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Kings 105 (24-24), Raptors 120 (36-13)

Despite not having De’Aaron Fox (toe), Nemanja Bjelica (back) and Iman Shumpert (rest), Sacramento managed to stay in the game until the fourth quarter.

The Raptors, who were without Kawhi Leonard (rest) once again, got big contributions from Fred VanVleet (19 points, 7 dimes, 7 boards) and CJ Miles (15 points, 4 treys in 15 minutes).

Kyle Lowry got in the groove during the fourth, finishing with 19 points and 9 dimes.

Blazers 114 (29-20), Thunder 123 (29-18)

After going 1-5 over a six-game stretch, Oklahoma City came away with their third straight win in four nights.

Paul George scored at least 31 points in all three of those wins, including a monster game tonight: 36 points, 8 boards, 4 dimes, 5 steals and a +16 plus/minus.

Russell Westbrook (29 points, 14 assists, 10 boards) finished with his 14th triple-double of the season.


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RAISE THE ROOF, RUSS 💥💥 (via @NBA)

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Clippers 98 (25-22), Mavs 106 (21-26)

Dallas snapped a four-game losing streak, picking up their first win without JJ Barea this season.

Dennis Smith Jr returned after a six-game absence to score 17 points with 8 boards and 4 assists.

Luka Doncic struggled with his shot, but finished with another well-rounded stat line: 17 points, 7 boards, 7 dimes, and one ripped jersey.


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Wolves 118 (22-24), Suns 91 (11-37)

Minnesota easily took down a Suns team that was missing DeAndre Ayton (ankle), Richaun Holmes (foot), Devin Booker (ejection) and TJ Warren (ankle).

Karl-Anthony Towns feasted in the middle, putting up 25 points with 18 boards and 7 dimes in just 31 minutes.

Phoenix has now lost five in a row and 14 of their last 17.

The post Post Up: Paul George Dominates in Thunder Win Over Blazers appeared first on SLAMonline.

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MELBOURNE, Australia (AP) — Serena Williams was one point — just one — from quite a comeback victory in the Australian Open quarterfinals when she turned her left ankle.

Everything unraveled from there.

In a startling reversal and result, Williams wasted four match points along the way to dropping the last six games of a 6-4, 4-6, 7-5 loss to No. 7 seed Karolina Pliskova of the Czech Republic at Melbourne Park on Wednesday.

“I was almost in the locker room,” Pliskova told the Rod Laver Arena crowd, “but now I’m standing here as the winner.”

So instead of Williams moving closer to an eighth championship at the Australian Open and record-tying 24th Grand Slam title overall, it is Pliskova who will continue her pursuit of her first major trophy.

In the semifinals, Pliskova will face No. 4-seeded Naomi Osaka, who advanced by beating No. 6 Elina Svitolina 6-4, 6-1 earlier Wednesday. The other women’s semifinal will be two-time Wimbledon champion Petra Kvitova against unseeded American Danielle Collins.

In the men’s quarterfinals Wednesday, 2016 Wimbledon runner-up Milos Raonic met No. 28 Lucas Pouille, before 14-time major champion Novak Djokovic was scheduled to face 2014 U.S. Open finalist Kei Nishikori.

Williams’ surprising departure scuttled what would have been a much-anticipated rematch against Osaka, who beat her in the chaotic U.S. Open final last September.

This defeat is the earliest in Australia for Williams since a fourth-round loss to Ana Ivanovic in 2014. Since then, she had won the tournament in 2015, lost in the final in 2016, and won again in 2017 while pregnant, before missing last year’s edition a few months after the birth of her daughter.

The 37-year-old American’s match against Pliskova was played under a stifling sun, with the temperature around 80 degrees (25 Celsius), and Williams — coming off an intense three-set victory over No. 1 Simona Halep in the fourth round — often stepped into the patches of shade behind each baseline.

She did not start well, not well at all. Her mistakes were mounting and deficit was growing.

In the first set alone, Williams made more than twice as many unforced errors as her opponent, 11-5, a pattern that would continue throughout. By the end, the margin was 37-15.

Looking increasingly frustrated, Williams would yell at herself after mistakes or gesture as if to say, “That’s NOT how I should be hitting the ball!” Add it all up, and Pliskova led by a set and a break at 3-2 in the second.

Only then did Williams seem to get going. From there, she immediately earned her first break point of the match and converted it to get to 3-all, beginning a run in which she claimed nine of 11 games.

“I was a little bit too passive,” Pliskova said about that section of the match. “Obviously mentally down.”

And then it all changed. Serving for the victory at 5-1, 40-30, Williams was called for a foot fault — reminiscent of an infamous such ruling at the U.S. Open a decade ago. During the ensuing point Wednesday, Williams twisted her left ankle and dumped a forehand into the net.

She grabbed at her foot afterward, and would go on to cede that game.

Not a big deal, right? She still had a sizable lead.

Except three more match points would follow, and Pliskova staved off each one.

Williams would again serve for the match at 5-3 — and again get broken. The owner of the most feared and respected serve in women’s tennis was broken for a third time in a row at 5-all, and Pliskova was on her way.

“She got a little bit shaky in the end,” Pliskova said. “So I took my chances. And I won.”

Read More Here

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Serena Williams did not blame her surprising loss to Karolina Pliskova in the quarterfinals of the Australian Open on her ankle injury. Instead, she credited Pliskova for turning things up in key spots.

Pliskova took the first set of the match 6-4 and was up a break in the second before losing her serve and giving it right back. Williams went on to win the second set 6-4 and then was up 5-1 and serving for the match up 40-30. She was called for a foot fault on her first serve and then rolled her ankle after being wrong-footed on her second serve. After that, she lost the game and five more in a row to lose the match.

In her post-match press conference, Williams said her ankle injury was not the reason she lost.

“I just think she played lights out on match points,” Williams told reporters. “Literally, hitting lines. Just went for it, went crazy on match points. She just played unbelievable on match point. … I don’t think it had anything to do with my ankle per se. I just think she was nailing and hitting shots. Obviously I made some mistakes, but she played really well after that.” Read More Here

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Prince Malachi is the founder of The Oracle Network and the Streetwear brand Y.A.H. Apparel

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