Cowboys latest free agent signing shows draft’s biggest flaw, faulty scouting

Those who don’t learn from their mistakes are doomed to repeat them. It’s a timeless saying, speaking to the importance of reflection and lesson learning. Some lessons are learned the hard way and others from observing. The Dallas Cowboys’ newest free agent addition, wide receiver Parris Campbell, falls into the latter category of lessons.

 Once upon a time Campbell was one of the hottest prospects in the draft. The Ohio State All-Star was a Championship athlete with a game-breaking skillset. At 6-foot, 205-pounds and 4.3 40-speed, Campbell is rare combination of size and speed. With the ability to stop and start on a dime, Campbell was both a feared return man as well as a rushing and receiving threat. He looked like the complete package.

In 2018 Campbell posted 90 receptions for 1,063 yards and 12 touchdowns for the Buckeyes, proving he wasn’t just raw ability but also a producer. He was often called the second coming of Percy Harvin and in many ways projected to follow Tyreek Hill in all the right ways.

As many well know, Campbell never remotely approached those massive expectations. In six NFL seasons Campbell has only amassed 123 receptions for 1,117 receiving yards and six touchdowns. He hasn’t had a single season averaging more than 37 receiving yards per game and only played one season with more than three starts. It’s been a wildly disappointing career for someone who seemed so “can’t miss” when he was selected by Indianapolis in the second round of the 2019 draft.

Sometimes, as is likely the case with Campbell, it all comes down to good old-fashioned scouting. The numbers don’t see it, the athletic testing doesn’t see it, but raw scouting sees it. Scouting reports universally noticed his limited role at Ohio State. He produced big results but he executed a rather elementary gameplan.

Campbell’s route tree was sparse, his route running was sloppy and his downfield opportunities were limited. Campbell produced partially as a gadget player. His run after the catch ability kept many of his routes shallow and unsophisticated and the bulk of his downfield production came against soft zones that required little technical acumen from Campbell.

Obviously, health played an enormous role in Campbell’s ability to develop as an NFL WR as well. Unable to stay on the field, Campbell struggled building a foundation of knowledge and muscle memory. But the real lesson to be learned is that despite all his production and translatable skills, Campbell was an unproven commodity. He was raw in his development and for years had survived on his natural ability.

It’s a cautionary tale for the Cowboys. Players with elite physical traits are important. Players with proven college production are also important. But players with proven knowledge, technique and positional awareness are just as important. Not all schemes are designed to highlight the players themselves so it’s not always easy to tell if the player is undeveloped or just underutilized. Sometimes it takes good old-fashioned scouting to know what a player can do if he’s just unleashed and refocused in the NFL. It can be applied to receivers, pass-rushers, tight ends, quarterbacks and more. It’s an important lesson for the Cowboys to keep in mind as they navigate the upcoming 2025 NFL draft.

This article originally appeared on Cowboys Wire: Cowboys’ free agent addition is a cautionary tale for the 2025 draft

Drake women’s basketball excluded from March Madness bracket. What’s next?

Drake women’s basketball will not be featured in the NCAA Tournament. The Bulldogs (22-11) were left out of the 68-team field during Sunday’s NCAA Tournament selection show.

Drake fell, 96-90, in the Missouri Valley Conference (MVC) Tournament semifinals to top-seeded Murray State, two wins away from an automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament.

Did Drake women’s basketball make March Madness bracket?

Drake’s resume wasn’t strong enough for an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament. The Bulldogs won their first two games of the regular season but went on to lose five games in a row through mid-November, including back-to-back losses to Iowa and Iowa State.

The Bulldogs bounced back with a nine-game unbeaten streak but couldn’t take care of business when it mattered most in the postseason. They defeated Illinois State, 75-69, in the quarterfinals of the MVC Tournament, but fell to Murray State in the semifinals.

During Allison Pohlman’s third season as head coach, Drake finished 15-5 in conference play.

Marc Ray is the high school sports reporter for the Iowa City Press-Citizen. He can be reached at MARay@gannett.com, and on X, formerly Twitter, at @themarcszn.

This article originally appeared on Iowa City Press-Citizen: Did Drake women’s basketball make March Madness? Bracket update

March Madness 2025: Selection Sunday winners and losers

It’s a big March Madness for the SEC. The conference got 14 of its 16 teams in the men’s NCAA tournament. (Photo by Michael Wade/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)
Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

Now that the brackets have been revealed for both the men’s and women’s NCAA tournaments, some teams fared better than others.

After taking a look at each of the 68-team fields, here are the winners and losers from Selection Sunday as March Madness is officially ready to get underway this week.

The SEC

The conference is an obvious winner after setting a men’s NCAA tournament record with 14 teams in the 2025 edition of March Madness. Only South Carolina and LSU fell short of the tournament as they combined to win just five SEC games.

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The committee felt the SEC was so good this season that it didn’t bat an eye at the 6-12 conference records that Texas and Oklahoma put up. Yeah, the Longhorns were one of the final teams in the tournament and play in the First Four in Dayton, but Oklahoma got a No. 9 seed.

The SEC ended up with four teams among the top eight seeds and six of the top 16 seeds in the tournament. And 11 of the 14 teams are single-digit seeds. With Texas at No. 11, Arkansas and Vanderbilt are No. 10 seeds.

Predictably, the SEC has the best chance of any conference to have the national title winner. Florida is the new favorite to win it all after winning the conference tournament and four of the top six betting favorites are SEC schools.

-NB

Rick Pitino

Is there a more reliable winner in college basketball than Rick Pitino? St. John’s earned a No. 2 seed in the tournament field in Pitino’s second season as head coach and is now the sixth team that Pitino has coached to the NCAA tournament. 

Pitino’s now coached Boston University, Providence, Kentucky, Louisville and Iona in addition to St. John’s to NCAA tournament appearances and has led two teams to NCAA championships (1996 Kentucky, 2013 Louisville, vacated). He’s largely found his success after taking over programs that were struggling before his arrival. 

St. John’s is a prime example. A former Big East power, St. John’s had fallen on rough times in recent decades and hadn’t made the NCAA tournament since 2019 before Pitino’s arrival in 2023. In his first year, he took a team that finished 18-15 the year prior to 20-13. Now he has St. John’s in the postseason as a legitimate threat to win a championship.

-JO

NASHVILLE, TN – MARCH 14: Kentucky Wildcats head coach Mark Pope claps on the sideline during a third round game of the SEC Tournament between the Alabama Crimson Tide and Kentucky Wildcats, March 14, 2025 at Bridgestone Arena in Nashville, Tennessee. (Photo by Matthew Maxey/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images via Getty Images)
Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

Kentucky

Did the Wildcats get a blue-blood boost from the committee? Kentucky finished the season 22-11 and is No. 16 in KenPom.com’s rankings and No. 15 in the NET rankings. Yet UK got a No. 3 seed on Selection Sunday.

Kentucky ranks behind four teams that got lower seeds in KenPom’s data including No. 8 seed Gonzaga and No. 6 seed Missouri. The Wildcats had the same record as the Tigers, though they beat Missouri in the final game of the regular season on the road.

To be clear, Kentucky probably deserved no lower than a No. 4 seed. But every seed line matters.

-NB

North Carolina

Many thought that North Carolina’s bubble was burst after it lost in the ACC tournament semifinal to Duke. But the opening moments of Sunday’s NCAA bracket reveal delivered good news for the Tar Heels.

North Carolina squeaked in as the last team in the field and a No. 11 seed in the South. The Tar Heels made the field despite a 1-12 record in Quad 1 matchups and on the strength of their No. 36 NET rating and No. 33 KenPom rating.

Carolina will still have to earn its way into the tournament’s true 64-team field. It faces a First Four matchup against San Diego State on Tuesday.

-JO

Auburn

The No. 1 overall seed shouldn’t have to worry about a partisan crowd against it during the first weekend of the NCAA tournament. But that’s what Auburn could be facing in the second round. The Tigers got sent to Lexington, Kentucky, for their first and second round games. That’s not a big deal by itself.

But the No. 8 seed at that site is Louisville. The Cardinals play Creighton in the first round and will have a raucous crowd behind it in Lexington if they win that game. Louisville is also probably under-seeded as a No. 8 seed too. The committee could have sent the Cardinals somewhere else. But instead, Auburn has a potential disadvantage despite getting the top seed in the entire tournament.

-NB

NASHVILLE, TENNESSEE – MARCH 15: Bruce Pearl the head coach of the Auburn Tigers gives instructions to his team against the Tennessee Volunteers during the SEC Men’s Basketball Tournament – Semifinals at Bridgestone Arena on March 15, 2025 in Nashville, Tennessee. (Photo by Andy Lyons/Getty Images)
Andy Lyons via Getty Images

Missouri

The Tigers got the seed they deserved at No. 6 and have a short drive to Wichita, Kansas, for their first-round game. But Mizzou drew an incredibly tough No. 11 seed in Drake.

The Bulldogs went 30-3 this season and won the Missouri Valley. Drake is coached by former Northwest Missouri State coach Ben McCollum — one of the hottest coaching candidates this offseason — and is led by Bennett Stirtz, a native of suburban Kansas City, Missouri. Including Stirtz, four of Drake’s five starters played for McCollum at Division II Northwest Missouri State.

Drake is one of the best defensive teams in the country. Missouri is one of the best offensive teams in the country but its defense has tailed off at the end of the season. Missouri will be a trendy pick to get upset in the first round as the Tigers hold the record for most NCAA tournament appearances without a Final Four appearance.

-NB

Indiana

Of the teams sweating the bubble, many pegged Indiana as the best bet to make the field. They were wrong.

Indiana finished 10-10 in a tough Big Ten that produced eight NCAA tournament teams. It also won five of its last eight games. But it lost to Oregon for a one-and-done outing in the Big Ten tournament. That combined with a 2-8 midseason stretch ultimately spelled doom for the Hoosiers’ hopes of making the NCAA tournament. 

-JO

West Virginia

Like Indiana, West Virginia felt like a safe candidate for the NCAA field heading into conference tournament play. Like Indiana, an early exit in tournament play ultimately spelled its doom. 

The Mountaineers lost to last-place Colorado in their first game at the Big 12 tournament, putting their NCAA hopes in peril. They also lost six of eight games in a tough midseason stretch from late January into February that included five losses to unranked teams. 

In the end, six wins in 16 Quad 1 games weren’t enough to put the Mountaineers over the hump and into the 68-team field. 

-JO

Mets Spring Breakout Notebook: Ryan Clifford’s power, Bohan Adderley’s Jazz Chisholm connection headline notes on top prospects

WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. — Ryan Clifford knows that power is “probably going to be the carrying tool” as he works his way through the Mets’ farm system. But, he also says, “I want to try to do my best to make sure it’s not my only tool.”

For now, though, Clifford’s power is the eye candy of his career, especially in light of the gargantuan home run he hit in Sunday’s Spring Breakout, a ball that was estimated to travel nearly 450 feet. It was easily the one shining moment of the Mets’ 5-1 victory over the Nationals at CACTI Park of the Palm Beaches.

Clifford, who was part of the return the Mets snagged in the Justin Verlander trade, slugged a drive well over the 406-foot sign in dead center off Nationals lefty Jackson Kent. It hit halfway or so up a grass rise beyond the fence.

“Felt good,” Clifford said. “Always feels good to put a good swing on one like that.”

Clips of his mighty swing were making the rounds on social media, and he acknowledged that he gets a charge from it.

“There have been a lot of great clips from Breakout games,” Clifford said. “It’s cool to be a part of it.”

Asked if he knew what his longest career home run was, he said, “I don’t know. That would probably be up there, though.”

Clifford — the Mets’ fourth-best prospect, according to SNY’s Joe DeMayo — is only 21 and was told that he would start the season at Double-A this year, he said. He hit 18 home runs at Double-A Binghamton last year and seems poised to move if his power continues to play.

He looms as a significant Mets commodity right now — as a slugger who plays first base, as well as some outfield, he’s a potential ready replacement in case Pete Alonso ends up opting out after this season.

That’s for another day, though. Clifford has more work to do till he puts himself in that kind of position. And he seems to know it — hence what he said about making sure power isn’t his only tool.

“I just try to be a complete player and just put together some competitive at bats and look to be a tough out and someone that pitchers don’t want to face,” Clifford said.

Clifford, who was playing in his second Spring Breakout, said that he and other Mets were talking about how it is an honor to be considered for the game, but there’s something else at play, too.

“I’m sure you don’t want to be a part of too many of them,” he said. “We were joking about that on the way over here.”

More notes from Spring Breakout day:

All that Jazz

Bohan Adderley, an 18-year-old infield prospect who was on the roster for Sunday’s Spring Breakout, is a regular texter with another Bahamian infielder, one who’s already got five years in the Major Leagues — Jazz Chisholm of the Yankees.

“I try to talk to him every day,” said Adderley, who had a .676 OPS and stole 27 bases in 28 tries in 47 games in the Dominican Summer League last year. “Pick his brain. Get anything I can from him and learn from him and it’s a helping tool.”

The two met “through baseball a long time ago,” Adderley said. Adderley’s brother played with Chisholm in their native Bahamas.

“So he would always be at my house,” Adderley said. “He would always chill. Me and Jazz, we’re close.

“He’s a great guy, a great player. He just puts on for our country, because baseball isn’t big there. I feel like he’s doing a great job at showcasing and putting on for the Bahamas.”

Chisholm is among nine players born in the Bahamas to make MLB, according to Baseball Reference’s database. Chisholm has played in 449 games, second-most among players born in the Bahamas, behind only Andre Rodgers (854), who played from 1957-67 for the San Francisco Giants, Chicago Cubs and Pittsburgh Pirates.

Adderley had a .356 on-base percentage in his brief pro debut season. But he wants to be better at controlling the strike zone when he likely starts the season in the Florida Complex League.

“I’m just trying to be more disciplined,” Adderley said. “Go up there with a game plan and really just show what I can do, because I feel like last year I didn’t do as much as I wanted to. So I just want to show what I’m capable of.”

Adderley was 0-for-1 in the game, but showed his powerful arm from shortstop.

Benge press

Carson Benge, the Mets’ highest draft pick last year (19th overall) said that he put on 15 pounds of muscle since giving up pitching and concentrating on the outfield.

Benge, 22, was a two-way player in college at Oklahoma State. He and the Mets “came to an understanding” that he would get off the mound, he said.

“Pitching is definitely fun, but I feel like the future for me is probably with the bat, so I’m going to stick there,” Benge said. “Obviously, putting down pitching was tough because I liked it. But getting to just focus on hitting was definitely exciting and motivating for me.”

Benge said that the added strength has meant “balls are coming off (the bat) a little bit harder and I’m getting more comfortable in the box.”

Benge — the Mets’ fifth-best prospect, according to SNY — played 15 games at Low-A Port St. Lucie last year and batted .273 with a .420 on-base percentage and a .436 slugging. He hit three doubles and two home runs. He was 1-for-2 with a walk Sunday.

From rivals to teammates

Jonathan Santucci, a lefty pitcher the Mets took in the second round last year, and Eli Serrano, a fourth-round outfielder in the same draft, faced each other in college in the ACC.

Santucci, who attended Duke, was impressive, said Serrano.

“I think last year I was like 0-for-2 against him,” Serrano said. “That fastball at 96 (miles per hour), up in the zone, it’ll beat you for sure.”

Mets beat Nationals in Spring Breakout game behind home runs from top prospects Ryan Clifford, Boston Baro

WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. — Ryan Clifford hit a mammoth home run, Boston Baro added an opposite-field blast and Jonah Tong threw two scoreless innings Sunday evening as the Mets beat the Nationals, 5-1, in their Spring Breakout game at CACTI Park of the Palm Beaches.

Nick Morabito added a two-run single for the Mets.

The Spring Breakout is a chance for teams to show off some of their top prospects and an opportunity for the players to showcase their skills against other highly-touted players. It went very well for the Mets.

Here are the main takeaways:

  • Tong, one of the Mets’ top pitching prospects, started the game and was mostly sharp, allowing no runs and one hit in two innings. He struck out three and walked two. Tong, who has the best fastball in the organization, according to Baseball America, pitched at three levels last season, reaching Double-A.
  • The Mets also got scoreless work from Jonathan Pintaro (two innings). Dylan Ross, who showcased nifty breaking stuff, and Jonathan Santucci threw one scoreless frame each. Ryan Lambert, who can hit triple digits, allowed a run in the seventh inning.
  • In the third inning, Baro, a 20-year-old infielder drafted in the eighth round in 2023, smacked a solo home run on a 3-0 pitch. It was an opposite-field shot for Baro, a left-handed hitter. Baro also singled and scored in the fourth. The homer came off Washington’s sixth-ranked prospect, Alex Clemmey, a lefty who struck out six over three innings in the game. Last year, Baro slugged four homers at St. Lucie before being promoted to High-A Brooklyn and had a .748 OPS over the two stops.
  • The Mets added two more runs in the fourth inning after loading the bases with two out. Morabito got ahead in the count, 3-0, and then believed the next pitch was ball four. He was so sure that he even tossed his bat away. But the umpire called it a strike. Morabito fouled off a pitch and then hit a single into short right-center field that plated two runs. Morabito, a second-round pick in the 2022 draft, batted .312 last season with 59 steals over two Class A stops and was named the organization’s minor-league player of the year.
  • One of the more impressive facets of Jett Williams’ skill set was on display in the first inning after he reached base on a fielder’s choice when his popup dropped untouched. Williams, the Mets’ top position-player prospect, took off for second with Clifford at the plate and was easily safe. Get used to seeing stolen bases from Williams, who has 56 steals in 66 tries (84.8%) in his minor-league career.
  • Kevin Parada, the 11th overall pick in the 2022 draft, was 2-for-3 with a double and a run scored. Parada batted .214 with 13 home runs in 115 games at Binghamton last year.

GAME MVP

Clifford, mostly because his fifth-inning home run was the most impressive moment of the game. Clifford, whose prospect calling card is power, smashed a 2-2 pitch over the center-field wall, which is 406 feet from home plate. The ball landed at least halfway up a grass berm well beyond the wall. Clifford, a 21-year-old first baseman/outfielder, hit 19 homers last season over two stops, including 18 at Double-A Binghamton

Highlights

Cavaliers’ winning streak ended by Magic comeback

Wendell Carter Jr (left) contributed 16 points and 14 rebounds in Orlando Magic’s win over Cleveland Cavaliers [Getty Images]

The Orlando Magic fought back to upset the Cleveland Cavaliers 108-103 and end the Cavs’ 16-game winning streak.

Orlando recovered from a 13-point half-time deficit to win, with Paolo Banchero scoring 24 points and Franz Wagner adding 22.

Cleveland have already secured a spot in the end-of-season play-offs and remain well placed to clinch the top seed in the Eastern Conference.

Meanwhile, the Los Angeles Lakers ended their four-game losing run with a 107-96 victory over the Phoenix Suns.

LeBron James missed the game with a groin injury, but Luka Doncic was fit enough to play and was the Lakers’ leading scorer with 33 points.

Elsewhere, Quentin Grimes scored 28 points against his former team as the Philadelphia 76ers overcame the Dallas Mavericks 130-125.

Luka Doncic scores 33 and gritty Lakers beat Suns to end four-game losing skid

Lakers center Jaxson Hayes dunks over Phoenix’s Devin Booker (1) and Bradley Beal (3) during the first half of the Lakers’ win Sunday at Crypto.com Arena. (Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times)

Dorian Finney-Smith hobbled around, the ankle problems that kept him off the court in the Lakers’ losses to Brooklyn and Denver, obvious. Still, he fought with Kevin Durant and helped push the Phoenix star into missing eight of his first nine shots.

In the second half, Finney-Smith would hit two big threes and have a key offensive rebound.

Jordan Goodwin hadn’t started consecutive games this season, nevertheless consecutive games for a team with NBA title hopes, and here he was Sunday, harassing Devin Booker. He opened the game with a tip-in and finished it by extending a possession with another hustle play.

Read more:‘They told me to go play, so I go play.’ Austin Reaves can carry the Lakers when asked

“Never judge a player by his box score,” JJ Redick said of Goodwin, who had just two points and four fouls.

And Jaxson Hayes, a former lottery pick given up on by the team that drafted him and by most of the league, feasted at the rim and ran in and out of defensive switches, the Lakers quickly reestablishing their defensive intensity after a four-game road trip where they never totally made it off the plane.

“We knew we had to be better,” Luka Doncic said.

Even though they didn’t have LeBron James and Rui Hachimura in their starting lineup, Hayes’ return and Finney-Smith’s and Goodwin’s defense made the Lakers look more like the team that had won eight straight and not the one that just dropped four in a row on the road.

Playing their first of five home games this week, the Lakers recaptured their identity largely thanks to their role players, the team clamping down on the Suns during a 107-96 win.

Phoenix Suns forward Kevin Durant (35) starts a fast break after grabbing a defensive rebound in front of Lakers forward Dorian Finney-Smith in the first half Sunday. (Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times)

None of this is to say the Lakers’ healthy stars weren’t terrific — they were.

One game after he nearly willed the Lakers to a win in Denver, Austin Reaves scored 28 to go with six assists and four rebounds. He hit a three over rookie Oso Ighodaro and drew a foul, Durant slumping back into his seat on the Suns’ bench. He drove past Booker, absorbed the contact and scored, flexing at the Lakers’ bench.

And Doncic, who didn’t play in Denver on the second night of a back-to-back set, scored 33 points to go with 11 rebounds and eight assists — his fifth game in the past six where he scored at least 30.

“Getting there,” Doncic said, “but every day I’m feeling better.”

The Lakers play again Monday night against San Antonio.

James, who has missed the past four games, did an on-court workout Sunday but he’s still unlikely to return for a little bit despite being called “day to day.” The expectation is the Lakers will be conservative with his recovery from a strained groin while he ramps up to a return.

Without him, the Lakers have their formula — a formula that requires Hayes back on the court and the team playing with the right spirit.

Healthy or not, that’s who the Lakers need to be — even if the odds were stacked against them. They’d just been on a road trip, they’d just suffered a brutal loss in Denver on Friday and they needed to be at their home arena first thing Sunday to play the Suns.

And they were the team that played hard.

“That to me, that says everything about our group,” Redick said proudly.

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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

With LeBron James still sidelined, Lakers beat Suns to end losing steak

The Los Angeles Lakers cruised to a 107-96 win over the Phoenix Suns at home on Sunday, breaking a four-game losing streak with the help of another dominant Luka Dončić performance.

With the victory, L.A. picked up its first win since LeBron James was sidelined with a groin strain, having lost three straight without James on the court. James is expected to miss at least another week with the injury.

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Los Angeles led for most of the game, picking up a lead in the first quarter and never really looking back. Although the Suns got a bit of momentum in the second quarter to close the gap, the Lakers pulled away again, finishing the half with a 17-point lead.

Phoenix did its best to fight back, getting within single-digits behind a second-half surge from Kevin Durant. In the final minutes, Phoenix got within eight points, but couldn’t quite dig in for the win as L.A. pulled away again. 

Dončić led both teams with 33 points, 11 rebounds and eight assists, with Austin Reaves chipping in a solid 28-point performance to lead the Lakers to the win.

With a 31-37 record, the Suns are currently on the outside looking in for a postseason berth, with only 14 games left in the season. That pressure might be starting to weigh on the team: During a first quarter huddle, Durant was spotted having a seemingly heated exchange with head coach Mike Budenholzer.

It’s unclear exactly what Durant and Budenholzer were talking about, but tension has been high between the two for the past few weeks. The Suns have lost five of their last eight games since the start of March; on Sunday, shooting was a particular problem for Phoenix, especially beyond the arc: Phoenix went 9 of 41 on 3-point shooting.

As for the Lakers, adjusting to playing without James has been difficult, especially with the team’s other starters dealing with injuries. Rui Hachimura has missed several games with a knee injury; Dončić and Jaxson Hayes both missed the Lakers’ loss to the Denver Nuggets on Friday.

Early in the fourth quarter, Dončić was spotted on the sideline with an ice pack on his right ankle after an awkward collision earlier in the game. But he returned to the court soon afterward, indicating the injury wasn’t too severe.

L.A. is now 41-25, tied with four other Western Conference teams in the loss column. The Lakers have played two games less than those clubs though, meaning the team has a few extra chances to pull themselves into better playoff position before the season ends.

With LeBron James still sidelined, Lakers beat Suns to end losing steak

The Los Angeles Lakers cruised to a 107-96 win over the Phoenix Suns at home on Sunday, breaking a four-game losing streak with the help of another dominant Luka Dončić performance.

With the victory, L.A. picked up its first win since LeBron James was sidelined with a groin strain, having lost three straight without James on the court. James is expected to miss at least another week with the injury.

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Los Angeles led for most of the game, picking up a lead in the first quarter and never really looking back. Although the Suns got a bit of momentum in the second quarter to close the gap, the Lakers pulled away again, finishing the half with a 17-point lead.

Phoenix did its best to fight back, getting within single-digits behind a second-half surge from Kevin Durant. In the final minutes, Phoenix got within eight points, but couldn’t quite dig in for the win as L.A. pulled away again. 

Dončić led both teams with 33 points, 11 rebounds and eight assists, with Austin Reaves chipping in a solid 28-point performance to lead the Lakers to the win.

With a 31-37 record, the Suns are currently on the outside looking in for a postseason berth, with only 14 games left in the season. That pressure might be starting to weigh on the team: During a first quarter huddle, Durant was spotted having a seemingly heated exchange with head coach Mike Budenholzer.

It’s unclear exactly what Durant and Budenholzer were talking about, but tension has been high between the two for the past few weeks. The Suns have lost five of their last eight games since the start of March; on Sunday, shooting was a particular problem for Phoenix, especially beyond the arc: Phoenix went 9 of 41 on 3-point shooting.

As for the Lakers, adjusting to playing without James has been difficult, especially with the team’s other starters dealing with injuries. Rui Hachimura has missed several games with a knee injury; Dončić and Jaxson Hayes both missed the Lakers’ loss to the Denver Nuggets on Friday.

Early in the fourth quarter, Dončić was spotted on the sideline with an ice pack on his right ankle after an awkward collision earlier in the game. But he returned to the court soon afterward, indicating the injury wasn’t too severe.

L.A. is now 41-25, tied with four other Western Conference teams in the loss column. The Lakers have played two games less than those clubs though, meaning the team has a few extra chances to pull themselves into better playoff position before the season ends.

Joey Gallo is planning to try pitching after he was released by the White Sox

GLENDALE, Ariz. — Joey Gallo is planning to try pitching after he was released by the Chicago White Sox.

Gallo went 2 for 20 in nine Cactus League games with Chicago in spring training, striking out 11 times. The first baseman/outfielder was in camp on a minor league contract.

After the White Sox announced Sunday that they had released the two-time All-Star, Gallo posted on social media that he was done with the outfield and he was going to start pitching.

The 31-year-old Gallo is a two-time Gold Glove winner for his work in the outfield.

Chicago also announced that Sean Burke will start its March 27 opener at home against the Los Angeles Angels. The 25-year-old right-hander made his big league debut in September, going 2-0 with a 1.42 ERA in three starts and one relief appearance with the White Sox.

Gallo hit .161 with 10 homers, 27 RBIs and 102 strikeouts in 223 at-bats with Washington last season. Gallo’s $8 million mutual option was declined by the Nationals in November.

He has a .194 career average with 208 homers, 453 RBIs and 1,292 strikeouts in 2,869 at-bats in 10 major league seasons with Texas (2015-21), the New York Yankees (2021-22), the Los Angeles Dodgers (2022), Minnesota (2023) and the Nationals.

The White Sox also said Mason Adams, one of their top pitching prospects, has a flexor strain in his right elbow.

The 25-year-old right-hander, a 13th-round pick in the 2022 amateur draft, pitched 1 1/3 innings against Cincinnati on Friday before leaving because of elbow discomfort.