D’Angelo Russell reportedly agrees to 2-year, $13 million deal to join Mavericks

The Dallas Mavericks have found their temporary replacement for Kyrie Irving.

The Mavericks struck a two-year, $13 million deal with point guard D’Angelo Russell on Monday afternoon, according to ESPN’s Shams Charania. Russell will have a player option in the second year of the deal, too. The No. 2 pick from the 2015 NBA Draft will now get to join a Dallas team rebuilt around Anthony Davis and rookie Cooper Flagg, and he’ll presumably get significant minutes right away this fall.

Russell has bounced around a lot in recent years. The Mavericks will actually be his fourth team in the past four seasons. He was traded to the Los Angeles Lakers by the Minnesota Timberwolves during the 2022-23 campaign, and then the Lakers sent him to Brooklyn ahead of the deadline last season. He finished out the end of a two-year, $36 million deal there, and then entered free agency this summer.

In total, Russell averaged a career-low 12.6 points and 5.1 assists per game last season across both his stints with the Lakers and the Nets. He also shot a career-worst 39% from the field. Though Russell has struggled over the last several seasons, at least some of that can be attributed to his seemingly constant movement.

Perhaps most importantly for Dallas, though, is that they’ve now landed an experienced point guard to hold things down before Irving comes back. Irving is currently recovering from an ACL injury he sustained earlier this spring, and he’s expected to be sidelined until January or so. Irving is the plan for Dallas long-term, too. He agreed to a new three-year, $119 million extension with the franchise last week. 

But until Irving can take the floor again, whenever that ends up being, they need a replacement for him. Russell is a great, and inexpensive, option to fill in there. And, if Russell can prove he can still succeed in the league, he can parlay this stint into a more lucrative deal somewhere else down the road.

The Mavericks went just 39-43 last season and largely fell apart after trading away star Luka Dončić to the Los Angeles Lakers for Davis. But now with Flagg arriving in Dallas after the draft, and a new point guard to bridge the gap for the first few months, the Mavericks appear to be in a position to compete again in the West. While it may not be a long-term spot for Russell, it’s definitely a great opportunity for him too. 

Dorian Finney-Smith agrees to 4-year, $53 million deal with Rockets: Report

Dorian Finney-Smith has agreed to a four-year, $53 million contract with the Houston Rockets, according to ESPN’s Shams Charania, adding a versatile 3-and-D frontcourt piece to a Rockets roster with designs on contending next season, especially after the acquisition of Kevin Durant.

Finney-Smith, 32, is currently rehabilitating after undergoing left ankle surgery in early June. He is expected to be available by the start of training camp in September.

Undrafted out of Florida in 2016, the 6-foot-7, 220-pound Finney-Smith became one of the most sought-after targets on the free-agent market after declining his $15.4 million player option with the Lakers for next season in pursuit of a longer-term, more lucrative deal. While a multi-year deal will carry the veteran through his mid-30s, teams around the NBA saw the value in Finney-Smith, who has carved out a decade-long career by becoming a valuable player type in the modern game: a stout, switchable defender across the forward spots who can guard up as a small-ball center and who makes enough 3-pointers to pull opposing big men out of the paint and helps unlock the benefits of five-out spacing for your offense.

Finney-Smith developed into a starter and integral role player for the Mavericks, growing into a trusted 3-and-D stalwart on the Luka Dončić-led teams that made three straight playoff appearances, capped by a run to the 2022 Western Conference finals. With Dallas scuffling midway through the 2022-23 season, Finney-Smith found himself on the move to Brooklyn, packaged with Spencer Dinwiddie and multiple draft picks in exchange for Kyrie Irving.

He’d spend parts of three seasons as a good-soldier vet at Barclays Center, providing energy, effort and switchability on Nets teams largely spinning their wheels in search of a roadmap to the future, before a December deal sent him to Los Angeles — where, just a few weeks later, he’d be reunited with old buddy Dončić as part of a revamped Lakers rotation around LeBron James.

Finney-Smith acquitted himself well in forum blue and gold, shooting 39.8% from 3-point range in the second half of the season and offering dependable contributions on both ends, whether he was starting or coming off the bench. By the end of the Lakers’ first-round playoff defeat at the hands of the Timberwolves, it was abundantly obvious Finney-Smith was one of the only players head coach J.J. Redick felt he could trust; he was part of the five-man unit that Redick infamously ran for the entire second half of Game 4, and he started and played 30 minutes in the deciding Game 5.

Whatever your thoughts on Redick’s strategy, it made sense that Finney-Smith was one of the players he felt gave the Lakers their best chance of winning — one of the players that, almost irrespective of matchup and opponent, he couldn’t do without. According to The BBall Index, only seven players who logged at least 1,500 minutes in the NBA last season ranked in the 80th percentile or higher in average matchup difficulty, defensive positional versatility and 3-point shot-making … and Finney-Smith was one of them.

The rest of the list? Dillon Brooks, Royce O’Neale, teammate Rui Hachimura, De’Andre Hunter, Taurean Prince and Trey Murphy III. That’s five guys who’ve been specifically targeted as high-end role players on teams with championship aspirations, and one (Murphy) who’d quickly become the belle of the ball on the trade market if the Pelicans ever made it clear they were interested in taking calls. Players who can defend multiple positions at a high level and shoot with consistency and accuracy can be awfully valuable come April, May and June. With this new deal, Houston is signaling they expect to be playing as spring turns into summer, and they expect Finney-Smith to be part of the reason why.

Why I’m Excited for Amazfit’s New ‘Helio Strap’ Fitness Tracker

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Amazfit recently launched its Helio Strap, the third of the three once-rumored Whoop-like trackers to be officially announced. It’s the only one you can buy right now, and its features and price (just $99.99) look pretty sweet. 

A brief history lesson: The first of the three Whoop-like trackers to be announced was something from Polar. That’s all we know—there’s no name of the device or even a photo, although the shadowy image from the press release looks a lot like the Polar 360, a device that was never marketed directly to consumers. The price has not been announced, but it will be “subscription-free.” The second was Garmin’s Index sleep monitor, which sells for $169.99, is also subscription-free, and is meant to be used only for sleep, not sports. (I found the product description to be underwhelming, though I haven’t gotten my hands on a review unit yet.) Finally, we have Amazfit’s $99 Helio band, which was previously teased by pro Hyrox athletes and just became available to the rest of us last week. My review unit is on its way, but I can say from looking at the specs that this is the band I’m most excited for. It’s what Garmin should have released, and it sets the standard that Polar will have to match. 

The price is hard to beat

It’s hard to envision paying more than $100 for a screenless strap. After all, the idea is that it does half of what a watch does (it collects data, but doesn’t have a screen to display it). I try to give Whoop a pass on being screenless because its app is so thoughtfully designed and does a ton of analysis and planning—in Whoop’s case, you’re really paying for the service more than the hardware. But if you’re going to buy a device for a flat fee, I find it hard to stomach Garmin’s $169 price tag when you would likely wear it in addition to a Garmin watch that costs anywhere from $200 to possibly over $1,000. Also, Garmin’s device is just for sleep. The Helio strap is for sleep and workouts, so you arguably get twice as much use for just a little over half the price. 

You can use it for both exercise and sleep

Garmin’s device is just for sleep, and Polar’s may be for 24/7 wear (we don’t know yet), but Amazfit’s is explicitly meant for exercise in addition to wearing it to sleep. The company boasts that it has 27 exercise modes, which doesn’t sound like a ton, but I’m intrigued by the “smart strength training” and a Hyrox race mode. (Hyrox is a fitness racing sport, where competitions have you run between exercise stations, doing things like burpees and sled pushes. Several Amazfit watches have a mode that can keep track of the different segments of this competition.)

Amazfit plans to sell an armband for the Helio strap, although their website says it’s not available yet. Personally, I love when trackers have an armband option for strength or functional fitness activities, since kettlebells and wrist wraps tend to interfere with anything wrist-based. 

It’s Garmin, not Whoop, that should be scared

According to press materials, the Helio strap has a 10-day battery life. The data from the strap feeds into the Zepp app, the same as that of other Amazfit watches, so you can swap between the Helio strap and any Amazfit watch you may happen to own, like the T-Rex 3 or the Bip 6—or the new Balance 2, which somehow manages to stuff dual-band GPS, offline maps, and a sapphire glass screen into a $299 package. It’s the kind of thing Garmin watch users have been asking for: Something that lets people take their watch off while still feeding data into the same app as their regular watch. Something that has a good battery life and a relatively affordable price tag. Something you can wear during activities, not just for sleep. 

The Helio strap even features something called BioCharge, which sounds a lot like Garmin’s “Body Battery.” Body Battery is a number that goes up when you sleep or recover, and goes down when you exercise or are stressed. I ignore it, personally, but I know a lot of people like to keep tabs on a numerical metaphor for how energetic they might feel throughout the day. 

The one thing I’m not so sure about is GPS. It’s not mentioned in any of the Helio strap’s specifications, and a note about battery life mentions that they’re assuming outdoor workouts occur with the strap linked to your phone’s GPS. This is similar to what Whoop does, letting them keep the device small and power-efficient by completely eliminating location tracking tech. But it comes with tradeoffs: Your phone’s GPS may not be as accurate as a watch (depending on your phone, of course), and it eats into your phone’s battery rather than the device’s. That said, if you’re tracking an outdoor run, you probably want to wear your watch anyway—bringing us back to the two-device setup that Amazfit probably hopes you’ll buy into.

Someone Built an Ad Blocker for Real Life, and I Can’t Wait to Try It

I use as many ad-blocking programs as possible, but no matter how many I install, real-life advertising is still there, grabbing my attention when I’m just trying to go for a walk. Thankfully, there may be a solution on the horizon. Software engineer Stijn Spanhove recently posted a concept video showing what real-time, real-life ad-blocking looks like on a pair of Snap Spectacles, and I really want it. Check it out:

The idea is that the AI in your smart glasses recognizes advertisements in your visual field and “edits them out’ in real time, sparing you from ever seeing what they want you to see.

While Spanhove’s video shows a red block over the offending ads, you could conceivably cover that Wendy’s ad with anything you want—an abstract painting, a photo of your family, an ad for Arby’s, etc.

How close are we to real-life ad-blocking?

While it’s a test at present, real-life ad-blocking for the people doesn’t seem far off. The technology is there now: current-generation consumer AI glasses like Meta Ray Bans can already identify what you’re looking at with scary accuracy.

Replacing ads is a little trickier, though. While there are AR smart-glasses on the market, like the XReal Airs, and upcoming Snap Specs, and AR experiences in VR headsets like the Meta Quest 3 can already strip out parts of the real environment and replace them, there isn’t anything on the market with full AR that is practical enough for wearing all the time. Battery life and weight are the problems, but those are solvable. There are so many companies competing for the smart glasses market, it seems like only a matter of time until it’s practical to achieve real life ad-blocking.

Companies versus consumer and the creation of the ultimate echo chamber

I could see this being a killer app for smart glasses in the near future: It’s the kind of things that consumers would really want. But it’s also the kind of thing that advertisers and marketers would really not want, and this might be the biggest obstacles to real-life ad-blockers. You could envision a “cat-and-mouse” game similar to the one that’s been playing out online for years, with companies trying ingenious ways to thwart the ad-blocking glasses, like disguising ads as something else. Would there be legal challenges? Would there be issues with a mega corporation that releases smart glasses not wanting to piss off every other company? And what happens if you want to edit out ads for the very device you’re wearing?

There are sociological concerns as well. People probably wouldn’t stop at replacing ads with pixel art. They’d be editing out anything that personally annoys them: homeless people, construction sites, other humans who have traits they don’t like. Curating your own visual experience in the real world could lead to the creation of personal echo chambers that make the world look more to your liking, but less like it is, the ultimate echo chamber.

Ethical concerns aside, I would be first in line for a pair of glasses that edited reality to my liking. I know I would use them responsibly, even if I’m not sure about everyone else. Maybe I wouldn’t wear them all the time. Just almost all the time.

Remembering Dave Parker, Mets get swept & a weekend recap

33 years after his retirement, Dave ‘The Cobra’ Parker finally got the news that he would be inducted into baseball’s Hall of Fame. Saturday, less than a month away from being able to attend his Hall of Fame induction, baseball lost its giant. The six-foot five-inch slugger left an indelible mark on the game. Parker won an MVP, back-to-back hitting titles, three Gold Gloves and two World Series. The 7-time All-Star finished with 2,712 hits and a 40.1 career WAR. Jake and Jordan remember the legend.

The Mets’ struggles continue as they suffer their worst series loss in team history. Losing by a combined score of 30-4 over the three game series, the Mets get swept by the Pirates without Paul Skenes. New York remains only 1.5 games back in the NL East, but does a players only meeting and a consistent lack of offense spell trouble as they prepare to meet up with the Brewers this week? The guys dive into this matchup and look ahead for the Mets. However, this was not the only sweep of the weekend as Jake and Jordan discuss the other two sweeps as well. They break down the Cardinals’ sweep of the Guardians and the Marlins’ sweep of the Diamondbacks in the latest version of ‘How Sweep It Is.’

Plus, Ohtani dominates on the mound and at the plate, Tarik Skubal strikes out 13, the Orioles score 22 runs in a game and the Astros continue to have the best record in baseball since May 6th. Jake and Jordan get you ‘Around the League’ quickly with ‘Turbo Mode’ as they break down each series from the weekend.

Join us to start off your 4th of July week at the Baseball Bar-B-Cast.

Note: This is the first of two episodes this week. We will return on Thursday to take a look at the upcoming weekend.

Remembering Dave Parker

AP Photo/Gene J. Puskar, Archivo
Remembering Dave Parker

AP Photo/Gene J. Puskar, Archivo

AP Photo/Gene J. Puskar, Archivo

(1:32) – Remembering Dave Parker

(16:36) – Pirates sweep Mets

(24:34) – Cardinals sweep Guardians

(30:17) – Marlins sweep Diamondbacks

(36:31) – Around the League

(48:42) – Ohtani returns to the mound

(51:47) – Turbo Mode

Follow the show on X at @CespedesBBQ

Follow Jake @Jake_Mintz

Follow Jordan @J_Shusterman_

🖥️ Watch this full episode on YouTube

Check out the rest of the Yahoo Sports podcast family at https://apple.co/3zEuTQj or at Yahoo Sports Podcasts

Remembering Dave Parker, Mets get swept & a weekend recap

33 years after his retirement, Dave ‘The Cobra’ Parker finally got the news that he would be inducted into baseball’s Hall of Fame. Saturday, less than a month away from being able to attend his Hall of Fame induction, baseball lost its giant. The six-foot five-inch slugger left an indelible mark on the game. Parker won an MVP, back-to-back hitting titles, three Gold Gloves and two World Series. The 7-time All-Star finished with 2,712 hits and a 40.1 career WAR. Jake and Jordan remember the legend.

The Mets’ struggles continue as they suffer their worst series loss in team history. Losing by a combined score of 30-4 over the three game series, the Mets get swept by the Pirates without Paul Skenes. New York remains only 1.5 games back in the NL East, but does a players only meeting and a consistent lack of offense spell trouble as they prepare to meet up with the Brewers this week? The guys dive into this matchup and look ahead for the Mets. However, this was not the only sweep of the weekend as Jake and Jordan discuss the other two sweeps as well. They break down the Cardinals’ sweep of the Guardians and the Marlins’ sweep of the Diamondbacks in the latest version of ‘How Sweep It Is.’

Plus, Ohtani dominates on the mound and at the plate, Tarik Skubal strikes out 13, the Orioles score 22 runs in a game and the Astros continue to have the best record in baseball since May 6th. Jake and Jordan get you ‘Around the League’ quickly with ‘Turbo Mode’ as they break down each series from the weekend.

Join us to start off your 4th of July week at the Baseball Bar-B-Cast.

Note: This is the first of two episodes this week. We will return on Thursday to take a look at the upcoming weekend.

Remembering Dave Parker

AP Photo/Gene J. Puskar, Archivo
Remembering Dave Parker

AP Photo/Gene J. Puskar, Archivo

AP Photo/Gene J. Puskar, Archivo

(1:32) – Remembering Dave Parker

(16:36) – Pirates sweep Mets

(24:34) – Cardinals sweep Guardians

(30:17) – Marlins sweep Diamondbacks

(36:31) – Around the League

(48:42) – Ohtani returns to the mound

(51:47) – Turbo Mode

Follow the show on X at @CespedesBBQ

Follow Jake @Jake_Mintz

Follow Jordan @J_Shusterman_

🖥️ Watch this full episode on YouTube

Check out the rest of the Yahoo Sports podcast family at https://apple.co/3zEuTQj or at Yahoo Sports Podcasts

Astros shortstop Jeremy Peña, team’s leading hitter, placed on 10-day IL due to fractured left rib

Houston Astros shortstop Jeremy Peña is going on the 10-day injured list due to a fractured left rib, the team announced Monday.

Peña, 27, sustained the injury in Friday’s 7-4 win over the Chicago Cubs when he was hit by a pitch from Cade Horton in the second inning. He stayed in the game until the fifth inning before being removed for a pinch-hitter. 

X-rays taken Friday did not reveal the fracture, according to MLB.com. But the injury was revealed in MRI and CT scans taken Sunday. Peña is staying with the team during its six-game road trip to receive treatment.

With a .322/.378/.489 average, Peña is the Astros’ leading hitter this season. His 11 home runs are third among Houston’s hitters, while his 102 hits, 18 doubles and 15 stolen bases lead the lineup. In the field, his eight defensive runs saved are fourth among MLB shortstops, and his five outs above average rank eighth.

Mauricio Dubón (.239 average, .668 OPS) is expected to fill in at shortstop while Peña is sidelined. Houston will announce a move to replace Peña on the active roster before Tuesday’s game versus the Colorado Rockies. Peña will be eligible to come off the IL on July 8, depending on his recovery. He will miss a three-game series this weekend with the Los Angeles Dodgers

“From talking to doctors, there’s some NFL players that play with this, but it’s a pain-tolerance thing,” Astros general manager Dana Brown told MLB.com. “If he feels like he’s fine after a week, we’ll start some baseball activity. We can give him some things to do, and he might be able to play through it as it heals.

“This isn’t one of those things where you have to be sidelined the whole time,” he continued. “Once the inflammation goes down, he might feel good enough to swing a bat. It’s more how much can he tolerate, which means he could come back soon after the 10 days.”

The Astros have the second-best record in the American League at 50-34, despite injuries to designated hitter Yordan Alvarez, outfielder Chas McCormick, second baseman Brendan Rodgers and pitchers Luis Garcia and Cristian Javier

Astros shortstop Jeremy Peña, team’s leading hitter, placed on 10-day IL due to fractured left rib

Houston Astros shortstop Jeremy Peña is going on the 10-day injured list due to a fractured left rib, the team announced Monday.

Peña, 27, sustained the injury in Friday’s 7-4 win over the Chicago Cubs when he was hit by a pitch from Cade Horton in the second inning. He stayed in the game until the fifth inning before being removed for a pinch-hitter. 

X-rays taken Friday did not reveal the fracture, according to MLB.com. But the injury was revealed in MRI and CT scans taken Sunday. Peña is staying with the team during its six-game road trip to receive treatment.

With a .322/.378/.489 average, Peña is the Astros’ leading hitter this season. His 11 home runs are third among Houston’s hitters, while his 102 hits, 18 doubles and 15 stolen bases lead the lineup. In the field, his eight defensive runs saved are fourth among MLB shortstops, and his five outs above average rank eighth.

Mauricio Dubón (.239 average, .668 OPS) is expected to fill in at shortstop while Peña is sidelined. Houston will announce a move to replace Peña on the active roster before Tuesday’s game versus the Colorado Rockies. Peña will be eligible to come off the IL on July 8, depending on his recovery. He will miss a three-game series this weekend with the Los Angeles Dodgers

“From talking to doctors, there’s some NFL players that play with this, but it’s a pain-tolerance thing,” Astros general manager Dana Brown told MLB.com. “If he feels like he’s fine after a week, we’ll start some baseball activity. We can give him some things to do, and he might be able to play through it as it heals.

“This isn’t one of those things where you have to be sidelined the whole time,” he continued. “Once the inflammation goes down, he might feel good enough to swing a bat. It’s more how much can he tolerate, which means he could come back soon after the 10 days.”

The Astros have the second-best record in the American League at 50-34, despite injuries to designated hitter Yordan Alvarez, outfielder Chas McCormick, second baseman Brendan Rodgers and pitchers Luis Garcia and Cristian Javier

Seven Changes That Finally Helped Me Stick to My Home Fitness Routine

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I have long been a gym regular (in large part because I work there part-time as a spin instructor) and I have owned my Peloton for four years, but I never considered myself a workout fiend. But lately, I’ve gotten more serious about it. I’m using apps to monitor my protein intake, filling my downtime with sports, and even—and especially—working out at home.

At-home exercise has long been a challenge for me, as I find I have trouble staying motivated the same way I do when I’m at the gym, but I’ve found some ways to keep myself consistent. Here are seven changes I’ve made that you can also try if you’re struggling to convince yourself to break a sweat while your couch is beckoning to you from across the room.

I invested in equipment

Money is a major motivator for me. Maybe it’s because of all my Capricorn zodiac placements, the fact that I’m an only child, or just a personality defect with no explanation, but the fact remains: I am incapable of enjoying a hobby without tying it to some kind of financial stakes. I can’t simply like fashion; I have to constantly sell and rent out my clothes online so I can get money to buy more clothes. I can’t simply take spin classes; I have to get certified so I can teach them. Teaching spin, it turns out, paid dividends for me: I got paid to do a thing I would otherwise be paying to do, and I got a free gym membership in the bargain. Initially, however, that backfired: Because I was no longer paying for my gym membership, I stopped going to the gym when I wasn’t teaching. Turns out that financial motivator was key to my productivity.

To rectify this, I’ve started funneling money into health and fitness in other ways. In addition to buying month-to-month packages at boutique gyms, like pilates studios, I’ve invested in at-home equipment. The Peloton app alone costs me $44 per month, which is probably a large part of why I’m on an 106-day streak of riding my Bike every day.

I also began collecting workout equipment, like weights, a sturdy yoga mat, yoga blocks, and random tools like resistance bands and this strange little device for more effective body-weight squats. I keep it all in the open in my living room so that I have to consider my investment every day. If I don’t use it, I’ll know my money is going to waste. It’s an aggressive defense against my own lazy tendencies, but it works for me.

If your plan is just to follow along with a few at-home “crunch challenges” or plyometrics you find on Instagram, you may lose motivation since it’s not really costing you anything. Up the ante with a little monetary investment and you’ll feel the burn, both in your wallet and your core.

This also addresses one of the other ways the gym tends to be better than at-home workouts: The more equipment you have, the more you can do, and the more you’ll want to do. It’s no fun to follow along with a YouTube video or a Peloton strength workout and not have the right tools. Spending not only money, but time, figuring out what you need to meet your goals is worthwhile.

I set specific goals

I used to have pretty nebulous fitness goals: “Lose weight. Be healthier.” Those are nice ideas to stick on a vision board, but they don’t produce much in terms of planning or motivation. If you have a solid routine of going to the gym, they’re easy enough to maintain, but if you need to get serious about forcing yourself off the couch and working out in your own home, I don’t think they cut it. So I started mapping out much more specific goals, like “Do the splits by August.”

You can set out to curl a certain weight by your next birthday, gain a certain circumference on your bicep by autumn, lose a certain amount of pounds by an upcoming event—it doesn’t matter what your goals are so much as it matters that they’re unique, actionable, measurable, and time-based.

I’ve found that for me, achieving the goal by my personal deadline is motivating enough to keep me focused. I set a goal to do a pistol squat by May and achieved it in April, which made me feel smug, and eager to move on to the next one. If a generaly feeling of superiority isn’t enough for you, try a rewards system: If your goal is to curl 30 pounds by December and you’re at 15 now, think of a reward you can allow yourself when you hit the 20 and 25 pound milestones, like a meal at a favorite restaurant. If you’re on a weight-loss journey, consider allowing yourself one deluxe activewear purchase every time you go down a size.

Don’t forget to track your progress toward your goals. Cristina Chan, a F45 Global Recovery Athlete, tells me that when it comes to staying motivated to work out solo, “Tracking your workouts in a way that’s visual and rewarding can be a game-changer.” She encourages clients to mark off a calendar, fill in a habit tracker app, or even put sticky notes on a wall to keep track of active days. “Seeing your consistency build over time is a powerful motivator and it shifts the focus to showing up, not just physical results.”

I dress to impress (myself)

Remember during lockdown when everyone was telling you to continue dressing for work, even when you were clocking in from home, because it would put you in a “work” mindset? I’ve done well applying the same logic to my workouts: Every day before I hop on my Peloton or situate myself on my yoga mat, I don a matching workout set. (My favorites come from Set Active because they’re all color-coordinated and the fabric is compressive but comfortable.)

I could do my at-home workouts in my pajamas, but that doesn’t put me in the “workout” headspace. It puts me in the “lounging” headspace. Making the conscious decision to get up and put on compressive garments, high socks, and a sturdy hair clip tricks my brain. I wouldn’t lounge around all day in those tight clothes, so my mind automatically knows it’s not time to lounge at all. Even if no one sees me in my matching sets, I “see” myself, and know what time it is. When I finish my at-home workout, I put on a new outfit, just as if I was leaving the gym.

I also prepare for an at-home workout like I would if I were heading to the gym. I mix some creatine into my water (I love the Wellah creatine and am obsessed with matching an Owala water bottle to my outfit), select a perfect playlist, and stretch well.

All of these rituals are about getting into the correct mindset. Your living room probably doesn’t look like a gym or have gym vibes, so it’s on you to make yourself feel like you’re ready to work out.

I approximate the feeling of community

I do love being at the gym because I enjoy being around people. It’s motivating to see the same faces every day and to be surrounded by people who are also working hard. When you’re next to someone on a treadmill or taking a pilates class, you almost can’t help but put some extra oomph into your own workout. Sadly, that energy is harder to replicate if you primarily work out from home.

This is why I love taking Peloton classes. The leaderboards make it easy to feel like I’m part of a real class, and I always feel a need to compete with other people—even faceless strangers whose output scores I’m trying to beat in a virtual setting. If you don’t have a Peloton, there are other ways to accomplish this same thing.

One option is to set up challenge groups. Assemble a group of friends who will all commit to, say, submitting mid-workout selfies to a group chat once a day for accountability. (I follow a few different people who do this publicly via Instagram stories, but that’s a stretch, even for me.) If none of your friends are into it, strangers on the internet will be: Search Reddit or Facebook for “fitness challenge” or “workout challenge.” Add your city or some identifiers, like “for moms,” and you’ll find a group of like-minded people who want to hold each other accountable.

A lot of virtual fitness instructors, like people who upload cycling classes to YouTube, offer live classes, too. Just like signing up for a class at the gym, this can force you to work out when you might not otherwise want to. You don’t want to miss class or make other regulars wonder where you are.

I add variety

A key component of working out is avoiding boredom, which isn’t always easy in your own home. When you go to the gym, you see all kinds of people, have access to a variety of tools and resources, and can even find entertainment in your commute. If you work out in your living room, it likely contains no new people and limited equipment—and the commute to get there might oly involve standing up.

To inject some variety, I mix up what I’m doing on my Peloton. I watch YouTube videos, play games, and take scenic rides. I schedule rides with friends and have even taken classes in foreign languages just to force myself to pay extra attention to the on-screen metrics. Beyond the Peloton, I try to do an array of other kinds of workouts, though a lot of them—like stretching and meditation—are also available in the Peloton app. I even divvy days up the same as I would in the gym, focusing on legs one day, arms the next, and so on.

Just because you’re working out at home doesn’t mean you can’t go outside. I consider outdoor jogs “at-home” workouts because they require the same additional motivators as doing yoga in my living room: There’s no one there with me, it costs nothing, and I have to convince myself to get up and go.

If you’re tired of the same four walls, stretch on your deck. Jog down the block. Get yourself out of the same room you’re always in so that the workout feels fresh.

I keep to a schedule

This one is a work in progress, but I think it’s crucial. For a long time, I was tackling at-home workouts sporadically. Some days, I’d bounce out of bed to do a morning Peloton ride. Other days, I’d wait until bedtime to tucker myself out with my free weights. Lunch-break runs, yoga when I felt stressed, randomly deciding it was simply “YouTube pilates time” at 8 p.m.—all of this kept me moving, but there was no schedule or structure to keep me accountable to myself.

Now, I’m slowly figuring out the schedule that works best for me, which is harder in the summer months, when the likelihood of going out at night is much higher. As it stands, I’m doing morning Peloton rides on the days I’m not already teaching a spin class at 7 a.m. (with a 10-minute “cooldown” Peloton ride when I get home on the days I do teach), then immediately doing yoga, stretching, or mat pilates right after work at least three days a week. I also try to make sure at least one leisure activity a week is more activity than leisure, like golfing, playing basketball, or swimming, and those are usually slated for weekend afternoons.

“One strategy I always suggest to clients is habit-stacking/pairing your workout with something you’re already doing every day,” Chan advises. “For example, if you always have coffee in the morning, lay out your mat right after your last sip. That small trigger helps turn movement into a non-negotiable part of your routine, not something you have to constantly talk yourself into.”

I try to be kind to myself

I’m serious about this one. I’ve been working hard for the last year or so to stop badmouthing myself when I don’t do as well at something as I think I should. Getting down on yourself only worsens your mood, which isn’t particularly motivating. There are days I really do not want or have time to work out, so I queue up a 10-minute meditation on the Peloton app to maintain my active days streak. I don’t give myself grief about this, and that’s key: I know that if I felt bad about it or made myself feel lazy or guilty, I’d start to associate those negative feelings with working out altogether—and then I might quit.

If I can stay positive, tell myself it’s OK to have an off day as long as I get back at it tomorrow, and stay focused on my real goals instead of an arbitrary idea about how much I need to do every single day, I’ll keep viewing working out as a fun and productive. And that means I’ll be much more likely to hop on the Peloton the tomorrow morning.

Chan suggests having a “bare-minimum” workout allowance for those off days—your version of my Peloton meditations. “Some days, motivation just isn’t there and that’s normal,” she says. “I tell my clients to always have a go-to ‘bare minimum’ workout: five minutes of mobility or three sets of a simple bodyweight circuit. Even if that’s all you do, you’ve kept the habit alive. Most of the time, once you start moving, you’ll want to keep going.”