Multiple Pistons, Timberwolves players and coaches ejected after massive brawl

A major brawl broke out in the middle of Sunday night’s game between the Detroit Pistons and Minnesota Timberwolves.

In the second quarter, with the Pistons up 39-29, Naz Reid of the Timberwolves was fouled by Ron Holland. However, instead of the teams separating, Reid wagged his finger in Holland’s face and Donte DiVincenzo shoved the Pistons’ player as well.

From there, a massive scuffle occurred that took minutes to untangle on the court. Not only that, Pistons head coach J.B. Bickerstaff and Timberwolves assistant coach Pablo Prigioni got into things as well. In total, five players and Bickerstaff and Prigioni were ejected for the dust up.

Here’s how it went down on the court.

This article originally appeared on For The Win: Pistons, Timberwolves players and coaches ejected after massive brawl

These South Carolina stars are used to winning. But they know Final Four won’t be easy

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. – With an Elite Eight victory over Duke, South Carolina seniors Sania Feagin and Bree Hall have now made it to four straight Final Fours during their time as Gamecocks.

When asked if they thought their careers would “come out this way” when they signed with Dawn Staley four years ago, Feagin had a very simple answer.

“Yes, I did.”

Hall had a different perspective about being a part of the historic South Carolina era.

“I really can’t believe it,” Hall said. “When I committed here, I didn’t really expect it to be this good. This is definitely an experience that people dream about, and I’m just really glad I made the right choice.”

Playing alongside Feagin and Hall throughout the dominant run is Raven Johnson, a junior guard who redshirted as a freshman. Feagin and Hall have one year of eligibility left and have not yet announced if they plan to stay at South Carolina.

But that’s a decision for another day. The Gamecocks are focused on the Final Four next weekend and extending their run.

“We’re not done,” Johnson said. “We can set history winning a national championship, and that’s the plan. We all know what it takes, and we know it’s not gonna be easy.”

She already knows the path ahead will be a challenge because getting this far was one.

No. 1 seed South Carolina survived No. 2 Duke 54-50, scoring a season-low paired with 16 turnovers. The matchup had four lead changes and four ties. Feagin and Hall each had three key rebounds in the fourth quarter. 

“The margin of error is very little,” said Johnson, adding that a missed shot can turn “the momentum of the game” to the other team.

This is now the third-straight nailbiter the Gamecocks have endured. They trailed at halftime in matchups against No. 9 Indiana in the second round and No. 4 Maryland in the Sweet 16. 

Prior to Sunday’s game, the Gamecocks had won 33 games with a 22.9-point margin of victory, so it’s safe to say they are usually comfortable on the court.

“I don’t know why everybody expects us to just blow everybody out,” Hall said. “These teams are coming to play. It’s not gonna be easy, every team is gonna be ready for us.”

The trio is ready to bring its experience to a familiar setting – the Final Four – and live up to its own expectation: winning.

Olivia Noni is a student in the University of Georgia’s  Sports Media Certificate program.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: These South Carolina basketball stars know Final Four won’t be easy

NBA reaches 30,000 3-pointers made for 4th consecutive season

CLEVELAND (AP) — James Harden made a milestone 3-pointer on Sunday as the NBA continues barreling toward another record-setting season from beyond the arc.

Harden’s 3-pointer with 5:23 left in the second quarter of the Los Angeles Clippers’ 127-122 loss in Cleveland was the 30,000th in the NBA so far this season.

It is now four consecutive seasons with at least 30,000 3s in the league. That figure had not been reached before the 2021-22 season — and this year’s barrage comes with the reigning NBA champion Boston Celtics nearing single-season records for 3s made and attempted by a team.

Boston has made 1,323 3s this season, 40 away from matching the mark set by Golden State two seasons ago. And the Celtics have taken 3,574 3s this season, 147 away from the record set by the Houston Rockets in 2018-19.

Boston has eight games remaining and is on pace to break those league single-season records later this week.

The NBA is also on pace to smash the current total records for 3-pointers made and attempted in a season. The league record of 31,579 made 3s was set last season and the record of 86,535 attempted was set in the 2021-22 season.

Entering Sunday, the league was on pace for about 33,200 made 3s this season and about 92,250 attempted.

It may have been fitting for Harden to make Sunday’s milestone 3 — since he made another one earlier this season. Harden joined Golden State’s Stephen Curry as the only players in NBA history with at least 3,000 regular-season career 3-pointers when he connected on his 60th of the season in a win over Denver on Dec. 1.

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AP NBA: https://apnews.com/hub/nba

Anunoby and Bridges both score 28 points and Knicks dominate second half to beat Blazers 110-93

NEW YORK (AP) — OG Anunoby and Mikal Bridges each scored 28 points and the New York Knicks dominated the second half for a 110-93 victory over the Portland Trail Blazers on Sunday night.

Bridges scored 21 in the final two periods as the Knicks outscored the Blazers 60-35 after halftime. New York made 27 of 42 shots (64%) across the final 24 minutes after trailing 58-50 at the break.

Josh Hart added 14 points, nine assists and eight rebounds for the Knicks. Karl-Anthony Towns shot just 4 for 13 but had 10 points and 11 rebounds.

Deni Avdija scored 33 points and Shaedon Sharpe had 23 for Portland, which shot 13 for 21 while outscoring the Knicks 33-23 in a strong second quarter, then made just 14 baskets the entire second half.

Takeaways

Trail Blazers: The Trail Blazers wasted another outstanding performance by Avdija. It was his fifth time scoring at least 30 points this month. The fifth-year player has eight games with at least 30 points in his career, and all have come in 2025.

Knicks: Anunoby has continued to shine while becoming more of a scorer in the absence of Jalen Brunson, who hasn’t played since March 6 because of a sprained right ankle but said Sunday he is feeling better and hopes to return during the regular season. Anunoby is averaging 30.5 points his past four games.

Key moment

Anunoby’s dunk with a minute left in the third quarter closed out a 9-2 run and gave the Knicks a 79-78 advantage at the end of the period, their first lead since late in the second quarter.

Key stat

Portland’s Anfernee Simons shot 5 for 20 from the field.

Up next

The Knicks host Philadelphia on Tuesday. Portland visits Atlanta that night.

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AP NBA: https://apnews.com/hub/nba

Rockets at Suns: Jalen Green and Devin Booker renew their rivalry

When the Houston Rockets and Phoenix Suns last met on March 12 in Houston, Jalen Green had his way with Devin Booker in an impressive win for the home team.

Now, two-and-a-half weeks later, the veteran Suns shooting guard has a chance to get some revenge on his fourth-year counterpart from the Rockets.

It’s a unique matchup for the Rockets, who have an opportunity to boost both their own playoff push and their future NBA draft outlook.

Because Houston owns the right to swap 2025 first-round picks with the Suns, Phoenix (35-39, No. 11 in the Western Conference standings) missing the playoffs would be very beneficial to the Rockets. The Suns are a game behind No. 10 Sacramento for the final spot in the West play-in tournament.

Then again, the primary focus for the Rockets is on securing their first berth in the NBA playoffs since 2020. Houston (48-26, No. 2 in West) enters with 11 wins in its last 12 games.

The Rockets won both home matchups against the Suns this season, and Sunday’s game is the third and final one between the teams. Thus, a Houston victory would give the Rockets a series sweep, which would be quite helpful on multiple fronts.

Reed Sheppard Returns

Schedule Turns More Challenging

Future NBA Draft Implications

Game and Broadcast Information

  • Date: Sunday, March 30
  • Time: 8:00 p.m. CT
  • Location: PHX Arena, Phoenix
  • Channels: Space City Home Network, NBA TV
  • Stream: Fubo TV (free trial), NBA League Pass nationally

Team Rankings

Statistical rankings among the NBA’s 30 teams, as of Sunday:

  • Houston: No. 5 net rating (4.7), No. 13 offensive rating (114.5), No. 4 defensive rating (109.8)
  • Phoenix: No. 19 net rating (-1.6), No. 9 offensive rating (115.3), No. 26 defensive rating (116.9)

Starting Lineups

Rockets:

  • Fred VanVleet, No. 5, guard
  • Jalen Green, No. 4, guard
  • Dillon Brooks, No. 9, forward
  • Amen Thompson, No. 1, forward
  • Alperen Sengun, No. 28, center

Suns:

  • Collin Gillespie, No. 12, guard
  • Devin Booker, No. 1, guard
  • Kevin Durant, No. 35, forward
  • Ryan Dunn, No. 0, forward
  • Nick Richards, No. 2, center

Player Absences

Rockets:

  • Tari Eason, left lower leg injury management
  • Reed Sheppard, right thumb avulsion fracture
  • David Roddy, G League (two-way)
  • N’Faly Dante, G League (two-way)
  • Jack McVeigh, G League (two-way)
  • Nate Williams, G League (on assignment)

Suns:

  • Bradley Beal, left hamstring strain
  • Jalen Bridges, G League (two-way)
  • TyTy Washington Jr., G League (two-way)

Road Trip Concludes

Sunday’s game in Phoenix is the midway point of a three-game road trip for the Rockets. That trip concludes Monday against the Los Angeles Lakers (45-29) in what will be the final back-to-back of the 2024-25 season. After sitting out against the Suns for maintenance purposes, third-year forward Tari Eason is expected to be back in the lineup against the Lakers.

The fourth-seeded Lakers are hot on the heels of the Rockets in the West standings, so Monday’s game could be pivotal for eventual playoff seeding.

This article originally appeared on Rockets Wire: Rockets at Suns: Can Jalen Green outplay Devin Booker again?

Jalen Brunson opens up about return from injury as Knicks’ regular season winds down

Knicks point guard Jalen Brunson has been out since early March with an ankle injury, but the two-time All-Star and team captain is working his way back.

“I’m doing rehab stuff,” he said before Sunday’s 110-93 win over the Portland Trail Blazers. “More days, as of recently, have been just cranking it up — two-a-days, if I have to. But whatever I can do to improve myself, it’s what I’m doing.”

Brunson said that he is “feeling better” and “progressing every day” while cleared for basketball activities.

“Realistically, I’m hoping to play before the playoffs,” Brunson said. “I think that’s as good for me to get some game reps before we got into that type of stretch run. But most importantly, I want to make sure I’m 100 percent healthy.”

Starting with Tuesday’s 7:30 p.m. tipoff against the Philadelphia 76ers, New York has eight regular-season games left.

“That’s probably a conversation to where we can have with the medical team,” Brunson said of if his plan is to wait until he feels fully healthy. “Obviously, I want to feel 100 percent. But a lot of this is also mental, just making sure I can trust everything I do. It’s just a conversation for us to have.”

Since Brunson’s injury March 6 in the Knicks’ 113-109 overtime loss at the Los Angeles Lakers, New York has gone 7-5.

“They’ve responded,” Brunson said. “And there were nights where, obviously, we don’t play well as a team but then the next day they respond. But that’s all we can focus on.

“And there will be times and games and days where things won’t go our way, but it’s how do we respond from those moments and how do we get better, and I feel like they’ve progressed that way and I can’t wait to join ’em.”

Knicks overcome Trail Blazers as OG Anunoby, Mikal Bridges step up

The Knicks, who hope to get Jalen Brunson back from injury soon, overcame an off night by Karl-Anthony Towns as OG Anunoby and Mikal Bridges combined for 56 points in Sunday’s 110-93 win over the Portland Trail Blazers.

Takeaways

  1. Deni Avidija dropped a game-high 33 points, and the Knicks (47-27) needed someone to keep up — especially with Towns struggling. New York got a pair of team-high scorers as Anunoby and Bridges rose to the occasion, contributing 28 points apiece. Anunoby and Bridges were a combined 23-of-38 shooting in 37 and 40 respective minutes.
  2. The same could be said with Anunoby and Bridges leading the charge on the other end of the floor in the second half, where the Knicks held Portland (32-43) to 35 points. Initially, New York trailed 58-50 at halftime and by a largest deficit of 14 points (68-54 with roughly eight minutes into the third quarter). In a game where the Knicks lacked the offensive firepower from Towns, who finished with 10 points on 4-of-13 shooting over 32 minutes despite a double-double via 11 rebounds, New York’s wing-anchored defense clamped the Blazers down the decisive stretch.
  3. Totaling 14 points, nine rebounds and eight assists, Josh Hart flirted with a triple-double in 38 minutes while making the plays that mattered late as the Knicks pushed a double-digit lead into the final three minutes. New York needed Hart to hit another gear.
  4. The Knicks are 20 games over .500 for the first time since early March. They were 40-20 after their March 2 game at the Miami Heat, a 116-112 overtime win. New York ends this month with a 7-5 record in the absence of Brunson, who started missing games March 7.

Who’s the MVP?

Anunoby and Bridges, who gave the Knicks the two-way play that they needed to mount their comeback and eventual 17-point win.

What’s next

The Knicks return to action in Tuesday’s 7:30 p.m. game against the Philadelphia 76ers.

Pistons-T’Wolves melee featuring Donte DiVincenzo, Naz Reid, Ron Holland spills into stands, results in 7 ejections

Ronald Holland, Donte DiVincenzo and Naz Reid sparked a brawl on Sunday that spilled into the stands at Minnesota’s Target Center. (AP Photo/Abbie Parr)
ASSOCIATED PRESS

It wasn’t the Malice in the Palace.

But a dust-up between the Detroit Pistons and Minnesota Timberwolves on Sunday quickly escalated and spilled into the stands, resulting in the ejection of seven players and coaches. 

The incident took place with 8:36 left in the second quarter after Detroit’s Ron Holland fouled Minnesota’s Naz Reid as Reid attempted a layup. Reid immediately had words for Holland and pointed toward his face. 

Reid’s teammate Donte DiVincenzo was nearby and stepped in between the two as they approached each other. DiVincenzo then put his hands on Holland’s torso, and the two traded hard shoves. 

Holland continue to stare down Reid before DiVincenzo grabbed Holland by his shoulders and wrestled him toward the ground. From there, it was on. 

Multiple players and coaches from both teams joined in the melee that spilled into the baseline stands behind the Pistons basket. Some got involved. Others, like Rudy Gobert, tried to pull players off the pile. 

DiVincenzo ended up back down into the second row of the stands with Pistons forward Isaiah Stewart on top of him. Fans in the immediate area held out their arms to brace themselves.

Here’s another vantage point from the stands. Be warned, the language is most certainly not safe for work.

Calm was eventually restored as the players and coaches involved were pulled out of the pile. The ruckus resulted in seven ejections, including Pistons head coach J.B. Bickerstaff and Timberwolves assistant Pablo Prigioni. 

Reid, DiVincenzo, Stewart and Holland, of course, were also ejected. As was Pistons guard Marcus Sasser.

Detroit held a 39-29 lead when the fight broke out. The Pistons were down three players in the aftermath, and the Timberwolves down two.

The Pistons were issued four technical fouls. The Timberwolves issued three. That tally resulted in one technical free throw for the Timberwolves, that Mike Conely hit. Luka Garza subbed in and hit two free throws for the foul on Reid after Reid was ejected.

The game then carried on with the better part of three quarters left to play.

This certainly isn’t the last of it for the parties involved. Significant suspensions and fines should be expected from the NBA office. 

Pistons-T’Wolves melee featuring Donte DiVincenzo, Naz Reid, Ron Holland spills into stands, results in 7 ejections

Ronald Holland, Donte DiVincenzo and Naz Reid sparked a brawl on Sunday that spilled into the stands at Minnesota’s Target Center. (AP Photo/Abbie Parr)
ASSOCIATED PRESS

It wasn’t the Malice in the Palace.

But a dust-up between the Detroit Pistons and Minnesota Timberwolves on Sunday quickly escalated and spilled into the stands, resulting in the ejection of seven players and coaches. 

The incident took place with 8:36 left in the second quarter after Detroit’s Ron Holland fouled Minnesota’s Naz Reid as Reid attempted a layup. Reid immediately had words for Holland and pointed toward his face. 

Reid’s teammate Donte DiVincenzo was nearby and stepped in between the two as they approached each other. DiVincenzo then put his hands on Holland’s torso, and the two traded hard shoves. 

Holland continue to stare down Reid before DiVincenzo grabbed Holland by his shoulders and wrestled him toward the ground. From there, it was on. 

Multiple players and coaches from both teams joined in the melee that spilled into the baseline stands behind the Pistons basket. Some got involved. Others, like Rudy Gobert, tried to pull players off the pile. 

DiVincenzo ended up back down into the second row of the stands with Pistons forward Isaiah Stewart on top of him. Fans in the immediate area held out their arms to brace themselves.

Here’s another vantage point from the stands. Be warned, the language is most certainly not safe for work.

Calm was eventually restored as the players and coaches involved were pulled out of the pile. The ruckus resulted in seven ejections, including Pistons head coach J.B. Bickerstaff and Timberwolves assistant Pablo Prigioni. 

Reid, DiVincenzo, Stewart and Holland, of course, were also ejected. As was Pistons guard Marcus Sasser.

Detroit held a 39-29 lead when the fight broke out. The Pistons were down three players in the aftermath, and the Timberwolves down two.

The Pistons were issued four technical fouls. The Timberwolves issued three. That tally resulted in one technical free throw for the Timberwolves, that Mike Conely hit. Luka Garza subbed in and hit two free throws for the foul on Reid after Reid was ejected.

The game then carried on with the better part of three quarters left to play.

This certainly isn’t the last of it for the parties involved. Significant suspensions and fines should be expected from the NBA office. 

What’s the deal with the Yankees’ ‘torpedo bats’? And are they really a competitive advantage?

NEW YORK — It’s not the wand. It’s the wizard. Or, well, maybe it’s bot

One thing is certain: The New York Yankees are not cheating. They are not breaking — or even bending — the rules. Their so-called “torpedo bats” that have gone viral in recent days are completely legal. In fact, a handful of other players around the league used the oddly shaped bats over MLB’s opening weekend. That number will almost certainly rise in the coming days. 

Unfortunately for conspiracy theorists and tin-foil-hat wearers, there is no secret Yankees bat laboratory hidden beneath the 4 train.

These new-age sticks made news over the weekend amid a historic offensive barrage by the Yankees’ offense. On Saturday, New York hitters blasted nine home runs against the Milwaukee Brewers, the highest single-game tally in the franchise’s 122-year history. A day later, the Bombers went deep four more times in a series-sweeping 12-3 drubbing.

Yet it was not the sluggers but their equipment that made headlines.

The bats look extraordinarily bizarre — abnormal, misshapen. Instead of a barrel that maintains an even circumference down the grain, as has been the norm for decades in professional baseball, the torpedo bats feature a thicker sweet spot before thinning off again toward the end. The result, in theory, is a piece of wood with more mass distributed in the specific location where contact is made. And if you remember anything from high school physics: Force equals mass times acceleration.

“The concept makes so much sense,” Yankees shortstop Anthony Volpe told reporters before Sunday’s game. The 24-year-old is off to a hot start in 2025, with home runs in the first two games of the season. “I know I’m bought in. The bigger you can have the barrel where you hit the ball, it makes sense to me.”

Volpe was one of four Yankees to go yard with the unusual lumber over the weekend, along with Austin Wells, Paul Goldschmidt and Cody Bellinger. Meanwhile, reigning American League MVP Aaron Judge, who has already cranked four homers this season, was less convinced. That’s understandable, considering the titanic outfielder has launched a league-leading 161 long balls since 2022.

“What I did the past couple of seasons speaks for itself,” the Yankees captain explained. “Why try to change something if you have something that’s working?”

Judge’s is a rational line of thinking, but for the mere mortals across MLB, the new tech has real appeal. Tampa Bay’s Junior Caminero and Minnesota’s Ryan Jeffers were two other big leaguers seen using the bats Sunday. And while the advent of these bats has been credited to former Yankees hitting analyst and current Miami Marlins field coordinator Aaron Leanhardt, various MLB sources told Yahoo Sports that multiple other teams have been working on similar technology for some time.

Multiple bat companies already manufacture torpedo bats, including Victus Sports, which teased its version on Instagram on Sunday. Players typically have deals with specific bat makers, who then coordinate with the player to find a model that works best for them. High-profile players, such as Volpe, will occasionally dig deeper, crafting a custom bat specialized in categories such as weighting, balance, thickness and density. The process, to its advocates, is similar to club fitting in golf, in which equipment is specifically tailored to its user.

How much of an actual advantage these torpedo bats create remains an open question. Because while the recent Yankees performance was eye-catching, several other factors contributed to the home run downpour. The Brewers are currently facing something of a pitching injury crisis, with eight of their top 13 arms unavailable. As a result, two hurlers made their MLB debuts Saturday, allowing a combined four homers. Former Yankee Nestor Cortes, who surrendered five homers Saturday, also looked discombobulated in his return to the Bronx, repeatedly missing spots up in the zone with his fastball.

That didn’t stop those on the receiving end of the offensive barrage from registering their complaints about the Yankees’ bats. But the truth is that only time, scientific testing and a much larger sample of data will determine exactly how beneficial the torpedo bats might be compared to a more typical piece of lumber.

But where the Yankees have already notably succeeded is in fostering buy-in from their players.

Convincing big-league hitters, particularly successful ones, to change anything about their routines can be difficult. These are creatures of habit, process, consistency. That Yankees brass have Volpe and Co. sufficiently invested in this new tech is, in and of itself, an enormous organizational win.

“We’re trying to be the best we can be,” Yankees manager Aaron Boone said. “… We’re trying to win on the margins, and that shows up in so many different ways.”

Given the wave of hype generated by the Yankees’ torrent of taters this weekend, other clubs are certain to commence or accelerate their own testing of torpedo bats. Going forward, curiosity will surely win the day.

Asked how many organizations besides the Yankees are toying with bat optimization, one high-ranking front-office person from another team offered a witty, revealing response:

“After this weekend? Roughly 29.”