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Vegas Blown Away: Like a Hurricane

June 15, 2026 by Digital Sports Desk

LAS VEGAS — Rod Brind’Amour captained the Carolina Hurricanes to their first Stanley Cup in 2006.

Twenty years later on Sunday night, Brind’Amour got to pick up and hold the trophy again on the ice at T-Mobile Arena after coaching the Hurricanes to another Stanley Cup victory.

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Rookie goaltender Brandon Bussi, a waiver-wire pickup from Florida in October, made 22 saves to win his third straight start and record his first career playoff shutout, and Jackson Blake had a goal and an assist to lead the Hurricanes to a 3-0 victory over the Vegas Golden Knights in Game 6 on Sunday night.

Taylor Hall and Nikolaj Ehlers also scored for Carolina, which won the best-of-seven series, 4-2.

“I think it was just our time,” Brind’Amour said. “We weren’t going to be denied.”

Carolina captain Jordan Staal, who tied a Stanley Cup Final record with goals in five straight games to start the series and totaled six goals in the finals, was awarded the Conn Smythe Trophy as the most valuable player in the playoffs.

According to Sportsnet Stats, Brind’Amour became just the fourth person to both captain and coach a franchise to a Stanley Cup, joining Toe Blake (Montreal Canadiens), Hap Day (Toronto Maple Leafs) and Cooney Weiland (Boston Bruins).

“It felt great (to lift the Cup again),” Brind’Amour said. “I’m so happy for everyone. That’s what this is about. That’s what hockey is about. It’s the ultimate team sport.”

Brind’Amour was asked to compare winning the Stanley Cup as a player and a head coach.

“It’s different, because as a player, I really wanted it for myself,” Brind’Amour said. “Now, sitting back behind (the bench) watching, I really wanted it for these guys because there’s no harder-working group. I see it every day. It’s just like a proud dad watching his kids go to work. Just couldn’t say enough good things about this group.”

At 37 years and 277 days, Staal became the oldest winner of the Conn Smythe. Goaltender Tim Thomas (2011) of the Boston Bruins was the previous oldest at 37 years and 61 days.

Staal also won the Stanley Cup in 2009 as a member of the Pittsburgh Penguins.

“That’s a lot of years,” Staal said. “I mean, it’s amazing. It’s something I’ve been going after ever since I got the first one. You want to win it again and again and again.”

Carter Hart finished with 20 saves for Vegas, which lost in the finals for the second time in the team’s nine-year history. The Golden Knights won the Stanley Cup in 2023.

Hall gave Carolina a 1-0 lead at the 3:47 mark of the first period. Jaccob Slavin set up the score with a stretch pass from blue line to blue line. Hall was open as he took the pass and broke in on the left wing, beating Hart with a wrist shot past his glove side for his seventh goal of the playoffs and second in the finals.

Vegas, which outshot the Hurricanes 11-8 in the opening period, had several excellent chances to tie the game later in the period. Brett Howden broke in alone down the slot midway through the period, but Bussi made a stick save on his five-hole try.

The Golden Knights had a flurry of chances near the end of the period, including two close-in tries by Mark Stone and a one-timer by Pavel Dorofeyev from the bottom of the right circle that Bussi made a diving save to stop.

Carolina tightened up on defense in the second period, holding Vegas to just three shots on goal. The Hurricanes extended the lead to 2-0 at the 13:31 mark when Logan Stankoven fed Blake alone on the edge on the right circle, and Blake blasted a one-timer past Hart’s glove side for his seventh goal of the playoffs.

Vegas had a chance to cut the lead in half midway through the third period when Carolina forward Eric Robinson went to the penalty box for high-sticking Nic Dowd. On the ensuing power play, Stone crossed a pass to a wide-open Jack Eichel at the bottom edge of the left circle, but Eichel’s snap shot against a stickless Bussi went off the crossbar.

The Golden Knights pulled Hart for an extra attacker with three minutes to go, and Ehlers intercepted a pass and sealed the win with an empty-netter with 68 seconds to play, his eighth goal of the playoffs.

“As I’ve always said, it’s a find-a-way league,” Vegas coach John Tortorella said. “All the games were close, and it was just try to find a way, and they did tonight, and they beat us.”

Golden Knights defenseman Brayden McNabb, who played the final four  games with a full cage after taking an Ehlers slap shot on the nose that needed 30 stitches to repair, said he was proud of his team.

“We came together late in the year and we battled our asses off,” McNabb said. “I’m proud of how we got here. We just came up a little bit short.”

Slavin joined Ken Morrow (Islanders, 1980) as the only American-born players to win Olympic gold and the Stanley Cup in the same year.

–Steve Guiremand, Field Level Media

 

Filed Under: NHL Tagged With: 2026 Stanley Cup Final, Carolina Hurricanes, NHL, Vegas Golden Knights

Rangers Hold Off Red Sox

June 15, 2026 by Digital Sports Desk

BOSTON – (Wire Service Report) – Wyatt Langford and Kyle Higashioka homered in back-to-back innings to start the game, and the visiting Texas Rangers avoided a three-game series sweep at the hands of the Boston Red Sox with a 6-4 win on Sunday night.

The Rangers tagged Boston starter Connelly Early (5-5) for six runs and 11 hits through the first 4 2/3 innings and totaled 13 knocks in the game.

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Beyond the long balls, Brandon Nimmo (2-for-5) hit a clutch two-RBI double in the fourth inning, while Justin Foscue went 3-for-3 with a run scored. Higashioka and Cody Freeman also had multiple hits.

The early offense stood tall as Rangers starter Nathan Eovaldi (6-7) pitched seven innings, striking out six while working around three runs and six hits.

Willson Contreras homered twice on his 3-for-4 night and Masataka Yoshida went 2-for-4 with a double and run scored to lead the Red Sox, who have lost five of their last seven games.

With the Tartan Army filling the Fenway Park stands after Scotland’s World Cup win in Foxborough, Mass., on Saturday, Early was tagged for a first-pitch leadoff home run for a second consecutive start. Langford crushed a solo shot completely over the Green Monster and out of the ballpark to lift Texas to an immediate 1-0 lead in the first inning.

The Rangers busted open the score with three straight hits to start the second. After Foscue and Cody Freeman stung back-to-back singles to center, Higashioka drove them both home with a three-run shot that just cleared the left-field wall.

After Eovaldi set down his former team 1-2-3 to start the game, Contreras went deep to left to get Boston on the scoreboard at 4-1. The inning continued with Caleb Durbin drawing a one-out walk and Isiah Kiner-Falefa knocking an infield single over second base. After a wild pitch moved both into scoring position, Marcelo Mayer’s RBI grounder made it a two-run game.

Early escaped a two-on jam without any damage in the third, but Texas extended its lead in the following frame. Alejandro Osuna started the rally with a one-out single, then back-to-back walks preceded Nimmo’s key double high off the Monster.

While Greg Weissert (1 1/3 innings), Ryan Watson (two innings) and Tommy Kahnle (one inning) teamed up for scoreless relief, Boston inched closer when Contreras knocked another solo shot out to deep left with two outs in the sixth, making it a 6-3 game.

In the eighth, Yoshida’s one-out knock got the Sox started, and he scored on Abreu’s liner to right two batters later.

Contreras followed with his third hit, but Jacob Latz entered to induce an inning-ending grounder from Jarren Duran before dealing a scoreless ninth to finalize his 11th save.

–Field Level Media

Filed Under: Boston Sports, MLB, Red Sox Tagged With: Boston Red Sox, MLB, Texas Rangers

PGA Tour: Cauley Gets His Win

June 14, 2026 by Terry Lyons

TORONTO – (Wire Service Report) – It was a long climb for Bud Cauley, but he finally made it.

Cauley birdied three consecutive holes on the back nine during the final round of the RBC Canadian Open on his way to shooting 5-under-par 65 and winning on the PGA Tour for the first time Sunday in Caledon, Ontario.

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Cauley, 36, had never finished higher than third since turning pro in 2011. The RBC Canadian Open was his 239th PGA Tour event — most of them coming prior a 2018 car accident that broke six of his ribs, fractured his leg and forced a collapsed lung.

“Just how hard that was,” said Cauley, reflecting on his journey. “Just so many people helped me get here and I’m just really thankful for all the help that I’ve gotten.”

Cauley ended up at 17-under 263 for a two-stroke victory over England’s Matt Fitzpatrick.

Fitzpatrick shot 64, finishing his round with a 12-foot eagle putt on No. 18 after a bogey on the previous hole pretty much dashed his hopes of winning the tournament at rainy TPC Toronto at Osprey Valley’s North course.

Norway’s Viktor Hovland (65) claimed third at 14 under.

Cauley used four birdies, including a chip-in on No. 12, on a five-hole stretch (Nos. 11 to 15) to pull away from the pack for a three-shot lead.

“I’m just very proud of the way I kind of kept going and continued to make birdies there on the back nine and I’m just so happy,” he said.

Fitzpatrick generally liked his performance.

“It’s a good week,” he said. “I would have taken it at the start of the week. I felt like there was a lot of good stuff in there.”

Jimmy Stanger trailed by three going to No. 18, but an approach into the water cost him and he bogeyed the hole and settled for 67. At 13 under, he tied with Jackson Suber (70), Brice Garnett (68) and Sweden’s Jesper Svensson (68) for fourth place. Suber led Cauley by one shot through three rounds.

Still, Suber had a worthwhile experience, gaining entry later this year in the British Open and Travelers based on the result. He qualified for the U.S. Open during a Monday qualifier at the beginning of the week.

“To be able to play in the U.S. Open next week, Travelers, and then the British Open, I mean, that’s a pretty big schedule change, especially coming into the year with conditional status,” Suber said.

Defending champion Ryan Fox of New Zealand posted 68 and tied with two others — Canadian Sudarshan Yellamaraju (68) and South African Aldrich Potgieter (65) — at 12 under.

“Obviously going into the week, it was like you have that little bit of added pressure being at the Canadian Open and for me being pretty close to home and stuff like that,” Yellamaraju said. “I just kind of tried to keep trying to tell myself to play the best that I could and just fight until the very end, which was pretty much what I did.”

Second-round leader Ben James recovered from a disastrous third round to shoot 69 and tie for 54th place at 3 under in his PGA Tour debut.

Brooks Koepka, who was a co-leader after a first-round 64, withdrew prior to the final round citing a hand injury. After a 72 on Saturday, he stood at 6 under through three rounds.

The start of Sunday’s round was pushed back because of concerns related to the weather forecast. Golfers were sent off the first and 10th tees in threesomes.

–Field Level Media

Filed Under: PGA TOUR

Captain Brunson Guides Knicks’ Ship

June 14, 2026 by Digital Sports Desk

SAN ANTONIO – (Wire Service Commentary) – Jalen Brunson fully understands what leading the New York Knicks to the NBA championship means for him, for his team and for the city of New York.

He’s heard it from Walt Frazier, who was a part of NBA championship teams in the Big Apple in 1970 and ’73. He’s talked about it with Bernard King and Patrick Ewing, stars who got the Knicks close in the 1980s and ’90s, and he’s lived it through his father, Rick Brunson, a former player and now an assistant coach for the team.

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Jalen Brunson knew what it would take to carry the Knicks to their first title in 53 years, the price he would have to pay to get his team to the Finals for the first time in 27 years, and what he would have to do to get the Knicks over the finish line against San Antonio and its superstar forward Victor Wembanyama, one of the league’s faces of the future.

Now it’s time to reap those rewards and put to rest one of the most dubious title droughts in pro sports history.

Brunson poured in 45 points, 29 in the second half, to lead New York to a come-from-behind 94-90 win over the Spurs in Game 5 of the Finals on Saturday night, clinching the best-of-seven series 4-1. Three of the Knicks’ wins came on the road with each of them coming down to the final minutes and requiring comebacks from New York.

Brunson, the NBA Finals Most Valuable Player, was the ticker that never flickered.

The 45 points tallied by Brunson set a Knicks record for a Finals game, supplanting the 38 scored by the legendary Willis Reed in 1970. Reed scored his in the third game of a series that went to seven and ended with the Captain literally willing New York to the title over the Los Angeles Lakers.

Brunson’s effort in this series was just as arduous and will go down in Big Apple lore with Reed’s performance in that distant Knicks championship run. The undersized New York captain took a beating as the Spurs employed four different players to defend him and knock him around every time he touched the ball. His bruises had bruises and his lumps had bumps.

“I’m hurting right now, oh, I do hurt right now,” Brunson, 29, said after the win. “I’m feeling maybe a little bit worn down physically just because of the game and what (San Antonio was) trying to do. Mentally, I feel fresh. I feel like that’s where I thrive. I’m just happy we’re able to find ways to win the games.”

There was nothing more San Antonio could do. Brunson was just too good. He’s one of just 11 different players to score at least 45 points in an NBA Finals game, for a total of 15 games.

San Antonio coach Mitch Johnson had a matter-of-fact response when asked what his team could have done differently against the Knicks star.

“Make (Brunson) score less points,” Johnson explained. “He’s aggressive. He got to spots. We were undisciplined at times. He got going, then he got going later on. He’s a heck of a player. He deserves everything he’s got.”

On a night when the Knicks got next-to-nothing offensively from Karl-Anthony Towns (two points) and OK production from Game 4 hero OG Anunoby (11 points, eight rebounds), it was up to Brunson to make the plays that produced the victory and the championship. His 15 points in the final quarter were one more than the rest of his teammates combined (14).

“You know, people say (Brunson is) too small. People say he’s a 1B or a 2B or whatever,” New York coach Mike Brown said of the three-time All-Star, listed at 6-foot-2. “He is a freaking 1A. He is an MVP candidate. Brunson — he is him, man, when it comes to New York basketball. He is freaking him.”

Brunson averaged 32.6 points per game in the Finals, scoring 30 or more in four of the contests. As hard as it is to fathom, he got better as the series went on, racking up 32, 36 and then 45 in the last three slugfests.

“That’s who Captain is, man,” Towns said about Brunson. “Captain always finds a way to get back into court and produce as a testament to who he is. It’s just his story, (he’s) never given up, always has been the underdog, always been looked down upon.

“Shout out to everybody (who) told him he couldn’t do it.”

After the final buzzer on Saturday, Brunson — a white towel over his head — ran on the floor toward half court, but he was overcome with emotion, and stopped and crouched near the scorer’s table. At his side were teammates Josh Hart and Mikal Bridges, his running buddies and fellow former stars at Villanova, loving him up before literally lifting Brunson to a standing position.

He had carried the Knicks to the title — and now, fittingly, it was his teammates that helped him to his feet. The weight of the world was lifted off his shoulders. The hopes and dreams of the whole of New York City and its rabid and vocal fan base had finally been realized.

After the game, Brunson clutched the Larry O’Brien Trophy and offered a weary smile. There’s a trip to the Canyon of Heroes in lower Manhattan in his and the Knicks’ future, as the team will be feted in the time-honored Big Apple parade tradition at long last.

It will be a day cherished for a generation of New Yorkers, an “I-remember-where-I-was-when” moment, for fans young and old.

Someday there might even be a statue of Brunson outside Madison Square Garden. If so, let’s hope it’s as tough and as durable as the man is himself.

–Steve Habel, Field Level Media

Filed Under: NBA Tagged With: 2026 NBA Finals, Jalen Brunson, New York Knicks

TL’s Sunday Sports Notes | June 14

June 13, 2026 by Digital Sports Desk

Alex Cora

By TERRY LYONS

BOSTON – In the Summer of 2018, night after night at Fenway Park and when the Boston Red Sox hit the road, you just couldn’t believe the number of victories the team recorded. By June 14, they were 48-22 on the way to a 108-win season.

Just last year, on June 14, the Red Sox started slowly and were 36-36, just hitting the .500 mark on the way to making the 2025 MLB Postseason when they lost to the New York Yankees 2-games-to-1 in the AL Wild Card. On July 4th, a summer ago, the Red Sox were 44-45 and sputtering.

This past April 25, with the Red Sox only 10-17 (.370) after a 17-1 thrashing of the Baltimore Orioles, manager Alex Cora and five of his coaches were sent packing.

Heading into June 13th play, the 2026 Red Sox were 28-39 (.418). and playing less than inspired baseball under interim manager Chad Tracy. That 28-39 record included an 11-21 mark at Fenway and a 17-18 record on the road. The Sox are 6-14 against the American League East.

Thus, it can be concluded, it’s not Chad Tracy’s fault and it certainly wasn’t Alex Cora’s fault that the current Sox club is bordering terrible.

The Sox situation and the stats beg us to ponder a bigger question.

Why do we look to place blame on people, to point “the fickle finger of fate” at someone, such as a baseball manager, when there’s little or no explanation for the occurrences taking place. But, nevertheless, the blame and finger associated to that blame are pointed outward – never inwardly.

A deeper dive into the expression “Fickle Finger of Fate,” show it surfaced in the 1930s on college campuses in the Unoted States, combining 1860s slang of a “fickle finger” and 1870s slang of “fickle fate.” In the 1960s, the television show “Rowan & Martin’s Laugh-In” created an award, presented weekly to salute bureaucratic stupidity or ironic institutional blunders. Rarely did that involve the bad luck or losing of a professional sports team.

Fate is usually caused by the whims of misfortune. In the base of Alex Cora, it was a combination of bad weather, injuries to the likes of Cy Young candidate SP Garrett Crochet, shortstop Trevor Story, the franchise’s cornerstone prospect and big game hitter, Roman Anthony and a ping pong of bullpen pitchers who all bounced back and forth from injury, rehab starts and plain, old-fashioned incompetence. Not a thing Cora could do about it.

The other factors in the “deep dive” are “uncontrollable twists and just plain bad luck.” The Red Sox encountered all of the above on the way to that flimsy 10-17 start.

It wasn’t (and still isn’t) Alex Cora’s fault paltry batting averages of .209 (Duran), .201 (Durbin), .220 Mayer, .229 for the oft-injured Anthony and .238 for Yoshida – all above the Mendoza Line but under the club’s expected productivity line.

On the pitching side, the ace, Crochet, is out indefinitely with a shoulder soreness/”lat” inflammation injury that is highly likey to sideline him through the all-star break. Sonny Gray, a glimmer of hope for the club, missed 14 games with a hamstrong strain and the middle relievers have been on-and-off the MLB IL if and when they are not being treated as Piñatas by opponents.

RHP Bryan Bello was optioned to AAA Worcester after stinking up the joint while off-season acquired Ranger Suarez has been inconstsitent and youngsters Connelly Early and LHP Payton Tolle have shown promise, but it has not translated to wins.

The bullpen has a 3.72 ERA to date.

Add it all up and point the finger elsewhere. It’s not Alex Cora’s fault that the Red Sox are four games buried in the AL East cellar.


TIP of the HAT: A tip of the hat goes to the incredible Boston Red Sox PR staff as they tossed a perfect, fitting 77th birthday party to longtime WBZ-Radio reporter Jonny Miller. Many Sox fans remember the wonderful tradition of having Miller begin each postgame press conference with the “honor” of asking the first question, much like the late Helen Thomas (1920-2013) of UPI who had that same honor in the White House briefing room when there was a semblance of decorum. On Saturday, to celebrate Miller’s 77th, there were tributes, a rare standing “O” of applause (tossing the no cheering in the press box rule to the side), and some Major League cake and cupcakes in Fenway Park glory (CITGO (in vanilla and chocolate; Wally; Baseballs and a few other icing pictorials). Nicely done and God Speed to the great Jonny Miller, who WWYI met in 1981.

HERE NOW, THE NOTES: Radio reports in Boston spoke of an (obviously) Scottish couple, a.k.a. “Man in Kilt,” strolling through Mattapan in downtown Boston. To say that was a safe walk in the park might be an error. Mattapan started as community for Native Americans known as the Mattahunt Tribe. Early in 20th century, immigrants traveling in New England found Mattapan to be a “good place to sit.” Irish, Jewish, and Haitian immigrants called the neighborhood home. That is largely the case for Haitian immigrants ‘til this day, and, in fact, Boston has a huge Haitian population, and Massachusetts ranks third in the USA for Haitian immigrants.

  1. Florida – 544,043 (2.4% of the state population)
  2. New York – 176,287 (0.8%)
  3. Massachusetts – 77,054 (1.1%)

It just so happens, at 9:00pm on Saturday, June 13, Haiti will face Scotland in an important World Cup preliminary match. The Group C in which they compete also includes Brazil and Morocco, not a Group of Death but you might say, a respirator will be attached to the team losing the opening match in the stadium formerly known as Gillette in Massachusetts (far away from Boston, not so far away from Providence).

On Friday night, there were more “Men in Kilts” at Fenway Park than there were Fenway Franks. The Red Sox scored 10 runs and held the Rangers of Texas to a single run. It was only the third time this season the hometown team managed double digits in the run column. Maybe there was some luck or inspiration in ‘dem ‘der kilts? On Saturday morning, hundreds – maybe thousands – of Scots boarded trains at Moynihan Station near Penn Station and Madison Square Garden to travel on the northbound tracks to the sticks of Foxborough – a long trip. The last time Scotland qualified to play in the World Cup was 1998. That’s a Knick-a-load-eon amount of time passed, as the Knickerbockers made it to the NBA Finals in 1999 and – yes – again this year.

TIDBITS & NOTES: Position Sports, in partnership with the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame, announced that St. John’s and Arizona will tip-off in the Hall of Fame Series New York City on Saturday, December 5, 2026, at Madison Square Garden. The December 5 matchup will also mark the first of two Hall of Fame Series meetings between the programs, with St. John’s and Arizona scheduled to meet at the Hall of Fame Series Phoenix in 2027. Obviously, JoJo will have to leave his home in Tucson to attend the 2027 game. … Did you know? Paul and the late Linda McCartney owned a historic Tucson ranch, located in the foothills of the Rincon Mountains.

ONE on ONE: Teams of 1×1 hoopsters representing Atlanta, Baltimore, Miami, and Washington, DC advanced through the second round of three championship events at Tracy McGrady’s Ones Basketball League (OBL). The playoff took place at Ridge High School in Orlando.

TALK the TALK: There’s been a fair share written in this column about minor league baseball, from Cape Cod to the Pioneer League to the American Association of Professional Baseball. The focus is usually about the teams and players, but sometimes the “behind the scenes” of sports finds a gem in the minors and AAPB alumni on the field aren’t the only ones finding success after their careers in the league. Denning Gerig, the AAPB Broadcaster of the Year in 2021 with the Cleburne Railroaders, has been named director of broadcasting for Wichita State University Athletics.

FENWAYS: Just like they do at Fenway Park, here in Boston, the Chicago Dogs of the same AAPB celebrated the music of Neil Diamond with pre-game performances and sing-a-longs, tagged “Cracklin’ Rosemont.” … In Boston, the Red Sox now feature Diamond’s work in a pregame salute to the 250th anniversary of the USA with a music video montage, entitled, “America.” … And, yes, the CITGO sign has been torn apart in an effort to move it 120 feet and raise it 30 feet higher as it remains in Kenmore Square. “CITGO may think of this as their Sign, but in Boston, we think of it as ours,” Boston City Councilor Sharon Durkan, who represents Kenmore Square, said in a press release about the sign’s move. … Nowadays, the WHOOP sign is the most visable of billboards and it’s been rigged up to glow in white light or go “Red, White and Blue” for the 250th.

Filed Under: While We're Young Ideas Tagged With: New York Knicks, TL Sunday Sports Notes, While We're Young Ideas

NFL Schedule: Here’s a Top Ten

May 14, 2026 by Digital Sports Desk

LOS ANGELES – (Wire Service Report) – Not only do the Los Angeles Rams have a reasonable shot at becoming the first team to win the Super Bowl on its homefield twice, the NFC West runner-up is by far the easiest team to find on the NFL’s 2026 broadcast schedule.

Seven times the Rams are positioned for a primetime slot — tying a league record — barring a slip from contender status that would prompt networks to invoke the “flex” option and reassign Sean McVay’s team to an afternoon kickoff.

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You’ve got to appreciate McVay’s offensive machine as much as the next NFL fan, but let’s survey the broader landscape for the 10 games we are circling on the 2026 schedule.

1. Green Bay Packers at Chicago Bears, Friday, Dec. 25
Are the Packers still gutted by two heartbreaking losses to the Bears? They’ll never admit it. The drama on the field and sidelines restored one of the  game’s best rivalries. Chicago’s schedule strength adds a degree of difficulty the Bears didn’t face rising from the bottom of the NFC North to a division title in Ben Johnson’s first season. The Packers had owned this series in recent years and want to pull the pendulum northward.

2. Philadelphia Eagles at Dallas Cowboys, Thursday, Nov. 26
Thanksgiving Day amplifies whatever the state of the Dallas Cowboys happens to be, and this one should be extra spicy. It hasn’t happened since 2014 and will be the third Turkey Day meeting between the teams. Cowboys fans are crossing their fingers the results will be better than the last time (33-10 loss in ‘14) and 1989, when the Eagles used two Randall Cunningham-to-Cris Carter TDs and Philly’s defense ransacked Troy Aikman at Texas Stadium, 27-0. Philadelphia hosts the first meeting of the 2026 season with Dallas on “Monday Night Football” in October.

3. Buffalo Bills at New England Patriots, Sunday, Dec. 6
Josh Allen ran the AFC East for nearly a decade and Drake Maye was more than the new kid on the block in 2025. He played like an MVP candidate — even winning in Buffalo — and the Patriots went 5-1 in the division. The only loss was a 35-31 barnburner at Gillette Stadium won by the Bills on Dec. 14. It was New England’s only loss between Sept. 28 and the Super Bowl.

4. Los Angeles Rams at Seattle Seahawks, Friday, Dec. 25
Fine, we can talk Rams, too Merry Christmas to those who celebrate, the NFL wrapped up a matchup between teams who combined for 26 regular-season wins and took the division duel down to the wire last season. Lumen Field won’t be a present for the Rams, but Matthew Stafford and Sean McVay have usually done just fine in enemy territory. The game falls one week after the one-year anniversary of Seattle’s memorable fourth-quarter rally from 16 down, forced overtime and walked it off with a 38-37 victory over the Rams.

5. Baltimore Ravens at Cincinnati Bengals, Thursday, Dec. 31
Last season wasn’t a typical set of Bengals-Ravens games. The AFC North rivals split with an average margin of victory of 21 points. Rewind to 2025 and unleashed Lamar Jackson vs. bomb-happy Joe Burrow produced scores of 35-34 and 41-38 (overtime). If we get a New Year’s Eve snow game with division and playoff consequences, even better.

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6. New England Patriots at Seattle Seahawks, Wednesday, Sept. 9
A Wednesday night opener ahead of the Thursday Rams-49ers matchup in Australia, we’ll find out if the Patriots are better prepared for a Super Bowl rematch with months to prepare. New England oscillated from disjointed to complete disarray in the February loss to Seattle and didn’t have all oars in the water during an offseason when Mike Vrabel’s off-field, ahem, affairs were a constant talking point.

7. Tampa Bay Buccaneers at Chicago Bears, Sunday, Nov. 8
Baker Mayfield vs. Caleb Williams piques our interest in a midseason “Sunday Night Football” matchup with the undercard of Buccaneers head coach and defensive maestro Todd Bowles against Bears coach and offensive brain Ben Johnson. The Bucs fell short of the postseason in 2025 for the first time since 2019, while the Bears are trending upward after the franchise won a playoff game (well, two of them, actually) in January to snap a 15-year drought dating to 2011.

8. Dallas Cowboys at Seattle Seahawks, Monday, Dec. 7
Crossover games with the NFC West add a degree of difficulty to the Dallas schedule this season. While we wait to offer judgment on the revamped defense, the Cowboys are likely to bring all the smoke to test Seattle’s versatile, attacking defense in a game sandwiched between matchups with the Eagles and Rams for Dallas.

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9. Jacksonville Jaguars at Denver Broncos, Sunday, Sept. 20
Some called the Denver AFC West run last season but far fewer anticipated Jacksonville winning 13  games and dealing the Broncos one of the team’s three regular-season losses. First-year head coach Liam Coen reflects many of Broncos head coach Sean Payton’s qualities as a play-caller and designer, adding built-in entertainment value.

10. San Francisco 49ers at Kansas City Chiefs, Sunday, Dec. 27
What will the 49ers have left in the tank? San Francisco is setting a record for miles traveled in a season thanks to international treks to Mexico and Australia and the closing stretch for the 49ers is some kind of minefield from NFL schedulers. Patrick Mahomes and Brock Purdy are familiar foes but 49ers coach Kyle Shanahan has not beaten Andy Reid as a head coach (0-3). Two of those losses were agonizing Super Bowl defeats (LIV, 2020 and LVIII, 2024). After falling short of historical track and expectations in 2025, is the window closed on one or both of these longtime contenders?

–Field Level Media

Filed Under: Boston Sports, NFL, Patriots

Red Sox Aim for Sweep of Texas

June 14, 2026 by Digital Sports Desk

BOSTON – (Wire Service Report) – After their first home series win since April, the Boston Red Sox go for a series sweep against the visiting Texas Rangers on Sunday evening.

The Red Sox are now 2-8-1 this season in home series and interim manager Chad Tracy knows if Boston is going to climb out of the American League East cellar, it will have to improve its performance at home.

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“It’s been a minute (since a home series win) and it feels good,” Tracy said. “It’s no secret. We all know we have to play better at home. We played two really good ball games and now have a chance to go sweep a series. It feels good for the guys for sure.”

While Red Sox fans haven’t had a lot to cheer about at home, Ceddanne Rafaela changed that – for an afternoon anyway – with a clutch, two-run go-ahead single that came with two outs in the seventh to give Boston a 4-2 lead.

The 25-year-old center fielder ranks second on Boston in batting average (.291), doubles (14) and stolen bases (seven).

“Every win matters,” Rafaela said. “Especially at home. I want the fans to be happy, that’s what we are showing up for to try and accomplish.”

With two straight wins, Jarren Duran said Boston has to stay focused as it has the chance to get on a roll. Duran launched a two-run homer in the eighth to provide the Red Sox bullpen with breathing room.

“We are picking it up, which is good,” Duran said. “We just need to put our heads down and keep going.”

Boston starter Connelly Early (5-4, 3.30 ERA) is scheduled to make his first career appearance against the Rangers. The left-hander allowed two runs on five hits with four walks and six strikeouts over 4 2/3 innings in a 3-1 loss in his last start at the Tampa Bay Rays on Monday.

The Rangers will counter with Nathan Eovaldi (5-7, 4.26 ERA), who took the loss in a 5-3 setback at the Kansas City Royals on Tuesday. The veteran right-hander surrendered four runs on four hits with three walks and three strikeouts in 5 2/3 innings.

In 12 appearances, including 11 starts, against one of his former teams, Eovaldi is 4-1 with a 4.68 ERA. He’s racked up 46 strikeouts in 59 2/3 innings pitched.

After scoring just four runs in the first two games of the series – a 10-1 loss on Friday and a 6-3 setback on Saturday – Rangers manager Skip Schumaker said his club’s offense has to provide more support for its pitching staff.

“The challenge for us is providing more cushion on the offensive side for our starting pitchers,” Schumaker said.

Jake Burger provided some offense with a solo shot in the eighth, his 100th career home run. Burger leads the Rangers in homers (12) and RBIs (42).

Michael Helman also contributed to the Rangers’ offensive output with an RBI sacrifice fly that tied the game 2-2 in the fourth. But the center fielder, who has 30 at-bats in 15 games, was hit by a pitch on his right hand in the eighth, and after being checked out by the Rangers’ training staff at first base, he exited the game.

“Michael has multiple fractures in at least one finger, if not two,” Schumaker said. “He will be out for a bit, (the pitch) got him pretty good.”
-Field Level Media

 

Filed Under: Boston Sports, MLB, Red Sox Tagged With: Boston Red Sox, MLB, Texas Rangers

Earth to NY Knicks: Time to Land

June 12, 2026 by Digital Sports Desk

By TERRY LYONS, Editor of Digital Sports Desk

TRANQUILITY BASE – At approximately 8:30pm (EDT) on Saturday night, the New York Knicks will re-enter the Earth’s atmosphere. They must. They have a game to play.

After performing a miracle of the sporting nature, including the greatest comeback in NBA Finals history which was capped by an impossible dream final sequence and O.G. Anunoby’s incredible tip-in of a Jalen Brunson front rim-rocker three-point field goal attempt, the Knickerbockers have to put their Finals Game 4 victory in the overhead compartment, and must splash down in Texas, maybe somewhere in the Riverwalk of San Antonio.

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Re-entering the earth’s atmosphere is hard enough but splashing down in two to 24 feet of water – call it dirty water – stemming from a combination of recycled wastewater, natural groundwater springs or, maybe, at best, storm water run-off.

NASA has nearly perfected the scientific wonder of blasting a rocket ship through the earth’s atmosphere to orbit the big blue planet, or maybe even soar to the Moon or to go where no man has ever gone before. But, NASA’s HQ is about 200 miles East of San Antonio, a straight shot across I-10. On a good day, you can drive it in three hours. San Antone might have iHeart Media but they don’t have NASA.

The Knicks might prefer to land in Houston – near the Johnson Space Center – to play the Rockets. There’d be the revenge factor of 1994 when they lost to Rudy T, Hakeem and company with John Starks’ off the mark shooting in Game 7 of that series. This year, the New Yorkers could handle Türkiye’s Alperen Şengün but, instead, they’re messing with a different brand of basketball, taking on “The Freak of “la République,” Victor Wembanyama, a 22-year old, 7-foot-4 smooth operator of the game, one with moves, footwork beyond belief, defensive presence good enough to win the NBA’s All-Defensive Player of the Year as the youngest to ever accomplish the feat.

Wembanyama is so good, he was the first player in the league to take the All-D Player of the Year in unanimous fashion. At the ripe age of 22, Wembanyama is earning votes as the NBA’s Most Valuable Player. Someday soon, he’ll be known as the best player in the world.

Which brings us back to the exact kind of ship the Knicks’ new masters of jet-propulsion will need to come down from the exhilarating highs of their miracle on 33rd Street victory of Wednesday night to somehow side-step human nature, and the fatigue it inherits, otherwise known as an emotional high the City of New York has never seen before.

Yes, there was Bobby Thomsen’s “Shot Heard ‘Round the World,” but the black & white television signal barely made it to Staten Island, never mind to Glasgow (Scotland) where Thomsen was born. Transistor radio was delivery system of choice back in 1951 when “the Giants won the pennant.”

Yes, there was Willis Reed gimping out of the Madison Square Garden corridor to join his New York Knicks teammates on May 8, 1970 in Game 7 of the 1970 NBA World Championship Series to hit the first two jumpers of the game and propel his club to a 113-99 title-clinching victory. Even Howard Cosell might’ve been lost for words when he uttered, “You exemplify the very best that the human spirit can offer” to the injury-plagued, cortisone injected Reed.

Yes, there was the key play of Super Bowl XLII and an incredible Eli Manning scramble, shaking off defenders to toss a ball that tight end David Tyree somehow caught with his hand and his helmet in the 17-14 NFL Giants title-winning game on February 3, 2008.

Yes, there was Joe Namath’s guarantee for a wictory in Super Bowl III when Namath’s AFC Jets upset the NFC’s Baltimore, 16-7 on January 12, 1969.

NY Mets’ Cleon Jones Catches the Final Out of World Series (File)

Yes, there were the Amazin’ Mets of 1969, 10-games back of the Chicago Cubs in the National League East, who won the division by eight games, upset the favored Atlanta Braves in the NLCS, then – after dropping the first game of the 1969 World Series to the Baltimore Orioles – ran off four in a row, three at Shea Stadium in Queens, to take MLB’s World Championship.

And, yes, there were the New York Rangers who won the NHL’s Stanley Cup after a 54-year drought (1949-1994). NYR captain Mark Messier had willed the team to victory and his moment of raising the Cup might be the only thing to compare to the joy felt by Knicks fans on Wednesday night when they witnessed history and the greatest of comebacks in NBA Finals’ lore.

But, emotional highs are a dangerous villain.

The very San Antonio Spurs the Knicks face might’ve fallen victim to the emotional high of defeating the favored OKC Thunder (May 30, 2026) and blown Game 1 of this 2026 NBA Finals on June 3, when the Spurs led by 14 points with 6:31 left in the third quarter only to lose to New York, 105-95, when the final buzzer sounded on the Spurs’ home floor.

The sound of silence in San Antonio on June 3 and 5th, was quite the opposite of the sonic boom heard at Madison Square Garden on June 10th after New York erased a 29-point deficit.

We just had some experience with a sonic boom as a meteor attempted to enter the Earth’s atmosphere at the speed of 75,000 mph from a height some 40 miles directly over the Commonwealth. The sound created was equal to exploding 300 tons of TNT (and that’s not Turner’s network, but explosives).

It was quite unsettling and it proved what a difficult task NASA faces when our manned USA space ships return their cargo and precious human lives back to safety.

It’s a daunting task to return to Earth, so remember, splashdown for New York’s miracle is Saturday night, June 13, in the Riverwalk of San Antonio. And, remember too, winning three games in the NBA Finals is easy. Winning the fourth game is damn near impossible. But, every season, someone does it. Yes, a Sweet Sixteen victories in a lengthy NBA postseason.

These days of 2026, Space X can return a spacecraft to the launchpad standing upright, as if it’s never even left in the first place. If the Knicks can do so, and clinch the NBA’s coveted Larry O’Brien Trophy and NBA championship, O.G. Anunoby might earn a new nickname – The Original Galileo.

Filed Under: NBA, While We're Young Ideas Tagged With: 2026 NBA Finals, New York Knicks, San Antonio Spurs

Comeback City

June 11, 2026 by Digital Sports Desk

NEW YORK – (Wire Service Report) – Mike Brown walked to the podium inside Madison Square Garden just before midnight on Wednesday, sat down and let out an exhausted sigh.

“Uhh, that was a good win by our guys, obviously,” the New York Knicks coach said.

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It was a lot more than that, and now the Knicks are one win away from a goal more than five decades in the making.

OG Anunoby’s tip-in with 1.2 seconds left capped the greatest comeback in NBA Finals history, as New York overcame a 29-point deficit to stun the San Antonio Spurs 107-106 in Game 4.

The Knicks, who trailed 81-52 in the third quarter, lead the best-of-seven series 3-1. They can clinch their first title since 1973 on Saturday night, when Game 5 will be played in San Antonio.

“Felt cool — I mean, everyone’s pretty excited, I’m excited too,” the normally poker-faced Anunoby said before breaking into a rare grin. “We’re all excited. We’re enjoying it right now, but we’re just focused on the next game now.”

The Knicks ended the game on a 55-25 run after Victor Wembanyama was whistled for a flagrant-1 foul on Karl-Anthony Towns with 9:27 left in the third. New York shot 52.6% (20-for-38) following the foul while holding the Spurs to 17.1% shooting (6-for-35), including 4-for-19 (21.1%) in the fourth quarter.

“To put as much good work into that first half as we did, get the lead that we had and not finish the job is disappointing to say the least,” Spurs coach Mitch Johnson said.

Jalen Brunson, the symbol of the Knicks’ stoicism, was asked if the Wembanyama foul sparked him and his teammates.

“Not necessarily, no,” Brunson said.

Earlier in his press conference, Brunson invoked a baseball analogy to describe the Knicks’ approach.

“We need to hit singles, get on base and make plays from there,” Brunson said.

New York scored 13 unanswered points after the Wembanyama flagrant foul and trailed 90-75 at the end of the third. The Knicks didn’t score on their first four possessions in the fourth as the Spurs extended the advantage to 95-75.

A 3-pointer by Jose Alvarado that rolled around the rim sparked the stunning final rally for New York. Consecutive 3-pointers by Alvarado and Jalen Brunson pulled the Knicks within 104-103 with 2:21 left. The Spurs turned the ball over, but Josh Hart missed a layup, after which Wembanyama missed two free throws.

Brunson then hit a floater to give the Knicks their first lead of the game with 1:22 left. The teams traded turnovers, after which Stephon Castle hit two free throws to put the Spurs up 106-105 with 30.3 seconds left.

After Brunson failed to hit a short shot, Anunoby blocked De’Aaron Fox’s layup attempt, setting up an inbounds play with 5.7 seconds left. Brunson missed a long 3-point attempt, but Anunoby, who was at the 3-point arc across the floor from Brunson, swooped into the paint, outleaped Dylan Harper and tapped the ball home as the sellout crowd roared.

“I don’t know if there was a play bigger than (that) in the history of Knicks basketball,” Brown said.

Towns, 7 inches taller than Harper, guarded the latter on the ensuing inbounds pass. Harper threw the ball over Wembanyama’s head, and Castle, surrounded by Mitchell Robinson and Josh Hart, couldn’t corral the ball or get a shot off as time expired.

“We, from the mud, found a way to get it done,” Towns said. “As anyone who lives in New York knows, if you want to make it in this city, you have to be OK getting out of the mud. And we did that tonight.”

The Knicks flooded the floor as a KNICKS WIN graphic flashed atop the scoreboard.

“Just happy that we found a way to come away with a win,” Brunson said. “But just there’s nothing — there’s nothing to celebrate. It’s not over yet, not even close.”

Brunson finished with 36 points, seven assists and five rebounds. Anunoby had 33 points and four rebounds after a pregame pep talk from Brown.

“I told OG — as big, as strong, as athletic as he is — he’s got to be a monster on the offensive glass tonight,” Brown said. “He took on the challenge and he went and won the game for us doing exactly what I called him out for during shootaround today.”

Towns added 13 points and 10 rebounds.

Wembanyama finished with 24 points and 13 rebounds. Harper scored 21 points off the bench for the Spurs, while Devin Vassell and Fox had 18 points each. Castle contributed 13 points.

Wembanyama (13 points) and Vassell (12) combined for 25 points during the first quarter, when the Spurs shot a blistering 65.2% — and held the Knicks to 29.4% shooting — to take a 41-22 lead.

The Spurs kept the Knicks at bay in the second, and San Antonio led by as many as 29 before ending the half with a 76-49 edge.

Now San Antonio must try to match the 2016 Cleveland Cavaliers, the only team to overcome a 3-1 series deficit and win the NBA Finals.

“I think it’s going to go one of two ways,” Wembanyama said. “The bad one would be giving up. The good one would be getting stronger through this, getting more together. I know this is what we’re going to do.”

– Field Level Media

Filed Under: NBA Tagged With: 2026 NBA Finals, New York Knicks, San Antonio Spurs

Spurs Strike Back vs NY Knicks

June 9, 2026 by Digital Sports Desk

NEW YORK – Stephon Castle feels the San Antonio Spurs didn’t accomplish much Monday night.

Even so, they did avoid falling into a historically unfriendly hole while ensuring the NBA Finals would get at least some of the length warranted by what has been a compelling matchup thus far.

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Victor Wembanyama produced 32 points, eight rebounds, six assists and three blocks Monday night for the Spurs, who got back into the NBA Finals by beating the red-hot New York Knicks 115-111 in Game 3.

The Knicks still lead the best-of-seven series two games to one. Game 4 is scheduled for Wednesday night in New York.

Castle added 23 points — 18 in the first half and five key points late in the fourth quarter — as the Spurs avoided falling into an 0-3 hole. No NBA team has ever overcome a three-games-to-none deficit in a best-of-seven series.

“I feel like we still haven’t really done anything,” Castle said. “Obviously we’re still down 2-1 and we’re looking forward to the next 48 minutes.

“Obviously it feels good to win, especially on the road after dropping two bad ones. But I think our confidence has been the same throughout this series regardless of what happens.”

Dylan Harper scored 13 points off the San Antonio bench while starters Julian Champagnie (12 points), De’Aaron Fox (12 points) and Devin Vassell (11 points) all got into double figures. Fox added eight assists.

Jalen Brunson scored 32 points on 11-of-25 shooting for the Knicks, whose 13-game winning streak — the second-longest postseason winning streak in NBA history — was snapped. The 2017 Golden State Warriors won their first 15 playoff games en route to the title.

“I tell the guys, it’s a seven-game series for a reason,” Knicks coach Mike Brown said. “They are a great team. They are well-coached. They have an iconic player. It’s not going to be easy.”

OG Anunoby had 28 points, hitting 9 of 13 from the floor, while Josh Hart put up 16 points. Karl-Anthony Towns chipped in with 11 points, and reserve Jordan Clarkson scored 10 points.

New York’s previous loss was a 109-108 setback against the Atlanta Hawks in Game 3 of an Eastern Conference first-round series on April 23.

“We didn’t do what got us 13 straight wins in a row — that’s how you lose a game,” Towns said. “We didn’t do what we’ve been doing for 13 (games). We decided to do something different, and it ain’t going to work.”

This is just the second NBA Finals in which the road team won the first three games. The Chicago Bulls took the first two games on the road in 1993 before the Phoenix Suns won Game 3. The Bulls won the series in six games.

“At home, it’s really like playing six against five — in here, it felt like five against six,” Wembanyama said with a grin. “It really shows what teams are made of.”

The Spurs showed some resilience Monday, when they squandered a 12-point first-half lead and fell behind 64-57 entering halftime. San Antonio blew a 14-point lead in a 105-95 loss in Game 1 and a 12-point lead in a 105-104 loss in Game 2.

On Monday, Champagnie scored the first six points of the second half, and the Spurs shot 50% (10 of 20) in the third while forcing four turnovers. San Antonio took the lead for good at 79-76 on Wembanyama’s 3-pointer with 5:02 left in the period.

 

Filed Under: NBA Tagged With: 2026 NBA Finals, New York Knicks, San Antonio Spurs

Knicks Fans: Better Be McCool

June 8, 2026 by Digital Sports Desk

By TERRY LYONS, Editor of Digital Sports Desk

You’ve got to be pretty good to advance to be head of the New York City Secret Service. Tonight, that is the job for Matt McCool, special agent in charge of the Secret Service’s field office that must oversee a Presidential visit to Madison Square Garden on the night of an NBA Finals game.

Sadly, McCool’s boss will enter The Garden thinking all the hype is about him, but a few seconds into his walk to his “Bunker Suite” or wherever they choose to stash him, and he’ll know what New Yorkers really think of him.

But that will be a distraction from The Main Event.

Much more importantly, we’ll all find out – FAST – that some 19,500 spectators are at The Garden for one reason – and one reason alone – to root on their New YorkKnickerbockers as they play the upstart San Antonio Spurs in a very important game for those who care about the incredible challenge of winning an NBA title.

The Knickerbockers haven’t been able to accomplish the feat since 1973 (and, once before that, in 1970). It’s been a long wait, 53 years to be exact. It’s not the longest wait in NBA history, but it’s close.

Please consider:

  • Sacramento Kings – 75 years – Last won in 1951 (Rochester Royals)
  • Atlanta Hawks – 67 years – Last won in 1958 (St. Louis Hawks)
  • Phoenix Suns – 57 years – entered NBA in 1969
  • Los Angeles Clippers – 56 years – entered NBA in 1971

For the Knicks, it’s been a long, strange trip. The franchise made it to The NBA Finals in 1999 and 1994, only to come up short. Other than those two seasons, it’s been bupkis.

The Summer of ‘73 was a long time ago.

In 1973, the American League had just approved the use of the designated hitter.

In 1973, the Supreme Court issued its ruling on Roe v. Wade.

In 1973, the United States finally put an end to the Viet Nam war.

In 1973, they dedicated and opened the World Trade Center in NYC. (RIP)

In 1973, George Lucas first put pen to paper on a little motion picture to be named “Star Wars.”

In 1973, Secretariat won the Kentucky Derby in 1:59 2/5, a still standing record, won The Preakness in 1:53 and took The Belmont Stakes in 2:24 for the mile and a half course, considered the greatest race in thoroughbred horse racing history.

In 1973, tennis great Billie Jean King beat Bobby Riggs in the Battle of the Sexes at the Houston Astrodome.

You get the picture, correct?

Nineteen hundred seventy-three was a long time ago.

In 1973, Patrick Ewing was 11. Willis Reed was 31 and Walt “Clyde” Frazier was 28.

May God Bless the Captain who died March 21, 2023, but Frazier turned 81 on March 29th and he’ll be at The Garden tonight with a bevy of other former Knicks – from John Starks to Ewing, himself. They’ll lead the cheers for the 2026 iteration of the club, a likable group who’ve grown together and improved. Much of the praise should go to former Villanova coach Jay Wright who schooled all-star guard Jalen Brunson,all-everything swingman Josh Hart and Game 2 star Mikal Bridges who scored 20 points, nine in the third quarter when New York seized temporary control of the game. Bridges logged a game-high 41 minutes, chipped in six rebounds and six assists, and hit eight of his 13 shots (including 4-for-6 from downtown.

On the other side, the San Antonio Spurs will not go down easily. Surely, all-defensive player of the year Victor Wembanyama will come with every ounce of energy stored in his 22-year old, 7-foot-4 frame. He’ll certainly be more aggressive than he was in the first two games in the Alamo City.

But, none of the Spurs will be bellowing to remember a thing about the games in “The Alamo,” but instead looking for any way possible to turn the series to a 2-games-to-1 slugfest of which any and all NBA referees will need to hold on for dear life to control the physical play (by both teams).

The Spurs will try to keep The Garden from truly rockin’ the way only Madison Square Garden can rock for a basketball game.

The Knicks will do their best to hold off any complacency, as every street corner coach is declaring victory with only two games in the win column, not the mandatory four games to take a best-of-seven series. In fact, most New Yorkers are clearing their schedules for a parade in the “Canyon of Heroes,” like championship teams that came before them.

Some 200-plus black granite and stainless-steel sidewalk plaques await the dedication of one more, but it will only come if the Knicks can block out the 13 consecutive victories in these 2026 NBA Playoffs. Only the 2017 Golden State Warriors can claim more (15).

Complacency can be a most dangerous antidote, one that can counteract even the very best of efforts of championship caliber teams. But, face facts, no team has ever come back from losing the first two games of The NBA Finals at home to win the series. Thus, a Knicks collapse would be an epic, historic effort.

For the Spurs, forcing a Game 5 is “priority one.” A single win in New York guarantees a change of venues – back to Texas with a glimmer of hope. A Game 3 loss by the Spurs would place as much pressure on the young club as has ever been placed on the shoulders of Wembanyama.

Battling momentum is one thing, but battling intense pressure in Madison Square Garden – the biggest stage in all of sport – is “a dimension not only of sight and sound, but of mind.”

As we all know, things can get a little strange in sports.

A Twilight Zone-like Prediction on “AI” six hours before Game 3

We’re sure to be reminded that comedy actor Ben Stiller will be in the building tonight, but if Rod Serling shows up, all bets are off – even those at the NBA’s co-official betting partners, Draft Kings and Fan Duel – as Twilight Zone defenses are not illegal but much frowned upon in midtown Manhattan where parade routes are already being discussed.

A bit too early, if you ask WWYI.

Filed Under: NBA, While We're Young Ideas Tagged With: Knicks Spurs NBA Finals

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Europe, get ready! ✈️🌍

The NBA will host SIX regular-season games in Europe over the next three years, with games to come in Berlin and London (2026), Manchester and Paris (2027) and Berlin and Paris (2028).

🗞️ http://NBA.com/EuropeGames

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Happy to welcome @mlaprey as our new Senior Associate Commissioner for Media Relations and Strategic Communications!
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Was Nate a Plumber or a Mailman? Asking for a friend named JJ.

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NBA players in the 70s were built different. This was Nate Thurmond at age 25.

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All hail Big Mike’s take on Hall of Fame inductee Ichiro #baseballhof

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In the span of 60 seconds, Ichiro went from having no shot to get into the Hall of Fame to being a LOCK for the Hall of Fame once Mike Francesa learned he has "three thousand American hits."

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Somehow, the Blue Devils are connected to the basketball gods. Somehow, the Blue Devils are connected to the basketball gods.
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