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Scottie Pippen and Scotty Pippen Jr. become first father-son duo in NBA play-by-play era to record triple-doubles

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Parents and children have been a prominent part of the recent NBA history. The 2024-25 season began with LeBron James and Bronny James becoming the First father-son duo in league history. play in the same game, and second-generation players are becoming more prevalent in the NBA as a whole. There are 29 of them total in the league right now, and one of them just joined his dad to make a little history.

Scotty Pippen Jr., the much less publicized son of Hall of Famer Scottie Pippen, had 11 points, 11 assists and 10 rebounds for the Memphis Grizzlies in a 128-104 victory over the Washington Wizards on Friday. That gave him the first triple-double of his young NBA career. His father, a six-time champion with the Chicago Bulls, had 17 triple-doubles in his Hall of Fame career. Some helpful research revealed that this makes them the first father-son duo in the NBA’s play-by-play era, which began in 1996-97, to each record triple-doubles.

The first father-son triple-double duo in NBA history was Dolph and Danny Schayes. Hall of Famer Major Dolph Schayes recorded three triple-doubles in his career (1951, 1957 and 1960), according to basketball reference. His son, Danny Schayes, filled out the stat sheet on December 22, 1982, while playing for the Utah Jazz.

So why have there only been two father-son NBA duos who achieved triple-doubles? Well, remember, most of the most famous basketball families are largely based around a single star. Kobe Bryant had 21 triple-doubles in the NBA, for example, but his father, Joe “Jellybean” Bryant, never had one. It’s a similar story for Stephen Curry, who is 10, and his father Dell, who has none. In an ironic case, it is the least famous member of the family who has the triple-doubles. Mychal Thompson has two triple-doubles, for example, but Klay Thompson has yet to record one.

The obvious group that you would think would have had career triple-doubles would be Domantas and Aryvdas Sabonis. Domantas is an All-Star with the Sacramento Kings and Arvydas is a Hall of Famer, and both are known for their passing acumen despite playing center. The problem was that the eldest Sabonis did not reach the NBA until he was 31 years old and had to deal with several injuries. The elder Sabonis never reached 10 assists in a game, but he also played 30 minutes per game in only one of his seven NBA seasons.

It’s still quite surprising that the Pippens were only the second family to finally get there. The younger Pippen went undrafted in 2022, and after a stint as a two-way player for the Los Angeles Lakers that didn’t lead to a full-time NBA contract, his long-term career prospects weren’t especially bright. But he took notice of the injury-plagued Grizzlies a year ago and took advantage of all the playing time they could offer. Since then, he has emerged as a viable option on both ends of the floor, defending very well for his size while becoming a solid backup point guard on offense.

While the Pippens have joined this exclusive club, it probably won’t be long before other NBA families join them. One of the best prospects for 2026 NBA Draft is Cameron Boozer, son of former All-Star Carlos Boozer, who had the only triple-double in his career. One day, the Boozers will likely join the Pippens, and at the rate that second-generation players are arriving in the NBA today, more will almost certainly follow.

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How NFL scout Mark Dulgerian scours four continents for talent

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When Mark Dulgerian arrived in Munich, Germany, in June 2023, he needed to find a park.

The NFL’s lone international scout was in town to try out a German rugby player for the NFL’s International Pathway Program. As he did for all of his workouts, Dulgerian preferred to use a flat, grassy area to conduct a series of drills that would decide the player’s next steps.

Dulgerian had a problem, though: He had never been to Germany.

He scrolled through Google Maps, hoping to find a grassy area, preferably a soccer field. He quickly realized there were too many to choose from but settled on what looked on his screen like a swath of grass that he hoped would be suitable to put a player through a two-hour tryout. Unbeknownst to Dulgerian, the park he picked turned out to be the English Garden, Germany’s version of Central Park.

For the next two hours, the smell of hops wafted over Dulgerian and the athlete as festive revelers gathered to watch the workout.

“It’s like, I’m in a beer garden and this guy could be playing for the New England Patriots in eight months,” Dulgerian said with a chuckle. “It’s crazy. It’s crazy to think that it’s his opportunity. As he’s going drill to drill with German music in the background, this could be his opportunity to make his first stamp of his journey in the NFL.”

This is Dulgerian’s life as he navigates four continents looking for international talent. He also identifies talent in Australia but isn’t on the ground to conduct tryouts in person.

While most scouts are confined to a region of the United States and evaluate athletes who have been playing football since they were in grade school, Dulgerian’s job is a bit different. His territory is Europe, Asia, South and Central America and the Caribbean. Former New York Giants star Osi Umenyiora leads the league’s efforts in Africa, while the NFL’s Australia office tries out prospective players on that continent.

For Dulgerian, he’s mostly evaluating athletes from other sports who he believes have the potential to play football.

Of the 14 players currently on NFL rosters whom Dulgerian scouted in the past two years as a part of the IPP, 13 are on practice squads. Offensive lineman Travis Clayton, who played rugby union in England, was drafted by the Buffalo Bills in the seventh round of the 2024 draft.

Wide receiver Praise Olatoke is one of the players, and his team, the Carolina Panthers, is set to take on the Giants on Sunday (9:30 a.m. ET, NFL Network) in Munich in the NFL’s final international game of the season.

Dulgerian’s role in a player’s journey is small but crucial: finding a prospect and making the initial evaluation. He’s usually the first or second point of contact for international players before they advance to the IPP, a program established in 2017 to discover, train and integrate athletes from around the world into American football and the NFL. For the first time this year, the NFL has expanded practice squads to include a 17th spot specifically reserved for international players.

If players advance to the IPP, Dulgerian hands them off to those in charge of that program, leaving him as a small steppingstone along their football journeys.

Through it all, Dulgerian has become a road warrior. He doesn’t check a bag. The most time zones he has had a meal in over a 24-hour span is five. He tries to do a lot of yoga, stay hydrated and take Airborne to preemptively ward off illnesses that could derail his marathon trips.

“He’s uniquely mastered the art of being everywhere at the same time,” said Kris Durham, the head of football at the NFL Academy who has worked closely with Dulgerian for the past few years. “He’s developed a real niche in terms of identifying talent in the world that doesn’t play our sport. It takes a special eye to really understand what teams are looking for, what we’re looking for and how … they relate to our sport.”


FROM THE TIME he started in 2022, Dulgerian has been on the road from August to October, conducting in-person tryouts for players he thinks might have a chance to be invited to the IPP. If chosen, they could receive a spot at the international combine, which could lead to a place in the intense, immersive 10-week program at IMG Academy in Florida. This past year, five specialists — punters and kickers — from the IPP participated in the NFL scouting combine in Indianapolis, the first time the program sent any prospects to the combine.

“We’re trying to present an opportunity that not a lot of people know about,” Dulgerian said. “And we’re trying to connect this opportunity with athletes who qualify, but athletes who have always wanted this opportunity and just never knew how to do it.”

Before Dulgerian took the first flight of his busy season, he estimated he put in about 1,000 hours of research from February to July, collecting data and watching countless hours of film, usually on social media.

He scours databases and rosters of sports he knows such as basketball, and others he’s figuring out the nuances of, such as rugby. Dulgerian also has looked at Gaelic football — which he described as a mix of rugby, basketball and soccer — and Australian rules football — a modified version of rugby.

The result was an initial list of 10,000 prospects this cycle. Of those, 6,000 were found through Dulgerian’s own research.

Dulgerian finds prospects from all athletic fields. When the Olympics were on TV, he watched for fun and work. It resulted in Dulgerian reaching out to athletes in rugby, handball, basketball and track and field. A few of those track and field athletes tried out at the NFL’s International Combine, which took place Oct. 9-12 at the NFL Academy at Loughborough University, north of London. Dulgerian said most of the Olympians he has talked with have been receptive to trying football but have told him the timing has to be right.

The other 4,000 on Dulgerian’s list are found through his network of around 1,000 agents, coaches and trainers around the world, as well as from tips.

As Dulgerian trims his list, his initial criteria are age and size: 20- to 24-year-olds who are at least 6-foot-4. This year, there were only about 900 players, about his annual average, who fit both categories.

“He’s living in a different mind space,” said Eric Galko, who hired Dulgerian as one of the first employees at his scouting company, Optimum Scouting, in 2008. “To be able to handle how you translate what he’s watching to an NFL player and seeing that it may be three, four, five years down the line or three, four months down the line depending on his evaluation, too. It’s probably a really complex thought process, for sure.”

Once he breaks down film on his pool of athletes, Dulgerian reduces his list to 160-200 athletes and contacts them.

Most of Dulgerian’s contact with potential prospects comes from his IPP-specific Instagram account. The messages are general in nature: “Would you be interested in football?”

More times than not, he won’t get a response. At first, he was baffled.

“It’s egotistical to think that everybody would just drop what they’re doing because ‘Oh, shoot the NFL’s here now,'” Dulgerian said. “They eventually do need to fall in love with the sport, but to think that as soon as we start those conversations that they’re in love with it already, it’s stupid. It’s not been a part of their life like it has been here.”

There are other roadblocks, such as language barriers and being under contract in another sport.

Last year, of the prospects he contacted, Dulgerian worked out 30-40. Of those, 13 were invited to the international combine.

“Mark’s role within that, sort of being from the very, very top of the funnel on down throughout the rest of the process, is just instrumental because you got to start somewhere and you got to cast that broad net,” said Pat Long, director of international football development at the NFL. “You got to canvass the globe truly and literally.”


BACK IN AUGUST, Dulgerian called Durham from hot and humid Jamaica to say he had found a potential prospect.

“I was like, ‘What are you doing in Jamaica?'” Durham recalled.

“I was like, ‘Is he a sprinter?’ He’s like, ‘No, he’s actually a thrower.’ And I was like, ‘Wait, what?’ So I was like, Mark is really turning over every rock.”

His trip to Jamaica was “eye-opening,” Dulgerian said. He felt a formidable buzz on the island about the NFL being in town to scout, which locals looked at as another path for athletes in addition to track and field.

Most of his trips produce a story. Jamaica was no different. He wrote his scouting report in a sweltering non-air-conditioned airport as a hurricane was approaching. It was a drastic contrast to the time he wrote a report on a rooftop in Paris with the Arc de Triomphe in the background.

There was the time he needed to measure the height of a rugby player he was trying out while staying at a small hotel attached to an Irish pub in a “really small town” in northern Europe. Dulgerian has learned not to rely on basic measurements given to him by athletes or teams. They tend to be skewed, which is why he carries his own measuring tape.

He looked around the quiet lobby of his hotel and decided he couldn’t do it there, so he measured the athlete in the hallway next to his room by taping a piece of paper from the notepad in his room onto the hallway wall as patrons of the Irish pub passed by. The 5-foot-10 Dulgerian needed to drag the sofa from his room into the hallway so he could stand on it and get the right measurements. And the guy was “tall, tall,” Dulgerian remembered.

“It’s not ideal,” Dulgerian said with a laugh. “The freaking NFL, a billion-dollar industry, and I’m taking this guy’s height right outside my hotel room door.

“That was a little awkward. It’s a lot of just kind of figuring out ways to do things.”

For some prospects like Carolina’s Olatoke, Dulgerian serves as their guide to the NFL. Olatoke’s path was more unconventional than most. He was a sprinter in Scotland but played club football at Ohio State after transferring there from Trinity Western University in Canada to run track. Then, Dulgerian helped him on his path to the NFL, checking in on him periodically, asking for video updates and encouraging him throughout.

Dulgerian’s workout of Olatoke included “a lot” of football drills, catching and running. Dulgerian put him through a mock combine, according to Olatoke.

“He’s been good,” Olatoke said. “He supports me, like reposts stuff I post about football and this and that. I know he’s doing a lot trying to grow the game.”

The NFL’s growth around the world in both popularity and participation has also helped Dulgerian do his job. There are 74 countries with football federations across North America, South America, Central America, Africa, Asia and Oceania, according to the International Federation of American Football.

In two years, he’ll have taken nine scouting trips that have taken him from his home base of Los Angeles to Austria, France, Finland, Jamaica, Estonia and the Netherlands, usually with multiple stops in each country. His longest itinerary this year was Los Angeles to Paris to London to Tallinn, Estonia, to Amsterdam to Dusseldorf, Germany, to Munich and back to Los Angeles.

This year he’ll spend 24 nights in a hotel, fly on 18 airplanes and take seven trains, plus too many cabs and rideshares to count.

“We want to invest our resources and our time in guys that have a legitimate NFL chance and a legitimate NFL shot,” Dulgerian said. “So, each year we’re trying to do better and better to really get the right guys in the selection process but also do our due diligence just in case maybe there’s something we didn’t see just on the film.”





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Why Brentford is the most entertaining place to watch football in England

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Former Arsenal defender Martin Keown said: “In their last three home games, it’s incredible. They’ve scored 12 goals and conceded eight, but it doesn’t matter if they keep winning at home. That’s the beauty of this team.”

Former Manchester City defender Nedum Onuoha added: “They remind me of Brighton at the start of last season in the sense that every time they played it seemed like it was a high-scoring game.”

“For Brentford at home, they have those comforts. It’s a pleasure to see them.”

Speaking to Match of the Day, Frank said: “It’s a big announcement for us and also for the Premier League in general. “It was an open game, both teams wanted to attack and move forward… and we’re so dangerous in the future.”

The Bees are yet to keep a clean sheet in the Premier League this season and, when asked if he would prefer to win 5-4 or 1-0, Frank said: “I need to say 5-4 because I want to score a lot of goals.” goals, be positive and offensive.

“I would love to have a clean sheet at some point in the season, but we are up against good teams and if you want to be offensive, sometimes you open yourself up at the other end.” [in defence]”.

Speaking to Sky Sports, the Dane added: “Sometimes I think, why do we do this? But of course we make it very entertaining for the fans. We feel good at home. It’s a strength and we have to keep building.”



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Russell Martin: Southampton manager defiant as Saints lose again

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“I hope to talk to you in two weeks. If not, we’ll see.”

Southampton manager Russell Martin was philosophical on Saturday after watching his team beaten by Gary O’Neil’s Wolves to leave the Saints bottom of the Premier League with nine defeats in 11 games.

The coach briefly responded to a question about his future after the match, which some had anticipated as a boss battle under pressure.

That record has put Martin in the spotlight for both his style and results this season, especially heading into the November international break.

“It will be what it will be. We work as hard as we can, we give all the care, love and commitment we can to the players. The rest is out of my control. I don’t worry or focus on it,” he added in his training session. post-match press at Molineux.

The experience of Rasmus Ankersen, co-founder and chief executive of Sport Republic, owners of the Saints, means he remains patient and strategic.

His time at Brentford as co-director of football (helping to oversee the Bees’ rise and promotion to the Premier League) has given him insights into how to build a sustainable model and a successful team.

The owners also remain visible at the Saints’ training ground in Staplewood, and rarely a week goes by without them being present.

That gives Martin support, for now, and potentially more time. Despite winning just one of their first 11 games, Southampton are neither drastically underperforming nor far behind where they were expected to be.

The preseason survival goal (finishing 17th) as well as shaping the team and generating value from it is still very much achievable.

This is recognized at St Mary’s and the challenges we face this season are understood.

That will become a factor in any long-term thinking, especially as the defeat in the Midlands on Saturday was not without frustration and controversy after Ryan Manning’s equalizer was ruled out. But Southampton failed to build on last weekend’s 1-0 win over Everton, their first Premier League win of the season.



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Dak Prescott injury update: Cowboys QB not placed on injured reserve ahead of Week 10, return status up in the air

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The Dallas Cowboys could be without starting quarterback Dak Prescott for a while. Cowboys chief operating officer Stephen Jones confirmed Friday that the plan is to place the NFL’s highest-paid player, who signed a four-year, $240 million extension in September, on injured reserve.

“Right now, I don’t think anyone knows if it’s going to be four weeks, six weeks or the season,” Stephen Jones said on 105.3 The Fan, via The Athletic. “We’ll have to continue to monitor it and see where it takes us.”

Prescott was not placed on injured reserve on Saturday, according to NFL Media. This means that if he is placed on injured reserve now, the earliest Prescott could return is Week 15 for the Dec. 15 game against the Carolina Panthers. The Cowboys not placing Prescott on injured reserve on Saturday also means he could return in fewer than four games, although it’s unknown how likely that is.

Immediately following the injury, Jerry Jones did not provide a timetable for Prescott, other than confirming that the quarterback would not play in their Week 10 game against the Philadelphia Eagles. The three-time Pro Bowler underwent an MRI on Monday to determine the extent of the injury, and according to CBS Sports NFL Insider Jonathan Jones, the results indicated a more serious injury than initially feared.

On Wednesday, NFL Media reported that Prescott’s initial diagnosis was a partial hamstring avulsion, meaning it is partially detached from the bone. In many cases, surgery is required to fix the problem, but there are some situations where waiting to let the scar heal, mend, and then strengthen through physical therapy and other methods could work. On Wednesday morning, Cowboys head coach Mike McCarthy said a decision had not yet been made on whether or not to place the quarterback on injured reserve.

The Cowboys were outplayed in their Week 9 game against the Atlanta Falcons, a 27-21 loss. And that was before losing Prescott for most of the fourth quarter to a hamstring injury.

After the game, Prescott provided insight into how his body felt before leaving the competition.

“I felt something pulling,” Prescott said, via The Athletic. “I felt something I had never felt before,” Prescott added, via ESPN. “It will be very difficult for me not to be there.”

Prescott was also seen waving his right hand on the bench, clearly compromised in both his upper and lower body, which is why Dallas concluded their day was over with 11:40 left in the game. He finished with 133 passing yards and a touchdown (a 3-yard touchdown to running back Rico Dowdle) on 18 of 24 passing on Sunday.

Prescott was replaced by backup quarterback Cooper Rush, an eight-year NFL veteran. Rush has won five of his six starts in place of an injured Prescott, including wins in four of his five starts in 2022 when Prescott was out with a thumb injury. Rush threw a 4-yard touchdown to wide receiver Jalen Tolbert in addition to passing for 115 yards while completing 13 of his 25 passes off the bench.

No matter who Dallas’ quarterback was Sunday in Atlanta, beating the Falcons wasn’t in the cards. The Cowboys went 3-for-13 on third down and 1-for-5 on fourth down. Missed tackles and a lack of communication on defense also hamstrung the Cowboys’ efforts to play complementary football on Sunday afternoon.

Rush should be expected to take over under center while Prescott remains out, although the team could also opt to turn to third-string quarterback Trey Lance to see if he’s capable of being Prescott’s future backup.





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WI vs ENG 2024/25, WI vs ENG 1st T20I Match Report, Nov 9, 2024

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Shake England win draw, bowl vs West Indies

England won the toss and elected to take part in the first of five T20Is against the West Indies.

With play set to begin in bright sunshine after heavy overnight rain in Barbados, England look to overcome a 2-1 ODI series loss to the hosts as they embark on their final white-ball campaign of the year.

Dan Mousley will make his T20I debut after scoring a maiden international fifty in the deciding ODI, while the visitors also welcome the return of captain Jos Buttler after a five-month layoff with a calf injury.

Buttler was listed to bat at number 3 as he handed over the wicket gloves to Phil Salt. Jofra Archer is out of the team after playing three ODIs in a row, with Jamie Overton, Saqib Mahmood and Reece Topley understanding England’s bowling attack.

“I’m looking forward to it,” Buttler said of captaining from the field rather than behind the stumps. “A different point of view, another thing I got rid of so I could focus on the captaincy and the team.”

The West Indies are without quick Alzarri Joseph as he serves a two-match suspension imposed by his team for storming off the field during the third and final ODI in Barbados. They have opted for two spinners in Akeal Hosein and Gudakesh Motie.

Rovman Powell, their captain, said at the toss: “It’s about whether you bat or bowl first, you have to do well. In years past we were just looking to compete as a West Indies team, now we are looking to beat teams in bilateral series”.

England: 1 Phil Salt (week), 2 Will Jacks, 3 Jos Buttler (captain), 4 Liam Livingstone, 5 Jacob Bethell, 6 Sam Curran, 7 Dan Mousley, 8 Jamie Overton, 9 Saqib Mahmood, 10 Adil Rashid, 11 Reece Topley

West Indies: 1 Brandon King, 2 Evin Lewis, 3 Nicholas Pooran (wk), 4 Shimron Hetmyer, 5 Rovman Powell (captain), 6 Sherfane Rutherford, 7 Romario Shepherd, 8 Andre Russell, 9 Akeal Hosein, 10 Gudakesh Motie, 11 Shamar Joseph

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The NBA Academy company will undergo a major restructuring

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At the end of their seasons, in July 2025, the NBA will close its Global Academy in Australia and its Latin American Academy in Mexico, which opened in 2017 and 2018, respectively. The NBA Africa Academy in Senegal will remain intact and a new global center will open in the future.

These two closing Academies produced five NBA draft picks from Australia and Canada in the last three years, including top 10 picks Josh Giddey, Dyson Daniels and Bennedict Mathurin.

Going forward, the NBA league office and team owners have chosen to place greater emphasis on identifying and developing talent from larger, non-traditional basketball countries that do not have high-level infrastructure. They will prioritize markets that are considered most essential to globalizing the NBA and, in turn, generating long-term revenue, such as China, India, Indonesia, Singapore, the Philippines, Korea and Japan.

“This is a strategic move,” Justice said. “Change locations and reallocate resources to be in places where we can help provide opportunities to more players in underrepresented countries. Our goal is to grow the game globally, raise the level of play around the world and help those who need it most “We want players from 80 countries to be represented on NBA rosters, not 43, as we have now. There is so much talent out there. “We just need to help support their growth.”

A new NBA Global Academy hub will be launched in a country more centrally located to those priority markets in the future, with Asia or the Middle East thought to be the most likely landing spots, with Abu Dhabi an option. especially strong.

The NBA has established a growing presence in the United Arab Emirates, which has hosted six NBA preseason games and four USA Basketball exhibitions, as well as a Basketball Without Borders camp and several Jr. NBA camps in Abu Dhabi.

The NBA’s seasonal tournament, the NBA Cup, was recently rebranded as the Emirates NBA Cup as part of a massive sponsorship deal with the UAE-owned airline, based in Dubai.

Dubai Basketball Club this season became the first Middle Eastern team to join the Balkan-based Adriatic League and is expected to eventually transition to the EuroLeague at some point. The next FIBA ​​Basketball World Cup will be held in neighboring Qatar in 2027.

No final decisions have been made regarding the relocation of the Global Academy to the United Arab Emirates, but the presence of high-level basketball infrastructure already in place, as well as local partners to help support the costly multi-million-dollar annual investment that requires the initiative of the Academies, they make him a logical candidate.

“We’re evaluating everything,” Justice said. “There’s nothing concrete or specific yet, but we know there’s an opportunity to do a lot more. Asia and the Middle East region are areas that connect everything. That’s the center of a lot of places we need to be.”

Beyond the high cost of operating three academies, the NBA says part of its decision stemmed from the difficulties it encountered convincing the families of elite prospects to move to Australia due to its distance from the rest of the world and the logistical challenges of transporting players to international camps. and events several times a year.

What doesn’t look set to change anytime soon is the NBA’s investment in Africa, which began with the opening of the NBA Academy Africa in Senegal in 2017 and culminated with the selection of its first player last June, when Ulrich Chomche was selected. in 57th place. by the Toronto Raptors.

NBA Academy Africa has a big success story in the making: projected 2025 lottery pick Khaman Maluach, who is currently a freshman starting at Duke. The 7-foot-2, 18-year-old may not have found basketball had he not been identified by the NBA Academy coaching network in Uganda and invited to join the program in 2021 when he was 14. years. Maluach spent parts of the last three seasons with the NBA’s Basketball Africa League (BAL) and helped South Sudan qualify for the Paris Olympics with a standout performance at the FIBA ​​World Cup 2023.

“Khaman reaffirms our belief that the NBA Academy concept is working,” Justice told ESPN. “While the NBA Academy footprint is evolving, the overall commitment to identifying and developing elite international talent is not changing. The NBA Academy program continues. The Basketball Without Borders program continues. The NBA will continue to invest in youth basketball. We just want to invest it in the right way.”

At one time, the NBA operated seven academies globally: three in China (Jinan, Urumqi and Hangzhou), one in Saly, Senegal, one in Delhi, India, one in San Luis Potosí, Mexico, and the Global Academy in Canberra , Australia. . 115 NBA Academy alumni (men and women) have gone through Division I college basketball programs since 2018. Others, like Brooklyn Nets wing Jacky Cui of China, came to the NBA through the professional route.

Justice said they plan to increase the roster size of their two academies to provide more opportunities to players from countries around the world, including even more players from the more than 50 countries that make up the African continent, as well as the United Arab Emirates and other countries. in Europe that don’t have the best basketball infrastructure, for example the United Kingdom or Scandinavia. The NBA will continue to invest in global coaching development through its Jr. NBA programs and NBA basketball schools.

“This is a long-term investment,” Justice said. “We have been at this for eight years and have seen incredible results. We are looking to build ecosystems and expand basketball globally in a way that has a significant impact. We can’t do it all ourselves, so we need to focus on where we need to be, “What we should do and who needs us most. This is a crucial moment for us, but I am confident that we are moving in the right direction.”

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Cowboys delay putting Dak Prescott on IR with hamstring injury

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The Dallas Cowboys did not place Prescott on injured reserve Saturday for the partial hamstring avulsion, meaning the earliest he could now return would be Dec. 15 against the Carolina Panthers, if the team makes the movement next week.

Prescott and the Cowboys continue to seek opinions on the best way to treat the injury, whether with rest and rehab or surgery. Multiple sources said Prescott will need six to eight weeks to recover without surgery. As of Friday, it had not been determined whether he would need surgery, which would end his regular season.

The Cowboys did not need Prescott’s spot on the 53-man roster for Sunday’s game against Philadelphia. Instead, he will be among the team’s inactive players.

Cooper Rush will start at quarterback against the Philadelphia Eagles, with Trey Lance as the backup. Coach Mike McCarthy said the team is considering adding a quarterback to the roster, either on the active roster or the practice squad, with Prescott out.

If Prescott does not return this season, it would be the second time in his career that he has finished a year on injured reserve. In 2020, he suffered a dislocation and compound fracture of his right ankle in Week 5.

The Cowboys also elevated cornerback Josh Butler and wide receiver Jalen Cropper from the practice squad. Cornerback Trevon Diggs, who did not practice Friday due to illness, was able to get a job Saturday.

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Tony Mowbray: Former Sunderland and Birmingham boss on battling bowel cancer

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The ordeal of surgery and the prospect of an uncertain future prompted a change of focus for the husband and father of three.

“When you suffer an illness like that, it’s a problem for the family,” said Mowbray, who also managed Hibernian, West Bromwich Albion, Celtic, Middlesbrough and Coventry.

“I remember sitting in a hospital bed and my kids had tears in their eyes, not sure if I was going to get through it or not, to be honest. “I was very, very sick.

“I returned home after that and the period was very up and down.

“Some days you felt great, and other days I would collapse, pass out, and find myself on the kitchen floor.

“I called Birmingham’s CEO and told him that health and family are what life is about and I needed to get myself together, so I left that job.”

Mowbray describes the “amazing” support from both Sunderland and Birmingham in fulfilling the contracts he signed as “humbling”.

But the “normal working-class boy from the North East”, who played as a centre-back for Middlesbrough, Celtic and Ipswich, is keen to earn his wages back in the dressing room and pass on his football and life experience to young players. .

For now, however, he has a more important message to convey.

“If something is not normal, don’t be afraid to go see your doctor,” he said.

“If I hadn’t done that I probably wouldn’t have been here today, or I would have been in a situation where I wouldn’t have been able to have surgery and recover.

“It’s not just you, think about your family.”

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These are the games with soundtracks so good that they have been nominated for the 2025 Grammy Awards

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Five video games have been recognized for their outstanding soundtracks and nominated for a 2025 Grammy Award.

Avatar: Frontiers of Pandora, God of War Ragnarök: Valhalla, Marvel’s Spider-Man 2, Star Wars Outlaws and Wizardry: Providing Grounds of the Mad Overlord have been selected for the shortlist of Best Soundtrack for Video Games and Other Interactive Media. at the 2025 Grammy Awards.

Here is the full list and corresponding composers:

  • Avatar: Pandora’s Borders – Pinar Toprak, composer
  • God of War Ragnarök: Valhalla – Bear McCreary, composer
  • Marvel’s Spider-Man 2 – John Paesano, composer
  • Star Wars Outlaws – Wilbert Roget, II, composer
  • Wizardry: Proving Grounds of the Mad Overlord – Winifred Phillips, composer

This is the third year the category has been featured at the Grammy Awards. Assassin’s Creed Valhalla took the inaugural award in 2023, while Star Wars Jedi: Survivor won last year.

The 2025 Grammy Awards will air on February 2, 2025.

Of course, music isn’t the only area where games have an impact on major awards shows. Earlier this year, Genvid’s experimental Silent Hill episodic series Ascension won the Creative Arts Emmy Award for Outstanding Innovation in Emerging Media Programming for Silent Hill: Ascension. Genid boss Jacob Navok was a “testament to the dedication” of the team.

Amazon’s Fallout adaptation now also has two Emmy Awards to its name.

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