Pacers race into NBA Finals on fast breaks and sharing the wealthNew Foto - Pacers race into NBA Finals on fast breaks and sharing the wealth

USA TODAY and Yahoo may earn commission from links in this article. Pricing and availability subject to change. TheIndiana Pacersare looking to make history. For only the second time in franchise history, the team has moved on to theNBA Finals, where theOklahoma City Thunder await. The Pacers, who have never won an NBA title, dispatched the Knicks in theEastern Conference finalsSaturday night insix games behind their tempo, shot-making and improved defense. Forward Pascal Siakam dropped 31 points and Tyrese Haliburton added 21 and 13 assists. OPINION:Small-market Pacers party down in big way with NBA Finals trip MORE:Pascal Siakam named Eastern Conference finals MVP after Pacers down Knicks The Knicks kept things close until a decisive third quarter in which the Pacers outscored New York by 11. Jalen Brunson, New York's top offensive threat, was the team's third-leading scorer with 19 points. Winners and losers from the closeout game of the Eastern Conference finals between the Indiana Pacers andNew York Knicks: In Game 5 Thursday night, the only starter for the Pacers to score in double figures wasforward Pascal Siakam, who recorded just 15 points. In Game 6 on Saturday night, it was a very different story. Seven Pacers — and all five starters — reached double figures, with Siakam leading the way with 31 points. Indiana whipped the ball around the floor, moving it far more efficiently than it did two nights previous, and the speed of the Pacers passes left the Knicks struggling to catch up. In Game 5, Indiana recorded just 20 assists, with All-Star point guard Tyrese Haliburton getting just six. Saturday, the Pacers dished out 30 dimes, 13 of which were Haliburton's. He had a rough series offensively, there's no question, but Pacers guard Andrew Nembhard took on the assignment of guarding Jalen Brunson with determination. With Aaron Nesmith slowed by his ankle injury, Pacers coach Rick Carlisle switched things up early in Game 6, putting Nembhard on Brunson. Nembhard responded by bodying Brunson, guarding him all 90 feet and making him feel constant pressure. In the first half, Brunson shot just 4-of-10 from the field for 10 points. Nembhard finished with six steals. He lost his minutes to fellow Pacers big man Tony Bradley, but a hip injury to Bradley thrust Bryant back into the rotation for Game 6. He responded with an energy-filled 11-point performance in just 13 minutes on the floor. The third quarter, when the Pacers pulled away from the Knicks, was when Bryant shined brightest, scoring eight of his 11 points in the period and draining a pair of massive 3s. Give the Pacers plenty of credit for swarming and harassing ball handlers and jumping gaps to steal passes, but New York's careless approach with the ball cost the Knicks the game. New York committed 18 turnovers that led to 34 Pacers points. The Pacers turned those turnovers into quick offense, firing passes up the floor, often to players streaking wide open to the basket. Whether it was cumulative fatigue from six games of trying to match the tempo of the Pacers, or whether it was a lack of attention to detail, the Knicks simply conceded far too many attempts for the Pacers in transition. This had been an issue throughout the Eastern Conference finals. The Pacers are known for getting players sprinting down the floor for open layups, even after opponents convert field goals. The concern for New York was that it did not adjust to this over the course of the game. In fact, if anything, the Pacers leaned into their speed in the second half. No player benefitted from this more than Pascal Siakam, who all series long got easy layups after his teammates launched passes to him after he had leaked out;four of his first seven field goalswere layups in transition. Overall, the Pacers outscored New York in transition, 25-10. Inexcusably, the Knicks also took a lax approach to defending Indiana's perimeter shots, allowing multiple players to get uncontested looks and failing to close out. A lot of this happened when Knicks players — center Karl-Anthony Towns in particular — went under screens or lacked the effort and intensity to meet Indiana's shooters. The Pacers attacked this repeatedly, calling for pick-and-rolls when Towns was the secondary defender. Indiana shot 17-of-33 (51.5%) from beyond the arc. And, since the Knicks made only 9-of-32 (28.1%) shots from 3, that means the Pacers carried a 24-point advantage from deep. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Pacers race to NBA Finals; Knicks suffer security breach

Pacers race into NBA Finals on fast breaks and sharing the wealth

Pacers race into NBA Finals on fast breaks and sharing the wealth USA TODAY and Yahoo may earn commission from links in this article. Pricin...
Doué's sensational Champions League performance for PSG launches him into a new dimensionNew Foto - Doué's sensational Champions League performance for PSG launches him into a new dimension

PARIS (AP) — Translate Désiré Doué's name into English and you get the words "coveted" and "gifted." Both seem highly appropriate, considering how the 19-year-old's stunning performance for Paris Saint-Germain inSaturday's Champions League finallaunched him into soccer's stratosphere, making Doué a player every team would love to have. Doué scored with two clinical finishes in a 5-0 rout of Inter Milan after setting up PSG's first goal with a remarkable piece of close control. Controlling the ball on his left foot and spinning in one swift movement inside the penalty area, he then effortlessly switched feet and passed with his right to Achraf Hakimi. "I really don't have the words to describe how I feel. What we did is magical. We showed we are a great side collectively," said Doué, who turns 20 on Tuesday. "There are a lot of young players in the side who still need to improve, I am among them." Doué improving is quite a scary thought, given how good he already is. A game-changing ability When Doué joined PSG from Rennes for around 50 million euros ($55 million) in the offseason, it appeared a hefty fee for an unproven young player. Except for the fans who closely followed Ligue 1, he was largely unknown in France and beyond. Furthermore, his return of eight goals in 76 games hardly suggested he would become a dangerous scorer. But Rennes is one of the best youth academies in European soccer. Doué's PSG teammateOusmane Dembélécame through the ranks there as didMathys Telbefore joiningBayern Munich. PSG coachLuis Enrique, who coached Lionel Messi, Luis Suárez and Neymar when Barcelona won the Champions League in 2015, saw a game-changing ability in Doué. He was proved right. Doué's emergencein the second part of the season saw him take goal-scoring winger Bradley Barcola's place in the starting lineup. It also coincided with PSG's revival in the Champions League after a difficult group stage where the club lost to Arsenal, Atletico Madrid and Bayern. Doué held his nerve in the penalty shootout win against Liverpool in March, scoring the decisive kick in emphatic style to send PSG into the quarterfinals. Later that month, he also scored for France in a penalty shootout win in the Nations League. Doué kept improving in the big games Doué equalizedin the quarterfinal first leg against Aston Villa in Paris andscored five goalsin the competition. Overall he scored 15 goals for PSG this season, including spectacular curlers from outside the penalty area with his right foot. His silky close control, allied to an ability to wrong-foot defenders, made him a vital part of PSG's intricate approach play, particularly in confined spaces. His unorthodox dribbling is often brilliant, but does not always come off, so he reigned it in. "I sometimes overdo it a bit, but I try to keep my personality. When you play, you know there are areas where you have to build, release the ball, and others where you have more freedom," Doué said. "I analyze my matches and my training sessions a lot. I try to always maintain my discipline, and I hope that will take me to the very, very high level." Doué said that back in April. On Saturday night he achieved it, and joinedBarcelona's 17-year-old prodigy Lamine Yamalamong the most coveted young players in world soccer. They could face each other on Thursday, when France plays Spain in the Nations League semifinals. Both have the soccer world at their feet. ___ AP soccer:https://apnews.com/hub/soccer

Doué's sensational Champions League performance for PSG launches him into a new dimension

Doué's sensational Champions League performance for PSG launches him into a new dimension PARIS (AP) — Translate Désiré Doué's name ...
Joe Milton happy joining Cowboys, Dak Prescott: 'Coming here was a blessing'New Foto - Joe Milton happy joining Cowboys, Dak Prescott: 'Coming here was a blessing'

TheDallas Cowboysswung a trade to add a potential-packed young quarterback,Joe Milton, during the 2025 NFL offseason. Dallas sent a 2025 fifth-round pick to theNew England Patriotsto acquire Milton – who played sparingly as a rookie but flashed in a Week 18 win over theBuffalo Bills– and a 2025 seventh-round pick. TheCowboyswill look to develop the 25-year-old behindDak Prescott, who is entering his age-32 season after missing half of the 2024 NFL season with a hamstring injury. DAK PRESCOTT INJURY UPDATE:Cowboys QB gets on field at OTAs, 'feels good' Milton admitted he wasn't expecting to be traded after spending less than a year with the Patriots. "Was I surprised? Yes,"Milton told the Cowboys websiteof the trade. "I kind of woke up around, like, 7 o'clock to a call and I knew I was getting traded." Still, Milton took the trade in stride and is grateful to have landed with the Cowboys. "The only thing I could have done, well, the only thing I did at that moment was to thank God," Milton described of being traded. "Coming here was a blessing. I didn't know it was going to be here. … I didn't know where I was going to end up." "I was just thankful to go to work. [But now I'm] back in the heat, for one. He allowed me to play in the dome, for two. And, three, it's America's team. Also, it's just great to learn from someone like Dak." Adding Milton was part of a greater restructuring of Dallas' quarterback room. The Cowboys' second- and third-string quarterbacks from last season,Cooper RushandTrey Lance, are no longer with the team. Rush signed a two-year deal with theBaltimore Ravensin free agency while Lance signed a one-year contract with theLos Angeles Chargers. Replacing Rush and Lance are Milton and veteran quarterbackWill Grier, a 30-year-old who signed with the Cowboys for a second stint last season after Prescott's injury. The two are expected to battle for the backup quarterback job, with Milton having the edge because of his athleticism and arm strength. OPINION:Chiefs never make Super Bowl excuses – a lesson the 49ers must learn Milton is getting good vibes from his counterparts despite his competition with Grier. He is relishing an opportunity to learn from the duo as he tries to establish himself at the NFL level. "It's great, man," Milton said of Dallas' quarterback room. "We all have three different games, you know? Dak brings the most experience to the room and Will has been around football throughout his whole life. And then you've got me, whereas I didn't grow up with a quarterback coach. I just happened to be so athletic, and I bring extra tools. "I learned along the way and I'm able to do certain things. So, putting it all together, we just shape one another as quarterbacks. It's just great. We feed off of each other. "They help me out a lot, man. Shout out to those two, man. Like, respect for sure. No matter what it is, they're willing to help, regardless." This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Joe Milton grateful to land with Cowboys: 'Coming here was a blessing'

Joe Milton happy joining Cowboys, Dak Prescott: 'Coming here was a blessing'

Joe Milton happy joining Cowboys, Dak Prescott: 'Coming here was a blessing' TheDallas Cowboysswung a trade to add a potential-packe...
'Extreme Buffoonery And A Mean Spirit': Scott Jennings Singles Out 'Toxic Brew' Of Likely 2028 Dem ContenderNew Foto - 'Extreme Buffoonery And A Mean Spirit': Scott Jennings Singles Out 'Toxic Brew' Of Likely 2028 Dem Contender

Republican strategist Scott Jennings said during a panel discussion on CNN's "State of the Union" on Sunday that one potential 2028 Democratic candidate would not be the party's future. Democratic Govs. Tim Walz of Minnesota and Wes Moore of Maryland spoke Friday at an event hosted by Democratic South Carolina Rep. James Clyburn,accordingto the New York Times. Jennings, speaking on CNN, expressed doubt about the chances of Walz, who was the Democratic nominee for Vice President in 2024, to lead the party.(RELATED: 'A Boss Move': Scott Jennings Says Trump Confronting South African President Over White Farmers 'Had To Happen') "The other person who spoke in South Carolina, Tim Walz, is a special mixture of extreme buffoonery and a mean spirit, which is a toxic brew," Jennings said. "He is not the future of the Democratic Party." WATCH: "I'll defend the Democrats. They are for things," the strategist added. "Illegal aliens, you're for boys in girls sports. I mean, you are for things and that's why you have such struggles right now in your party, because you're not for anything that's on the right side of any of the 8020 issues that are driving this cultural divide in America." Jennings also said that he thinks Moore "is actually a pretty talented communicator." "Moore is interesting. Moore is interesting," Jennings continued. "Probably more interesting than some of the radicals you have out there. [Democratic Rep. Jasmine] Crockett [of Texas], AOC [Democratic Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York], I mean, these are the true leaders of your party right now, but it might be better off replacing them." During his speech at the Clyburn fish fry Friday, Walzcalledon Democrats to "bully the shit" out of President Donald Trump and that Democrats needed to be "a little meaner." "Maybe it's time for us to be a little meaner. Maybe it's time for us to be a little more fierce, because we have to ferociously push back on this," Walz said. "And again, I'll speak to my teacher colleagues in here. The thing that bothers a teacher more than anything is to watch a bully, to watch this bully and to stop it. And when it's a child, you talk to them and you tell them why bullying is wrong. But when it's [an] adult like Donald Trump, you bully the shit out of him." WATCH: Walz previouslyjokedhe was tracking Tesla stock and that its decline gave him "a little boost" during an event in March. Walz was also widelycreditedwith starting the trend of labeling then-Republican Sen. JD Vance of Ohio, Trump's running mate in the 2024 election and now his Vice President, as "weird" during a July 23appearanceon "Morning Joe," according tomultiplereports. All content created by the Daily Caller News Foundation, an independent and nonpartisan newswire service, is available without charge to any legitimate news publisher that can provide a large audience. All republished articles must include our logo, our reporter's byline and their DCNF affiliation. For any questions about our guidelines or partnering with us, please contactlicensing@dailycallernewsfoundation.org.

‘Extreme Buffoonery And A Mean Spirit’: Scott Jennings Singles Out ‘Toxic Brew’ Of Likely 2028 Dem Contender

'Extreme Buffoonery And A Mean Spirit': Scott Jennings Singles Out 'Toxic Brew' Of Likely 2028 Dem Contender Republican stra...
Trump's foreign policy frustrations are piling upNew Foto - Trump's foreign policy frustrations are piling up

Every president thinks they can change the world – and Donald Trump has an even greater sense of personal omnipotence than his recent predecessors. But it's not working out too well for the 47th president. Trump might intimidate tech titans to toe the line and use government power to try to bend institutions like Harvard University and judges, but some world leaders are harder to bully. He keeps being ignored and humiliated by Russian President Vladimir Putin who is defying the US effort to end the war in Ukraine. Russian media is now portraying Trump as the tough talker who always blinks and never imposes consequences. The president also thought that he could shape China to his will by facing down leader Xi Jinping in a trade war. But he misunderstood Chinese politics. The one thing an authoritarian in Beijing can never do is bow down to a US president. US officials say now they'refrustratedthat China hasn't followed through on commitments meant to deescalate the trade conflict. As with China, Trump backed down in his tariff war with the European Union. Then Financial Times commentator Robert Armstrong enraged the president by coining the termTACO trade— "Trump Always Chickens Out." Everyone thought that Trump would be on the same page as Benjamin Netanyahu. After all, in his first term he offered the Israeli prime minister pretty much everything he wanted. But now that he's trying to broker peace in the Middle East, Trump is finding thatprolonging the Gaza conflict is existential for Netanyahu's political career,much like Ukraine for Putin. And Trump's ambition for an Iranian nuclear deal is frustrating Israeli plans to use a moment of strategic weakness for the Islamic Republic to try to take out its reactors militarily. Powerful leaders are pursuing their own versions of the national interest that exist in a parallel reality and on different historical and actual timelines to shorter, more transactional, aspirations of American presidents. Most aren't susceptible to personal appeals with no payback. And after Trump's attempts to humiliate Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky and South African President Cyril Ramaphosa in the Oval Office, the lure of the White House is waning. Trump spent months on the campaign trail last year boasting that his "very good relationship" with Putin or Xi would magically solve deep geopolitical and economic problems between global powers that might be unsolvable. He's far from the first US leader to suffer from such delusions. President George W. Bush famously looked into the Kremlin tyrant's eyes and "got a sense of his soul." President Barack Obama disdained Russia as a decaying regional power and once dismissed Putin as the "bored kid in the back of the classroom." That didn't work out so well when the bored kid annexed Crimea. More broadly, the 21st century presidents have all acted as though they're men of destiny. Bush came to office determined not to act as the global policeman. But the September 11 attacks in 2001 made him exactly that. He started wars in Afghanistan and Iraq — which the US won, then lost the peace. And his failed second term goal to democratize the Arab world never went anywhere. Obama tried to make amends for the global war on terror and travelled to Egypt to tell Muslims it was time for "a new beginning." His early presidency pulsated with a sense that his charisma and unique background would in itself be a global elixir. Joe Biden traveled the globe telling everyone that "America is back" after ejecting Trump from the White House. But four years later, partly due to his own disastrous decision to run for a second term, America — or at least the internationalist post-World War II version – was gone again. And Trump was back. Trump's "America First" populism relies on the premise that the US has been ripped off for decades, never mind that its alliances and shaping of global capitalism made it the most powerful nation in the planet's history. Now playing at being a strongman who everyone must obey, he is busily squandering this legacy and shattering US soft power — ie. the power to persuade — with his belligerence. The first four months of the Trump presidency, with its tariff threats, warnings of US territorial expansion in Canada and Greenland and evisceration of global humanitarian aid programs show that the rest of the world gets a say in what happens too. So far, leaders in China, Russia, Israel, Europe and Canada appear to have calculated that Trump is not as powerful as he thinks he is, that there's no price for defying him or that their own internal politics make resistance mandatory. For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

Trump’s foreign policy frustrations are piling up

Trump's foreign policy frustrations are piling up Every president thinks they can change the world – and Donald Trump has an even greate...

 

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