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MIAMI GARDENS, Fla. — Thank you, Lewis Hamilton.

Your hilariously snarky outbursts over the Ferrari radio made the fourth annual Miami Grand Prix memorable for audiences around the world, more than we’ll remember who won the race.

No offense, Oscar Piastri — the McLaren driver has won four of the six races with 16 more to go during the 2025 F1 season.

The thing about this Miami race: Lando Norris finished nearly five seconds behind his teammate Piastri in second place — and 37 seconds ahead of Mercedes driver George Russell in third place.

This was a McLaren blowout. Any intrigue for a thrilling finish was gone like Piastri when he took the lead from reigning F1 champion Max Verstappen during the 14th lap — with 43 laps to go.

That was until Hamilton jeered back and forth with race engineer Riccardo Adami when he had the pace to pass Ferrari teammate Charles Leclerc with about 10 laps remaining.

As Hamilton stewed behind Leclerc without instruction, Hamilton said: “This is not good teamwork — that’s all I can say.”

When Ferrari finally cleared Hamilton to pass after several laps, he snapped: “Have a tea break while you’re at it — C’mon.”

Then, Ferrari informed Hamilton that Williams driver Carlos Sainz was 1.4 seconds behind him — get this — after he was asked to return his place back to Leclerc.

“You want me to let him pass as well?” Hamilton shouted over the radio.

Hamilton was jovial, lighthearted and reflective after the race. He said he was even happy with finishing in eighth place — if you can believe that from the seven-time F1 champion — while Leclerc finished seventh.

“I want to win. I still got that fire in my belly. I could feel a little bit of it, like, really coming out there. And I’m not going to apologize for being a fighter,” Hamilton told USA TODAY Sports.

“I’m not going to apologize for still wanting it, and I know everyone in the team does, too.”

Hamilton said he wasn’t upset at Leclerc or Ferrari. His car simply isn’t performing how he’d prefer overall, but he felt it “really come alive” after getting onto medium tires. He was able to at least see a McLaren car in the distance. He thought he had some chance to contend for at least sixth place.

“It was all PG at least, right?” Hamilton said of his race comments. “I don’t know what you’re gonna write — whether I was disrespectful or whatever …”

Oh, no, Lewis. Quite the contrary.

Thank you.

Insert a gif of Michael Scott from “The Office” with his “thank you” hands directed right at you.

The Miami Grand Prix race would have ended without a climax if Hamilton’s sarcasm and wit didn’t carry the end of the race from an entertainment standpoint.

The gap between Norris and Russell was so vast, Sky Sports analyst and former driver Martin Brundle said: “McLaren could’ve made another pit stop just for the fun of it, and still won by 10 seconds. That’s a measure of dominance.”

It’s also a measure of how difficult it is for Formula One to hold onto the American attention span, beyond the fans who already clamor for the sport.

This is far from a Miami problem. The Miami race has become one of the best on the F1 calendar four years into a 10-year deal. An extension was announced this week for another 10 years of the Miami Grand Prix through 2041. F1’s presence in the United States runs through Miami — just like it does at the Circuit of the Americas in Austin, Texas, and another F1 newcomer in Las Vegas.

F1’s problem, however, is the moments of pure entertainment are few and far in between. They’re easily digested on social media clips instead of a two-hour race, unless the novice fan has elevated to appointment viewer.

Significant intrigue comes at the start of every race around Turn 1 where the pack fights mightily to get out in front. Some drivers might overtake their struggling counterparts after the formation line is set. Others will swap places after they pit once or twice during the race.

Then, there’s the safety cars after collisions. Some drama returns when the race is restarted. But if it comes out near the end of the race, it sucks the drama out even more because drivers in the lead just coast to a victory. Ask Norris, who won the Miami Sprint race Saturday and last year’s Miami Grand Prix in this fashion.

Hamilton won the Sprint race in China, and finished third in the Miami sprint race. But the pressure is mounting after his Grand Prix performances in his first season with Ferrari.

He placed 10th in Australia, was disqualified in China, finished seventh in Japan, fifth in Bahrain, and seventh again in Saudi Arabia before what unfolded in Miami.

Hamilton, Leclerc and Ferrari appeared to all be at odds six races into being on the same side.

The drama that unfolded was sports and reality TV at its finest.

And Hamilton was absolutely hilarious.

“I could have said way worse things on the radio. You hear some of the things other people said in the past,” Hamilton said.

“It was just some of your sarcasm. You got to understand that we’re under a huge amount of pressure within the cars. You’re never going to get the most peaceful messages in the heat of battle. It was fun.”

Added Leclerc: “There’s no bad feelings with Lewis. All I understand is he wants to try and optimize just as much as I want to try and optimize the car potential.”

After six races, Ferrari trails first-place McLaren in the Constructors’ standings by 152 points. They’re also looking up at Mercedes and Red Bull.

Hamilton is in seventh in the Drivers’ standings, behind Piastri (131), Norris (115), Verstappen (99), Russell (93), Leclerc (53) and his 18-year-old Mercedes replacement Kimi Antonelli (48).

Hamilton’s elusive eighth title might still be elusive this season. But he’s striving for a chance to just compete at this point in his transition from Mercedes to Ferrari.

“I truly believe that we fix some of the problems that we have with the car, we’ll be back in the fight … It just can’t come quick [enough],” Hamilton said. “I look forward to the time where maybe I can fight for a podium — and be nice.”

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Cleveland Cavaliers vs. Indiana Pacers. Boston Celtics vs. New York Knicks. Oklahoma City Thunder vs. Denver Nuggets. Minnesota Timberwolves vs. Golden State Warriors.

The NBA’s Eastern conference semifinals are set; the Western Conference semifinals fell into place Sunday night when the Warriors beat the Houston Rockets in Game 7.

The No. 1 seeds (Cavaliers, Thunder) have been impressive; sixth-seeded Minnesota sent the Los Angeles Lakers packing with relative ease; Denver routed the Los Angeles Clippers in Game 7; Boston rolled through Orlando; Indiana beat down beat-up Milwaukee; New York out-executed the Pistons in fourth quarters; Golden State’s experience proved too much for the Rockets.

CONFERENCE SEMIFINALS PREVIEWS:NYK-BOS | IND-CLE | DEN-OKC

Who will win and advance to the conference finals? USA TODAY Sports experts make their predictions:

NBA predictions for conference semifinals

No. 1 Cleveland Cavaliers vs. No. 4 Indiana Pacers predictions

Lorenzo Reyes: Cavaliers in 6
Heather Tucker: Cavaliers in 6
James Williams: Cavaliers in 6
Jeff Zillgitt: Cavaliers in 5

No. 2 Boston Celtics vs. No. 3 New York Knicks predictions

Lorenzo Reyes: Celtics in 5
Heather Tucker: Celtics in 5
James Williams: Celtics in 6
Jeff Zillgitt: Celtics in 6

No. 1 Oklahoma City Thunder vs. No. 4 Denver Nuggets predictions

Lorenzo Reyes: Thunder is six
Heather Tucker: Thunder in six
James Williams: Thunder in five
Jeff Zillgitt: Thunder in five

No. 6 Minnesota Timberwolves vs. No. 7 Golden State Warriors

Lorenzo Reyes: Timberwolves in six
Heather Tucker: Timberwolves in seven
James Williams: Timberwolves in six
Jeff Zillgitt: Timberwolves in seven

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The Winnipeg Jets are heading to the second round after a major rally in Game 7 and will face another team that also showed resilience in Game 7.

The Jets beat the St. Louis Blues, 4-3, in the second overtime Sunday night on an Adam Lowry goal to set up a meeting with the Dallas Stars.

But the story was how Winnipeg got to overtime.

The Jets were trailing 3-1 with two minutes left in regulation, seemingly poised for another disappointing first-round exit. But Vladislav Namestnikov and Cole Perfetti scored to tie the game. Perfetti’s goal with less than three seconds left was the latest game-tying goal in Game 7 history.

The Jets, playing without No. 1 center Mark Scheifele for a second consecutive game, lost No. 1 defenseman Josh Morrissey in the first period. Defenseman Neal Pionk played 46 minutes and had three assists, including taking the shot that went in off Jets captain Lowry.

The big question heading into Game 7 was the play of Jets goalie Connor Hellebuyck, who was pulled in all three games in St. Louis. That remained Sunday when the Blues (Jordan Kyrou) scored on the first shot for the second game in a row, took a 2-0 lead on a Mathieu Joseph goal and got a goal by Radek Faksa with 35 seconds left in the second period for a 3-1 lead.

But Hellebuyck settled down and made the saves he needed to make as the Jets outshot St.. Louis 15-4 in the third period. Winnipeg scored both third-period goals with Hellebuyck on the bench for an extra skater.

The NHL’s No. 1 overall team will host the Stars on Wednesday night in Winnipeg. The Stars overcame a 2-0 lead in the third period to beat the Colorado Avalanche 4-2 on a Mikko Rantanen hat trick. Dallas won the series without its top forward and defenseman.

USA TODAY Sports provided updates on Game 7 between the Winnipeg Jets and St. Louis Blues. Here ae the highlights:

Jets vs. Blues highlights

What’s next for the Jets?

After their first playoff series win since 2021, the Jets will face the Stars in the second round. It’s the teams’ first playoff meeting and Winnipeg won the regular season series 3-1. Hellebuyck will try to match saves with 4 Nations Face-Off USA teammate Jake Oettinger. Dallas is expected to get Robertson and Heiskanen back for this series. The status of Winnipeg’s Scheifele and Morrissey is to be determined.

What’s next for the Blues?

They’ll have to work next season on better defending 6-on-5 situations. Most of their key players are signed long-term. Faksa and 40-year-old defenseman Ryan Suter are unrestricted free agents. Backup goalie Joel Hofer is a restricted free agent.

Jets-Blues final score: Jets 4, Blues 3 (2OT)

Neal Pionk’s shot goes in off captain Adam Lowry for the winner at 16:10 of the second period. Winnipeg is heading to the second round.

Five minutes left

Third-longest Game 7 in NHL history.

Halfway through second overtime

Fourth-longest Game 7 in NHL history.

Connor Hellebuyck save

He makes a glove save on Mathieu Joseph’s backhander. He’s looking confident.

Second overtime underway

The Blues have an all-time record of 11-6 in games that require multiple overtimes. The Jets are 1-2.

End of first overtime: Jets 3, Blues 3

The Jets controlled play in that period with an 11-4 edge in shots. Jordan Binnington had to make several big saves. Remember that he and Connor Hellebuyck were the goalies in the 4 Nations Face-Off final. That ended in the first overtime with Binnington’s Team Canada winning. Also remember that the Jets have been playing with five defensemen for most of this game because of an injury to Josh Morrissey. Dylan Samberg has played 36 minutes.

Three minutes left

Shots are 10-4 Winnipeg in overtime.

Big save by Jordan Binnington

He stops Nic Ehlers with five minutes left in the first overtime.

Jets go on power play

Brayden Schenn puts the puck over the glass. Blues kill it off.

Overtime underway

Winner faces Dallas in the second round.

End of third period: Jets 3, Blues 3

The Jets score twice in the final two minutes to tie the game. Vladislav Namestnikov and Cole Perfetti (his second of the game) get the goals. Both were scored with Connor Hellebuyck out for an extra skater. The Blues iced the puck several times as Winnipeg was rallying. Shots were 15-4 Jets in the period.

Jets-Blues score: Winnipeg ties game

Cole Perfetti scores on a tip in the final seconds to tie the game. We’re heading to overtime. Jets 3, Blues 3

Close call

Jets get a chance on a scramble but the puck is stopped on the goal line. A replay confirms no goal.

Jets-Blues score: Winnipeg gets one back

Vladislav Namestnikov’s shot deflects in off Blues defenseman Ryan Suter’s stick. Blues 3, Jets 2

Jets pull Connor Hellebuyck for extra skater

There’s 3:14 left.

Jordan Binnington save

He makes an arm save on Nic Ehlers in tight.

Midway through third period

Blues still lead 3-1.

Josh Morrissey injury update

The Jets’ No. 1 defenseman won’t return. He left the game in the first period.

Third period underway

St. Louis on the power play for 90 seconds. Jets kill it off.

End of second period: Blues 3, Jets 1

The Jets came out much better in the second period. They were physical, blocked shots and got a power play goal from Cole Perfetti. But that all went away when St. Louis’ Radek Faksa scored with 35 seconds. The Jets will have to kill the remaining 90 seconds of a penalty when the third period starts.

Blues go on power play

Nic Ehlers, who lost the puck before the last Blues goal, is called for tripping. Jets kill the remaining 30 seconds in the period and St. Louis will be on the power play to start the third.

Jets-Blues score: St. Louis gets late goal

Nic Ehlers loses the puck and Nathan Walker feeds Radek Faksa, who beats Connor Hellebuyck high glove side with 35 seconds left in the period. Could be a killer goal. Blues 3, Jets 1

Jets-Blues score: Cole Perfetti gets Winnipeg on board

He’s standing by the side of the net when he deflects in a Kyle Connor shot-pass. The Jets needed just seven seconds to score on the power play. Blues 2, Jets 1

Jets go on power play

Oskar Sundqvist is called for slashing. Jets had the top power play in the regular season.

Connor Hellebuyck playing better

He makes a giveaway but stops a Mathieu Joseph shot. He also stops a Brayden Schenn deflection.

Jets playing better

They’re throwing hits and have outshot St. Louis 5-0 so far.

Collision with Jordan Binnington

Vladislav Namestnikov misses an opportunity and Cole Perfetti collides with Binnington, who gets up slowly. Binnington stays in net.

Second period underway

No sign of Josh Morrissey.

End of first period: Blues 2, Jets 0

The worst possible start for Winnipeg in the Jets’ first home Game 7. The Blues score on their first shot for the second game in a row and they score another goal that Connor Hellebuyck probably wants back. No. 1 defenseman Josh Morrissey goes to the dressing room after an Oskar Sundqvist hit. Winnipeg also has trouble generating chances. Shots are 7-3 Blues after one period.

Jets get physical

Luke Schenn throws a couple big hits.

Josh Morrissey not on the bench

TBS reports that Jets No. 1 defenseman Morrissey is not on the bench.

Jets-Blues score: Mathieu Joseph doubles lead

Joseph skates into the zone after a Kyle Connor giveaway and beats Connor Hellebuyck clean. The struggling Jets goalie should have stopped that. Blues 2, Jets 0

Connor Hellebuyck save

Hellebuyck gets the save he needs after that first goal, stopping Robert Thomas.

Jets-Blues score: St. Louis takes early lead

St. Louis scores on its first shot. Connor Hellebuyck is out of position when Colton Parayko passes to Jordan Kyrou, who taps it in 70 seconds into the game. Winnipeg coverage broke down on the play. Blues 1, Jets 0

Game underway

Winner faces the Stars in the second round.

What time is Jets vs. Blues Game 7?

How to watch Stars vs. Avalanche Game 7: TV, stream

Time: 7 p.m. ET
Location: Canada Life Centre (Winnipeg, Manitoba)
TV: TBS
Stream: Max, Sling TV

Jordan Binnington vs. Connor Hellebuyck

This goalie matchup is the same one as in the championship game of the 4 Nations Face-Off. Binnington and Canada won that game 3-2 in overtime against Hellebuyck and the USA.

Coaches’ Game 7 records

Winnipeg’s Scott Arniel has never been a head coach in an NHL Game 7 but is 3-3 as an assistant or associate coach. St. Louis’ Jim Montgomery is 1-2 as a head coach. That includes a first-round loss in 2023 when he was coach of the Boston Bruins, the No. 1 overall and record-setting team that season. The Bruins won their Game 7 last season.

Goalies’ Game 7 records

Blues goalie Jordan Binnington is 2-0 with a 0.82 goals-against average and a .968 save percentage in Game 7s, both of them in the 2019 playoffs, including in the Stanley Cup Final. Winnipeg’s Hellebuyck is 1-0, 1.00, .973, winning in the 2018 playoffs.

Mark Scheifele ruled out for Game 7

Arniel said No. 1 center Mark Scheifele won’t play in Game 7. He was injured in Game 5 on a Brayden Schenn hit and didn’t play in Game 6.

St. Louis Blues vs. Winnipeg Jets prediction

Jason Anderson: Blues 5, Jets 4. The Jets had the best defense in hockey this year, with Connor Hellebuyck in the hunt for the Vezina, which makes his struggles in this series all the more baffling. He’s been pulled from all three road games and has a .815 save percentage in this series. This pick is less about the Blues, and more about Winnipeg being unable to keep pucks out of the net.

Mike Brehm: Jets 4, Blues 3. I’m giving the Jets the edge because they’re at home, and they were able to bounce back and win Game 5 after losing back-to-back games in St. Louis. They won that game despite losing Mark Scheifele to an injury. He won’t play Sunday, but Winnipeg still will have plenty of offense.

Jace Evans: Blues 4, Jets 2. The Jets battled all year to get the top seed for this moment, but I just don’t trust Connor Hellebuyck right now. The likely Vezina Trophy winner has given up at least three goals in five of the series’ six games. Not to oversimplify the game … but Game 7’s outcome hinges entirely on which Hellebuyck shows up. 

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

– BOSTON – He is out of power, but former Vice President Mike Pence does not feel powerless. 

Pence, the once loyal vice president who broke with President Donald Trump as he defied his one-time boss’s request to throw out the results of the 2020 presidential election, pledged to be a vocal GOP critic when Trump, during his second tour of duty in the White House, veers from the ‘conservative agenda’ that defined the Trump-Pence administration.

‘When you look at those Trump-Pence years, they were years that we governed on a conservative agenda,’ the former vice president said in an exclusive national digital interview with Fox News minutes after receiving the John F. Kennedy Profile in Courage Award in Boston on Sunday night.

Pence said he gives ‘President Trump all the credit in the world for an historic victory last November, and for sparing the country one more liberal Democrat administration.’

He also praised Trump ‘not only for his victory, but for securing our southern border, for restoring morale and recruitment in our military, for taking the fight to the Houthis.’

However, he argued that ‘I truly do believe that some of the other steps the president is taking away from that conservative agenda should be a concern that would work against his legacy and ultimately the success of our party or our country. And so we’re going to continue to be a voice against them.

‘I really do believe that for prosperity…for the success of our country, we need to stick to those time-honored principles of strong defense, American leadership on the world stage, less government, less taxes, traditional moral values, and the right to life, and I’m going to be a voice for that,’ added Pence, long a champion of social and fiscal conservative values.

On the suggestion in recent weeks by some House Republicans to raise taxes on the wealthy to help pay for Trump’s second-term agenda, an idea some in the White House contemplated before the president came out against the proposal, Pence was clear in his opposition.

‘Any suggestion that I’ve heard among some in and around the administration that we raise the top margin rate, the so-called millionaires tax, would be an enormous tax increase on small business owners across America,’ Pence said.

He additionally emphasized that ‘It needs to be opposed. Let’s make all the Trump-Pence tax cuts permanent. That’s a way to really lay a foundation to grow the economy in the days ahead.’

The former vice president, a proponent of a muscular U.S. foreign policy, has criticized the president’s upending of longstanding U.S. foreign policy and has urged Trump to stand with longtime international allies.

Pence received a standing ovation from the audience at Boston’s JFK Presidential Library when, in his acceptance address, he stressed that the U.S. ‘must continue to stand with Ukraine.’

Pence ran on a traditional conservative platform, framing the future of the Republican Party against what he called the rise of ‘populism’ in the party, as he bid for the 2024 GOP presidential nomination, as part of a large field that unsuccessfully challenged Trump.

While Pence, who became the first running mate in over 80 years to run against their former boss, regularly campaigned in the crucial early-voting states of Iowa, New Hampshire and South Carolina, his White House bid never took off. 

Struggling in the polls and with fundraising, he suspended his campaign just four and a half months after launching it.

When asked if there was another political chapter ahead, and possibly another bid for national office, Pence told Fox News Digital, ‘I leave that up to the American people.’

He reiterated that he intends to ‘be a voice’ for traditional and conservative values and ‘we’ll let the future take care of itself.’

As for Trump’s repeated flirtations the past three months with seeking a third term in office in 2028 – which is forbidden by the 22nd Amendment in the U.S. Constitution – Pence said, ‘I think there’s no higher priority for a president or any elected official to keep faith with the Constitution of the United States.’

‘Every single one of us takes the same oath to support and defend the Constitution of the United States and my hope and my prayer is for the president on down, Republicans and Democrats, will take that oath to heart, because that’s the pathway forward for our country and all the American people,’ he added.

Pence spoke with Fox News Digital after receiving the Profile in Courage Award, which is named for a book the late John F. Kennedy published in 1957 before he became president.

The annual award honors public officials who take principled stands despite the potential political or personal consequences. Among the previous recipients were former Presidents Barack Obama, George H.W. Bush and Gerald Ford.

Pence was honored with the award for his actions on Jan. 6, 2021, during the attack on the U.S. Capitol by right-wing extremists — including some chanting ‘hang Mike Pence’ — who stormed the U.S. Capitol aiming to upend congressional certification of the 2020 election.

Hours later, after the rioters were cleared from the Capitol building, Pence resumed his constitutional duties by overseeing congressional certification of former President Joe Biden’s Electoral College victory.

‘Vice President Pence put his life, career and that of his family on the line to execute his constitutional responsibilities. His actions preserved the fundamental democratic principle of free and fair elections, and we are proud to honor him,’ former Ambassador Caroline Kennedy, the late President Kennedy’s daughter, said in presenting Pence with the award.

Pence, in accepting the annual award, emphasized that it is a ‘distinction that I will cherish for the rest of my life.’

The former vice president, pointing to his actions on Jan. 6, said to a standing ovation, ‘I will always believe by God’s grace that I did my duty that day.’

Additionally, Pence, in his interview, noted that ‘in all my travels across the country in the last four years, I’ve been deeply humbled by how many Americans have come up to me and just taken a point to encourage us and support us, and it convinces me that the American people know that what ever differences we may have, the Constitution is the common ground on which we stand.’

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

LOUISVILLE, Ky. — Every Kentucky Derby winning trainer has the same day-after script when it comes to bringing their horse to the Preakness. And the line is usually some non-committal variation of “they’ll tell us” if they’re physically ready to run back just two weeks later in the second jewel of the Triple Crown. 

Bill Mott was no different Sunday, the morning after Sovereignty’s victory. But you could almost see the thought bubble forming around his words, telling the world not to be too surprised if he and the management team at Godolphin, which owns the horse, decide to take a pass on Baltimore. 

“It’s good to have that option,” Mott told reporters waiting at his barn Sunday morning. “I don’t think we’re dead set on it. I don’t think that’s the only thing we’re thinking about.”

Uh oh. Is anyone in horse racing going to listen when the best trainers in the world — and the people responsible for the health and well-being of the animal — tell you over and over again that the Triple Crown is no longer viable in its current format? 

Sorry, traditionalists. But it’s time for the Triple Crown to change. 

It doesn’t have to be anything radical. But the modern racehorse is not bred or built to run three long races in five weeks, and there isn’t a single high-level trainer in the country that would put their horse through that gauntlet unless there was a historic achievement on the line. 

Those who have resisted adding some time between the races have long argued that it cheapens the achievement if you remove part of the challenge. But what’s actually been happening over the last several years is that so few horses run in all three races it’s already being cheapened. 

And the ones that do, in general, don’t come out better for it on the other side. 

Last year, Derby winner Mystik Dan ran in all three legs and then disappeared until December. He’s 0-for-3 since then. Mage, the 2023 winner, ran in the Preakness and was never the same, retiring after two more races and several physical issues.

“I think over the years, people realize that spacing these horses out a little bit gives you the opportunity to make them last a little longer,” Mott said. “I think we’re looking at a career, you know, and you want the career to last more than five weeks.”

There could not be a more damning indictment of how the Triple Crown is now perceived. 

This isn’t the 1940s anymore when it was common for Thoroughbreds to run every couple weeks and sometimes actually run races in between the three-week gap separating the Preakness and Belmont. This isn’t the 1980s when one of the premier Derby preps, the Blue Grass Stakes, was actually held nine days before the run for the roses. It’s not even 2015, when American Pharoah broke the 37-year drought and proved to the racing world that it could still be done. 

And even as modern Thoroughbreds become more injury-prone and less sturdy due to inbreeding and the commercial appeal of speed pedigrees over stamina, it can still be done. 

But at what cost? 

“It’s a long season and he’s had three hard races since February and that takes a lot out of those horses,” Michael Banahan, the director of American bloodstock for Godolphin, told reporters. “It’s a quick turnaround and that’s what makes the Triple Crown so special. He’ll tell us yea or nay, and we’ll do what he tells us to do. There’s lots of great opportunities and really good races to try to compete in and see if we can pad his résumé even more.”

That last part seems significant. 

Because for the connections of a horse like Sovereignty, the Kentucky Derby was the goal, full stop. Everything they did with him in the winter and spring was designed to have him at his peak level of fitness on Saturday to run an incredibly grueling race. 

Often, the horses are so fit after the Derby that they can bounce right back two weeks later and deliver another monster performance. 

But it does grind them up, and the Preakness — for all its tradition and fanfare — is really just another big race. Yeah, running for a $2 million purse is nice. But what if the result is that they end up with a tired horse that isn’t going to run in the $1 million Haskell Stakes or the $1.25 million Travers at Saratoga or the $7 million Breeders’ Cup Classic at the end of the season?

“I think the Triple Crown is a huge challenge for any horse,” Mott said. ‘The great thing about it is not many horses are able to do it and certainly I believe that he’s a big, strong horse and if you’re ever going to look at one and if that’s your goal and the goal of the owner and still in the best interest of the horse, it’s great. Everybody knows that American Pharoah won it and Justify won it (in 2018), but we’re going to look long term.”

If horse racing had its act together, this wouldn’t even be a debate. There would be three weeks or a month between the Derby and Preakness, then another month to get ready for the Belmont. It would still be extremely hard to win — maybe even harder because the Preakness and Belmont would have better fields. 

And it wouldn’t be the end of the world. Though the spacing of the Triple Crown races has been consistent for decades, it has moved around a bit since the early days. There’s nothing sacrosanct about squeezing it into five weeks, and the powers that be should have started a real conversation about changing things when they noticed in the 2010s how few horses anymore were running in all three races. 

After that thrilling Derby on Saturday, what could possibly be better for horse racing than having a Preakness where you get Sovereignty, Journalism and Baeza back for a rematch on a different track with different conditions? Instead, Pimlico will be lucky if one of the three shows up. And if that’s the case, what’s even the point of the Preakness anymore? 

As much as most fans want to see Sovereignty try for the Triple Crown, Mott holding him out of the race might just be the moment of clarity horse racing needs to finally admit that the current format is no longer in the best interests of the sport. 

Follow USA TODAY Sports columnist Dan Wolken on BlueSky.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The NHL’s non-playoff teams will learn Monday night where they will draft, and they will learn in real time.

Previously, the draft lottery drawing would take place off camera before the televised show and deputy commissioner Bill Daly would be handed cards with team logos on them. He would turn over the cards in inverse order until the winner was confirmed.

But this year, the drawing will be shown live for the first time during the show at Secaucus, New Jersey. Everyone will be able to see the lottery balls as they are drawn.

The first and second picks in the draft will be determined in the lottery. Here is how to watch the draft lottery, each team’s odds, how the process works and top prospects:

When is the NHL draft lottery?

The NHL draft lottery will be held at 7 p.m. ET at the NHL Network’s studio in Secaucus, New Jersey.

How can I watch the NHL draft lottery?

The NHL draft lottery will be broadcast by ESPN.

How can I stream the NHL draft lottery?

It can be streamed on ESPN+ and on services that carry ESPN, such as Fubo.

Draft lottery odds

The draft lottery winner can move up a maximum of 10 spots, so only the bottom 11 teams have a chance to win the No. 1 pick. The last-place team has an 18.5% chance of winning outright, plus would retain the first overall pick if a team that finishes 12th to 16th from the bottom wins the lottery. The Rangers dealt their pick to Vancouver in the J.T. Miller trade but it’s top-13 protected. If the Flames win one of the drawings, the Canadiens would get the Panthers’ first-round pick instead.

San Jose Sharks – 25.5% (18.5% outright)
Chicago Blackhawks – 13.5%
Nashville Predators – 11.5%
Philadelphia Flyers – 9.5%
Boston Bruins – 8.5%
Seattle Kraken – 7.5%
Buffalo Sabres – 6.5%
Anaheim Ducks – 6.0%
Pittsburgh Penguins – 5.0%
New York Islanders – 3.5%
New York Rangers – 3.0%
Detroit Red Wings – 2.5%
Columbus Blue Jackets – 2.0%
Utah Hockey Club – 1.5%
Vancouver Canucks – 0.5%
Montreal Canadiens (from Calgary Flames) – 0.5%

How does the draft lottery work?

There are two drawings, first for a chance at the top pick and then for a chance at the second pick. Winning teams can move up only 10 spots. The last-place team can draft no lower than third overall. Beginning with the 2022 lottery, a team cannot win more than twice in a five-year period.

There are 14 balls, numbered 1 to 14, in the machine and each team is assigned a series of four numbers. The resulting four-digit series is matched against a table that lists the 1,000 possible combinations to determine which team was assigned the winning combination. The lower a team is in the standings, the more series of numbers it gets. The last-place Sharks will be assigned 185 numbers.

Who is the top prospect?

Defenseman Matthew Schaefer is the top-ranked North American skater in NHL Central Scouting’s final rankings of 2025 draft prospects, despite not playing since the world junior hockey championship in December.

He scored 22 points in 17 games with the Erie (Pennsylvania) Otters and had two points in two games at the tournament before breaking his collarbone and missing the rest of the tournament and the season.

“He is the complete package playing a dynamic style that generates results and influences the outcome of games,’ said Dan Marr, vice president of NHL Central Scouting. ‘Schaefer easily projects as a future All-Star in the NHL.”

Top North American skaters

Erie (OHL) defenseman Matthew Schaefer
Saginaw (OHL) center Michael Misa
Boston College center James Hagens
Brantford (OHL) center Jake O’Brien
Seattle (WHL) defenseman Radim Mrtka
Brampton (OHL) right wing Porter Martone
Moncton (QMJHL) center Caleb Desnoyers
Brandon (WHL) center Roger McQueen
Barrie (OHL) defenseman Kashawn Aitcheson
Everett (WHL) left wing Carter Bear

Top international skaters

Djurgarden (Sweden) center Anton Frondell
Djurgarden (Sweden) right wing Victor Eklund
Modo Jr. (Sweden) Milton Gastrin
Karlovy Vary (Czechia) left wing Vojtech Cihar
Ufa Jr. (Russia) right wing Alexander Zharovsky

When is the NHL draft?

The 2025 NHL Draft will be held June 27-28. The first round will be on June 27 and rounds 2-7 will be held the next day. The times haven’t been announced yet. It will be held in Los Angeles at L.A. Live’s Peacock Theater. Top prospects will be there, but not team representatives, who will take part virtually.

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All year, the Western Conference has been lauded as deep and talented.

That remains true as four teams remain in the West playoffs, including the sixth-seeded Minnesota Timberwolves and seventh-seeded Golden State Warriors, who will face each other in a conference semifinals series.

That means a No. 7 or No. 6 seed will reach the conference finals.

Warriors-Timberwolves features stars (Steph Curry, Anthony Edwards), and the series is a matchup of one team trying to extend its dynasty (Golden State) and another trying to reach its first NBA Finals (Minnesota).

Here’s everything you need to know about the second-round series between the Timberwolves and Warriors:

Golden State Warriors vs. Minnesota Timberwolves most important players to watch

Anthony Edwards, guard, Timberwolves: Edwards was the most impactful player on the court in the Timberwolves’ first-round series victory against the Los Angeles Lakers. He averaged 26.8 points, 8.4 rebounds, 6.2 assists and 1.2 steals and shot 42% from the field, 33.3% on 3-pointers and 77.4% on free throws (his shooting efficiency needs to improve in the second round, for sure). Julius Randle’s play is important, too, but the Timberwolves can win games when Randle isn’t elite. The Timberwolves need Edwards – not just his talent but his confidence, too – to be the best player on the court to win this series.

Jimmy Butler, forward, Warriors: The Warriors acquired Butler at the trade deadline so they were better equipped to make another run at a title with Steph Curry and Draymond Green. The Warriors are 27-10, including the playoffs, with Butler in the lineup. He has improved the Warriors offensively and defensively and gives them a chance to get back to the conference finals. Yes, Curry needs to play well, but it’s Playoff Jimmy that can push the Warriors to the next round.

Golden State Warriors vs. Minnesota Timberwolves preview

How the Timberwolves will win: The Timberwolves are well coached (just devised a game plan to limit Luka Doncic and LeBron James), defend, have some depth and can score just enough to eke out victories with Edwards leading. The Timberwolves had a solid first round. If indeed Edwards is the best player on the court in the series, Minnesota could be playing in the conference finals for the second consecutive season. Coach Chris Finch’s ability to gameplan for an opponent is a big part of the Timberwolves’ success.

How the Warriors will win: Curry. Green. Butler. Coach Steve Kerr. That kind of experience is what drives a team deeper in the playoffs. Throw in shooting from Buddy Hield and Brandin Podziemski, solid defense and minimal turnovers and the Warriors have a recipe for success.

Golden State Warriors vs. Minnesota Timberwolves stat

The Timberwolves are No. 2 in offensive rebounding and No. 1 in second-chance points in the playoffs.

Golden State Warriors vs. Minnesota Timberwolves predictions

Lorenzo Reyes: Timberwolves in six
Heather Tucker: Timberwolves in seven
James Williams: Timberwolves in six
Jeff Zillgitt: Timberwolves in seven

Golden State Warriors vs. Minnesota Timberwolves schedule

Game 1: Warriors at Timberwolves | Tuesday, May 6, 9:30 p.m. | TNT
Game 2: Warriors at Timberwolves | Thursday, May 8, 8:30 p.m. | TNT
Game 3: Timberwolves at Warriors | Saturday, May 10, 8:30 p.m. | ABC
Game 4: Timberwolves at Warriors | Monday, May 12, 10 p.m. | ESPN
Game 5: Warriors at Timberwolves | Wednesday, May 14, time TBD | TNT*
Game 6: Timberwolves at Warriors | Sunday, May 18, TBD | TBD*
Game 7: Warriors at Timberwolves | Tuesday, May 20, 8:30 | ESPN *

All times Eastern. *-if necessary

Golden State Warriors vs. Minnesota Timberwolves season series

Warriors won the series 3-1.

Dec. 6: Timberwolves 107, Warriors 90
Dec. 8: Warriors 114, Timberwolves 106
Dec. 21: Warriors 113, Timberwolves 103
Jan. 15: Warriors 116, Timberwolves 115

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Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., expressed her frustrations on a variety of political topics on Friday, stating in a post on X that she represents the Republican base and if she’s unhappy, the base is too.

The congresswoman suggested that the situation does not bode well for future elections, as President Donald Trump will not be on the ballot.

‘I represent the base and when I’m frustrated and upset over the direction of things, you better be clear, the base is not happy,’ Greene wrote. ‘When you are losing MTG, you are losing the base. And Trump isn’t on the ballot in the future, so do the math on that.’

Fox News Digital reached out to Greene’s office for a comment on her post, but did not receive a response by the time of publication.

‘I campaigned for no more foreign wars. And now we are supposedly on the verge of going to war with Iran. I don’t think we should be bombing foreign countries on behalf of other foreign countries especially when they have their own nuclear weapons and massive military strength,’ the lawmaker wrote.

She has expressed staunch opposition to the minerals deal the Trump administration struck with Ukraine last week. 

The White House indicated that the ‘partnership between the United States and Ukraine establishes a fund that will receive 50% of royalties, license fees, and other similar payments from natural resource projects in Ukraine.’

Ukrainian official Yulia Svyrydenko noted, ‘the Fund will be financed exclusively from NEW licenses,’ and the U.S. ‘will contribute to the Fund. In addition to direct financial contributions, it may also provide NEW assistance — for example, air defense systems for Ukraine.’

Greene asked in her post, ‘Why on earth would we go over and occupy Ukraine and spend an untold amount of future American taxpayer dollars defending and mining their minerals as well as potentially putting American lives at risk and future war? Why don’t we just mine our own rare earth minerals that are tied up on federal lands that the government confiscated years ago?’

Another issue Greene expressed frustration with is the coronavirus pandemic, specifically the COVID-19 vaccines.

‘I also campaigned on accountability for the communist and tyrannical acts made by the government during Covid. Yet the Covid vaccine still has FDA approval even though there are millions reported injuries and deaths, and this mRNA vaccine is known to have horrific side effects and DOES NOT STOP PEOPLE FROM CATCHING COVID. And to this day, it’s still on the childhood vaccine schedule, why on earth is this happening?’ she asked.

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The Indiana Pacers stole Game 1 of their second-round playoff series Sunday night on the road against the Cleveland Cavaliers, 121-112.

It was a surprising result, after the Cavaliers — the wire-to-wire No. 1 seed in the Eastern Conference — rolled through their first-round opponent, the Miami Heat, in a commanding sweep.

But, if Game 1 was any indication, this will be a competitive, back-and-forth series; the Cavaliers recorded consecutive losses just three times during the regular season, so a response should be expected.

Here are three things we learned from Game 1 of the conference semifinals series between the No. 4 Indiana Pacers and No. 1 Cleveland Cavaliers.

The Cavaliers sorely missed Darius Garland

In a game in which the Pacers sprinted out in transition, point guard Darius Garland’s absence was palpable. Missing his third consecutive game with a toe sprain, Garland provides a counterpoint to Pacers point guard Tyrese Haliburton. Although Garland can be a liability on defense, his speed and athleticism would’ve helped diversify Cleveland’s offense, especially from 3; the Cavs shot just 23.7% from beyond the arc and snapped a streak of 91 games with at least 10 made 3s. Garland, a 40.1% shooter this season from 3, could have made a huge difference.

Indiana’s 3-point deluge impressive, but regression is likely

With the tempo the Pacers unleashed Sunday, they were able to unsettle Cleveland’s defense, especially along the perimeter. And when Indiana was able to put up clean looks from beyond the arc, it flushed 19-of-36 (52.8%) of them. Many were open, but that pace is not only unsustainable, a steep regression to the mean should be expected. Cleveland will almost certainly adjust, and the Pacers were tied for a very respectable 9th this season in 3-point percentage, but it was at a 36.8% clip.

Cavaliers top priority for Game 2? Slow the Pacers in transition

Though the stats for fastbreak points appear at first glance to be even — with the Pacers winning 15-14 — that was not reflective of the way Indiana relentlessly scooped rebounds and loose balls and galloped up the floor. The Cavaliers did far better in the second half at getting back and protecting the rim and rushing to close lanes in transition. Still, Game 1 proved that one half will not be nearly sufficient against a team that ranked 7th in pace (100.76) in the regular season.

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On Star Wars Day, the Baltimore Orioles and Kansas City Royals broke out some high-powered weaponry at Camden Yards.

The two teams combined for an MLB record-tying 10 solo home runs in a single game as the Royals went on to post an 11-6 win over the slumping Orioles.

Kansas City’s Maikel Garcia and Baltimore’s Jackson Holliday led the way with a pair of solo blasts apiece.

The battle was so intense, it prompted Orioles television announcer Kevin Brown to exclaim that the two teams ‘were putting the tattoo in Tattooine’ in one of many Star Wars references throughout the day.

The Orioles’ Cedric Mullins and Ryan O’Hearn, along with the Royals’ Jonathan India, Bobby Witt Jr., Vinnie Pasquantino and Luke Maile also contributed to the onslaught.

Royals second baseman Michael Massey added an 11th home run of the game in the top of the ninth inning, but it came with a runner on base — ending the run of solo shots. It was also the Royals’ seventh homer of the game, setting a franchise single-game record.

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