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Wednesday, September 30, 2020

Miami Heat's Goran Dragic, Bam Adebayo exit with injuries in loss to Los Angeles Lakers - ESPN

LAKE BUENA VISTA, Fla. -- The NBA Finals couldn't have started much worse for the Miami Heat. Not only did they get blown out 116-98 by the Los Angeles Lakers in Game 1 on Wednesday night, but they also lost veteran guard Goran Dragic (foot) and big man Bam Adebayo (shoulder) to injuries that could alter the course of the series.

A league source told ESPN's Adrian Wojnarowski that Dragic sustained a plantar tear in his left foot. His return in the series is unclear.

Dragic appeared to injure his left leg during the second quarter while driving against Rajon Rondo, but he didn't exit the game immediately. According to ESPN's Rachel Nichols, Dragic left the locker room after halftime and was nearly at the entrance to the court before a team staffer stopped him. The 34-year-old guard then went back to the locker room and did not return.

"I know he's as tough as anybody, and it's the Finals," Miami coach Erik Spoelstra said of Dragic after the game. "But I don't have an update on his foot right now."

With just over 6 minutes left in the third quarter, Adebayo exited clutching his shoulder. He was briefly examined on the sideline before heading back to the locker room with Dr. Harlan Selesnick, the team physician. Adebayo had X-rays and they were negative, Miami said.

This isn't the first upper-body injury the 23-year-old Adebayo has sustained this postseason. He hurt his shoulder after getting tangled up with Boston Celtics guard Jayson Tatum at the end of Game 4 of the Eastern Conference finals. After that game Adebayo said he was "good," and he carried the Heat in a closeout Game 6 victory, racking up a career-high 32 points and 14 rebounds.

Spoelstra added then that the injury was "a little bit of everything," including his shoulder, arm and wrist. After Wednesday's game, Spoelstra said he didn't know if Adebayo's injury was new or an aggravation of a previous one.

Heat All-Star swingman Jimmy Butler, who turned his left ankle at the end of the first half Wednesday night, said he didn't feel he needed to deliver a message to the rest of his team after losing two of its best players.

"We talk about how damn near perfect that we have to play, and that was nowhere near it," Butler said. "There's nothing to be said. We can watch all the film in the world, we understand, we know what we did not do, what we talked about we were going to do, we didn't do. We didn't rebound, we didn't make them miss any shots, we didn't get back, all of those things led to the deficit that we put ourselves in."

If Dragic, who led Miami in scoring in the first round of the 2020 playoffs, has to miss any extended time, the Heat might look to guard Kendrick Nunn for a lift off the bench. Nunn hasn't played much in the bubble, but he chipped in with 18 points in 20 minutes on Wednesday.

"When your number is called, you need to be ready to play," Nunn said. "I haven't played in a couple of a games, but that doesn't mean anything. Once I step on the floor, I'm back at it like I've been playing. Always have that mentality and I always just stay ready."

Butler was told about reports of the severity of Dragic's injury at the end of his news conference, but he said that didn't change his mindset moving forward. The Heat have prided themselves on being a no-nonsense team all season, and Butler brushed off the idea that they would use any excuses now.

"Be ready to go with or without Goran," Butler said. "He's a big part of what we're trying to do, but until we can have him back, we got to go out there and we got to fight even harder. We got to try to cover up what he gives us and make up for it. We're capable of it. We have to be capable of it. Moving forward, with or without Goran, we better hurry up and tie it up 1-1."

Adebayo's injury is just as big of a concern for the Heat. His loss, like Dragic's, would be an emotional crusher for Miami team that has relied on his presence all season.

But Miami remains outwardly confident it can turn around the series after a rough start.

"We're better than we showed tonight," Spoelstra said.

ESPN's Nick Friedell contributed to this report.

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MLB playoffs schedule, scores: Cardinals hit Padres' Paddack hard in Game 1 win; Astros, Rays advance to ALDS - CBS Sports

Wild Card Round - New York Yankees v Cleveland Indians - Game Two
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The 2020 Major League Baseball postseason continued Wednesday with a packed eight-game schedule in the best-of-three Wild Card Series. The full slate saw three American League teams advance to the ALDS -- including the Yankees in a wild game vs. Cleveland -- and two road teams winning in the National League.

Below are the results from Wednesday and key takeaways from the day.

Wild Card Series scores

Yankees outlast Cleveland in wild Game 2

Hands down, the game of the postseason thus far is Game 2 between the Yankees and Cleveland. The game featured multiple lead changes, including one in the eighth inning and one in the ninth, and 19 total runs. At four hours and 50 minutes, it was the longest nine-inning game in baseball history, and that doesn't include the 76 minutes of rain delays they had to wait out.

The Yankees ultimately prevailed thanks to their ninth-inning comeback against Brad Hand. A walk, a single, and an infield single loaded the bases with no outs, then Gary Sanchez tied the game with a sac fly to center. DJ LeMahieu gave the Yankees the lead with a four-hopper back up the middle. It was definitely well-placed rather than well-struck, which is what the Yankees needed.

New York overcame a poor start from Masahiro Tanaka (six runs in four innings) and some shoddy bullpen work to win Game 2. They drew 12 walks, the most ever in a nine-inning postseason game, and they also hit three home runs. That includes Gio Urshela's go-ahead grand slam in the fourth inning. Urshela of course started his career with Cleveland.

The Yankees now advance to the Southern California bubble and the ALDS, where they'll take on the AL East rival Rays. That series will begin Monday. Cleveland goes home for the winter with the franchise's championship drought now at 72 years.

It's a rematch of the 2018 NLCS, though this one isn't nearly as close a matchup on paper. Mookie Betts doubled in each of the first two innings for the Dodgers, who scored three times in those first two frames and never looked back in a 4-2 win over the Brewers. Julio Urias, Blake Treinen and Kenley Jansen from the Dodgers' bullpen combined for five scoreless innings, striking out seven, to lock things down. For full takeaways on the Dodgers taking a 1-0 series lead, click here.   

Cards hit Paddack hard in Game 1 win

In a perfect world, the Padres would've had Mike Clevinger or Dinelson Lamet start Game 1 of their Wild Card Series against the Cardinals. In this decidedly imperfect world, the Padres had to start Chris Paddack after both Clevinger and Lamet developed arm issues. 

If the Padres go on to lose the series -- and they'll have to win Games 2 and 3 to avoid elimination after dropping the series opener on Wednesday -- they'll have no choice but to wonder what could have been if Clevinger and Lamet had stayed healthy a little longer. Paddack's start got off on the wrong foot, as he allowed four runs to cross the plate before the Padres had a chance to bat. 

His troubles wouldn't end with the first inning, either. By the time he departed, after 2 1/3 innings, he had yielded six runs on eight hits. Paddack managed just one strikeout along the way. The Cardinals will have a chance to advance to the NLDS on Thursday. They would play the winner of the Dodgers-Brewers series.

Astros knock out Twins 

The No. 3 seed Twins saw their postseason nightmares continue this week. With the 3-1 loss to the Astros in Game 2, the Twins extended their record MLB playoff losing streak to 18 games and were knocked out of the postseason in the process. The devastating streak dates back to the 2004 ALDS, and is the longest in North American sports history. Houston, the team with the worst regular season record (29-31) in the playoff field, knocked out Minnesota in two games at Target Field. 

Aside from the fact the the Twins were simply a far better team than the Astros during the regular season, the Twins also held a 24-7 (.774) record when playing at home. Furthermore, the Astros had been terrible when playing on the road during the regular season, compiling an atrocious 9-23 (.281) record on the road. The Twins home record was the highest win percentage since the 1975 Reds, while the Astros away record is the worst road winning percentage by a playoff team in the World Series era.

Frustrations piled up for the Twins in Wednesday's elimination game when the Twins' offense went ice cold. Altogether in the two Wild Card Series games, the Twins lineup managed just seven hits and two runs. Minnesota's usually hot bats going quiet during the postseason isn't a new storyline. The last time the Twins scored more than four runs in a playoff game was when they scored five runs in a loss to the Yankees on Oct. 9, 2004.

Braves only need one

Braves first baseman Freddie Freeman secured a 1-0 victory with a walk-off single in the 13th inning of Atlanta's series opener against the Reds on Wednesday. Freeman's knock was just the sixth of the day for a Braves team that reached base six fewer times than the Reds did.

What everyone will remember about Game 1 was how dominant the pitching was for both teams. The Braves were paced by left-hander Max Fried, who struck out five over seven shutout frames. Atlanta then received three-plus perfect frames from relievers Chris Martin, Will Smith, and Mark Melancon before turning things over to the rest of the bullpen. Darren O'Day, Tyler Matzek, Shane Greene, and A.J. Minter bent but didn't break by putting on eight baserunners and stranding them all across 2 2/3 shutout frames.

The Reds arguably outpitched the Braves. Trevor Bauer struck out 12 and allowed just two hits in 7 2/3 innings. Raisel Iglesias, Lucas Sims, and Michael Lorenzen then combined to strike out nine batters and gave up a hit and two walks over four-plus innings. Archie Bradley and Amir Garrett couldn't keep the good times rolling with no margin for error, however. Every starter on both teams struck out at least once, resulting in a record 37 punch outs. As our Mike Axisa noted elsewhere, the Braves and Reds also set a record for the longest scoreless playoff game. It was just that kind of afternoon.

Oakland flips the script? 

Playoff success for the A's since the days of the Bash Brothers has been difficult to come by. From 2000-13, there were six Game 5 losses in the ALDS. They did win one ALDS, but then got swept in the ALCS. Since that stretch, there have been three wild card games and the A's lost all three. Looping in the last two with Game 1 here in 2020, the A's had zero leads in any playoff game after losing the 2014 Wild Card Game to the Royals

With their backs against the wall on Wednesday, however, the A's delivered the goods early. They got two in the first thanks to a Nick Madrigal error, though they got three singles before that and putting the ball in play is always preferred to striking out. Then in the bottom of the second, Marcus Semien muscled up for a two-run shot: 

White Sox lefty Dallas Keuchel was chased after just 3 1/3 innings. 

The A's counterpart, however, was excellent. Chris Bassitt worked seven innings and allowed just one run on six hits. Oakland nearly coughed up a three-run lead in the ninth, but Jake Diekman got Jose Abreu to ground out with the bases load to end the threat and the game.

Looking ahead to Game 3, the A's could run lefty Sean Manaea out there, but there's a caveat. The White Sox are now 15-0 this season in games started by left-handers, including Game 1 against Jesus Luzardo. Here's how the Sox fared in the regular season against each side: 

vs. RHP: .253/.313/.436
vs. LHP: .285/.364/.523

With that in mind, maybe the choice will be righty Mike Fiers

The White Sox's options are Dane Dunning (2-0, 3.97), Dylan Cease (5-4, 4.01) and Reynaldo Lopez (1-3, 6.49). 

Rays sweep Jays with ease

Three-game series on a one vs. eight matchup in baseball might not typically be quite the bloodbath fans of other sports might expect. In the case of the Blue Jays visiting the Rays, it was every bit of one. The Rays grabbed a run in the bottom of the first, a two-run homer in the second, and then a Bo Bichette error left the door open for Hunter Renfroe with the bases loaded and two outs:

Just like that, it was 7-0 Rays and they never looked back. The series barely felt like it had started before it was essentially over. 

Renfroe's shot was the first Rays grand slam in postseason history. 

The Rays only had to use Blake Snell and Tyler Glasnow among their starting pitchers and now get to wait until Oct. 5 (Monday) before they have to play again. They will be traveling to southern California, but otherwise it's an easy handful of days working out to get themselves ready for the ALDS, where they'll face either the Yankees or Cleveland.

The Marlins surprising 2020 continued Wednesday as Miami scored five times in the seventh inning for a 5-1 win over the Cubs in Game 1. Miami got a strong outing from Sandy Alcantara and finally got to Cubs' righty Kyle Hendricks in the seventh. You can read more about that game here.

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Lightning bring the Stanley Cup back to Tampa Bay - NHL

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  1. Lightning bring the Stanley Cup back to Tampa Bay  NHL
  2. Winners and losers of the 2020 NHL playoff bubbles  ESPN
  3. Tampa Bay Lightning overcome pandemic, adversity for second title | Journey to the Cup | NBC Sports  NBC Sports
  4. Puck already dropped on NHL offseason that could be a frenzy  Yahoo Sports
  5. Free tickets for Lightning fan rally at Raymond James gone quickly  ABC Action News
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Covid: Boris Johnson defends 'strong local' measures to beat virus - BBC News

Prime Minister Boris Johnson has defended the use of localised measures to combat Covid-19 across the UK.

Mr Johnson told MPs "strong local action" was needed in response to "a serious and growing" virus resurgence.

Labour's Sir Keir Starmer asked how people could be expected to understand and follow rules when the PM himself had failed to make them clear.

Mr Johnson said he had "cleared up" a mistaken comment he made on rules for the North East "as fast as I could".

It comes as the latest UK coronavirus figures show there have been a further 7,108 cases of coronavirus and another 71 deaths.

Speaking at Prime Minister's Questions, Sir Keir asked how the government planned to move towns and cities out of local restrictions, as some people in places such as Bradford had not seen their families for "months".

Mr Johnson said "nobody wants to impose restrictions of this kind" but that "frankly, when you have the virus going up in the way that it is now in some parts of the country, you have to take strong local action".

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He added that "one important difference" in the way the virus was now spreading in the UK was "it does appear at the moment as though the illness is more localised".

"That's why you need direct local action of the kind that we're taking, in addition to the strong national measures that we announced last week," he said.

In total, at least 16.6 million people - about one in four people - in the UK face extra coronavirus measures on top of the national rules.

The Times reports that officials will decide on Wednesday whether Merseyside will be the latest area to face a ban on households mixing indoors.

And about 500,000 people in four council areas in north Wales are to face strict new measures from Thursday evening.

Sir Keir accused Mr Johnson of stoking "widespread confusion" around the localised rules in parts of north-east England, where people will no longer be allowed to mix with anyone outside their own household in any indoor setting - although support bubbles are exempt.

On Tuesday, the prime minister failed to clarify restrictions on social gatherings in north-east England, hours after junior minister Gillian Keegan was unable to answer questions on the rules.

"If the prime minister doesn't understand the rules, and his own [Conservative] council leaders are complaining about mixed messages, how does the prime minister expect the rest of the country to understand and follow the rules?" the Labour leader said.

Mr Johnson said Sir Keir was trying to "snipe from the sidelines" and "undermine" the government's response to the pandemic, adding that people "do understand the rules and overwhelmingly do follow the rules".

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In regard to the error he made about those rules on Tuesday - when questioned by Channel 5 - Mr Johnson told the House of Commons: "I cleared that matter up as fast as I could. It's very clear that you shouldn't mix [households] indoors either at home or in [a] hospitality setting, [and] you should avoid socialising outdoors.

"We need to apply that in the North East because that is where is it spiking. I think people do understand why we are doing that, I think people do get it."

Sir Keir said he supported the restrictions but that it was "perfectly reasonable to ask why they aren't working" , adding that infection rates in some areas with local measures were continuing to increase.

Rules 'not a quiz show'

Earlier, Business Secretary Alok Sharma accused BBC Radio 4's Today programme of treating interviews like a "quiz show" after Mr Johnson's mistake.

Asked why the PM stumbled over the rules in the North East, Mr Sharma said there was "an element of slightly 'gotcha' about this in terms of this line of questioning", reminding Today's Martha Kearney she was on "a flagship programme" and "not a quiz show".

"If people want to understand the precise restrictions that they have in areas which are more restricted, then they should go on to the [central government and local authority] websites," he added.

Labour shadow health minister Alex Norris criticised Mr Sharma's comments.

"The prime minister should understand the rules he is asking huge numbers of people to follow. That's not a gotcha, that's just basic government competence," he said.

'Sensible and practical'

Meanwhile Kim McGuinness, Labour's police and crime commissioner for Northumbria Police, told Today that Mr Johnson "caused a lot of confusion" when he "misspoke" on Tuesday.

She said following the restrictions was a "big ask" for people and that the government should "be better at communicating in advance of these local restrictions".

A health psychologist and member of the Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencies (Sage) said confusion has become a problem for people trying to follow coronavirus rules.

Prof Lucy Yardley told the BBC: "I think it is a real problem that people are trying to follow top-down rules that are changing all the time and are different in different places and in different organisations.

"We need less rule following and more working together to work out, in your individual situation, what is the best way to minimise the risk to the people around you."

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Mr Sharma also urged people - in particular, university students - to follow coronavirus rules.

When asked by BBC Breakfast about a video which appears to show a large group of students having a party at Coventry University, he said: "This has been actually a very, very difficult time for young people and actually, they want to get back to some sense of normality, we can't just lock people down forever.

"Students have gone back and of course we ask them - just as we ask the rest of the population - to follow the rules, follow the guidance, and act responsibly."

Mr Sharma added that Education Secretary Gavin Williamson was looking into how to make "possible" his commitment that students will be able to go home for Christmas.

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China approves arrest of 12 Hong Kong speedboat fugitives - Al Jazeera English

The group was reportedly trying to reach Taiwan when mainland authorities picked them up on August 23.

Chinese authorities have formally approved the arrests of 12 Hong Kong activists caught last month while allegedly trying to flee the territory for Taiwan.

The group was picked up some 70 kilometres (43 miles) southeast of the city on August 23 while trying to escape by boat, authorities said at the time, adding that they were handed to police in Shenzhen, the southern mainland city bordering Hong Kong.

The 12 had since disappeared into China’s opaque judicial system, with lawyers struggling to access them and family members expressing fear over their fate.

On Wednesday the People’s Procuratorate of Yantian District in Shenzhen said it had approved the arrests.

Two of the detainees, referred to as Deng and Qiao respectively, were arrested on suspicion of helping the others escape Hong Kong.

These names were likely to refer to the Chinese surnames of detainees Tang Kai-yin and Quinn Moon.

The other 10 – including suspects with the names Li and Huang – were arrested for making illegal border crossings.

The case remains under investigation, the statement added.

People in Hong Kong have been calling for the release of the 12 and organising postcard campaigns for the 12 arrested in southern China  [Isaac Lawrence/AFP]
Families of the 12 said in a statement they were “shocked and concerned” by the approval.

Hong Kong’s Security Bureau confirmed that mainland authorities informed local police of Wednesday’s approval, but declined to comment on families’ complaints of lawyers being barred from visiting the detainees.

Some of those on board the boat were facing prosecution in Hong Kong for activities linked to last year’s enormous and often violent pro-democracy protests, according to authorities in the territory.

Prolonged detention

Lu Siwei, one of the mainland lawyers working on the case, told AFP news agency the period of detention for investigation could last as long as seven months.

“Review of (the) detention’s legality can be applied for any time,” Lu added, but said that “for now it remains most important to seek a meeting with the 12 in custody”.

At least 14 mainland lawyers hired by the detainees’ families have been pressured by authorities to drop their clients, according to activists.

None of the lawyers has managed to see their clients in custody, while senior officials in Hong Kong said the 12 were assigned lawyers by mainland Chinese authorities.

Hong Kong has its own internationally respected legal system where detainees are promptly produced after their arrest and tried in open court, but the system on the mainland is notoriously opaque and controlled by the Communist Party. Conviction is all but guaranteed.

In June, Beijing imposed a new security law on Hong Kong, announcing it would have jurisdiction for some crimes and that mainland security agents could openly operate in the city.

The prospect of people in Hong Kong getting entangled in China’s judicial system triggered months of protests last year after the government moved to allow extraditions to the mainland. The demonstrations soon evolved into broader calls for democracy and greater police accountability, and sometimes descended into violence.

As Beijing has cracked down on Hong Kong’s democracy movement, self-ruled Taiwan, one of the region’s most vibrant democracies, has emerged as a sanctuary, quietly turning a blind eye to residents turning up without proper visas or paperwork.

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Armenia publishes photos of wreckage it says is SU-25 warplane shot down by Turkish F-16 jet - Reuters

幻灯图集 ( 5张图片 )

YEREVAN (Reuters) - Armenia posted pictures on an online government platform on Wednesday of the wreckage of a plane it said was a SU-25 warplane shot down by a Turkish fighter jet on Sept 29.

Turkey and Azerbaijan have denied Yerevan’s claim that a Turkish F-16 fighter jet shot down the Armenian plane, killing the pilot. On Wednesday Armenia’s defence ministry named the pilot as Major Valeri Danelin.

Fighting between Azerbaijan and ethnic Armenian forces over the breakaway territory of Nagorno-Karabakh entered a fourth day on Wednesday in the biggest eruption of their decades-old conflict since a 1994 ceasefire.

’s unified info centre, an online governmental platform,

Reporting by Nvard Hovhannisyan; Writing by Alexander Marrow; Editing by Gareth Jones

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Lakers' Game 1 win vs. Heat looked like a mismatch – Tim Legler | SportsCenter - ESPN

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  1. Lakers' Game 1 win vs. Heat looked like a mismatch – Tim Legler | SportsCenter  ESPN
  2. Riley wants to beat LeBron so much, but Heat’s Game 1 loss in NBA Finals a reality check | Opinion  Miami Herald
  3. Hyde: Bad loss, big injuries — the dream becomes a Game 1 nightmare for Heat | Commentary - South Florida Sun Sentinel  South Florida Sun Sentinel
  4. First Take's NBA Finals predictions: Lakers vs. Heat  ESPN
  5. How the 2004 Detroit Pistons and 2020 Miami Heat became spitting images  Detroit Free Press
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Heat injuries: Goran Dragic, Bam Adebayo exit Game 1 of NBA Finals; Jimmy Butler rolls ankle in loss to Lakers - CBSSports.com

untitled-design-2020-09-30t213435-725.jpg
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It's just Game 1 of the NBA Finals, but the Miami Heat are running out of players. Midway through the third quarter, Jimmy Butler, Bam Adebayo and Goran Dragic were all dealing with apparent injuries. Dragic's appears to be the most serious. According to ESPN's Adrian Wojnarowski, he suffered a plantar tear of his left foot. 

He can put pressure on his foot for now and has not yet been ruled out for the remainder of the series, according to Wojnarowski. "I don't know right now. I know he's as tough as anybody and it's the Finals, but I don't have an update where he is on his foot right now," Heat coach Erik Spoelstra said of Dragic. The veteran guard will be re-evaluated after leaving the arena without wearing a walking boot and didn't appear to favor his foot, per Chris Haynes of Yahoo

Fortunately, Butler seems to be OK. His injury came in the second quarter, as he tried to score on Lakers big man Anthony Davis. He appeared to land awkwardly on the play, with his ankle twisting. The Lakers quickly made their way down the court before Miami could call a timeout, but Butler stayed in the game afterward to finish the half and started the second half, despite being slightly hobbled.

Butler described himself to reports as a "little bit sore. I'll be OK. Some treatment, and get ready to go again. I think I gotta be ready to go, so we'll see how it feels tomorrow, but I'm gonna be fine."

Things only got worse from there. In the third quarter, Adebayo left the game with a shoulder strain, according to a broadcast update. Afterward, Spoelstra offered little on Adebayo's condition. "We'll re-evaluate him tomorrow and see where we are," he said. 

The Heat are among the deepest teams in the NBA. Their run to the NBA Finals was made possible by role players like Herro, Jae Crowder and Andre Iguodala as much as their best players. But no team in NBA history, no matter how deep, can survive the losses of perhaps its three best players. If Butler is hobbled and Dragic and Adebayo have to miss time, this series will be over. 

The Lakers dominated Game 1 with a 116-98 victory. That puts them three wins away from a championship. If the Heat aren't healthy by Game 2, this will be a very short series. 

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Lakers vs Heat Game 1: Live Score and Updates - The New York Times

LeBron James is not accustomed to Game 1s like these.

James’s teams lost the series opener in eight of his previous nine trips to the N.B.A. finals, but Wednesday night’s start to the 2020 finals against the Miami Heat went as well as James and the Los Angeles Lakers could have hoped. The Lakers won, 116-98.

Anthony Davis rumbled for a dominant 34 points James added an efficient 25 points, 13 rebounds and 9 assists for a near triple-double. And the Lakers, after a slow start, dominated in numerous key categories while the Heat were quickly confronted with multiple injury scares.

While the Lakers were dominating the boards (54-36) and limiting the Heat to just 14 trips to the free-throw line, Miami lost Goran Dragic (left foot) for the entire second half and Bam Adebayo (left shoulder) for most of it.

Jimmy Butler managed to stay on the floor to log 33 minutes despite rolling his left ankle late in the first half and led the Heat with 23 points. Miami, though, has little shot to keep this series competitive without Dragic or Adebayo — especially when Davis and James are rolling like they were in Game 1.

Times sportswriter Scott Cacciola is reporting from inside the N.B.A. bubble at Walt Disney World near Orlando, Fla.

Credit...Scott Cacciola
Credit...Scott Cacciola
Credit...Nathaniel S Butler/NBA, via Getty Images

Sports fans tend to be irrational, and many Lakers fans are surely so: They expect to win a championship every season. Over the first decade of this century, they almost did.

The Lakers won championships in 2001, 2002, 2003, 2009 and 2010. The last one — in seven games over the Boston Celtics — brought the franchise total to 16 championships.

Of course, Celtics fans will be quick to point out that 16 are great and all, but 17 — their 17 championships — are better. That’s the N.B.A. record.

(He’s in the bottom row, next to Shaquille O’Neal.)

Miami’s Jae Crowder came into the N.B.A. finals mired in a 4-for-28 slump from the 3-point line. All Crowder did in the first quarter was make his first two 3s and start out defensively against the Lakers’ Anthony Davis, allowing his teammate Bam Adebayo to roam freely early on the defensive end.

Moving the ball crisply and getting everyone involved as this team is known to do, Miami surged to an early 23-10 lead. Back-to-back 3s from Kentavious Caldwell-Pope, with LeBron James resting on the bench, kept the Lakers from losing touch early. Caldwell-Pope’s 3s sparked a 21-5 run from the Lakers to close the opening quarter and surge into a 31-28 lead — with a corner triple from the Lakers reserve Alex Caruso capping the comeback.

Miami Coach Erik Spoelstra’s reaction:

Silver acknowledged in a pregame news conference that the league “can do better” when it comes to hiring of Black head coaches.

“I don’t see a way to operate a league where the league office, the commissioner, is dictating to a team who they should or shouldn’t hire. Or who they should and shouldn’t fire, frankly,” Silver said in response to a question about whether the league should institute its own version of the Rooney rule — the N.F.L. policy that teams must interview people of color for coaching positions.

In the last year, several Black coaches have been dismissed or resigned, including Doc Rivers, who mutually parted ways with the Los Angeles Clippers this week. There are five more head coach openings in Philadelphia, Indiana, New Orleans, Houston and Oklahoma City. White coaches have filled previous openings this season with the Knicks, Nets and Bulls.

“We’re in discussions with all of those teams about making sure there’s a diverse slate of candidates,” Silver said, adding, “Let’s talk again after we fill these six positions and see where we are because I know we can do better.”

Silver also said at the news conference that many of the details for next season were still up in the air. He reiterated that the earliest start would be Christmas — “a traditional tentpole day for the league” — but that it was more likely to begin in January. He also said it was the league’s goal to have fans in seats, even before a vaccine has been widely distributed, “dependent on some additional advancements.”

“Rapid testing may be the key here,” Silver said.

Credit...Kim Klement/USA Today Sports, via Reuters

As Bam Adebayo’s college coach, John Calipari is admittedly biased but also unapologetic when he gushes about his former player and how much the burgeoning Miami Heat star has improved since imploring Calipari to bring him to the University of Kentucky.

“He reached out to us,” Calipari said. “He was like, ‘Why isn’t Kentucky recruiting me?’

“He didn’t ask me how many guys I had,” Calipari continued. “He didn’t ask me if I was going to recruit anybody else like him or, ‘Am I going to get the ball all the time?’ He’s built different.”

Adebayo has proved it all year, ascending to All-Star status in his third N.B.A. season and playing with distinction in the league’s bubble.

Read more about Bam Adebayo’s big season here.

After a slow start, the Lakers recovered quickly and entered halftime with a commanding lead, 65-48.

The Heat led by 13 in the first quarter, but the Lakers got hot from the perimeter and took a 31-28 lead at the end of the first. In the second quarter, the Lakers outscored the Heat, 34-20.

The Lakers did much of their damage from deep, shooting 11 of 17 from 3. Anthony Davis led the Lakers with 18 points on 11 shots. LeBron James had 9 points, 7 rebounds and 6 assists. The Heat offense was carried by Jimmy Butler, who scored 16 points and dished out 4 assists. Miami only shot 43 percent from the field.

A tough break for Miami to start the second half: Goran Dragic, the team’s dynamic point guard, suffered a left foot injury and is doubtful to return, the team announced. Dragic averaged 16.2 points and 5.1 assists during the regular season. In the playoffs, his production had increased to 20.9 points a game.

Anthony Davis leads the Lakers with 24 points, 6 rebounds and 5 assists. Jimmy Butler has 19 points for the Heat.

The Heat’s Bam Adebayo picked up his second foul with less than 90 seconds remaining in the first quarter. Seemingly from that point, Miami’s night cratered.

Adebayo’s early foul trouble helped fuel the Lakers’ comeback from an early 13-point deficit — and Los Angeles hasn’t relinquished the momentum.

The Lakers expanded their lead to as many as 32 points in the third quarter, capitalizing on their uncharacteristically strong shooting from 3-point range and the Heat’s sudden injury concerns: Jimmy Butler rolled his left ankle late in the first half, Goran Dragic was knocked out of the game by a left foot injury, and Adebayo appeared to hurt his shoulder in the third quarter.

For the first time in these playoffs, Miami appears headed for a Game 1 defeat. The Heat swept Indiana in the first round, won the first three games of their second-round series against Milwaukee and the first two games of the Eastern Conference finals against Boston.

Credit...David Santiago/Miami Herald, via Associated Press

This is the new era of the Miami Heat, a remarkable transition so soon after leaving the one led by Dwyane Wade. If the Heat upset the Lakers, it will be their first championship without Wade on the roster. He played for the team from 2003 to 2016, and then again for his final season, in 2018-19.

He became the greatest player in Heat history, helping lead the team to three championships. He made 13 All-Star teams (one was an honorary selection). He was one of the virtual fans in attendance on Wednesday night.

Wade appeared on NBA TV with his former teammate, Shaquille O’Neal, with whom he won a championship in 2006, ahead of Game 1. “People say, ‘If the Heat win, are you going to be jealous? Are you going to feel a certain kind of way?’ ” Wade said. “My answer to that is, ‘Hell no.’ I want to be a part of that legacy. I was the first to do it.”

Do you remember being shocked by the cascade of trades and free-agent signings in the N.B.A.? There was a time when that was what would elicit gasps from fans. But last off-season — call it the Summer of Player Empowerment — was just the tip of the iceberg for this bizarre N.B.A. season that, at times, seemed stranger than fiction.

There was the N.B.A. finding itself embroiled in a conflict with an international superpower as well as the United States government — all over a general manager’s tweet. Followed by the shocking deaths of Kobe Bryant and David Stern. The Knicks being the Knicks. Several high-profile injuries and then: the season’s postponement as a result of the pandemic, followed by months of social unrest.

But the finish line is in sight. At a time when teams would normally be gearing up for a new season, the N.B.A. is still trying to complete the old one. It’s been a long year, so you’ll be forgiven if you don’t remember all the twists and turns that brought us here.

Here is a rundown of the strangest N.B.A. campaign in the league’s history.

Miami has cut the Lakers’ lead to 17 points with 4:18 to go in the fourth quarter. But they are hurting.

Goran Dragic (foot) and Bam Adebayo (shoulder) are done for the game, and Jimmy Butler is clearly limping after rolling his ankle at the end of the first half.

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Rain delay debacles cause Yankees-Indians Game 2 mess - New York Post

What a mess.

After Wednesday’s start of Game 2 of the Wild Card Series between the Yankees and Indians was delayed by nearly 45 minutes because of the threat of rain at Progressive Field in Cleveland, the game finally started — after no rain — only to be delayed again with one out in the bottom of the first and the Indians up, 1-0, when the rain finally came.

The disastrous move came after Cleveland’s Carlos Carrasco threw 17 pitches in the top of the first and Masahiro Tanaka tossed 11 pitches and gave up a run in the bottom of the inning.

Tanaka returned to the mound after the second delay, which lasted 33 minutes.

Before a game, MLB determines whether to start a game, in consultation with both teams. Once the game begins, the decision belongs to the umpires.

On the ESPN broadcast, Cleveland pitching coach Carl Willis said, “We started in a delay. Here in Cleveland, with the lake effect [off Lake Erie], you can follow the radar and things can turn around and come back on you. We thought we were gonna be safe.’’

A source familiar with the situation added the weather at Progressive Field presents unique challenges because of the lake effect and while the first heavy system missed the stadium, the second system strengthened as it came onshore.

Before the stoppage, Carrasco pitched a scoreless inning, while Tanaka allowed back-to-back doubles to Cesar Hernandez and Jose Ramirez to give the Indians a one-run lead.

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Heat @ Lakers | NBA on ABC Live Scoreboard | #NBAFinals Presented by YouTube TV - NBA

[unable to retrieve full-text content]

  1. Heat @ Lakers | NBA on ABC Live Scoreboard | #NBAFinals Presented by YouTube TV  NBA
  2. NBA Finals - Predicting who wins Lakers-Heat, and why  ESPN
  3. How the 2004 Detroit Pistons and 2020 Miami Heat became spitting images  Detroit Free Press
  4. Kevin Durant admits he, Kyrie Irving ‘solidified’ they were joining forces at All-Star Game  Yahoo Sports
  5. Jalen Rose on the NBA Finals: LeBron vs. Jimmy Butler, Pat Riley & Erik Spoelstra | Get Up  ESPN
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Kamalei Correa latest Titans player on COVID list - NBC Sports - NFL

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Kamalei Correa has become the latest Titans player to land on the COVID-19 list.

The team placed the outside linebacker on the reserve list Wednesday. The NFL found no close contacts with Correa, a league spokesman told Erik Bacharach of The Tennessean.

The NFL already has postponed the Titans-Steelers game, hoping to play it Monday night after three other players and five team personnel tested positive for COVID-19.

The Titans are up to 10 positive tests since Saturday when outside linebackers coach Shane Bowen didn’t make the trip to Minneapolis after a positive test.

Defensive lineman DaQuan Jones, long snapper Beau Brinkley and practice squad tight end Tommy Hudson were placed on the reserve/COVID-19 list Tuesday.

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France to ban use of wild animals in circuses, marine parks - ABC News

France’s environment minister has announced a gradual ban in the coming years on the use of wild animals in travelling circuses and on keeping dolphins and killer whales in captivity in marine parks

In addition, starting immediately, France’s three marine parks won’t be able to bring in nor breed dolphins and killer whales any more, she said.

“It is time to open a new era in our relationship with these (wild) animals,” she said, arguing that animal welfare is a priority.

Pompili said the measures will also bring an end to mink farming, where animals are raised for their fur, within the next five years.

The ban does not apply to wild animals in other permanent shows and in zoos.

Pompili did not set any precise date for the ban in travelling circuses, saying the process should start “as soon as possible.” She promised solutions will be found for each animal “on a case-by-case basis.”

The French government will implement an 8 million-euro ($9.2 million) package to help people working in circuses and marine parks find other jobs.

“That transition will be spread over several years, because it will change the lives of many people," she said.

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Chris Bosh talks NBA Finals, Jimmy Butler's toughness and LeBron Leaving Miami | THE HERD - The Herd with Colin Cowherd

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  1. Chris Bosh talks NBA Finals, Jimmy Butler's toughness and LeBron Leaving Miami | THE HERD  The Herd with Colin Cowherd
  2. A handful of bets I like for Lakers-Heat matchup in the NBA Finals  PhillyVoice.com
  3. First Take's NBA Finals predictions: Lakers vs. Heat  ESPN
  4. How the 2004 Detroit Pistons and 2020 Miami Heat became spitting images  Detroit Free Press
  5. Halsey Reveals Her Birthday Gift From the LA Lakers  Showbiz Cheat Sheet
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New York Yankees vs. Cleveland: Lineups, how to watch, TV channel - Pinstripe Alley

Yesterday was a very good day to be a Yankee fan, as the team jumped all over Cleveland starter Shane Bieber in the first inning en route to a 12-3 victory in game one of this Wild Card Series. The Yankees can sweep Cleveland right out of the playoffs with a similar outing tonight, and they’ll send on of the best postseason pitchers of all time to the mound.

Masahiro Tanaka has fluctuated from average-to-good in the regular season for the Yankees, but in the playoffs, he’s a completely different man. His 1.76 playoff ERA is two runs less than his regular season mark, and the lowest of any Yankee postseason performer not named Mariano Rivera. That’s some company.

He faced Cleveland in game three of the 2017 ALDS, throwing seven shutout innings as the Yankees began their now-famous comeback in that series. Tonight, he’ll face a lineup starting four hitters he mowed down three seasons ago.

Carlos Carrasco, Cleveland’s starter, was also the starter in that game three, and matched Tanaka pitch for pitch, throwing 5.2 innings of no-run ball. He’s had an excellent 2020 - 2.91 ERA and 3.59 FIP, striking out almost 11 per nine.

The only change from last night’s lineup is the insertion of Gary Sánchez at catcher over Kyle Higashioka. Otherwise, why mess with the squad that put up a dozen 24 hours ago?

First pitch comes at 7:05PM EDT, on ESPN.

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Sources -- Miami Marlins outfielder Starling Marte suffers fractured left pinkie - ESPN

Miami Marlins center fielder Starling Marte suffered a non-displaced fracture of his left pinkie after getting hit by a pitch Wednesday, but there is optimism that he could continue playing, sources told ESPN's Jeff Passan and Jesse Rogers.

Marte was hit in the hand on a fastball by Chicago Cubs reliever Dan Winkler in the ninth inning of Miami's 5-1 wild-card-opening win in Chicago. Marte was in obvious pain and quickly retreated down the clubhouse tunnel.

He was replaced by Monte Harrison.

The Marlins said after the game that Marte, 31, was set to undergo X-rays on the injury.

Marte, acquired at the trade deadline from the Arizona Diamondbacks, hit .281 with 6 home runs, 27 RBIs and 10 stolen bases this season.

He was deemed to be "100 percent" by manager Don Mattingly entering the game after he was hit by a 94-mph fastball on the front of his helmet by New York Yankees pitcher Clarke Schmidt during Sunday's regular-season finale.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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Azerbaijan, Armenia reject talks as Karabakh conflict widens - Al Jazeera English

UN Security Council expressed concern about the clashes, after Secretary-General Antonio Guterres called for a halt to fighting.

Armenia and Azerbaijan accused one another of firing directly into each other’s territory and rejected pressure to hold peace talks as their conflict over the enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh threatened to descend into all-out war.

Both countries reported on Tuesday firing from the other side across their shared border, well to the west of the breakaway Nagorno-Karabakh region over which fierce fighting broke out between Azeri and ethnic Armenian forces on Sunday.

The incidents signalled a further escalation of the conflict despite urgent appeals from Russia, the United States and others to halt the fighting.

The conflict has reignited concerns about stability in the South Caucasus region, and threatens to drag in Turkey and Russia.

Azeri President Ilham Aliyev, speaking to Russian state television, flatly ruled out any possibility of talks. Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan told the same channel there could be no negotiations while fighting continued.

Nagorno-Karabakh is a breakaway region inside Azerbaijan that is controlled by ethnic Armenians and backed by Armenia. It broke away from Azerbaijan in a war during the 1990s but is not recognised by any country as an independent republic.

Dozens of people have been reported killed and hundreds wounded since clashes between Azerbaijan and ethnic Armenian forces broke out on Sunday.

UN concern

After a closed-door discussion on Tuesday the 15-member United Nations Security Council “expressed concern” about the clashes, condemned the use of force and backed a call by UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres for an immediate halt to fighting.

Further stoking tensions between the two former Soviet republics, Armenia said a Turkish F-16 fighter jet had shot down one of its warplanes over Armenian airspace, killing the pilot.

It provided no evidence of the incident. Turkey has denied the claim.

“Armenia should withdraw from the territories under its occupation instead of resorting to cheap propaganda tricks,” Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s top press aide Fahrettin Altun said.

Earlier this week, Armenia accused Turkey of sending mercenaries to back Azerbaijani forces in the ethnically Armenian region.

Putin appeal

Any descent into all-out war could threaten to drag in not only Turkey, but Russia. Moscow has a defence alliance with Armenia, but also enjoys close relations with Azerbaijan.

The Kremlin said President Vladimir Putin spoke by phone to Pashinyan for the second time since the start of the crisis and said all sides should take measures to de-escalate. It has not made public any contacts between Putin and Aliyev.

Moscow was in constant contact with Turkey, Armenia and Azerbaijan, and any talk of providing military support for the opposing sides would only add fuel to the fire, it said.

Rising casualties

Pashinyan told the BBC in an interview that Azeri forces had shelled villages and towns in Nagorno-Karabakh and inside Armenia itself on Tuesday.

“There are casualties among both military and civilians. Dozens are killed and hundreds are wounded,” he said.

Azerbaijan’s prosecutor’s office said 12 Azeri civilians had so far been killed and 35 wounded by Armenian fire. The Azeri side has not disclosed military casualties.

Nagorno-Karabakh has reported the loss of at least 84 soldiers.

“What can I say? It’s a war. We hear air raids several times a day and hide in bomb shelters,” Albert Voskanyan, a resident of the enclave’s capital Stepanakert, told Reuters.

Armenian officials said earlier that a civilian was killed in an Azeri attack on the Armenian town of Vardenis, more than 20km (12 miles) from Nagorno-Karabakh. They said a bus caught fire in the town after being hit by an Azeri drone.

Azerbaijan’s defence ministry said that from Vardenis the Armenian army had shelled the Dashkesan region inside Azerbaijan. Armenia denied those reports.

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Kuwait Emir Sheikh Sabah al-Sabah dies aged 91 - BBC News

Kuwait's Emir Sheikh Sheikh Sabah al-Ahmed al-Sabah witnesses a signing ceremony at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, China (9 July 2018)
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Kuwait's Emir, Sheikh Sabah al-Ahmed al-Sabah, has died at the age of 91, state media report.

His 83-year-old half-brother, Crown Prince Sheikh Nawaf al-Ahmed, has been named by the cabinet as his successor.

In July, Sheikh Sabah was flown to the United States for medical treatment following surgery for an unspecified condition in Kuwait that month.

He had ruled the oil-rich Gulf Arab state since 2006 and had overseen its foreign policy for more than 50 years.

He was dubbed the "dean of Arab diplomacy" for his efforts to restore relations with states that backed Iraq during the 1990-1991 Gulf War, when Kuwait was invaded by Iraqi forces.

The emir also often acted as a mediator in regional disputes, including the ongoing diplomatic stand-off between Saudi Arabia, its allies and Qatar.

Kuwait similarly refrained from intervening in Syria's civil war, instead hosting several donor conferences for humanitarian aid.

Kuwait's Emir Sheikh Sabah (2nd right) stands beside Saudi Arabia's King Salman (right) and Bahrain's King Hamad (2nd left) at a GCC summit in Riyadh on 10 December 2019
image copyrightAnadolu Agency
"Today we lost a big brother and a wise and loving leader... who spared no effort for Arab unity," Jordan's King Abdullah IIwrote on Twitter in Arabic.
Abu Dhabi Crown Prince Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan, the de facto ruler of the United Arab Emirates, tweeted: "Sheikh Sabah epitomised wisdom, tolerance, and peace and he was a great pioneer of Gulf cooperation."

UN Secretary General António Guterres called the emir "an extraordinary symbol of wisdom and generosity, a messenger of peace, a bridge builder".

2px presentational grey line

Calming, mediating force

Analysis box by Frank Gardner, security correspondent

Tiny, oil-rich and vulnerable, Kuwait has long been both an ally of the West and dependant on it for protection. Britain has twice sent troops to defend it from its giant neighbour Iraq, first in 1961 and then in 1991 as part of the massive US-led Desert Storm campaign to expel Saddam Hussein's forces.

Despite being ruled by ageing men from the long-standing Al-Sabah dynasty, Kuwait has one of the more lively political scenes in the Arab world, with elected MPs able to call government ministers to account. This has sometimes led to political paralysis.

The ruling family also took on conservative religious opinion by pushing for women to be allowed to vote and run for political office.

In recent years Kuwait has been seen as a calming, mediating force in the region, helped by the late emir's decades of experience as foreign minister. The succession is thought likely to be a smooth one.

2px presentational grey line

Sheikh Sabah's death was announced on state television on Tuesday afternoon by the Minister of Emiri Diwan (Court) Affairs, Sheikh Ali Jarrah al-Sabah.

"With the utmost sadness and grief for the Kuwaiti people, the Islamic and Arab world and people of friendly nations, the Emiri Diwan mourns the death of Sheikh Sabah al-Ahmed al-Jaber al-Sabah, the emir of Kuwait, who is now next to God" he said.

Sheikh Jarrah did not give a cause of death.

Kuwaitis listen to the announcement of Emir Sheikh Sabah al-Sabah's death in Kuwait City (29 September 2020)
image copyrightEPA

Born in 1929, Sheikh Sabah was the great-grandson of the founder of modern Kuwait, Mubarak al-Sabah, who signed a "Treaty of Friendship" with Britain in 1899 that saw it become a protectorate.

Sheikh Sabah became Kuwait's foreign minister in 1963 - two years after Britain recognised Kuwait's independence - and held the position until 1991, following the end of the seven-month-long Iraqi occupation.

He was reappointed foreign minister in 1992 and served until 2003, when he was named prime minister by his half-brother Emir Sheikh Jaber al-Ahmad.

Sheikh Sabah became Kuwait's ruler himself in 2006, after Sheikh Jaber died and his cousin Emir Sheikh Saad al-Abdullah stepped down just nine days into his rule as parliament moved to depose him on health grounds.

Sheikh Nawaf al-Ahmed of Kuwait at a GCC summit in Kuwait City on 5 December 2017
image copyrightEPA

Kuwait - which has a population of 4.8 million, including 3.4 million foreign workers - has the world's sixth-largest known oil reserves and is a major US ally.

The emirate's parliament has the most powers of any elected body in the Gulf and opposition MPs openly criticise the Sabahs.

However, the ruling family retains full control over key government and executive posts and the emir has the last say in political matters. He also has the power to override or dissolve parliament, and call elections.

Sheikh Sabah dissolved parliament or reshuffled his cabinet a number of times after lawmakers sought to question or submit votes of no confidence against senior ministers, including members of the ruling family.

Map of Kuwait

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