7 Questions about the NBA Playoffs, the Draft, and Trade Rumors + my Kon Knueppel conversation | The Kevin O'Connor ShowNew Foto - 7 Questions about the NBA Playoffs, the Draft, and Trade Rumors + my Kon Knueppel conversation | The Kevin O'Connor Show

KOC has 7 big questions to start the week, and you need to hear them all. For starters, who does Kevin have winning the Eastern Conference Finals and how? Might the Boston Celtics consider trading Jaylen Brown in a blockbuster trade to the Houston Rockets? Whose NBA Draft stock is rising, and whose is FALLING? It's all on this must-hear Monday episode of theKOC Show. (0:43) How long until we see Nesmith on Brunson? (3:10) Will the Knicks create a size advantage? (5:38) Can KAT have the series of his life? (7:14) Can Haliburton reach a new level? (10:14) What changes should the Celtics make? (18:12) Who are Draft Combine fallers? (20:08) Who are Draft Combine risers? (24:06) Kon Knueppel & KOC from the Combine in Chicago 🖥️Watch this full episode on YouTube Check out the rest of the Yahoo Sports podcast family athttps://apple.co/3zEuTQjor atYahoo Sports Podcasts

7 Questions about the NBA Playoffs, the Draft, and Trade Rumors + my Kon Knueppel conversation | The Kevin O'Connor Show

7 Questions about the NBA Playoffs, the Draft, and Trade Rumors + my Kon Knueppel conversation | The Kevin O'Connor Show KOC has 7 big q...
With contract extension, Derrick Henry looking for more rushing success in BaltimoreNew Foto - With contract extension, Derrick Henry looking for more rushing success in Baltimore

OWINGS MILLS, Md. (AP) — Derrick Henry arrived in Baltimore at age 30 and had one of the best seasons of his career while playing alongside Lamar Jackson. Why leave all that behind? Henry is now ready to stay with the Ravens for at least the next couple of years after agreeing toa two-year, $30 million extensionlast week that included $25 million guaranteed. The star running back was already under contract for this coming season, but now Baltimore has him signed through 2026. It was clear Henry didn't want to mess with a successful situation after he ran for 1,921 yards and 16 touchdowns in 2024 while producing a career-high 5.9 yards per carry. "I really enjoyed last season a lot," Henry said. "Being able to play alongside a player like Lamar, the best player in the league, it was just dynamic and a lot of fun. There's a lot of young guys on the offense and on this team, so I feel like they give me youth and give me a lot of energy." Henry is now 19th on the career rushing list with 11,423 yards, and another season like last year would vault him all the way into the top nine. Baltimore is certainly a place where a running back can put up big numbers and win a lot of games, as long as Jackson is healthy and playing well. The Ravens led the NFL in rushing the past two seasons and have ranked in the top three every year since Jackson's arrival in 2018. The two-time MVP quarterback produces a lot of yards on the ground himself, but his presence also creates space for running backs such as Henry, who ran for 1,167 yards — 4.2 per carry — with Tennessee in 2023 before looking rejuvenated in Baltimore. "I'm just very grateful for this organization," Henry said. "Just like last year, coming off the season I had, I wasn't really happy, and I wanted to prove myself and just get an opportunity, and they gave me the opportunity. I'm very appreciative of how much they value me, to give me an extension, and I just want to show them how much it means to me, how much this organization means to me by the way I work and what I do on the field." The Ravens' effect on rushing success is evident in reverse too. Gus Edwards ran for a career-high 810 yards with 13 touchdowns for Baltimore in 2023. With the Los Angeles Chargers last season, he had a career-low 3.6 yards per carry. And while the Ravens provide an environment where running backs can flourish, they clearly don't view everyone at the position as interchangeable — as evidenced by what they're willing to pay Henry. "I think he fits Baltimore as a city and what the city stands for," running backs coach Willie Taggart said. "When you always watched the Ravens play, it was always dominating and physical, and when you watch Derrick run, it's dominating and physical. You think about our city. We're dominating and physical, so I think he just fit everything about Baltimore and the Ravens' organization." It didn't take long for Henry to dispel concerns about his age last season, and Baltimore is willing to bet he can keep on doing that. "If you look at the performance he had last year — one of his better years — and that's nine years in. That's big time, but Derrick works hard. It's important to him," Taggart said. "He wants to win a Super Bowl, and I know he's going to do everything he can to help this football team accomplish that." ___ AP NFL:https://apnews.com/hub/NFL

With contract extension, Derrick Henry looking for more rushing success in Baltimore

With contract extension, Derrick Henry looking for more rushing success in Baltimore OWINGS MILLS, Md. (AP) — Derrick Henry arrived in Balti...
Dodgers activate Teoscar Hernández, restoring lineup to full strength amid pitching concernsNew Foto - Dodgers activate Teoscar Hernández, restoring lineup to full strength amid pitching concerns

TheLos Angeles Dodgersare getting a key part of their lineup back.Teoscar Hernándezhas been activated from the injured list,the team announcedon Monday. Hernández, 32,sustained a left groin strainwhile chasing down a line drive in the outfield during the Dodgers' game versus theMiami Marlinson May 6. At the time of his injury, he was batting .315 with a .933 OPS, 10 doubles and nine home runs, while leading MLB with 34 RBI in 33 games (136 plate appearances). With Hernández's return, outfielderJames Outmanwas sent back down to Triple-A Oklahoma City. He was recalled from the minors to fill Hernández's spot on the roster. Outman, 28, was batting .125/.222/.375 with two homers and four RBI. The Dodgers may not be done making moves with their outfielders now that Hernández andTommy Edmanhave been activated. The teamreleased veteran utilityman Chris Tayloron Sunday, deciding to keepHyeseong Kim(.452/.485/.581 in 33 PAs) instead.Andy Pageshas also been playing very well, batting .280 with a .987 OPS, nine homers, 27 RBI and five stolen bases. Dodgers manager Dave Roberts will likely opt to use Edman and Kim, in addition toEnrique Hernández, at multiple positions based on pitching matchups and the need for days off to keep players fresh. However,Michael Confortocould ultimately be pushed out of the outfield mix, carrying a .171//.305/.279 batting line with nine doubles and two home runs. With just 44 games played, the Dodgers will probably give Conforto more time to turn his season around. But he onlysigned a one-year dealand thus may be viewed as expendable in a roster crunch. But moving Taylor and veteran catcher Austin Barnes off the roster shows that the Dodgers feel the urgency to make tough decisions as they face a tough race in the National League West. Three straight games with a home run for Teoscar Hernández!pic.twitter.com/Ts1xUUnqe0 — MLB (@MLB)April 29, 2025 Going into Monday's MLB slate, the Dodgers lead both theSan Diego PadresandSan Francisco Giantsby one gamein the National League Westat 29-18. TheArizona Diamondbacksaren't far behind either, just four games back. Of greater concern isthe team's pitching, which ranks 11th in the NL (and 21st in MLB) with a 4.18 ERA. StartersTyler Glasnow,Blake SnellandRoki Sasakiare all on the injured list, in addition to relieversBlake Treinen,Evan PhillipsandKirby Yates.Clayton Kershawmade his first start of the season on Saturday, butlooked like a work in progressafter returning from multiple surgeries. As Dodgers president of baseball operations Andrew Friedman said on Sunday, building pitching depth is an endless chase. "It's like a game of Whack-a-Mole, and things keep popping up," Friedman said,via the Los Angeles Times. "The definition of enough depth, I think is a fool's errand. I don't know what enough depth means. I think more is always better with pitching depth." Figuring out the team's outfield mix is a luxury by comparison. That's a problem the Dodgers will surely accept right now while there are far more pressing issues to address.

Dodgers activate Teoscar Hernández, restoring lineup to full strength amid pitching concerns

Dodgers activate Teoscar Hernández, restoring lineup to full strength amid pitching concerns TheLos Angeles Dodgersare getting a key part of...
Rick Carlisle's changing style has helped Pacers reach 2nd straight Eastern Conference finalsNew Foto - Rick Carlisle's changing style has helped Pacers reach 2nd straight Eastern Conference finals

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — Indiana Pacers coach Rick Carlisle still prefers brutal honesty to nuance. He doesn't sugar-coat mistakes, doesn't fear taking his critiques public and doesn't shield players from high expectations. It's not who he is — andthese young Pacers embrace it. Yes, after winning nearly 1,000 regular season games, one NBA title and surviving 23 up-and-down seasons as an NBA head coach, Carlisle has seemingly found the perfect fit in a locker room that views a tough, demand coaching through a more genteel prism. "A savant," two-time All-Star Tyrese Haliburton dubbed Carlisleduring Indiana's semifinal series."When it comes to adjustments and getting the best out of guys, we follow his lead, and his intensity come playoff time is easy to follow. When we have a game like (the Game 3 loss to Cleveland), he sets the tone with our energy, practice, film or whatever." Carlisle is back in his third Eastern Conference finals not because he stuck to his old-school philosophy, but because he figured out how to adapt to the league's new ways. Instead of routinely calling plays from the bench or complaining when opponents produce 40-point quarters, the 65-year-oldCarlisle trusts Haliburtonand the Pacers ball-handlers on the floor and now understands high-scoring quarters are just part of today's game — even if he doesn't like it. The transition hasn't come without some rough edges such asthe sideline clash between Carlisle and All-Star guard Rajon Rondoin February 2015. "I would literally give him (Rondo) my play sheet, and he would make calls." said Milwaukee coach Doc Rivers, who coached Rondo in Boston. "I remember Rick calling me and the last thing I told him was 'Rick, I may have created a monster, I don't know. You're going to have let him help you on the floor.' It was like 24 hours later you see them getting into it on the sideline because Rondo didn't want to call that play." The two patched things up later. But in the decade since, things seem to have changed. Center Myles Turner, who grew up in Dallas, believes Carlisle has given the players more freedom to work their magic on the court. New York Knicks star Jalen Brunson also saw that side of Carlisle during his first five pro seasons in Dallas. Brunson and Carlisle will meet for the second straight year in the playoffs Wednesday night in Game 1 at New York. "Different personnel, but that's just coach Carlisle. With the personnel he has he's going to adapt and going to play with whatever their personnel's strengths are," Brunson said Monday. "What he's been able to do there (with Indiana) in a short time is special." Carlisle's coaching principles are the result of a 40-plus year resume that reads like a basketball history lesson. He was teammates with Ralph Sampson, Larry Bird and the late Bill Walton. As a coach, he worked with stars such as Reggie Miller, Chauncey Billups, Dirk Nowitzki, Luka Doncic and Brunson and endured the pain of playoff losses with some of the game's biggest names — Michael Jordan, Patrick Ewing, Shaquille O'Neal and the late Kobe Bryant. Carlisle won a championship with the 1985-86 Boston Celtics, one of the greatest teams in league history, and in 2010-11 as the Mavericks coach. And in between he dealt with the fallout from one of he NBA's biggest black eyes, the 2004 brawl between Indiana and Detroit. But Carlisle never shied away from a challenge, and he managed to navigate the NBA's ever-evolving world long enough that he'll head into next season as the league's second-winningest active coach, behind Rivers, and needing seven victories become the 11th member of the 1,000-win club. "I think all of us have had to change," Rivers said. "Where Rick has been always good, in my opinion, he just coaches the team he has, and I think he realized early on with Haliburton, this may be one of those teams where 'I just have to wind them up and let them go.' I think that's why he's a sensational coach." And Haliburton & Co. have taken full advantage. A year ago, they ended a franchise-worst nine-game skid in the playoffs, won their first postseason series and reached the conference finals for the first time in a decade. This year, they won 50 games and earned home-court advantage for the first round for the first time since 2013-2014. Now the Pacers are four wins away from reaching the NBA Finals for the second time and to nobody's surprise, Carlisle is back on the bench for this run, too. "He let's players go out there and create," Turner said. "I think that helps, especially this time of year, because in the playoffs, everybody scouts, everybody knows your plays and whatnot. So you've got to freelance more. I think his experience with different personnel, different guys in this league, he knows how to adapt." ___ AP NBA:https://apnews.com/hub/nba

Rick Carlisle's changing style has helped Pacers reach 2nd straight Eastern Conference finals

Rick Carlisle's changing style has helped Pacers reach 2nd straight Eastern Conference finals INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — Indiana Pacers coach R...
Timberwolves vs. Thunder odds, betting: Best bets for the Western Conference finalsNew Foto - Timberwolves vs. Thunder odds, betting: Best bets for the Western Conference finals

The Oklahoma City Thunder were the NBA's best team in the regular season, compiling a franchise-record 68 wins en route to the No. 1 seed in the Western Conference. Anthony Edwards and the Minnesota Timberwolves took a while to adjust to a stunning pre-training camp trade of Karl-Anthony Towns to the New York Knicks, but have found their footing in the2025 NBA playoffs, beating each the Los Angeles Lakers and Golden State Warriors in five games. The two teams meet in the Western Conference finals with the Thunder as huge -350 favorites atBetMGM, thefirst time in the Thunder era they have been favored in a conference finalsin their fifth trip. It's also the biggest favorite the combined Seattle SuperSonics/Oklahoma City Thunder franchise has been in a conference finals since the Sonics started playing in 1967, according toSports Odds History's database. It's third time the Wolves have reached the conference finals in franchise history and the second straight season they've reached this round. Minnesota lost to the Dallas Mavericks in five games last season in the conference finals. Yahoo Sports askedhandicapper Michael Fiddlefor his thoughts on the Thunder-Wolves series and his best bets: Fiddle:"I like the Thunder to win the series, but I think the best bet is to play the NBA Finals future because both teams have matchup advantages versus Eastern Conference opponents. One of my favorite bets available right now is Thunder to win title -160 or better, and a big reason for that is understanding patterns in the market. We have seen a little bit of a downgrade in the Oklahoma City power rating after going seven games with the Nuggets, but Denver covered four games in the series. I disagree with [the move]. There has also been consistent late action on Oklahoma City, bringing the spread out further. When they were -4.5 on the road in Game 6, it went to -5.5 right before tip. The late movers have come in on the Thunder, so I want to get in early. "I'm comfortable with the Thunder -7.5 in Game 1. I think it closes -8.5. I think the biggest matchup angle is if Chet Holmgren plays equal or better than Julius Randle, then I'm not sure how the Wolves have a chance. If Chet plays a little better, this should be a resounding Thunder win. I think Lou Dort will start on Anthony Edwards, with Lou Dort and Alex Caruso mixed, but the amount of different looks and concepts to throw at Ant because of how versatile the Thunder are is a different level of beast than the Warriors and Lakers. This is a colossal upgrade in the defense he'll face, and I don't think that the lack of rest hurts the Thunder much." Best bets:Thunder to win NBA Finals at -160 or better; Thunder -7.5 in Game 1

Timberwolves vs. Thunder odds, betting: Best bets for the Western Conference finals

Timberwolves vs. Thunder odds, betting: Best bets for the Western Conference finals The Oklahoma City Thunder were the NBA's best team i...

 

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