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Good morning! Lord, we are still talking about Bill Belichick. Keep scrolling:
Farewells? Giannis’ perplexing future
If this was the end, it was bizarrely depressing: Giannis Antetokounmpo, the superstar who brought the Bucks their first championship of the modern era, jawing with Tyrese Haliburton’s father, seconds after Haliburton hit the game-winning layup.
Damian Lillard, the superhero brought to Milwaukee to entice Antetokounmpo to stay, was gone, dealing with a devastating Achilles tendon tear. The Bucks’ season is over after a brutal 119-118 loss in overtime to the Pacers last night. With it, the Antetokounmpo era in Milwaukee could be, too.
Two things:
- As John Hollinger wrote yesterday, trading Antetokounmpo, 30, could be the only way out for a hamstrung Bucks franchise. Milwaukee has done everything possible to stay in contention for its star’s prime, and it hasn’t worked. Now the team has no trade assets and massive salaries to pay. Forcing things at this point would be folly.
- Every single team should call Milwaukee if Antetokounmpo becomes available, but three favorites could emerge quickly: Houston, Brooklyn and Toronto.
Read more in John’s piece, which is brutally honest about Milwaukee’s reality right now.
Let’s quickly hit our other playoff results, NBA first:
- The Knicks choked in a possible series clincher against the Pistons. New York is up 3-2 overall.
- Denver inched closer to ousting the Clippers with a 131-115 win. That’s 3-2 here as well.
- Boston advanced with a nice win over the Magic.
Full playoff takeaways here. On the ice:
- The Maple Leafs are doing the bad thing again. A series that was once 3-0 Toronto is now 3-2 after Ottawa’s blowout 4-0 win in Toronto last night.
- Carolina claimed its first-round series over the Devils with a 5-4 double-overtime win. Tiring.
- After going down 2-0, Edmonton has won three straight over the Kings after a 3-1 victory last night.
- Las Vegas is up 3-2 after its own overtime win against the Wild. Tough scene for Marc Andre-Fleury.
We’re almost done with the first round. Now, about that catch:
Things You Need to See: Daulton Varsho is too smooth
There is something powerful about struggling with aplomb. Take Blue Jays outfielder Daulton Varsho, who literally fell down while chasing a fly ball last night — then did this:
Blue Jays OF Daulton Varsho stumbled and still made the backhand catch ‼️
🎥 @MLBpic.twitter.com/yvodGGPlXY
— The Athletic (@TheAthletic) April 30, 2025
The move, on its face, is simply cool as hell. But I don’t get how he had so much time. This man fell flat on his back, quickly did a little barrel roll thing, gathered himself and still had time to locate the ball and make a flippantly awesome catch.
I don’t know how many other players make that catch. I would’ve just laid there. Even better, this came in his season debut.
The only bad part? It was a 10-2 loss. Let’s keep going:
News to Know
Kittle gets paid
49ers tight end George Kittle is now the highest-paid TE in NFL history after agreeing to a four-year, $76.4 million contract extension yesterday. Kittle has been rock-solid since San Francisco drafted him in 2017, and if not for a guy named Travis Kelce, Kittle would probably be considered the most productive TE of the last decade. More details on his deal here.
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Kings hire Christie
Doug Christie, a Kings legend in his playing days, is now the permanent head coach of the franchise, a source confirmed to The Athletic yesterday. Christie took over as interim coach this season after Mike Brown was fired in December. Christie went 27-24 in Brown’s stead. Now we just wonder how long until he’s hastily fired. (Sorry, Kings fans.)
More news
- MLB commissioner Rob Manfred said he has spoken with President Trump about reinstating Pete Rose. Hm.
- The Yankees made history yesterday by becoming the first team to ever hit three consecutive home runs to start a game twice in one season. That feels fake.
- UConn men’s basketball forward Alex Karaban will return for his senior season.
- Oleksandr Usyk promoted his bout this weekend with Daniel Dubois by signing pictures of Dubois’ alleged low blows in their last meeting, in front of Dubois. Funny.
- Amazon added Stan Van Gundy to its broadcast team for next season’s NBA coverage. Read more.
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What to Watch
📺 NBA: Warriors at Rockets
7:30 p.m. ET on TNT/Max
It’s a great night for hoops, with Timberwolves-Lakers following this matchup. Both Golden State and Minnesota can close out their series with a win. Takes will flow if either team wraps up these matchups in five games.
📺 NHL: Blues at Jets
9:30 p.m. ET on ESPN
There is worry brewing in Winnipeg, where the league-best Jets have lost two straight in horrid fashion. Could we see a titan toppled in the first round? This one will tell us what road we’re on. St. Louis will miss Tyler Tucker in this one.
Get tickets to games like these here.
Pulse Picks
So, about Bill Belichick and his girlfriend, Jordon Hudson. Today brings an exclusive report from The Athletic about how Hudson was “instrumental” in shutting down a planned “Hard Knocks” production at North Carolina. Read the report here.
Ted Nguyen graded the top 10 NFL Draft scheme fits. Always read Ted. Related: The Athletic Football Show got deeper on draft fits.
I really enjoyed Sean Gentille’s story on “nerd” Dylan Strome, the Capitals center who changes games with his brain.
You know who loves trading cards? Derek Jeter, Tom Brady and Bobby Witt Jr. We talked to all of them about it.
I loved this story on former Pistons big man Rick Mahorn’s legendary move: pulling the chair, which we still see today over 40 years later.
Most-clicked in the newsletter yesterday: Mike Jones’ column about Shedeur Sanders and a lesson in humility. For more, Dianna Russini has intel on that meh meeting with the Giants. Watch.
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(Top photo: Stacy Revere / Getty Images)
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