the first books to delve into poker strategy and created a lasting impact that helped bring many others to the game.

Five-time WSOP winner Scotty Nguyen tweeted that he “can’t believe this day has come – you will always be held high in our hearts, the man, the myth, the legend & THE GODFATHER of poker baby! Mr Brunson, you made poker what it is baby! thank you for what you give to all of us baby! RIP Mr Doyle Brunson THE GODFATHER OF POKER.”

His influence carried beyond poker.

“This one is a heartbreaker,” actor James Woods tweeted. “Doyle Brunson, the greatest poker player who ever lived, has cashed in his chips.

“Doyle was so kind and helpful to me. He was gracious to my late dear brother and every friend I introduced him to. A gentleman and a genuine legend.”

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Peloton is recalling 2 million exercise bicycles over safety concerns, the second major recall the fitness company has faced.

The Consumer Product Safety Commission said in a release Thursday that the bikes’ seat posts can break during use, posing fall and injury hazards to users.

Peloton has already received 35 reports of the seat post breaking and detaching from the bike during use, the CPSC said, including 13 reports of injuries that include a fractured wrist, lacerations and bruises.

‘Consumers should immediately stop using the recalled exercise bikes and contact Peloton for a free repair,’ the release said. ‘Peloton is offering consumers a free seat post that can be self-installed.’

This is not the first time Peloton has faced a widespread recall. In May 2021, it was forced to recall 125,000 of its Tread+ treadmills after a child’s death and other problems involving the machines.

Peloton’s stock was down more than 7% following Thursday’s announcement.

This post appeared first on NBC NEWS

With the odds of a U.S. debt default increasing, Social Security advocates warn beneficiaries they should be prepared in case their payments are interrupted.

Negotiations around whether the nation’s ability to borrow money should be expanded have been ongoing, but Congress and the White House have yet to reach an agreement on the path forward.

The impasse has placed the U.S. in a precarious financial position, and leaves some of the most vulnerable Americans at risk.

Dan Adcock, director of government relations and policy for the National Committee to Preserve Social Security and Medicare, said there is a ‘good chance’ that in the event of a default, millions of Americans’ benefits would be disrupted.

‘Seniors should be prepared if they’re financially able,’ Adcock said, adding they should consider putting off discretionary purchases ‘so they have enough to tide them over.’

But millions of beneficiaries have no financial room to maneuver, Adcock said, noting that about 40% of Social Security recipients, which include Americans who are disabled and those who are widowed, receive 90% of their income from the safety net program. That equates to nearly 27 million people.

‘Even though we’re a few weeks before a default, they won’t have enough to squirrel away to cushion for not getting their payments,’ Adcock said.

Not a foregone conclusion

Analysts suggest it isn’t certain that the government will miss payments to Social Security recipients in the event of a default. The matter would likely depend on how much cash is on hand if or when the debt ceiling is breached.

The staggered schedule of Social Security payments, which relies on an individual’s birthdate to determine which part of the month they receive them, means not all beneficiaries would be equally affected in a missed or partial-payment scenario.

The White House and House Republicans remain at odds after meeting on Wednesday to discuss a resolution to the impasse. NBC News Capitol Hill correspondent Ali Vitali reported the meeting was “tense.” Led by House Speaker Kevin McCarthy, the GOP seeks spending cuts from President Joe Biden in exchange for an agreement to raise the debt ceiling and avoid a default.

On Thursday, the White House said a scheduled follow-up meeting had been postponed.

Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen has warned a default could come as soon as June 1. When asked for comment, a department spokesperson pointed to Yellen’s recent remarks in which she said the Treasury might not be able to pay bills that come due on the day of a default, including payments to Social Security recipients and Medicare providers.

‘This would be really the first time in the history of America that we would fail to make payments that are due,’ Yellen said.

A McCarthy spokesperson did not respond to multiple requests for comment submitted Thursday. Following Tuesday’s meeting, he told reporters there was no ‘new movement” in negotiating positions.

“Everybody in this meeting reiterated the positions they were at,” before the meeting, McCarthy said outside the White House.

Mary Johnson, policy analyst with the Senior Citizens League, a nonpartisan advocacy group, said she is far more pessimistic about a resolution this time around compared with 2011, the last time a debt-ceiling crisis unfolded.

By law, Johnson said, the Social Security Administration cannot spend more money than it has on hand, which she said appears to pre-empt any other possible workaround, absent an agreement between Republicans and the Biden administration.

‘We are so extremely divided, and there is such a big chance of a stalemate,’ Johnson said.

‘And the longer we wait and get close to default, the greater the risk to Social Security benefits being held up and delayed, or not paid in full.’

This post appeared first on NBC NEWS

If you sat out last summer’s overcrowded, overpriced, booked-solid travel season in hope of cheaper and easier getaways this year, you may be out of luck.

Sixty-three percent of U.S. adults plan to travel this summer, up from 61% this time last year, according to a recent survey by Bankrate, a consumer-finance data provider. Airlines are bracing for high demand, and aviation authorities are warning of another season of flight disruptions.

The expectations come as inflation eased to 4.9% in April after having peaked at 9.1% last June and as the Biden administration’s ending of the pandemic emergency officially concludes the era of Covid-related travel restrictions, which have largely evaporated anyhow.

Clients are just willing to pay whatever it costs to do what they have been waiting to do for three years.

— Sandy Staples, owner of Artistico Travel

This summer, wealthier people increasingly plan to shell out for trips while lower earners pull back, industry analysts and travel experts say.

“Clients are just willing to pay whatever it costs to do what they have been waiting to do for three years,” said Sandy Staples, owner of the luxury travel agency Artistico Travel in Granite Bay, California.

“We have clients doing a massive cruise,” she said, “and the round-trip business class airfare to Iceland was over $11,000 per person. They paid it.”

Passengers check in at Chicago’s O’Hare International Airport in January. Scott Olson / Getty Images

Among households earning over $100,000 annually, 81% are likely to take summer vacations, Bankrate found, up from 75% last year. At the other end of the spectrum, just 54% of households making under $50,000 said the same, down from 56% a year ago.

Many travel costs are still rising faster than headline inflation, said Sally French, a travel expert at the personal finance company NerdWallet. “Because inflation is already high as is, this summer is set to be rough for people seeking to travel affordably,” she said.

But rather than shelve summer getaway plans entirely, 80% of travelers told Bankrate that they’re looking for ways to economize.

While airline ticket prices have fallen by just 0.9% from a year ago, gasoline prices have plunged by more than 12%, inflation figures show. The airfare tracker Hopper predicts domestic round-trip costs to climb as high as $328 by June — $72 shy of last summer’s record peak but still 4% higher than pre-pandemic. So travelers like Terri Johnson, of Ocala, Florida, are choosing road trips over flying.

“I’m going to a wedding in Fayetteville, North Carolina, and then to Raleigh to visit cousins I’ve never met” after having found them on an ancestry platform, Johnson said.

“Flying costs more with multiple destinations, so I’m driving,” she said, adding that she’s limiting her hotel stays and taking her own vehicle to avoid high rental car prices.

She’ll have plenty of company on the roads.

To save money, 26% of vacationers plan to drive rather than fly to their destinations this summer, up from 16% last year, according to Bankrate. The national average price for a gallon of regular gas is $3.54, down from $4.42 a year ago, AAA data shows, and rental car prices fell by more than 11% last month from the year before.

Bankrate also found that 29% of summer travelers will be choosing cheaper accommodations or destinations, a bigger share than 22% last year. And 26% — up from 19% — will be traveling fewer days.

A security checkpoint at Newark Liberty International Airport in New Jersey in January. Aristide Economopoulos / Getty Images

“We’re taking every opportunity to get away from home but making adjustments for inflation,” said Michael Huntsberger, of McMinnville, Oregon. For this summer’s getaways, his family trimmed two days off a planned trip to California wine country, and they decided to vacation in eastern Canada because it was more affordable than New England.

“We couldn’t find a hotel for less than $450 in Portland, Maine, and the cost of traveling from there to Montreal was prohibitive,” he said, “so Ottawa, here we come!”

More travelers are also turning to loyalty points and rewards programs to help cut costs, with 34% doing so this year, up from 28% last July, according to research Morning Consult released in March.

Cashing in travel points rather than stashing them away not only frees up money for other expenses, but it can also be a good inflation-fighting tactic, said French of NerdWallet.

“Just like inflation, points inflation is real,” she said. “Airlines and hotels regularly raise the number of points or miles [required] to book travel,” which means rewards can lose value if you sit on them too long.

An overwhelming 85% of travelers told NerdWallet that they plan to put the costs of their summer trips on credit cards, and nearly three-quarters of them said they’ll pay off those charges as soon as a billing statement arrives to avoid interest fees.

But, thanks to rising rates, the remaining 26% who said they expect to carry travel-related balances could end up paying a lot more for their trips than they’d planned.

The Federal Reserve’s recent quarter-point interest-rate hike “won’t move the needle much” on credit card rates, said Ted Rossman, a senior industry analyst for Bankrate, but after 10 consecutive increases, “the cumulative effect is significant,” he said. 

I still make travel a priority and don’t mind using a little more of my savings to maintain the level of experiences.

— Marcy Schackne, Hollywood, Florida

“The typical credit card holder should soon see a rate that’s 5 percentage points higher than it was in early 2022,” Rossman said. “That makes a big difference if you’re carrying debt from month to month, especially if you’re only making minimum payments.”

While 55% of American travelers told the industry research firm Destinations Analysts in March that travel would be a high priority in their spending over the next three months, that was 6 percentage points lower than those who said the same last spring. The group also found a nearly 8-point drop in travelers saying it’s a good time to take a trip, to just 30%.

Some travelers are taking the expenses in stride.

“It’s more of a mental adjustment that everything will cost more,” said Marcy Schackne, of Hollywood, Florida. “I still make travel a priority and don’t mind using a little more of my savings to maintain the level of experiences.”

While Morning Consult found wealthier consumers were more likely than others to ditch their travel plans, Staples said she’s seeing lots of demand: “Summer travel requests have been coming in to the point that my team and I have had to make the decision to not take any additional requests.”

“We are definitely seeing the continuation of the ‘revenge travel’ post-pandemic,” she said.

This post appeared first on NBC NEWS

The NBA draft lottery awards one team the No. 1 pick in June.

There are several teams that need the kind of player who can transform a franchise and make it a contender.

And unless there’s a major draft-day trade, the team with the top pick will select France’s Victor Wembanyama.

But here is something else to consider: in the past 30 seasons, there are just three No. 1 overall picks who have won a championship with the team that drafted them, and one of the players comes with a caveat.

Kyrie Irving, the No. 1 pick by Cleveland in the 2011 draft, won a title with the Cavaliers in 2016, and LeBron James, the No. 1 pick by the Cavs in the 2003 draft, also won a title with Cleveland in 2016. However, James left Cleveland for Miami in 2010 and returned to the Cavs after his four-year stint with the Heat. Tim Duncan, San Antonio’s No. 1 pick in 1997, led the Spurs to five titles.

Follow every game: Latest NBA Scores and Schedules

Regardless, the team with the No. 1 pick will take its chance on the best player available.

When is the NBA draft lottery?

Tuesday, May 16 in Chicago at 8 p.m. ET

What channel is the NBA draft lottery on?

ESPN

How does the NBA draft lottery work?

According to the NBA, ‘Fourteen ping-pong balls numbered 1 through 14 will be placed in a lottery machine. There are 1,001 possible combinations when four balls are drawn out of 14, without regard to their order of selection. Before the lottery, 1,000 of those 1,001 combinations will be assigned to the 14 participating lottery teams.

‘All 14 balls are placed in the lottery machine and they are mixed for 20 seconds, and then the first ball is removed. The remaining balls are mixed in the lottery machine for another 10 seconds, and then the second ball is drawn. There is a 10-second mix, and then the third ball is drawn. There is a 10-second mix, and then the fourth ball is drawn. The team that has been assigned that combination will receive the No. 1 pick. The same process is repeated with the same ping-pong balls and lottery machine for the second through fourth picks.’

The remaining lottery teams are slotted in order of their draft odds.

The lottery is conducted in a separate room just before ESPN’s draft lottery show. Select media, NBA officials and representatives of the participating teams and the accounting firm Ernst & Young will be in attendance in the room for the drawings.

What are the NBA draft lottery odds for each team?

1. Detroit − 14%

2. Houston − 14%

3. San Antonio − 14%

4. Charlotte − 12.5%

5. Portland − 10.5%

6. Orlando − 9%

7. Indiana − 6.8%

8. Washington − 6.7%

9. Utah − 4.5%

10. Dallas − 3% (Pick is top-10 protected but will go to New York if pick falls outside of top 10.)

11. Chicago − 1.8% (Pick is top-four protected but will go to Orlando if pick falls outside of the top four.)

12. Oklahoma City − 1.7%

13. Toronto − 1%

14. New Orleans − .5%

The three teams with the best odds — Pistons, Rockets, Spurs — also have a 52.13% chance to land a top-four pick.

Who is the projected No. 1 NBA draft pick?

France’s Victor Wembanyama is the clear-cut No. 1 pick and has been for some time. He’s 19 with an impressive skill set — a guard’s game in a big man’s body and a big man’s game in a 7-2 frame. He’s athletic, can handle the basketball, shoot it, pass and he possesses great footwork and shot-blocking ability. Think Giannis Antetokounmpo and Kevin Durant — if Wembanyama maximizes his potential.

This season, Wembanyama is averaging 21.8 points, 10.3 rebounds, 3.1 blocks, 2.4 assists and is shooting 54.7% from the field. He will need to improve on his 29.2% 3-point shooting.

Wembanyama will become the first player from France drafted No. 1 overall.

Who else is a projected high pick in the NBA draft?

Scoot Henderson, 19, played for the G League Ignite the past two seasons. In 2022-23, he averaged 17.6 points, 6.6 assists and 5.1 rebounds and shot 44.4% from the field and 32.4% on 3-pointers.

Brandon Miller, 20, spent his freshman season at Alabama. The 6-9 forward averaged 18.9 points and 8.2 rebounds and shot 43.3% from the field and 37.9% on 3s.

Amen and Ausar Thompson: The 20-year-old twins played in Overtime Elite the past two seasons. They are 6-7 perimeter players. Ausar averaged 16.3 points, 7.1 rebounds, 6.1 assists and shot 56.2% from the field and 29.8% on 3s and Amen averaged 16.4 points, 5.9 rebounds, 5.9 assists and shot 66.2% from the field and 25% on 3s in 2022-23.

NBA draft lottery simulator results

Using tankathon.com’s draft lottery simulator, this is what the draft lottery results could look like:

1. Detroit

2. Houston

3. Chicago

4. San Antonio

5. Charlotte

6. Portland

7. Orlando

8. Indiana

9. Washington

10. Utah

11. Dallas

12. Oklahoma City

13. Toronto

14. New Orleans

Follow NBA reporter Jeff Zillgitt on Twitter @JeffZillgitt

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The Los Angeles Lakers advanced to the Western Conference Finals on Friday to face the Denver Nuggets, but before looking forward to their next opponent, Lakers guard Dennis Schroder is paying respect to another.

The Lakers knocked the defending champion Golden State Warriors out of the playoffs in Friday’s dominant 122-101 Game 6 win in the Western Conference semifinals in Los Angeles, but Schroder was not on the court when the purple and gold confetti sprayed over Crypto.com Arena.

Schroder was ejected with 6:20 remaining in the third quarter after he and Draymond Green were assessed double technicals for a dust-up under the rim. The incident happened after Anthony Davis stole an inbound pass from Donte DiVincenzo and was fouled by Green. Schroder then screamed and flexed in front of Green, who responded by pushing the ball in Schroder’s face. They were both assessed technicals, Schroder’s second of the night, which triggered an automatic ejection. Schroder finished with three points and five assists.

Schroder took to Instagram afterward to praise Green. He shared a series of photos of himself and Green during their double-technical altercation, plus a photo of his pregame outfit.

‘One of the biggest competitors there is !!! @money23green,’ Schroder wrote. ‘A lot of respect for you HOF.’

Follow every game: Latest NBA Scores and Schedules

James scored 30 points on 10-for-14 shooting, adding nine rebounds and nine assists in the Lakers’ series-clinching victory. Davis finished with 17 points and 20 rebounds and Austin Reaves added 23 points.

Steph Curry scored 32 points, Green finished with nine points and nine rebounds, Klay Thompson had eight points and DiVincenzo added 16 points off the bench.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

About a week since Mage won the 2023 Kentucky Derby at 15-1 odds, the field for the second leg of the Triple Crown is beginning to come into focus.

Mage will run in the $1.5 million, Grade 1 Preakness on May 20 at Pimlico Race Course in Baltimore. He could face several of the horses he beat at Churchill Downs.

Here’s a look at horses considered likely to run. The Preakness draw is set for 4-6 p.m. Monday in Baltimore. Horses are listed in alphabetical order.

Blazing Sevens

Trainer:Chad BrownJockey:Irad Ortiz Jr.Sire: Good MagicLast race: Third in Grade 1 Blue Grass on April 8 at Keeneland

Chase the Chaos

Trainer:Ed Moger Jr.Jockey: TBASire: AsternLast race: Eighth in California Derby on April 29 at Golden Gate

Coffeewithchris

Trainer:John Salzman Jr.Jockey:Jaime RodriguezSire: Ride On CurlinLast race: Fifth in Federico Tesio on April 15 at Laurel Park

Disarm

Trainer:Steve AsmussenJockey:Joel RosarioSire: Gun RunnerLast race: Fourth in Grade 1 Kentucky Derby on May 6 at Churchill Downs

First Mission

Trainer:Brad CoxJockey:Luis SaezSire: Street SenseLast race: Won Grade 3 Lexington on April 15 at Keeneland

Mage

Trainer:Gustavo DelgadoJockey:Javier CastellanoSire: Good MagicLast race:Won Grade 1 Kentucky Derby on May 6 at Churchill Downs

National Treasure

Trainer:Bob BaffertJockey:John VelazquezSire: Quality RoadLast race: Fourth in Grade 1 Santa Anita Derby on April 8

Perform

Trainer:Shug McGaugheyJockey: Feargal LynchSire: Good MagicLast race: Won Federico Tesio on April 15 at Laurel Park

Red Route One

Trainer: Steve AsmussenJockey: TBASire: Gun RunnerLast race: Won Bath House Row Stakes on April 22 at Oaklawn Park

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Bob Stoops is a champion again.

The longtime Oklahoma football coach guided the Arlington Renegades to the XFL title Saturday, defeating the league-best D.C. Defenders 35-26 in the championship game played at San Antonio’s Alamodome.

Arlington went just 4-6 in the regular season, but that was enough to secure the second playoff spot in the South Division. They took down the 7-3 Houston Roughnecks in the divisional playoff before upsetting the Defenders, who went 9-1 in the regular season, in the title game.

Stoops, who won the 2000 national championship at Oklahoma, praised his team’s ‘hard work and the way we’ve turned our season around.’

“The assistant coaches and the players really deserve the credit. They’ve stuck together, they’ve hung together and here towards the end of the year we’ve really hit our stride at the right time,’ Stoops said.

The victory concludes the first season of XFL version 3.0.

‘I think what this first season of the XFL has proven to us as owners, to the football community whom we embrace because we love the game of football — it has proven that we can do it. We can do this. We can create, in time, day-by-day, the best spring football league in the world,’ league co-owner Dwayne ‘The Rock’ Johnson said in an interview before kickoff.

Here’s how the Renegades won the XFL title:

First quarter

Arlington scored on its first possession, when Luis Perez connected with Sal Cannella for a 41-yard touchdown, then forced a three-and-out when the Defenders’ Josh Hammond was unable to corral a pass from Jordan Ta’amu. A holding penalty on the Renegades’ ensuing drive wiped out Kelly Bryant’s rushing touchdown, but Arlington overcame the setback in the waning moments of the first quarter when Perez connected with Tyler Vaughns on a 9-yard touchdown to cap the 8-minute, 45-second drive. A successful two-point conversion pushed the Renegades’ lead to 14-0.

The first quarter stats were about as lopsided as you’ll ever see. Arlington ran 24 plays to D.C.’s four, had an eye-opening 174 to -1 advantage in total yards and held the ball for 12:47 of the opening 15 minutes.

Second quarter

D.C. finally put a drive together, stringing three first downs together after Arlington held a 10-0 advantage in that department in the first quarter, but the drive ended when Joe Powell intercepted Ta’amu’s tipped ball in the end zone.

The Renegades took another 6:50 off the clock on the ensuing drive, but were forced to settle for a field goal to extend the lead to 17-0.

Scary moment in second quarter

There was a significant delay in the second quarter following a scary collision on the sideline between Hammond and a photographer. The photographer was attended to by trainers and medical personnel and was eventually placed on a backboard and carted off the field.

The Defenders finally got into the end zone when play resumed, capping off the 10-play drive on Abram Smith’s rushing touchdown with 32 seconds to go. Arlington managed to get another field goal before halftime to go into the break with a 20-6 advantage.

Third quarter

Smith further cut into the deficit, to 20-12, with a 52-yard touchdown on the Defenders’ first possession of the second half. But Arlington extended the lead back to 14 points as Leddie Brown finished off a 12-play, 71-yard drive with a 7-yard touchdown run.

After exchanging punts, the Defenders scored again as Ta’amu and Hammond connected on a 72-yard bomb to cut the deficit back to 26-20 with nine seconds to go in the quarter. A personal foul penalty, combined with an illegal kick penalty on the kickoff, though, helped set Arlington up in great field position and they immediately took advantage as Perez hit Brown for a 30-yard touchdown and 32-20 lead as the third quarter concluded.

Fourth quarter

Ta’amu was picked off again on the Defenders’ next drive as Brandon Rusnak made an acrobatic play.

Arlington turned that into another field goal for a 35-20 lead then bled a lot of clock with a lengthy drive following a D.C. three-and-out. A fumble gave the Defenders the ball back and Hammond scored a 23-yard touchdown with a great catch and run to cut the deficit to 35-26 with 1:17 to go.

D.C. went for it on fourth-and-15 after the score in order to try to maintain possession — one of the XFL’s many quirky rules — but Ta’amu was picked off again.

Ta’amu, the XFL’s offensive player of the year, went 16-for-30 for 245 yards with two touchdowns and three interceptions. Perez was named the game’s MVP, after going 26-for-36 for 288 yards and three touchdowns.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Steve Pikiell tried not to push his four kids into athletics − even as a former player for Jim Calhoun at Connecticut and a college basketball head coach during all or most their lives.

His daughter, Brooke, though, said she felt a distinct message from him early in her sports career: I don’t care if you play, but if you play, you have to give it your all.

Pikiell’s kids all took this lesson to heart, and two made it to Division I sports. Brooke played four years (2017-21) as a guard on Northwestern’s women basketball team. Olivia is a sophomore midfielder on North Carolina’s No. 4-seeded women’s lacrosse team, which is playing in this year’s NCAA tournament. The Tar Heels advanced to the quarterfinals, which will be played Thursday, by defeating Richmond 16-12 on Mother’s Day.

Live updates: 2023 NCAA lacrosse championships

‘I was blessed that some of my kids had really good youth coaches,’ says Pikiell, Rutgers’ men’s basketball coach, ‘and I would just follow up with some of the lessons that they were teaching. Like, ‘Hey, you gotta play harder’ or ‘You gotta make sure that you pass the ball.”

Pikiell inherited two struggling programs as a head coach (Stony Brook in 2005 and Rutgers in 2016) and turned them around. He had to look beyond talent to fill out his rosters. He notices habits, intangibles and actions that are fully within a player’s control regardless of ability.

He and his daughters shared with USA TODAY Sports last week how their lifelong love of sports powered their careers forward. This week, they offer ways to impress your coach regardless of your age level or sport. They include:

Be coachable and unselfish.Be a defensive stalwart.Go all out in practice.Be vocal and communicative with teammates.(For parents) Be present but not too present.

‘Be your best self’ when you are on and off the court

Steve Pikiell likes a player who can score a lot of points, but scoring is one of the last boxes he checks.

“I look for tough kids that are driven, that have a little chip on their shoulder,” he says. “Maybe I look for kids that are a little under recruited.”

When Pikiell watches sports – whether high school basketball or soccer or Olivia’s college lacrosse games – he follows who threw the pass that led to the score and picks out other traits of unselfish play. He shares his observations with his kids.

‘They don’t even realize how important those passes were, but they might have helped them win the game,’ he says.

Brooke, who worked her way to a scholarship as a walk-on guard at Northwestern, says “being your best self” and having a positive attitude is a skill in itself.  Are you sitting on the bench sulking because you’re not playing? Or are you standing up and cheering your teammates?

“I think it says something a lot about you, and I think a coach will take someone who’s a good teammate over someone who’s selfish and has a bad attitude about everything, even if they’re less talented,” she says.

PIKIELLS PART 1: Sports are supposed to be fun. Rutgers coach, DI daughters offer tips to keep them that way

Get defensive to make yourself stand out

“Everyone always talks about the guy that scores the most points,” Steve Pikiell says, “and I usually talk about the guy who held the guy to the least points. If I was a sportswriter, I would be writing about the defense. The easy thing to do is write about who scores the goals, who hit the home run … ’cause those are sexy.”

Pikiell looks for ways a player factors into winning that don’t necessarily show up on a stat sheet: who dove for a loose ball; who took the most charges; who had the most deflections.

 “If I get a phone call and someone says, ‘This kid’s the best defender in the country,’ I will go watch him play and I’ll probably be one of two coaches there,” he says. “But if he’s the best offensive player in the country, there will be a thousand coaches at that game.”

Communicate and lead, even if you’re not playing

“You are always gonna impact the people around you by what you say and what you do and how you act,” Olivia Pikiell says, echoing Levy. “So just know you are important to all these people around you.”

Levy and assistant coach Phil Barnes emphasize communication and leadership. As a freshman, Olivia was quiet, even kind of scared, as she was learning the ins and outs of collegiate lacrosse. As a sophomore, she has learned to be more vocal.

“We’re all learning, so it doesn’t matter if you’re a fifth-year or a freshman, we all add value,” she says. “Especially now that I’ve gotten more comfortable … I can say what’s on my mind − just being a leader and not being afraid to help your teammates out and talk about things.”

Leadership is something her dad also instilled in her. And he believes you can be a leader regardless of your age.

“I love kids that are verbal, so when I go to a practice and a kid is involved, engaged with his mouth, those are things that really impress me because now kids just text,” Steve Pikiell says. “They don’t talk anymore. The phone has taken away that skill set. So when I go into a gym and I hear a kid and he’s communicating with his teammates, he’s communicating with his coach, that’s an unbelievable skill set.”

Get after it in practice. ‘It’s bigger than just you’

If given the choice between watching a player in practice or a game, Coach Pikiell goes to a practice.

“I think I see more. I learn about his work ethic,” he says. “Sometimes you go to a game and a kid gets in foul trouble and he’s only playing a little bit or teams are double-teaming him. But when I go to practices, I’m able to watch more, I’m able to see him do drills, I’m able to see him in different settings. I like high-energy kids that are getting after it in practice.”

Brooke sometimes found it hard to grapple with putting in the same amount of time as her Northwestern teammates in practice but not seeing a lot of game minutes. She credits her coaches for reminding her she still played an important role.

If you don’t play a lot in games, you can always go all out in practice.

“I think just realizing that it’s bigger than just you, and (that) we won a Big Ten championship my junior year, and I think, just like the goal of winning as a team … that’s what motivated me,” she says. “I feel like I contributed just as much as everyone else did practicing and making them better.”

As a parent, be seen (but not necessarily heard) for your kid

Sometimes just showing up and exchanging eye contact with your son or daughter before a game will brighten their sports experience. It could also make them play more confidently knowing you are there to support them.

Steve Pikiell tries to know as much as he can about all the people that surround players. He watches how players interact with their parents, coaches and teammates. He watches parents especially closely.

“People are working from home and I go to games now, my son’s in AAU games, and I’m like, ‘Two parents are here? And they’re yelling at the referees,’ ” he says. “I’m saying to myself, ‘These kids are 15 years old. The referee’s done his ninth game today. The dude’s exhausted. I’m just thankful that they got referees.’ ‘

‘I see and I hear a lot and I’m just like, ‘I think we’re missing the boat on a lot of things as a parent.’ ‘

You never know who is watching. Are you yelling at the referees or at your child? Or are you just sitting, watching and supporting?

At Olivia’s lacrosse games, her dad is usually pretty hidden − unless, of course, he’s wearing his scarlet red.

“I’m like, ‘Dad, they’re gonna notice you when you’re in your Rutgers sweatshirt,’ ” she says.

Steve Borelli, aka Coach Steve, has been an editor and writer with USA TODAY since 1999. He spent 10 years coaching his two sons’ youth teams, including basketball in grade school. He and his wife, Colleen, are now loving life as sports parents for a high schooler and middle schooler.

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PHOENIX (AP) — Brittney Griner strolled down the sideline about 1 1/2 hours before the Phoenix Mercury played Friday night, giving hugs and high-fiving her teammates, coaches and opposing players.

Then it was a little stretching, a little shooting and a little agility work to prepare for a basketball game.

Just like old times.

‘I’m grateful to be here, that’s for sure,’ Griner said. ‘I’m not going to take a day for granted.’

Griner returned to game action for the first time since a nearly 10-month detainment in Russia on drug-related charges ended with a prisoner swap in December. The seven-time All-Star, who missed the entire 2022 season because of the detainment, finished with 10 points and three rebounds in a WNBA preseason game against the Los Angeles Sparks.

The 6-foot-9 Griner looked good, especially considering the long layoff, casually throwing down a one-handed dunk during warmups. She stood with her teammates while the national anthem was played and received a loud ovation from the home crowd when she was introduced before tipoff.

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‘Hearing the national anthem, it definitely hit different,’ Griner said. ‘It’s like when you go for the Olympics, you’re sitting there, about to get gold put on your neck, the flags are going up and the anthem is playing, it just hits different.

‘Being here today … it means a lot.’

Mercury coach Vanessa Nygaard said the anthem and introductions were emotional for the entire team.

‘We looked at each other and we just had chills,’ Nygaard said. ‘We were here last year for all of it. I’m getting emotional about it now. Just to see her back out there — it’s an absolute miracle. It was amazing. It’s giving me chills again.’

Once the game started, the 32-year-old Griner immediately went to work, scoring on a turnaround jumper early in the first quarter. A few minutes later, she was fouled on another turnaround and sank both free throws.

She even had a cameo with the medical staff in the third quarter. Teammate Sophie Cunningham went down with a knee injury and Griner helped carry her off the court so she didn’t have to put weight on her leg.

‘When one of us goes down, we’re always right there,’ Griner said. ‘That’s one thing about this team — we’re always there for each other. We’ve got each others’ backs, big time.’

Griner’s return to the Mercury rekindles hope the franchise can make another run to the WNBA Finals. The former Baylor star helped the franchise win its third title in 2014 and has averaged 17.7 points and 7.6 rebounds during her nine-year career. She was runner-up for Most Valuable Player in 2021, when the Mercury also played in the Finals but lost to the Chicago Sky.

Griner said she was more rusty on the court than expected. But given the trials and emotions of the past 18 months, it was a pretty good night.

‘Not where I want it to be, but on the right track,’ Griner said. ‘We’re making the right moves.’

Phoenix opens the regular season in Los Angeles next Friday.

The extra exposure from being detained in Russia for having vape cartridges containing cannabis oil in her luggage has given Griner a platform to advocate for other Americans being detained abroad. She was already an LGBTQ+ activist since publicly coming out in 2013 and became the first openly gay athlete to be sponsored by Nike.

Griner announced in April that she is working with Bring Our Families Home, a campaign formed last year by the family members of American hostages and wrongful detainees held overseas. She said her team has been in contact with the family of Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich, who is being detained in Russia on espionage charges.

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