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FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. — Lionel Messi held his arms up in the air in disbelief. The rest of his Inter Miami teammates joined him in complaint, and waited to see what would come from their contest with a referee.

No one was watching Orlando City’s Luis Muriel, who scored a goal just before halftime that kept the Inter Miami players fuming as they walked onto the pitch for the second half.

Orlando City’s Marco Pašalić doubled the lead (53’), Dagur Thorhallsson scored before the final whistle (90’+4’), and Inter Miami lost 3-0 at Chase Stadium on MLS Sunday Night Soccer.

“There’s always something going on with the referees, some isolated plays. I think MLS needs to look a little more closely to the referees,” Messi said during a post-match interview with Apple TV.

It’s easily the most difficult stretch Inter Miami has experienced in the Messi era – even more for first-year coach Javier Mascherano, whose lineup changes are not sparking enough fire offensively to keep up.

Inter Miami has won just one match in its last seven games – conceding 20 goals, while scoring just 12. They have lost five matches during the stretch, including their elimination in the semifinals of the Concacaf Champions Cup tournament by MLS Western Conference leaders Vancouver late last month. 

Messi and his squad are a club in disarray, about to be exposed on the world stage during the FIFA Club World Cup next month.

“It’s a difficult time, but we’re going to come through this together,” Messi said. “Now we’ll really see if we’re a team in difficult times because when everything is going well, it’s very easy. But when difficult times come, like now, that’s when we have to be more united than ever, be a real team and get through it.”

“We as a coaching staff are failing, and we have to try to turn things around,” Mascherano added.

Inter Miami’s frustration boiled over as Messi, Luis Suarez and others contested with referees before their first goal allowed.

Messi contested an Orlando player made a pass backward to his goalkeeper, who then picked the ball up with his hands – leading to the transition goal. However, there was another Orlando player in front of the goalkeeper who did not touch the ball – making it permissible for the goalkeeper to pick it up.

“There was a strange play where one of their players passed the ball to goalkeepers and the referee told me that he didn’t know the rule, that he didn’t think it was a foul or that he didn’t understand it,” Messi said. “And well, from there came a long ball, and the goal.”

Messi and Luis Suarez each received yellow cards within minutes of each other midway through the second half as tensions remained raised. A season ago, they both scored twice in a 5-0 win over their in-state rivals as part of a record-setting season where Inter Miami won the MLS Supporters’ Shield.

After losing the Florida Derby during MLS Rivalry Week, Inter Miami fell to sixth place (21 points) in the MLS Eastern Conference, jumped by Orlando City (24 points) in the standings.

They dropped from fourth to fifth earlier this week behind Philadelphia Union (29 points), FC Cincinnati (29 points), Columbus Crew (27 points) and Nashville (24 points) after a 3-3 draw in San Jose on Wednesday night.

Inter Miami’s last win was a 4-1 victory against the New York Red Bulls on May 3.

Inter Miami has three MLS regular-season matches remaining, and Messi is expected to join Argentina for two World Cup qualifying matches – Argentina will visit Chile on June 5, and host Colombia on June 10 –before the Club World Cup.

They will play in the tournament opener on June 14 against Egyptian side Al Alhy at Hard Rock Stadium in Miami, the first of three group-stage matches during the summer tournament between 32 of the best teams in the world.

They’re barely a Top 15 team in MLS, amid their difficult stretch. And time isn’t on their side for much-needed improvement.

“It has been a period of poor results, but we must continue working and think about what lies ahead,” Messi said. “We have four games left to finish the month on a high note ahead of the Club World Cup.” “If we all start pulling in different directions, it’s going to be impossible to get out of it. It’s clear that we have to get out of this together,” Mascherano added.

Marco Pašalić scores goal: Orlando City 2, Inter Miami 0

Inter Miami allowed a goal before halftime, and one to begin the second half. Marco Pašalić has scored in the 53rd minute to double Orlando City’s lead.

Luis Muriel scores goal: Orlando City 1, Inter Miami 0

Orlando City is on the board just before halftime as Luis Muriel scored a breakaway goal in the 43rd minute of the match.

Iván Angulo shot saved by Oscar Ustari: Inter Miami 0, Orlando City 0

Inter Miami goalkeeper Oscar Ustari saved this attempt by Orlando City’s Iván Angulo in the 24th minute. Ustari has been on the opposite end of 17 goals allowed in the last six games.

Messi misses shot with right boot: Inter Miami 0, Orlando City 0

Lionel Messi lined up this opportunity with his right foot instead of his legendary left, but was unable to score past Orlando City goalkeeper Pedro Gallese in the 22nd minute.

Messi contract talks: When will he re-sign with Inter Miami?

Lionel Messi is under contract this season, but Inter Miami wants to extend the World Cup champion.

Inter Miami coach Javier Mascherano said of a possible extension for Messi: “Hopefully in a few weeks, we can have some news about Leo because I think it will be very, very good for the club, for the fans, and for MLS.”

Is Messi playing vs. Orlando City? Inter Miami lineup today

Yes, Messi was announced as a starter by Inter Miami before the match. Here are the starting lineups for both clubs:

How to watch Inter Miami vs. Orlando City match on TV, live stream?

The match is available on the Apple TV+ channel, and MLS Season Pass via Apple TV.

What time is Inter Miami vs. Orlando City match?

The match begins at 7 p.m. ET (8 p.m. in Argentina).

Is Luis Suarez playing tonight vs. Orlando City?

Suarez is also listed in the starting lineup, and returns after missing the last two Inter Miami matches due to personal reasons.

Inter Miami vs. Orlando City prediction

Inter Miami 2, Orlando City 1: Messi scores a goal and has an assist in a 2-1 victory for Inter Miami against Orlando City. — Safid Deen, Lionel Messi reporter.

Inter Miami vs. Orlando City betting odds

Inter Miami enters the match as the favorite (-130), while a draw (+290) has slightly lower odds than a win by Orlando City (+300), according to BETMGM.

Messi to join Argentina before Club World Cup

Messi has been called up by the defending World Cup champions for qualifying matches for the 2026 tournament. Argentina will visit Chile on June 5, and host Colombia on June 10.

Messi, Inter Miami upcoming schedule

May 24: Philadelphia Union vs. Inter Miami, 7:30 p.m. ET
May 28: Inter Miami vs. CF Montreal, 7:30 p.m. ET
May 31: Inter Miami vs. Columbus Crew, 7:30 p.m. ET

Messi, Inter Miami schedule for Club World Cup

June 14: Inter Miami vs. Al Alhy, 8 p.m. ET (Hard Rock Stadium in Miami)
June 19: Inter Miami vs FC Porto, 3 p.m. ET (Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta)
June 23: Inter Miami vs. Palmerias, 9 p.m. ET (Hard Rock Stadium in Miami)

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Former President Barack Obama, former President Bill Clinton, and President Donald Trump have each commented on the grim news of President Joe Biden’s cancer diagnosis.

‘Michelle and I are thinking of the entire Biden family. Nobody has done more to find breakthrough treatments for cancer in all its forms than Joe, and I am certain he will fight this challenge with his trademark resolve and grace. We pray for a fast and full recovery,’ Obama noted in posts on social media.

Biden served as vice president during Obama’s White House tenure from early 2009 through early 2017.

He was diagnosed with prostate cancer last week, according to a statement his personal office released on Sunday.

‘Last week, President Joe Biden was seen for a new finding of a prostate nodule after experiencing increasing urinary symptoms. On Friday, he was diagnosed with prostate cancer, characterized by a Gleason score of 9 (Grade Group 5) with metastasis to the bone. While this represents a more aggressive form of the disease, the cancer appears to be hormone-sensitive which allows for effective management. The President and his family are reviewing treatment options with his physicians,’ the statement noted.

President Donald Trump also commented on the news.

‘Melania and I are saddened to hear about Joe Biden’s recent medical diagnosis. We extend our warmest and best wishes to Jill and the family, and we wish Joe a fast and successful recovery,’ he noted in a post on Truth Social. 

The Clintons both commented as well.

‘My friend Joe Biden’s always been a fighter. Hillary and I are rooting for him and are keeping him, Jill, and the entire family in our thoughts,’ former President Bill Clinton noted.

‘I’m thinking of the Bidens as they take on cancer, a disease they’ve done so much to try to spare other families from. Wishing you a speedy, full recovery,’ former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, who lost the 2016 presidential election to Donald Trump, said in social media posts.

Biden, who left office earlier this year on Jan. 20, is 82 years old. 

Fox News’ Peter Doocy contributed to this report

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President Donald J. Trump’s Middle East swing was one big, beautiful business trip – and America foreign policy will never be the same. 

As we saw over and over again, Trump believes international relations work best when they consist of sharp-elbowed business deals. When countries are busy trading, launching construction projects, developing AI, etc., then ideology and military confrontation diminish and tolerance thrives. Of course, Trump’s battering of the Houthis with aircraft carriers and bombers greatly facilitated this trip. 

But make no mistake. This is peace through strength: economic strength. Commerce, not conflict. 

Way back in 1987, when the U.S. Navy was protecting oil tankers from Iran, Trump spent $95,000 on a full-page ad in the New York Times to tell America to stop paying to defend countries that can afford to defend themselves. ‘We are protective of Saudi Arabia. They should pay for it,’ Trump said to Larry King on CNN on Sep. 2, 1987.  

Forty years later, as a second-term president, Trump has swept away tenets that drove American foreign policy for the last hundred years. 

President Woodrow Wilson making the world safe for democracy as he led America into World War I in 1917? Gone. 

Foreign aid soft-power culture projects? All over.  

Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and President Barack Obama rabble-rousing the Arab spring of 2011 and ditching friends like Hosni Mubarak of Egypt? Not anymore. 

Russian military bases in Syria and China cutting deals across the Middle East? Not so fast. 

And you already know the new deal with NATO, an alliance dating from 1949. Going forward, America will remain the lead security partner deterring Russia, but trade deals will be squared up. 

Adding to the shock and awe, Trump expanded the roster of his national security team for this away game. The secretaries of State, Defense, Treasury and Commerce were joined by businessmen: Tesla CEO Elon Musk, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman, Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang, Boeing CEO Kelly Ortberg, GE Aerospace CEO Larry Culp and others. Why? Trump is putting businessmen on the field to run plays that boost the U.S. and knock back China. 

And not a moment too soon. For it is the rise of China and the technology threat of AI that has made Trump’s shift urgent.  

Here are six major scores from his Middle East trip.  

1. Investment in USA

Trump raked in over $2 trillion in investment pledges from Saudi Arabia, Qatar and the UAE. This is real money, coming directly to America. Check out the UAE investing $1.4 trillion in the U.S., ranging from natural gas in Texas to data centers to the first new U.S. aluminum smelting facility in 35 years.  

2. AI chip sales

Long-term, this may be the single most valuable outcome of Trump’s trip. You don’t want a world where China rules in artificial intelligence, and Saudi Arabia, the UAE and others end up in Xi Jinping’s lap. Trump has made AI leadership a priority for U.S. foreign policy.  

The UAE is going full AI and will import 500,000 Nvidia chips per year for AI datacenters. Allowing sales to Mideast partners will help U.S. companies gain global market share over China. You can bet Commerce has ways to monitor how chips are used, and restrictions remain on the most advanced chips, but let me be clear. It was us or China. I’m glad Jensen Huang, and not Xi Jinping, got that deal. 

3. Airpower

Playing to an American export strength, the trip yielded a gigantic order from Qatar Airways for 130 Boeing 787 Dreamliners, 30 777-9s, and options for 50 more jets, making this the biggest widebody order ever. Boeing says the order supports 400,000 American jobs throughout the supply chain.   

Qatar will also purchase some extremely advanced ‘Desert Viper’ F-16 Block 60 fighter jets with upgraded engines, the AN/APG-80 AESA radar and more. Saudi Arabia restocks vital AIM-120 missiles, with a big order that will also help the U.S. speed up production for our own stockpile to deter China.  

4. Syria

The 30-minute meeting with Syria’s President Ahmad Al-Sharaa was a direct application of Trump’s new policy. Al-Sharaa is a radical-turned opportunist, and by lifting sanctions, Trump is calculating that a better Syrian economy will be stabilizing.  ‘It’s not going to be easy anyway. So, it gives them a good, strong chance,’ Trump told leaders of the Gulf Cooperation Council in Riyadh.  

Is Syria an ally or an enemy, wondered NBC News. Wrong question. Syria is neither; lifting sanctions is a chess move. ‘We do not want to be stuck with China being the only choice for Syria,’ Dr. Sharvan Ibesh of the Bahar Organization, a humanitarian NGO active in Syria, told Gordon Chang on May 7. Don’t forget that U.S. Central Command’s A-10s, B-52s and F-15Es knocked the stuffing out of ISIS weapons caches in Syria last winter.  

5. Iran

‘Iran can have a much brighter future,’ Trump said in Riyadh. You know the ayatollah gasped when Syria got its sanctions lifted. All the business deals were a vivid message to Iran. Dump the weapons program and ‘nuclear dust’ as Trump calls it and reap the economic benefits. Of course, Trump is keeping U.S. aircraft carriers, bombers and more pointed straight at Iran. 

6. Slap to China and Russia

Every move made by Trump in the Middle East is a tactical loss for China and Russia. Trump’s deals are far better than China’s underhanded Belt and Road projects. Bonus points for pouring cold water on China’s overtures in Syria. And Putin is writhing over the loss of Russian bases in Syria, which his Wagner Group cronies used to support military operations in Africa.  

Foreign leaders know what they are getting with Trump, and it works for them. ‘At the end of the day, President Trump is a businessman,’ UAE Foreign Trade Minister Dr. Al Zeyoudi commented to Gulf News on Friday. He wants to strike a deal. He is looking at added value to the U.S.’ 

Golden age foreign policy has just begun.  

 

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Robert Shwartzman made history Sunday at Indianapolis Speedway becoming the first rookie in more than 40 years to win the pole for the Indy 500.

Shwartzman posted the fastest four-lap average in the Indy 500 Fast Six on the final day of qualifying for the 2025 Indianapolis 500, outdueling a two-time Indy 500 winner, the reigning IndyCar champion and one of the best drivers in series history in the process.

Driving for Prema Racing, which is in its first year of IndyCar Series racing, Shwartzman averaged 232.790 mph in his No. 83 Chevrolet over his four qualifying laps to become the first rookie to qualify for the pole position since Teo Fabi in 1983.

‘Honestly, it feels like I’m dreaming,’ the 25-year-old Israeli native said after his history-making performance sunk in. ‘The car felt amazing, so fast.’

Takuma Sato, who won the Indy 500 in 2017, posted the second-fastest time and two-time runner-up Pato O’Ward took third to join Shwartzman on the front row for next Sunday’s race. Six-time series champion Scott Dixon, whose 58 IndyCar wins rank second in history, will start fourth. He will be joined on the second row by Felix Rosenqvist, who finished fifth, and two-tine reigning IndyCar champion Alex Palou, who finished sixth.

Tony Stewart started first in the 1996 Indy 500 after pole-winning driver Scott Brayton died in post-qualifying practice.

INDY 500 STARTING GRID: Complete guide to 33-car lineup for 2025 race

Indy 500 Fast Six qualifying

Six drivers get one attempt each. The fastest earns pole position for the 2025 Indy 500. Takuma Sato went first and Felix Rosenqvist last.

(83) Robert Shwartzman, Prema, Chevrolet, 232.790
(75) Takuma Sato, Rahal Letterman Lanigan, Honda, 232.478
(5) Pato O’Ward, Arrow McLaren, Chevrolet, 232.098
(9) Scott Dixon, Chip Ganassi Racing, Honda, 232.052
(60) Felix Rosenqvist, Meyer Shank, Honda, 231.987
(10) Alex Palou, Chip Ganassi Racing, Honda, 231.378

Who is Indy 500 pole winner Robert Shwartzman?

Robert Shwartzman was born in Tel Aviv, Israel and grew up in Italy. An endurance racing veteran and a former Formula 1 test driver, Shwartzman made his NTT IndyCar Series debut in March and has never raced on an oval before.

Driver profile

Age: 25
Nationality: Israel
Hometown: Tel Aviv, Israel
Car number: 90
Race team: Prema Racing
Engine: Chevrolet
Best 2024 finishes: Shwartzman competed in the World Endurance Championship, winning the Lone Star Le Mans event in Austin, Texas.

Robert Shwartzman 2025 IndyCar results

Schwartzman, in his rookie season, has made five starts in the NTT IndyCar Series in 2025. Here are his results:

St. Petersburg (street race): 20th
Thermal (road course): 22nd
Long Beach (street race): 18th
Barber (road course): 25th
Indianapolis road course: 18th

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This was a categorical Oklahoma City demolition.

The Thunder blitzed the Denver Nuggets in a 125-93 victory Sunday evening to take Game 7 of their Western Conference semifinal, setting up a showdown against the Minnesota Timberwolves in the conference finals.

Oklahoma City guard and Most Valuable Player candidate Shai Gilgeous-Alexander led all players with 35 points on 12-of-19 shooting (63.2%). His competition for the award, Nuggets center Nikola Jokić, scored 17 of his 20 points in the first half. (MVP voting concluded before the playoffs began).e Denver Nuggets and Oklahoma City Thunder:

WINNERS

Thunder’s balance and depth

Known for being one of the more cohesive teams in the NBA, the Thunder lived up to their reputation Sunday. Through their first 35 points, all eight players who had entered had scored, with no player recording more than six points.

Oklahoma City’s eight-man rotation shot 51.6% from the field and recorded 26 assists on 44 field goals.

Alex Caruso’s defense

Nuggets center Nikola Jokić is listed at 6-foot-11 and 284 pounds. Thunder guard Alex Caruso, acquired this offseason, is listed at 6-foot-5 and 186 pounds. Yet, Oklahoma City coach Mark Daigneault opted to deploy Caruso as the primary defender on Jokić and Caruso responded, not backing down, using his physicality and strength to pester Jokić until help arrived. In the first half, Jokić shot just 1-of-6 from the floor when Caruso was the primary defender.

Overall, Caruso forced four turnovers and was key in another, with a timely double team that forced a 24-second shot clock violation in the fourth.

Christian Braun

One of the few bright spots for the Nuggets, third-year guard Christian Braun posted a very efficient 19 points on 7-of-14 shooting. Braun scored nine in the first quarter and looked to rush out in transition throughout the game.

OKC runs in 2nd quarter

Behind swarming defense and forced turnovers, the Thunder went on a pair of debilitating runs during opposite ends of the second quarter. Going back to the one-minute mark at the end of the first quarter, the Thunder went on a 16-3 run. Then, Oklahoma City closed the first half on an 18-5 run.

LOSERS

Nuggets’ second quarter

Denver, for the most part, held its own in the first quarter, taking a five-point lead into the second period. But cold shooting, carelessness with the ball and no answer for Oklahoma City’s swarming defense and transition offense led to a massive turnaround. The Nuggets were outscored in the period by 19 points, shooting just 6-of-20 (30%) from the field.

Jamal Murray

With Aaron Gordon hobbled, gutting it out and playing just three days after suffering a left hamstring strain, the Nuggets needed a big day from point guard Jamal Murray. Unfortunately for Denver, he did not deliver.

Murray, who has been battling flu, started slowly, making just one of his first five shots. Although he did end up with 13 points, much of that came when the game was already out of hand. He finished 6-of-16 from the field, including an abysmal 1-of-8 (12.5%) from 3-point range.

The Nuggets from beyond the arc

Speaking of poor shooting from deep, the Nuggets struggled from 3 throughout the game, with the eight-man rotation shooting just 18.9% (7-of-37) from beyond the arc. The Thunder — with their length, size and athleticism — excel at perimeter defense, and it showed Sunday evening.

Denver’s ball security

The Thunder are the top defensive team in the NBA, and led the league in steals with 10.3 per game. The one thing the Nuggets absolutely could not afford to do, turn the ball over, was exactly what they did in Game 7. Denver gave the ball away 23 times, leading to 37 Thunder points.

By comparison, the Thunder committed just 10 turnovers, leading to only seven Nuggets points.

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We have reached the regional championship portion of the 2025 NCAA Softball Tournament.

The field has dwindled from 64 teams to 32 entering play on Sunday, with 16 more teams facing the end of their seasons today. The 16 winners from today will advance to the super regional and continue on the road to the Women’s College World Series in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma.

The 2025 tournament has featured a lot of parity, as a number of ranked teams are on the ropes entering the championship. No. 1 seed Texas A&M needs to win twice to advance to a regional, while one loss could derail its season. No. 10 LSU has already been eliminated and will watch its home regional championship game from the stands.

No. 13 Arizona, No. 14 Duke and No. 16 Oregon also enter similar situations as the Aggies. The Wildcats, Blue Devils and Ducks all need two wins to continue their seasons. Will their seasons continue to the super regionals, or will they all face disappointment with an early ending to their seasons?

Here’s a look at scores and highlights from the second day of the 2025 NCAA Softball Tournament regional round on Sunday, May 18:

NCAA Softball Tournament scores today

Sunday, May 18

Tallahassee Regional: Auburn 8, No. 5 Florida State 3
Knoxville Regional: No. 7 Tennessee 5, Ohio State 0 | Ohio State eliminated
Gainesville Regional: No. 3 Florida 8, Mercer 0, 5 innings | Mercer eliminated
Columbia Regional: No. 8 South Carolina 8, North Florida 0, 5 innings | North Florida eliminated
Clemson Regional: No. 11 Clemson 5, Kentucky 1 | Kentucky eliminated
Austin Regional: No. 6 Texas 9, UCF 0 | UCF eliminated
Norman Regional: No. 2 Oklahoma 12, Cal 1, 5 innings | Cal eliminated
Durham Regional: No. 14 Duke 8, Georgia 1
Tuscaloosa Regional: No. 15 Alabama 3, Virginia Tech 2 | Virginia Tech eliminated
Lubbock Regional: No. 12 Texas Tech 9, Mississippi State 6 | Mississippi State eliminated
Baton Rouge Regional: Nebraska 8, Southeastern Louisiana 0 | Southeastern Louisiana eliminated
Fayetteville Regional: No. 4 Arkansas 12, Oklahoma State 0 (6 innings) | Oklahoma State eliminated
Bryan-College Station Regional: No. 1 Texas A&M 14, Liberty 11 (8 innings)
Eugene Regional: No. 16 Oregon 15, Stanford 5 (6 innings)
Los Angeles Regional: No. 9 UCLA 12, UC Santa Barbara 1 (5 innings) | UC Santa Barbara eliminated
Tucson Regional: No. 13 Arizona 10, Ole Miss 1 (5 innings)

If necessary games:

Tallahassee Regional: No. 5 Florida State 4, Auburn 0 | Auburn eliminated
Durham Regional: Georgia 5, No. 14 Duke 2 (8 innings) | Duke eliminated
Bryan-College Station Regional: Liberty 6, No. 1 Texas A&M 5 | Texas A&M eliminated
Tucson Regional: Ole Miss 7, No. 13 Arizona 3 | Arizona eliminated
Eugene Regional: No. 16 Oregon 10, Stanford 7 | Stanford eliminated

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The NHL had to change referees in Game 7 of the Florida Panthers-Toronto Maple Leafs series because of an injury to Chris Rooney.

Rooney was hurt 13 seconds into the second period when he caught an errant stick from Niko Mikkola in the face. The Panthers defenseman was clearing a puck and accidentally hit Rooney on his follow-through.

The referee’s helmet was knocked off and he fell to the ice, grabbing his face. He stayed down for minutes and a stretcher was brought onto the ice.

Rooney eventually got up and left the ice with assistance as a towel was held to his face. TNT reported in the third period that Rooney needed stitches above his eye and wouldn’t return to the game.

The NHL carries backup officials at games and Garrett Rank took Rooney’s place.

The game was scoreless at the time, but the Panthers scored three quick goals afterward on the way to a 6-1 win and third consecutive trip to the conference final.

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The Minnesota Lynx handed the Los Angeles Sparks their first loss of the season.

Star forward Napheesa Collier led the Lynx to a 89-75 road victory over the Sparks on Sunday at Los Angeles’ Crypto.com Arena, finishing with 23 points, six rebounds, two steals and one assist in the win. Courtney Williams finished one assist short of a double-double, ending the night with 13 points and nine assists.

The Lynx led by a many as 16 points in the contest, but the Sparks came within five points with 7:45 remaining, 75-70. The Lynx responded by stepping on the gas and closed the game on a 14-5 run to move to 2-0 on the season.

Azura Stevens led the Sparks with 21 points, while Dearica Hamby recorded a double-double with 20 points and 10 rebounds. Kelsey Plum finished with 18 points and five assists.

Here is a recap of the Lynx and Sparks battle in Los Angeles:

End of Q3: Lynx 70, Sparks 62

The Minnesota Lynx have an eight-point lead over the Los Angeles Sparks heading into the fourth quarter. Napheesa Collier has 19 points and six rebounds, while Courtney Williams added 13 points and six assists. Dearica Hamby scored 20 points, while Azura Stevens added 17 and Kelsey Plum recorded 15 points.

Halftime: Lynx 46, Sparks 45

The Sparks outscored the Lynx 20-16 in the second quarter, yet trail Minnesota by one at halftime. Sparks’ Dearica Hamby scored nine of her 15 points in the second quarter, while Azura Stevens added 14. Napheesa Collier is the only Lynx player in double-digits with 17 points, shooting 7-of-11 from the field and 2-of-2 from three.

End of Q1: Lynx 30, Sparks 25

The Minnesota Lynx have a five-point advantage over the Los Angeles Sparks heading into the second quarter. Minnesota’s Napheesa Collier led the way with 12 points and three rebounds, shooting 5-of-6 from the field and 1-of-1 from three. Sparks’ Azura Stevens has a game-high 14 points, shooting 5-of-5 from the field and 3-of-3 from beyond the arc.

What time is Lynx vs. Sparks?

The Minnesota Lynx and Los Angeles Sparks will tip off at 6 p.m. ET, 3 p.m. local time, on Sunday, May 18 at Crypto.com Arena in Los Angeles, California.

How to watch Lynx vs. Sparks: TV, stream

Time: 6 p.m. ET/3 p.m. PT
Location: Crypto.com Arena in Los Angeles, California
TV: Spectrum SportsNet, FanDuel Sports Network – North
Stream: Fubo, WNBA League Pass

Watch the Sparks vs. Lynx live with Fubo

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Maybe if Aaron Gordon hadn’t been limited by a hamstring strain, the Denver Nuggets could’ve made it a closer game or even beaten the Oklahoma City Thunder on Sunday.

Maybe. But we will never know.

On the road for Game 7 with Gordon hobbled by an injury that rendered him way less than 100% and should’ve sidelined him, the Nuggets didn’t have enough.

The Thunder moved to the Western Conference finals with a 125-93 victory against Denver, an anticlimactic Game 7 that showed promise early but turned into a Thunder rout late in the second quarter and into the second half.

MVP finalist Shai Gilgeous-Alexander led the Thunder with an efficient 35 points on 12-for-19 shooting, plus four assists, three rebounds and three steals, and Jalen Williams had 24 points, seven assists and five rebounds.

The Thunder used their size, depth, versatility and offensive and defensive power throughout the series, and they made offense difficult for Denver MVP finalist Nikola Jokic.

This was an impressive series for the Thunder, and they took one step further in the playoffs than they did last season. Oklahoma City closed out Game 5 against Denver for a 3-2 series lead and left no doubt in Game 7. The Thunder are learning in real time what’s required to get to the next level, and that’s an encouraging sign.

But they will need to be much better in the conference finals against the Timberwolves and Anthony Edwards.

Both teams are relatively healthy – as healthy as a contender can be at this point in the season – and seeds no longer matter. Minnesota beat the third-seeded Los Angeles Lakers in five games, dispatched the Golden State Warriors in five (albeit no Steph Curry for the final four games) and now gets the Thunder.

Minnesota has a star in Edwards, Julius Randle is playing outstanding in the postseason, and while the Timberwolves might not be as deep and versatile as Oklahoma City, they still have a strong bench and can go big or small.

It should be a competitive series.

But Oklahoma City – based on its 68 regular-season wins, No. 1 seed and home-court advantage – is favored. The roster was assembled and designed for long-term success which includes competing for a championship. The Thunder have been close, getting to the NBA Finals with Kevin Durant, Russell Westbrook and James Harden in 2012 and the West finals three other times before this season.

Following Durant’s departure in 2016 and Westbrook’s departure in 2019, the Thunder embarked on another rebuild, and executive vice president and general manager Sam Presti, this season’s NBA executive of the year, used trades, free agency and the draft to create the roster. He’s as good as it gets in the front office – not only does he and his staff have an eye for talent but they have a knack of knowing the right combination of players.

With stakes and pressure rising with each game, the Thunder must prove – to themselves and the rest of the league – they can take the next step. That’s the storyline that hangs over this series.

Follow NBA columnist Jeff Zillgitt on social media @JeffZillgitt

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Friday night, he was the Baltimore Orioles’ third base coach and infield instructor, a minor league lifer who’d earned his stripes on the major league staff the past four seasons. Saturday morning, he was thrust into the manager’s seat when the man who gave him a big-league shot, Brandon Hyde, was fired amid a 15-28 start.

By Sunday morning, he was holding his first media briefing and aiming to contextualize it all.

‘This is very different than what I was doing. I had a nice little silo that I worked in, and it was comfortable,’ says Mansolino. ‘This is about as uncomfortable as it gets right now.’

A few hours later, Mansolino learned it can always, always get more uncomfortable.

For the second consecutive game in the post-Hyde era, the Orioles trailed their quasi-rival Washington Nationals by seven runs after just two innings. Both games, the Orioles trailed before recording an out, with CJ Abrams ripping Sunday’s first pitch from Baltimore ace Zach Eflin over Camden Yards’ right field wall.

Abrams would homer his next at-bat, and Dylan Crews hit a three-run homer, and a lively crowd on Little League day was soon lulled into the catatonic stupor that just may accompany Baltimore’s final 117 games of the season.

If the firing of Hyde – who endured the club’s tanking and survived to guide it to a 101-win season and two playoff berths – was supposed to invigorate a clearly underperforming club, it’s initially had the opposite effect.

The Orioles were swept at home by the Nationals, who prevailed 10-4 on Sunday, for the first time since 2018, when they lost a franchise-record 115 games that inspired this rebuild that only recently went sideways, resulting in Hyde’s firing.

For a team widely expected to make the playoffs a third consecutive season, and a young core that seems to be regressing rather than peaking, there’s seemingly no bottom.

‘I don’t think there’s really any words I can tell you,’ says Eflin after withstanding the early barrage to pitch into the sixth inning. ‘I mean, it’s frustrating. We’re not necessarily having fun right now.’

And for a young club playing for a different manager for the first time, it might take some adjustments.

A new sensation

The Orioles looked relatively shell-shocked in the aftermath of Hyde’s Saturday firing. Mansolino, 42, who has four seasons of minor league managerial experience, does not expect that to disappear overnight.

‘This is tough. This is emotional. There’s a lot of emotions,’ says Manosolino. ‘For a lot of our guys, for us as coaches. I mean, this was a tough pill to swallow in a lot of ways.

‘So, we have to say that, but we also have to recognize this is not going to be as linear as we want.’

With that, Mansolino anticipates the seven-game trip that begins Monday at Milwaukee will allow space after a chaotic weekend to pull individuals aside and take their emotional temperature.

‘This is going to linger for a little bit,’ he says, ‘and we got to do the best we can to move forward and try to win some games.’

All this is new for the Orioles’ core. They sent five players to the All-Star Game last season, with Gunnar Henderson, Adley Rutschman and Jordan Westburg representing the homegrown core of the rebuild.

Henderson missed the start of the season with an oblique injury, one of many nicks that have waylaid the club so far. He had a predictably uneven beginning to the season but now has reached base in 21 of his past 23 games.

He slammed his seventh homer Sunday, then reflected on this new sensation for the group.

‘It’s definitely different,’ says Henderson. ‘This is my first change in manager, so it is a little bit different, but I have full faith in Manso and the surrounding staff, so we’ll see if we can get it turned around.’

That seems unlikely – at least, to the extent that the 15-30 Orioles reach .500, avoid a sell-off at the trade deadline and remain live dogs for their third consecutive playoff berth.

Still, it’s plenty early, though that means nothing if the team can’t pitch. Sunday, the club designated for assignment right-hander Kyle Gibson, one day after he created that 7-0 second-inning hole in the first game of the Mansolino era.

Eflin, their opening-day starter, won’t meet that fate after his Sunday foibles. But he also couldn’t stop whatever bleeding – on the scoreboard, and emotionally – that lingered from the Hyde dismissal.

‘This was tough yesterday. There’s no doubt,’ Mansolino said Sunday. ‘But as you walk into that clubhouse today, even yesterday, I don’t think that they’re feeling sorry for themselves. I don’t think that their compete has diminished in any ways.’

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