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Alejandro Osuna's first career home run

Alejandro Osuna's first career home run

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Why The Rangers Did Well Without A First Round Draft Pick
I'm not going to sit here and tell you that it's a good idea NOT to have a first-round pick in the Entry Draft but – on the other hand – it's not the worst thing in the world either.
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Mike Brown has faced pressure before, but this time might be different. Welcome to the Knicks
Mike Brown has faced pressure before, but this time might be different. Welcome to the Knicks

New York Times

time33 minutes ago

  • New York Times

Mike Brown has faced pressure before, but this time might be different. Welcome to the Knicks

Mike Brown is familiar with pressure. He coached LeBron James to his first MVP and NBA Finals appearance. He was the Los Angeles Lakers coach tasked with steering the final years of Kobe Bryant's greatness in the right direction. He was right next to Steve Kerr and Stephen Curry as they orchestrated the league's latest dynasty. Advertisement He's been to the finals as a head coach. He's won four NBA titles as an assistant/associate coach with the San Antonio Spurs and Golden State Warriors. He made a dysfunctional franchise respectable as a head coach. He's been fired after one year as a head coach. He's been fired in the middle of seasons. The New York Knicks wanted experience when looking for Tom Thibodeau's replacement, per league sources, and that's why Brown is now their guy. On Wednesday, multiple league sources confirmed to The Athletic that Brown and the Knicks are working on finalizing a contract to make him the franchise's next head coach. The hiring comes weeks after New York fired Thibodeau following the team's first Eastern Conference finals appearance in 25 years. But there's pressure, and then there's New York. Brown's about to learn what it's like to be a Knick. The 55-year-old coach isn't just walking into one of the NBA's most followed and starved franchises. That's pressure in itself. But he's now the head coach of the team that made it very clear that doing something it hadn't done in a quarter century still wasn't good enough. The Knicks, per league sources, are singularly focused on winning a championship. They believe Brown gives them the best chance to do that. Whether Brown will be an upgrade over Thibodeau for this iteration of New York basketball is yet to be seen. We're months away from learning that. What we do know, though, is that everything that comes with being in New York, Brown has gone through something similar. LeBron. Kobe. The lights don't get much brighter than when standing next to those two. The two-time NBA Coach of the Year was the only candidate the Knicks ended up bringing back for a second interview, per league sources. It was a patient search that featured multiple twists and turns. New York's front office led by Leon Rose reached out to employed head coaches (like Houstons' Ime Udoka and Dallas' Jason Kidd), assistant coaches (like Minnesota's Micah Nori, Dallas' Sean Sweeney and New Orleans' James Borrego), recently fired head coaches (like Brown and Taylor Jenkins) and even held a conversation with South Carolina women's basketball coach Dawn Staley. Rose and Co., per league sources, didn't feel rushed to make a hire since the Knicks were the only team in the NBA with a vacancy. Advertisement New York went into the initial stages of the hiring process with Brown's name circled. Per league sources, the Knicks liked Brown's extensive résumé and the fact that he's worn many hats in the NBA. New York, led by stars Jalen Brunson and Karl-Anthony Towns, liked that Brown has worked with James, Bryant and Curry. The Knicks liked that Brown came up under Popovich, worked alongside Kerr and won championships with both. New York was impressed at how Brown turned the Sacramento Kings around and helped them win 45-plus games in back-to-back seasons for the first time in the lowly franchise's history since 2006. Before he was fired by Sacramento after 31 games last season, Brown helped turn De'Aaron Fox into an All-Star. In 2022-23, Brown and the Kings had the best offensive efficiency since tracking began in 1996. Now, Brown is tasked with pushing the Knicks to the next level, into a tier of champions. The Knicks' offense, while it finished the regular season with the fifth-best rating in the NBA, was a bit deceiving. Things started hot for New York on that end of the floor until around the top of the calendar year, when teams started regularly guarding Towns with smaller, athletic wings and putting their centers on Josh Hart. The Knicks' offense, despite all of its firepower in the starting lineup, ranked just 16th from Jan. 1 until the end of the regular season (Brunson missed a month due to injury in March). In the postseason, veteran-laden New York struggled with the up-and-coming, injured Detroit Pistons in the first round of the playoffs. In the second round against the Boston Celtics, the Knicks found themselves down by 20 points late in both Games 1 and 2 before pulling off miraculous comeback wins that helped them eventually take down the defending champions. Ultimately, New York ended up in the Eastern Conference finals. That's an achievement worth celebrating. However, even with that success, it's also easy to understand how the franchise's decision-makers looked at how the Knicks got to that point and came to the conclusion that this team needed a shake-up in order to get to the next level. *Enter Mike Brown* Advertisement The Knicks are positioned as well as any team in the Eastern Conference to make the leap next season. On paper, New York should be one of the conference's last two teams standing. Yet, there's so much more that goes into winning a championship than names on a sheet. There's talent. There's luck. There's health. The Knicks aren't promised another trip back to the conference finals, but they're expecting one. Brown comes into a situation that he can only come out of as a superhero if he takes New York to the NBA Finals or beyond. That's it. Anything less will be considered a failure, unfair or not. New York's decision-makers put those expectations on their new head coach. The fans didn't. The media didn't. The pressure is tremendous. The Knicks feel like they got the right person to end a 50-plus year title drought. And maybe they do. We won't know that answer, though, for quite some time. What we do know right now is that of all the coaches available to the Knicks, no one was more familiar with the gravity of the situation than Brown. That's at least a good start.

A pair of Makars on the Avalanche roster? Taylor hopes to one day join older brother Cale
A pair of Makars on the Avalanche roster? Taylor hopes to one day join older brother Cale

Fox Sports

time33 minutes ago

  • Fox Sports

A pair of Makars on the Avalanche roster? Taylor hopes to one day join older brother Cale

Associated Press DENVER (AP) — Should Taylor Makar someday make the roster, big brother Cale needs to consider altering the back of his Colorado Avalanche sweater. That's the running joke of Taylor, anyway — a 'C. Makar' modification from simply "Makar" to make room for 'T. Makar.' One Makar on the blue line and another at forward is something they've thought about since they were growing up in Calgary, Alberta. Because of their age difference — Cale is more than 2 years older — the tandem has never really been on the same elite team. If it happens with the Avalanche, they could join the likes of the Hughes brothers, who have Jack and Luke suiting up together with the New Jersey Devils (brother Quinn plays for Vancouver). Cale, of course, is already well-established as one of the league's top defensemen and coming off a season in which he won the Norris Trophy. Taylor keeps working his way toward the NHL. He started last year at the University of Maine before joining the Avalanche's American Hockey League affiliate, the Colorado Eagles, for the remainder of the season. When big brother speaks, Taylor carefully listens. 'I learn a lot from him,' said Taylor, who's taking part in the Avalanche's development camp this week but not skating as he rehabs from an upper body injury. 'Obviously, we train together. Do everything. It's just cool.' He cracked: 'Hopefully, he has to put a 'C' (for C. Makar) on his (sweater)." Although, it's not a requirement by the league. Sibling rivalry The Makar brothers are highly competitive in whatever hobby, activity or sport in which they challenge each other. By Taylor's scorecard, he reigns over Cale in cribbage, basketball, board games and video games. He gives Cale the edge on the golf course and sometimes in tennis. To hear Cale tell it, though, the rules sometimes get bent. 'He's the feisty little brother that would cheap-shot you when everything was said and done," Cale recently said. 'I'd usually win and then for some reason I'd call it quits and he kind of gave me cheap shots. As kids, we had a lot of fun like that. It definitely brings back a lot of memories. I think it's helped us later in life in competitiveness." Cale made his NHL debut in the 2019 Stanley Cup playoffs and has been a goal-scoring, puck-defending force ever since. He's coming off a season in which he had 30 goals as he became the first NHL defenseman to reach that mark since Mike Green scored 31 for Washington in 2008-09. No surprise, Cale was awarded the Norris Trophy as the league's top defenseman (he also won the award in 2022, the season Colorado captured the Stanley Cup). Now this was a surprise — the secret celebration his younger brother helped spring to commemorate the achievement. Taylor played a role in organizing a golf outing for the unsuspecting Cale as family and friends gathered in the backyard for the trophy presentation. When the group stopped by during their round, everyone was waiting. 'It turned out well, and he was pretty excited,' explained Taylor, a seventh-round pick by Colorado in 2021. 'It was a cool, special moment for all the people that are really close to him and our family to share together.' The Makar name For Taylor, there's no added pressure having 'Makar' on the back of his sweater given his brother's success. In fact, it's 'pretty cool,' he conceded. Big brother's biggest piece of advice? 'Just be myself,' Taylor said. Cale, 26, certainly is proud of his younger brother. The 24-year-old Taylor is coming off a season at Maine where he scored 18 goals and had 12 assists in 38 games. He then signed an entry-level deal and joined the Eagles, scoring a goal in five regular-season games. 'I think he's got a lot of intangibles that once he puts them all together he's got a really bright career ahead,' said Cale, who was the fourth overall pick by the Avalanche in 2017. 'It's cool to be able to have family this close now.' Watching little brother In April, Cale ventured up to Loveland, Colorado, to watch his brother play for the Eagles. Of course, there were extenuating circumstances — Avalanche captain Gabriel Landeskog was with the Eagles on a conditioning assignment in his recovery from a serious knee injury. It marked Landeskog's first professional game since Colorado's Cup run in 2022. 'First time I've seen (Taylor) play live at least since (youth hockey)," said Cale, who along with teammate Nathan MacKinnon was part of Team Canada's first six players chosen to take part in the 2026 Milan-Cortina Winter Olympics. Taylor's road to making the Avalanche roster to start the season figures to be difficult. Colorado is a bona fide title contender and stacked at forward. 'Just keep working hard, keep learning,' Taylor said. 'Got a ways to go, but just put everything out there.' ___ AP NHL: recommended

Knicks pick Mike Brown as franchise's next head coach after Tom Thibodeau's shocking dismissal: report
Knicks pick Mike Brown as franchise's next head coach after Tom Thibodeau's shocking dismissal: report

Fox News

time37 minutes ago

  • Fox News

Knicks pick Mike Brown as franchise's next head coach after Tom Thibodeau's shocking dismissal: report

The New York Knicks hadn't advanced to the Eastern Conference finals since 2000 before doing so in May. New York ultimately lost to the Indiana Pacers in six games. Shortly after New York's playoff exit, the Knicks announced the organization would be moving on from coach Tom Thibodeau. A wide-ranging coaching search ensued, which included multiple interview request denials. On Wednesday, the search reportedly culminated with the selection of Mike Brown. According to ESPN, the Knicks are expected to name Brown as the franchise's next head coach. A contract for Brown has yet to be finalized, but both sides appear to be making progress on a formal agreement. Brown's pending arrival in New York City comes nearly one month after Thibodeau's exit. Brown spent the past three NBA seasons coaching the Sacramento Kings. He also had two stints as the Cleveland Cavaliers' head coach and led the Los Angeles Lakers from 2011-12. He was named the Golden State Warriors' associate head coach in 2016. Brown coached several notable NBA greats, including LeBron James, Stephen Curry, the late Kobe Bryant and others in his career. Brown also spent multiple seasons learning under five-time NBA Finals-winning coach Gregg Popovich during the early portion of his career. Brown has led a team to the NBA Finals just one time in his coaching career. Popovich and the Spurs swept Brown and Cavaliers in the 2007 finals. Follow Fox News Digital's sports coverage on X, and subscribe to the Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter.

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