2026-04-27 03:13:13
Victor Wembanyama, who sustained a concussion in Tuesday night's Game 2 between his San Antonio Spurs and the Portland Trailblazers, has been cleared by medical personnel to return to action in Sunday's Game 4, according to a report by ESPN's Shams Charania and Malika Andrews.
As Defector's Patrick Redford wrote on Wednesday, concussions are notoriously tricky injuries, with notoriously unpredictable recovery processes and timetables. These are realities which have always cast a little bit of suspicion on the various sports leagues' ballyhooed brain-injury protocols: Somehow, superstar athletes seem to pretty much always complete their concussion recoveries in time to appear in their team's next do-or-die game, if not its next do-or-die return from a TV timeout. Stipulating that all brains are different, and that I know nothing more about the condition of Wembanyama's than anybody else who has never met him and only saw the event of his concussion on TV, this recovery seems particularly dubious to me. The dude's head bounced on the hardwood, after falling from, well, Victor Wembanyama's height.
2026-04-27 02:50:43
No one was shot and killed at the annual White House Correspondents' Association dinner on Saturday night at Washington D.C.'s Hilton Hotel. President Donald Trump—who is presently waging an illegal war of aggression against the nation of Iran and aiding and abetting a genocide in Palestine; who is responsible for the killing of at least 180 people in military strikes on civilian boats in the Caribbean and eastern Pacific, and hundreds of thousands of deaths around the world due to the targeted withdrawal of humanitarian aid; who is orchestrating a campaign of domestic terror and brutality against immigrant and minority communities in the U.S.; who is weaponizing the Justice Department against his personal enemies; who is running the most nakedly corrupt and lawless administration in U.S. history; who a few weeks ago threatened to jail a journalist who reported on the downing and rescue of an American pilot in Iran if they didn't reveal their sources—was unharmed.
On a different floor of the Hilton, several layers of security away from the Correspondents' event, an individual carrying at least one firearm reportedly sprinted through a security checkpoint, exchanged fire with law enforcement, and was arrested. According to authorities the assailant is named Cole Tomas Allen, and evidently traveled by train from the Los Angeles area to D.C. for whatever he was trying to do at the Hilton. In the commotion of his attack and arrest, Allen is reported to have fired a shot that struck a Secret Service agent's bulletproof vest. As a precaution, Secret Service agents evacuated Trump—who recently threatened to annihilate the civilization of Iran and disseminated an image of himself depicted as Jesus Christ—and vice president JD Vance from the dinner.
After the remaining guests—who'd assembled in their finery to fête and network with the authoritarians strip-mining American society, rolling back rights and civil liberties, and rounding up demonized minorities into literal concentration camps, and who will return unscathed to their stations of power over the rest of us tomorrow—milled around for a while, taking selfies and helping themselves to the abandoned bottles of expensive champagne left on tables, security personnel informed them that the evening's festivities would not resume and instructed them to leave. A little while later Trump spoke to the press, including CBS News White House correspondent and WHCA member Weijia Jiang, who'd been seated beside him at the dais during the dinner. The recipient of a $400 million luxury airliner gifted him by the royal family of Qatar, presently engaged in a scheme to sue his own Treasury Department into paying him 10 billion dollars, boasted that, to the extent the fracas at the security checkpoint may have represented an attempt on his life, it attested to his historical importance.
2026-04-27 02:36:31
The top-seeded Detroit Pistons are quietly in a lot of trouble. Not just because they are down 2-1 in their series against the eighth-seeded Orlando Magic, but because in those two losses Orlando has looked like the superior team. The Magic have looked faster, tougher, and like they have the better roster of shooters most nights. Detroit essentially needs to find a way to blow the Magic out in order to beat them, because if it's close it seems to be tilting in Orlando's favor. Not one person could've predicted that outcome.
Not even a full month ago the Magic looked dead in the water, like the team was ready to full-on mutiny against its coaching staff. Suddenly they are all healthy at the right time and Orlando looks to be realizing the potential they've shown in flashes over the past couple seasons. As for the Pistons, well, they're the top seed for the first time since 2007, and here they are, lead by burgeoning superstar Cade Cunningham—being taken by surprise by the Magic, mainly thanks to role players who have come alive for Orlando and died on the vine for Detroit.
2026-04-27 01:43:13
Picture it: You're the Minnesota Timberwolves and two of your starters have just gone down with severe injuries in the first half of Game 4, including your best player Anthony Edwards. You're up 2-1 in the series but the Denver Nuggets have momentum going into the half. Well, obviously this is the time to unleash the Dosunmu. And unleash they did.
Ayo Dosunmu, a last-minute trade-deadline pick up from the Chicago Bulls earlier this year, just broke out with a career-high 43 points, in a career-high 42 minutes, in the Timberwolves dramatic 112-96 win over the Nuggets to take an authoritative 3-1 lead in the series. Dosunmu shot 13-for-17, including going 5-for-5 from the three-point line, and additionally hit all 12 of his free throws—a statline that would be insane for an all-star let alone a role player who had been withering away in Chicago just a few months ago.
2026-04-25 02:59:14
Basketball is a sport where five teammates work together to dribble and pass the ball up the court and ultimately toss it into the hoop. Certain exceptions exist. For instance, the final possessions of a close New York Knicks playoff game. Here, basketball is a sport where a solitary little fella bounces the ball indefinitely until he has no choice but to fling it in the direction of the hoop. That is a fair description of the final Knicks possessions Thursday in Game 3 of their first-round series against the Atlanta Hawks, one of which ended in a Jalen Brunson airball, and the other in a Jalen Brunson turnover, as the Knicks lost by one point for the second consecutive game.
Brunson is a one-man offensive system (complimentary and derogatory). He is an incredible talent. Were he not on the team, the Knicks wouldn't be remotely good enough to disappoint as violently as they do. But he has his preferences, which have held fast across different coaching regimes. He likes to hold onto the ball. He likes to dribble and dribble and probe the defense with a sequences of head fakes, hesitations, crossovers, shoulder bumps, pivots, until he's pried open a tiny bit of space to get off his jumper. (These moves, while deft, might also get a little easier to predict over the course of a seven-game playoff series.) Often, when the defense collapses on Brunson, you can see him seeing a passing window and deciding against it, because he'd rather avoid the risk of turnover and take the shot himself. These tendencies are exacerbated to comical extremes when the stakes are highest, and the defenders are playing hardest. His teammates—because the coach has told them so; because they have great trust in their captain; because their capacities for off-ball movement have atrophied while playing alongside him—often stand stationary while he breaks it down.
This tendency wasn't specific to former head coach Tom Thibodeau's infamously stodgy offenses. We see it still under the regime of current head coach Mike Brown, who was brought in to give them some new offensive juice, and to take better advantage of the other extremely talented players on the roster, like Karl-Anthony Towns, OG Anunoby, and Mikal Bridges, all of whom can create their own shot against a defense in rotation. I'm not even saying that Brunson isolation is a bad outcome for a given possession. Perhaps it is better than passing the ball to Bridges, who, if he caught the ball under the rim, while all five defenders laid down supine on the hardwood, would still find a way to still take an 11-foot drifting jumper. I am just saying that I, personally, cannot look at it anymore. I need to see the ball change hands. I need to see a non-Brunson Knick take footsteps more purposeful than shifting their weight from one foot to the other. I would rather lose on a too-cute offensive set that sends a bad pass flying into the fourth row than watch Brunson take 40 dribbles into a double-team. I'm going to die.
2026-04-25 02:00:41
Chances are you haven't seen or thought of Tony Dokoupil in a while, and you wouldn't be alone. Dokoupil's CBS Evening News is lagging well behind ABC and NBC's nightly news programs, recently dropping under 4 million viewers per night. But TV ratings aren't necessary for what you can see with your own eyes: The CBS anchor is a dud with poor direction, and everyone knows it—including the people who work with him.
On Thursday, Vanity Fair published a piece full of brutal quotes about Dokoupil's time as Bari Weiss's pet. There's some clarity provided on why he had such a rough start in the job in January. Remember when Dokoupil ate shit on his first regular broadcast and screwed up a line read? That's reportedly because Weiss, the CBS News editor-in-chief, fiddled with the script to make Donald Trump look better, and typed her changes in the wrong place. "The text was added to the teleprompter twice, leaving her new star anchor flummoxed, stumbling over his words for several excruciating seconds," Aidan McLaughlin wrote.
The Vanity Fair article is based off 20 or so sources, some of them anonymous CBS staffers. As anyone could've figured out, Dokoupil's weirdly hostile interview with writer Ta-Nehisi Coates in 2024 was what got Weiss's attention. (Dokoupil reportedly went off script with his questions in that interview.) When she was put in charge of CBS News, Dokoupil became her anchor, but only because no one good was willing to do it.