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Good morning! No time to waste today. Letâs get moving:
While You Were Sleeping: A vintage Klay game
First, some overnight news: The Kings and general manager Monte McNair agreed to part ways less than an hour after Sacramentoâs 120-106 Play-In loss to the Mavericks at home, a disappointing end to a disastrous season.
But on the other side, there was something oddly cathartic about watching Klay Thompson, exactly a year after going a brutal 0-for-10 in his Warriors finale â another Play-In game in Sacramento â find his groove early in the fateful contest. Some neat symmetry to balance out the harsh vibes of this Mavericks season, perhaps.
- The 35-year-old put up 16 points and four 3s in the second quarter, where he and Anthony Davis (27 points on the night) combined to give Dallas all the separation it needed. âIt did feel good to exorcise those demons in here,â Klay said after the game.
KLAY THOMPSON IS CATCHING FIRE âŒïž
That’s 4 triples in a 3-minute span đ https://t.co/cweKm2LbEY pic.twitter.com/35VQwWxuM4
â NBA (@NBA) April 17, 2025
So whether Dallas fans actually like it or not, the Mavericksâ season lives to see another day: Theyâll play the Grizzlies for the 8-seed in the West tomorrow night, and the Heat will play the Hawks for the final spot in the East. Weâre so close to true playoff basketball.
The NHLâs playoff picture is also set after the Canadiensâ win last night. More on that next:

Patrick Smith / Getty Images
Finally: Welcome back, playoff hockey
I have waxed many times in these digital pages about how the NHL postseason is like a white-knuckle ride, on ice, in the best way. Hockey itself is a tense game, as each pass and deflection can lead to prosperity or disaster in an instant. Add season-ending stakes and you get a most stressful, yet entertaining, experience.
Today is the last day of the regular season, so to fully prepare for the playoffs, I pestered both James Mirtle and Sean McIndoe â primary authors of our new hockey newsletter Red Light, which debuts tomorrow â for insights.
Hello, James. In one sentence, pick your Stanley Cup winner and why.Â
đŹ Colorado. They have a tough path in the West, but since they picked up Mackenzie Blackwood in December, the Avs have the third-best record in the league.
Same question to you, Sean.Â
đŹ The Winnipeg Jets, who will go full #ElbowsUp for a nation in need and finally bring the Stanley Cup back to Canada (on the strength of their American goalie, but letâs not let pesky details get in the way of a good narrative).
James, the Maple Leafs continue to fascinate me. They have the second-best chance to win the Stanley Cup, per our odds, but as youâve detailed, this situation feels far from triumphant. Do they enter the postseason with the most pressure of any team?
đŹ I think thatâs very fair â especially given theyâll be the favorites and are facing a huge rival in Ottawa. The Senators have been one of the leagueâs better teams over the last 50-odd games, so this will be no cakewalk. If Toronto loses in the first round yet again, there will be major changes â to the roster and in the front office.
I feel like youâll have a good answer for this, Sean: Whatâs the funniest possible outcome of these playoffs?
đŹ Donât sleep on a Kings/Capitals final. Not only are these two good teams that absolutely nobody is picking to do much of anything despite what the standings page would suggest, but they made a major trade in the offseason that was largely dismissed at the time as a dual salary dump by two teams going nowhere, but now looks like the win-win deal of the summer. Wait, does an outcome count as âfunnyâ if all it does is prove that experts like me are dumb? (Checks notes.) Yes. Yes, it absolutely does.
I am now more excited for puck drop Saturday. Make sure youâre subscribed to Red Light before then. Sign up here. (Free!)
News to Know
Iamaleava picks Bruins
Former Tennessee quarterback Nico Iamaleava is expected to transfer to UCLA, a source said yesterday, after splitting with the Vols last week over an NIL contract dispute. Itâs an ⊠interesting fit, as Antonio Morales and Sam Khan Jr. note, as Iamaleavaâs camp had reportedly raised concerns about Tennesseeâs offense â but UCLAâs was a total disaster last year. Hm.
More news
- Trailblazing former MLB executive Kim Ng will serve as commissioner of the upstart Athletes Unlimited Softball League, which opens its regular season in June. More here.
- Four MLS teams â Inter Miami, the Chicago Fire, NYCFC and D.C. United â have expressed interest in signing Manchester City star Kevin De Bruyne, Paul Tenorio and Pablo Maurer report.
- Former Rams star Aaron Donald was granted a temporary restraining order against a woman he claims has harassed and stalked him and his family since 2020.
- The Pelicans hired Hall of Famer Joe Dumars as their executive vice president of basketball operations after firing David Griffin earlier this week.
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Serious Matters: Could this gambling investigation shake the sports world?
When news of Jontay Porterâs lifetime ban from the NBA broke last year, it elicited our now-customary response to betting malfeasance: Yikes â and how could he be so brazen?
A little more info trickled out about the depths of the crime ring Porter â a relative unknown â was involved in, then things sort of went dormant on this front. At least that felt like the case until yesterday, when our Mike Vorkunov dropped new details about the FBI investigation into the former Raptors forward and how itâs led to âwhat may become one of the most far-reaching scandals to hit sports in decades.â The biggest revelation:
The Porter case is also linked to investigations into match-fixing across college sports, sources said, and five schools are being investigated by the federal government for their possible ties to the scheme.
Ominous. Two other takeaways from the piece, which you should parse in full today:
No. 1: Gambling is as accessible as ever, but it appears relatively simple to commit a legitimate crime while partaking.
No. 2: Part of that is because impropriety has never been so easy to identify, given the monitoring of all those completely legal access points.
There are plenty of other recent examples of professional athletes â and even an umpire â getting dinged (or worse). It seems likely this investigation will further chip away at the sports worldâs credibility; whether it actually forces a reckoning is a separate conversation.
What to Watch
đș Golf: RBC Heritage | 7:15 a.m. to 6 p.m. ET on ESPN+/Golf Channel
Canât get enough golf after an incredible Masters weekend? The PGA Tour heads to Hilton Head Island for one of its no-cut Signature events. Plenty of top golfers will be there.
đș NCAA womenâs gymnastics semifinals | 4:30 p.m. ET and 9 p.m. ET on ESPN2
Oklahoma, Florida, Alabama and Missouri will kick off the action in the first semifinal before LSU, Michigan State, Utah and UCLA take the floor for the evening session. Olympians Jordan Chiles and Jade Carey highlight the star power in Fort Worth. A must-watch event if youâve never tuned in.
Get tickets to games like these here.
Pulse Picks
Ahead of the Hockey Canada trial next week, Dan Robson and Katie Strang tell the harrowing story of another allegation of group sexual assault involving junior hockey players decades ago that rocked a city and upended a life.
The Athleticâs MLB staff again polled 40 of the top decision-makers from across the sport, asking each to rank the top five front offices in baseball. Here are the results.
Jon Krawczynski has a fun piece today on a young Timberwolves coach tasked with making some of the teamâs biggest calls as keeper of the replay review system.
The newest womenâs soccer league kicked off in Canada last night. Talia Barrington has the inside story of the Northern Super League and why it doesnât use the words âwomenâ or âCanadaâ in its name.
Why is American hockey player Laila Edwards, one of the top young forwards in the world, playing defense at womenâs worlds? Hailey Salvian broke it down.
Most-clicked in the newsletter yesterday: Dane Bruglerâs full seven-round mock draft.
Most-read on the website yesterday: Our live blog covering Arsenalâs Champions League triumph over Real Madrid.
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(Top photo: Sergio Estrada / Imagn Images)