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Kendall Graveman, B game batboy and relief pitcher, is fitting in with White Sox

GLENDALE, Ariz. – It was a spring training B game on the backfields of Camelback Ranch, and Kendall Graveman was giving it everything he had.

As the batboy. And ballboy, and waterboy all wrapped into one.

The White Sox are paying Gravemen $8 million for the next three seasons to get important outs in late innings of baseball games, not to retrieve bats. But the way Graveman saw it, what else would he be doing on a day he wasn’t throwing?

“Sitting here in this chair at my locker,” he said.

When Graveman, 30, was traded from the Mariners to the Astros last July 27, angered Mariners players ripped general manager Frank DiPito, not only because the team was within a game of the second wild card spot with a surprising 55-46 record and Graveman helped get them there with a 0.82 ERA with 10 saves, but because they lost a leader and a loved teammate who, as the Sox are finding out, isn’t too big to step into the common man’s realm to perform acts of service.

Graveman, who said he did the batboy thing as a Blue Jays minor leaguer, carried out the B-game duty Monday until the very last out. He sat on a perch outside the dugout, shagged bats, brought balls to the plate umpire and delivering water to the crew near second base between innings.

“That’s a pro move there,” manager Tony La Russa said, stopping during an interview to note Graveman’s work. “Talented man bringing it out there.”

“We’re in the desert,” Graveman said. “I told them they need to stay hydrated.”

Graveman said he also wanted to watch Lance Lynn pitch that day and to see how bullpen mate Ryan Burr’s new pitch, a one-seam fastball, was progressing.

“But I just enjoy the game of baseball,” he said. “No one else was doing it so I thought I’d help out a little bit.

“It’s fun. And being on a backfield game with big leaguers and fans is more of an intimate setting. We don’t get that a ton, so that’s a pretty cool thing, just playing the game of baseball without the huge venues.”

Kendall Graveman, batboy.

The Sox stacked their bullpen with new investments Graveman and Joe Kelly joining closer Liam Hendriks, right-handers Craig Kimbrel, Burr and Jose Ruiz and lefties Aaron Bummer and Garrett Crochet.

“I’m excited about not only the talent they signed, but the character, makeup, you can already get a feel there’s no egos,” Graveman said. “We just want to go out and pitch and get outs and ultimately win baseball games. I think that goes a long way as a team, especially when you have guys as established and as good as the here. That’s huge for us.”

Graveman has appeared in three Cactus League games, allowing no runs on no hits and a walk while striking out five.

A ground-ball pitcher with swing and miss stuff, he posted a 1.77 ERA, third best among AL relievers, with 61 strikeouts in 56 innings, between the Mariners and Astros.

“He’s everything we thought he’s be,” pitching coach Curt Hasler said. “Plus sink, plus breaking ball, uses both sides of the plate.”

Graveman is slated to pitch Friday against the Athletics and will pitch on back to back days for the first time this weekend as Opening Day draws nearer.

“What’s really impressive about him is his preparation, knowing himself and exactly what he wants to do, who he is and what his strengths are,” Hasler said.

“And he’s a really good dude, too. The other day in a B game he’s the batboy. He’s out there having fun, talking to everybody. He’s fitting right in.”

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Source: CWS’ Anderson has suspension reducedon March 31, 2022 at 9:05 pm

Chicago White Sox shortstop Tim Anderson will miss the first two games of the regular season after his three-game suspension, stemming from an incident at the end of the 2021 season, was reduced to two games, a source confirmed to ESPN.

During a bench clearing incident with the Detroit Tigers in late September, it was determined that Anderson, 28, made contact with umpire Tim Timmons. He was suspended for three games but appealed the decision, allowing him to finish the regular season and participate in the postseason.

His appeal was heard earlier this week where his suspension was reduced to two games. He’ll miss the White Sox games on April 8 and 9 in Detroit against the Tigers.

Anderson tweeted about the suspension on Thursday morning.

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Badgers’ Davis to enter NBA draft, hire agenton March 31, 2022 at 9:40 pm

Wisconsin sophomore guard Johnny Davis will enter the 2022 NBA draft and forgo his remaining college eligibility by hiring an agent, he told Malika Andrews on ESPN’s NBA Today on Thursday.

“After taking some time off and discussing everything with my family and coaches, I have decided to pursue a lifelong dream by declaring for the NBA draft with the intent of hiring an agent,” Davis said.

Davis, the No. 9 prospect in the ESPN 100, was named Big Ten Player of the Year and a consensus All-American after averaging 19.4 points, 8.4 rebounds and 2.1 assists in 34 minutes per game.

“This season was an unbelievable ride,” Davis said. “People didn’t expect us to have the season we had, but the players in our locker room and our coaching staff always knew we had the potential to be a special team.

“With so many great teams and players in our league, it was obviously a huge honor to win Big Ten Player of the Year, but winning the Big Ten regular-season title and playing in the NCAA tournament was so much sweeter. I would like to think NBA teams saw a player who is tough, who competes on both ends of the court every single possession and who will do whatever it takes to help my team win. Every time I step on the floor, I want to be the best player.”

Davis led Wisconsin to a Big Ten championship, which the Badgers shared with Illinois after losing at home to Nebraska in the final game of the regular season. The Badgers led by 10 points at halftime, but relinquished the lead when Davis went down with an untimely ankle injury, which continued to hamper him in the postseason.

“I wasn’t 100%, but I felt confident that If I played, we still had a great chance of winning the Big Ten Conference tournament as well as advancing in the NCAA tournament,” Davis said. “I wanted to be out there with my guys to give it everything I had.”

Davis is a finalist for some of the most prestigious postseason awards in college basketball, including the Wooden, Naismith and Lute Olson awards, all of which are presented annually to the top player in Division I men’s basketball.

Davis grew up in La Crosse, Wisconsin — 143 miles from Madison — and was named the state’s Mr. Basketball. He was also an all-star quarterback and played alongside twin brother Jordan, a wide receiver. Jordan Davis is a key reserve on the basketball team at Wisconsin.

Johnny Davis’ ascent from three-star high school recruit to arguably the best player in college basketball was remarkable. He was part of the USA Basketball team that won a gold medal at the FIBA U19 World Cup in Latvia this past summer, but few expected him to emerge as a potential top-10 pick just a few months later with the Badgers.

“Coach [Greg] Gard and my teammates believed in me and gave me the confidence and opportunity to have a much larger role than my freshman season,” Davis said. “Deep down I always knew I could be this caliber of player, but my success and experience with Team USA last summer took my confidence to another level and I just carried that into this season. I trust the work I have put in over the years, and I have been fortunate to work every day with arguably my toughest defender, my twin brother, Jordan, for as long as I can remember.

“I think NBA teams can learn that the path to the NBA is not the same for all players. I wasn’t highly ranked in high school, and I went to Wisconsin to change the narrative surrounding our program. My dad always told me that production will always trump potential and to keep my focus on playing hard and winning, and that has stayed with me.”

Drawing comparisons from NBA scouts to Jalen Suggs, the No. 5 pick in the 2021 draft, Davis has rebounding, defensive versatility and toughness that put him on NBA radars early on as Wisconsin defeated Houston to win the Maui Invitational in November, with Davis scoring 30 points in the final and winning MVP honors.

He continued to shoulder a heavy scoring load for the Badgers in Big Ten play, emerging as his team’s primary ball handler and one of the best pick-and-roll and midrange scorers in college basketball, while hitting 37 3-pointers and 155 free throws in 31 games.

“I know the pace and style of play in the NBA is different, but I think that suits my skill set extremely well,” Davis said. “My ability to get by my defender, athleticism and strength to finish at the rim, and being a three-level scorer combined with added spacing in the NBA will give me the opportunity to be successful.

“… My hope is to effectively fill whatever role is asked of me by my next team, which hopefully results in our team winning games. I ultimately want to be one of the reasons an NBA team becomes a championship organization.”

The NBA draft combine will be May 16-22 in Chicago, and the draft will be June 23 in Brooklyn, New York.

Jonathan Givony is an NBA draft expert and the founder and co-owner of DraftExpress.com, a private scouting and analytics service used by NBA, NCAA and international teams.

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White Sox’ Tim Anderson to start season with a two-game suspension

GLENDALE, Ariz. — The White Sox will be without All-Star shortstop Tim Anderson for the first two games of the season as he serves a two-game suspension for making contact with an umpire in a game in Detroit on Sept. 29.

Anderson noted the suspension, as well as a $10,000 fine, on his Twitter account Thursday.

“They gave me 2 game suspension and 10k fine …” Anderson tweeted.

Anderson has been told the suspension will be served over the first two games of the season.

Anderson was initially suspended three games and fined for his involvement during a bench-clearing incident in Detroit, sparked by Jose Abreu’s hard slide into second base and the Tigers taking exception to it. He bumped umpire Tim Timmons in the midst of a heated scrum and said at the time he didn’t know at first that the contact was with an umpire. Anderson said at the time that Timmons initiated the contact.

Anderson appealed the suspension, which applies to regular season games, and was expecting to serve at least one game. Major League Baseball has not announced the suspension.

Anderson is a .342/.381/.513 hitter in 92 career games against the Tigers. His 12 homers are the most against any team.

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Fantasy basketball streamers and NBA betting cheat sheet for Thursdayon March 31, 2022 at 6:26 pm

The ESPN fantasy and betting cheat sheet is your pregame destination for our best intel and data to help you make smart fantasy and wagering decisions. NBA game odds are provided by Caesars Sportsbook, and fantasy advice is based on ESPN 10-team leagues.

Jump ahead: Game of the night | Picks and props | Analytics edge

What you need to know for Thursday’s slate

By Jim McCormick and Kyle Soppe

Drum Beat: The Nets are beginning to get consistent play from Andre Drummond (44% available). Drummond ranks 12th in the league in rebounding chances over the past 10 games and has real upside for Brooklyn. Expect some high-percentage looks in pick-and-roll sets combined with heavy minutes in a matchup against a large Milwaukee lineup.

Lake Effect: Malik Monk (74% available) has averaged 24.7 points and 3.7 3-pointers over the past three games as the primary scoring option for the Lakers with LeBron James and Anthony Davis sidelined. James and Davis are both ruled out again ahead of tonight’s tilt against the Jazz and Monk is a strong candidate to flirt with 10 3-point attempts and a heavy usage rate for a depleted Los Angeles team.

Wing Men: Atlanta has endured some frontcourt woes with both John Collins and Danilo Gallinari injured. Collins won’t play against the Cavaliers, so if Gallinari can’t go, Bogdan Bogdanovic (26% available) and Kevin Huerter (85%) will be strong fantasy starters. Huerter has averaged 20.7 points to go with solid peripherals over the past week.

Detroit Depth: Isaiah Stewart (35% available) has made multiple 3-pointers in consecutive games for the first time in his career and has become a fun target at plus odds for hitting another tonight against the 76ers. Stewart ranks eighth in the NBA with 17.8 rebounding chances per game over the past 10 games, supporting value even as he faces Joel Embiid in the post. Marvin Bagley III (40%) struggled against Brooklyn earlier this week, but could thrive if he is matched up against Embiid’s exploitable backups.

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Punt Play: Isaiah Hartenstein is available in over 85% of leagues and checks in at just $5,100 on DraftKings tonight despite facing a below average rebounding team in the Bulls. Paul George‘s return got the headlines in Tuesday’s win, but Hartenstein quietly kept doing his thing and has averaged 14.7 points on 15-of-22 (68.1%) shooting over the past three games. The scoring bump is nice, but he has also averaged 6.0 rebounds and 5.0 assists per game over that stretch. There are plenty of appealing stars on tonight’s slate and if you want to build around two of them, Hartenstein is a savvy place to find salary relief.

Super Punt Play: It’s pretty clear that the Cavaliers believe in going big consistently and with Evan Mobley out for at least three games, Moses Brown becomes an interesting option. He posted 12 points and 9 rebounds in 21 minutes last night against the Mavericks so we know there is some upside to chase here. He also averaged 9.4 PPG and 10.3 PPG last May with the Thunder. Brown gets a below average rebounding Hawks team tonight that has allowed an average of 236.1 total points scored on them over their past 10 games. If you play your cards right and on a short slate there are reasonable DFS roster builds with both Giannis Antetokounmpo and Kevin Durant if you believe in that game is going to be special.

Game of the Night

Milwaukee Bucks at Brooklyn Nets
7:30 p.m. ET, Barclays Center, Brooklyn, NY

Line: Nets (-2.0)
Moneyline: Nets (-120), Bucks (+100)
Total: 243 points
BPI Projected Total: 235.5 points
BPI Win%: Nets (50.5%)

Key players ruled out: none

Notable: Overs are 8-4 in Milwaukee’s past 12 road games.

Best bet: Bucks +2.0 points. The Bucks are peaking as they prepare for the postseason, having won 10 of the past 12 games (+7.0 scoring margin) with Giannis Antetokounmpo against a bevy of playoffs-caliber teams. The Nets have been solid, but are seemingly working through some growing pains with Kyrie Irving playing full-time again. The Nets have gone 2-2 (+0.3 scoring margin) in their past four games with Irving, and have failed to cover in three of those four games. — Andre Snellings

Fantasy streamer: Brook Lopez. Lopez’s workload continues to increase. He has averaged 12.5 PPG, 4.3 RPG, 1.0 APG, and 1.0 BPG in 25.7 MPG over his last four games. With the Nets still struggling to defend consistently, Lopez (59% available) should put up solid numbers. — Eric Moody

Breaking down the rest of the slate

Philadelphia 76ers at Detroit Pistons
7 p.m. ET, Little Caesars Arena, Detroit, MI

Line: 76ers (-10.5)
Moneyline: 76ers (-550), Pistons (+400)
Total: 223 points
BPI Projected Total: 219.5 points
BPI Win%: 76ers (70.5%)

Key players ruled out: none

Notable: Less is more? The Pistons are 7-1-1 ATS in their past nine games that have gone under the total.

Fantasy Streamer: Killian Hayes. Hayes has played very well over the past five games. He has averaged 11 PPG, 6.0 RPG, 4.0 APG, 2.0 SPG and 1.0 BPG. Due to his back injury, Cory Joseph is questionable and considering the Piston’s record, he may not play. Regardless, Hayes makes sense as a streaming option. — Moody

Best bet: Pistons +10.5 points. The Pistons have been a covering machine since the All-Star break, going 15-2-2 ATS during that stretch. They’re getting 10.5 points, at home, against a 76ers squad that has been decidedly average for the past month. Philadelphia sports a 7-6 record with a +0.1 scoring margin over their past 13 games. — Snellings

Best bet: Joel Embiid over 42.5 points + rebounds. Embiid has averaged 28 PPG and 11 RPG in 12 games against the Pistons in his career. He posted 40th double-double on Tuesday against the Bucks and the Pistons rank 22nd in points allowed per 100 possessions and 28th in offensive rebounds allowed. — Moody

Cleveland Cavaliers at Atlanta Hawks

7:30 p.m. ET, State Farm Arena, Atlanta, GA

Line: Hawks (-5)
Moneyline: Hawks (-230), Cavaliers (+190)
Total: 222.5 points
BPI Projected Total: 228 points
BPI Win%: Hawks (73.5%)

Key players ruled out: Evan Mobley, Jarrett Allen

Notable: The Cavaliers are 0-6-1 ATS in their past seven games on the second night of a back-to-back: they hosted the Mavericks last night.

Fantasy Streamer: Lamar Stevens. Stevens (99.0% available) is a deep sleeper for the Cavaliers. He has been productive over the past couple weeks and has averaged 13.7 PPG, 4.3 RPG, 0.7 3PG and 0.7 SPG in over his past six games. While he has been coming off the bench for the last four games after starting the previous five, with Jarrett Allen and Evan Mobley out he’s will get consistent minutes and opportunities. — Snellings

Fantasy streamer: Moses Brown. Evan Mobley is out with an ankle injury for the next two to three games, so Brown started on Wednesday night against the Mavericks. He finished with 12 points and nine rebounds in 21 minutes. As a streamer, Brown is someone to consider in deeper formats. He is available in 98% of ESPN leagues. — Moody

Best bet: De’Andre Hunter over 14.5 points. Hunter had 18 points against the Thunder and has averaged 12 free throws and 15 points over his past nine games. He’s scored 16.4 PPG in his five career games against the Cavaliers. — Moody

LA Clippers at Chicago Bulls
8 p.m. ET, United Center, Chicago, IL

Line: Bulls (-3.5)
Moneyline: Bulls (-170), Clippers (+145)
Total: 222.5 points
BPI Projected Total: 216 points
BPI Win%: Clippers (52.7%)

Key players ruled out: none

Notable: After nine of 12 games went under the total, each of the Clippers’ past three games have gone over.

Best bet: Clippers +3.5 points. The Clippers are an entirely different team with Paul George in the lineup, as they demonstrated in his return on Tuesday with their huge comeback win over the Jazz. Meanwhile, the Bulls have struggled for more than a month, having lost 11 of their last 16 games with a -6.3 average scoring margin in that stretch. — Snellings

Best bet: Nikola Vucevic over 32.5 points + assists + rebounds. Vucevic has averaged 19 PPG, 9.0 RPG, 3.0 APG, 1.5 SPG, and 1.0 BPG over the past four games. He had a usage rate of 29% on Tuesday night against the Wizards. Billy Donovan recently mentioned publicly that the Bulls should involve him more. Centers have averaged 24.6 PPG, 16 RPG, and 3.6 APG against the Clippers this season. — Moody

Los Angeles Lakers at Utah Jazz

10 p.m. ET, Vivint Smart Home Arena, Salt Lake City, UT

Line: Jazz (-12.5)
Moneyline: Jazz (-700), Lakers (+475)
Total: 225.5 points
BPI Projected Total: 226 points
BPI Win%: Jazz (83.7%)

Key players ruled out: LeBron James, Anthony Davis

Notable: The Lakers’ struggles have been well documented, but how about the Jazz having failed to cover each of their past five games?

Fantasy streamer: Malik Monk. Monk (70% available) has been one of the best offensive players for the Lakers as of late. He has averaged 24.7 PPG, 1.7 RPG, 3.7 APG, and 1.0 SPG in 31 minutes over the past three games. With LeBron James and Anthony Davis, Monk will continue to be heavily utilized. — Moody

Analytics Edge

BPI highest projected totals

1. Utah Jazz (118.6 points)
2. Atlanta Hawks (117.8 points)
3. Brooklyn Nets (117.7 points)

BPI lowest projected totals

1. Detroit Pistons (106.9 points)
2. Chicago Bulls (107.6 points)
3. Los Angeles Lakers (107.7 points)

BPI top probability to win (straight up)

1. Utah Jazz (83.7%)
2. Atlanta Hawks (73.5%)
3. Philadelphia 76ers (70.5%)

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Brittney Griner’s USA Basketball teammates end silence

MINNEAPOLIS — Two of Brittney Griner’s USA Basketball teammates have broken their silence on the star player’s imprisonment in Russia.

Most WNBA players have been hesitant to talk about Griner’s detention on apparent drug charges in Russia, hoping to avoid potentially hurting her case.

“People are saying she’s 6-foot-9, she’s different. It’s really not about that,” said USA Basketball player Angel McCoughtry on Wednesday at the team’s training camp in Minneapolis. “It could have been any of us.”

Players have been keeping discussions about how to best help Griner within their community. WNBA players have been very cohesive in the past when rallying behind issues such as voter registration or the Black Lives Matters movement.

For the first few weeks following Griner’s detention, it was decided that it was clearly better for them to say less.

The Phoenix Mercury star was detained after arriving at a Moscow airport in mid-February. Russian authorities said a search of her luggage revealed vape cartridges that allegedly contained oil derived from cannabis, which could carry a maximum penalty of 10 years in prison. Griner was returning to the country after the Russian League was taking a break for the FIBA World Cup qualifying tournament.

“The big thing is the fact that we have to go over there. It was BG, but it could have been anybody,” said Breanna Stewart, who earns over $1 million to play in Russia. “WNBA players need to be valued in their country and they won’t have to play overseas.”

Besides offering support for Griner, Stewart also wanted to help a charity that the Mercury’s All-Star has been involved with — The Phoenix Rescue Mission — for a long time.

“While BG is away I wanted to support her and her charitable efforts and do what I can from an off-the-court standpoint to help her and her family,” Stewart said.

Russia has been a popular destination for WNBA players like Stewart, McCoughtry and Griner over the past two decades because of the money they can make playing there in the winter.

The WNBA has made strides to increase player salaries and find other ways to compensate players in the last collective bargaining agreement, which was ratified in 2020. The contract, which runs through 2027, pays players an average of $130,000, with the top stars able to earn more than $500,000 through salary, marketing agreements, an in-season tournament and bonuses.

The CBA also provides full salaries while players are on maternity leave, enhanced family benefits, travel standards and other health and wellness improvements.

The legal team for the two-time Olympic gold-medalist has been quietly seeking Griner’s release and has declined to speak out about the case since her arrest was made public.

Of the thousands of U.S. citizens arrested and jailed in prisons abroad, a small subset are designated by the U.S. government as wrongfully detained — a category that affords their cases an extra level of government attention and places them under the auspices of the Special Presidential Envoy for Hostage Affairs at the State Department. The U.S. government has not yet put Griner’s case in that category.

Griner is not the only American detained in Russia. Marine veteran Trevor Reed was sentenced to nine years in prison in 2020 on charges alleging that he assaulted police officers in Moscow. And Michigan corporate security executive Paul Whelan is serving a 16-year sentence on espionage charges that his family and the U.S. government have said are false. U.S. officials have publicly called for Moscow to release them.

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Police exchange gunfire with suspect who then barricaded himself inside Pullman house

Police exchanged gunfire with a suspect who then barricaded himself inside a Pullman home on the Far South Side, according to Chicago police.

No one was hit by gunfire but an officer suffered a minor cut to the right hand, police said.

Officers had been responding to a call of shots fired and tried to curb a car about 1:20 a.m. Thursday in the 900 block of East 104th Street, police said. Two people ran from the car and one was immediately placed into custody.

Officers were chasing the second suspect on foot when he shot toward officers, officials said. He then barricaded himself inside a home as a SWAT team was called to the scene, police said.

Police took the suspect into custody without incident, officials said. No charges have been announced.

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The tall and the short of it: What’s fueling the new NBA DPOY debateon March 31, 2022 at 12:52 pm

Boston Celtics guard Marcus Smart, the leading defender on the NBA’s leading defense, believes he is the Defensive Player of the Year. So, too, does Mikal Bridges, the Phoenix Suns‘ fourth-year wing and the franchise’s top NBA All-Defensive candidate.

But, based on the award’s history, it’s unlikely either of the league’s premier defensive stoppers will win it.

In the 39 times the Defensive Player of the Year has been awarded since its inception during the 1982-83 season, one point guard has won it: Hall of Famer Gary Payton, in 1996, behind a league-leading 2.9 steals per game.

Shooting guards have won it another five times, but none since Michael Jordan in 1988, as that position claimed the award five of the first six years it was handed out.

Centers have won the award a whopping 25 times, while three power forwards who patrol the paint — Kevin Garnett, Giannis Antetokounmpo and Draymond Green — have claimed the honor. Small forward Kawhi Leonard won the award in 2015 and 2016, but he and Ron Artest in 2004 are the only non-big men to win the award in the last 25 years.

Those statistics don’t sit well for a player such as Smart, who feels the league, instead of honoring the best defensive player, rewards the best kind of defensive player.

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“I’m not taking anything from the bigs,” Smart told ESPN. “A vital part of the game is protecting the paint. But, as guards, we do a lot more before [our man] gets to the paint. … Contesting the 3, contesting pullups, making sure he doesn’t get to his spots.”

Smart is one of several contenders for this year’s award. And while Bridges is also getting consideration, most of the choices — as is the case every year — are big men, from Antetokounmpo to Utah Jazz center Rudy Gobert to Memphis Grizzlies forward Jaren Jackson Jr. to Miami Heat center Bam Adebayo, to name a few.

All of that presents a couple of questions: Can perimeter players win Defensive Player of the Year in today’s NBA? And, more importantly, should they?

‘The most important position on the floor’

Gobert had just folded his 7-foot-1 frame into a courtside seat inside Boston’s TD Garden when his favorite topic of conversation came up.

Gobert has won Defensive Player of the Year three times in the past four seasons and, if he wins his fourth it will put him in a tie with Hall of Famers Dikembe Mutombo and Ben Wallace for the most all-time. So, naturally, his ears perked up when he was asked whether guards should be considered for the league’s most prestigious defensive honor.

“I think small ball impacts who has the most impact on their team,” Gobert said before his Jazz faced the Celtics on March 23.

“There’s a lot of very good guards, very good defensive guards. … It can be hard, sometimes, for people to understand, but when I come into the game, I’m worried about the team. I think sometimes we get too focused on the individual matchup.”

Another big man who has talked about his desire to win Defensive Player of the Year, Philadelphia 76ersJoel Embiid, offered a similar argument.

“[Centers] call out all the coverages. They know what is going on. They call out the plays and stuff. That is the way it has always been,” Embiid said last week. “That’s why most of the Defensive Players of the Year in the past have always been big.”

Rudy Gobert is vying for his NBA record-tying fourth Defensive Player of the Year award. Jeffrey Swinger-USA TODAY Sports

Teams with elite centers, such as Utah and Philadelphia, do funnel players toward their players in the middle. And having an effective deterrent at the rim is vital in a team’s ability to stop its opponents.

The stats back that up. According to ESPN Stats & Information research and Second Spectrum tracking, 139 players have contested at least 500 shots as the closest defender this season. Among that group, Gobert ranks second in effective field goal percentage allowed, behind Celtics center Robert Williams III, who will miss at least four weeks after surgery to repair a torn meniscus.

Gobert also ranks second in field goal percentage allowed at the rim among players to defend at least 200 shots, and opponents take 19.2% of their shots in the restricted area when Gobert is on the floor, the lowest rate in the league. When he’s on the bench, that rate jumps up to 24.3%, which would rank 19th.

Embiid, meanwhile, has been the help defender on 20.8 drives per game this season, per ESPN Stats & Information and Second Spectrum, the most in the NBA; a big part of why he thinks the center is the hub of the defense.

“That is the most important position on the floor, on defense,” Embiid said. “Because you see the whole floor.”

‘They’ll give somebody’s ass 40’

Perimeter players like Smart and Bridges have an ace up their sleeves in the Defensive Player of the Year debate: Centers aren’t chasing the NBA’s best scorers around the court.

It isn’t Gobert who is checking the Dallas MavericksLuka Doncic or the Golden State WarriorsStephen Curry, the greatest 3-point shooter of all time, for 30 or 40 minutes. That responsibility primarily falls to stoppers like Smart and Bridges.

In their minds, that’s just as important as patrolling the paint.

2022 Defensive Player of the Year odds

“You just got to give more love and more recognition to on-ball defense,” Bridges said. “Guarding these tough guys like [James] Harden, [Kevin Durant], Kyrie [Irving], Steph, Luka, the list goes on.

“[Award voters] must not know how difficult it is to keep a guy in front of you and not be able to really touch him as much because they’re going to call foul, and just how talented these guards and everybody else on the wing and perimeter are.”

Bridges would know. He spends as much time guarding the elite wing players as anyone.

Bridges ranks in the league’s top five in half-court matchups on defense against 2022 All-Stars, per ESPN Stats & Information, and he also ranks in the top five in player points allowed per 100 matchups among 41 players to record 500 defensive matchups.

“You got to give [the defender] credit as much as you credit them when they’ll give somebody’s ass 40 — because they could do that every night,” Bridges said.

‘Rudy can’t guard all five spots’

When Smart was informed of Gobert’s pro-big man argument, the 28-year-old who has made the All-Defensive First Team in 2019 and 2020 and has been open about his desire to be considered the league’s top defensive player, immediately countered.

For Smart, the NBA’s best defender needs to have versatility.

“Let’s think about it,” Smart said. “As a guard, especially on the team that switches a lot, especially on the No. 1 defensive team, you are worried about every single player. And here’s the thing: When you see Defensive Player of the Year, that means he can guard all five spots.

“Nothing against Rudy, but Rudy can’t guard all five spots. I can guard all five spots and I have been doing it. I’ve done it very well.”

Can Marcus Smart become the first point guard to win Defensive Player of the Year since 1996? David Butler II-USA TODAY Sports

Per ESPN Stats & Information, Smart has switched 409 times as the ballhandler defender against on-ball screens this season, the third most in the NBA. On those plays, the Celtics have allowed 0.87 points per chance on these plays — well below the league average of 0.94 points per chance.

“Look at what he’s been doing since I’ve been in the league,” Williams said of Smart last week. “Played with him my whole career in the league. My energy, I base it off of his defensive presence. When I see him attack the other team, I wanna follow that. I wanna follow that routine.

“So he’s got my vote, 100 percent.”

Smart also received praise from Jazz coach Quin Snyder when presented with the question of whether a perimeter is capable of winning the award.

Snyder, who knows the impact Gobert has on a team and has helmed a Utah team built around the Frenchman’s singular strengths — including having a roster full of offense-first players and leaning into Gobert’s ability to clean up the ensuing mistakes as a result — said the award should be given to who impacts the game “most consistently and effectively.”

And he said a player like Smart, while seven inches shorter and nearly 40 pounds lighter than Gobert, is more than capable of impacting the game in a similar way.

Wednesday, March 30
Heat at Celtics, 7:30 p.m.
Suns at Warriors, 10 p.m.

Sunday, April 3
Mavs at Bucks, 1 p.m. (ABC)
Nuggets at Lakers, 3:30 p.m. (ABC)

All times Eastern

“You look at [Smart’s] strength, his size, his quickness,” Snyder said last week. “He’s not a shot-blocker, but in some kind of ironic way, he’s able to do things off the ball that are equivalent because he’s a deterrent.

“It’s almost like [Los Angeles Rams cornerback Jalen] Ramsey in the Super Bowl. You don’t want to throw to that side of the field. … So his versatility is really what makes him unique.”

Ultimately, whether Smart, Bridges or another perimeter player snaps the center and power forward stranglehold on the Defensive Player of the Year award, or Gobert or another big carries on the tradition, it won’t change the fundamental disagreement on both sides.

“As a big,” Gobert said, “you can impact multiple players at a time. As a guard, it’s harder to do that.”

Said Smart: “I mean, if we’re looking at just simple impact, [perimeter players] definitely should be in any kind of conversation when it comes to that award.”

ESPN’s Ohm Youngmisuk contributed to this story.

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The tall and the short of it: What’s fueling the new NBA DPOY debateon March 31, 2022 at 12:52 pm Read More »

Police exchange gunfire with suspect who then barricaded himself inside Pullman house

A SWAT team responded to a scene Thursday morning after officers were involved in a shootout with a suspect who then barricaded themselves inside a Pullman home on the Far South Side, according to Chicago police.

Officers exchanged gunfire with a suspect about 1:20 a.m. in the 900 block of East 104th Street, police said. The suspect then barricaded himself inside a home as SWAT was called to the scene police said.

No officers were struck by gunfire, officials said.

No other details were immediately available.

This is a developing story, check back for details.

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Pels’ McCollum feels love in return to Portlandon March 31, 2022 at 12:48 am

PORTLAND, Ore. — For the first time in his career, CJ McCollum knows what the opposing locker room inside the Moda Center looks like.

McCollum was a member of the Portland Trail Blazers for the first 8 1/2 seasons he was in the NBA. After being dealt at the deadline, he’s now a member of the New Orleans Pelicans and with his new team in town to face his old one, things were a little different Wednesday morning.

“It’s weird, man,” McCollum said of being in Portland as a visitor. “Some of the setting in which you operate is just unique. … It’s a part of the game. I’m looking forward to getting to the game tonight.”

McCollum said he was able to sleep in his own bed last night. Although his wife, Elise, and his young son were in New Orleans last week, it was the first time he was able to see his dog since the trade.

It was all a touch of home, even though he’s about to try and defeat his former squad. And that squad will look a little different with former teammates like Damian Lillard and Jusuf Nurkic out for the game.

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“Yeah, not as fun,” McCollum said about not having to face those guys. “Won’t be as fun. They’ll be back eventually though.”

Since the trade, McCollum has thrived in his role as lead guard with the Pelicans. In 19 games, McCollum is averaging 25.9 points, 6.5 assists and 4.9 rebounds — all of which would be career highs if they were over the course of the season.

McCollum said the situation in New Orleans is “exactly how I thought it would be.”

“It was a team I kind of zeroed in on and they obviously zeroed in on me,” McCollum said. “I knew what I signed up for and what I was going to be asked to do, and I’m doing it. They held up their end of the bargain as well. I’m happy to be in this situation.”

McCollum said he’s looking at Wednesday’s game as the “final closure” for the this chapter. He said while he had some closure when he first left after talking with teammates, tonight will help.

“I had conversations and was able to talk to some of my teammates and obviously I still talk to them to this day,” McCollum said. “I talked with the staff. It’ll be good to see Chauncey, talk about our teams. Talk about our football teams. Just kind of catch up and get back to business. Get the win and get outta here.

“This is the final step. You know this is going to happen at some point. But it’s good that it’s happy emotions opposed to the opposite. I like to call it a happy breakup. One where you’re not bitter at your ex.”

The game comes at an important time for New Orleans, which is battling with the San Antonio Spurs and the Los Angeles Lakers in the play-in race in the West.

The Pelicans are one game up on both teams and in ninth place. New Orleans has the eighth-easiest schedule over the last seven games, including two against fading Portland and one against the Lakers on Friday in Los Angeles.

The Lakers have the third-hardest schedule and the Spurs have the fifth-hardest schedule over their last seven games.

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