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DeRozan powers Bulls past Raptors 111-108

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TORONTO – DeMar DeRozan reminded the Toronto Raptors and their fans on Monday that he still has game.

DeRozan hit three clutch field goals and drained two foul shots in the final five minutes of play to keep his Chicago Bulls in front of the Raptors for a 111-108 victory before a sellout crowd of 19,800 at Scotiabank Arena on Monday.

The 32-year-old DeRozan finished with a game-high 26 points to keep the Bulls (4-0) the only undefeated team in the Eastern Conference.

“Just trying to do my job, especially with my experience, understanding those moments,” DeRozan said. “I understand what needs to be done.

“You know we got kind of stagnant and couldn’t score. Those guys went on a run. It’s always my job, especially late in games, to close out games, understanding what needs to be done and to getting to my spots and try to make big shots.”

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DeRozan played the first nine seasons of his NBA career in Toronto before getting traded to the San Antonio Spurs in 2018. He was traded to Chicago this past off-season.

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“He bailed them out because I thought we turned the water off on the other guys,” Raptors coach Nick Nurse said, referring to the hot start from Bulls guard Lonzo Ball, who drilled five three-pointers for his 15 points.

“(DeRozan) came in that last run in the fourth and pretty much made all their buckets,” Nurse said. “I don’t remember any other scorers. I’m sure there were some, maybe, maybe not. I don’t know if there was or not. But he made some tough ones, and give him credit. He can do that.”

The Raptors (1-3) have yet to win at home in three starts. They trailed 61-51 at half-time and fell behind by 20 points early in the third quarter.

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But a Toronto push in the fourth quarter, combined with a sloppy Chicago finish, made the game close.

After DeRozan pushed the Bulls to a 108-102 lead with just over a minute remaining, Raptors guard Fred VanVleet hit an inside shot to pull Toronto to within four.

The Raptors had the ball back with 40 seconds remaining, but VanVleet’s pass was picked off by Chicago guard Alex Caruso.

A Bulls’ miscue on an inbounds pass led to an easy layup for Raptors rookie Scottie Barnes and a two-point deficit with 14 seconds left. But Chicago hung on with a late free throw from Nikola Vucevic and a game-ending three-point miss from VanVleet.

“Just continued to have fight, staying together, believing in one another still, and just trying to put up an effort and try to get a win,” said Gary Trent Jr, who scored 18 points. “We waited a little long to try to turn it up, but it shows the signs are there, it shows what we can do, it shows what we can do when we play together, when we believe in one another.”

VanVleet rallied late to score 15 points to go along with his career-high 17 assists. But he also committed a career-high eight of the Raptors’ 19 turnovers.

“I’ve already said this about three times tonight, but man, it’s like pinball when he drives down the lane,” Nurse said. “It’s crash, crash, crash, and I think for the amount of physicality he went through.

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“I thought he was handling (the ball) pretty well as much as he was getting knocked around. Again, I’m not complaining about that. You guys have noticed, you’ve watched all the games this year. It’s very, very physical out there.”

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Oct. 25, 2021.




© 2021 The Canadian Press

Hamilton: Feels like this is our acceptance into the U.S.

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U.S. shaquille o neal united states grand prix podium verstappen hamilton-001

Lewis Hamilton had to settle for second but Formula 1’s most successful driver said Sunday’s United States Grand Prix in Austin, Texas, still felt like a breakthrough for his sport.

The race day crowd of 140,000 at the Circuit of the Americas surpassed the 135,000 who attended the Indianapolis 500 in May, then the largest sporting event in America since the start of the pandemic.

The three-day crowd figure for the race in Texas was given as 400,000.

“It feels like this is our acceptance into the U.S.,” Hamilton, a five-time winner in Austin, said as he surveyed the scenes after the race.

“I hope we get more races out here and I hope that the sport continues to grow because you can tell just how great the fans are out here,” added the Mercedes driver.

There was no race in Austin last year due to the COVID-19 pandemic but F1 will have two U.S. rounds next year, with Miami making its debut.

There has also been talk of further expansion, with Las Vegas seen as the most likely candidate.

While there are no U.S. drivers, the sport has been owned since 2017 by U.S.-based Liberty Media who have targeted America as a key growth area.

The sport struggled to make inroads in the past, particularly after an infamous six-car race at Indianapolis in 2005 left huge reputational damage. Hence gaps between the United States Grand Prix eras.

The Texas weekend offered plenty of evidence of F1’s growing popularity, with many crediting the Netflix ‘Drive to Survive’ documentary series, now filming season four.

“I think Netflix has been outstanding for F1. It’s driven a younger fan base, it’s driven a much larger fan base. It’s really had an impact in America,” said McLaren’s American boss Zak Brown.

“I think it’s doing what we as a sport would like it to do, which is turn on a bunch of new fans. I think it’s been hugely successful.”

Hamilton’s Mercedes boss Toto Wolff agreed: “We were not keen at the beginning of Netflix because we wanted to concentrate on on-track performance and I was wrong. It’s clearly a big success.

“Everywhere in the world it was the number one documentary on Netflix for quite a while and it’s become part of Formula 1 and you can clearly see it’s beneficial… the feedback that we get from fans is tremendous, especially here in the U.S.”

The attendance may also have been boosted by the lack of a race last year and the pandemic effect, with bottled-up demand for mass gatherings.

The tense and thrilling battle between seven-times F1 world champion Hamilton and Red Bull’s, race winner on Sunday and overall championship leader, Max Verstappen has drawn new fans as well.

Mexican Sergio Perez’s move to Red Bull this season as a race winner in a competitive car was another significant factor for fans from the region. (Reporting by Alan Baldwin)

Lakers’ LeBron James says right leg sore after injury scare, hopes to play Tuesday with ‘around the clock’ treatment

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LOS ANGELES — The Los Angeles Lakers barely escaped the Memphis Grizzlies in Sunday’s 121-118 win and LeBron James might have narrowly avoided another major injury.

Grizzlies forward Desmond Bane collided with James’ right leg in the first half, causing James to tumble to the floor. The Lakers star remained there for several minutes as L.A. called timeout so the team’s medical staff could check on him.

For James, it was a scare involving the same leg that suffered a high right ankle sprain last season when the Atlanta HawksSolomon Hill crashed into his lower body while lunging for a steal. That injury caused him to miss 26 games and didn’t fully heal until months into the offseason.

“The first thing I was thinking to myself was, ‘Not again,'” James said afterward. “Because obviously it was almost similar but not the same kind of play. Guy falls into my leg and there’s nothing you can do about it and I couldn’t get my leg out of there in time.”

This time around, James not only stayed in the game, but ended up logging a game-high 40 minutes, finishing with 19 points, six rebounds, six assists, two steals and two blocks in the win.

The collision occurred when Dwight Howard tried to block Bane’s finger-roll attempt with 6:27 remaining in the second quarter. The shot went through the net and then Bane fell to the floor after bumping bodies with the Lakers center. James, with his eyes fixed on the rim as he tried to establish rebounding position, never saw Bane hurtling toward his leg.

“Just wanted to take a moment on the floor, just hopefully it wasn’t getting worse,” James said about the moments after the contact. “Had an opportunity just to tie my shoe again and see if I’m able to go, I was able to continue to go.”

The 19-year veteran said his leg felt “sore” after the game but he planned to receive “around the clock” treatment heading into Tuesday’s road game against the San Antonio Spurs, which he plans to play in.

“Hopefully I’m ready to go,” James said.

Bernhard Langer, 64, breaks Champions age record with win in Dominion Energy Charity Classic

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RICHMOND, Va. — Bernhard Langer became the oldest winner in PGA Tour Champions history Sunday at 64, beating Doug Barron with a 6-foot birdie putt on the first hole of a playoff in the Dominion Energy Charity Classic.

The German star thrust both arms in the air after winning for the 42nd time on the 50-and-over tour and the first time since March 2000.

“It comes down to the putt,” Langer said. “That’s how tight it is out here.”

At 64 years, 1 month, 27 days, Langer broke the age record of 63 years, 5 months, 4 days set by Scott Hoch when he teamed with Tom Pernice Jr. to win in the 2019 Bass Pro Shops Legends of Golf.

Langer closed with a 3-under 69, also birdieing the par-5 18th in regulation to match Barron at 14-under 202 on the Country Club of Virginia’s James River course.

“This has been a very special win,” Langer said. “It’s been a long time coming and I’ve had some very, very close calls, which was in a sense frustrating and disappointing. So when it actually happens and you win, it’s exciting.”

He had played in the final group six times previously this season without a victory. The two-time Masters champion has won nine times since he turned 60. Barron also finished with a birdie in a 68. He missed a 6-foot birdie try in the playoff before Langer ran in the winner to end a string of five playoff losses.

“He’s just an anomaly. He’s incredibly, incredibly gifted and he’s one of my heroes and good friends,” Barron said about Langer. “I’m very fortunate to call him a very dear friend. If I’m going to get beat, I don’t mind getting beat by him.”

Langer, also the 2017 winner in Richmond, increased his lead in the Charles Schwab Cup season standings in the playoff opener. Second-round leader Steve Flesch was third at 12 under after a 73. Ernie Els, who tied the course record with a 63, finished at 11 under along with Ken Duke (68), Tim Petrovic (71) and first-round leader Steven Alker (72).

Defending champion Phil Mickelson shot a 71 to tie for 47th at even par. He has three victories in five senior starts, winning the Constellation Furyk and Friends two weeks ago in Florida.

The second event in the playoffs is in two weeks in Boca Raton, Florida.

Tomljanovic edges tough first-round test

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Ajla Tomljanovic has fought back from being a late break down to secure a hard-fought victory over Anastasia Potapova at the WTA Tour’s Transylvania Open.

Potapova served for the match at 5-3 in the deciding set only for Tomljanovic to win the final four games of the first-round encounter to prevail 6-2 5-7 7-5.

The Australian fifth-seed stepped up her power game with the match on the line to close it out in two hours and 30 minutes.

She broke serve three times in the first and third sets, with the lone break in the second coming in the 12th game as Russian Potapova drew the match level.

World No.43 Tomljanovic will face Kaja Juvan or Jacquline Cristian for a place in the quarter-finals.

Anastasia Gasanova of Russia saved two match points before outlasting fourth-seeded Jil Teichmann 4-5 6-0 7-5 while eighth-seeded Ukrainian Anhelina Kalinina progressed with a 6-1 6-1 drubbing of Lesley Pattinama Kerkhove.

Others to advance from the opening round in Romania were local hope Ana Bogdan, Ukraine’s Lesia Tsurenko and German duo Mona Barthel and Anna-Lena Friedsam.

Former world No.1 Simona Halep of Romania is the top-seeded player at the indoor event.

Tyson Fury’s promoter names two potential opponents for next fight | Boxing | Sport

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Tyson Fury’s co-promoter has dismissed suggestions that ‘The Gypsy King’ is set to retire and has named two potential opponents for his next fight. Fury, 33, won his thrilling trilogy bout with Deontay Wilder in Las Vegas this month, fuelling suggestions he will opt to end his career at the top. 

However, speaking to Blue Blood Sports TV, Bob Arum dismissed that notion, claiming “I’ve never heard that” when asked about rumours his client was done with the sport.

“I talk to Tyson all the time he’s assured me he’s not going to step away from boxing. He wants to fight and I would say it’ll be March next.”

Dillian Whyte’s plans to set-up an all-British bout with Fury were dealt a blow this month when a shoulder injury forced him to postpone his fight with Otto Wallin, originally scheduled for October 30.

However, while Arum, 89, was open to the idea of Fury fighting the ‘The Body Snatcher’, he said Whyte couldn’t declare himself the mandatory challenger until he got past Wallin.

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“Dillian Whyte is not the mandatory, he has an obligation to fight this Wallin,” he continued. “But in March I’d like Tyson Fury to fight in the UK and I think the opponents could be Whyte or maybe this big English guy, Joe Joyce.

When asked if securing a licence to fight in Britain would be a problem for Fury, the Top Rank boss seemed unconcerned.

“Licence? I don’t know. I don’t think there would by any problem having the fight here (in the UK),” he said.

While Whyte, 33, has long touted a battle with the Manchester man, it will be a boost to Joyce to hear his name in the potential mix. The 2016 Olympic silver medalist has won all 13 of his professional bouts so far, and is promoted by Frank Warren, who works alongside Arum with Fury.

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His last win saw him stop French fighter Carlos Takam in London in July, to retain his Commonwealth, WBC Silver and WBO International heavyweight titles.

Fury’s hopes for a long-awaited unification bout with Anthony Joshua were scuppered this year, firstly when a court ruling ordered that he had to complete his trilogy with Wilder before negotiating with ‘AJ’.

Joshua’s subsequent loss to Oleksandr Usyk was a further blow, and now the British fighter has triggered a rematch clause in a bid to win back his WBA, IBF, WBO, and IBO heavyweight belts.

That bout is expected to take place on the spring of 2022.

However, Arum was pleased with how things works out, saying the only heavyweight clash that compared to Fury’s latest win was the infamous Mohammad Ali v Joe Frazier ‘Thriller in Manilla’ in 1975.

“That fight was hell, Frazier was winning and looked like he was going to knock him out, then Ali came back.

“That was a great fight, the difference between that and the Wilder v Fury fight is that one had five knock downs. I’m really up in the air as to what was a better heavyweight championship fight.”

Lakers’ Carmelo Anthony passes Moses Malone for 9th on NBA all-time scoring list

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LOS ANGELES — Carmelo Anthony said the best part about passing Moses Malone for No. 9 on the all-time scoring list in the Los Angeles Lakers’ 121-118 win over the Memphis Grizzlies on Sunday is the level he’s sustained nearly two decades into his NBA career.

“I’m still here doing it,” Anthony said after scoring 18 of his team-high 28 points in the second half to seal the victory. “I think that’s what I’m honestly excited about. I’m here in Year 19 still doing what I’m able to do. Still passionate about the game. Still passionate about coming to work every day and getting better. And what a better night to reach ninth than with a win, the way that we needed a win tonight.”

Anthony came into the night needing 15 points to leapfrog Malone’s 27,409 career total. He got going early, scoring five points in the first quarter, followed by another five in the second, before really finding a rhythm in the third.

He hit back-to-back 3s in a 48-second span, turning a two-point deficit into a two-point lead after the flurry, with his wing triple with 3:20 remaining in the quarter lifting him past the 13-time All-Star and 2001 Hall of Fame inductee Malone.

“He didn’t crawl up to that milestone,” Lakers coach Frank Vogel said. “He blew the doors off of it.”

Anthony continued to pour it on in the fourth, scoring 12 more in the final period. He iced the game by making two free throws with 1.9 seconds remaining to secure L.A.’s first win of its new campaign after an 0-6 preseason followed by an 0-2 start to the regular season.

LeBron James‘ relationship with Anthony dates back to when he was 16 years old and Anthony was 17 when they met for the first time. “I came back and told my guys I just seen the best player I ever seen to that point,” James recalled Sunday.

The two have remained close, and after countless games together for the U.S. Olympic team and making the same All-Star rosters, they are playing on the same NBA team for the first time this season.

“Usually when some of my friends have these kind of achievements, I text them or call them or FaceTime or put something on social media,” James said afterward. “In this case I got to do it in person, because he’s my teammate now, so it made it special for me.”

Anthony said the Lakers presented him with the game ball in the postgame locker room as a keepsake.

“They wanted me to give a speech, but I was too tired,” Anthony said, flashing his signature smile.

Malone finished his playing career as a 39-year-old, averaging 2.9 points for the San Antonio Spurs in his 21st season. It was his third straight year averaging fewer than five points per game to finish out a Hall of Fame career that included back-to-back league MVPs for Houston and Philadelphia in the early 1980s.

Anthony is 37 and is averaging 17.7 points through his first three games with L.A.

This after spending more than a year out of the NBA — from early November 2018 until late November 2019 — after the Houston Rockets waived him after he played just 10 games with the franchise.

“A couple of years ago, nobody wanted him,” Anthony Davis said. “He was counted out. Doubted. And he stayed the course. Stayed a professional and got a shot in Portland. Made a name for himself again. And he’s here now and doing the same thing, picking up where he left off. It’s an honor to have him on our team, an honor to play beside him.”

James, who along with Anthony make up the first pair of 19-year veterans to play together in league history, also was sure to bring up how the league recently turned a cold shoulder toward Anthony.

“He’s been doing it for quite a while, and it’s just beautiful to continue to see, especially when, you know, they gave up on him,” James said.

Anthony, who is on a one-year contract with the Lakers and will turn 38 in May, sounded like somebody intent to keep getting buckets as long as a team will have him.

“Scoring the basketball is not easy. We may make it look easy, but it’s not easy,” Anthony said. “For me, this is 19 years of repetition. And night in and night out. Day in and day out. Every summer. Every season. I’m reaping those benefits right now because of the persistence that I have in my professionalism. What I bring to the game, how I approach the game. And I want to keep going. That’s all that matters to me.”

US GP: Verstappen fends off Hamilton in a thriller

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Max Verstappen fended off Lewis Hamilton to win a thrilling United States Grand Prix, Formula 1‘s two greatest drivers of this era delivering an epic contest to the very last lap.

The Red Bull driver started from pole but Hamilton, beside him, got the jump out of Turn 1 and what followed was an engrossing game of cat and mouse. Verstappen’s team gambled by bringing him early, to undercut Hamilton who was kept out longer by Mercedes.

With the lead swinging between the two, it came down to the final laps with Hamilton attacking on fresher rubber, and Verstappen defending on the older stuff. In the end, the Dutchman held on to take maximum points.

It was high-end racing from the masters of this generation, as Max kept some rubber in reserve for Hamilton’s attack. Neither put a foot wrong and in the end the first undercut, the Red Bull early gamble probably won them the race but in the end it needed Verstappen to make it work. And he did.

Verstappen summed up his first United States Grand Prix victory: “Of course we lost out in the start so we had to try and do something else. The tyre wear is quite high around this track, we went aggressive and I was not sure it was going to work but the last few laps were fun. A bit sideways through the high-speed corners but super happy to hang on.”

This victory means the Dutch ace has now doubled his lead in the 2021 F1 championship to 12 points over Hamilton with five races remaining. Red Bull trail Mercedes in the F1 constructors’ title race by 23 points

The Mercedes driver said in parc ferme after the race: “Firstly congratulations to Max he did a great job today. It was such a tough race. I got a good start, gave it absolutely everything but at the end of the day, they just had the upper hand this weekend and we couldn’t really have asked for more. A big thank you to my team, great work through the weekend.”

Sergio Perez did not factor into the equation despite his team’s attempts to dial him into the strategy but he simply did not have the pace but did enough to take third place, albeit over forty seconds adrift. Nevertheless, a big afternoon for the Bulls, as Valtteri Bottas was sixth after penalties confined him to the heart of the midpack start which proved to be hard work for the Finn on the day.

The Mexican had a tough day when his water bottle ran dry as he revealed afterwards: “Since lap one, I ran out of water so could not drink at all. By the middle of the second stint it was starting to get difficult, I was losing strength. It was my toughest race physically.”

Apart from the title contenders delivering mega-entertainment, behind them Ferrari and McLaren were evenly matched, with Charles Leclerc finishing fourth after a somewhat lonely race where he was not challenged but also lacked podium finishing firepower.

Daniel Ricciardo was fifth for McLaren in arguably his best race for the Woking outfit, bettering his teammate Lando Norris for a change. The younger driver finished eighth after what seemed like a race-long duel with Ferrari’s Carlos Sainz, the Spaniard in the end good for seventh.

Rookie Yuki Tsunoda was ninth for AlphaTauri the rookie delivering an impressive performance on a tough afternoon in Austin for the Red Bull junior team. Pierre Gasly suffered a DNF.

Sebastian  Vettel claimed the final point for Aston Martin and had to work hard for it as he made the most of fresher tyres at the end which pushed the Alfa Romeo of Antonio Giovinazzi out of the points.

Final word after a captivating United States Grand Prix to Red Bull boss Christian Horner: “I think I’ve aged about 25 years in that race. I really didn’t think we were going to hang on.”

Indeed Max did with a Champion’s performance today.

2021 United States Grand Prix Results & Stats

2021 United States Grand Prix result graphic Verstappen winner

Pirelli pitstop graphic

Pirelli graphic

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London, Ont. Olympic star Maggie Mac Neil named Best Female Athlete of Tokyo 2020

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Londoner and Olympic champion Maggie Mac Neil has been named Best Female Athlete of Tokyo 2020 by the Association of National Olympic Committees (ANOC).

Mac Neil, who competed at her first Olympic Games in Tokyo this summer, won gold in the 100m butterfly, silver with the 4x100m freestyle relay team and bronze with the 4x100m medley relay team.

“It’s such a great honour to receive this award,” said Mac Neil. “There are so many amazing athletes who competed in the (Olympics). With all we’ve been through the last year and a half, this makes it even more special.”

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The 21-year-old swam the second leg of the women’s 4x100m freestyle relay, which earned Canada its first medal of Tokyo 2020.

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Mac Neil then captured Canada’s first gold at Tokyo 2020 when she won the 100m butterfly. Her time of 55.59 seconds set an Americas region record.

“When Maggie won her gold medal on Day 3 of the Games, it blew the lid off of our team’s simmering pot,” said Marnie McBean, Team Canada’s Tokyo 2020 Chef de Mission. “To perform at that level having spent a significant amount of time training in her backyard pool … confirmed to the rest of the team that unique, less than ideal, training programs could result in world-class results.”

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The Association of National Olympic Committees is an umbrella organization that represents the collective interests of the world’s 206 National Olympic Committees.

The ANOC Awards were first presented in 2014, and are now presented after every Olympics. They recognize outstanding athletic achievements from the most recent Olympic Games.




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

Dillian Whyte plots Tyson Fury fight after Otto Wallin cancellation | Boxing | Sport

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And now an all-British fight between Whyte and Fury could be on the cards.

“Fury’s got the world title and that’s what I’ve been waiting for, that’s what I’ve worked for,” Whyte declared. I don’t even know how much sanctioning fees I’ve paid. I could’ve easily abandoned this route and gone down another route years ago, but I’ve waited and I’ve waited and I’ve waited.

“So what am I gonna do? Fight Otto Wallin or fight Tyson Fury, what are you gonna do? It’s common sense.

“Like I said, I’m not scared of no-one. I wanted to fight. I think they’re gonna mandate me vs Tyson Fury, they’ve basically said it already. It’s already been mandated really, so we don’t need to wait…”

Whyte, who suggested such a bout should take place in the UK rather than Las Vegas, believes the prospective clash with Fury would be the biggest all-British heavyweight title fight since Lennox Lewis versus Frank Bruno in 1993.