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Raptors win in virtually empty Scotiabank Arena

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TORONTO – The Toronto Raptors bid farewell to 2021 with a victory. It came in a near-empty arena that was almost befitting the end of another bizarre sports year in the COVID-19 era.

Now, they hope they’ve left their virus troubles behind them.

Fred VanVleet had 31 points and nine assists in his first game back from COVID-19 protocols, while Pascal Siakam had 25 points and tied a career high with 19 rebounds to lift the Raptors to a 116-108 victory over the Los Angeles Clippers on Friday.

On what would normally be a festive New Year’s Eve affair, the Raptors played in a virtually spectator-free Scotiabank Arena due to Ontario’s tightened COVID-19 restrictions.

But it’s nothing the Raptors aren’t used to.

“It was more normal than not, to be honest with you,” VanVleet said. “I would say we probably played just as much if not more fanless basketball than we have in packed stadiums, so it is what it is.

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“Fans or no fans, we’ve got to go out there and play basketball and do the best we can.”

OG Anunoby added 26 points for Toronto (15-17).

Marcus Morris had 20 points to top the Clippers (18-18), who were missing head coach Tyronn Lue – he became the 10th head coach to enter COVID-19 protocols earlier Friday.

Chris Boucher and Svi Mykhailiuk are the only Raptors who’ve avoided COVID protocols. With the team nearly back at full strength, the players were optimistic.

“It’s been a bit, right?” coach Nick Nurse said on the roller-coaster last couple of weeks.

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The Raptors raced out to a 15-point lead, but a couple of sloppy quarters on the defensive end and poor three-point shooting saw them trailing 87-82 to start the fourth.

They regained the lead early in the quarter with a 12-4 run punctuated by a dunk and three-pointer by Anunoby.

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Siakam’s dunk with 1:34 to play had Toronto up 109-105, Terance Mann connected from long distance to make it a one-point game, then VanVleet connected on back-to-back three-pointers to put the game out of reach with 24 seconds left.

Nurse was happy to escape with a win.

“Are you excited about the way the team played tonight? Not especially,” Nurse said. “But we made a step towards the re-gather … accepting that it’s not just going to be oh, we got our guys back, there’s the wand you wave and we’re going to be back to mid-season form we were in three weeks ago.”

Siakam said “it felt good” to have the majority of the roster back playing. Rookie Scottie Barnes was sidelined with knee tendinitis.

“We missed those guys out there,” Siakam said. “It felt good tonight to have most of us out there and just see what we could do.”

With no fans in attendance except for a few dozen family members, the game was reminiscent of the 2020 NBA bubble in Florida.

The Ontario government announced Thursday that it was slashing crowd capacity due to skyrocketing COVID-19 cases in the province. The province trimmed the 50-per cent limit that went into effect two games earlier to a maximum of 1,000 people.

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Maple Leaf Sports & Entertainment Ltd., went one further, announcing they would sell no tickets for Raptors or Maple Leafs games for three weeks beginning Friday.

The gaping 19,800-seat arena made for an almost fitting backdrop to send off the year.

Asked if playing in front of no fans would be weird, Brian Shaw – who filled in for Lue – said “I don’t think anything is weird anymore.”

The national anthems were broadcast via video, and canned applause played throughout the game. There was a video tribute for former Raptor Serge Ibaka that was met with silence. Glittery “Happy New Year!” messages flashed on the Jumbotron. The fourth quarter began with a prompt for fans to “MAKE SOME NOISE!”

The Raptors at least are accustomed to curve balls. Border restrictions and capacity limits in Toronto last season forced them to call Tampa, Fla., home, where they played many games in front of a smattering of fans.

“We’ve had to get ready to play in a lot of different venues,” Nurse said before the game. “The main thing to keep in mind or in the forefront is that we’re getting to go out there and play.

“I mean, listen, you think about it … get disappointed when you hear the news come out, probably all wish it wasn’t this way but it is and you’ve just got to get on with it.”

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The Raptors got off to a great start but the Clippers went on a 16-4 run that straddled the first and second quarters, closing to within 32-29 to end the first, and taking the lead early in the second.

Poor defence and terrible three-point shooting saw Toronto outscored 33-24 in the second quarter and L.A. went into halftime up 62-56.

VanVleet had 11 points in the third, including a running layup that tied the game with 3:41 left in the quarter.

The Raptors still have Isaac Bonga, plus hardship signees D.J. Wilson, Daniel Oturu and Juwan Morgan in protocols. The Clippers have four players sidelined because of protocols, including centre Ivica Zubac, who entered protocols on Thursday.

The NBA had about 120 players in health and safety protocols on Friday.

Some 97 per cent of NBA players are double vaccinated and at least two-thirds of players have received boosters.

The Raptors host New York on Sunday and San Antonio on Tuesday to cap their four-game homestand.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Dec. 31, 2021.




© 2021 The Canadian Press

Fury vs Whyte, Joshua vs Usyk – boxing’s biggest fights in 2022 | Boxing | Sport

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Fury and Wilder’s fight for the ages, Usyk outclassing ‘AJ’, Ebanie Bridges fighting through one-eyed – there were plenty of classic boxing bouts in 2021 to linger long in the memory. And whilst some fights are yet to be signed and sealed, there’s already some mouth-watering heavyweight clashes – literally and metaphorically – in store for 2022.

Usyk and Joshua to go at it again: The exact date and location is yet to be confirmed, but what’s at stake for the man once touted to become British boxing’s greatest heavyweight is already abundantly clear.

When Oleksandr Usyk took a unanimous decision over Anthony Joshua in London last September, he didn’t do so through fireworks, but by delivering a masterclass in movement and technical boxing. The deficit was such, that overturning the loss this Spring represents a seismic task for Eddie Hearn’s biggest asset.

Joshua’s career is now at crossroads. Redemption, like he achieved in his rematch with Andy Ruiz, could pave the way for a mouth-watering unification bout with Tyson Fury and give him a shot at becoming king of the heavyweight division.

Defeat, and no man’s land awaits. It won’t just be the WBA (Super), IBF, WBO, and IBO heavyweight belts on the line here, it will be Joshua’s future as well.

JUST IN: Boxing ring announcer David Diamante critically injured in serious motorcycle accident

Taylor’s date with destiny – Olympic gold medalist, undisputed lightweight champion, and a 20-0-0 professional record. At 35, is there anything left for Katie Taylor to prove? Yes, there is.

When both Taylor and unified featherweight champion Amanda Serrano came through their respective bouts this month, anticipation from boxing pundits, fans, and the two fighters themselves, suddenly went up a notch.

The two icons had originally been due to fight in 2020 before Covid-19 took its grip on the world, but with Puerto Rica star Serrano herself now 33, and a pro record of 42-1-1, surely the time has come again to discover whose the best of the best.

That time it seems, will come in May 2022, with promoter Hearn openly pushing for a bout in Madison Square Garden. The match-up, would merit the venue.

Whyte’s long wait over? – Dillian Whyte has believed for years he merits a shot at Tyson Fury. Next year looks the time ‘The Gypsy King’ allows him one.

Negotiations, albeit seemingly complex ones, are ongoing after Whyte was made mandatory challenger to the WBC crown. For Fury, ‘The Body Snatcher’ represents a stepping stone to a unification bout to Usyk or Joshua – but it’s a clash he can ill-afford to take lightly.

Eubank and Williams start Sky’s year with a bang – As heated rivalries and bad blood goes, this one between Chris Eubank Jr and Liam Williams is currently unrivalled but it has been hit by scheduling problems. After their first bout was postponed they were supposed to be facing each other on January 29.

However, the suspension of British boxing in January due to the pandemic has forced the bout to be rescheduled once more.

COVID-19 outbreak within Denver Nuggets forces postponement vs. Golden State Warriors

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The NBA has postponed the Golden StateDenver game scheduled for Thursday night after COVID-related issues have left the Nuggets without the necessary eight players required to play.

It is the 11th game to be postponed this season for COVID-related reasons.

Nuggets coach Michael Malone entered the league’s health and safety protocols earlier Thursday along with other staff members, including two assistant coaches, sources told ESPN’s Adrian Wojnarowski.

Nuggets forwards Jeff Green and Zeke Nnaji and guard Bones Hyland had also entered protocols Thursday, the team said.

In addition to the protocols, the Nuggets are dealing with several injuries, including questionable status on four players: Monte Morris, Aaron Gordon, Austin Rivers and Vlatko Cancar.

Warriors forward Draymond Green took to social media to vent his frustrations over the game being postponed.

“How do you continue to cancel games when you’ve implemented rules to prevent this from happening?” Green posted to Twitter. “Is that not a competitive advantage for other teams? The guys we didn’t have due to the protocol list played no role in Tuesdays loss? Pick a side but don’t straddle the fence.

“So when the game is rescheduled(which will probably take a day away from our “break”), we wil play them at full strength… But they got to sneak a win when we weren’t at full strength, only two days ago??? Let’s make it make some sense here.”

Green said the postponement also would likely add a back-to-back to the Warriors’ schedule, “which is also advantage Denver.”

Assistant coach David Adelman will serve as acting head coach for the Nuggets during Malone’s absence, sources told ESPN.

Malone joins Doc Rivers (Philadelphia), Frank Vogel (Lakers), Monty Williams (Phoenix), Billy Donovan (Chicago), Chauncey Billups (Portland) and Mark Daigneault (Oklahoma City) as NBA coaches who have entered the COVID-19 protocols.

The Denver Post first reported about Malone and Adelman.

Joshua trains with Mayweather as he prepares for Usyk rematch | Boxing | Sport

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However, while Joshua has been open to working with different personnel ever since his surprise loss in September, he’s yet to settle on a new full-time coach after more than a decade of being guided by Rob McCracken.

He’s previously been in America working with the likes of Canelo Alvarez’s illustrious trainer Eddy Reynoso and Ronnie Shields, but is yet to publicly confirm whether he intends to outright replace McCracken or bring in someone to work alongside him.

His promoter, Matchroom boss Eddie Hearn, said last month he felt his client needed to experience a different environment having become too comfortable with his iconic status in the UK.

“I feel it might be time to move on from that environment because when you’ve been there since you were 18 and you go into GB and Anthony Joshua is everywhere, he’s a god,” he said.

Recent Match Report – New Zealand vs Bangladesh 1st Test 2021/22

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Report

New Zealand go in with four-man pace attack

On the first day of 2022, Bangladesh captain Mominul Haque decided to field first against New Zealand in the first Test at the Bay Oval in Mount Maunganui. Mominul said that Bangladesh wanted to get first use the moisture on a greenish pitch.

This is New Zealand’s first home test after becoming world champions in the format in June last year. They opted for Rachin Ravindra as the allrounder at No 7, instead of Daryl Mitchell. Bangladesh have gone for the left-arm quick Shoriful Islam in place of Abu Jayed, who played in the last Test series at home.

This is the first time Bangladesh are missing Shakib Al Hasan and Tamim Iqbal in a Test match in New Zealand since 2008. The home side are also without regular captain Kane Williamson, although Devon Conway and Trent Boult have returned to the Test fold.

New Zealand: 1 Tom Latham (capt), 2 Devon Conway, 3 Will Young, 4 Ross Taylor, 5 Henry Nicholls, 6 Tom Blundell (wk), 7 Rachin Ravindra, 8 Kyle Jamieson, 9 Tim Southee, 10 Neil Wagner, 11 Trent Boult

Bangladesh: 1 Shadman Islam, 2 Mahmudul Hasan Joy, 3 Najmul Hossain Shanto, 4 Mominul Haque (capt), 5 Mushfiqur Rahim, 6 Liton Das (wk), 7 Yasir Ali, 8 Mehidy Hasan Miraz, 9 Taskin Ahmed, 10 Shoriful Islam, 11 Ebadot Hossain

Mohammad Isam is ESPNcricinfo’s Bangladesh correspondent. @isam84

Liverpool’s Klopp confident Chelsea game will go ahead despite Covid chaos | The Guardian Nigeria News

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Liverpool manager Jurgen Klopp believes his side’s crucial match against Chelsea will go ahead on Sunday despite three new coronavirus cases in his camp as another Premier League fixture was called off.

Klopp refused to name the players on Friday as they were awaiting test results but forward Roberto Firmino and goalkeeper Alisson Becker were absent from pictures released by Liverpool of a club training session.

Both sides will regard the match at Stamford Bridge as a must-win game as they seek to keep pace with defending champions Manchester City, who are eight points clear at the top.

“We have three new Covid cases in the team and a few more in the staff so it’s not so cool at the moment,” Klopp said at his pre-match press conference.

“I’m not able to say who it is because we have to do the whole process, get a proper PCR (test), but you will see the day after tomorrow on the team sheet — it will be pretty clear who is affected or infected.”

The German, whose side are third in the table, a point behind Chelsea, added: “We never had this proper outbreak where 15 to 20 players had it. For us it is every day, another one, stuff happens more and more often.

“It’s like a lottery in the morning, waiting for the result. It is pretty much day-by-day, always one case, then another one.

“In this moment (we will) probably not (ask for a postponement) but we don’t know how it will look in a few hours.”

In addition to the three Covid cases, the injured Takumi Minamino and Thiago Alcantara will miss the trip to Chelsea.

Klopp’s comments came as Southampton’s Premier League match at home to Newcastle on Sunday was postponed due to Covid cases in the visitors’ camp.

The game at St Mary’s is the second in Premier League matchweek 21 to be postponed, following the announcement on Thursday that the New Year’s Day clash between Leicester and Norwich was off.

Arteta absence
Arsenal manager Mikel Arteta said he was frustrated to miss Saturday’s match against City as he isolates following a second positive test.

“It will be very strange,” said Arteta, whose team are fourth in the table. “I will need a big room so I can walk and move a little bit, because I won’t be able to stand on my sofa.”

The Spaniard, who also had coronavirus in March 2020, added: “It is a big, big game for us and it is a very frustrating thing to not be able to be there helping the team.

“But I will do my best from here, with everything that I can do, and we have prepared for every scenario possible and they know what we have to do.”

Wolves boss Bruno Lage admitted even his players were unsure if they would be fit to face Manchester United on Monday after a virus outbreak forced the postponement of this week’s trip to Arsenal.

“After 10 days without playing, in your mind, to be ready to play is difficult,” said Lage. “Today I was talking with a player and I asked ‘are you ready to play?’

“He said: ‘I really don’t know’. After 10 days without playing and training you are slow to take the right decisions.”

More cases confirmed in players and officials at World Juniors tournament

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The International Ice Hockey Federation announced Thursday an additional seven cases of COVID-19 have been confirmed in players and officials involved in the now-cancelled World Juniors tournament.

The IIHF said that it had confirmed six players and one on-ice official tested positive for COVID-19.

The players were one member each of Team Canada, Team Russia, Team Germany, Team Slovakia, and two members of Team Sweden.

The organization said Thursday that all who had tested positive would be required to quarantine for ten days before they could return to their home countries.

Read more:

World Juniors cancelled in Edmonton, Red Deer due to COVID-19 cases

Earlier this week, the U.S. team had to forfeit its game against the Swiss due to two of its players testing positive for COVID-19.

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Czechia also forfeited its game against Finland on Wednesday after a player tested positive for COVID-19. A positive case was also previously confirmed in a player on the Russian national team, leading to a forfeit of the Russia-Slovakia game.


Click to play video: 'World Juniors cancelled in Edmonton, Red Deer due to COVID-19 cases'







World Juniors cancelled in Edmonton, Red Deer due to COVID-19 cases


World Juniors cancelled in Edmonton, Red Deer due to COVID-19 cases

“Getting results as little as two hours before games made things even more complicated and challenging,” the IIHF said when it announced the cancellation of the tournament on Wednesday.

Read more:

‘Tremendous disappointment’: Major economic blow with World Juniors cancellation

The organization said it will make “every effort” to reschedule the World Juniors.

–With files from Global News’ Jessica Guse




© 2021 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

Driver, Team, Car, Race and Disappointment of the Year

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ABU DHABI, UNITED ARAB EMIRATES - DECEMBER 12: Race winner and 2021 F1 World Drivers Champion Max Verstappen of Netherlands and Red Bull Racing celebrates with his team after the F1 Grand Prix of Abu Dhabi at Yas Marina Circuit on December 12, 2021 in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates. (Photo by Lars Baron/Getty Images)Each year we give our own Formula 1 Awards, the season as we saw it trimmed down to ten areas deserving a mention as  2021 comes to a close.

GrandPrix247 Editor Jad Mallak and Publisher Paul Velasco combined to dissect the highlights of an epic season deserving awards and/or mentions. Yesterday we published Part 1 of our F1 Awards, this is the second part

Driver of the Year: Max Verstappen

That was a close one to call, and honestly, it went to Verstappen on the basis of him winning the Championship, as he and his runner up Lewis Hamilton, were so close to each other in terms of their performance levels, and on another one compared to the other drivers.

However, 2021 was one of the Dutchman’s best seasons if not his best, as he cut down on errors, and was always delivering at the highest level, extracting the last ounce of performance out of his Red Bull RB16B, while being under extreme pressure from a formidable opponent in the form of Lewis Hamilton in the Mercedes.

Binning his car in qualifying for the Saudi Arabian GP may be the only time when he seemed to be cracking, but in Abu Dhabi, he was cool enough and kept it together to eventually win the race and the Championship.

Despite all controversies, Verstappen remains a fully worthy champion and the GRANDPRIX247 F1 Award for Driver of the Year.

Paul Velasco: “Max ticked all the boxes. His coming of age at Zandvoort under a national spotlight was the stuff of legends. In the end, he and Hamilton deserved a fitting end to their season for the ages. Nevertheless, in a season of finest margins, Max got the job done to be F1 World Champion. No doubt the first of many F1 titles heading his way.”

awards Verstappen claims he does feel like the World Champion

Team of the Year: Red Bull

That was a close call as well between Mercedes and Red Bull, but the energy drinks outfit has consistently delivered superior performance over the season, on all aspects: strategy, pitstops, car design/development, and Honda’s impressive power unit.

They might have lost out on the Constructors’ Championship to Mercedes, but it is worth noting that Sergio Perez took some time to get up to speed, so he didn’t bring in as many points required, but the Mexican was the best team player possible supporting Max Verstappen during the races with Turkey and Abu Dhabi being excellent examples of that, while nothing similar was seen from the best “wingman” Valtteri Bottas, which swings this award towards Red Bull.

Paul Velasco: “The team built around Max delivered. They may not have won the Constructors’ Title but everything their star driver needed he got. From a top car to the slickest of pitstops plus a crew that went the extra mile whenever required making the Bulls a worthy team of the year.”

award Can Formula 1 be better next year after exciting 2021?

Race of the Year: Abu Dhabi Grand Prix

This one took some contemplating and thinking, with many races popping up as contenders, and that should not be any surprise for such a season as the one we just had, and it went down to the wire, just like this year’s Championship, between Brazil and Abu Dhabi.

Brazil earned consideration for being a turning point as Lewis Hamilton started his counterattack on Max Verstappen, winning everything from there up to the Abu Dhabi GP, which for us is the “Race of the Year”.

It was the finale after all, and the two title contenders entered it tied on points with Verstappen’s advantage being the extra win he had on Hamilton, making things simple; whoever finished ahead gets the Title, and the more interesting scenario meaning that if both DNF, Verstappen wins. Mouth-watering stuff.

Despite most of the race’s duration swaying towards Hamilton taking his eighth F1 Title, controversy was abundant during the race, right from the first lap incident when Hamilton wasn’t asked to yield after cutting the corner, and of course, the post-Nicholas Latifi crash safety car soap opera, which gave us the heart-attack-inducing final-lap-sprint, a lap you can tell your grandchildren about.

Baku’s two-lap sprint race didn’t stand a chance against that final lap under the Yas Marina floodlights, hence the Abu Dhabi Grand Prix takes this one.

Paul Velasco: “There were too many candidates for this one. But the Yas Marina, controversy-packed, finale had it all from last lap chaos and everything that ensued before that and afterwards. That it descended into an unsatisfactory farce hopefully triggers a rigorous upheaval of the FIA’s officiating systems. For all the right reasons the Max vs Lewis showdown was billed as “the race of this Century” and indeed it was but, alas, for all the wrong reasons.”

hamilton Mercedes-AMG F1 W12 E Performance Launch

Car of the Year: Mercedes W12

The Mercedes W12 might not have started the season as “Car of the Year” material, as it seemed to have lost quite some performance due to the 2021 revised floor regulations, but Mercedes kept faith in their machine and developed it to what we venture to label the “best Formula 1 car” in the history of the sport, keeping in mind that next year’s F1 machines will be slower, until further notice.

The W12 kept on improving over the course of the season, and especially after the Silverstone upgrade package, and was at its formidable best after having that “spicy engine” bolted to its back in Brazil, maintaining an edge over Red Bull’s RB16B until the end of the season.

If it weren’t for our faith in the genius of F1 engineers, no one would be blamed to believe that no faster F1 car may be seen again.

Paul Velasco: “The W12 had a tough act to follow and while it may go down as the Mercedes that did not win the Title during their eight-year cavalcade, but it was a formidable piece of kit. I would venture when they unleashed the beast in Brazil it was probably the most potent car of this era.”

vettel stroll 2022 aston martin

Disappointment of the Year: Aston Martin

Not really an F1 Award…

The fanfare with which Aston Martin announced their reincarnation from Racing Point was the only highlight of the team’s 2021 Formula 1 season, and it was a pity that a car as beautiful as the AMR21 did not feature at the competitive end of the grid in 2021.

With its “Pink Mercedes” predecessor netting the team (in Racing Point guise) third in the 2020 Constructors’ Championship, the “Green Mercedes” fell prey to the new floor regulations of 2021, as the team failed to develop it out of the performance hole it fell into.

Sebastian Vettel got the team their first podium in Baku, but the team’s incompetence lost the German an impressive second place in Hungary due to a fuel infringement, not to mention the botched pitstop in the same race that cost the four-time Champion a potential win. Disappointing…

Paul Velasco: “Pre-season Aston Martin was one of the most exciting projects to hit F1 ever, they ticked all the boxes with aggressive hiring of the best brains in the paddock, building a state-of-the-art HQ, signing Sebastian Vettel, delivering hugely impressive marketing and media programmes to make Lawrence Stroll’s dream a reality. However, the first modern Aston F1 car was a dud and thus they underdelivered, sadly and I imagine the Big Boss wasn’t happy.”

Dallas Mavericks’ Isaiah Thomas enters NBA’s health and safety protocols

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After one game with the Dallas Mavericks, former All-Star guard Isaiah Thomas entered the NBA’s health and safety protocols on Thursday.

Thomas was signed to a 10-day hardship deal on Wednesday to replace Brandon Knight, another hardship-deal addition who entered the league’s protocols after testing positive for COVID-19.

Thomas, whose 10-day deal with the Los Angeles Lakers expired earlier this week, said he was grocery shopping near his Seattle home Wednesday morning when Mavs general manager Nico Harrison called to inquire about whether he could play in Sacramento that night. He quickly booked a flight and arrived in Sacramento a little more than four hours before tipoff.

“I was like, ‘Hell yeah I can play tonight!'” Thomas said after scoring six points and dishing out four assists in 13 minutes during the Mavs’ 95-94 loss to the Sacramento Kings, receiving a standing ovation when he entered the game. “I just actually got home from L.A. [on Tuesday]. It’s been a lot, but I’m built for this. I’m ready for it. I’m thankful for the opportunity. And it was a no-brainer when he asked.”

However, Thomas stint with the Mavs might last only one game, with the team optimistic that several players will be returning soon and with Thomas’ 10-day deal likely to expire while he’s in the league’s protocols. The Mavs currently have eight players in the protocols.

Thomas, 32, was a two-time All-Star for the Boston Celtics before a serious hip injury derailed his career. He has spent most of the past two seasons out of the league, playing a total of seven games on 10-day deals with the New Orleans Pelicans in April and Lakers this month.

Wilder’s coach makes Oleksandr Usyk vs Tyson Fury fight prediction | Boxing | Sport

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As for Scott’s own fighter, Wilder has been encouraged by Matchroom boss Eddie Hearn to set up a fight with Derek Chisora, following ‘Del Boy’s’ latest defeat to Joseph Parker.

Hearn said: “Deontay Wilder, we want to see you back in the ring. I’ve got the perfect guy for you – Derek Chisora.

“Come on, he’s getting on a little bit, he’s coming off three defeats on the spin now. Easy comeback fight for Deontay Wilder. Derek’s ready.”

Chisora’s trainer however, Dave Coldwell, wasn’t impressed, responding by saying: “Christmas is over. Eddie needs to put the sherry away for another year.”