Has No. 4 seed ever won College World Series? How Murray State might fare at CWSNew Foto - Has No. 4 seed ever won College World Series? How Murray State might fare at CWS

OMAHA, NE ― Dan Skirkadoesn't actuallycut the grass at Murray State's home ballpark, as a viral social media post wrongly asserted, but the Racers' coach has still done more with much less. Murray State, making its fourth NCAA tournament appearance and first since 2003, is in the Men's College World Seriesfor the first time. The Racers stunned in the Oxford Regional, defeating Ole Miss and Georgia Tech, and then again in the Durham Super Regional, defeating Duke. The No. 4 regional seed — the lowest possible entering the NCAA Tournament — will take on UCLA in their opening game of the CWS on June 14 (1 p.m. CT, ESPN) at Charles Schwab Field in Omaha. It's rare for No. 4 seeds to reach Omaha — only three other teams have accomplished the feat — but it's not unprecedented for those teams to make noise (most notably Fresno State, the 2008 national champion). Here's how bottom seeds have fared in the College World Series and how Murray State compares to the teams that made runs: The original mid-major Omaha darling, Fresno State made the most of its 2008 trip to the CWS by winning the whole thing. The Bulldogs weren't a traditional No. 4 seed, as expectations were high entering the season. They were ranked in two polls and picked to win the WAC in the preseason. The roster consisted of four eventual major leaguers. But despite the talent, they got off to an 8-12 start. Fresno State still won the WAC regular season and conference titles, earning an automatic bid to the NCAA tournament. The Bulldogs won a regional at Long Beach State and a super regional at No. 3 national seed Arizona State to advance to Omaha. Despite losing Game 1 of the championship series to Georgia, Fresno State won the final two games by a combined score of 25-11. Led by future big leaguer Travis Jankowski, Stony Brook was the class of the America East. The Seawolves had a whopping 43-7 regular season record and swept the America East tournament. A team from that conference, typically one of the worst in Division I, had never advanced to Omaha. And Stony Brook didn't have an easy route. The Seawolves were sent to a regional against Miami, and they waded through the losers' bracket to win. Then they rallied to win a super regional against LSU despite dropping the first game in a 12-inning heartbreaker. Stony Brook's run in Omaha ended quickly, as the Seawolves lost to UCLA and Florida State and were the first team eliminated. After a so-so start to the season, Oral Roberts got hot at the right time. The Golden Eagles were 14-2 in April and 11-0 in May, and even after being assigned a No. 4 seed in the NCAA tournament, it was clear they were dangerous. Oral Roberts went 3-0 in the Stillwater Regional, defeating Oklahoma State, Washington and Dallas Baptist. Like Stony Brook, the Golden Eagles won their super regional, against Oregon, despite losing Game 1. Oral Roberts was competitive in Omaha, too. The Golden Eagles won their first game against TCU and played a one-run game against Florida. But they ran out of gas and fell in their second game with TCU to end their season. BEST TEAMS IN OMAHA?Ranking the CWS field from best to worst Murray State wasn't ranked preseason and likely won't have as many major leaguers as the Fresno State team that won it all. But the Racers are more akin to the 2023 Oral Roberts team than the Stony Brook underdogs. Murray State was viewed as one of the strongest — if notthestrongest — 4-seeds in the field, and while the Racers have never been on this stage, teams from the Missouri Valley Conference have a good track record. Indiana State and Evansville, the last two MVC champions, advanced to super regionals, and the Sycamores even hosted in 2023. Aria Gerson covers Vanderbilt athletics for The Tennessean. Contact her atagerson@gannett.comor on X@aria_gerson. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Can Murray State win 2025 College World Series? History of No. 4 seeds

Has No. 4 seed ever won College World Series? How Murray State might fare at CWS

Has No. 4 seed ever won College World Series? How Murray State might fare at CWS OMAHA, NE ― Dan Skirkadoesn't actuallycut the grass at ...
How Shannon Harris guided Defenders through Reggie Barlow departureNew Foto - How Shannon Harris guided Defenders through Reggie Barlow departure

The DC Defenders have made it to a spring football championship game for the second time in three seasons. They did so despite losing their coach six days before the 2025 UFL season. Reggie Barlow left the Defendersless than a week before the 2025 season to take the coaching job at Tennessee State, which opened late in the offseason hiring cycle afterEddie George was hiredfor the same job at Bowling Green. DC had to pivot quickly with just days remaining until their season opener against the three-time reigning champion Birmingham Stallions. They ultimately decided to promote quarterbacks coach Shannon Harris into the interim coaching role. That decision delighted Harris' long-time collaborator, Defenders offensive coordinator Fred Kaiss. "That's who I thought deserved it," Kaiss told USA TODAY about Harris' promotion. "I think that's what this league is all about." Kaiss has been witness to Harris' growth throughout their 19-year history together. The 66-year-old used to view himself as the mentor to his long-time No. 1 assistant. The tables haven't yet turned in full, but in recent years, they have shifted. "There's aspects of the game where he's passed me," Kaiss said. Despite Harris' progression, the two still work collaboratively. Kaiss insists they are "always on the same page" and that if you asked the two each to draw up 100 plays without consulting the other, 90 would be the same. That's one of the perks of their two decades working together – and their decision to live together during the 2025 UFL season. Their bond was also key in navigating DC's early-season turbulence. The Defenders didn't just lose Barlow to Tennessee State. Defensive coordinator Gregg Williams stepped down to join Barlow's staff while offensive line coach Cody Crill took a job at North Texas in the weeks leading up to the season. The Harris-Kaiss partnership also allowed the Defenders continuity while quickly achieving stability. They came with built-in chemistry, while the other notable replacements on staff – Brian Braswell, who played for Kaiss during his college days, and Blake Williams, son of Gregg Williams – were able to quickly integrate themselves into DC's operation. "When you got other coaches around you that you trust, that makes the job much easier," Harris said. "Now, it just turns into knowing how to manage it all." Harris successfully managed those goals and expectations. He helped build upon the winning culture Barlow created – something for which Harris is careful not to take too much credit – while also instilling the idea the Defenders would be "a player-led football team" in 2025, as quarterback Jordan Ta'amu described. THE GAME, THE GUYS, THE DREAM:Why UFL players are playing spring football Harris' ability to do so helped allow him to smoothly transition into the Defenders coaching job. "We just flowed with it," Harris explained of his elevation. "Everyone rallied around myself. The team rallied around each other, and it was kinda status quo from that standpoint." Because, in part, of that cohesion, the Defenders are playing for a UFL championship Saturday against the Michigan Panthers. Kaiss, 66, acknowledged he would love to win that game not just for himself, but also for Harris. "I think I've had more stress on me this year than I have in a lot of years, and it's mainly because I want this for him," Kaiss said. "I want to see him succeed. He deserves this. He's a really good football coach." Regardless of the result, Kaiss is coming away with the conviction he was spot-on about Harris' chances of succeeding as DC's coach. "I believe he was the guy. I believe he was ready," Kaiss said. "He's proven it without question." This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Why Shannon Harris was 'the guy' to take over UFL's Defenders

How Shannon Harris guided Defenders through Reggie Barlow departure

How Shannon Harris guided Defenders through Reggie Barlow departure The DC Defenders have made it to a spring football championship game for...
Bonnaroo Unexpectedly Canceled Mid-Festival for 'Crazy' ReasonNew Foto - Bonnaroo Unexpectedly Canceled Mid-Festival for 'Crazy' Reason

Bonnaroo Unexpectedly Canceled Mid-Festival for 'Crazy' Reasonoriginally appeared onParade. Bonnaroo, the major music festival based in Manchester, Tenn., was forced to cancel the remaining three days of the four-day festival late on Friday, June 13. The festival explained that they were "beyond gutted" to announce that the weekend's weather forecast anticipated too dangerous of conditions to move forward. "...significant and steady precipitation...will produce deteriorating camping and egress conditions in the coming days," the festival announced on social media. The news comes after a significant weather delay was put in place earlier on Friday due to approaching storm cells. "Some of your fellow campers' sites are in rough shape," the statement continued, noting that the rain so far had made "certain parts of [the property] difficult to manage." As such, the festival was prioritizing getting campers in affected areas and folks with accessibility needs out to safety as soon as they could. Food, health and safety stations are set to remain operational throughout the evacuation. All single-day ticket-holders for the rest of the weekend can expect 100 percent refunds, while those with four-day tickets will receive 75 percent of their money back. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Bonnaroo (@bonnaroo) A concert update accountreshared the news on X, where one user noted, "The rain has been CRAZY this year, be safe y'all." "Friday the 13th hitting hard this year," an Instagram user quipped amid the chaotic comment section on Bonnaroo's account. Related: Country Icons Team Up for 'Absolutely Fire' Live Performance During Major Music Festival 'First' and Fans Are 'Obsessed' Bonnaroo Unexpectedly Canceled Mid-Festival for 'Crazy' Reasonfirst appeared on Parade on Jun 14, 2025 This story was originally reported byParadeon Jun 14, 2025, where it first appeared.

Bonnaroo Unexpectedly Canceled Mid-Festival for 'Crazy' Reason

Bonnaroo Unexpectedly Canceled Mid-Festival for 'Crazy' Reason Bonnaroo Unexpectedly Canceled Mid-Festival for 'Crazy' Reaso...
Kylie Jenner, Alix Earle and More Celebrities' Exact Boob Job Orders, As Shared by the Stars ThemselvesNew Foto - Kylie Jenner, Alix Earle and More Celebrities' Exact Boob Job Orders, As Shared by the Stars Themselves

Kristin Cavallari/Instagram; Jeff Schear/Getty; Kylie Jenner/Instagram These stars are baring it all when it comes to their boob jobs. If it seems like you've noticed more celebrities than ever getting candid about their exact cosmetic procedures, you're not wrong: In the past few weeks, Kylie Jenner, Kristin Cavallari and Barbara Corcoran are just a few of the stars who have provided the exact "order" for their breast augmentations and other cosmetic procedures — down to the exact number of ccs (cubic centimeters, the liquid measurement of the implant) they selected. And thoughplastic surgeons tell PEOPLE that each procedure is uniqueand tailored to a person's particular proportions and frame, many people are taking notes about what their favorite celebrities have gotten to help inform their own conversations. FromAlix EarletoLindsay Arnold, see which stars have given the exact specifications about their breast augmentations. Lindsay Arnold/TikTok In a "get ready with me" video shared to her TikTok account following her breast augmentation surgery,Lindsay Arnoldgave fans a little more information about how shechose the size of her implants. "300 is too big, 245 felt too small. so I was like, 265 and 285 kind of felt like the right fit for me," she explains, sharing that after her surgeon ultimately decided that 265 cc would be the best fit and they went with a "moderate plus" profile. In addition to the implants, Arnold got a breast lift where "they remove skin, they move your nipple up higher to eliminate any overhang." At just three days post-op at the time, Arnold said she was "soo happy with my results already!" @kyliejenner/Instagram WhenKylie Jennersaw fan Rachel Leary's video on TikTok wondering what Kylie had asked for at her surgeon's office, she knewthere was one thing to do. "It's like the most perfect natural looking boob job ever," Leary said in the video. "They're still big, but whatever way you had the implants — if they are implants or if you had fat transfer — to me, it is perfection." "Help a girl out@Kylie Jenner🥺 i just want to know how to get them to sit like that, respectfully 🙏🏼," she added in the caption of the video. "445 cc, moderate profile, half under the muscle!!!!! silicone!!! garth fisher!!!! hope this helps lol," Jenner responded, naming her doctor as well. Jeff Schear/Getty In a 2024 episode of her podcastHot Mess with Alix Earle, the social media star shared for nearly an hour all the details of her experience going under the knife in a video she titled "Watch This Before Getting a Boob Job." In the video she goes through her whole experience from pre-op to post-op and includes the exact details of what she asked for: saline implants, 275cc, moderate profile and placed under the muscle, which she explains is "how they look a little bit more natural." Sami Sheen/Instagram Possibly inspired by Jenner sharing the details of her procedure,Sami Sheenshared the details of her own surgery in a post to her Instagram Story, revealing that she got moderate profile 350cc silicone implants under the muscle. The 21-year-old previously shared that she hopes to one day re-do the surgery in an effort to make her breasts bigger. "When the time comes to get them redone I'm definitely going bigger, and I think I'm going to go over the muscle so they look a little more natural," she said in a video posted in April. Christopher Polk/Billboard via Getty After feeling unhappy with how her breasts looked, describing them as "always saggy,"Meghan Trainordecided to getMotivaSmoothSilk Ergonomix 290 mini implants with plastic surgeonDr. Payman Danielpourat the beginning of the year. Going into more detail,Trainor told PEOPLEshe got a "full anchor, the areola down the center and underneath because I needed a lift, as well as an implant, so that I could have any shape. Before they were just empty and different sizes and just felt like skin on me. There wasn't much breast tissue." Now, she says, "these are the boobs of my dreams." Kristin Cavallari/Instagram Kristin Cavallarialso posted on Instagram recently to addressrumors surrounding the cosmetic procedures she's undergone, including a breast augmentation. "I was 340 cc before now I'm 340. Everyone thinks I went a lot bigger but I've just pushed them up a couple times since getting them done. This is the new set a few days ago and they fit my frame," she said alongside a photo of herself in a white mini dress, referencing her recent breast surgery revision. In a previous episode of podcastLet's Be Honest, Cavallari said she decided to redo her breasts recently after deciding she didn't like the way they looked, only to later find out that one of her implants had ruptured. Read the original article onPeople

Kylie Jenner, Alix Earle and More Celebrities' Exact Boob Job Orders, As Shared by the Stars Themselves

Kylie Jenner, Alix Earle and More Celebrities' Exact Boob Job Orders, As Shared by the Stars Themselves Kristin Cavallari/Instagram; Jef...
Thunder vs. Pacers: Shai Gilgeous-Alexander takes his place in NBA Finals lore as he saves the series and OKC's seasonNew Foto - Thunder vs. Pacers: Shai Gilgeous-Alexander takes his place in NBA Finals lore as he saves the series and OKC's season

INDIANAPOLIS — The moment was here — everyone playing knew it, everyone in Gainbridge Fieldhouse knew it, and it couldn't be escaped. Shai Gilgeous-Alexander said it as much: He knew what would happen if the Oklahoma City Thunder succumbed to these Indiana Pacers, if they fell behind three games to one. Maybe he's a steward of history, knowing what Game 4s have looked like in the more recent compelling NBA Finals. Maybe he's not and just knew the score — nearly infinity to one in that 3-1 scenario and how unlikely it would be for this team to come back if they allowed the Pacers to keep growing in confidence after coming home for two games. But he knew the moment was upon us of all, and most importantly, the moment was upon the newly crowned Most Valuable Player. He was gassed, the Pacers' breakneck speed pushing the Thunder to the brink. The whispers of fraud were starting to bubble, and had he withered beneath this pressure and this moment, the bulk of the critique would be headed to him. "I knew what it would have looked like if we lost tonight," Gilgeous-Alexander said. "I didn't want to go out not swinging. I didn't want to go out not doing everything I could do in my power, in my control, to try to win the game." Nothing was easy. The ultimate rhythm player was off-key — hounded by fellow Canadian Andrew Nembhard. Gilgeous-Alexander could barely touch the ball without Pacers swiping, swinging and forcing him off his spots and into uncomfortable positions. Superman's cape was ripped, tugged and twisted for the better part of 40 minutes. But Gilgeous-Alexander sensed the opening, especially after the Pacers couldn't completely close the door in the third quarter. He darted through the door of opportunity in the last four minutes. Gilgeous-Alexander added his name to NBA Finals lore Friday night, scoring 15 of his game-high 35 points in the last 3:52 to lead the Thunder to a111-104 victoryto tie this unexpected NBA Finals at two games each. Make that 15 of Oklahoma City's last 16 points,the most by a player in the last five minutes in the NBA Finals since 1971. The Pacers will lament this loss, and should they lose the series, the pseudo-meltdown will be the thing they regret the most — the moment they lost control of a series that was seemingly there for the taking. Gilgeous-Alexander's catch-and-shoot 3 that looked true from the moment it left his fingertips — his only make from distance on the evening — cut a four-point lead to one. His step-back jumper once he was freed from the clutches of Nembhard gave the Thunder a 104-103 lead at 2:23 they wouldn't relinquish. "I relish those moments, love the moments, good or bad," Gilgeous-Alexander said. "When I was a kid shooting at my driveway, I'd count down the clock for those moments. Now I get to live it. It's a blessing, it's fun, and I relish it." Game 4s in the last 15 years have produced performances that have validated premier stars — Stephen Curry, Giannis Antetokounmpo and Dirk Nowitzki stamped themselves in adverse circumstances. Curry's 2022 showing at TD Garden shut up his critics and Celtics fans — buoying the Warriors to their last title. Antetokounmpo's defensive play the year before, blocking Deandre Ayton against improbable odds on a gimpy leg, was the catalyst for the Bucks to complete their comeback against Phoenix. Nowitzki was saddled with the flu in the 2011 Finals, and being playfully mocked by Dwyane Wade and LeBron James wasn't received very kindly, and he battled through. Each of those performances tied the series and pulled their teams from the brink. The Thunder were under no delusions, which of course is easier to say in the backdrop of a win. "Our season is kind of on the line," Thunder forward Jalen Williams said. The Thunder gathered themselves in the last four minutes, in that final quarter — doing just enough in the third to not get knocked out. Pascal Siakam was putting some touches on a Finals MVP performance, and the Pacers made every corner 3 available, while the Thunder couldn't hit anything and weren't moving the ball like they'd been doing for the last eight months. "I just thought we showed great will in the game. I thought we really hung in there in the third," Thunder coach Mark Daigneault said. "I thought that was the key to the game. They really had the wind to their back. We had some deflating plays. It was an easy game to give up on. We kept it in striking distance, eight, 10, then able to close it in the fourth." When the moment is at hand, the stats don't matter as much, the details truly become hazy through time. All we knew was the Thunder were being tested in ways they weren't even in the second round against Nikola Jokić and the Denver Nuggets. They advanced, but this series is a post-graduate course with Rick Carlisle on the other side, the master teacher who's taking away so many of the things that have become hallmarks of Oklahoma City's dominant campaign. Maybe the Thunder weren't ready. They've grown, but they hadn't had real, extensive playoff heartbreak. Denver had some disappointments before breaking through. Boston had more than its share, as well as Milwaukee. That's been the path of recent champions, with very little exception. That's how the Thunder looked — bewildered for the better part of the night and ready to break. Gilgeous-Alexander didn't look like an MVP but a bystander — although there's a beauty in watching Williams play de facto point guard because no one would let Gilgeous-Alexander out of sight, and Chet Holmgren elevate his game on both ends with timely offensive scores and critical stops when the Pacers tried to hunt him. And Alex Caruso shined as the vet with a championship ring doing the little things. Championships are won in the margins, even before you get to the moment. "Just didn't quit. We haven't really had to show it a lot this year, with the success we had in the regular season," Williams said. "We've had a lot of ups and downs during the playoffs. We've just learned from those experiences. That is something Mark is really big on us, every game you should be able to learn, then the next game you should be able to apply something and get better at it. That's what we're trying to do every time." The Thunder still needed their closer to bring closure to this game and reset the table for the rest of this series. "When you're on the road like that, it's just you. That's your unit," Daigneault said. "Those guys did a great job staying in it because that was a hard game, a hard game for us. We could just not get a lot going, especially the third. Just to hang in there just kind of showed who we are." And the MVP showed who he is. He fouled out Aaron Nesmith and had just enough breathing room to become breathtaking. It feels like the NBA Finals have turned, almost violently in the last 48 hours. "Winning, especially this time of the season, it comes down to the moments," Gilgeous-Alexander said. "It's going to come down to late game. Every team is good. There's rarely going to be a blowout. It comes down to the moments and who is willing to make winning plays on both ends of the floor." He made them, so they made them. More than winning, the Thunder survived — and advanced back home, back in control.

Thunder vs. Pacers: Shai Gilgeous-Alexander takes his place in NBA Finals lore as he saves the series and OKC's season

Thunder vs. Pacers: Shai Gilgeous-Alexander takes his place in NBA Finals lore as he saves the series and OKC's season INDIANAPOLIS — Th...
Thunder vs. Pacers: How OKC's collective team effort gave Shai Gilgeous-Alexander the juice to close out Game 4New Foto - Thunder vs. Pacers: How OKC's collective team effort gave Shai Gilgeous-Alexander the juice to close out Game 4

INDIANAPOLIS — Shai Gilgeous-Alexander told anyone who would listen earlier in these 2025 NBA Finals: Yes, he's the one withthe Most Valuable Player trophy and the matinee idol billing, but the Thunder are far from a solo act. "No one-man show achieves what I'm trying to achieve with this game … those guys are the reason why we're as good of a team as we are," he said followingOklahoma City's series-leveling Game 2 win. "I just add to it." Gilgeous-Alexander added plenty on Friday: a game-high 35 points, headlined by anall-time-clutch, postseason-career-high 15-point fourth quarter, to propel the Thunder past the Pacers to aseries-evening — and possibly season-saving — 111-104 winat Gainbridge Fieldhouse. But surviving a physical, nasty, fever-pitched Game 4 to send this best-of-seven series back to Oklahoma City all knotted up at two games apiece took much,muchmore than just a handful of final-frame buckets by the MVP. "We had a lot of guys make winning plays that can kind of be invisible to the untrained eye," said Thunder big man Chet Holmgren, who scored 14 points and pulled down 15 rebounds in 37 hard-fought minutes. "It's not showing up necessarily in the stat sheet. It's not like a highlight that's going to be played over and over. It's not one single instance." It didn't take one single instance; it took everything that everyone had to offer. And two nights afterIndiana's bench tilted the seriesin its favor, Oklahoma City reminded the basketball-watching world that it's got ahellof a lot to offer. Jalen Williams certainly felt like he had a lot more to offer. He scored a team-high 26 points in OKC's Game 3 loss, but point totals don't necessarily tell the whole story of a performance. "I don't think Dub played his best game last game," ace reserve Alex Caruso said. "I don't think he would say that either. I kind of just expected him to come out and answer the call." He did: With Gilgeous-Alexander once again wearing Pacers stopper Andrew Nembhard all over the court like anill-fitting orange or blue tuxedo, Williams carried the OKC offense early, scoring 12 points in 11 first-quarter minutes. He brought the ball up the courtmore often in Game 4 than he had all series— a ploy by Thunder head coach Mark Daigneault aimed at saving SGA some of the hard-driven miles of advancing the ball with Nembhard stationed squarely in his shadow the full 94 feet, as he wasin Game 3. When the Pacers pushed their lead to double digits late in the third quarter, Williamsgot to the free-throw linefor a pair and hit atoughclosing-seconds fadeawayto get OKC back within seven heading into the fourth — a more manageable distance from which to mount a comeback effort to save their season. "There's a reason he's an All-NBA player, an All-Star, at just, I think he's 23, if that's correct," said Caruso. (Just turned 24 in April, Alex. Probably want to get him a belated birthday card.) "I mean, he's a phenomenal talent." A versatile one, too. Williams battled on the defensive end, jousting with Pascal Siakam and doing his damnedest to keep the Pacers' ascendant demigod from snatching the series in his two bare hands. (Siakam finished with 20 points, eight rebounds, five assists, five steals and a block in 35 massive minutes, but went scoreless in the deciding fourth quarter.) He competed on the glass, grabbing seven rebounds, including a pair of big defensive boards late. And with Indiana leading in crunch time, it was Williams who paired with Gilgeous-Alexander in the two-man game, with the MVP trotting up to set ball screens knowing Indiana would switch the action, resulting in Nembhard shifting over to Williams while Aaron Nesmith guarded SGA — a matchup he clearly felt much more comfortable attacking. The result, as Daigneault said, was "kind of our best rhythm of the night" — and a game-sealing 12-1 run. "We've worked on that over the course of the last couple years," Gilgeous-Alexander said after the win. "Both of us can do multiple things with the basketball: shoot, pass, handle. We try to just play off our instincts and play off each other, be aggressive, make the right basketball play. If we do so, we usually end up with a pretty good shot, because of the players we are." The player Williams is, as Gilgeous-Alexander noted, is one capable of doing "so many things … on a basketball court." And after a monster Game 4 — 27 points on 8-for-18 shooting, seven rebounds, three assists in 36 minutes spent running point and guarding an All-Star staring down an existential deficit in the NBA Finals — we now know Williams is capable of coming up with precisely what his team needs, precisely when the Thunder need it. "I think my biggest thing is just stepping into the moment, success or fail, just kind of living with the results," Williams said. "I put a lot of work into my game, so I just go out there and play. I just don't want to ever play a game and look back where I wasn't aggressive, afraid to do a move, whatever the case may be." "Aggressive and unafraid" pretty well encapsulates the way Luguentz Dort approaches every single possession he plays, especially on the defensive end. "Lu and all the other guys climbing up in the ball, really playing some hard-nosed defense, not only sets the tone for us and all the other guys guarding, but it also kind of sets the tone for the other team," Holmgren said. "Just making things tough. That was huge for us tonight." As Daigneault saw it, the defensive pace the All-Defensive first-teamer set in the fourth quarter "was kind of contagious" for the rest of the Thunder, who held the Pacers to 5-for-18 shooting in the fourth with three turnovers, thanks in no small part to bothDort's overwhelming physicalityand the knock-on effects of watching him deploy it. "Yeah, he was himself," Gilgeous-Alexander said of Dort, who finished with six points, three rebounds and a steal in 33 minutes, a box score that dramatically undervalues his contributions to the comeback effort. "He was pressuring. He was making life difficult for them to get into offense. He was physical on-ball. He was disruptive. He was who he's been all season. "I think that's the biggest thing: The more … we can be who we've been all season, our identity, the better off we'll be." Who Caruso has been — not only this season, but throughout his career — is, as Daigneault put it, "a competitive monster, clearly." What makes him so perfect for this Thunder team, though, is his ability to channel that competitive energy into specific, bespoke solutions at any given time. "What makes Alex very good is that he's able to figure out what we need, and be that," Williams said. "Makes big shots, and obviously, the defense speaks for itself. He's just really smart. He's kind of like our fill-in: He does a really good job of seeing what the game needs and then doing it at 100%. "Which is hard to do, since he's, like, a hundred." After OKC lost Game 3 with Nembhard, Nesmith and Ben Sheppard working overtime to run Gilgeous-Alexander ragged and leave him spent, Caruso felt like he, in particular, had come up short — hadn't done his job to help SGA, Daigneault and the rest of the crew solve the puzzle that Indiana had presented them. "The way that Indiana is playing, it's leaving opportunities for supplemental offense for other guys … I don't think I was aggressive enough," he said Friday. "I think I made a couple bad reads on the perimeter. I don't think I tested the paint enough. I just didn't feel like I was doing the same amount of work that I did in Game 1 and 2, where I found success and we found success as a team." In Game 4, Caruso redoubled his efforts to find the magic in that work. In addition to his standard über-caffeinated on- and off-ball defense, he brought the ball up the floor to ease some of the offensive initiation burden for Gilgeous-Alexander and Williams, seized opportunities to make hard downhill drives to the paint and try to either create offense for himself or others, made timely off-ball cuts behind the Pacers defense and, when the ball found him on the perimeter, shot it with confidence and without a conscience. "A lot of times during my career, [my role has] been guard the best guy, spot up on the wing, or set pick-and-rolls and get to the dunker," Caruso said. "This series — this playoffs, really — teams are forcing me to try and score the ball … I knew this was going to be the scout: take away the best players on the team and make the other guys beat you. So, just being confident in myself and being confident in the work I'm putting in and recognizing opportunities." That confidence, it turns out, was well-founded. Caruso made seven of his nine shots from the field, finishing with 20 points for the second time in three games — after not cracking 20 allseasonbefore the Finals. Not bad for a 100-year-old. "I want to win," Caruso said. "I don't care if it's pickup in September before training camp, I don't care if it's Game 45, 50, before the All-Star break, if it's the Finals and you're down 2-1. I want to win. That's what I'm focused on … I wanted to make sure that I came out here and I made sure I had a concentrated effort to play as hard as I could, and to make as many plays to help the team win. "That just comes down to really wanting to win — being super competitive. That's why my career is the way it is. That's why I've had success. That's why I'm still in the NBA. That's why I'm here talking to you right now." Holmgren's in the NBA because he's 7-foot-1 with the ability to run the floor like a gazelle, handle the ball like a guard, shoot 37% from 3-point range (thoughnot necessarily on hang pulls, which would be odee) and protect the rim at a level few big men on the planet can match. It's what the Gonzaga product did in space in the fourth quarter, though, that opened an awful lot of eyes — and helped keep the Thunder from being pushed to the brink. Chet crunch time defense.0-4 FG in the last 2 mins when targeted#wowhttps://t.co/swtkNNssnPpic.twitter.com/aScNSkpD10 — Mohamed (@mcfNBA)June 14, 2025 On four critical possessions in the final three minutes of Game 4, Tyrese Haliburton and Nembhard tried the 23-year-old — put him under pressure, dragged him out into deep water, made him prove it. And on all four possessions — a Nembhard drive to the rim, followed by three different isolations up top — Holmgren stood his ground, held his own when switched onto Indiana's quicksilver guards and prevented them from producing points. "He held up great," Daigneault said. "We don't do that a ton with him, because he's just so impactful at the rim. But he can really switch. It's funny: When he was coming out of the draft, that was one of the things that they really recognized with him, is that he's very switchable. He's got great feet. We just found ourselves behind the ball in a lot of plays tonight. The switching was able to get that under control late. We can't do that unless he can do that." The Thunder had to keep the Pacers coming up empty, had to keep stacking stops. They did, because Holmgren — on the biggest stage of his life — can do that. "Special player," Williams said. "Special players do special things. He's really good. Me and him have always talked about, like, coming into the NBA together, it's just always been, find something that you can do to impact the game. That makes you more of a special player. "We try not to be one-dimensional. Shots fluctuate. Everybody is going to shoot bad; from Steph Curry to me, you name it, you're going to have bad shooting nights. But there's so many things you can do in a basketball game to affect the game. He understands that." He also understands that every possession you experience is one that you can build on and, hopefully, improve upon. "I mean, I had just given up two drives right before that," Holmgren said. "Just kind of trying to learn from those and play them better in those instances. I feel like I got a good contest. [Haliburton] was still able to get it off. He shoots a high-arcing shot; the whole time it's in the air, a lot's going through your mind." One thing that never went through the minds of any Thunder players, though? Being on the wrong side of the scoreboard when the clock hit triple zero. "We never wavered — never thought we might lose this game," Caruso said. "We were concentrating on trying to win it, on trying to solve the puzzle, figure out a way to make plays down the stretch to win the game. That's just been our focus throughout the whole playoffs. It started from the whole season — just an extreme belief in each other to make plays and find a way to win." With their season on the line, they did it. It took everything — a fourth-quarter masterclass from Gilgeous-Alexander, Williams displaying his entire skill-set, Dort's tone-setting, Caruso proving he'smore than just an agent of chaos, Holmgren proving he's more than just a rim protector, and so much more — but they did it. And now, they go back to Oklahoma City tied up, with home-court advantage restored, to try to do it again. "No matter what happens — good or bad, pretty or ugly — we're always going to stick together," Holmgren said. "We're going to win together, we're going to lose together, we're going to have great moments together, we're going to fail together. No matter what happens, we're going to do it together. I don't really see that changing. Ever." "That's what makes us a good team," Gilgeous-Alexander said. "It's more than just me.Waymore than just me."

Thunder vs. Pacers: How OKC's collective team effort gave Shai Gilgeous-Alexander the juice to close out Game 4

Thunder vs. Pacers: How OKC's collective team effort gave Shai Gilgeous-Alexander the juice to close out Game 4 INDIANAPOLIS — Shai Gilg...
Today's Wordle Hint, Answer for #1456 on Saturday, June 14, 2025New Foto - Today's Wordle Hint, Answer for #1456 on Saturday, June 14, 2025

Today's Wordle Hint, Answer for #1456 on Saturday, June 14, 2025originally appeared onParade. If you're stuck on today's Wordle answer, we're here to help—but beware of spoilers for Wordle 1456 ahead.Let's start with a few hints. There is one vowel out of the five letters in the word today. Today's Wordle begins with a consonant. No, there are no double letters in today's Wordle. As a noun, this word refers to a disembodied soul or an apparition (of a dead person). OK, that's it for hints—I don't want to totally give it away before revealing the answer!Related:16 Games Like Wordle To Give You Your Word Game Fix More Than Once Every 24 HoursWe'll have the answer below this friendly reminder ofhow to play the game.SPOILERS BELOW—do not scroll any further if you don't want the answer revealed. Today's Wordle answer on Saturday, June 14, 2025, is GHOST.How'd you do?Up Next:-Catch Up on Other Wordle Answers From This Week-Hints, Clues and Answers to the NYT's 'Mini Crossword' Puzzle Today's Wordle Hint, Answer for #1456 on Saturday, June 14, 2025first appeared on Parade on Jun 14, 2025 This story was originally reported byParadeon Jun 14, 2025, where it first appeared.

Today's Wordle Hint, Answer for #1456 on Saturday, June 14, 2025

Today's Wordle Hint, Answer for #1456 on Saturday, June 14, 2025 Today's Wordle Hint, Answer for #1456 on Saturday, June 14, 2025ori...
'GMA's Robin Roberts Garners Mixed Reactions with Bold Marriage AdviceNew Foto - 'GMA's Robin Roberts Garners Mixed Reactions with Bold Marriage Advice

'GMA's Robin Roberts Garners Mixed Reactions with Bold Marriage Adviceoriginally appeared onParade. Robin Robertsand her wifeAmber Laignare sharing one of their secrets to a long-lasting relationship, but fans aren't sure how to feel about it. In a new interview withE! News, theGood Morning Americahost and her wife revealed their best advice when it comes to making their relationship stand the test of time, and it involves an unconventional living situation. 🎬SIGN UP for Parade's Daily newsletter to get the latest pop culture news & celebrity interviews delivered right to your inbox🎬 "The true secret: separate apartments," Laign told reporters on Thursday, June 12 while attending opening night ofJean Smart's Broadway showCall Me Izzy. But fans on social media were raising their eyebrows at the couple's confession, with one person on Instagram calling it "weird" not to sleep under the same room as your spouse. "I can see separate bedrooms but not separate apartments," another user wrote, while someone else pointed out that the advice seemed to be only applicable to "rich people," as many couples "can barely afford one apartment or one house." But others said they fully supported the advice, with one person coming to Roberts and Laign's defense by writing, "Well whatever works for them and it obviously has." View this post on Instagram A post shared by Robin Roberts (@robinrobertsgma) Though Roberts, 64, has only been married to Laign since 2023, the two have been together foralmost 20 years. And in addition to their nontraditional living situation, Laign said laying a solid foundation is also the key to their successful relationship. "Communication, keeping it fresh, trust—all the good pillars," she said, while Roberts agreed, "Trust is very, very big." "I mean, 20 years. Something's got to be working," the journalist added. Related: Michael Strahan Gets Trolled By 'Good Morning America' Guest 'GMA's Robin Roberts Garners Mixed Reactions with Bold Marriage Advicefirst appeared on Parade on Jun 14, 2025 This story was originally reported byParadeon Jun 14, 2025, where it first appeared.

'GMA's Robin Roberts Garners Mixed Reactions with Bold Marriage Advice

'GMA's Robin Roberts Garners Mixed Reactions with Bold Marriage Advice 'GMA's Robin Roberts Garners Mixed Reactions with Bol...
Men's College World Series 2025: Coastal Carolina, Oregon State notch wins, LSU on pace for record Jell-O shot salesNew Foto - Men's College World Series 2025: Coastal Carolina, Oregon State notch wins, LSU on pace for record Jell-O shot sales

The2025 Men's College World Serieskicked off Friday, with No. 13 Coastal Carolina earning the first win of the tournament over Arizona and No. 8 Oregon State outlasting Louisville in the late game. Oregon State had a win in hand entering the ninth inning — and didn't let some misadventures stop them from advancing in the winner's bracket. Gavin Turley hit a walk-off double to give his team a 4-3 win after the Beavers blew a two-run lead in the top of the ninth. Aiva Arquette, one of the top prospects for the 2025 MLB Draft, set it up with a one-out single, then motored first-to-home on Turley's line drive into left field. WHAT A WAY TO FINISH 👏#MCWSx 🎥 ESPN /@BeaverBaseballpic.twitter.com/3WBLMgajCt — NCAA Baseball (@NCAABaseball)June 14, 2025 Turley and Arquette were the heroes of the bottom of the ninth and the goats of the top. Defensive blunders from both players allowed Louisville to tie the game, with a missed dive from Turley turning into a triple and a bad throw from Arquette giving the Cardinals another man on third, who later scored. KA- CHOWWWW ⚡️#MCWSx 🎥 ESPN /@LouisvilleBSBpic.twitter.com/uTudYFRirI — NCAA Baseball (@NCAABaseball)June 14, 2025 TRIPLE TIME!!!#MCWSx 🎥 ESPN /@LouisvilleBSBpic.twitter.com/5AeWvoQvMi — NCAA Baseball (@NCAABaseball)June 14, 2025 The miscues nearly spoiled a great outing from star freshman Dax Whitney, who struck out nine across 5 1/3 innings while allowing three hits and a single run. The lanky right-hander with big heat and a bigger curveball outlasted the Cardinals' Patrick Forbes in a battle of future MLB Draft picks. Six batters, five strikeouts 🥱Dax punches out the side in the second.#GoBeavspic.twitter.com/YG4cEPOCxW — Oregon State Baseball (@BeaverBaseball)June 13, 2025 Whitney was ranked as the No. 56 prospect of the 2024 MLB Draft byMLB Pipeline. The No. 57 prospect, Boston Bateman, got $2.5 million from the San Diego Padres. Whitney has more than helped his stock this season and now projects as a future first-round pick after earning second-team Freshman All-America honors. Curiously, the first 15 hits of this game were all singles, with Rose getting the first extra-base hit of the game with his leadoff triple in the ninth inning. The Beavers got their first runs when they opened the bottom of the fourth with four straight singles. Louisville got one run back in the sixth with its own rally but then handed Oregon State an insurance run when shortstop Alex Alicea booted a potential double-play ball with the bases loaded. With the victory, Oregon State advances to face Coastal Carolina in the next round, while Louisville will get Arizona in the loser's bracket on Sunday. The Chanticleers, who came into the CWS with the best record in Division I, overcame a 4-4 tie with a few clutch doubles in the bottom of the eighth to keep their 24-game winning streak alive. It was a quiet first inning for both teams. But in the second inning, Coastal Carolina had a huge opportunity, loading the bases off a muffed infield catch by Arizona pitcher Owen Kramkowski. Outfielder Wells Sykes took advantage, hitting a two-run single to put the Chanticleers on the board. Arizona came alive in the top of the fourth, starting with a solo homer from shortstop Mason White. Then the Wildcats hit back-to-back doubles, sending catcher Adonys Guzman home to tie the game 2-2. In the bottom of the fifth, a single from Chanticleers right fielder Blagen Pado sent second baseman Blake Barthol home for a 3-2 lead. Coastal Carolina is known for getting hit by pitches; the team has been hit by an NCAA-leading 170 pitches this season. But in the sixth inning, it was Arizona who took advantage of getting hit. Chanticleers reliever Cameron Flukey hit three batters, allowing the Wildcats to load the bases and score a game-tying run before they recorded an out. Then a grounder from second baseman Garen Caulfield sent White home to give Arizona a 4-3 lead. WILDCATS IN FRONT‼️#MCWSx 🎥 ESPN /@ArizonaBaseballpic.twitter.com/BMhgvVKHl1 — NCAA Baseball (@NCAABaseball)June 13, 2025 In the bottom of the sixth, Chanticleers catcher Caden Bodine drove in a run to make it 4-4. The two teams stayed locked in a tie for the next two innings off some strong defensive play, with Flukey settling in. In the bottom of the eighth, with the Chanticleers sitting on two outs, it looked like the game would come down to the final inning. Then Coastal Carolina's offense broke through. It started with Sykes getting on second on a hit that landed right on the line. Left fielder Sebastian Alexander then hit an RBI single to send Sykes home for a 5-4 lead. Another huge double from Barthol sent Alexander and Bodine, who was intentionally walked, home to give the Chanticleers a 7-4 lead heading into the ninth. CHANTS EXTEND THE LEAD 😤#MCWSx 🎥 ESPN /@CoastalBaseballpic.twitter.com/sy3X4dcq3S — NCAA Baseball (@NCAABaseball)June 13, 2025 Arizona wasn't done yet, as designated hitter Andrew Cain earned a double with some bold running, and first baseman Tommy Splaine got a base hit. But a huge double-play ended the game and sent Coastal Carolina to the winners' bracket. The men's College World Serieshas one of the most entertaining side plotsof any NCAA championship: the Jell-O shot competition at Rocco's, where patrons compete annually to see which school's fan base can consume the most Jell-O shots. LSU, which set the record with 68,888 Jell-O shots purchased in 2023, is off to an early lead after the first day of the MCWS, with a monstrous 4,410 shots as of 10 p.m. CT. That tally is far ahead of last year's pace, setting LSU up for another record victory. Two years ago@LSUbaseballhad nearly 2100 less than this year so it's safe to say they are still hungry....and thirtsy.@getGordonsent our friend@whellmers4to do a little damage and have a little fun and I don't think they are done yet!#roadtoroccos#cws2025pic.twitter.com/9vJGeFxB9z — CWS Jello Shot Challenge (@CWSShotBoard)June 14, 2025 However, Murray State and Coastal Carolina are also on a roll, coming in at 2,180 and 1,753 shots, respectively, after a back-and-forth Friday. Regardless of who wins, all three schools are currently on pace to break LSU's 2023 record.

Men's College World Series 2025: Coastal Carolina, Oregon State notch wins, LSU on pace for record Jell-O shot sales

Men's College World Series 2025: Coastal Carolina, Oregon State notch wins, LSU on pace for record Jell-O shot sales The2025 Men's C...
NASCAR's Jeff Gordon Jokes About Teaching His 2 Teenagers How to Drive: 'Oh Boy'New Foto - NASCAR's Jeff Gordon Jokes About Teaching His 2 Teenagers How to Drive: 'Oh Boy'

CHRIS DELMAS/AFP/Getty Jeff Gordon is sharing how he approaches teaching his kids to drive The former professional race car driver is also hoping to get his teenagers driving a stick shift this summer Gordon shares his kids with wife Ingrid Vandebosch Jeff Gordonmay be a former professional race car driver, but he's just like any other dad when it comes to teaching his kids how to drive. On Tuesday, June 10, Gordon appeared on an episode ofTodayand spoke about what it was like teaching his daughter, Ella, 17, how to drive. Gordon shares Ella and son Leo, 14, with wife Ingrid Vandebosch. When asked how he teaches them how to get behind the wheel, Gordon cheekily replied, "Very carefully." "Very carefully. I mean, you get 'em started young. You go to the parking lot," he joked. "You get in the driveway." Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE's free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. He was then asked if he'd taught his kids how to drive stick, which is how one historically drives a race car. "My goal this summer is to get both of my kids to learn how to drive stick," the dad of two said. "So it is definitely a goal." "But I will say, one of the most terrifying moments I've had is being in the passenger seat. I'm not a very good passenger to begin with, when my daughter was first getting her permit. Oh boy." Although Ella is now driving, getting her license wasn't the first time she was behind the wheel. When she was 6, Gordon introduced her to the world of racing. "Ella driving a quarter midget for the first time yesterday," he captioned anInstagram postin April 2014. "The smile says it all." However, Gordon later shared that racing didn't seem to be something she was interested in. "[Racing] didn't seem to stick," Gordon shared onThe Charlotte Observerpodcast in November 2023. Instead, her interest in speed came in another form: running. "My daughter is the athlete in the family," he said. "She's the speed demon. She runs track." He went on to call her "a tremendous athlete" in track and field. Sean Gardner/Getty "She [also] plays field hockey. She can play about anything, honestly. She can high jump, pole vault," he said proudly. His son also learned how to drive a quarter midget early on, at the age of 7. In 2017, Gordon shared a video of his son driving laps for the first time on hiswebsite. "He had a lot of fun!" he wrote. Similar to his sister, though, Leo didn't want to follow in their dad's footsteps. "They just have other interests and that's fine," Gordon said onThe Charlotte Observerpodcast. "I want to support them and whatever they're passionate about." In fact, Gordon's son seemed to be more interested in the entertainment industry. "I think he might want to be a YouTube star one day, you know, an influencer," he said with a laugh. Read the original article onPeople

NASCAR's Jeff Gordon Jokes About Teaching His 2 Teenagers How to Drive: 'Oh Boy'

NASCAR's Jeff Gordon Jokes About Teaching His 2 Teenagers How to Drive: 'Oh Boy' CHRIS DELMAS/AFP/Getty Jeff Gordon is sharing h...

 

ONEEL MAG © 2015 | Distributed By My Blogger Themes | Designed By Templateism.com