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Tyson Fury given huge boost as WBC confirms purse split for Dillian Whyte bout | Boxing | Sport

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Unless a deal is struck between the two parties in the next two weeks, the fight will go to purse bids on January 11.

If that happens, any promoter can put in an offer to stage the fight in a blind bidding process, with the highest bidder earning the right to stage the bout.

Given they have less than two weeks to strike a deal away from that process, purse bids seems the likely outcome as both camps have so far been unwilling to compromise in negotiations.

If Frank Warren, Fury’s UK promoter, is the one who gets his way, the all-British fight is likely to take place on home shores.

Memphis Grizzlies sign forward Killian Tillie to new 2-year, $4 million deal

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The Memphis Grizzlies signed forward Killian Tillie to a new two-year, $4 million contract, his agents Andy Shiffman and Mark Bartelstein of Priority Sports told ESPN on Saturday.

Tillie, undrafted out of Gonzaga in 2020, has played a more prominent role for the Grizzlies lately with several teammates in the league’s health and safety protocols. Tillie had been on a two-way contract, which the Grizzlies converted into a regular NBA deal — including for the 2022-23 season.

Memphis waived guard Sam Merrill, who sources say will undergo a procedure on his left ankle and be sidelined for three to four months. Merrill had a guaranteed contract for the rest of this season and had made a positive impression with Memphis.

Tillie, 23, is a native of France and has averaged over 20 minutes in Memphis’ past four games, which included posting 4 rebounds, 3 assists, 2 blocks and 2 steals in Friday’s victory over the San Antonio Spurs.

Cavani will stay at Man United, insists Rangnick | The Guardian Nigeria News

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Manchester United interim manager Ralf Rangnick has ruled out the possibility of losing Edinson Cavani this month.

Cavani has not played his last game for Manchester United, insists Rangnick (Photo: AP)

The Uruguayan has scored 19 goals in 49 appearances for the Red Devils since joining on a free transfer in October 2020.

However, the 34-year-old’s time in England has also been beset by injury problems and a controversial ban last season for using what the English Football Association deemed racist language in a social media post.

Cavani, whose contract expires at the end of the season, has been linked with a move to Barcelona, but Rangnick highlighted his importance despite having a wealth of attacking options to choose from.

“We spoke about Edi and he knows that I will definitely not let him go,” said Rangnick ahead of United’s Premier League clash with Wolves on Monday.

“For me, he is a highly important player for the rest of the season, still playing in three competitions, so we will definitely need Edi.

“I would rather have another Edi on top of that but for me it’s clear that Edi has to stay.”

Cavani started for the first time under Rangnick in Thursday’s 3-1 win over Burnley.

And the German believes he and Cristiano Ronaldo can form a potent partnership despite having a combined age of 70.

“He is probably the only one who can play as a striker back to goal and face to goal,” added Rangnick on Cavani.

“His professionalism, his work ethic is just amazing and I told him that I desperately want him to stay until the end of the season. He knows that.

“He also knows how highly I rate him and how highly I respect him, and that was also the reason why I played him (against Burnley) from the beginning together with Cristiano.”

Anthony Martial is one of United’s forward options who looks set to leave in January with Sevilla reportedly close to agreeing a loan deal for the French international.

Dean Henderson, Jesse Lingard, Juan Mata and Donny van de Beek could also move on in search of more first-team action.

But having just got over a coronavirus outbreak among the United squad, Rangnick said he may have to retain a larger pool of players for the second half of the season due to Covid considerations.

“Our squad is maybe a little bit too big with regards to numbers,” said Rangnick.

“But we still have Covid, we have three competitions, as I said, and I think we could do with a bigger squad than maybe in times without Covid.”

Calgary police escort unruly passengers identified as Russian hockey team members off international flight

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Calgary police were called to the Calgary International Airport Friday night to help remove multiple passengers from a scheduled flight.

The call came in around 5:45 p.m., when a disturbance was reported on an Air Canada flight.

In a statement, police said “passengers were being asked to deplane due to a disturbance involving multiple passengers in the aircraft cabin.”

Police confirmed to Global News alcohol was involved.

Read more:

2022 World Junior Championship cancelled amid rising COVID cases

Passengers aboard the plane were tweeting about the delayed flight and identified the offenders as members of the Russian Junior World Hockey Team, which was in Alberta for the 2022 World Junior Championship.

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Kathleen Scherf was seated in business class, near who she said she believed to be two Russian coaches.

“They were very difficult for the flight attendants to handle,” she told Global News.

“They wouldn’t stay in their seat. They wouldn’t keep the mask on. One of them was vaping… They both had loud music coming out of their iPhones — like not head phones, but playing — and they kept getting up to hug each other.”

Scherf said the flight had been sitting on the tarmac, delayed for over an hour and a half, when police swarmed the plane and all the passengers were asked to get off.

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“I’ve never been in a situation where there was a security de-planing. So it was quite interesting and just really shocking that these young people held up hundreds of passengers… I didn’t have a connecting flight but others did, which they missed. There were tons of kids on the flight, scores of crew would have been affected by this just because they were being testosterone-filled young men.”

A short time later, most passengers were re-boarded and the flight took off.

The International Ice Hockey Federation cancelled the remainder of the tournament on Dec. 29 due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

In an emailed statement Saturday afternoon, the IIHF said it was “gathering further information on this incident from the relevant authorities and will refer the incident to the IIHF Ethics Board to determine if the Russian National Team’s actions violated the IIHF Ethics Code. Upon the IIHF Ethics Board decision, the incident will be referred to the IIHF Disciplinary Board for sanctioning.”




© 2022 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

Verstappen: I’m F1 World Champion but in 2022 we start from scratch

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formel-1-red-bull-racing-max-verstappen world champion

Max Verstappen is no doubt enjoying being Formula 1 World Champion but the Red Bull driver knows that next year it is back to square one for his title defence, and hopes more than two teams are in the mix for top honours, a tonic he says the sport needs.

In the wake of claiming the 2021 F1 title, his first, on the final lap of the unforgettable Abu Dhabi Grand Prix, the Dutch ace has been showered with accolades since the night he picked up his F1 World Champion trophy, in Paris earlier this month.

He has been just about everyone’s Driver of the Year, from our own site through F1 Team Principals and F1 Drivers, all voting Max the Main Man of F1.

This crowns an incredible dream that triggered an epic journey that began from the moment father Jos Verstappen realised his son had one destiny: Formula 1. Since then it has very much been a family affair, a tough path, packed with sacrifices from his racing driver mother Sophie Kumpen and his sister.

While Jos developed his son, mostly on the road away from home, into the racing genius he has become. Thus it was fitting that Verstappen senior collected the Dutch “Male Sportsman of the Year Award” on his son’s behalf.

On the night of the occasion, Jos told the assembled VIPs, dignitaries and media: “Max has had to work hard for this, it was a tough year. After he won the world title, there were a lot of emotions.

“He also had a lot of commitments last week, so he is happy he can finally be on holiday. Max has always been able to relax well, and this time he really needs it,” explained Jos of Max’s absence.

Fotos vom Herzschlagfinale in Abu Dhabi: Verstappen bejubelt ersten F1-Titel - FOCUS Online

Jos: I knew if there is a chance, he will go for it, all or nothing

The older Verstappen, a former F1 driver, also shed light on those anxious moments when all seemed lost during a topsy-turvy finale at Yas Marina: “After the fifth or sixth lap I walked away. I really didn’t think we would be able to do it; we just lacked the pace. I sat alone in a room with a TV and the lap times.

“Then the Latifi crash happened with the safety car. That got us excited, there was a chance again. I knew Max, if there is a chance, he will go for it, all or nothing. And we’ve seen how it all ended.”

One of the standout images of that dramatic night were father and son crouched together only moments after Max alighted the car, title his the enormous emotions clearly visible.

“I don’t remember what I said, there were so many emotions,” Jos attempted to recall. “We’ve worked for this for twenty years. I’ve travelled the world with him for twelve years.

“Our dream was to become F1 world champion and this was the moment. I saw that he was very emotional. For us both, it was a special moment that we were able to share.”

Formula 1 title-deciding season finale upon us

Max: In 2021 every race was full gas, from the first lap to the end of the race

In his final interview of the year, Max sat down with Olav Mol, of Ziggo Sport, to look back on his triumphant season: “In 2020, there were races after which I was not tired at all, it felt like I had been cruising all afternoon. Mercedes were too fast and I was just driving around.

“This year every race was full gas, from the first lap to the end of the race. Without tyre management and strategy, we just couldn’t do that. Racing that way is a lot harder.”

While the Red Bull team is built around Verstappen for obvious reasons, this year he enjoyed Sergio Perez as a teammate who gave support like none of his predecessors had but not enough to claim tyhe constructors’ title, which went to Mercedes for an unprecedented eighth time in a row.

Nevertheless, the Dutch ace commended his Mexican partner: “He was super, I had no idea he’d be so good. I knew of him as a driver in F1 but now we spend a lot more time together, you notice what a good guy he is.

Verstappen also prefers not to be seen as the team’s number one driver: “I do not like to say it like that, as we both have equal opportunities. You make your own luck but I do not want to be favoured.

“I don’t need that, and it is not good for the team. Of course, I am World Champion, but I will have to start from scratch again next year.”

The new World Champion also was full of praise for his race engineer GianPiero Lambiase: “I told him that I will only work with him. If he stops, I will also stop!

“It is unbelievable how we work together. Sometimes he can be strict towards me, but that is what I want. He should be able to tell me when I behave like a jerk, and I will do that to him too. That is what I have always told him, and he can tell me over the radio.

“Lately, it has been going very well, as sometimes I have been trying to be the engineer and he tried to be the driver. Helmut also likes how we communicate.”

Verstappen-Vertragsgespräche erinnern an Vettel | F1-Insider.com

Max: I hope more teams will be closer together at the front, that will be much better for F1

With 2021 over, 2022 is on us and an exciting, bright future for F1 with a rules upheaval intent on levelling the lopsided F1 playing field.

Looking ahead to next season, Max said: “I’ve only been driving the new car in the simulator and they’re a lot slower, but I hope racing will be better and easier to attack.

“Then it will not really matter if the cars are three or four seconds per lap slower. I hope more teams will be closer together, that will be much better for F1 in general,” reckoned the 24-year-old.

And to close off our site’s 2021 coverage of the greatest sport on the planet, a final word to our new World Champion, Max Emilian Verstappen: “A bit of a break, it has been a long season. And then we will start all over again.”

To all our readers have a safe and prosperous 2022, and may Formula 1 be better than ever this forthcoming World Championship season! Thank you Max and Lewis for the Memories.

Boxing cancelled in Britain for January with Chris Eubank Jr among those affected | Boxing | Sport

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“The things he has said, ‘lowlife’, ‘scumbag’ and ‘cretin’, these are the words that I can use to describe a man that talks the way he talks and he will eat his words soon enough.

“It seems he has come here today and take about respect but it has gone too far past that and he is going to get embarrassed.”

The suspension also has a knock on effect on Eubank’s hopes of a world title bout with Gennady Golovkin, as all of the Englishman’s plans will now have to be shuffled back.

Eubank already has big plans for a clash with Golovkin, as he believes the bout would be able to sell out a football stadium on home soil in England.

A year after ‘The Charlie Show,’ all eyes on Tiger Woods

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ORLANDO, Fla. — The focus is back where it always burned brightest, on the guy whose various injuries and comebacks have garnered the laserlike attention akin to all the golf records he set.

Tiger Woods was on a golf course again, a crowd of thousands following him in a pro-am. It was amazing to witness, knowing what we know.

A year has rambled by since he last did this, at the same Ritz- Carlton Golf Club where his son, Charlie, then 11 years old, stole the headlines at the PNC Championship.

Padraig Harrington, the most recent European Ryder Cup captain, who had his battles with Woods throughout the years, is just as curious as the rest of us. He chuckled at the memory of pronouncing at the 2020 event “The Charlie Show.”

“For once, Tiger is not the story,” Harrington said then.

Tiger Woods is now — and that was obvious on Friday. Golf Channel wasn’t breaking in to show live pro-am shots were it not for the momentousness of the occasion. Woods was back on a golf course, hitting shots, looking good, nearly 10 months to the day that he was involved in a horrific car crash that could have claimed his life.

The injuries were extensive to his right leg and foot, and only recently has Woods felt good enough to appear in public. For months, he stayed in seclusion, needing a wheelchair. When he finally graduated to crutches, he joked that getting around his mansion in South Florida was more of a chore than he realized.

A few weeks ago, he appeared at his foundation’s Hero World Challenge in the Bahamas, doing his first interviews and proclaiming he had a long way to go — all the while hitting balls on various days at the Albany course, showing there was still some game left.

That he has taken it to this point — even if he is riding in a golf cart — is impressive. The story isn’t so much about Charlie, whose exploits as a 12-year-old now are impressive. And yet, Charlie is the reason Tiger is here.

“Completely,” said Erica Herman, Tiger’s girlfriend. “[Tiger] really wanted to do this for him. It became important to try and do this.”

Herman said that Charlie didn’t so much try to drag his dad to the tournament, in which where they tied for seventh a year ago, as remind him how much fun he had. And Tiger, realizing its significance, wanted to make it happen.

We probably will never fully realize that magnitude of the struggle to get here.

Herman joked that when the rest of us have some sort of malady and a doctor asks us to rehabilitate, we are likely to be less than committed. Not Tiger Woods.

“He’s worked hard — and it’s been harder than any of the others,” she said, referring to the various comebacks from knee and back issues. “No matter what it was, no matter how small, he did it. Never missed. Did everything.”

That seems right on brand for Woods, whose work ethic and attention to detail throughout his career is part of the legend.

“I think he’s got alien DNA,” said Notah Begay, Woods’ teammate at Stanford and now a Golf Channel analyst. “His ability to repair not only physically but mentally and emotionally is second to none. I don’t think we’ve ever seen anything like it in sports.”

In some ways, Friday appeared to be business as usual. Herman usually never bothers with the pro-ams.

“Are there usually this many people?” she asked.

But she was recruited to help drive the cart and direct traffic. Joe LaCava is here to caddie, and Rob McNamara, Tiger’s longtime friend and eyes and ears over the past several years, was with him inside the ropes, discussing the swing and various aspects of the game.

McNamara admitted he had his reservations about Woods doing this, given the struggles that lay ahead and knowing that even walking the short distances between the cart and the greens or tees is still going to take a toll over three days.

But he also acknowledged that it seemed right, that Woods bonding with his son on this stage after nearly a year of immense struggle was worth it.

And if you didn’t know what you know … well, a lot of what Woods did during five-plus hours on the course seemed … normal.

Woods has never been fully engaged in pro-ams. He chats up his amateur partners, jokes around with a few stragglers and works on his game — but not in any high-intensity manner. That was the case on Friday. He practiced his short game around the greens, pitching and chipping to different spots. He did the same on the greens with his putting.

There was some thought he might forgo tee shots. But he hit from the back tees; they measure just more than 7,100 yards. And while they didn’t all fly true and far, he had his moments, such on the 11th hole, where his tee shot went 320 yards.

Around the greens, Woods’ short game looked sharp. But let’s face it: That is the aspect he has been able to work on the most.

One drive got away from him on the ninth hole, a toe-push that elicited some obvious dismay from Woods. As Charlie walked by his dad, the younger Woods quipped: “Nice shot,” which in turn had Tiger firing his tee at Charlie’s back and eliciting a huge laugh.

Tiger has been working with a new prototype driver as well as a new golf ball. He unveiled a new device a few weeks ago for swing speed and launch angle work. Clearly, some of this is about him giving some love to his sponsors, who have not been able to benefit this year from the eyeballs he typically draws to everything about him.

But it also shows that Woods is fully engaged in the process. He is an equipment geek at heart. And he loves to test out all of the game’s new toys, a sign he is engaged in this recovery. That he was hitting chip shots from behind the 18th green despite being in some discomfort was another sign.

As the round progressed, Woods hit fewer shots, a reminder of this daunting process. He said he wanted to save them for the tournament. That makes sense. The weather is quite warm, and there is bound to be fatigue.

“For all intents and purposes, nine months hasn’t done his swing any different,” Harrington said. “To him, it might feel different, but it doesn’t look any different. Coming back, speed is going to be an issue.”

Speed. And endurance. And the ability to walk. And walk. And walk some more.

Don’t underestimate how big of a deal that is for Woods, an act that once was routine but now takes on extra meaning. Woods is going to need some time, perhaps quite a bit more. Four rounds of tournament golf is certainly nothing to be taken for granted, and doing so at the highest competitive level only adds to the stress.

This event should be far from that. It is meant to be low-key, which is nearly impossible when Woods is involved. Hence, the spotlight will be on him again.

But if it weren’t for Charlie, Tiger wouldn’t be here, and an important part of the comeback would be on hold.

Tennis player Leylah Fernandez named The Canadian Press female athlete of the year

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Leylah Fernandez displayed a champion’s poise after a memorable run to the US Open tennis final last summer, a performance that showed she had truly arrived on one of the sport’s biggest stages.

Mere moments after coming up just short of a Grand Slam title, the Canadian teenager delivered a speech that brought the house down at Arthur Ashe Stadium. Her eloquence wowed the New York crowd that day, just like the quality of her play over the preceding fortnight.

Fernandez’s upset-laden blitz through the women’s draw was one of the highlights in a breakout season for the Montreal native. She also earned her first career WTA Tour title in 2021 and surged up the world rankings to crack the top 25.

Fernandez capped her year Tuesday by winning the Bobbie Rosenfeld Award as The Canadian Press female athlete of the year.

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An up-and-coming 73rd-ranked player entering the US Open, expectations were modest at the start of the tournament. Fernandez would wildly exceed them.

She stunned defending champion Naomi Osaka in the third round and knocked off more big names like Angelique Kerber, Elina Svitolina and Aryna Sabalenka en route to the final.

“I was very, very proud of myself, how I was able to be composed and how I was able to step up in those important moments so I could get through the finish line,” Fernandez said.

Read more:

U.S. Open: Canada’s Leylah Fernandez loses to U.K.’s Emma Raducanu

Fernandez thrilled the lively crowds along the way with her energy, spirit and determination. Fans were smitten and cheered the 19-year-old Canadian like a hometown favourite.

The final match, however, did not go her way as she fell to British qualifier Emma Raducanu.

It was an emotional afternoon in New York on the 20th anniversary of the 9/11 attacks. After an on-court interview, Fernandez asked for the microphone back before receiving the finalist trophy so she could address the crowd one last time.

“I know on this day it was especially hard for New York and everyone around the United States,” she said. “I just want to say that I hope I can be as strong and as resilient as New York has been the past 20 years.

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“Thank you for always having my back, thank you for cheering for me. I love you New York and hope to see you next year.”

The applause from the over 23,000 spectators in attendance was deafening.

In addition to her first Grand Slam final appearance, Fernandez — who started the year ranked 88th in the world — won the Monterrey Open in March. She also helped Canada post a 4-0 win over Serbia in the Billie Jean King Cup playoffs in April.

Read more:

Leylah Fernandez, Felix Auger-Aliassime in Montreal after lengthy US Open runs

The Rosenfeld race was a close one this year with Fernandez receiving 12 of 45 votes cast by sports editors, writers and broadcasters across Canada. Swimmers Penny Oleksiak and Maggie Mac Neil finished with 10 votes apiece.

“This award is going to be one of many she wins,” said Tennis Canada president Michael Downey. “We just are so proud of this young woman, both for what she did on court but also what she does off court because her speech after she lost the (US Open) final was one for the ages.

“We’re just so proud of her.”

Fernandez, who lives and trains in Boynton Beach, Fla., is the third tennis player to win the annual award in the last decade. Bianca Andreescu won it in 2019 and Eugenie Bouchard won it in 2013 and ’14.

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“Leylah’s run through what is arguably the most difficult of the tennis majors — the US Open — was nothing short of remarkable,” said Kelowna Daily Courier managing editor David Trifunov.

“Her surgical cuts through the field of former champions and world No. 1s – all with what’s becoming her trademark dimpled smile — is precisely the tonic Canadian sports fans needed in a pandemic.”


Click to play video: 'Tennis stars Felix Auger-Aliassime, Leyla Fernandez return home after U.S. Open'







Tennis stars Felix Auger-Aliassime, Leyla Fernandez return home after U.S. Open


Tennis stars Felix Auger-Aliassime, Leyla Fernandez return home after U.S. Open – Sep 14, 2021

 

Fernandez finished the year with a 25-17 record and she earned US$1.77 million in prize money.

Soccer player Christine Sinclair took the Rosenfeld honour last year.

“I’m very honoured to be amongst these athletes who’ve done so much for women’s sports, and their respective sports, and even outside of their sports,” Fernandez said. “Growing up, I’ve read about (Sinclair) in the news.

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“I’ve seen how much she’s accomplished and I’m honoured to have my name right beside hers.”

The winner of the Lionel Conacher Award, presented to CP’s male athlete of the year, will be announced Wednesday. The team of the year will be unveiled Thursday.

— With files from Canadian Press’ Lori Ewing.




© 2021 The Canadian Press

Los Angeles Lakers’ LeBron James scores season-high 43 in blowout win over Blazers

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LOS ANGELES — If 2022 goes anything for the Los Angeles Lakers like LeBron James‘ first game since turning 37, L.A. could have big things in store.

James scored a season-high 43 points in just 29 minutes in the Lakers’ 139-106 win over the Portland Trail Blazers, dominating the action from the start as he scored the game’s first five points in the first 46 seconds and kept pouring it on from there.

James shot 16-for-26 from the floor (5-for-10 from 3-point range) and added 14 rebounds, four assists, two steals and two blocks as he became the oldest player since Michael Jordan in 2003 to put up a 40-point, 10-rebound stat line.

According to ESPN Stats & Information research, James became the oldest player with 40 points in under 30 minutes of play as well as the oldest to have at least 40 points and 14 rebounds.

“I literally try to prepare my mind and my body and my soul on how I can stay young in a young man’s game,” said James, who said his birthday celebration Thursday centered around watching movies on the couch with his family, having some wine and tequila and being in bed by 10:30 p.m.

“Sometimes you do have to remind people that you can still do what you do at a high level, and I’ve just been blessed, very blessed and continue to put the work in,” he said. “Because that’s what it all boils down to. It boils down to putting the work in and everything else will take care of itself.”

James took to Instagram afterward to revel in his first game as a 37-year-old.

The Lakers, now 18-19 and No. 7 in the Western Conference, have their work cut out for them in the second half of the season. After squandering a friendly schedule full of home games and lesser opponents over the last couple of months, things are set to become much tougher.

But if James can continue the tear he’s on, you can’t count L.A. out.

Friday was his seventh straight game scoring 30 points or more, his longest such streak since 2013, and his 28.0 points per game average this season is his best since playing for the Cleveland Cavaliers in 2009-10. James is the oldest player in NBA history with seven straight 30-point games, according to ESPN Stats & Information research.

While L.A. slipped in the standings in December, going 6-8, it was an incredible month for James. He became the oldest player in league history to average 30 points per game in a month, surpassing Jordan, who was 34 when he put up 30.7 points per game in January 1998. It was the third time in his career that he had 10 30-point games in a calendar month, but the first time he’s done it since 2006.

And Friday was an incredible capper, as he did all his damage in just 29 minutes of playing time, marking the first time in his career that he has scored 40 or more while playing under 30 minutes. It was just the second time in his career that he scored 40 while also having zero turnovers. He did it for the Miami Heat on March 18, 2014, while playing against Cleveland.

James is averaging 36 points on 58% shooting overall and 42% from 3-point range over the past seven games, adding 11 rebounds and 6.1 assists per game while picking up the slack in Anthony Davis‘ absence since he went down with a sprained MCL in his left knee. He’s just the sixth player in league history to hit that stat line over a seven-game stretch, joining Jordan, Larry Bird, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Wilt Chamberlain and Elgin Baylor as the only others to do so.

“I’m not a guy that just goes out and just sees if I can jack a bunch of shots,” said James. “I want to be efficient every single night or anytime I’m playing. So as long as the streak I’ve been on, as far as my scoring, I’ve been extremely efficient as well. I take way more pride in that than the scoring. That’s just who I am as a basketball player.”

Lakers coach Frank Vogel said James continues to give L.A. hope even though the season has been difficult so far.

“He exemplifies going out and playing until exhaustion,” said Vogel, adding that James called for a sub because he had exuded so much energy at one point. “That’s how we want our group to play, that’s how we should play the game, so play the game to exhaustion and he’s showing that.

“And then his energy in film sessions and all of our work away from the game is like a mental energy. He brings [that to] our team, and the positivity… There’s so much noise around our team and negativity and he doesn’t let that, allow that to filter into our group.”

Man City late show at Arsenal opens up 11-point lead | The Guardian Nigeria News

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Rodri scored a 93rd minute winner as Manchester City took another huge step towards retaining the Premier League title with a 2-1 win over 10-man Arsenal.

Pep Guardiola’s men are now 11 points clear at the top thanks to an 11-game winning run, but were made to toil until deep into stoppage time by the Gunners.

A 5-0 thrashing to City when the sides last met in August saw Arsenal off to their worst start to a league season in 67 years.

But Mikel Arteta’s men have rallied to rise to fourth in the table and showed why as they deservedly led at half-time through Bukayo Saka’s seventh goal of the season.

Riyad Mahrez levelled from the penalty spot before Gabriel Magalhaes stupidly got himself sent off for two quickfire bookings just before the hour mark.

And the 10 men just failed to hold out for a point when Rodri poked home from close range after Aymeric Laporte’s shot was blocked.

Plastic bottles rained down on the Spanish international as he celebrated with the Arsenal supporters furious as they voiced their frustration at the officiating after seeing a penalty appeal of their own waived away in the first half.

However, it was Gabriel’s indiscipline that cost his side the chance to extend a four-point cushion over the chasing pack for a place in next season’s Champions League.

Arteta was forced to watch the game from home after he tested positive for coronavirus for the second time earlier this week.

However, that did not disrupt the Gunners’ fine form as with assistant Albert Stuivenberg directing operations they ran the champions and runaway leaders ragged in the first half.

The first big decision to go against the home side came on 12 minutes when Martin Odegaard went down as he tried to round City goalkeeper Ederson.

The Brazilian was given the benefit of the doubt by the referee and VAR, but Ederson appeared to have gone through the Norwegian’s foot to get to the ball.

– Martinelli’s missed chances -Gabriel Martinelli’s form has played a big part in Arsenal’s resurgence in recent weeks, but it was a day of missed opportunities for the Brazilian.

Martinelli fired powerfully into the body of Ederson and saw two more efforts fly just wide of the target before the break.

But Arsenal did get the half-time lead they deserved when Saka swept home Kieran Tierney’s pass into the bottom corner.

That was just the second Premier League goal City had conceded in the first half all season and Guardiola’s men bounced back in a dramatic second period.

Arsenal were furious when Stuart Attwell was sent to review Granit Xhaka’s pull on Bernardo Silva seven minutes after the break when he had not been for Odegaard’s penalty appeal.

Mahrez made no mistake from the spot in his final City appearance for a while due to his participation in the African Cup of Nations with Algeria.

The game then turned in the course of an incredible 60 seconds.

Firstly, Arsenal somehow did not retake the lead when Nathan Ake rescued Laporte’s wayward header from crossing his own line before Martinelli hit the post with an open goal on the rebound.

From the resulting goal kick, Gabriel Jesus turned onto Ederson’s pass and was hauled down by Gabriel, who had already been booked for scuffing up the penalty spot as Mahrez prepared to take his spot-kick.

City went on to dominate possession without creating many big chances and grabbed the winner in uncharacteristic fashion.

Laporte made the most of a hopeful ball into the box and the ricochet fell kindly for Rodri to prod past the helpless Aaron Ramsdale.