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CTV News
9 hours ago
- Business
- CTV News
A timeline of Masai Ujiri's more than decade-long run with the Toronto Raptors
Masai Ujiri is departing after a more than a decade-long career as the president of the Toronto Raptors. Arda Zakarian has more on his legacy.


Washington Post
15 hours ago
- Business
- Washington Post
Masai Ujiri fired as Raptors president and vice chairman after 13 years with franchise
TORONTO — Toronto Raptors president and vice chairman Masai Ujiri was fired Friday after 13 years with the franchise. Ujiri joined the Raptors in 2013 as executive vice president and general manager. He was promoted to president in 2016 and surrendered his responsibilities as GM in 2017, when Bobby Webster took over.


CTV News
15 hours ago
- Sport
- CTV News
Masai Ujiri out as Raptors president: reports
Watch According to reports, Masai Ujiri is out as president and vice chairman of the Toronto Raptors. Ujiri led the team to win its first-ever NBA championship in 2019.


New York Times
19-06-2025
- Sport
- New York Times
As Nationals' losing streak reaches 11 games, Dave Martinez finds his way into the spotlight
WASHINGTON, D.C. — It took more than three days for someone front-facing in the Washington Nationals organization to publicly acknowledge manager Dave Martinez's recent comments, in which he absolved his coaches of any blame for the team's abysmal play. By now, the response largely falls on deaf ears. Advertisement 'There's onus on the players, there's onus on the coaches, there's onus on the manager and there's great onus on the general manager to do a better job,' general manager Mike Rizzo said Wednesday morning in a paid scheduled weekly radio appearance for 106.7 The Fan. 'We all got to look in the mirror when you lose 10 games in a row.' The Nationals, who extended that losing streak to 11 after Wednesday's 3-1 loss to the Rockies, have not been ones for self reflection as of late. Rizzo, who did not reply to text messages from The Athletic on Monday and declined further comment Wednesday, finally accepted a portion of the blame for the team's recent freefall during his radio spot. Martinez hasn't — and no amount of backtracking or clarifying in subsequent days is as effective as a simple apology would have been in the moment. Martinez, who publicly called out his players as the sole issue in his team's underperformance, practically put himself on the hot seat. And as the Nationals continue to flounder, he might be the least of their problems, if he's a problem at all. 'We're not going to fingerpoint here and say it's on the coaches. It's never on the coaches,' Martinez said after Saturday night's loss to the Marlins. 'Sometimes you've got to put the onus on the players, they've got to go out there and they've got to play the game.' Martinez followed that up the next day by saying he had talked to his players about his comments and everything was fine. 'It wasn't on them. My comments (were) nothing about them. They know that,' Martinez told reporters Sunday. 'They read through it, and I talked to them about it. They're good.' '(It) was never about them, right? I never mentioned anything about players,' Martinez said. 'I appreciate those players. I played. I understand how hard this game is, and they know that. It's a difficult game, and these guys are out there trying hard. We've got to do the little things. We start doing the little things, we'll start winning some of these games.' Advertisement The Nationals aren't doing either the little things or winning. They are winless in their past five series. They've averaged fewer than three runs per game (2.62) this month, which is worst in the majors. And they allowed 19 runs in the first three games of the series to a Colorado Rockies team cruising to the worst record in modern baseball history. Rizzo said Wednesday he treats all losses the same, but this is the soft part of the Nats schedule as the team goes west after Thursday's game to play the Dodgers, Padres and Angels. Martinez — often tasked with speaking for the entire organization — has spent the majority of the past eight seasons appearing heartfelt and polite on the podium. No one in an organization speaks to the media more than the manager. Martinez is typically excellent in that regard, making it even more confounding how he inexplicably lacked feel in the days after his comments caused a stir. Why, multiple people in the industry surmised, did he not come back Sunday and shoulder at least some of the blame for what has now morphed into a double-digit losing streak? If coaches and managers don't have any impact on the on-field product, why are they there? And why has Martinez had several different iterations of his staff, including an entire new group from the one that won in 2019? The Nationals season is, like Rizzo said, a byproduct of failures all around, beginning with the general manager and working its way down. No one can say, 'I'm working hard, this isn't on me!,' particularly when the little things that managers and coaches can impact — like baserunning and sound defense — are absent on a near-nightly basis from the Nationals' side of the dugout. Fans who have sat through what looks to be a sixth consecutive losing season weren't appeased by Monday's promotion of touted third base prospect Brady House — a diversion attempt that would surely make even D.C. politicians proud. Martinez's comments took on a life of their own, filling up talk radio stations and stirring even some of the more apathetic fans into action. During Tuesday's loss — in which the Nationals surrendered seven home runs — there were loud boos and 'Fire Davey!' chants sweeping through Nationals Park. The comments also put the Nationals back on the national consciousness. Advertisement For years, particularly since Rizzo and Martinez engineered the organization's 2019 World Series, the pair have been under-the-radar in the general baseball landscape. When my colleague, Ken Rosenthal, wrote an excellent column last month on the state of the Nationals, he admitted it only came after another team's executive had pointed out that the rebuild appeared to have stalled. Rizzo and some of the fan base questioned the timing. With teams like the Rockies and White Sox — who set the major-league record for losses just last year — and the neverending futility of the Pirates, surely baseball had bigger problems. People outside of the Beltway weren't paying close attention. They are now. And the two highest profile members in baseball operations, Martinez and Rizzo, are each under added public scrutiny. It remains unlikely that any change is coming, particularly mid-season for an ownership group that remains remarkably hands off at best and uninterested at the worst. (The Lerner family, who purchased the team in 2006, briefly contemplated selling but took the team off the market when they didn't like the bids.) Both Martinez and Rizzo have club options that must be decided on later this summer. Martinez is well liked by ownership — it was his new contract that was agreed to before Rizzo's in the last go-around — and people close to the family believe the Lerners have a lot of respect for Martinez, who led them to their only World Series while dealing with a heart issue. It would be more humane — if the Lerners decide to make a change — to simply not offer Martinez another contract, particularly when there's no clear answer to who on his staff would serve as interim. The same goes for Rizzo, who was promoted from assistant GM to the top spot in 2009, and is the second-longest tenured baseball operations head in the game. Rizzo threw his support behind Martinez on Wednesday, calling him one of the best player managers he's been around. 'Davey still has the pulse of the clubhouse, he's a great clubhouse presence, a calming presence,' Rizzo told 106.7. 'And once we get through this and win a couple games, which we will, we can right the ship and continue progressing toward winning a championship, whenever that is.' Advertisement As Rizzo pointed out, the pitchforks have been out for Martinez before. In 2019, several media outlets, including the Washington Post, called for a change as the team stumbled out to a 19-31 start. Even then, Martinez never lashed out. He smiled and kept the receipts, taking the high road all the way to the World Series, using the phrase 'Bumpy roads lead to beautiful places,' to describe the Nationals magnificent run. It was an incredible job by Martinez, Rizzo and a veteran-laden team to bring a championship to D.C., a dream of Lerner family patriarch Ted, who passed away in 2023. But it's not 2019 anymore. The Lerners must decide, and soon, if this is another bump in the road or if the organization is approaching a dead end. (Top photo of Dave Martinez:)


New York Times
17-06-2025
- Business
- New York Times
PGA Tour leadership: Brian Rolapp is in, with Jay Monahan to be phased out
CROMWELL, Conn. — The PGA Tour has new leadership. Jay Monahan, the current commissioner of the PGA Tour, will step down from his position at the end of 2026 to make way for the new CEO, Brian Rolapp. The tour officially announced Rolapp's hire from the NFL on Tuesday. The search for a CEO to be at the helm of the PGA Tour's new for-profit entity, PGA Tour Enterprises, began at the start of this year, with an implication that Monahan could phase out of his role upon an eventual hire. Monahan will stay on through the duration of his contract, with Rolapp taking over his day-to-day responsibilities when he officially steps into the role later this summer. Monahan will turn his focus over to his roles on both the PGA Tour Policy Board and the PGA Tour Enterprises Board. Advertisement Rolapp addressed the PGA Tour in an open letter on Tuesday morning, sent as he joined a players-only meeting that took place here at the Travelers Championship. The seasoned executive has held various leadership roles at the NFL over the last two decades, notably serving as the chief negotiator for the NFL's $110 billion media deals with ESPN, NBC, Fox, CBS and Amazon. Many believed he could be Roger Goodell's successor as the NFL commissioner, but Goodell's contract has been extended again, The Athletic reported last month. Addressing the media for the first time since his official appointment, Rolapp emphasized his blank-slate approach to the role, and the ability to respect tradition without letting it hold the tour back. He comes into the job as the PGA Tour and LIV Golf continue to operate in a fractured state, with negotiations between the tour and the Saudi Public Investment Fund, LIV's financial backer, stalling in recent months. While Rolapp did not comment on a specific plan to bring the tours together, he noted that the best players competing together on the same stages is clearly what fans of the game want. As a self-proclaimed fan of the game, Rolapp aligned with that sentiment. 'When it comes to the situation with LIV, I think that's a complex situation that's probably something I should learn more about before I speak. But I will say my focus is on growing the Tour, making it better, and really moving on from the position of strength that it has,' Rolapp said. Rolapp said he was drawn to the role for a variety of reasons, but he specifically pointed to the $1.5 billion investment from Strategic Sports Group, a private equity group of American sports team owners and leaders, as a significant influence in his interest. That money, which could be matched by the Public Investment Fund should a deal be completed, has not been spent. The tour has previously stated its plans to give players a stake in its future, in the form of equity grants. Advertisement 'Where we deploy that capital, I have ideas,' Rolapps said. 'I don't think I want to share them now, but that's going to be part of the job to get in there and talk about it. But I think they saw when I saw, which is a great opportunity, and just getting sort of the right alignment and the right capital to do that, that's what really drew me to it. It's an investor group that is experienced in sports. They're smart.' Members of the CEO search committee were on hand for Rolapp's announcement, including Tiger Woods, Adam Scott and Monahan. Monahan's tenure as PGA Tour commissioner began in January 2017. Many lauded his ability to guide the sport through the pandemic. When the threat of LIV Golf emerged in 2021, Monahan took a strong stance against the start-up league, a move that ultimately came back to bite him when the PGA Tour announced a shocking framework agreement with the PIF in 2023. Players and constituents in the game criticized Monahan for operating behind closed doors and flipping his previously declared stance on the issue. Rolapp, who admittedly plays between five and 10 rounds of golf per year, shared his intention to learn from Monahan as he transitions out of his role. 'No one hired me for my golf game here. That's not my job. My job is to do other things. But I'm a big fan of the sport,' Rolapp said.