Jokic scores 40, outduels Wembanyama and Nuggets top Spurs 136-134 in OT

DENVER (AP) — Nikola Jokic had 40 points, 13 assists and eight rebounds, Christian Braun added 21 points and the Denver Nuggets beat San Antonio 136-134 in overtime Saturday to snap the Spurs’ 11-game winning streak.

Cameron Johnson scored 17, Jamal Murray finished with 15 points and 10 assists and Aaron Gordon scored 15 for the Nuggets.

Gordon scored with 6.2 seconds left in regulation to tie the game, then forced Victor Wembanyama into a miss on the final shot of regulation.

Wembanyama finished with 34 points, 18 rebounds, seven assists and five blocked shots for the Spurs, who lost for only the third time in their last 30 games.

Stephon Castle scored 20 points for San Antonio, while Devin Vassell and Julian Champagnie each scored 18 for the Spurs.

Castle’s three-point play midway through the second quarter put the Spurs up 57-44, that 13-point margin the biggest that they would hold all afternoon.

Wembanyama scored with 9:08 remaining to put San Antonio up 107-96. The Spurs were 48-2 this season in games where they held double-digit leads in the fourth quarter.

They’re 48-3 now — with two of those losses against the Nuggets, who rallied from a 13-point deficit in the fourth to beat San Antonio on March 12.

Denver held San Antonio to 33% shooting the rest of the way, outscoring the Spurs 40-27 in the final 14 minutes of the game including overtime.

Jokic had 16 of his points in those final 14 minutes, while Denver held Wembanyama to 1 for 4 shooting in that span.

Up next

Spurs: Host Philadelphia on Monday.

Nuggets: Host Portland on Monday.

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

Astros’ Tatsuya Imai bounces back with 9 Ks in 5 2/3 innings of shutout ball vs. A’s in second MLB start

Tatsuya Imai felt some nerves last week during his MLB debut against the Los Angeles Angels. The former Nippon Professional Baseball ace, whom the Houston Astros signed to a three-year deal reportedly worth up to $63 million, struggled with his command and gave up four walks and four runs in 2 2/3 innings. The Astros won that day, but the three-time Japanese All-Star didn’t look like himself.

He discussed afterward how the major-league atmosphere and a difference in the slope of the MLB mound were things he needed to adjust to. Whatever tinkering the right-handed pitcher did over the next week seemingly did the trick.

Imai returned to form Saturday against the Athletics, spinning 5 2/3 innings of shutout ball while piling up nine strikeouts during his second start in the bigs. He walked three batters, but he made it through nearly six frames, earning the win as the Astros (6-3) coasted to an 11-0 victory over the A’s (2-6).

After signing his contract with the Astros, Imai reportedly earned the second-highest average annual salary of any Japanese-born MLB pitcher, behind only Yoshinobu Yamamoto of the Los Angeles Dodgers.

The 27-year-old righty was coming off an impressive 2025 NPB campaign in which he posted a 1.92 ERA with 178 strikeouts over 163 2/3 innings for the Seibu Lions.

His stuff was working Saturday against the A’s, especially his slider.

Imai’s walk numbers will be worth monitoring, particularly because they were concerning early in his career. But his whiff rate will require attention, too.

Imai’s bounce-back performance against the A’s was a welcome sight for the Astros, who have now won six of their past seven games after starting the season 0-2.

Stephen Curry set to return for Warriors against Rockets after two-month absence with knee injury

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Stephen Curry faced what he called “some long, dark days” of rehab on his troublesome right knee over the past two months. The recovery took far longer than he’d ever imagined.

Now, the two-time MVP is set to return when the Golden State Warriors host Houston on Sunday night after missing 27 consecutive games — it would be his first game since Jan. 30 against Detroit.

And the Warriors know everyone at Chase Center will be thrilled. Curry warmed up on the floor Wednesday and his routine was a huge hit.

“We want to bring joy to this building, we want to bring joy to our fans, that’s what this is about. It’s about winning, yes, but it’s about people really enjoying coming to the building and watching our team play. It’s the most important thing,” coach Steve Kerr said. “… Frankly, Steph is responsible for more of that than anyone. One of the greatest players of all time but he’s the greatest face of a franchise in any sport that I’ve ever seen.”

Curry scrimmaged several times this past week to test his injured right knee, and he never thought of shutting it down for the rest of the season because he has remained determined to get on the floor as the Warriors head for the play-in tournament hoping to make a surprise run.

“I’m just happy to have a little clarity and a little window to get back out there and try to get to the level I was playing at and finish the year strong,” Curry said after practice Saturday. “A lot of hours go into it so it’s just a matter of reminding yourself you’re working toward getting back as much as you can.”

He will be listed as questionable on the injury report. Curry said dealing with the pain is part of his “new normal” and the offseason will require a significant reset.

The 38-year-old Curry initially expected to be playing right after the All-Star break, but the recovery was prolonged by some difficult moments when he would feel good, push hard then pay for it the following day.

“So there was always a point where I would do all these tests off the court and do stuff to make sure it makes sense to get out on the floor and I’d feel great,” he said, “and then you start running and do your normal workout and toward the end of however long the session was you start to feel that pain start to creep back in and the next day it would be awful. You played that song and dance so many times over the last two months, so that was the most frustrating part.”

Curry leads the Warriors in scoring with 27.2 points per game and it has been frustrating.

When asked whether he and Vice President of Player Health and Performance Rick Celebrini had determined how many minutes Curry might play, Kerr said “less than 48.”

And it was possible Curry could come off the bench — “everything is possible, yeah, anything is possible.”

Whatever his limitations, the Warriors can’t wait to have No. 30 finally contribute again.

“The game tends to get a lot easier for everybody when Steph is out there. We’ll still be playing our style of basketball but it will be nice to have him back assuming he’s back,” Kerr said. “… Great energy, hope, he just brings hope to everybody, so the sun is shining a little brighter, food tastes a little better. Steph is Steph, he brings joy to everybody, players, coaches fans. He’s a special human being.”

The Warriors (36-41) have lost three straight games overall and are to 13-25 this season without Curry — including 9-18 during this stretch with him sidelined by patellofemoral pain syndrome.

“Now Superman’s back, we’ll figure it out,” guard Gary Payton II said. “It’s like a gravity pull, some type of pull, force pull. Just to see him available, I’m sure he gives life to players and coaches and front office.”

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

Nikola Jokić’s monster 40-point performance leads Nuggets over Spurs in OT as Denver gets 8th straight win

The Denver Nuggets, led by MVP candidate Nikola Jokić, are rounding into championship form as the NBA regular season winds down.

The Nuggets have now won eight straight games after securing a 136-134 overtime win at home against the San Antonio Spurs on Saturday.

The Spurs had a massive first quarter, scoring 43 points and pulling away from the Nuggets early on. But Denver rolled all the way back, and in the final seconds of regulation, Aaron Gordon’s cutting dunk tied the game at 124-124 to force overtime.

Nikola Jokić, who finished with 40 points, 13 assists, 8 rebounds and 3 blocks, sunk two free throws in the final seconds of OT to ice the game.

Dylan Harper’s long 3-pointer went in at the buzzer, but it was too little, too late for San Antonio, which saw its 11-game winning streak snapped.

Victor Wembanyama’s MVP campaign continued as well, with the Spurs center putting up 34 points, 18 rebounds, 7 assists and 5 blocks, but his herculean effort fell just short.

San Antonio is very comfortably second in the Western conference with four games left on its schedule. The Spurs, with a 59-19 record, sit two wins back of the Oklahoma City Thunder and 8.5 games ahead of the third-place Los Angeles Lakers.

For the Nuggets, though, the win gives them a boost. The Nuggets are neck-and-neck with the Los Angeles Lakers for that third spot in the West, with both teams currently at 50 wins, although the Lakers are now without Luka Dončić and Austin Reaves. Every win also puts Denver further away from the Houston Rockets and Minnesota Timberwolves, who sit two and four wins, respectively, away from fourth place.

The Nuggets and Spurs will meet again in San Antonio for the regular-season finale on April 12.

Stephen Curry says ‘nothing is structurally wrong’ with his knee before return from 27-game absence

Stephen Curry is set to return to the Golden State Warriors on Sunday, with five games left to play in the regular season and plenty to figure out.

The former MVP has missed 27 games with a knee injury sustained in January and is reportedly expected to be cleared for this weekend’s game against the Houston. His timeline has been hazy throughout the process, with the injury initially presented as non-major and late described by the Warriors as patella-femoral pain syndrome and bone bruising in his right knee.

Speaking with reporters on Saturday, Curry was asked about the recovery process. He painted it as a frustrating few months, via ESPN’s Anthony Slater:

“It was more of a mental thing at first, meaning I didn’t know enough about it. I thought I was going to be out a week. Ten days max, let it calm down. Every time I got on the court or tried to push it in that first month, there was always — I wouldn’t call it a reaction, it just wasn’t healing as fast as you thought.

“The patience then was tough just because it’s one of those injuries you really have to let rest. There’s nothing you can push through or be on the court while it’s healing. It’s just a different experience than most injuries that I’ve had, that had a very defined timeline and a very defined process.”

Curry went on to clarify that there was no structural damage in his knee (e.g. a torn ligament), but he is apparently still learning how his leg works now:

“There is nothing structurally wrong with my knee, so it’s not like I’m compromised out there. It is a new normal, though, if that makes sense.

“It’s just a matter of understanding what I need to do off the court to make sure everything around my knee is strong and firing the right way. I’ll take full advantage of the offseason, whenever it is, to have a full reset. And then you just figure out what it looks like going into next year.”

At 38 years old, any prolonged absence is going to trigger concerns around Curry, who has a history of injuries dating back to the early years of his career. The Warriors are continuing to operate with the assumption that he can control the court like the greatest shooter of all time, hence why they’ll be hoping that offseason is indeed a proper reset.

It wouldn’t have been a surprise for Curry and the Warriors to simply shut it down for the rest of the season rather than send him back out there for five games and whatever happens in the postseason. Key contributors Jimmy Butler III and Moses Moody are already out for the season and the team sits in 10th place in the Western Conference.

They are in no danger of falling out of the play-in tournament, but all a pair of wins after the regular season would do is set up a seven-game series with the West-leading Oklahoma City Thunder.

White Sox’s Munetaka Murakami hits 4th HR in 1st 8 MLB games, besting Shohei Ohtani’s record by Japanese player

Munetaka Murakami probably won’t surpass Shohei Ohtani for many major-league records, but the Chicago White Sox third baseman overtook the four-time MVP with a record for Japanese players in Saturday’s 6-3 win over the Toronto Blue Jays.

Murakami, 26. became the first Japanese player to hit four home runs in the initial eight games of his MLB career, according to MLB’s Sarah Langs. In the sixth inning, Blue Jays reliever Brendon Little hung a sinker in the inner middle of the strike zone and Murakami launched it to straight-away center field for his first homer at Rate Field.

With that fourth home run, Murakami overtook Ohtani, who hit three home runs in his first eight games with the Los Angeles Angels during the 2018 season.

During the opening week of the 2026 campaign, Murakami joined a notable club by becoming the fourth player in major-league history to hit three home runs in his first three games of the season.

However, one of those four players — Cleveland Guardians outfielder Chase DeLauter — separated himself from the pack on Friday by hitting his fifth home run in his first seven games. Only Trevor Story, who hit seven home runs in his first seven games as a rookie with the Colorado Rockies, has more.

Murakami signed a two-year, $34 million contract with the White Sox in December. He was ranked by Yahoo Sports’ Jake Mintz and Jordan Shusterman as the sixth-best free agent available this past offseason.

In 2021, Murakami won the Japan Central League MVP with the Yakult Swallows, compiling a triple-slash line of .278/.408/.566 with 39 home runs and 122 RBI. He topped those numbers the following season, breaking Japanese baseball legend Sadaharu Oh’s single-season record with 56 home runs, adding a slash average of .318/.458/.710 with 134 RBI and 118 walks.

That performance made Murakami the youngest Triple Crown winner in Nippon Professional Baseball history at 22 years old.

In 34 plate appearances this season, Murakami has a .250/.353/.679 slash line, demonstrating that he can hit for power in MLB but also thus far confirming the concerns about him hitting for contact.

Lakers’ Austin Reaves will miss rest of the regular season with an oblique strain

The Los Angeles Lakers announced on Saturday that Austin Reaves will miss the rest of the regular season with a Grade 2 oblique strain.

The news is a devastating blow to a Lakers team that’s already playing the remainder of the regular season without injured All-Star and MVP candidate Luka Dončić, who’s sidelined with a Grade 2 hamstring strain.

The Lakers will now play the rest of the regular season without their top two scorers. They have five games remaining on their schedule. Dončić is reportedly out indefinitely, and his status for a first-round playoff series is unclear.

Per ESPN’s Shams Charania, Reaves is expected to miss 4-6 weeks with his injury, projecting to sideline him for any first-round playoff series and possibly beyond that if the Lakers advance out of the first round. The playoffs are scheduled to start on April 18.

Reaves sustained the injury during Thursday’s loss to the Oklahoma City Thunder, the same game in which Dončić was injured.

The Lakers were previously waiting results of an MRI exam before determining Reaves’ status. According to head coach JJ Redick, a second MRI was necessary because the Dallas Mavericks scanned the wrong area when they performed imaging on Reaves. The Lakers are in Dallas for a game against the Mavericks on Sunday.

The Lakers entered Saturday in third place in the West at 50-27, one game ahead of the Denver Nuggets, two games ahead of the Houston Rockets and four games ahead of the Minnesota Timberwolves. The top four teams in the conference will have home-court advantage in the first round of the playoffs.

Reaves, 27, is in the midst of a career-best season. He’s averaging 23.3 points, 5.5 assists and 4.7 rebounds per game while shooting 49% from the field and 36% from 3. He’s become a go-to scoring option on a roster that features Dončić and LeBron James. The Lakers will be at a significant disadvantage as long as he and Dončić remain out.

Where to watch Philadelphia Phillies vs. Colorado Rockies: Live stream, start time, TV channel, odds for Saturday, April 4

The Philadelphia Phillies have won three in a row, including a 10-1 victory over the Colorado Rockies in the opener of their series on Friday night. Jesús Luzardo is scheduled to start for the Phillies against Brennan Bernardino.

  • Philadelphia Phillies: 4-3 (No. 3 in NL East)

  • Colorado Rockies: 2-5 (No. 4 in NL West)

  • Spread: Colorado Rockies +2.5

  • Moneyline: Colorado Rockies +200 / Philadelphia Phillies -250

  • Over/Under: 10.5

Philadelphia Phillies: Jesús Luzardo (0-1, ERA: 9.00, K: 7, WHIP: 1.17)
Colorado Rockies: Brennan Bernardino (1-0, ERA: 0.00, K: 1, WHIP: 0.67)

Weather: 63°F at first pitch

Ballpark: Capacity: 50,144 | Roof: Open | Surface: Grass

Where to watch Chicago Cubs vs. Cleveland Guardians: Live stream, start time, TV channel, odds for Saturday, April 4

The Chicago Cubs (3-4) face the Cleveland Guardians (5-3) in the second game of their series. The Guardians won the opener 4-1 on Friday. The starting pitchers are Shota Imanaga for the Cubs and Slade Cecconi for the Guardians.

  • Chicago Cubs: 3-4 (#5 in NL Central)

  • Cleveland Guardians: 5-3 (#1 in AL Central)

  • Spread: Cleveland Guardians +1.5

  • Moneyline: Cleveland Guardians +115 / Chicago Cubs -135

  • Over/Under: 8

Chicago Cubs: Shota Imanaga (0-1, ERA: 7.20, K: 7, WHIP: 1.60)
Cleveland Guardians: Slade Cecconi (0-1, ERA: 12.46, K: 5, WHIP: 2.08)

Weather: 69°F at first pitch

Ballpark: Capacity: 34,788 | Roof: Open | Surface: Grass

Where to watch Los Angeles Dodgers vs. Washington Nationals: Live stream, start time, TV channel, odds for Saturday, April 4

The Los Angeles Dodgers (5-2) face the Washington Nationals (3-4) in the second game of their series. The Dodgers won the opening game 13-6 on Friday. Starting pitchers are Tyler Glasnow for the Dodgers and Jake Irvin for the Nationals.

  • Los Angeles Dodgers: 5-2 (No. 1 in NL West)

  • Washington Nationals: 3-4 (No. 5 in NL East)

  • Spread: Washington Nationals +2.5

  • Moneyline: Washington Nationals +240 / Los Angeles Dodgers -300

  • Over/Under: 9.5

Los Angeles Dodgers: Tyler Glasnow (0-0, ERA: 3.00, K: 6, WHIP: 0.83)
Washington Nationals: Jake Irvin (1-0, ERA: 3.60, K: 7, WHIP: 0.80)

Weather: 85°F at first pitch